.10 -: THE BEE: OMAHA. FRIDAY. APRIL 9. 1920. - . . 1 1 1 - I .T, .1 The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY TH1 BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. PROPRIETOR NELSON B. UPDIKE. PRESIDENT MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS , 4aMtatad Tnm. ef which Tha Bm tl a mamtor, It x- cluimy anUUad Is tha w (or tmbllcatlon of all aawa dlapalonai fMMM to It or mot othwwtn endiud In thli papar, and alao tha MMl Bi ruMiihed kerala. All ftfhu ot publication ot our apaelal wMMmmiIm laaemd. BEE TELEPHONES Private Branch Eichanie. Ask fnr the T"1 1 AAA IMwiUtcat or Particular raraou Wanted. 1 JTIW 1UUU For Night and Sunday Sarvica Callt Mttertal Sasartmant ........... Tjlar 1090!. OfoalaUoa lapanaiant .......... Tiler 100S& Smittaag Pavartmant .......... Trier 1008b OFFICES OF THE BEE Bona Offlrat 17th and Farnam. Branca omcea: 4110 North 4th I Park MIS Leavenworth CouaoU Bluff IS Boott St. I Walnut 813 North 40th AJbag aw Tort Offloa S8 Tilth Art. I Waahlnctoa 1311 O St. Chicago Stager Bldg. I I'tni Franuo 430 Bue St.. Honore The Bee's Platform 1. Najw Union Passenger Station. 2. A Pip Lin from tha Wyoming Oil Fields to Omaha." . 3. Continued improvamant of th N braaka Highways, including th pawa- meat f M.i. T I. ....... L r I 1: w. u auv.vwiiiivi ivauini into Omaha with a Brick Surface. -i 4. A short, low.rat Waterway from th Corn Belt to th Atlantic Ocean. "MACHINE" PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATIONS. " The esteemed Brooklyn Eagle, advocating h nomination of Mr. Hoover as a republican eandidate for president, bemoans the activity of lit so-called "machine," and regrets its potency N determining the choice of candidates. This from a democratic newspaper, which will sup port the nominee of the San Francisco conven tion, no matter who he may be, ought to be musing. Alongside it might be ranged the Indignant outburst of Senator Johnson, disap pointed because he does not have the support t New York. . -I All this would be important, were it not for the fact that in each case may be noted a dis petition to ignore the plain facts of political history. From the very beginning of our gov aroment, groups of men whose patriotism is beyond question, whose motives have been justi fied by the event, have sought to direct the con trol of conventions and elections. Some mis takes have undoubtedly beet) made, but the menu for correcting them were not only avail able, but soon -were applied, and the forward movement of the nation continued. Representa tive government has persisted because it has been found serviceable, ., Examine the history of the republican party for confirmation of this. Abraham Lincoln was neither unversed in the science nor unskilled in the practice of politics. Local elections in Illinois, service in congress, and his campaign against Douglas had taught him much. Go to Chicago and watch David Dudley Field, Simon Cameron, William H. Seward and other big men of the new party as they maneuvered and bar gained before the nomination of Lincoln was brought about. Get the record of the Cincinnati convention when Rutherford B. Hayes was named, or the gathering at Philadelphia when McKinley was renominated and Roosevelt forced to accept second place on the ticket. Was the public interest betrayed at either of these conventions? . ?j The outcome was the result of the combined judgment of the leaders of the party, and good came to the people from their action. No party "boss" was ever so maligned as Mark Hanna, and yet he gave the country McKinley and led the campaign that saved the country from the vagaries of Bryan in 1896. Americans have little to fear from the deliberations of a repub lican national convention. ' ' Strike of the Switchmen. Interstate commerce is being seriously in terfered with by the action of switchmen and other railroad employes, who are striking for increased pay and to enforce other demands, v . ' The most difficult phase of the affair arises from the fact that the men, although acting in con cert, and defying, the leaders of their great femions, are going about the business blindly and with no definite purpose save to exact com pliance with hastily formulated requests for relief. ; How much of this is due to impulses re strained while the roads were under govern ment control, and how much may be looked Itpoa as a protest against the steadily increas 4f cost of ' living, will perhaps never be known. That. the schedule of pay governing in the Chicago yards, where the troble originated, M low may be admitted, but the steps taken to remedy this appear rather drastic. If the strike becomes general, as it now threatens, the situa tion will not be that of civil war, threatened when it was proposed to tie up the roads against the government, but will partake of the nature Of gigantic hold-up. The effect of the action on the cause of the men is bound to be bad, for it discredits .the unions to which they belong. An agreement was made that strikes would not be called until full and fair test had been made of the plan provided in the new law for settling wage dis putes on railroads. Unauthorized "insurgent" or "outlaw" strikes may compel compliance with demands, but will not assist in reaching a final settlement. Conscientious labor leaders realize the harm ,-Tnat will come from this disturbance incident f 0 domination of radical views, but are power less to control men who throw off all restraint hut their own passions. Whatever may be the erid of this strike, it will not be of assistance to organized labor in America, becau.e it de stroys public confidence in the integrity of the unions. ' V Anything to Lengthen the Payroll. The Department of Agriculture is at ir again. People will remember its exploit of two or three years ago when it sent its partisan agents over fifteen or twenty states "teaching" the wives of farmers how to make cottage cheese. It afforded delightful automobile outings to hundreds of democrats over the country with all expenses paid by the government and $5 . , day "velvet," if we remember the per diem. The enterprise didn't last long, however,' when "the farmers began writing to their congress men to know, by heck, what sort of darn fools were spending public money to teach their "wives something they had known all abou! ever 'since they learned to milk. " " The latest freak educational -stunt ot the de ' partmeot is to s"end out a book to farmers' wives all over the union on the "Selection and Care of Clothes." Imagine a farmer's wife who has cut down dad's trousers to fit three boys at intervals of two years, reading such stuff as ''socks should be-long enough not to cramp the toes," and "clothing should always be com fortable and healthful," and "men's hats may be freshened by reblocking and renewing the rib bon." . However, something must be clone to keep the vast army of democratic flotsam and jetsam in Washington on the payroll. What Shall Nebraska's Answer Be? More and more the foresight of those who first grasped the potential possibilities of the candidacy of General Pershing for president is being justified by events and the deeper cur rents of opinion all over the country. In no city, town, village or rural neighborhood where loyalty to American institutions abides, has there come a note of disapproval of Pershing the general or Pershing the man. And from no republican source comes even a hint that his nomination would not be followed by his elec tion. That is as certain in popular belief as was the election of Grant and Roosevelt after the Civil and the Spanish-American wars. Nebraska has, therefore, through General Pershing a candidacy that will meet no unkind ness where the American flag is loved and re spectedan asset of enormous value in direct ing public favor toward any man. His serious wisdom, his human sympathy, his sense of humor, the manly charm of his personality, his great achievements, and his devotion and at tention to regular duties while other candidates have dropped everything else to seek party preference, have had a powerful influence upon the people at large. In the homes of the nation, urban and rural alike, when the heads of repub lican families sit by their lamps, or firesides in the evening and talk of the convention to come at Chicago next June, none but friendly words are spoken of Pershing. It is in these same homes that the election also will be decided, long before the November ballots are cast. The home is the real center ot American politics, now more than ever be fore, but always decisively so; and when men hesitate to make a choice between good men for any office, the first question they ask is: "What do they think of him at home?" That is the question the nation is asking today about General Pershing, and it is directed to Nebraska. It must be answered by Nebraska on April 20. Answered right, Nebraska and fier candidate will at once become possessor of a national volume of political influence that gives every promise of being decisive at the Chicago convention. ' It's all up to Nebraska to the republicans of Nebraska to bring about this most desir able crystallization of public sentiment, that will be felt," and in the end heeded, by every dele gate to the national convention. "There is a tide in the affairs" of states, as well as of men, "which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune." That tide is now rising in Ne braska. It will be at the flood on April 20. If the republicans fail to take it, can they com plain if afterward "all the voyage of their (political) life is bound in shallows and in mis erics?" For the good name of their state and the good wishes of their party associates in other states, the republicans of Nebraska should launch the candidacy of their greatest fellow citizen on the full tide. They must protect and care for their own. They will do so. en thusiastically, there is every reason to believe! A Match for the Gods. A New York correspondence recounts a meeting between "T. R." and "Black Jack" Pershing in a Cuban canebrake on a rainy night. Each was in quest of a pair of errant mules, neither knew the other, and both were bent on a single point, the possession of a span of long eared Missouri mocking birds. What was said on that occasion must have been Homeric. No one who knew "the Colonel" ever questioned his ability to express himself, and those close to Pershing give him credit with similar ability. The man who tells the story says Pershing got the mules. Buck privates then present doubtless cherish the incident as one of their rare ex periences, and that it is preserved as an army classic may not be doubted. What a match it wasl A combination of ability, persistency and real American determination, to a finish in off hand argument. It will be a long time before another such occasion arises. Maybe Roosevelt recalled, the incident when he jumped Captain Pershing over so many heads to make him a brigadier general, but he did a good job both times. Hiram and Herbert Lock Horns. On May 4, from present indications, there will be a battle royal in the republican primaries in California. Hiram Johnson and Herbert Hoover will contest for the laurel wreath usu ally referred, to as the favorite sonship of the great state on the Pacific. Many things are going to happen before May 4, and some of them may entirely change the existing situa tion on the cost. But if Herbert and Hiram fail to fade each other in other portions of the union it will be a tooth and toenail event in California. Hiram has the advantage of the senatorship, and Herbert that of eastern sup port, and California is likely to go to the one whose outlook at Chicago is least depressing. Either of them may have the opportunity to lead the break to General Pershing on the last ballot. ' A Washington correspondent says the presi dent's spirit is broken because Washington throngs no longer cheer him. He should not despair they have merely become accustomed to him. The houe will do its share to end the state of war today. Let the senate follow promptly, and see if the president disagrees. Well, if we must have snow, let it come and get it over. A Line 0 Type or Two Haw to tha Lint, lat tha aulaa fall whare ihey may. MR. WILSON will summer at Wood's Hole, and there was a heavy snowstorm from the northeast in Chicago on Easter Sunday. And the number of contributors who have advised asr that General Wood will reside in Wilson's Hole after March 4 nest is exceeded only by the number of those who have reminded us that it was a nor'-Easter. A close third is the wheeze about Mustapha Kernel being fussy about his brand of cigarette. Small Town Daredevil. ( From the York, Neb., News-Times. The police clock wastaken from the pole back, of the Odd Fellows' hall last night. The party who took it is known and is re quested to return It to the Fire hall. If this is done promptly no questions will be asked. ' H. J. Brown, Chief of Police. MR. HOOVER'S weakness as a candidate is that he is too international, too solar-system-wide, too cosmic. In its experience,, the present generation will not know a time when there will be more need of nationalism, of intensive interest in one's own affairs as a nation. Those who say, "We don't want a military man," would change their tune quickly enough if an emer gency arose demanding a military man. And the offing is crowded with emergencies. i COAL- miners in Illinois and Kansas are dissatisfied, we read without surprise. "Well," said George Moore to the Irish patriot in the railway coach, "what will content you?" "Sure," said the other, "we don't want to be con tented." "LET Wegler Brothers crate and ship your furniture all over the United States." Adv. Jamais re la vie! It is trouble enough to trace a trunk that has started globe-trotting. WHY FATHER BEAT IT. (From the Fairfield Journal.) Mrs. Ed Krum of Mt Pleasant, Mrs. J. O. Way and family of Valley Junction, Mrs. J. C. Way of Birmingham are guests at the D. R. Way home. ' D. R. Way ha left for Kansas on ac count of his health. "THE mind," observed the Trib, in discuss ing the new bridge over the river, "the mind which is able to conceive and execute such a stmetttre is developed because it is rewarded by both pay and position." Is it not, rather, de veloped because, like the artistic mind, it takes the channel which it particularly wishes to fpl- lowr As tor pay, it one will glance over the wantads'in the engineering journals one will find that salaries, offered and asked for, are some distance this side of the dreams of avarice. SIMPLE SARAH. Simple Sarah, sweet sixteen. - Felt the need of lengthy green. So in uncle's tea did hide Sixty grains of cyanide. Fresh insurance chap it's shocking Kept an eye on Sarah's stocking. Murmured as he made the payment. Don't she wear the jocund raiment:" And the jury, aorely smitten, Voted her a cunning kitten; But the judge was rather peeved Fired the jury. Sarah grieved. After marraige husband's joking Orew quite dull 'twas so provoking. Sarah then, with mirth a-quiver. Punched a n.ut-pick through his liver. When the baby found him bleeding, Sarah cried in accents pleading, "Don't go near him, darling Tessie, Daddy always was so messy." Simple Sarah artless child Second trial set her wild; Now she'll stick to pastimes lawful, Lawyer's fees are something awful. L. C. W. NEXT to a shortage of food, nothing could be more serious than a shortage of white paper; but the best way to dissuade people from read ing a newspaper is to beseech them to read it, and offer to throw in a set of silverware with every subscription. YOU'LL GET MORE TRUTH FROM FREUD. Sir: At Lafayette, Ind., in one of those tile upholstered hasty lunch-rooms where they serve music with the odd-penny dishes, I heard the orchestra play, "I Dreamt That I Dwelt in Mar ble Halls." Should 1 take the matter up with the Truth in Advertising Committee or with some student of Freud. If you must know, the name of the place is the Bohemian Cafe. E. B. K. "THE good old Democratic ship has her sails set for a spanking breeze." Apalachiola Times. As further preparation it might be well to begin cutting away the mast. " 'BUT that,' he said, smiling, is the unpar donable sin.' " Evening Story. Much he knew about it! The unpardonable sin, as defined by Max Muller, was much less pardonable. "To me, an ethnologist who speaks of S'n Aryan race, Aryan blood, Aryan eyes and hair, is as great a sinner as a linguist who speaks of a dolichocephalic dictionary or a brachyce phalic grammar." IN communicating with the Loyal Orange Institution, U. S. A., one write to Rev. Geo. T. Lemmon of Sand Lake, N. Y. A WINDY IMMORTAL. 1 (From the Kansas City Star.) Hiss Dimple Chinn and Miss Thelma Merideth entertained with a theater party, followed by a supper, in honor of Miss Helen Pierson and Mr. Erie Gale Helms. A MERCHANT on Fifth avenue, New York, offers a filled suit case for women at the trifling price, $1,365.00. But "initials stamped on case without charge." That Brings 'Em to Terms. Sir: Client objected to amount of fee. I suggested he pay me according to plumbers' scale. He paid my original request. PHILARDEE. THE WOMANIZING OF MAN. Sir: Honest, there are hatters in Seattle who advertise as "milliners to men." L. E. S. THEN there are those who borrow your paper before you get up. B. L. T. Cue VELVET HAMMER DijvflTtfmr "Srooks "Baker -IPSA U Woiulcr if Mitch Palmer knows about spuds MAYOR ED P. SMITH. The city that is fitted with a large and able chief is justified in giving up a sigh of great relief; for mayors are not all alike and few are up to snuff; they pose before the camera and throw a constant bluff; they make a wild and foolish speech or go upon a toot, or otherwise they compromise their city's good repute. The uses of a mayorship are difficult to state. They show a large variety of color, form and weight. But there is one utility of valua ble pith forever in the roomy mind of Mayor Ed P. Smith. He sees in it a stepping stone by which his feet may rise and plant their shoes upon a job of greater class and size. For lawyers are not always doomed to prac tice in the courts, since law itself's a vestibule to other indor sports. Ed made a mint of money from Nebraska's corn and wheat, and cherished it with competence sagacious and dis creet It gives an independence to his attitude and walk, for he can simply close his ear when bosses try to talk. When critics judge his efforts with unkindly words and strong, he writes a letter which ad mits that they may not be wrong, but hopes we won't interpret it by such a hazy light that we will hasily adjudge the critics to be right; for, let vour mind accept this truth immaculate 'and tall, though critics may be dull "n sight, lliey rc seldom weak in gall. Next subject: "Mike" Clark. How to Keep Well By Dr. W. A. EVANS Zffta&oes . PHYSICAL OVERSTRAIN. While exercise is good, like all other good things, it can be over done. Several years Dr. J. II. Bar ach had an opportunity to study 24 athletes before and after a marathon race. The men all, except one, were in prime condition just before the race. Ho had a little albumin in his urine. Maybe had trained too hard. The distance run was 24.85 miles. The time consumed varied between three hours and 14 minutes and four hours and 15 minutes. Of the 19 finishing all had albumin and casts in the urine and 18 had blood in the urine and also evidence of acidosis. One week later all 19 still had albumin and six casts in the urine. Three weeks after the race three had albumin and casts. This study Barach supplemented by one made on 57 normal young men before and after base ball and track work. One hour and 50 min utes of base ball caused one man to loose 5.5 pounds. The average loss per man per game of base ball was 1.3 pounds, principally due to loss of water and remediable by drinking a few glasses of water. The average time spent in run ning by each track men was 48.1 min utes. Seventy -seven per cent of all the men showed albuminuria after their hard play. Of 36 who played base ball 2S developed albumin in the urine. Of 18 track men 16 developed albuminuria. Seventy-one per cent of the track men developed hyaline and granular casts and blood in the urine. Twenty-three per cent of the base ball players had the same ef fects develop. There was an increase in the acidity of the urine in most of the cases but the cases in which mcst ordinary acidity developed were not always those developing albumin and casts. The boys who showed the greatest degree of disturbance of the pulse, hear- -r-:e!ation and blood pressure were those who showed more evi dence of temporary acute Bright's disease. Perhaps here is one of the reasons for the fairly well established fact that competing athletes do not live to old age as a rule, also for the fact that many of them develop symptoms of organic crippling early in life. Here, also, is an argument for uni versal participation by all the stud ent body in exercises geared lower. What we know as major competitive athletics is set at two swift a pace for any except the few. The result is that the great bulk of the student bedy become onlookers. Except in the universities where physical de velopment is planned the average student does not get enough exer cise to keep his muscles in prime condition, Dr. Barach furnishes good proof that even the picked men are not equal to the strain put on tfcem by competitions in major ath letics. , Helpful Chiefly to Hair. H. P. P. writes: "1. What spe cial benefit does a person derive from taking hot oil scalp treatments? "2. Does it relieve congestion in head and soreness caused by same'.'" REPLY. I. The massage, heat and oil are ot service to the scalp and hair. 2. I doubt it. ODD AND INTERESTING. Words that most puzzle poets to find rhyme words for are silver, window and chimney. When riding, the Chinese hold the bridle in the right hand, the op-a posite to our custom. The Cunard line, originally known as the British and North American Steam Packet company, will be 80 years old next July. Septimus Winner, the Philadel phia composer, was paid $35 for his famous song "Listen to the Mock" Ing Bird." His publishers made 13,000,000 out of it One billion dollars represents about 4,000,000 pounds of gold, or 2,000 tons. Four hundred five-ton trucks would be required to trans port this sum, and they would form a line about four miles long. One of the most remarkable boundaries in the world is that be tween Alaska and Canada. The line follows the meridian without the slightest deviation, regardless of mountains, swamps, and forests, and markers have been set up at points visible from each other over the whole 600 miles length of the boundary. Dancing plays a very important part in the education of boys and girls In Japan. In the better class families the dancing teacher comes every other day, regular practice is an affair of routine, and private en tertainments where, the qjiildren per form are arranged by friendly fam ilies. The municipal authorities of a French town hit upon a curious in ducement to tardy couples to seek the altar. They publicly announced that all persons who married with in a certain period should be ex empt from local taxes for the space of five years, and this announcement w-as evidently so alluring that an epi demic of marriages set In at once. Ohe Shirt With Comfort Points There's extra ful ness at the elbows tapering neatly to the trim.perfect fitting cuffs. Joit anstkar ration fat th comfort tal good look of 3 eauaQtramn drjhirts Skill! Knowledge! A Profound "Know How" of Everything Pertaining To Clothes Cleaning. Etc. Phone Tyler 345 DRESHER BROTHERS Dyers " Cleaners 2211-17 Farnam St. Respect for the V'niform. Kansas City, April 6. To the Editor of The Bee: Permit me as a subscriber to The Bee to commend your dignified and American edi torial, "Respect to the Uniform." The service General Wood rendered your city in time of trouble entitles him at least to the respect of every American in Omaha and America. Unfortunately, party hate and grasp ing desire have blocked enthusiasm for men in uniform, existing in war. Ultimately honest enthusiasm will win. Hate belongs in the discard, after Its defeat abroad. ; JOSEPH MEINRATH. Add a Free Bridge. Omaha, April 6. To the Editor of The Bee: In your paper you name four things The Bee is work ing for, viz: New Union station. Wyoming oil pipe line. Hard surfaced country roads. Better water shipping routes. I wish to suggest a fifth objective a free bridge between Omaha and Council Bluffs, between Nebraska and Iowa. This would benefit not oniy Omaha and Council Bluffs but all Nebraska and Iowa territory within a radius of a 100 miles. Con ditions are about ripe for this im provement and if The Bee will take this up the desired' end can be at tained. A. H. ROSE, 3514 Lafayette Avenue. Jerry on the Job. Omaha, April 2. To the Editor of The Bee: The article in today's it-sue headed ,lA Woman's Word to Women" contained a practical sug gestion "Register and Vote." I hope the women will act upon the sugges tion, otherwise they cannot vote for their own emancipation. Perhaps they are not cognizant of the fact that they are privileged to vote on the ratification of the new constitu tion which contains the suffrage proposal, the women's minimum wage proposal and other meritorious proposals. Without the women's vote these righteous measures might fail to pass. I fear some of the worn en are paying too much attention to partisan polities and too little to fundamentals. JERRY HOWARD. Would Prefer Hanging. About the worst punishment the allies could prescribe for Wllhelm would be an order restraining him for ever wearing a uniform or hav ing his picture taken again. New York Telegraph. Looks That Way. Lord Curzon's remark that the United States is to blame for the Turkish mess reminds one of the man who failed in business because no one left him a million dollar leg acy. Boston Transcript. MADE to ORDER Go to marp shops to find one pattern you want Or, come to this one shop and find man)) patterns you'll want. Suits and Overcoats $55, $65, $70 and upwards r The Store of Wide Assortments NICOLLThelbilof WEJerrems' Sons 209-211 So. 15th Street Why the The revolutionary device which makes the sounding-board of the Mason 8r Hamlin preof against deterioration is called the Tension Resonator!' No other piano has it which is why none is as long-lived ai the Mason cV namlm. US to she ur 1 aSaar ' -aaa - r kse V IfaW dru ii Priced tliqhest PrJiswi We Carry Only Pianos of Well-Known Makes Our guarantee goes with the $365 as well as the $2,000 Piami Prices ONE Cash or Time Every instrument mark ed in plain figures 1513 DOUGLAS ST. The Art and Music Store rToDAYJ The Day We Cclebralc. Rev. Robert L. Wheeler, pastor Wheeler Memorial Presbyterian church, South Side, born 1861. Gen. Erich Ludendorff. who served in the late war as chief or the German Imperial ataff, born in Posen. 55 years ago. Park Trammell. United States senator from Florida, born in Polk County, Fla., 44 years ago. David H. Kincheloe, representa tive In congress of the Second Ken tucky district, born in McLean County, Ky., 43 years ago. James K. Vaughn, pitcher of the Chicago National league baseball team, born at Weatherford, Tex., 32 years ago. . Jack Hendricks, manager of the Indianapolis American assoc atlon baseball club, born at Joliet, 111., 44 years ago. Thirty Years Ago in Omaha. Dr. V. B. Coffman sued the city for jl5,000 on account of damage done to his property by the grading at Twenty-seventh and Jackson. There was an epidemic of burg laries, twelve lobberies being re ported. Major J. W. Pearina. "squatter ..r.n of vhraaka for ten vears. was in the city, the guest of his two daughters. Receipts of the post office for the month of March amounted to $21,542.13. MUCH IN LITTLE. Canada's first lumber export was to France in 167. Chinese cannot be telegraphed; figures corresponding to certain words have to be used. Antipodes Island, not far from New Zealand, was thus named be cause it is directly opposite to Lon don. , The Greeks and Romans imagined that a grave maiden called Clotho spun from her distaff the thread of the destiny of man, and as she span, one of her sisters worked out with . l.-.. ait th events which Hip ihk.u - - ... were in storekand Atropos, the other sister, cut the thread at th part when death was to occur. Many of the finest carpets an i rugs of today are produced in Bui garia but they are nearly all sol i as being of Turkish or Persian man ufacture. The peons of Mexico and the pro fesslonal porters of Turkey are reel, oned the strongest of mankind. On. of the former has been known t. carry a piece of machinery welghin;: 600 pounds over a mountain pa while three of the Turkish poitn haVe carried a grand piano in i' case for a distance of three miles m, end. in :v GARRISON Correct in Heifjhl and Dedipn Always ek for iqn(olars OCOCST BRAND IN AMERICA Nebraska State Teachers' Convention Concert Grand Piano Played by SIDNEY SILBER, Concert Pianist 15)3 Douglas , Street Vote for PERSHING Then vote for these delegates who will support him loyally and represent you faithfully DELEGATES AT LARGE Titus Lowe Charles H. Kelsey George H. Austin Elmer J. Burkett ALTERNATE DELEGATE AT LARGE Carl E. Herring DELEGATE-SECOND DISTRICT C. E. Adams ALTERNATE-SECOND DISTRICT HirdStryker John C. Caldwell REPUBLICAN PRIMARIES APRIL20 Save Something for the Future Now You will never know how much you can save until something forces you to economize to the limit. Then you will realize that you might have been saving more with out any sacrifice of comfort, social standing or anything really nec essary. But you know you can save something, so start a Savings Account at .this bank, the oldest in Nebraska, and turn all your spare change into it for the next few years. Keep up this saving and you will be rich some day. mm I First National iBank of Omaha Streat Floor Eatranc Either. Farnam or Siateanth Street Door Established 1857