p.l THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1920. .The Omaha Bee j DAILY (MORNING ) EVENING SUNDAY ' THE BEK PUBUSHING COMPANY, NELSON B. UPDIKB. Publi.ar. 18 i'' MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 'Ui ?V aandata fr-m, or wtlr Tha Ba H a mamicr. ( t(u,1mt antiUM I (ha iim for niMh-atlon of aU nun duratchat , to it or Mt athtnnM wdHi in thit raw. and alw tha t 'i!r1 "T K" - An riibu at pnbitcaUoa af our utal ' UmtokM ara aaaa mmad. LT r- ; J BEE TELEPHONES ,! ml Miun Art for tha tr- "Wm" t Funicular Tmm TlHitod. lyier 1UUU Far Nicbt aa4 Siataajr Service Call: 'Jjdltorttl SuputMnt ............ Trlw lmwt .a-irruiauna impaiunaM '...... JadnrUalnt DapaitiMtit ........ OFFICES OF THE BEE '' . Bom Offloa: 17th and Faraaui Tvlw 10ML Tjlet 100M. ..Council Bluffs, 1 aVott St. jrara Ilranak Offlwa: h Sit I Brattk Sid Walnut U liunniti I . Out-ef-Tawa Official Tori Offlca SM fifth An. Waahlnirton Mil It t ill Uorta atta Statu BMt imi o aa. I'arla Franca 4M Boa Bl. Haaoaa 11 3' JAe Bee's Platform - 1. New Union Patsenfer Station.,, v 2. A Pino Ltae from tke Wyoming Oil Field! to Omaha., 3. Continued improvement of tha Ne . , braaka Highways, including tha pave ment of Main Thoroufhfaree leading into Omaha with a Brick Surface. 4. A short, low-rate Waterway from tha Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocaan. 5. Homo Rule Charter for Omaha, witk City Manager form of Government. P FAITH AND HOPE JUSTIFIED. Ibl Political reviews, technical magazines, trade ?. journals, daily newspapers, public speakers, jjteveryform of general expression today teems rwith a discussion of abnormal conditions. One iy another cause is ascribed, and the remedies Jproposed vary in degree, but all tend to the same jf And. The country is safe, and all will be well t eventually. That this conclusion is reached by ffisll is only a proof of the general optimism, lis People are surviving the high prices, short Supplies and other ills and annoyances, sustain ing with fortitude if not with patience the op pressive presence of profiteers of all kinds, and rjnuddling through the morass cheerfully looking 'for the solid ground on which to press their feet ;lt is not that businesses not good, nor will re- main eood. The prospects are for a number of Hyears of continuous activity in all lines of pro Seduction. Projects for the future are numerous hand attractive, and are getting reasonable sup port, to the end that they will develop in time 3i into genuine enterprises of merit. Never were jxso many well considered plans for the ex pansion of business before the public at one .time. V Ijj-i What li supporting this mood at a time when jfeveryone is more or less disturbed as to just ijjwhat may take place? It is the abiding faith of "Sthe American people in their own genius, the t rjfunconquerable hope for better things that has Always animated and spurred them on. "Jazzing . ground" may ornay not be at an end, but under 1 ;i he surface disturbance rests the big body of ;the people, "firm and clear in its determination. i'A sweeping change may. impend, .as some ap prehend, but it will be only a change in which :jall will share and to which the great majority jkwill give their consent ijf:; This faith and hope have justification, for ''only when the whole body moves is progress "made. Americans are going forward, and have ; ;the courage to do so. Their institutions will '. Endure, because they are founded on a basis to jrtvhich the people themselves adhere. Only i wheh the people prove false to themselves is jlthere danger for the nation. Medals for French Mothers. French mothers of. five or more children are to be awarded medals bronze for five, sil ver for eight, gold for ten. If decorations will prove an antidote for race suicide ,jn France, what will restore the natural course of married life in America? Not two breakfasts a week together, ob viously; nor the entrance of women into all the avocations, which makes babies a liability in stead of an asset Even the entrance of women into full political privileges promises no reform in this vital matter. .' Perhaps we shall be just as well off in the Mong run to let nature have its way. It has never failed to find a way out yet, since man first went out with a club and battered his woman into subjection. The refined selfishness of society ultimately will thwart itself. :! Let the Experiment Develop. ?Vi Now; that the supreme court of the United rStates has declined to interfere with the experi tPments of government set on foot by the Non jjiPartisan league of North Dakota, we may ex Vpect to see a considerable impetus given to the i propaganda of the league. Efforts will surely jl fee made, not. only 'in Minnesota, where tha 1 league is actively at work, but in other states, io 'Secure the adoption of the plan for state-owned anks, mills, mercantile-establishments, news papers, and the like. This movement is sup ported by the customary arguments, glibly re peated by those who have not inquired, or do rnot care to know just what is involved.- Behind tit all lurks the desire of one group to prosper at rthe expense of another. The underlying theory 'Is the same that animated the bolsheviki in E their ill-starred efforts at establishing a Paradis .where work would be unknown. As The Bee then advised, that the test of the idea be left to .. the Russians to work out so now it suggests if r- Irhay be wise to watch the course in North Da- jh.kota-a little longer, until - something more 'definite may be learned of how these business Undertakings of the state work out. If human , (experience should be reversed through the ap rplication of Townley's doctrine, and a new sys Ir.tem of industrial life be effectually established, Nebraska and other great food producing states f may follow, but until that time wisdom lies in ' ,jthe way of holding to a safe anchorage. To follow Pope's advice: , tie not tne nrst ny wnom tne new is triea, Nor yet the last to cast the old aside. Wholesome Discipline. The rejection at Chicago of both sets of national delegates from the Kansas City dis trict after a contest before the committee showed fraud on, both sides, is evidence of a new order of things. Heretofore it has been the custom in the committees of both parties to decide' contests' according to factional bias. In the convention' which nominated McKinley, for instance, contested delegation after delega tion from the south wenfc to the major on the demand of Judge Thompson after Mark Hanna captured the committee. It was then simply, a case of might making right, factional politics submitting -to-the customs and practices of 'war alone. A better day seems to have arrived. A dis orderly district has .been disfranchised in the place of all places where it most ardently de sires to be represented. The action will have a salutary effect, and the committee is to be congratulated on the wholesome discipline it has administeresi to the rowdy element of Kan sas City. The Saving Conservative Body. - The senate of the United States is now, and for a generation has been, the best abused legis lative body in the world; always because it has not done something greatly desired. Yet its actions, or refusal to affirm actions of the lower house, which have been most roundly criticized in years past, now almost without exception stand forth as unquestioned wisdom. ' . Our fathers were animated by sound con siderations of prudence when they established the senate as a brake upon the hasty en thusiasms of the house. They foresaw also the political exigencies which so often impel the house, elected every two. years, to do unwise things to appease transient clamor for doubtful legislation. The senate remains, and in our judgment will continue to remain, the Bulwark of sound con servative public opinion. Sweetening the Editor. ( The Utah-Idaho Sugar company is singularly frank in its business dealings with country newspapers. In a letter to an Idaho paper, en closing an order for-an advertisement it dis interestedly remarks that it "is planning to ex tend its advertising activities," and adds: The medium we will most naturally choose is the paper that is friendly and loyal to . . . our own organization in particu lar. It is our intention to read your paper, with a view to learning your editorial and general attitude toward us, and we trust it will prove such as to warrant future business profitable to us both. - Certainly a commercially suggestive epis tolary communication to the editor, but rather out of date. The modern idea is to advertise where there is hostility to the product. But this company apparently believes all editors like "sugarl" ' ft' 4: Emigration and Immigration. During the latter half of 1919 emigration to ;t Shis country was only one-fifth of what it was f 'during the same period in 1913, while the num- ifber of aliens returning to their native land was f. - :; greater. i:a;ySix nations increased their emigration to us y mc ranee, juexico, japan, jrortugai ana opuusn 'j;?America; while 36 decreased, some of them iargely. Italy dropped from 179,000 to 30,000; "Poland from 87,000 to 867; Russia from 29,000 ty 1,200. - I' The largest increases in departures of aliens iirom our shores were recorded by Italians, ; f Greeks, Roumanians and Bulgarians. Bureau of ' T'lrmmigration officials say prohibition is making I'-many peoples hesitate about making the United ' .States their homes; i There is no time like Spring, T When life's alive in. everything, ;,!nd'the freshness of nature's resurrection from Hht deathlike rigidity of Winter brings universal ,oy. Let us hope its weather may continue . through June before the heats of summer come ; sand we must cry w'ith the author of ''Ninety "nine in the Shade:" to for a lodge in a garden of cucumbers! ' O for an iceber or two at control! ?0 for, a valfi that at midday. the dew. cumbers! i O for a pleasure trip up to the pole.! The coal bin no longer attracts domestic attention. Interest now centers on the refrigera tor and itsstal comfort, : w- General Pershing's Admirable Conduct Noting the abandonment of the campaign in behalf of General Pershing's nomination for the presidency, the Sun and New York Herald com ments on the general's deportment while his friends were -seeking support for him. Every one Of them must feel gratified by what the Sun says,' which follows: As a receptive candidate f6r the nomina tion General Pershing bore himself with dig nity, with tact and with discretion. He did not pretend that he feared the office of presi dent He did not pose as one who believed that above all other men he was called to fill the office. He did. not belittle that office or himself by feigning reluctance to consider his occupany of this highest of all political posts as f possibility or even a probability. ..When he was asked if he would be a candidate his answer was. in effect, that if his fellow citi zens wanted him for president he would per form the duties of the office to the best of his ability. Having declared himself in this man ner without presumptuousness and . without mock modesty. General Pershins went on about his duty as a soldier of the republic, which at the moment called him on a military inspection tour which offered comparatively few opportunities for self-advertisement General Pershing's bearing throughout this incident has been such as to increase the esteem in which his fellow citizens hold him. America Has a Super-Gun. Only the sudden end of. the war, says a Washington -dispatch, kept a German city from being bombatded by an American gun jp miles away. .While most of the world was skeptical as to the German "terror gun," which was drop ping shells into Paris 'from a distance of 75 miles, gunnery experts of the United States tackled the problem from a scientific stand point and soon solved the secret The weapon they have produced Is reported to have a range of a little over 110 miles. The incident is of little momentlave as it shows that the applica tion of science and skill to overcoming problems involved in warfare is not peculiar to any one nation. Americans , had -devoted themselves to the solution of difficulties encountered in peace times, but without entirely neglecting the theory of warfare. "When the necessity spurred them on, the trained warriors of this country, with scientists enlisted in the service, produced weapons that would have exceeded those of any other combatant, had the war continued. With the deadly gas that was not used, and ' the super-gun that is. only fired in in experimental way, the Yankees were ready to add quite a bit of interest to proceedings along the Rhine. Now impend the excitements and anxieties of the season-of presidential nominations, al ways a time when stirring incidents arouse the people to keenest interest Mn the news of each day's doings where national history is being made. ' ' . ' "' ' " A Line 0 Type or Two Htw It tjw LI aa, M m taltM tall vfctr tM Mar. PHILOSOPHY FOR FISH, ' ' I- wm Gather ye minnows while ye may, . Old Time hla net la plying. The very fish that swims today Tomorrow may be frying. II. Materialist as Is the carp, Fish sometimes think him rather sharp; So tough his muddy browsings make him, The gods above are loath to take him, m. r - . "a Preparing for a higher sphere, , The pollywog looks dull and queer, But some day, fishes, this poor cuss Will have It over all of us. PAN. MR. HENNING reports thst President Wil son was in excellent humor. Probably he told both of his Indian stories. BA A A A! , Sir: Every weli organized Academy should have an official goat, upon whom, as upon the long-suffering proof-reader, should be laid the sins of his fellows. My nomination Is Baboo Ram, now at the University of Chicago. SPENCER. SPEAKING of" proof-readers, one of them was recalling yesterday that in the good old days of Editor Medill, an unfortunate comma-chaser was cast into outer darkness for making one word of "Pontet Canet." - STOCK IS LOOKING OOD. From the Plain vlile Kan., Times. i Mr. and Mrs. Earl Stock spent Satur day and Sunday visiting the . former's parents at Hays. . Stock of all kinds looks good. They came , off the wheat pasture In fine shape and now are on the grass. , r ' Have a Little Water 'With It? Sir: Tell that contrib who doubted the "down on one's knees" proposal to ship the hooch to Deacon ' Herb Thomas of South Han son, Mass. The deacon, Tie It known, was ever long and lean, and It is easy to Imagine that his lap was, as a seat, decidedly understaffed. But i that was the favorite and poetical perch of hla sweetheart, so who can blame her r first padding the way with tha eider-stuffed sofa pil low that Uncle 'Bill had brought home from the i centennial? In any case, saya the deacon, such was the setting when he popped. Down on hla knees? Tes, and on his lap and lower weskit i and as fine a black suit as ever searsroebucked out of a catalog, I swan. Say when. POM SAT. CHEVROLET Wins Race; No Fatalities." Headline. How disappointing. SPEAKINO OF CONRAD Sir: All this talk about Joseph Conrad re minds me of what Hugh Walpole told me about him. Conrad, as you and I know, speaks Eng lish so brokenly that It often Is difficult to un derstand him, yet Walpole says the man can in terrupt a conversation to dictate a chapter in a new story, -and speak with the surest English intonation. Walpole believes thetman possesses a dual personality. And speaking of Walpole, as I was, and still am. for that matter, reminds me that one morning last winter, In a Pullman wash room, I saw him wash his face and hands after donning shirt and collar, and then by some legerdemain place his cravat within his bisr fold; collar, adjusting the knot, all unmindful of the admiring clock and suit trade. W. S. Across the footlights at a free lecture in Burlington, la. NOW that someone has broached the subject of Conrad, we will let you in on a trick of his far-famed style. ' It is to work the reader up to a feverish expectation and then fail to deliver the goods. You look, for something terrific to happen, and instead you get a soul-state. When ever anything does happen, it is never so im portant as he has led you to expect Back to the Farm. From the Los Onglaze Times. ' v Personal -To my many friends, mis-; treated, cursed and $460 taken from me for a loan of only 1100, obtained to buy a man. transportation, I am starting east for Goshen, Ind., on Friday next to face the profiteer, on foot, in automobiles, by rail, anyway I can. Call at 610 Bryson bldg., and wish me Godspeed on my Journey. Elder brother. . WILLIAM KELLAWAY. : THAT TROLLOP NICOTINE. Sir: Those who call the goddess Nicotine an evil jatle doubtless point particularly to A." Hus Bey Tobacco Company of Chicago. W: S. "'WE were thrown out because of the. hue of our skin,' cried Hibbler." Convention note. A hue and cry, as 'twere. . Cook's Dash for the Pole.' Sir: The animals of Yellowstone Park, never molested, .are quits tame, particularly some of the bears, which came up to the hotels and camps to feast off the table leavings. A special train of sleepers and diner, carrying tourists-, arrived at the park and was sidetracked, while members of the party made the trip through. The second cook on the diner, a lanky colored boy, was an ardent fisherman, and never missed an opportunity to drop a line. Daybreak found him at the edge of a trout stream. The fish were so voraoious that he had to hide behind a tree to bait his hook. The first fish had Just been landed when a crackling noise in tha bushes attracted the cook's attention, and he saw a large bear emerge from the thicket and amble toward "him. Suddenly the bear rose, but mora suddenly the fisherman left that vicinity, and broke all records for the hundred yard dash. A short distance away there was a camp of school teachers, and the sleeping tent was directly in the path of the terrified cook. Entering the tent he collided with the center pole, and, keeping On, carried the pole out on his shoulder, pulling down the canvas on the dressing pedagogues. OLD TIMER. OLD readers may smile reminiscently, and new ones will be tickled to learn, that J. F. Bales & Son are dealers in hay t Circleville, O. . STILL, THAT'S A GOOD MANY PAGES. Sir: ' As I waa somewhat handicapped by be ing bedridden, four patrons of the Springfield Library beat me to E. F. Benson's "Up and Down," 333 pages. No, one troubled to use the paper cutter after p. 171. Do you imagine ihls gem In chapter five had anything to do with It? "And if in process of time we did not rally from staggering blows, we should all of us at an early age lis prone on our backs, squealing, till death mercifully put an end to our troubles." flHERJf. "BORN, to Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Morgan and wife ". . ." Oskaloosa Herald, Morganatic, would you say? Not Too Refined. t From the El Paso Herald. Wanted By refined, but heaitny, couple, furnished bungalow apartment in desirable section of city. THE Worst Advertising Agency is in San Francisco. "Truth in advertising," did you murmur? -IN WHICH THE GOVERNOR OF GEORGIA CLEAVES AN INFINITIVE TO THE CHINE. Appreciation of young Horace Wade. My Dear Horaces I have just learned, with a great deal of pleasure, of the fact that you are to soon have published a book, ' etCt ' HANDY & BLAND are funeral directors in Des Moines. A hard team to beat, eh? "JACK S PRATT COULD EAT Nd FAT." From the Boston Globe. John McLean, 30, clerk, 130 West Brook line street, and.Fatima Allen, 33, clerk, 38 -Upton street. ' RUSSIA'S deficit for 1920 will be so large that it is estimated in bushels. ' . AS for the fly, swatit! B. L. T. Home brews may be more numerpus than ever before, "but their Output U insignificant ifld not of a quality to. excite enthusiasm. . How to Keep Well By Dr. W.A. EVANS 8Mwttrt eaoNrniliif hfttaae, aanl on and prevention of dlaaaaa, tub mlttod to Dr. Evan y nadara af Tha Baa. will ba anairercd pcraoaaUy. sub ject to pmpar limitation, wbare a tamnod, addrvaaad anrlop la an ctaacd. Dr. Ktana wlU not make rilaa-naals or praertba for tadlvldoal rtlMaMt. Addreaa letter la care of The B. Copyright, It 19, by Dr, W. A. Evans. j EYE INJURIES. Gordon L. Berry tells us In tha Medieal Review of Reviews that each year in tha United States two out of each 1,000 persons of all ages suffer eye injury enough to be recorded. Those who are exposed to flying particles should wear protective gog gles. Those experienced In the sub ject have devised standards ' of re sistance against breakage from force and from heat, and standard frames as well. For those who work in industries wheae the danger Is great the wearing of light goggles may do more harm than good, as Anthony Pnnfield found when particles broke his glasses and drove particles Of glass Into his eye. Dr. Harold Clifford of Omaha con tends that farmers suffer from eye injuries more frequently than do men working in the industries. They need to wear goggles when hammer ing farm machinery, driving staples and even when threshing. In factories where men work In acid goggles should be worn. When acid gets Into the eyes they should be washed at once In running water. The sufferer should be laid On his back, the eyelids lifted and the eye balls thoroughly washed with wa ter. If nothing else Is available plunge the head In a bucket of wa ter and open the eyelids. Apply a salve bandage and send for the phy sician. In some places they neu tralize the acid by washing with a solution of bicarbonate of eoda. Then cocaine is applied and the eyes treated with olive oil and bandaged. Some advise scraping the plaster from tho wall if no other alkali Is available, making a solution of it and washing the eyes with that. Of course bicarbonate of soda solution Is better when it can be secured quickly. When 'the eyes are burned with caustic 60da or other rtlkali they should be washed with water as quickly as possible. Many firms handling caustlo alkalies keep acet ic acid at hand to be used to neu tralize the alkali. The acetic acid used should not be stronger than 2 per cent. If ordinary .-ommercial acetic acid is used one quart is add ed to fourteen quarts of water. The eyes are washed thoroughly with this solution, after which sweet oil is applied. No absorbent cotton should bo used, since fibers become imbedded in the wound. There are those who do not think acetic acid Is very effective In neu tralizing caustic soda, and mineral acids are too caustic to be employed. One firm distributed 12 runce bot tles of 2 per cent zinc sulphate solu tion around its plant. When a man gets an eye burn his eye is quickly flooded with .the zinc sulphate so lution and he goes at once to the dispensary- Then the eye is treat ed with cocaine and again washed thoroughly with the zinc sulphate solution. The eye Is then treated again ,with' cocaine, olive oil is ap plied and co.ld compresses are put on. The zinc sulphate method Is more effective, less Irritating and more antiseptic than the dilute acteio acid method. ,; - . May Be Scarlet Fcvor Case. A. J. writes: "Will yott please tell me the. cause "and remedy for the skin of the hands and feet peeling off? The skin seems to dry up and peel off on the sides and bottom of the feet and also on the hands. The skin appears to be worse after bath ing." REPLY. - v Be certain that you are not con valescing from scarlet fever. In some cases peeling is the first indi cation that a supposed minor illness has been scarlet fever. If scarlet fever is ruled out you have a .skin disease for which you should see a physician. . Colon Bacilli Infection. W. A. W. writes: "My child 4 years old has repeated attacks of fever. No other localizing symp toms. Lasts two or' three days. Cause obscure. Intervals of weeks with perfect health. Was told It Is pyletis. What' are the usual eymp- Wants "The Man of the Hour." Omaha, June 1. To the Editor of The Bee: The crucial period of tho world's history is at our very door. Wars and their attributes have been tha deciding factors in all great questions since tha fall of man. Tha great conflict through which wa have so recently passed has, In a manner, demonstrated to the world that It has been tried and found wanting. Within the coming several months tha people of America will be called upon to determine whether" a continuation of former principles shall be t,he basts on which to build, or their overthrowing and super seded with the opposite of savagery, butchery and the furthering of hell In its magnified form. Within the group of aspirants for leadership of the aeveral political parties are to ba found true and dis junct types of men ably qualified to further the interests of the respec tive causes. The results, so far, In the various states holding primaries plainly show that the astute politic ian has lost but little of his sub tilt y. They also have proven that the. power of money la not the greatest of factors. That the American peo ple are seriously weighing questions of . the day is also concurrent with former demonstrations. . The literal meaning of the ma terial names of the two leading par ties are synonymous. We have no record of any marriage legalized ex cept that of man and wife; so why marry anything else political, social, religious, or what the case may be, where principle must be sacrificed. All speciflo issues cannot possibly be Incorporated within the platforms of either, party that are liable to ma terialize ' during the respective term of tha elected party. New develop ments constantly arise which di rectly confronts the party in power. To fuller the Interests for which wa fought, the dependable man at the helm should be the one who has had the 'moral courage to cling to principle, regardless o'f party affilia tions, friends of special interests or directly for his political' and 'per sonal welfare. ' During the past num ber of months it has been my privi lege to personally Interview many people of the various walks of life from a number of states of the mid dle west. Ninety per cent of such, after the elimination of the "would bes," declared themselves favorable to William Howard Taft but "we hear nothing about him whether he would accept," etc., was the almost universal rejoinder. Late develop- There's one lunch ftatllifcebetter than any other -s-sr Post Igasties are.dbod anytime V Famous Bare Feet Don't be ashamed of your feet. Socrates, the most intellectual man that ever lived, went barefoot nine months in the year. The other three months he doted on seclusion in his luxurious study, -where he type-wrote his famous lectures, essays, epigrams and near jokes. Cleopatra moved nonchalantly through all the most fashionable Egyptian resorts iit bare- feet. Helen's bare feet were the most beautiful of feminine pedal extremities, and her' steady, Paris, often laved them in the crystalline rivulets which flowed on and on through tha back wards of Troy.Gotijsnburg IadcDendcnt, A Hallmark Special $1.50 Here's a pair of nifty Cuff Button auitabl for buiineu or outing wear. They are gold filled with pearl centers cubttanlially constructed and nicely Cnithed. M Thit Hallmark Special, for tale la 7)0 Hallmark Store,' it produced k large quantities to meet the demand. That it why we can offer you luch a remarkable vslos. C. B. Brown Co. Diamond Merchant Jeweler i 16th and Faraass Sts. i toms of pylitls? Is it a disease com mon in childhood? Is it serious? REPLY. -The more usual . symptoms, are fever, pain, painful urination. It is much more common among girls than among boys. It Occurs fairly frequently. Very careful collecting and examining of the urine shows the condition to be due to an infec tion of the pelvis of the kidney, usually with colon bacilli. The con dition Is not serious in that it often threatens life. It Is difficult to cure and painful Ih many instances. ments conclusively prove, where l millions of dollars were spent simply for the nomination of a single Indi vidual, tells the story why" he Is un heard of. No law was ever enacted favorable to corporation, select few or set of men, but that it was at the expense of the other fellow. This applies to men of every walk of life and will continue to breed hatred and con tempt until a unity of principle is agreed upon and put Into practice. Considering the records, both past and. present, of those most con spicuously arrayed, with political achievements, can wa reasonably ex pect any deviation ..frcun fqrmer methods which we know haa kept the world in ignorance since history, should we select them as our stand ard bearer at this coming election. if wars are ever subjected as his tory only, it will be when we, as a free people, are not compelled to submit to political trickery. More progressive legislation favorable to humanity was enacted during the first four years of the Wilson ad ministration than any like period in decades. The man of The hour is the man who is broad enough to con sider mankind as one human family and act accordingly. Who can say .that Taft and Hoover are not men of such character and purposes? The riohest eoll is of no value if seed is not sown at the proper season. D. B. NEWCOMER. Should Have Begun Earlier. A. Mitchell Palmer follows distin guished democratic precedent by dropping his first name, tnitiaL and all. But he should also Tiave dropped some of his undemocratic notions, and begun sooner. Spring field Republican. For Rent Typewriters and Adding Machines of All Makes Central Typewriter Exchange . Doug. 4120 1912 Farnam St. Get a Comfortable COUCH HAMMOCK for the Porch or Lawn this Summer Our stock is Urge. Prices exceptionally moderate. Scott Tent & Awning Co. 15th and Howard Run A Car, Do You? r Upholstery All Soiled, It It? , Well, drive the car up to our plant, we will clean the upholstery like new. PHONE TYLER 345 DRESHER BROTHERS DYERS CLEANERS 2211-17 Farnam St. Extraordinary ' ' in " VALUE GIVING Unusual because of tne furniture which, will be of fered for your selection on Saturday x Massive Colonial Buffets, Extension Tables and Chairs in Golden Oak; Li brary Tables in Fumed and GoKTen Oak, A great many homes need Oak Furniture and for your benefit we are creating this opportunity to save handsomely. - . See This Display ! in our large windows choose the pieces that fit your needs then come pre pared to buy on' Saturday. BBBSO Bee Want Ads' Produce Results. Farm Efficiency Speedy transp'orta-; tion, of the unfailing kind, is necessary on the farm.' Every fanner knows this. Oldsmobile engineers . can furnish it. They have built a power ful, low-priced truck ' equipped with elec tric lights and ' an electric starter. The frame is made of : deep channel steel and it is equipped with Goodyear pneu matic cord tires. 1 t QtnJVfr' Omtti On December 2?1863, Goy. Alvih Sauiv ders, Mayor B. E. B. Kennedy, Augustus Kountze and George Francis Train broke ground for the Union Pacific A celebra tion was held and a bahquetgivien that night at the Herndon House The first rail was laid July 10,1865,and the first train of record run In November; 1865, from Omaha to Sailing's Grove, to 'celebrate the'completion of the first fifteen miles.; General W.T.. Sherman was a passenger on this train. 1 (You are invited to transact your banking business with a bank that was in business years before Nebraska had a single mile of railroad within her borders, a bsnk that has been actively identified with Omaha's developmenr.since its organixation.' f irst National Bankof.Omaha V I fStfaaj