Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 5, 1920)
r THE ' BEE: Of AHA, SATURDAY. JUNE I V The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY " ' r ' TBS BEB PUBU8HINO COMPANY, NELSON B. UPD1KK. Publisher. 11 1 MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A aaaoolaUd Tntt, of wttloh The Bee it umlur, ll er . (resttelr aotlUM ta tlx m tor publtoatloi of all new dlipatckt nillud lo It or lot otherwise credited la this papar. tad al lb tm Dtwt publtihed h drain. All rl(hu of publication, of on special ttspatobai are alio nml BEE Print Breae Sxehinm. uepsnaeni or TELEPHONES Aak for the . T 1- 1 AAA Panon WuUH a www For Night CaUe After 10 P. M.l . IdlinrlaJ Ztarartment ClreiiUUoB Department YdvariUUi- DoptrUnant ,..,. . OFFICES OF THE BEE lUlo Office: 17UI and raraaav 0OVJMI! Mffl 15 Scott St. t South Sid Out-of-Towa Offlcoai lf York SM Fifth Arai I Weehlnrto Cateaso Tflor JM01 Trier I008L Trier MOM. Mil 5 Bt 1SU Q flt Statu Bide. I Parta mace 4M Hue 81. Honor The Bee's Platform K , 1 New Union Passenger Station. 2. A PipaxLino from the Wyoming Oil Field to Omaha, r 3. Continued improvement of, thai Ne ' braika Highway, including the pae-v rnent of Main Thoroughfare loading . Into Omaha with a Brick Surface. A short, low-rat Waterway from the Corn Bait to the Atlantic Ocean. Home Rule Charter, for Omaha with City Manager form of Government. 1; -IV.', THE J0Y OF WORKING." One of the phases of the labor problem of $day getting considerable attention-hat to do flrith the interest the worker takes in his task. ijThe general trend of opinion is that modenfi methods of production have been so changed Ithat the man no longer has the interest in his ftsk that once, was an accompanirnVnt of labor. Jhis is inevitable: ", ;' la the days of hand work, or when handi craft yet was predominant in industrial pra tjietses, the artisan was essentially a creator. He ook the raw material and fashioned it into . jomething useful. The cooper, as an illustration, rived his staves from the bolt, shaved them into Iform, split the pole and dressed his hoops, cut ind shaped his heads, and set up the whole, jproducing keg, barrel, tierce or cask, the' work pi his own hands, skillfully directed by a brain Ithat could vision the completed article before ifio first touch of the tool? So with the car penter, in all tin divisions' of his trade, and all , own through the, long list of mechanics who "!iyere true masters of their craft Machinery jid away with all of this, and skill and training jwas diverted from the hand operated tools to fthofe driven by steam or other power. I' In modern factories the only skill now called for is manual eipertness in carrying on a single process, and often one of such tedium that the Blind is deadenedT rather than inspired by the toil. What joy can the worker in a great fac tory derive from carrying on a steadily repeated Operation of short duration throughout eight or ten hours of unremitting toil Picture to your-; jelf how much of exultation attends the "run sling down" of taps on bolts all day long, sev eral workmen employed in a "chain," each giv ing a. specified number of turns to the tap, till nally one sets it home with a wrench? is; Productive work should have in it some ele ment of the creative. In the "efficient" modern ictory this is lacking, almost entirely. That f , Jjrthe "joy" has been taken out of the ork. The happy solution will be found, in a ftctory where the hand and brain of man are aged in way that wilt employ the. natural faculties of man for doing things, and give the workman a chance to create as well ai to Frank L. Stanton sings in the Atlanta Con stitution: . Ef I wus dar " Whar Adam uster be, De ole High Cost Would never hit me! But right there was where the original high cost of living started, according to the Oriental Biblical traditional allegory of the origin of man. Under a'change of administration what cab inet officer will have the greatest opportunity to improve the work of his department? Say it one at a time or all together; the answer will be the same. N It must be a hard task to make a Memorial Day address at Gettysburg, and face the com parison that cannot be escaped. One of. the things republicans view with dis pleasure eleven southern states with a total of 168 delegates coming to Chicago with more than a hundred contests. These states now have 94 votes less hi the convention than they had eight years ago, and exceptipg one or two states, have little in view but federal patronage. "Gas" up another cent. But what's 10 cents on ten gallons? s, . . " v The republican party, it appears, is to treat the matter of prohibition as legally .settled by the adoption of the amendment .; There s every indication that the man who raises ten or fifteen bushels of potatoes this season for the ue of his. family Niext winter will be glad he did it,' and more than glad if circumstances permit him to raise a hog or two for his table use. There are hundreds of thousands, of people in the cities who wish they could raise butter and eggs and cream and sugar to tide them over from next Thanksgiv ing Day until the following Fourth of July. i Of the making of books there is no end, but the quality of the paper therein and of the covers thereonvVemind one 'of the 28-cent edi tions of 1914. ' . The president h not yet sent any message to Oregon thanking the democrats there for. fol lowing his orders. 1 . . N, It may be constitutionally correct to exempt the salaries of federal judges from taxation, but the decision to that effect is likely to be unpop ular." . " . X How the .Wilsonian influence has waned was shown by the senate vote on the Armenia man date. His appeal was rejected, 62 to-12. Only a dozen democrats could be cajoled into his support , merely manufacture. V Changing the Label. ; The current Saturday Evening Post, in a political article by Irvin Cobb, has a picture of beautiful young lady leading the democratic Sdonkey into the St Louis convention of 1916. ' BThe donkey is embellished with a shield carry ing thr words: "America First" That was . tfchen, under the guidance of the official admoni tJon of the gentleman who up to that time had fcept us out of war, we were pretending to be Iteutral in word and thought Pretending is tfght - y . . , Then the democratic donkey Was labeled ;America First" What label will be put on ; jMm at San Francisco this month, we wonder? 1 JIow would The League Over All" do?' lis; ., ;. '- - i - Ay Cause for Gratulation. "i The public is heartily glad the wage dif . .ferences of the street car men and the "company r to be settledNin a fair basis to both sides. wucn a disposition is fzi lor ine men, oest xor fte public, and best for the company. A strike t'is always a signal for hostilities a declaration 'f industrial war and war is always and in ' evitably costly to all who participate in it; and In public utlilities means a loss to the public :'as well. Like wars between nations, it "should pever be resorted to until all opportunities for .honorable adjustments of difference's have been' . titterly, exhausted. . i , Coal Needed at Home Going Abroad. ' T- 1 flAArWk i. . -r au vu iuui c mail A,uuJfUW ions OI COal The United States supreme courf decided that when the constitution said amendments must be ratified by the legislatures of the states, or by conventions, it meant what it said and not a referendum. A stubborn old document, and stout NPackers profits' are about 50 cents for each person or $2.50 a family, per year. That has no excessive appearance when we consider our ex penditures for meat during twelve months. What the retailer makes is something else again. "What will the harvest be" is a popular air on presidential row just now. , ' : An Atlantic City cop actually has compelled a beautiful maiden on the beach to cover her bare and dimpled knees. The vain thing had rolled her stockings down to sock height, and Wjhen the stern custodian of Atlantic City morals pulled the law on her, she just unrolled them upward until they reached hrer skirt. The Wealth of the. Mind. . When all is done and said, ' In th' end shall you find: I He most of all dotrrbathe in bliss, That hath a quiet mind; And clear from worldly cares, To deem can be content . - The sweetest time in all his life In thinking to be spent -v . ,' . t. r - '' Our wealth leaves us at death; Our kinsmen at the grave; But virtues of the mind unto , ' The heavens with us we have. ' Wherefore, for virtue's sake x --I can be well content, The sweetest time of all my life v To deem in thinking spent. Lord Vaux. rere exported from Hampton Roads. In April Jl ,200,000 tons went overseas. The April ship ments alone required 25,000 cars on the Nor jfolk & Western, Chesapeake & Ohio, and Vir ginia railroads all loaded at Pennsylvania and JWest Virgania soft coal mines. . : And while this was going on the Boston & JMaine railroad was paying $13.50 a ton for coal, Equivalent to $8.50 at the mine; with New Eng land factories constantly short of fuel, . snd .vessels in New York harbor paying $20 a ton. j; With desperately needed American coal ingoing to supply fuel to manufacture goods in foreign lands to compete with pur own factory products, and going at the rate of i00,000 'tons a month, it is not surprising that an em jjjbargo on coal exports is considered unless it would interfere with the administration policy . :J--f-A! 1. -A. T? jjof depleting our reiourceiV to make Europe trAanrrttfa f ! : fj.eMM.a 17 A nr aa4d axf XTaei TBtStJMr Xm ;nbunced, will go to San' Francisco to force a ;wine anrLbeer plank into the democratic plat jfornu When he and Bryan meet then will Icome the tug of war. , v , .. . - it 'Here and there a town or city shows a de ,f crease in population since 1910, and we feel i sorry. Bnt why? Maybe the lost population is 'now on the farm.'"' ".'.''- . Rome sat on her seven hills, white Omaha ;v cuts ben way to auit kr cpnvenience. Studied Comparative Values. We know a good story on an Irishman. We cannot tell it, because it s the type of story we find great difficulty -in elucidating. But we can indicate it and assume the liberty of doing so. An Irishman with something "on his hip strolled nonchalantly into an open cellarway. He fell with a splintering crash, and as he struggled upright from his recumbent position he felt the trickle of a liquid substance upon his bare skin. "My Godl" he said, as he set about to determine the extent and details of the accident, 'I hope it's blood." Public Ledger. . Editor Gets and Sees.' We went to Friend the 16th and got a good big dinner and saw the finest prospect for a big crop of wheat, the grass could not be better, the os is doing well, but the corn is not planted except in a few fields, too wet Crete Democrat, Envy's Mischievous Influenced A very large percentage of the discontent in the world, and there seems to be an unusually large amount of it just now, is due to envy. A man or a woman would endure almost any de gree of poverty and discomfort with equanimity if everyone else were in the same plight. It is the knowledge that other people are better off, as we figure it, that makes us unhappy. It we .knew that nobody had finer clothes, or a higher priced automobile, or more Liberty bonds or more prominence in the community than, we, we" should be perfectly satisfied with 6urlot, and, in fact never think anything about it.Ohi State Journal. - V v' It Has a "Kick." The dandelion nuisance, which used to cause the papk authorities a great deal of worry, has disappeared. It is announced that the noxious plant, which is classed as abiennial, is fast dis appearing from the face of the earth. The present demand for dandelion blossoms bids fair to exceed the' supply. V. "The parks everywhere are full of dandelion pickers,", says a park policeman. Yeast dealers also say that we have de veloped a sadden and unprecedented demand ' for yeast ' T , A scarcity irf -five and ten-gallon casks is re ported. New York Mail. Remedy Suggested. , JrV'ash, Grimes says: "Ef th" public would hev its -expendix cut out I reckon as how it would relieve these yere high-cost pains we're all aJuviaWDeayer Post, A Line (T Type ojr Two N t tk U. lot tM talpa tall efcar th nay. GENERAL WOOD estimated conservatively tliat to print and mail a campaign letter cost about five cents; and this very quickly ran into moneys But we clutch from the "testimony respecting the delegates from Missouri that you could put in your eye all the money squandered on campaign "literature." . "NO," replied Mr. Goldstein to Senator Reed, "money" does not enter into my mind in such matters." Comment would be painting the lily or gilding refined Goldstein. t - A Few Rare Business Opportunities. (From the Tampa Tribune.) "Wldow.42, worth 130,000, would Vi&rry. C Box ; Monroe, Mich. Young maiden, refined and wealtfiy, would marry good, neat, and kind gentle man. Write Mme., Box , Los Angeles, Cal. ... Lonely widow, age 22, worth $25,000, wishes to hear from honorable gentlemen under 60; object matrimony. Send Btamped ' envelope. P. O.ox , Montgomery, Ala. Pretty country girl wishes to correspond with gentleman able to handle $12,000 es tate. Object, matrimony. Enclose stamp for reply. Cor. Box , Oxford, Fla. WE wonder what the more or less late John Marshall, Chief Justice, would have thought of the Eighteenth. Amendment. Do you remember the yam which went the rounds during and after Jiis life? Mr. Beveridge quotes it in his biography: 1 "We are great ascetics, and even deny our selves wine except in -yet weather," Story duti fully informed his wife. "What I say about the wine gives you our rule; but it does some times happen that the Chief Justice will. say to me, when the cloth Is removed, 'Brother Story, step to the window and see if it does not look like rain.' And I tell him that the sun Is shining brightly, Judge Marshall will sometimes reply, 'All the better, for our jurisdiction ex tends over so large a territory that the doctrine of chances makes it certain that It must be rain ing somewhere.'" THEY say the present Chief Justice is hu man, but not exactly bubbling with geniality. Any humor exchanged by the present group is necessarily of the dry variety. TO AXCntSA. 0 facilest Anchusa, 1 knew that you could use a Most unmanageable meter In a most engaging way; v. But your feet Jiave never pattered (This is maybe 'cause I'm nattered) So airily as In the verse you sent to me today. Tot warm my heart, Anchusa, ; .(So different from Medusa Wasn't she the petrifler by the blue Aegean sea, Who was brilliant cold, and snaky. Not unlike dear Lytton Strachey?) But I wander. Let me send my thanks. Sin cerely yours, , , P. B. How to Keep Well By Dr. W. A.VANS Snetlon.4ncernur hygiene, (ani on end prevention of dlaeatM, nl mlttcd to Dr. Erana by reader of Th lire, will be answered personally, aub Jeet to proper limitation, where a a tamped, addreaeed envelope la cloned. Dr. Evan will not - make riiainuala or nreeertbo for Individual dlaeaae. Ad area letter In ear of Tb Bee. Copyright, 1139, by Dr. W. A. Evens. MR. HUGHES i$ mentioned as a dark horse. Dark sun perhaps describes him better. A vio lent collison between him and Beveridge might set both of them alight again. - THE LOGICAL SUCCESSOR. ' Sir: While traveling In the south, I heard a Bryan man saying m the Pullman smoker that the aforesaid W. J. B. would be the Demo cratio nominee. I allowed that he should have no trouble In being elected. A Wilson man asked how I figured that. I replied that he could have his pictures pasted on all the bill boards of the country with the slogan, "He kept us out of liquor." J. A. M. GREAT preparations are making to toss Bill Bryan overboard, but when the democratic chorus begins singing, "And now the sky is all serene," you will see old Dick Dead-Eye prowl ing around with his chat a neuf queues. The Magic Veil. ' (From Letters of John Butler Yeats.) The benignity and majesty of Goethe's countenance may have been because he was al ways In love. The sculptor of the Venus de Milo probably never saw a woman without find ing In her some curve or hollow or line, some fragment of his great conception, and by an easy and an inevitable transition he would deliciously acquire the art of discovering everywhere, In the hills and valleys and In the clouds, the same curves and hollows and lines which are in his statue. The creative artist that Is In every man, for it is his soul, out of his sensibility with its mingled audacities and timidities, and out of his cunning, is continually engaged in weaving for himself a magle veil, through which he may look and see only what he wants to see and be blind to what he does not .want to see. Tet different men make different veils. Iago was not as Hamlet who could not hate except in fits and starts and this only in words, and Goethe tells us it was a fault, he thought, in bis own character that he could not hate. Goethe had a benignant and angelic countenance, so we are told; was it not of that perennial fresh ness because of which he was always "in love" from youth to age? "IN Ensrland the railway cars are divided up for first, second and third-class passengers.' In America only the first-class people travel. From an interview.with E. V. Lucas. . What the srentleman wishes to say, perhaps, is that in America everybody travels first class. PETRARCHINO ON THE LOSS OF HIS SMALL ABILITY TO WRITE SONNETS. Sonnets I wrote, pedantic and precise. Which somehow pleased you: So I tried again. But now that real have grown love's joy and pain, I find less easy the compact device! Tumultuous thoughts burst the conventional vlso That should their lawless errantry constrain; Each day, as I love more, become more vain My efforts to be elegant, concise. I send this song, not that it's worthy writ For such bright eyes; but praying you may see, In just the labored awkwardness of it, The utter starkness of sincerity. ' " Affection's warmth has cracked the thin veneer That hid true love 'neath your sonneteer. PETRARCHINO. V MR. WALPOLE may be shocked to find in "The Rescue" the phrase, "except you and. I." It quite spoiled our evening. " "Shoes Repaired While Ton Wait." , , Sir: I'm sure that other gadders,, like myself, have been obliged; to wait while their, shoes were repaired. There used to be a second floor shop on Van Buren where you Could sit, in slippers furnished" by the management, and watch the "L" trains go by. The alternative was forced seclusion in your hotel room while the bellhop had the job .done for you. Your half bottle of Burnett won't go far with all the traveling men who will confirm me In this. Jj. R. M. . Sir: rVe Just put In the mornintr at the shoeman's sitting around in a pair of too ble slippers wondering where I will get a touch of Vermouth. If you will plot a similar contest around a "Suits Pressed While You Wait em porium, making the prize about one-quarter bot tle of French Vermouth, I'll wear the barrel. y ' D. B. A. Bir: 'About three years ago I cooled my heels In a repairemwhlleyouwsit for forty-five minutes while a genial cousin of Gabe Danunz leisurely pasted and tacked a pair of shock absorbers on one (1) pair of kicks. MAC. FOR the information of W. F. Y., who'de sired a name for a publication issuing every four months. Dr. Shorey supplies "Tetramen- lan. concerning Ulympiad, he advises us that its meaning in English ought to be its normal Greek meaning the four-year period, butin Greek it can also mean the Olympic fes tival or even the victory won thereat It would seem, then, that writers who wish to use it in the second sense must write it in Greek. PROPERLY encouraged you no doubt would be willing to tell the world that Babler is an ideal name for a national committeeman.,. SOMEHOW or other, we cannot imagine a man named Sprout being president, yet stranger things have happened. ' - MEANWHILE swat the fly. B. L. T ROAD TO DEGENERACY. II. H. writes: "Your article con cerning the survey of defectives in a Minnesota district seems to me very instructive. Probably there is no such place which, has not some defectives, at least some , of the commoner kinds, but mixed in with a large majority, of normals they are concealed from practically all ob servers. We have to observe a par ticularly bad district in order to get the full force of the situation to understand degenetacy. When that bad district is? a city slum we have largely erred in thinking that the bad surroundings account for the warped and twisted humans. But in a' country district there Is little ex cuse for this deception. "I think it should be held that the defectives were crowded into the mountains or sought them to escape the pressure of civilization. If they were normals and were forced Into the hills they would build roads, however difficult and would keep in touch with the worldshave a com merce, schools, etc. ( "It seems a fair assumption that (a) when these eastern families moved to Minnesota they either set tled in a place of average worth which became later a vaHey of little productivity because of their worth lessness, or (b) they deliberately set tled in a poor country because they lacked the sense 'or tne ambition to pick out pood land. "In other words, it is, for the greater part, the defective who makes the slum, and when a normal is born in' the slum district he es capes. - "I have been much impressed of late with the idea that under harsher conditions of life the mortality rate of the, subnormal was high enough to prevent a large proportion from , living to the age of reproduction. But more and more in modern dec ades society has bentits energies to preserving every flicker of human ; life regardless of its source. En-1 vironment has been put to the front as everything. ' , "Two dogmas are accepted: that the merest flicker of human life, re gardless of everything, is more preci ous than anything else, and that, except in the case of idiots and im beciles, every person is capable of un limited development and advance ment. The good of the race is lostH sight of entirely in this alignment or dogma. Nearly all of. our civiliza tion is merely making life easier to live. In so far as it is that, it is dis tinctly decadent. It leads downward inevitably. A few more generations, perhaps only a few more decades, and the percentage of irresponsibles will become too great to permit of stabilizing a society which grants so much individual freedom, which de pends so much on personal charac- ter and discipline, which creates such an Involved mode of living that a little halting in the machinery im perils all. "If for three generations more we make .life fatter and easier at the rate of present progress and permit the ready increase of the unfit while all responsible persons limit their offspring we will have a condition in which democratic society as we know it will be impossible. It is not possible actually to visage these conditions because, if degeneracy in creases very much, the elaborate means for making life more complex and interdependent as a condition for greater ease and luxury will be the first to fall. "Self-government, when it works well, is the best government not be cause it governs better, but because it implies and must have ai wonder fully high-average of individual pow ers. It means a lot of very capable folks. When they are less capable they cannot make the thing go, and will, if they deteriorate enough lose their self-governing estate. They wiJI not even know thev have lost it for a long time and a society ruined by tne detectives win not Know even that it has any except the outstand ing. The fish cannot see the ocean." When Buying an Icebox. . E. H. H. writes: "Ihave been con sidering the purchase of an , icebox and had nearly selected one in which of a given case depends on the cause. As a general rule it can be cured. You should discover the cause and correct it. ' the part where the food is placed is covered with enamel, when a friend of mine warned me against that kind of an icebox, saying the paint is likely to affect milk and other foods. Will you tell me if it is dangerous?" REPLY.. There is no danger in ' keeping milk and other foods in an enameled ! Pleads for Ireland. Omaha, June 1. To the Editor of The Bee: Continually gathering strength,' the storm clouds over Ire land are hanging low today. In the distance we hear thelhunderlng cry of its people: Freedom for Ireland. We see the flash of lightnings. The breaking of the clouds is at hand. The seeds of hatred were sown by the English king, Henry VIII, who nearly finished the subjugation of Ireland started back in the 12th century by Henry II, and completed In 1600-1603 by Lord Mountjoy dur ing the reign of Henry's daughter, Queen Elizabeth. Ireland, then Pro testant, was roughly forced to accept the Itoman Catholic religion by Henry VIII, who accomplished his goal through exasperating cruel agencies never forgotten by the Irish people, and added to by cruelties of later years. Bones have -been laid to bones. Century to century. Yet the Irish blood could never blend with the English. And the English lion, ar rayed in all its splendor, Is now reaping the fruit of its toil. ' The Irish spark of l6ve for free dom, laying abeyance under smoldering ashes of centuries, could not be entirely extinguished, nor icebox or refrigerator. In fact, such lining is advantageous in that it shows dirt easily and is nonab sorbent. The kind of lining is of secondary importance. The great question is what temperature is maintained in the food chamber and at what expense of ice. Do not buy a refrigerator or Icenox which will not maintain a temperature of 50. Do not waste your money on an ice eater. i Many Things Affect Pulse. A. Z. writes: "Will you kindly tell me the cause of a skipping heart beat, one skip out of every five? . Is it serious? Can it be cured, and what is your advice?" . REPLY. ) There are 'different causes for inter mittent pulse. Among them are tobacco, heart disease, indiges tion,' nervousness. The seriousnei could it be pacified by amended home rules, but rose high on holy aspirations, and on theetrength of President Wilson's 14 points, which so completely covered the program of world peace that Germany was moved to accept peace and thus end war. - We) rallied under the Star Spangled Banner to stem the tide of autocracy. You . with your life. We with dollars and cents. We clothed the naked in France fed the hungry in Poland, "raised up con quered nations. Ireland, in travail, is yet waiting to be delivered. Have we forgotten Ireland? AGNETA JOHNSON. 2530 Seward street. Bee Want Boosters. Ads Are Business roactr wjiNtii V ScyrTAuToTouw$TSroiiB OnAHA.U8.A. 'mm lasa i ft r Ml "TheFountainof . Youth" A spring-time sermon for people who wan to , keep young. . ', ' ROBERT F. LEAVENS Unitarian Church, '31st and Harney ' Sunday Morning at 10:30 For Rent Typewriters and Adding Machines of All Makes Central Typewriter Exchange Doug. 4120 1912 Farnans St Phone Douglas 2793. Gtl fans? I V fAKIUUI UaS ff IrtTVT -a 1fcWmpit tar Office OMAHA PRINTING COMPANY 1MMCT tnmewBs tauatt Commercial Printers -Lithographers Steel die Embossew LOOSC tEAF DEVICES Army Goods For Sale. ; ' J TENTS TENTS TBNTS r ': XT. 8. Army Regulation Tents, 18xl, 3-foot wall, pyramid ahape, extra heavy duck canvas. These tents cost tba government yj to (125. Our ......:$45.oo U. 8. Regulation Pup Tents or 8helter Halves, very peclal tj Officers' wall Tenta, Ixt. Complete with poles and stakes. $30 QQ BOOITNO PAPEB s !-p!y. sanded both aides, waterproof, weatherproof and fire-resisting, t squares (21 sq. ft.) to the Q4 rjf? roll. Price, per roll, only. . . W I 0 FAINTS Guaranteed House and Barn Faints. Outside White, , rtQ A per gal. .....DO.OU All colors, per 5Q 0! gallon .; '..'..; DJ.40 Red feara Faint. 51 'Qft per sal VlVO t r : .-' BARB TVXRB Extra Heavy 4-polnt Barb "Wire, In reels weighing approximate ly 60 lba. Special, per reel. Q'j HARNESS AND HALTERS New Harness with J-4 Inch bridles, I ring breeching with felt, lined pads; ltt In. by 520 ft. Hnes and 1H breast strap. Trace 14 in. x ( ft. No collar or hltchatrap. (PQQ CA All oak leather DOeUU Halters, double riveted, fr-t QQ 1 Inch vlatVO a?e".......".......;..A88c We have many ether Item tee num eral te mention. Send far eompeUe price Ust. -T "Nebraska limy & Navy Salvage Co. Mis Howard Street, Omaha, ffeb.v 'V Open Saturday Evenings. it ss"J ' 1 - ., ll 1 I n .. in , 1 Real Savings in . .. 1 j Men s Ux fords K 1 I a T usher in the season, we are offering ' ffK. CI some unPrecedentecl values in Men s Fine I SJS. Y Oxfords at sale beginning Saturday. . .7 II vlS Vl These Oxfords consist of the newest styles ' llW ' for the season, including the Brogue, English i ymK Snsi3 an( Conservative lasts, in the popular tan, ' NcF'S. ar brown and oxblood colors. . j VY Actual Reductions rom Former Prices f ' ' Make Them the Best Purchase of the Day. J English and Brogue Ox- . ' Brogue Oxfords, form- fords, form- G 1 QQ erly ?14 Clfl CC- sQSZ1 7 I J f erly $15 att)l 100 ... , at .: . .-. . : :'. ; ePlU.00 - yXfrr 1 "; HI . "English, Conservative XJv - Jfl 1 ' and Straight Last Ox- j -Bj. 'In fords, formerly fl A QQ ' vge I $13 at. ....tJj.OO i 11 I ; HI Fit Your Feet for Warm Weather Now By Taking Advantage of This Exceptional Money-Saving Opportunity. U ill Shoes of a saet AiaJek im js&js. Furmshins ill- 1 I Sam Dansky , ;, FUBM1SHII1GS FOiUIEfl , ' J. j. Isaacson I M ; 1415 Douglas St. . I igi , - ' : " 7" ' : : . J-" i ' KEEP "'"'ffiPI in- - &xrm - - JfK I ; i I i s ' 'I ' i . 'II HIGH. BUSINESS IS GOOD THANK YOU ' When you hit the rougjj roads and steep hills keep your machine in high- bur straight run gas- olenes will give your' .car the power.' Good, straight run gasolenes, to a greater extent, do away with the shifting of gears. Two GOOD Gasolenes: BLITZEN (Export Test) . . . . .31c VULCANx (Dry Test) . .y. 28c L. V. NICHOLAS OIL Cp. Locomotive and . Keystone afF Auto Oils 'The Best Oils We Know" President "ak- r 'J, Kerolite (a better kerosene) at all Our Stations. Our Electric Pumps Insure Accuracy Your Protection and Ours. s ""- aa. r J mrmxm