8 B THE OMAHA SUNDAY 3 EE: 1 APRIL 25, 1920. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) -EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. PROPRIETOR NELSON B. UPDIKE. PRESIDENT MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS , ' Associated Pim ol whkB TM Mot is merneer. If tx !W ""'""J to Uie uae for aiibllcatloa of all newi dispatches eraditad to II or not otDarwlae credited In this rtper, an4 kin to local news published hernia. All rlghta of publication ol oar special dispatches are also mened. BEE TELEPHONES Prliata Brant Iimarite. Auk for tlx T1 IftAA Dsparlmwt or fartlcular remit Wanted. I yiCT 1UUU For Night and Sunday Service) Call: Editorial Depsrtment ........... Tylet innoi. Circulation Department .......... Tyler 10041, Advertising Department - ijn luOKI. OFFICES OF THE BEE noma Office: ntn and t'arnam. Ural-Cb Offices: 4110 North Htl 11 Scott St. MIS Leatanwortfe Oul-of-Terwn Offices New York Offlca 2M fifth Ata. Amaa council Bluffa fart South 8lda Walnut 318 N St. 613 North 0U CLIcaga Washington tii a m. uiat Bid. I Parla France 420 Rue St., Honor The Bee's Platform 1. Nw Union Pastsngor Station. 2. A Pip Line from the Wyoming Oil Fields to Omaha. 3. Continued improvement of the Ne braska Highway, including the pave ment of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha with a Brick Surface. 4. A abort, low-rate Waterway from the Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. BLAMING IT ON THE WOMAN. Man has ever been inclined to attribute his folliesajnd failures to the influence of woman, at least ever since the Biblical story of the Fall Become a general belief. The Old Testament is peppered with historical incidents, poems, la mentations and proverbs in which women get the worst of it. At the very beginning, be cause Eve was disobedient and invited Adam to become her companion in sin, the Lord put an especially heavy yoke on her and her female descendants. In penalizing the three parties to the original human rebellion against divine au thority the subtle serpent who introduced lemptation to Eve was sentenced to go on his belly and eat dut all his life; Eve's sorrows were multiplied and she was placed under the domination of her husband; and Adam, because he "hearkened unto the voice of his wife," was condemned to cat his bread in the sweat of his face in a never ending contest with the thorns and thistles of life. Eve was most severely pun ished, because the Lord said to her: "Thy hus band . . . shall rule over tliec." These punishments would not have been so crushing if they had been applied only to the original triangle of woe. But they fell upon the whole human race, which 'has sweated, agonized and struggled under them ever since. One of the notable instances in sacred his tory of the blame being laid by interpreters (unjustly, we think) upon a woman, is that of Delilah's exploit with the hair of Samson, the sporting judge of Israel. Miss Delilah was simply a tool of the lords of the Philistines a wicked tool, undeniably, but the fault was in Judge Samson himself. He was a violent man, headstrong, immoral and of adventurous dis position. Wherever he held court he had a roving eye for pretty women, as every one in the tribe of Dati well knew. He gambled con stantly with his prodigious physical strength, his amours were numerous and spectacuhr, and he a good joke. His judicial decisions were just so far as the records reveal them. Incidentally, it may be mentioned that he was a lifelong pro hibitionist in a land flowing with good wine. But the fact remains (hat his career and its pitiful ending, were the legitimate and natural result of his own follies and excesses, and are not to be charged against the beautiful Miss Delilah. In profane history Cleopatra is held up as a famous example of a bad woman wrecking the lives of great men. In her 28th year she met Marcus Anthony of Rome, who promptly and willingly succumbed to her charms, in spite of the fact that he was a married man. We are asked to sympathize with this Roman general who pronounced the funeral oration over the body of Julius Caesar, "the greatest man of an tiquity;" who married twice; and ended his career with a dagger when Cleopatra sent him word she was dead. We cannot do so. In both sacred and profane history gifted and dissolute women are mentioned usually as striking examples of evil influence on equally gifted and dissolute men. Why not put it the other way? History is strangely silent about the despicable conduct of men who destroyed the lives of women, because ancient, as well as modern historians omit such things where pos sible because, shall We say? of a fellow feeling. In America the sins of great men against women have been many, and never mentioned Unless suppression was impossible. Birt we suspect there will be a change with women in full possession of the ballot. Already defeated candidates in primary elections are saying "the woman whom thou gavest me" did it. The old Wan excuse, applied to politics. But "blaming it on the women" is not going to be good politics not long for while the kick has been laken out of beverages largely through the infut- nce of good women, with woman suffrage a new and potent kick is entering the front door of civil government and is likely to send certain un holy and unscrupulous powers kiting into ob- ivion. Speed the day! necessities, always advance in late winter, along with sugar, coffee, apples, beans, onions and other staples, but in to&n they are not "laid in" for the winter as formerly to the profit of the dealers at the cost of the family. It is a poor way to get along, living out of little paper bags and packages, cans and cartons; and a costly one withal. But the habit of doing so has become a firmly established custom. It would make an interesting story to figure just how much a family of five would save between November 1 and May 1 by buying all possible food supplies in advance for the six months' period. , V'k Or Election the Acid Test. The ability to make entrancing speeches on political subjects and draw vast crowds of en- husiastic auditors, has won many a party nomination, but in presidential campaigns has cored notable failures to win elections. The xperience of James G. Blaine, the darling of Lll republican campaign orators, and of Mr. Jryan, who has thrilled democratic mass meet- ng9 time without number, are instances that !ccur at once to the mind. Brilliance, eloquence and magnetic person lity are not enough for the American people uhen thev are choosing a president. They go peeper into the character of candidates. A Profitable Custom Abandoned. "To every thing there is a season, and a ime to every purpose under the heaven," says she Preacher. Fortunate are those who know fhe time when it comes. A generation ago the Erfce to provide for the family s needs during he winter was before winter came, and goodly tores were laid by irt cellar and smokehouse, itcherj and barn, to keep the family well fed intil the earth should again yield its crops. It ii not so now in the cities, except in the matter if fuel. The average family buys its table sup lies from dav to day or week to week in small Ittantities and pays always the highest market rice. Jt otatocs, flour ana meat, tne prime iouu The Interchurch "Drive." Today will begin the greatest co-ordinated movement ever undertaken by the Protestant churches. For one week every Protestant church organization in America will devote its full power and energy to an intensive effort aimed at securing money to carry on church work. Denominational lines are not broken down in this movement, ' nor is any tenet of dogma or creed obliterated. ( Leaders 'of the churches have simply de cided that all can do together much better than each can do singly the big work they have in view. Details have been" worked out carefully, each has assumed or been apportioned the amount it is to raise among its membership, and all will share alike in the undesignated gifts. Frnds so obtained are to be applied to carry ing on the work of the institutions fostered by the church, to the extension of Christianity through support of missionary effort, and in general to the purposes for which organized religion stands. The benefits' that will come from this simul taneous effort arc obvious. The ground has been carefully prepared through various means of propagation of the central thought; a thorough survey has been made of the situation as a whole and as applied to 'each particular de nomination, and the general plan as well as its details based on the information so obtained. This is a new and significant departure for the church. Hitherto the plan of "voluntary contribu tions" has been relied upon, and while very large sums of money have been so raised, the amount is pitiably small in comparison with what is actually ieeded. Under the' present arrange ment the gifts will be voluntary offerings, but the case will be presented with more of appeal, to the end that the church members will be helped in realizing more completely their obliga tion. Salvation will continue to be free, but the cost of spreading the gospel must be met some how, and: "What shall it profit a man if he gain the world and lose his soul?" In Omaha all is ready for the big move, and the workers feel confidence in the success of their effort. The outcome will in a sense be a fair measure of the sincerity and devotion of the Protestant church membership of the United States. Omaha's Tuesday Musical Club. One agency for the cultivation and dissemi nation of artistic knowledge to which Omaha owes (considerable of its cultural advancement is the Tuesday Musical club. The natural out growth of a smaller and more exclusive organ ization, originally limited in membership to a comparatively few earnest students of music, it has come to be a most important factor in the city's social life. At a time when the business of bringing here the great musicians of tiie world, tha't they might charm and enlighten those who otherwise could not hear then;, was falling into decay, th:s organization shook off the limits of its original form, took over the greater work, and has accordingly prospered. It is in no sense a money-making institution; its members have a distinct advantage in being preferred for-sittings at any concert or recital under the club's auspices, but whatever of gain is netted in the club's exchequer is used for the advancement" of the aYt to which it is devoted. The season which closed last night has been perhaps the most brilliant of its history, because of the energy and good management of the ladies who directed the club's activities. Omaha has had much of direct benefit as a result of this organization's activities, and it is encouraging to know it is already laying plans for even greater things in ftie future. Its service to the community is greater than even its members realize. ' Mark Twain's Character. The editor of the Atlantic Monthly, while printing Gamaliel Bradford's article on Mark Twain in the April number, could not let it go without the following note on the title itself: The material essential to an intelligent es timate of Mark Twain's character will be found, of course, in Albert Bigelow Paine's monumental and very human biography. That footnote in itself is sufficient to excite a lively curiosity in the mind of the reader as to what Mr. Bradford has written to call forth such an editorial suggestion. The text fully re wards that curiosity. It is a brilliant, steely, ap preciative estimate of a many-sided man, with a shocking conclusion that leaves one with a feel ing of almost bitter disappointment, and uncer tain whether the disappointment should be charged to Mark Twain or the wTiter. Cer tainly nothing so frankly condemnatory of Mark's irreverence has appeared for many years, nor any review which carries with it so deep a sting for those who loved Mark Twain. A Much Married Sport. How many times should a divorced man be permitted to marry. The notorious "Kid McCoy" is about to marry the ninth time to the seventh woman. From one of his wives he was divorced three times. A man six women have been unable o live with would certainly be rated a bad risk in matrimonial insurance. It would seem that for the good reputation of marriage as an restitution, as well as for the protection of susceptible women, some restric tion might properly be placed on the marrying proclivities of persons temperamentally unable to stay hitched. Omaha's building record still 'shows up pretty well, but nothing what it would be if men and material were available. Churches helped wonderfully in the war drives; now we will see if they have forgotten how. We had an early fall, so perhaps this late spring is sent as compensation. ' Texas potatoes at $12 the bushel sound al most like a Cleopatra drink. Our navy on the Pacific may be useful after all. A Line 0 Type or Two Haw to til LI a. M the aulas taM trtere thai nay. T SONG. I thought my heart was broken Beyond the power to mend; By many a sign and token, X thought my love at end. But soon I saw the glory . Of one not seen till then Ah, that's another story: My heart was whole again. LAURA BLACKBURN. IN "The Royal. Vagabond," the number which draws the most applause, we are in formed, is the interpolated Gilbert and Sullivan lyric, "The Flowers That Bloom in' the Spring." In New York, "Ruddygore" has passed its hun dredth performance. Sometimes the public is not such a d. f. as it looks. Why the Editor Disconnected IIIm Phone. (From the Dalton, Neb., Delegate.) Mrs. Lally and Mrs. Junken were absent, and all those that were present had a very enjoyable time. UNRELIEVED pessimism rather shocks us. In spite of everything we are willing to look on the bright side. We are willing to agree that, in some previous incarnation,, we may have in habited a crookeder world than this, ' THE CANNY MC MIX FAMILY. Sir: It seems that a member of the w. k. McMix family has made his pile here in Okla homa City and built a large building for a monu ment as well as an investment. A canny bunch, those- McMixes. N. G. B. THE lad was soliciting customers for the Sat. Eve. Post on the Midway. One professor who was willing to help him along inquired, "But what is the Saturday Evening Post?" GOVKRNMENT BY THK PKOPLK. (Walter Graham Sumner, "The Forgotten Man") The truth is that cupidity, selfishness, envy, malice, lust, vindietiveness, are constant vices of human nature. They are not confined to classes or to nations or to particular ages of the world. They present themselves in the palace, in the parliament, in the academy, in the church, in the workshop ind in the hovel. They appear in autocracies, theocracies, ' aristocracies, democ racies, and ochlocracies all alike. They change their masks somewhat front age to age and from one form of society to another. All history is only one long .story to this effect: men have struggled for power over their fellow-men in order that they might win the joys of earth at; the expense of others and might shift the bur dens of life from their own shoulders upon those of others. It is true that, until this time, the proletariat, the mass of mankind, have rarely had the power and they have not made such a record as kings and nobles and priests have made of the abuses they would perpetrate against their fellow-men when they could and dared. But what. folly it is to think that vice nnd passion are limited by classes, that liberty consists only in taking power away from nobles and priests and giving it to artisans and peas ints, and that these latter will never abuse it! They will abuse it just as all others have done unless they are put under checks and guarantees, and there can be no civil liberty anywhere un less rights are guaranteed against all abuses, as well from proletarians as from generals aristo crats, and ecclesiastics. How to Keep Well By Dr. W. A. EVANS RULERS everywhere might borrow a leaf from the statecraft of Christophc V., who stalled off indefinitely a social revolution by the work ers. "II nc les soulageait point ni lie pas op primait davantagc, alin qu'ils fusscnt toujours une menace et jamais 1111 danger." O DEATH, WHERE IS THY STING-A-LING-A-LING? Ad of a Valparaiso, Ind., mortician.) Frank A. LePell, by his calming influ ence, the kindly atmosphere of sympathy which he radiates and an unobtrusive tact, soothes the mourner's sorrow and inspires them with hope even when the present is clouded with misery and the future appears as a dreary vista of loneliness. HITHERTO the pride of a young mother in her first-born has been considered the apex in pride; but this is as nothing compared with the pride of an amateur brewer who believes that his product has a recoil of at least 8 per cent. THK GENU'S OK THE G.YIIDKX. Now does My Lady blithely go Out to her garde.i fair. The tiny potent seed to sow And rear with tender care. With skill she wields the rake and hoe On each-presumptuous weed, And makes the cooling streams to flow To meet her nurslings' need. To bugs she's a relentless foe! She notes each insect pest, Then Paris green, or strong Bordeaux Soon sends it to its rest. She tends the corn and peas, also The cabbages and beans, And watches anxiously a row Of superfine Swiss greens. When all the walks and borders show What wealth her toil attends, How lavishly she doth bestow Her largess on her friends! From daffodils to golden-glow. Each "plant's her special pot, And as each darling blossoms lo! It is the finest yet. Never we give otirselves with ho Return for what we spend. Love always brings us love, and so The garden loves its friend And yet My Lady doth not know Wbat best attests her art, For what she surest makes to grow Is love, within my heart! IRIS. HAY FEVER CAUSES CURES "I am subject to yearly attacks of hay fever," A. B writes. "What can 1 do to .prevent them? Every year it becomes easier to answer questions similar to this. Hay fever is ht two types that which comes in the spring and the regular August-autumn kind. As a rule spring hay fever is due to grass pollen, while that of the August-autumn type is due in the main to rag weed. 1 A sufferer can discover which polen causes his trouble by having skin tests made. The pollen vac cines prepared for making these tests are put out by the drug manu facturing" concerns, and any physi cian can get them. The method of testing is so simple that any physi cian can carry it out. The time to make tese tests ts now, months in advance of the hay fever season. In fact, it is already late to begin a campaign to ward off spring hay fever this spring. Having established which pollens ! are responsible, the next step is to test to see how sensitive the patient is. Tests are made with pollen ex tracts diluted as little as 1 to 100, with other dilutions of 1 to 100,000, and with still other dilutions in be tween. Having1 determined the smallest dose which will cause a reaction treatment to decrease sensitiveness is begun. The treatment consists in getting the patient used to this pollen by injecting: him hypodermic ally with very small doses of it doses too small to cause any reac tion. If time is pressing the Injec tions should be given at four-day in tervals. If there is plenty of time the interval should be one week. The amount injected should be in creased slightly each week. After many treatments the patient be comes so accustomed to pollens that he no longer reacts to them. If a case comes on at the hay fever season and has the typical symptoms of hay fever it can usually be presumed that the case is one of hay fever and the only testing that need be done is for sensitiveness to pollen. The number of hay fever sufferers who chase the climate cure runs into the thousands, the amount of money they spend annually into the millions. The only proper basis for the selection of a hay fever resort is a skin test made on the subject, not on the resort. The question is not whether Jones gets relief at Saltair, but whether this particular individual will. The only way to know that is for the person inter ested to have himself tested and then to go somewhere where his pet aversion does not abound. Some hay fever subjects develop real bronchial asthma toward the latter part of the hay fever .season, some still earlier in the course of !the complaint. These cases fall into two groups. In one group there is so much pollen and the patient is so sensitive that the pollen gets into his tubes and sets up a condition there similar to the well known con dition in the nose and eyes. There is nothing for persons in this group to do but stay in looms, the open windows of which are cov ered by damp cheese cloth, and to wear veils. As soon as the season is over they should begin vaccina tion, so as to be ready for the next season. The second group develop bronch ial asthma, because they are highly susceptible to the poisons from cer tain bronchial tube bacteria, as well as to pollens. Therefore, all hay fever subjects who are accustomed to developing bronchial astham be fore the season is over should have skin tests made for susceptibility to ordinary air bacteria. ODD AND INTERESTING. IF you have any welding to do, you might see a Davenport man who, we suspect, is in that business. He advertises: "Oxyacetylene welding. I do all kinds of general welding. Welding a specialty." THEY'RE FROM MISSOURI. (From the Tulsa Oil Journal.) The druggists of Carthage, Mo., refuse to take out licenses to sell whisky on the ground that whisky is not a medicine. They say that they are not going to become bar tenders to suit the federal authorities, and , if the government wants to sell whisky let it establish its own dispensaries. They also claim that the government license of $25 per year still shows that "red lieker" is looked on as a beverage and not a medicine. OUR attention has been called, by P. D. P., to a topic that has not yet been discussed the topic of seams and their orientation. Often, he says, they go round and round, like stripes on a barber's pole; again they diverge in manner to suggest an ineffective pig trap; not infre quently they travel this way and that. Almost never do they parallel and point due north. BIVALVE WHEEZE. "Dear Blue Points and Cotuits. say, Have modern fashions come your way? Are all the little oyster heads Hep to the wisdom of twin beds?'' "We little Blue Points rest as well on half a cot as half a shell; But those Cotuits, sir, so sizable. Find modern fashions more advisable." PAN. ODD how things, come and go. Pajamas now are confined almost entirely to the stage. A SLAVE TO CONVENTION. CKrom the Clayton, N. M.. News.) While the bride has not forgotten all the customs of her native country, she is very welcome to our country. Upon her arrival here she created some excitement by kissing some of her husband's gentle man friends. But It did not take her long to discover the unconventionality of that practice, and she now refuses to kiss anyonie but her husband. "I KNOW A BANK." Sir: For assistant treasurer of the Academy I nominate Miss Iva Stocking of Lindenwood, 111. C. A. Y. "CHRIST Church Sold; Big Auto Store on Site." Continuing the good work of running the devil out of gas. WOMEN are queer. They can't sec the dif ference between playing eighteen holes of golf and digging eighteen shrub holes in a gardcr. B. L. T,. Making Bran Bread. G. H. writes: "I inclose a recipe for bran bread. It is very palatable as well as healthful: Two cups bran, two cups graham or whole wheat, one-half cup sugar, two-thirds table spoon soda, two-thirds tablespoon salt, one egg, two cups sour miik- or buttermilk, one-half cup light brown molasses, one cup seeded dates; nuts if desired. Mix dry ingredients and wet ingredients separately, then combine. Add nuts and dates last. This makes two loaves. Bake about r0 minutes in a slow oven. The measurements are all level." Ben Franklin as a Dry. J Mrs. R. A. B. writes: "In 'Walks in London, by Augustus J. C. Hare, may be found the following: 'In a house opposite the Sardinia chapel Benjamin Franklin lived while in London when he was a journeyman printer. Franklin relates that he drank only water, while the other workmen, some 50 inmunibor, were great drinkers: but he used to be much stronger and could carry far greater weights than his compan ions, and this greatly excited their surprise. Thev called him the "water American." ' " REPLY. Drinking alcoholic beverages les sens the productiveness of labor, es pecially in hot weather. ADVERTISEMENT I SHE DYES HER OLD GARMENTS LIKE NEW 1 The Russian eats on an average once every two hours. In some parts of central Africa tt is considered respectful to turn the back to a superior. In France the doctor's claim on the Estate of a deceased patient hits precedence of all others. A curious feature of the theaters In Australian cities is that they are mostly all equipped with billiard rooms. The surface of the earth In one geographical mile "falls away" or departs from a straight line 8.04 inches. Some 40 miles from Barcelona there is an actual mountain of very pure sale, which is hewn out in the open air, like stone from a quarry. Buffon calculated that, if a pair of herrings could be left to breed and multiply undisturbed for a pe riod of 20 years, they would yield an amount of fish equal In bulk to the globe on which we live. In some parts of Scotland the fish ermen very frequently call them selves by their wives' surnames. Thus James Smith marries Mary Green. He calls himself, even in business affairs, "James Smith Green." Whisky, which 500 years ago was used chiefly as a medicine, was originally manufactured exclusively in Scotland, the term being confined to the liquors distilled in the High lands from barley. AN EASTER STORY. The baser passions of manKlnd Could not affect the Strange Man' mind, Nor play the heartstrings In hl bread. Hate. lOnvy, lrlile and all tha real Of Krror'a malconnnted brood, (So runa the tale), multitude. Were ruffled lit their lack of aktll To twang a tone or thrum a thrill. Amidst tha disappointed throne i.ove, drcsa.-d in Meekness, nma along. And all the string commenced to shaka I.Ike wlml-klaacd waves upon a lake. A Hong of Kladncss. minus words. Resounded like the chant of blrda. XpxI came a peal of hurmony Filled with (he soul of Liberty. Rfnvolcnco began to flow In measures ptanlpnlmo. An HltrulHtlo melody KxproBxed the themo of Sympathy. Rerntenees alow minor atralns On Sorrow's salutary pulna Were followed by a gleam of Hope Portraying lifeboats and a ropi The noble pasalons were ung I'pon the harp with hlnnainga strung, While all the baser pawdotiH nought To ucutrulizc each slnlew thought. Foraiveneaa, like a lullaby. Attuned to Mercy's lofty key. t'ame lent, aod with a soft amen The godlike atringa were Btlll again. lie wished hit listeners to feel KmntionR of a higher zeal; They, misinterpreting the same. And wrongly thinking that he came To cunt reflections on each one Tty odious comparison. Resolved, with evil thinking rife. To forthwith take away his life. And. with their self -conviction filled. They etruck. but ju.it his body Jkllled. Then anthems from his harp arose To cheer his friends and help his foes; And since. In each recurring spring, The songs of iove on Easter ring Immortal mu:iic to the glad, But discord to the wilful bad. WII.US HUnSPKTH. Eve Strain J : a i Lavoptik M t- nmPW Kanofif. in eases of rur v eye strain there is nothing equal to simple witch haiel, camphor, Hy drastis, etc., as mixed in Lavoptik .... ,.,Dol, Tha witch hazel iw.A I vjc moan. - ----- - - - camphor soothe and relieve the in- r . . . l J a I . iL flammation; tne nyarasus ana om. ingredients have tonic and anti septic propertUs. One man reports that TWO applications helped great ly when his eyes were so bad ho could not read without pain. W e guarantee a small bottle Lavoptik to help ANY CASE weak, strained or inflamed eyes. Aluminum eye cup FREE. Sherman & McConnell Drug Stores and all leading driiK- srists. Diamond Dyes" Make Faded, I Shabby Apparel so Fresh j and Stylish I Don't worry about perfect re sults. Use "Diamond Dyes," guar anteed to give a new, rich, fadeless color to any fabric, whether it be wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed eoods dresses, blouses, stockings, skirts, children's coats, feathers, j draperies, coverings. The Direction Book with each package tells so plainly how to dia mond dye over any color that you can not make a mistake. To match any material, have drug gist show you "Diamond Dye" Color Card. ! J ' Suppose the jtpcllo Joes con us both a Hult mora Demonstration ' Daily TERMS I A. HOSPE Omaha An Amazing Musical Performance on enjoy hearing Heifetz, the phenomenal, play' the violin. Then think what added plea sure would be yours if you could accompany him or have a great pianist accompany him. You can do this in your own home on Mpollo-phone Combining tkePhonograph cmdtheApdhTber It plays all records and rolls. In one case you have an artistic piano the famous Apollo Player Piano and a high-grade phonograph. It plays any record, any roll, either separately or together, and is under the control of one person. The perfect synchronization allows you by means of special rolls to play the accom paniment of great vocal or instrumental artists. This music house which has through service earned the confidence of the music-loving - public, invites you to a demonstration of the ' Apollo-Phone. No obligation. I i I I Please tell me about the Apollo- Phone without obligation on my I part. ' Name Address 1513 Douglas Street ttsto L ' The Art & Music Store YOUR OLD INSTRUMENT TAKEN IN EXCHANGE.. SANATORItr This institution is the only one in the central west with separate buildings situated in their own grounds, yet entirely distinct, and rendering it possible to classify cases. The one building being fit ted for and devoted to the treat ment of noncontagious and nonmen tal diseases, no others being admit ted; the other Rest Cottage being designed for and devoted to the exclusive treatment of select mentl cases requiring for a time watchful care and special nursing. Change of Dodge and Harney Lines Owing to the grading of the Dodge Street Hill it will be necessary to TEMPORARILY change the routes of the Dodge and Harney Lines. Commencing Sunday, April 25th, and until further notice, these lines will run as.follows: The Dodge Line will leave 10th Street at Harney, go west to 16th Street, north to Cuming, west to 20th Street, where it will continue on its usual route. . The Harney Line will leave 20th Street at Farnam proceed west to 24th, north to Dodge, where it will con tinue on its usual route. Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Railway Co.