Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 20, 1920, EDITORIAL, Image 28

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    4 D
The Omaha Bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
THE UF.E PUBLISHING COMPANY.
NELSON B. UPDIKE, Tubliiher.
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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aiiustruM are i trwnta.
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OFFICES OF THE BEE
lliln Officii: 17th and Fimin
Council Bluffi IS Scott St. I South Side HIS M Bt
Out-ol-Town Offictsi
Km Yih Ms fifth At. I Wuhlniton 1 SI 1 O St
Chicago 8ter Bid. I Ptrli France 420 Run Bt, Honor
The Bee's Platform
1. New Union Passenger Station.
2. A Pipe Lin from the Wyoming Oil
Fields to Omaha.
3. Continued improvement of the Ne
braska Highways, including the pare
menf of Main Thoroughfares 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.
LUUKltbY AS AN ASSET.
There was a time when the dancing masters
taught manners "the etiquette of the ball
room," it was called along with graceful bows,
undulating gestures, and skillful balancing on
the heels and toes, to such orders as "first couple
forward and back," "grand right and left," and
"balance all." Perhaps they do it yet, although
we understand the so-called square dances have
long been out of vogue, that waltzes are infre
quent, and that the universal dance is a "one-
step," whatever that may mean, reminiscent of
the shuffling of a nervous bear standing on his
hind legs and shifting his weight from one foot
to another.
However, some of our young friends tell us
there is no longer occasion for the graces
taught with such assiduity forty years ago, nor
of the polished and formal verbal utterances
which once characterized the social functions
of young people. What a fellow wants now is a
close dance, a cigarette and a drink if the latter
may be had. Then another dance, another ciga
rette and another drink. And so on. Not 'till
midnight. Dear no! But until daylight.
This may or may not all be true. We have
it only on hearsay. But what we shall say on
the general subject of manners is not hearsay.
It is truth, observed time and again. There is
much rudeness abroad in social circles, much
contempt for conventions, much individuality
which in fact is boorish ignorance or general
disrespect for associates of both sexes. Some
attribute these conditions to the entrance of
tobacco Into parlors and ballrooms. Where
social smoking is, there will be a certain laxity,
a sure lowering of dignity, and a lessening of
respectful consideration for ladies young and
old.
Others say there is no longer the refine
ment and discipline in the homes of the people
which train the young in that constant con
sideration for the rights and feelings of others,
which is called courtesy. We do not know; it
is not for us to inquire.
But we believe if the fathers and mothers
of today realized the value of courtesy in life,
they would never leave it to school teachers or
dancing masters to begin or "finish" their boys
and girls in it. To be courteous requires the
' mastery of certain rules of conduct, to be sure
such as rising when a lady enters the room,
and to remain standing until she is seated; or
to remove the hat and remain uncovered while
speaking to her in a hotel lobby or other public
place but it also means something far deeper
than these outward signs. It is a matter of the
spirit, It is kindness of character. Where that
exists there will always be respect for others.
The young man who possesses good man
ners, who from a kind heart learns the arts of
courtesy, has a great asset. Everybody admires
good manners in others. They are rare enough
to attract much attention. They give distinction
to young or old. They invariably please, re
gardless of sex, color, age or condition. And
always they pave the way to favor. In this
age, when favor counts as much for advance
ment in every occupation, business and profes
sion, it is an injustice to any youth to rob him
of the discipline that will make of him a cour
teous gentleman, and gain him admission to
places much desired from which thft rude, the
vulgar, the ignorant and the brazen always
have been and always will be excluded.
In courtesy there is much profit, much pleas
use, much favor and much distinction.
A Bid for the Democratic Nomination.
President Wilson, in an interview with the
New York World, makes a bid for the demo
cratic nomination at San Francisco. The build
ing of the Chicago platform, he avers, "seems
essentially and scientifically Prussian in inspira
tion and method" a suggestion particularly
cool and impudent from the man who enjoined
Strict neutrality on the American people when
the Prussians were trying to strangle civiliza
tion in Europe.
He is delighted that the League of Nations
is to be an issue in the campaign, and wishes it
made the sole issue, which is his way of delicate
ly indicating that he himself is the only logical
man for the democratic nomination. He does
not at this time desire to discuss partisan poli
tics there will be plenty of time for that in his
letter of acceptance, and still clings to the
hallucination that his word is "the word that
America has given to the rest of the world."
The next president will recognize the senate
of the United States as having the final and de
cisive word on American foreign policies, so far
as they relate to treaties. Mr. Wilson con
tinues stubbornly to ignore this constitutional
fact.
Colonel Harvey was in the neighborhood of
the Chicago convention. We can think of no
democrat who had a better right to be in the
vicinity. The Colonel is first a patriot, and sec
ondly the most thorough and caustic critic of
Wilsonian shams, inconsistencies and worse, in
the country. Indeed, he ranks with old Nemesis
herself as a dispenser of retributive justice.
The president, it is said, will use a bicycle
this summer. .Very well; just so it isn't a motor
Sunday a Day of Tragedies.
Sunday has become the most dangerous day
of the week for pleasure seekers. In years gone
the Sunday excursion train that was in collision,
or that plunged through a rotten trestle; or the
Sunday excursion steamer that turned turtle or
burned to the water's edge, with scores of sick
ening fatalities, shocked the country. ,
It is different now. The excursion trains
no longer attract horrified attention. The fatali
ties continue, but they come to us so regularly
in every Monday paper that they no longer un
settle our nerves. Perhaps we need not expect
anything else with automobiles in charge of
drivers who are inexperienced, careless or dis
posed to take chances.
The railroad crossing, the narrow place in
the road with a declivity at one side, the sharp
turn, and the insane desire to pass another car
on a crowded road, all contribute to sudden
Sunday death or injury. We have become ac
customed to it, and it no longer stirs our emo
tions, but the loss of life is said to far exceed
the occasional railroad wreck or steamboat dis
aster of former years.
THE BUBONIC PLAGUE THREATENS
The appearance of the bubonic plague in
Mexico, and the death of a man in Pensacola,
Fla., whose symptoms led local physicians to
suspect it a true case of plague, is more than un
welcome after the experience of the country
with the flu, which assumed in its mortality re
cord all the terrifying aspects of the black death.
Since the middle of the Fourteenth century,
the plague, under its various names, has de
vastated Europe, Asia and Africa. Between
1334 and 1351 it swept many millions into the
grave in China, India, Persia, Russia, Germany,
Italy, France, England and Norway. In 1720
a single case at Marseilles resulted in the death
of 86,000 people in that one city. In the first
half of the Nineteenth century Constantinople,
the Balkan peninsula, Greece and Italy suffered
from it In its latter half Russia, Asia and
Africa had awful visitations, Bombay being
especially unfortunate.
We have at hand no complete statistics of
the present century, but there have undoubted
ly been genuine cases in our hemisphere. In
November, 1899, New York City received two
cases from South America, but was able to re
sist the spread of the disease. In 1900 Japan
brought it to the Hawaiian Islands. The same
year New York had two cases, and San Fran,
cisco 42 fatalities from it.
Medical scienccand sanitation have so far
been able to keep it in check when isolated
cases appear, but there is always the danger of
a sudden spread of it by flies and other in
sects that may overwhelm medical resources and
give it the wide sweep of the flu, which came
here from Europe because no sufficient guard
against it was maintained at our Atlantic ports.
There is an anti-plague serum which has proved
effective in many cases.
The characteristics of the true bubonic
plague do not make pleasant reading, and we
shall not rehearse them, hoping we shall hear
no more of it in the United States, but every
precaution against it should be taken.
Plagues have had a melancholy interest to
humanity ever since the original ten in Egypt,
attributed to the wrath of the Almighty because
the Israelites were forbidden by an obstinate
king the privilege of going into the wilderness
to celebrate a festival. They were not bubonic
plagues. A recital of them carries their mean
ing without medical interpretation. They were
the turning of the river into blood, frogs, lice,
flies, murrain (a disease of cattle and domestic
animals), boils, hail, locusts, darkness and the
slaying of the first-born.
A man may be a master of finesse and all
the complications and suggestive leads and
plays in bridge whist, and yet be blind to the
perils of a woman's jealousy.
The same hot weather that dejects a man
freshens and beautifies a woman.
TWILIGHT.
It is the hour when from the boughs
The nightingale's high note is heard;
It is the hour when lovers' vows
Seem sweet in every whispered word;
And gentle winds, and waters near,
Make music to the lonely ear.
Each flower the dews have lightly wet,
And in the sky the stars are met,
And on the wave is deeper blue,
And on the leaf a browner hue,
And in the heaven that clear obscure,
So softly dark and darkly pure,
Which follows the decline of day,
As twilight melts beneath the moon away.
Byron.
What a Bushel of Walnuts Did.
Late in the year 1867 one of the little French
boys was told to scurry down in the woods and
pick up a bushel or so of walnuts to give their
neighbor, Daniel Denton, who was going to Ne
braska to file on a timber claim in the far west,
twenty miles from Lincoln, Neb. Daniel tucked
the walnuts away and schoonered out to Salt
Creek. J. M. French grew up to be a timber
buyer and the walnuts grew into trees. This
spring Mr. French bought and shipped from the
Denton timber claim three cars of walnut logs
which ranged from twelve to sixteen inches in
diameter. Trenton (Mo.) Times.
The New York Sun on Harding.
In the nomination of Warren G. Harding,
United States senator from Ohio, as its candi
date for the presidency, the republican party
has done the wisest thing it could have done.
Senator Harding is the exemplification of
the best type of Americanism. He comes from
New England and Ohio stock and is a fine ex
ample of the American who has started at the
foot of the ladder and climbed, hand over hand,
unaided, to the topmost round.
Senator Harding hails from the small town
of Marion, O., where his life activities in jour
nalism, ownership journalism, for he is the
owner of his newspaper, brought him favorably
before the people of his state, with the result
that after successive stages of advancement he
was sent to the United States senate. In this
body he has borne himself with splendid dienitv
and in respect of ability has always given a good
account ot himself.
In personal appearance Senator Harding is
a superb specimen of the American man. He is
tall, six feet and more; has a powerful frame
and in features as well as in frame shows rugged
strength, great poise. He !s a true Ohioan of
the best type, gracious in manner, winning and
warm in personality, a man who makes friends
as McKinley made them, a man who if elected
will bring back to the White House the cordial
human spirit of McKinley.
But apart from the merits of Senator Hard
ing he was the best selection of the convention
for the reason that he should be able to redeem
Ohio to the republican party. Examined with
regard to both strategy and the qualifications
of the candidate, the republican convention has
shown clear thinking and sound acting. There
were many very good men under consideration,
Dut tawng into account geographical location
as well as the man himself, it is clear that the
convention did a fine piece of work in fixing
upon Senator Harding for the presidency. New
York Sua and Herald.
THE OMAHA SUNDAY
A Line OMype or Two
Hw is tht Lin. 1st ths sulpt fill whtrs they as.
LOVERS.
Wheneo and whither this dancing- gleam,
Light of my heart, my heart?
Comes It out of the sunset stream
Caught and held on a bright moonbeam,
Held, while the stars of morning spoke
In silver tones, till the dawn awoke?
Whence and whither this lilt I sing,
Joy of my heart, my heart?
Is It the sound that the four winds bring
To forests, echoing, murmuring,
Whose rivers, lapping their way along,
Bear to the ocean depths their song?
Whence and whltther this burning flame,
Heart of my heart, my heart?
Brand aglow, from the gods it came,
His be the glory who bore the blame.
Through the ages the cleansing fire
Leaps to splendor in souls' desire.
Flame, sound, gleam! Oh heart of me
Wrapt and lapt in ecstasy! C. S. P. W.
GOV. JOHNSON has been charged with
being an emotional statesman. And yet when
a newsboy thrust a headline under 4iis nose,
"Johnson Boom Explodes," the Governor1 batted
never an eye.
SMALL TOWN STUFF.
(From the London Times.)
A tomtit has built its nest in a pillar-box
at Pickle Gate, in the Weald of Kent, and
has laid seven eggs, which it is hatching.
A robin's nest containing several eggs
has been found in the lettter-box of a house
at Sherbrook, Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Derby
shire.. Thanks for the Ad.
(From F. P. A.'s Conning Tower.)
In "Adventures of a Nature Guide" Enos
Mills says that the beaver is the most in
veterate player in the world; he loafs most
of all animals in the woods; he is master
of the fine art of rest. Old Stuff. In "The
Well In the Wood," by Bert Leston Taylor
(1903), one of the "most prominent charac
ters is the Lazy Beaver.
IN return we should like to quote something
from Mr. Adams' latest book of verse, "Some
thing Else Again," which the publishers say
they sent to us. But somebody around the shop
admired the book so greatly that it never got to
our table.
A NEW FACE IN THE ACADEMY CHOIR.
(From the Kendallville News-Sun.)
Mrs. Warble Robins of La Grange visited
friends here this afternoon while en
route home from Syracuse.
ACCORDING to Mr. Vollmer, department
of criminology of the University of California,
"crime is due mostly to sex, pugnacity, and the
fever for acquisition." That about covers it.
The Second Post.
(From a natural born comedian.)
Kind friend Sara: The reason I advertised
for a hard working girl regardless of and no
matter what she works at is that I am a poor
hard working man myself having been such
since the year 1899 that is the year or in other
words the last year I was in the show Biz. I am
a natural born Comedian. I never forget what 1
once learn. I was on the Stage in Action 24
long years of my life. It has been 35 years since
the first time that I ever appeared before the
footlights. I have got pienty of Acts, Mono
logues, Jokes, Sketches Rapid fire conversation
& etc.. So if it is your ambition and desire to
really become an Actress, and if you care to ac
cept me as your instructor, & Partner after com
pletion of your environment, in other words after
you have acheived success & become an ef
ficient performer, which is beyond a reasonable
doubt you certainly will, if you take me as your
teacher, then and not until then will your ambi
tion or desires be realized. There is one thing
that you always must remember, and that is that
this earth, you & I are living on wasn't built or
mode in 5 minutes. So it is the same with Actors
& Actresses they are or never waa or never will
be made in 5 minutes or 5 years either. I've been
at it now for 35 years since I began and I can
still learn something about it, Its a true saying
an old adage that there never was or never will
be a thoroughly educated man or woman. That
is true! for instance Take Noah Webster that
founded our Dictionary. Just as he got it all
complete and ready to enjoy it He died and for
got it all. So my dear Sara you cannot start
to soon the quicher and sooner you start the be
ter off you will be. Do it while you are young
little Girl and when you become an old Woman
then you will be independent, never will have to
labor or work hard then, Now Sara you will
have to write and let me know when & where,
time & place, where I can call on you, as I have
no office for you to call at. Now Sara here is
another factor I wish to mention to you, is that
I can tell you more in 5 minutes when I am in
your company than I could write in 50 letters
like this, As Shakespeare quoted The tongue is
swifter and faster than Pen and pensils. Yours
respectfully, etc.
TAKE it from the management, "the bridal
paths afford a splendid diversion for the guests
at Manoir Richelieu at Murray Bay, Que." ,But
we should think the newly-weds would be em
barrassed by so much rubbering.
, Gumming It.
(From the Hillyard, Wash., News.)
Alderman Johnson came to city council
meeting Tuesday evening without his false
teeth. He has all the ear-marks of a comic
actor in the movies with his chin making
love to the end of his nose and some of his
fellow-councilmen suggested that he enter
the movies. Mr. Johnson says that the
things didn't fit and he got tired picking
them out of an oil pan every time he sneezed
while working around autos at the Crad
dock Garage, so he is having a new set re
constructed. A GOTHAM shop David H. Lowenthal &
Co., to be exact announces "individualized
modes in dresses of restrained good taste."
Quite so, we should conjecture.
REMEMBRANCE.
Wistful forget-me-nots bloom but In the spring,
What time we turn toward every coming thing
Gone is the dull, dead season of the cold,
Gone are the passions and the tears of old,
Forward 's the word! the harvest is our mark.
Yet is the day the heir to all the dark.
Taught by that speck of blue.
We shall the past renew.
Those borders, richly set with blue In May,
Ere Leo rules the sky shall pass away.
Shall all sweet recollections then escape?
Nay, here is fair Anchusa from the Cape
That flowers freely all the summer through,
And brings remembrance soft as evening dew.
Though myosotis fade
Anchusa is her shade. H. A. L.
FOR star slugger of the Academy's Bloomer
Girls, Micksee nominates Miss Irma Battle of
Greenville, la. The outfield backs up when Ima
appears.
SINCE the latest decision of the Supreme
Court there has been talk in New York of clos
ing the saloons and stopping the sale of liquor
in hotels.
MR. JOHNSON'S BUSY SEASON.
(From the Alden, Minn., Advance.)
Mauritz Johnson of West Carlson says
that they are not sure about who will be
the teacher at school number 61 next win
ter. Mr. Johnson is now milking ten cows
and about 125 Plymouth Rock chicks and
some fine Duroc Jersey Brood sows beside
thirty-five acres of corn and 52 acres of
small grain and all looks fine.
THE firm of Duduit & Duduit, of Ports
mouth, O., is composed of Richard B. Duduit,
F. E. Duduit and William V. Duduit. Curiously
enough they have not chosen for slogan, "Du
duit Now."
OVERHEARD at the Garfield Park Town
and Country Club: "You topped your ball."
"No, I hit it with the bottom of the club."
NOW that the smoke of battle has cleared
away, you will be glad" to be' reminded that the
second quarter of your income tax is due the
fifteenth. B. L. T,
BEE: JUNE 20, 1920.
stopped
How to Keep Well
- By Dr. W A. EVANS
Sueetlunt concerning hyglms, sanl
on and prevention of dlMe, snb
tnitted to Dr. Kvone by reader of Tbe
llee, will he answered personnllY, eub
jret to proper limitation, where a
tamped, addressed envelope Is en
closed. Dr. Kvttn will not mnh
diagnosis or prescribe for Individual
diseases. Address letters In care of
The lies.
Copyright, 1110, by Dr. W. A. Evans.
They built
MALARIA REWON PALESTINE.
Writing on this Sunday morning
for the people who will read on an
other Sunday morning, I have de
cided to translate some information
about malaria conditions in
Palestine as the Australians found
them in 1917 and 1915.
The British advanced through
Sinai in 1916. They did not suffer
from malaria there except as a few
troops formerly in the Egyptian delta
had relapses. When they occupied
the line from Gaza to Beersheba
during the summer of 1917 they did
not suffer from malaria.
There were enough mosquito
breeding places, but Maj. Evans of
the Australian army says the native
population had moved out of the
country and the mosquitoes were not
Infected.
Turkish army
tian army,
toman empire.
In the autumn of 1917' Jerusalem
was captured and the valley of the
Jordan was occupied. The Jordan
is a swiftly flowing stream with
clean cut banks fairly free from
spectively)
growth of all kinds. It lies in a
valley eleven miles wide and 1,300
feet below the 6ea level. Surround
ing the valley is a brim of moun
tains 4,000 feet high. This makes
a deep, hot, dry saucer in which in
sect life exists in great abundance.
a Wasserman
if a spinal
tive it is
This valley is watered in part by
irrigation ditches built by Herod and
in operation continuously since that
time. Some of the feeders, creeks
or other
and rivers of the Jordan are clear.
you should
rapid streams with well defined
banks, while others are sluggish
sloughs running through marshes.
There are many springs, Bible read
ers will recall some of the springs
of Palestine.
The British recognized that ma
laria would be a problem in the
summer of 1918 if they conMnued to
occupy the valley or the Jordan, as
seemed inevitable. Up the river
from Jericho and crossing the old
Roman road were two tributary riv
ers, Wadyel Anjah and Wady Nuera
meh, lying wholly within their lifies.
A third stream, Wady el Mellahah,
rose in a marsh within the Turkish
lines, flowed througn a marsh in no
man's land, and there crossed into
the area occupied by the British.
The Australians dug straight,
clean banked ditches to carry the
water of these stream's within their
lines, drained the marshes, and
For Rent
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All Makes
Central Typewriter
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Doug. 4120 1912 Farnam St.
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If It's Worth Anything
Herod's irrigation ditches.
an aqueduct to bring in a
water supply.
All the ponds were covered with
heavy petroleum oils. Insofar as was
possible the stagnant waters were
cleared of weeds, brushes, algae,
green scums, and all vegetable
growth. Some bodies of water were
stocked with mosquito-larvae-catching
minnows. The men were issued
mosquito screens, gloves and mos
quito netting.
These precautions entirely would
have saved the Australians from ma
laria had It not been for the mos
quitoes which bred in no man's land
and behind the Turkish lines, and
which infected both armies. The
Australians' malaria hospital rate
was 2 per cent. On the other hand
the Turks kuffered greatly.
Maj. Evans said their hospitals
were always filled with soldiers sick
with malaria and the captured
Turkish soldiers had to go straight
to the hospital. Maj. Evans says the
great prevalence of malaria in the
The Archbishop's Visit.
Omaha, June 17. To the Editor
of The Bee: Can It bo possible that
the pro-British believe that the
United States is only an English
province. A Washington dispatch
that appeared in yesterday's issue
says that a protest has been filed
with the "State Department" against
admission to United States of the
Most Rev. Daniel J. Mannlx, arch
bishop of Melbourne. Archblshlp
Mannlx is a typical Irishman of the
caliber of Archbishops MacIIale of
Tuam, Croke of Cashel, and Feehnn
of Chicago, and he would as quickly
die for Ireland as blessed Oliver
Plunkett, archOishop of Armagh, or
as Wolfe Tone, Lord Edward Fitz
gerald, Father Murphy and the men
of 1798 "who fears to speak of
ninety-eight." His patriotism is as
pure as that of the young Ire
landers of 1S47, the Venians of
made the capture of
Palestine easy.
Malaria, which is said to have
wiped out the Grecian empire, to
have destroyed the power of Rome,
to have defeated Napoleon's Egyp
1867, or Patrick Pearse, the first
president of the Irish republic, and
tho other Sinn Fein martyrs con
sequently England's hatred for such
is thus credited with hav
ing wrested Jerusalem and all of
Palestine from the grasp of the Ot
a man. The proposition presents
itself, this Irishman who represents
the religion of St. Patrick and the
patriotism of Robert Emmet will be
in Omaha next Tuesday. Will the
Irish-Americans of Omaha turn out
together with their fellow citizens
to give him a reception worthy of
the cause he represents. In their
devotion to Ireland the Irish women
never hesitate. Whether it be
picketing the Washington residence
of the British ambassador, or the
Countess Macklvsitz marshaling the
Sinn Felners for a seige on Dublin
castle, or Miss Parnell in the old
Land League days, organizing the
women to take her brother's place,
who was thrown into prism with
thousands of others during that
period.
That monument on the banks of
the Shannon in the city of the Vio
lated Treaty is to the valor of the
Probably Safe.
W. C. F. writes: "After being
treated by injection of neo-salvar-san
and salvarsan (one each) re
four years ago, is it pos
sible that a patient is cured? A
Wasserman test showed negative be
fore the injection of salvarsan, and
recently taken showed
no trace of the disease."
REPLY.
If no symptoms can bo found and
fluid Wasserman Is nega
altogether probable that
you are safe. Two salvarsan injec
tions are not sufficient to effect a
cure. Probably you took mercury
treatment in addition, as
have done.
If You are a
Motor User
and that means every man who has
anything to do with the payment of elec
trical repair bills those responsible to
the stockholders for the size of their divi
dends, will be interested in our service.
Motor and Generator Repairs
Adherence to the highest standard with
an unvarying uniformity of workmanship
and material, has placed a well-merited
reputation on our rebuilt electrical equip
ment. We invite inquiries from those interested.
New and Rebuilt Motors and
Generators in Stock
States Electric Service Co.
1011 Farnam St.
Omaha
Tyler 4488
NEW LOCATION
207-9-11 SOUTH 19TH STREET
(Ground Floor Kennedy Building
S. E. Corner 19th and Douglas Sts.
NEW TELEPHONE NUMBER
DOUGLAS 1350
FOSTER-BARKER
INSURANCE
Have It
Irish women and England deceit
Therefore, there can be .no doubt
about tho colleens of Omaha lend
ing the dignity of their presence to
mike Archbishop .Mannlx"- reoep.
tlon a grand success. The elite of
the Irish race, those who were ever
and always faithful and true will
undoubtedly do their duty on this
great occasion. Tuesday. June i ZZ.
The opportunity offers itself to show
the archbishop and the world that
the Stars and Stripes out 'stand
ard and not the hated Union Jack,
also that the "Star Spangled Ban
ner," such as Francis 6co" lwr
wrote it, is our national anthem,
and not "God Save the King, nor
"God Bless the Prince of Wales.
JERRY HOWARD.
Pungent Paragraphs.
Ladles and gentlemen: Meet Mr,
O. Flation. Greensboro News.
The profiteers are an optimistic
lot. They take the world as they
ind it Sioux City Journal.
The socialist campaign is a com
edy, with Debs in the cellar role.
Louisville Post.
' Uou
will have a
choice of the
best instrun
merits in
our store
Saxophones and Cornets
Mandolins, Banjos and
uuitars; Violins and Cel
los; Piano Accordions and
Drummer's Traps, in
every desirable grade.
Terms: On instrument
fiver 9K . 1 1
rw, nwniniy pay
menu may he arranged.
The Art And Music Store
1513 Douglas St
I
1
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CO.
Insured99
SI
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