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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 12, 1920)
J THE BEE: OMAHA, SATUR1JAT,' JUNE Vl, 1020. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MCfttNING) EVENING SUNDAY THS BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, NELSON B. UPDIKE, Publisher. MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TIM Amoc!i!4 Praia, of which The Be It SMKber, It ttv .thuimr tuMtlea Uis um for putillcttlon of til nti dlipstcUes credited la It or not etherwtie erml In thli plr, and also lbs local m published herein. Ail rlgala at publication of our twIU dlipttckts are also wtml rnrau Branch Xirhuiit. Ask for U tlanartmml nr WriAn WftnfMf , For Nifht Call After 10 P. M.I tdltorltl Department Circulation Itapartment adrsrUsuui Deiarta-nt . OFFICES OF THE BEE Main Office: 17th and Karaaa Council Bluffi 15 Boot St. South Sid Out-of-Town Oflicesi Km Tfw MA HMflh A r. I Wlllllnfftnn Chlctso Sieger Vide. I Pull Franc 420 Rut Si. Honors Tyler 1000 Tyler 10001. Trier 100SL Jfjler 100UL till N It tail o st. Thk Bee's Platform tl. Now Union Passenger Station. 2. A Pipe Line from the Wyoming Oil Fields to Omaha. 3. Continued improvement' of the Ne braska Highways, including the pave- , ment of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha with a Brick Surface. 4. A short, low-rate Waterway from the Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. 5. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. NO MAN'S LAND FOR THE GRAD. We have whh us this month the college graduate. Poor fellowl Rich in the intellectual foundations he has laid, but poor in experience; ricli in ambition and ideals, but poor in practical - - knowledge; rich in culture and refinement, it may be, but poor in purse, let us hope, for pov erty alone, can compel the use of his latent powers to the highest'advantage of himself and society. ( Just now, with his diploma clutched tightly to his breast, he is at last "over the top" 'at the zero hour, with No Man's Land under his feet. Only those who have passed ) from thel loving plaudits of crowded commencement halls . to the stark bleakness of an unfeeling and some times slightly contemptuous world, can ap preciate the cheerless position of the fresh laid graduate without a dollar in his pocket, or aught wherewith to1 savor his unsaved newness. He has so much to learn ! and unlearn I A hust lingj hurrying world scurries by him. He sees the youths he left behind him when he de parted from the public schools for college and a liberal education, nicely started in life, fixed in good jobs, earning good money, and wonders if all his hopes must die. An appalling sense of his unfitness and inability to compete with these former companions in the hurly-burly of real -life all but overwhelms him. His total ignorance of the ins ahd outs of honest money getting de presses him.- Again, poor fellow! He is indeed in the No Man's Land of his career that en , entangling maze of hazards, disappointments, chilling fears and Heart-breaking set-backs that re to try his soul as never it was tried before; that hot touch of experience where -a Bachelor of Arts must yield precedence to any boy who has served his apprenticeship in the real work of the world. y' But hold. If he be honest, industrious, adaptable, he wifl get safely over to victory, a better, stronger, more useful man because of the merciless hazing the world has in store for him during the next five or ten years. And then how he will soar to achievement after achievement! Then, and not until then, will he fully grasp what his Alma Mater has done for him 'and for his future. And all the follow ing days of his life he will be deeply thankful for the bitter experiences-which now confront him. Journey on, young brother-; you are wel comed to the pains and privileges, the amenities nd bumps, that follow commencement admit tance tothe fellowship of scholars! Junk Yields Rich Treasure. There is romance in the junk business. It has to do with old things, and odd finds turn up irfthe junk man's bags. Old garrets are a. favorite lurking place for junk and divers and sundry interesting things, as many a boy has discovered on rainy days. f Recently a Philadelphia garret yielded a great treasure in old postage stamps a col lection probably made by a secretary of the treasury in 1849, which contains specimens long sought and believed to have disappeared from the face of the earth. Many, of these stamps are listed in the catalogues of philatelists at from $100 to $500 each. This discovery recalls the junk find in St. Louis about ten years ago, when in a bale of Caste paper purchased by a lucky dog for $16 ere found stamps valued around $140,000. The stamp collector has his thrills and sensations, v v . 7 The Labor Market. There seems to be reliable symptoms of a labor surplus at some points, in sharp contrast to the constant shortage that has existed since the summer after we entered the war. We quote from a news item in the Soux Cify Journal: A surplus of labor exists in Sioux City, al though there is a constantly increasing amount of work being done, contractors state. Labor is plentiful here and in the country,, employment figures show. The supply of labor of all kinds, aside from the plumbers, is said to be good. Fifteen laborers were' reported tcthave come from- Omaha to Sioux City Tuesday since they could find no work in Omaha. The shortage on "the ffrms still exists and will become more ' acute with harvest time, doubtless; but It is a symptom when the job ceases feverishly to hunt the man. V Two Clear Notes Sounded. Senator Lodge plumbed the very depths of true Anrican republican sentiment when he said at Thicago: ' We must be now and ever for American ism and nationalism, and against Internation alism. There is no safety for us, no hope that we can be of service to the world, if we do otherwise. Mr. Wilson and his dynasty, his, heirs and assigns or anybody that is his, anybody who with bent knee has served his purposes, must be driven from all control, from all influence upon the government of the United States. Amen Amen. America has had enough of fuddling, of muddling, of huddling and of med dling of ineptitude, inefficiencyv and self-sufficiency in high places. - Suffering Ireland. 1 Recently a young man entered a Dublin hos pital suffering from terrible burns on his legs, neck, chest, face and hands, the latter without a nail or shred of skin on them. He died. , " On the night of his admittance .Ballybrack police barrack in County Dublin was destroyed by incendiaries, and a police sergeant and mili tary officers making a survey of the ruins and adjacent grounds, found the complete skins of two, hands, with the nails attached, close by a fountain. Gruesome human gloves. This is only one horrible incident of many in the disordered isle so long in pitiful, demoraliz ing distress and disorder. High-Rollicking Times in Havana. Gentlemen recently back from Havana de scribe it as a gambling heaven which eclipses Monte Carlo, and bathed in intoxicating bev erages of every imaginable, kind. Millionaires from all over the world are shedding their in comes freely in -a newly completed casino whose gorgeous decorations vie with the most ornate "palaces of Europe in magnificence. But it's hot in Havana damnably hot. If we had to have booze and roulette in our cur riculum we should much prefer the Bermudas, now that tlie supreme court has stopped public drinking. But England goes only so far, and no farther, in its tolerance of the sporting life of money-spenders. A Mistaken Editor. Editors were not all endowed with wjsdom. In 1863 the Harrisburg Patriot commented as follows on a speech by Abraham Lincoln: -""The president succeeded on this occasion because he acted without sense and without constraint in a panorama that was gotten up more for the benefit of his party than for the glory of the nation and the honor of the dead. We pass over the silly remarks of the presi fdent; for the credit of the nation we are willing that the veil of oblivion shall be dropped over them and that they shall be no more repeated or thought of. A striding example of the mistakes partisan rancor may lead to, for the words this editor attempted to relegate to oblivion constituted the Gettysburg speech, one of the greatest utter ances that ever fell from the lips of man. There are several conceptions of what a political party platform should be. One is that it should be an unqualified and explicit avowal of principles that is to say, a party constitu tionwith a definite statement of party policy on matters foremost in the public mind as issues. Another is that it should be an artful assemblage of pleasant words of promises de signed to sootheand satisfy as many conflicting interests as possible such a conception, for in stance, as the "single term" declaration of the democratic platform off of which Mr. Wilson made' his' first campaign. The beatification of twenty-two negroes of Ugeilda who" burned to death at the stake in 1886 rather than renounce their faith, was cele brated by Pope Benedict, June 6. Pictures and relics of these black saints, who were subjects of King Mwanga, are at St. Peters in Rome. What men will do and suffer for their beliefs is past imagining. The soul's limitations tan not be measured. ' There were people who regarded the abolition of slavery as a most unjustifiable invasion of the rights of white men-quite as strongly as many believe prohibition to' be an assault on personal liberty. Inefficient public schools produce inefficienj boys and girls who are likely to follow that bent all their days. First rate schools profit a land a thousand-fold over their cost. University man attempts to tell "when little fed ants are troublesome." The man of the hour is the one who can tell when they are not troublesome. The Sun and New York Herald remember the old Astor House opposite City Hall Park for a number of things. JVe remember it for the best clam chowder and oyster pates earth and ocean ever united to produce, back in the middle 80's. 7 .France has a tax on bachelors. America needs a heavy tax on loafers. What Prohibitionists will never select the dande lion blossom as their favorite flower. THE SNOB. . The artificial flower on the girl's hat Looks at the rose upon the stalk And turns at dusty petal in disdain: "A vulgar plant, born in the mud, Too red, and spreading evil scents, Mispress of bees and butterflies, Inconstant, unashamed, Nodding to all the breezes. . . N Tomorrow she will wither." ... I New York Evening Sun. ' Such a Reluctant Creature. "We entered the war most reluctantly." President Wilson. May we not add, we are getting out of the war even more reluctantly New York Evening Mail. A Line 0' Type or Two Haw It Iht LIm, let tht tul fall whtrt thsy may. , Oil in Bible Spots. The asphalt springs of Hit, from which Noah probably obtained the "pitch" with which he made the Ark impervious to the "flood of waters," have now been thoroughly examined with a view to their commercial possibilities. The petroleum deposits of the land of Shipar, between the Tigris and the Euphrates, which furnished the "slime" that the descendants of Noah "had for mortar" in building the Tower of Babel, have been measured as well as can be until-the bit of the oil driller is sent down to prove whether the geologist is right or not., And the Sources of bitumen which archeologjsts have found was used as cement in constructing the ancient palaces of Babylon and Ninevah have undoubtedly been located. John K. Barnes in the World's Work. Our Professor of Shams. In a campaign dodger to the railway labor unions President Wilson declares that in nine months the congress which has just adjourned had "taken no important remedial action with respect to the problem of the cost of living." But it is a fact, and President Wilson knows it is a fact, that the present congress has had to throttle by main strength the colossal squan der of Mr. Wilson's own administrative depart ments. It is a fact, and President Wilson knows it is a fact, that from the regular supply bills which his own congress tried to put through this new congress when calkd into, special ses sion cut out close to a billion dollars to be exact, $940,510,598. It is a fact, and President Wilson knows it is a fact, that in the regular session of this congress his own administrative departments demanded and fought for ap propriations to continue their spending debauch, but this very congress chopped out of their esti mates nearly a billion and a half of dollars more to be exact, $1,433,850,218. It is a factiherefore, and President Wilson knows it is 9 fact, that all told this congress chopped out more than two and a quarter bil lions of dollars to be exact, $2,374,460,917 which Mr. Wilson's own -administrative depart ments strove to get so as to continue their spendthrift profligacy.T-Suo and New York Scald. WE were much distressed to hear of a gpn tleman who, havinff purchased a convention ticket from a speculator, arrived at the hall to find that the convention had adjourned. NO. 7. Sir: What Is the serial number of this re port that conventioners have 'been seen on -the Boul wearing hat bands labeled "Wood?" L. M. "THIS is the first convention I have at tended," said an old timer, "conspicuous for lack of applause whenever soma well known repub lican comes in." My Dear, You Must llo Careful! Sir: Why should anyone bemoan the lack of tilvhhalla nr hlirh.nowprfid tliVVQrS. When tllO SUn rlickerintf down through tho trees of the Forest1 Preserve, under such a sky as yesterday b, can make a dignified middle-aged old maid, on a solitary hike, mentally turn handsprings in the road, kiss a gypsy lover or a lusty, i-rowingr baby, shout the Doxology, hum "In a Kingdom of Our Own," cast a vote for Herbert Hoover, eat wild strawberries, read Francois Villon and Hilda Conklinfr, and dance on a hill top, by moonlight, to the music of the spheres? 15. 1'. B. THE proposal of tho irreconcilables and the proposal of the treaty reservationists are alike in this respect: they are both hot air. ASTOUNDING, INDEED. Sir: As you were speaking of Conrad's trick, as you were, of leading you to expect more than you get, I have conceived the astounding theory that Hugh Walpole is responsible for a great part of theBritish Pole's work. Walpole's "The Dark Forest" is one of the greatest adventure less adventure stories I have ever read. - Im portant events are always on the verge of not happening. K. S. C. CONRAD'S masterpiece is still' unwritten, al though meditated for many years. The scene of it will be the Sargasso Sea. No Reflection on 3Iother. (From the Sabetha, Kan., Herald.) Ed Smith, father of Mrs. Charles Rob erts, and Mrs. Brad Dougherty, her aunt, came up from Kansas City Saturday, Mr. Dougherty joining them Sunday at the Rob erts country home near Oneida. They all pitched in and helped the young bride set tle the house, her mother having been here a few days previously, i ,"A FAMOUS poet tells us that order Is heaven's first law," keynoted Mr. Lodge. But science inclines to believe that the' poet was mistaken. WHAT ON'E 90VYS TO ONE'S SELF IN ONE'S BEST MOMENTS. (From the Madison Democrat.) The Receptive listener will, for instance, drink in at the Strand theater, the lovely tones of the four string instruments com bining with the piano and will have much the same sensation as if he were surrounded by beautiful fuifiishings in a well appointed home. The creative listener will note the order and the symmetry,' the delicacy and grace, the power and sonority of the tones, and will say to himself: "In this composi tion of MacDowell, Beethoven, y or Tchai kovski (or whatever the composer may be) has expressed a fineness of outlook upon the world which characterizes me. at my best moments and which I shall endeavor to make-mine in the future."' "THERE never was so great a moral victory as prohibition," declares Mr. Bryan, whose mind is perfectly adjusted for the emission of small town stuff. PRIERE DU REFOKMATEl It. O Seigneur Dieu, je te rends grace Be n'etre point comme les autres: lis sont du monde la disgrace Et se croient de tres bons apotres. lis s'en vont dans les cabarets . Chercher eou-de-vie et vins vieux; lis admirent les beaux mollets, Et que ne font-ils pas chez eux! Mon ame est toute d'innocence, Telle des autres, d'insolence. Ton Filsi aux noces de Cana, De l'eau, fit un excellent vin, Je veux en guise d'hosanna Soniter, du boire, letocsin. De notre auguste republique, Je veux extirper tous les vices. v Je suis bon, honnete et pudfque, A moi, a moi. tous les caprices. Puisqu'on a detrone les rois, C'est moi qui vais forger les lois, Heme aux poetes pleins d'esprit - Qui s'impriment chez B. L. T. M. J. "THE sayirig that oratory is a lost art is still heard in the land. Nothing could be further from the truth." Chicago Journal. v Nothing, indeed. Tribes have been lost in the ilark backward and abysm of time, but the Tribe' of Gab was never threatened with ex tinction. -S" , 1' POTATOES were never so high. But why eat them' Hominy makes an agreeable substi Jjjte. ANYTHING TO GET CIRCULATION. (From the Wisconsin News.) , All records for June marriages are ex pected to be shattered. Records for the first , two days of June a year ago ehow forty-v ' two applications. AVatch the Green for "Indoor. Sports." ' DAYLIGHT is to be saved hereabout; and so far as we are concerned, the farmer can meet the sun upon the upland lawn whenever he jolly well pleases. N ' Hotel Art. Sir: When working in and out of Soo Falls, I "stopped at" what H. O'Reilley, of Cresco, Iowa, would have denominated (as he did his own caravansary) "not a firsht class hotevbut a moighty fine second clas3." Here I noticed that each room I occupied was adorned by a gilt framed certificate of membership vouching that mine host had "jined" .some fraternal "order. I learned that his hotel boasted sixteen rooms, and he hoped, in time, to accumulate a "Jiner's" cer tificate for each room. B. C. B. MR. PHILIP HALE is urged to combat the habit of writers of begining simple statements of facts with the French Idiom "It is . . . that." 'Tis a worthy "crusade," in which we beg to join. Reading over what we have thus far written, we find no great, reason to recast a sentence, but we have sinned freely in the past. AU SEjCOURS! AU SECOURS! (From the June Metropolitan.) f His eyes, narrowed and he bent sllg-htly toward her. "N'oubliez pas. Je n'avez jamais le de sir'e pour une femme!" . " "READING about a yacht race is almost as wearisome as watching it," says Old P.. P. A. But is not the reporter to blame? The usual report of a golf njatch is as dull as a country squire, yet It can be, and occasionally has been, made good reading. IN case you are looking .for the headquar ters of the National Woman's party, you will recognize the place by the posters plastered over it, "The (Sweetheart Shop." Commercial Candor. (From the Ottumwa Courier.) You : never heard of such a thing at Leonard's. Even above the clnk and thet clank of the many so-called sales, now being held, our prices stand out prominently and conspicuously for their lowness as a 15--story skyscraper on a country cross roads corner. - OF course there Is coaj 'enough to last seven thousand years, at the rate it Is moving. May we remind Mr. Upham that It ,1s called the Con sumers Company because It consumes so much time In filling our order? FROM the programme of an organ recital In Denver: "T5 Be Near You" Coote "WBfpDINO Ends Romance." Milwaukee Sentinel. . Ala. It so often does! TOM LAWSON has Joined Mr. Hearst in back ing Hiram. "f ruly, , misfortunes never come singly. ' 1 pNLY ONE IS OUR GUESS. Sir: I will bet that the nominee will have two o's In his name. II. FORBID. How to Keep Well By Dr. W. . EVANS Qumtlnnt roncrrnlng hycirne, nl ttttlou unci pri'vriitiun of disriwr, b initti'cl id Dr. Kvnim by rriulpro of The lln', will t'f uriNwi'rril ix'r-onully, uH. Jeot to priipi-r limitation, n I ere a Uiinptil, nildrffltieri envrloue la en tlimrri. Ir. Kvnn will not mrtk (llnitnosla or ir'irihc fur Individual lii-U!'!i. Address lettert In care of The llee. Copyright, 120, by Dr. W. A. Evans. RABIES RETURNS TO EUROPE. Disturbing rumors have romo from Europe of the return of hydropho- rbiu in tho wake of tho war. For tins disease wvs is no spooinc cure, hut there is a upocitic preventive. Making free use of the Pasteur pre vention, vaccination, and controlling all animals subject to hydrophobia, central Europe had almost forgot ten hydrophobia or rabies when in tho wake of tho war there was an outbreak of it. For sixteen years England had known no hydrophobia of man or lronst, because of tho strict enforce ment of certain laws. All dogs were registered, tagged and muzled. No dog was allowed to bo imported un til ho had been held in quarantine past the hydrophobia incubation pe riod and then had been O. K.'rt by the inspector. Dog bites were made reportable. Suspected cases of hy drophobia were reported. Labora tory diagnosis was inada and preventivo treatment given. ' ' But the vir disturbed their secur ity. Sir Stawart Stockman gives as reasons: J 1. The public, having forgotten its fears, became careless and indif ferent. 2. Tho pets of trie returning sol di'era were not always made to con ftftni to the law. ' S. Some animals were brought in by airplane. 1 On August 30, 1919, the authori ties became suspicious that rabies had gotten into the country. Inves tigation showed that the disease had probably been imported about the middle of the preceding May. They found that tho disease had been im ported into tho Devon, probably not fan from Plymouth. It had extend ed over a rather wide area ?n Devon and Cornwall, but had not gotten beyond these two counties.. Two factors Ijad prevented the disease from spreading more widely during the nearly four months in which it had existed unsuspected. Fortunately, most of the dogs af fected had - paralytic rabies and wore unable to runl and spread the disease. Fortunately, also, most of tho diseased animals which ran went westward, and since these counties are on the west coast, they were stopped by fho sea. Some evidence was obtained as to the distance mad dogs travel. One 1 had gone 20 miles when, hav ing 'bitten a man, he was shot. A second, after traveling eight miles and biting seven dogs, bit two men and was killed. A third traveled 20 miles as the crow flies. A fourth 20 miles when he bit a policeman and was captured. A fifth traveled 22 miles as the crow flies when it attacked somo ducks and was cap tured. A sixth was shot while go ing strong after 30 miles. A seventh traveled 12 miles, bit 10 people, re turned home, -and died two days later. An eighth traveled 20 miles and died exhausted. eavin? out of consideration the animala said to have died from tho disease before the authorities took charge, there were 112 rases of rabies in dogs, 21 people were given Pasteur treatment, and none de veloped the disease. By inspection the authorities fmind every dog in the district, registered it, and had it muzzled. They established a branch diagnosis laboratory, which made a diagnosis of hydrophobia in five hours possible. They caught the wandering dogs. All dog bites were promptly reported and persons bitten were given Pasteur vaccina tion. The disease seems to be com ing under control. 1 can't eat. I am getting so thin and weak that I can hardly stand. I lose about five pounds a week, and 1 only weigh 100 pounds. This s my second child. I am 25 years old. Is thoro any remedy I can take to give me an appetite-and to keep fronj vomiting? "2. I also have bad pains In tho heart. My heart beats so hard that I feel like fainting. , "3. Do you think I will havo a poor, sickly child" REPLY. 1. In a recent article I quoted an authority 'who said' under these cir cuknstances tho body needed sugar. Eat crackers several times a day. Early in the morning eat several crackers and then lie quietly in bed at least half an hour before getting up. Eat crackers between meals. In addition eat some sugar or candy. When the condition is grave the physicians inject a solution of (sugar Into the veins. 2. Have your. heart and thyroid 3. You should be able to overcome your symptoms and develop healthy, strong baby. nave' Dentist ( lim Your Teeth. O. S. writes: "Is it possible- for a girl of 19 to h.tve Kigss' disease? J.JiIy gums lined to bleed at the slight est pressure, although they do not bother mo so much now.' I notice, however, -that there are spaces he- j tween two of my upper toeMi. The feum Meeiuw i.' receu'. i7'iierwise my teeth, I believe, are healthy." REPLY. rjpgs' disease or pyorrhoea some times develops in young people, though it in a disease of older peo ple as a rule.. Have a dentist clean an,d polish your teeth. He will tell you whether you have early Riggs. At'tor they-'have been cleaned keep them so with dental floss and by brushing and washing. Serums vs. Sans. F. J. S. writes: "1 have had sinusi tis, frontal sinus (over both eyes), for several years after every heavy head cold. I have been treated in this country and abroad with no satisfac tory results. Will you tell me some thing about this?" REPLY": ; There is not much that t can tell 5ou. Nn doubt you know the sub ject well. There are several cavi ties which open into the nose. The bacteria of the nose tire apt to travel intothesj. cavities, causing sinusitis. Most, cases of supposed so-called catarrh are due to jnfection of one sinus or another. If I had sinusitis I would wa-;te some time on the bacteriologists and vaccine makers. That I regard as' a better gamble than trusting to the sawyers, drill ers, carpenters, and cutters. tAat 'A 14 gproiJ, ft U 7 Sugar Is Essential. Mrs. W. A.. G. writes: "1. I am to be a mother about December 3, and I get so sick at my stomach that I haven't any appetite at all I can; not eat more than half a piece of bread a day. I feel hungry, but lllliil"liill!l(1!i.:in;!liil;!;l.!i:;ii!;:'i:iii!iiiiui!i!ilii I Tuning y - I Repairing: J Moving I Refinishing I 5 Phone Us for Estimate i Schmclier h Mueller i I , PIANO CO. 1 I loug. 1623 lilMHlin. iii!l!ilii.iliili.iiii:iri: HJiil il::liiiiiiiiiiT For Rent Typewriter and Adding t Machines of All Makes,' Central typewriter Exchange Doug. 4120 1912 Farnam St. IN THE BEST OF HUMOR. - I.nulse Clnr nd Edith hv not spoken to eucb other fur months, but now they r Insepxfabl sicaln They go sverywher toijethsr. Julia Yes; Itacy decidra to rensw hos tilities. Lite. Ths fly hsd landed on the revolving rhouograph record and was taking a Joy ride "Whoopee!" yelled the fly. "I'm itolne at record speed!" Cincinnati Enquirer. Golf Professional (nlving- a leon) Tou know, sir, ynu lift your elbow too much to play (tnlf properly. , Now Memher I'll report' you to the committee. I'm a lifelong teetotaler! Dallas News. n "The world seems to havs beaten a path t'o this man's door." "It must be that he makes excellent mousetraps." '.Maybe, and maybe he manufacturers moonshine." Kansas City Journal. Director In this scene you must regis ter sickness Jilovio Xctor Postpone It until tomorrow, won't you? I'm roIhr to a stag party tonlKht, and I will not need any make up tomorrow. Film Fun. 1 Change sTime x Sumrner Schedules, Effective Sunday, June 13, 1920 TO THE TWIN CITIES Lv. Omaha -s , Lv. Council Bluffs... Ar, Mason City Ar. St. Paul Ar. Minneapolis ...... 7:20 a 5 p 7:4 3!t) n. 8:10 f). m. m. m. m. 7:3Q'P. 7:53 p. 2:40 n. 7:30 a. 8:10 a. m. in. m. m. m. 3:00 p. 3:20 p. m. m. ... . 8:45 p. m. Earlier departure of evening train assures full dny in Twin Cities and all morning connections. FRQM THE TWIN CITIES 7:25 a. , . . . . 8:00 b 1:20 p. 4:04 p. 9:08 p. 9:35 p. m. m. m. m" m. m. 6:50 7:30 12:23 Lv. Minneapolis Lv. St. Paul Lv. Mason City . . Lv. Ft. Dorlpe . . . Ar. Council Bluffs Ar. Omaha Ft. Dodge, Dubuque and Chicago train will instead of 3:17 p. m. and arrive Omaha 5:15 p. m m. m. m. m. 7:27 a. m. 7:55 a m 58 a. 12:04 p. m. 4:55 p. m. m. m. 5:15 p. leave Omaha 3:00 p. instead of 5.00 p. m. SUMMER TOURIST FARES Ad Various Convention Arrangements Now in Effect. Make Your Reservations Early and Send for Nw Illustrated Folder of the MINNESOTA LAKES. Ticket Offiee 1416 Dodge Street. Marshall B. Craig, General Passenger Department. 1419 First National Bank Bldg., Omaha, Neb. Phone Douglas 1684. BEE WANT ADS BRING YOU QUICK RESULT Hamd and Bacon s - ' Zs. ' t ' I s Asecond reminder will not be necessary after you have once tasted Furitan Ham. - The sweet flavor, rich with the tang of hick . ory smoke; the fine grained, firm yet tender meat; the fat, white and melting These are qualities so distinctively apparent in Puritan that the name will instinctively come to mind whenever you think of ham. Ask your dealer and remember "HhcTasteleHs" THE CUDAHY PACKING COMPANY And Also Remember Puritan Hams are of mild cure. thereforcV free of excess salt. They need not and should not be parboiled before frying or boillrg. I.your dealer doesn't handle Puritan, phone F. W. CONRON. Ma-naffer 1321 Jones St., Omaha. Neb Phone Douglas 2401 Puritan yarns and Bacon are smoked daily in our Omaha Plant, insuring freai, brightly smoked meats at all times. DOUBLE FILTERED GASOLENE "'- "S'1ST1I - if . S ill rt S . "BUSINESS S COOP THANH YOU - V- NICHOLAS gasolenes are clean. They are settled and filtered at our plant at Twenty-fourth and Hickory streets and filtered again from our pumps into your car. They are sweet, clean and dry. Just as a test, smell our gasolene and com pare it with any other on the market. ifwo GOOD Gasolenes: BLITZEN (Export Test) ..... ,31c VULCAN (Dry Test) .28c L V. NICHOLAS OIL CO! Locomotive and Auto Oils . Keystone "The Best Oils We Know President " Kerolite (a better kerosene) at all Our Stations. Our Electric Pumps Insure Accuracy Your Protection and Ours. w ; . I - - - r T f