Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 09, 1920, Page 6, Image 6

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    A
BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1920.
The. Omaha Bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
TKI BBS PUBLISHING COMPANY.
NELSON B. UPDIKE. Publisher.
MEMBERS OF, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tit AiwvUltd TrtM, of vtilcB Th. Rc M a nrmtr. M at
iIu!ti tniulM i th. at tor inMlritlni of all ikot atspatcaat
(rrdltcd It or not Mhsrwtaa endiud In Ihlf ptnar, ut also lh
local am publlahH herein. Ail light of ruUlcMloo at aur spaclal
i'lpfttrhtt ar lo mtned.
BEE TELEPHONES
frlflta Branch Kirhsnis. Ak foe U.i, Tl 1AAA
Dptrlnit or Pron Wintrt. IJ19T IVrVU
Far Nlfht Call Altar 10 P. M.i
tiillnrtal D1rtinant ........... TMar 1MML
Cirrulttlnn rpannnl , . ...... Trltr WML
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OFFICES OF THE BEE
. Main OfflM: ;th and fmtm S
Council Blttffl 15 Scot I it. I SouUt Si da till N 8t
Ou-af-Tawa Offcast v
Ns Tot M riflh At. I WaiMnttoa 13H O M.
CWrsia Slater Bid. I rarta Friara J Baa St. Honors
A-
The Bee's Platform
1. Naw Union Paatangar Station.
2. A Pip Lin from th Wyoming Oil
Field to Omaha. a
3. Conlinuad Imprerarnant of th No
Wratka Highway!, including th pava
t of Main Thoroughfare loading
into Omaha with a Brick Surfaco.
4. A abort, low-rato Waterway from tho
Corn Bait to tho Atlantic Ocean.
5. Homo Rul Charter for Omaha, with
City Manager form of Government.
HURRYING TO OLD AGE.
Luigi Cornaro, a Venetian who died at 99
three hundred and rifty years ago, remarked
when he was 78 that "whosoever wishes to eat
much must eat little," a cryptic utterance in
tended to convey the idea that a man who eats
sparingly will live so long that his total food
nhsorption will be much greater than that of
one who wholly gratifies his appetites at every
meal. The statement was made hy Cornaro
because his friends continually pestered him
with admonitions to eat more.
The ancient notion that a man must eat
largely to thrive physically still persists. Many
people believe an ailing man should be stuffed
with food in order that he may pain strength,
when in most cases the cause of his ailing is
overeating.
', In tan illuminating article in the Saturday
Evening Post entitled "How Old Are You?"
Dr. Rinel'art quotes from Cornaro's book "La
Vita Sohria'' (The Temperate Life), and writes
on old age, with valuable suggestions for re
tarding ks arrival. Baldness, gray hair and
wrinkles'ht says, are signs of old age no mat
ter how' soon they appear, because they result
from impaired circulation of the blood. Thus
a man may begin to grow old at 30 or 40. And
when he begins, it will be well for him "to look
a little out" for the causes, and if possible
eradicate them. (
"Work and recreation both contribute toward
long life," says the doctor, and "toward con
tentment." But there must be a "judicious mix
ture" of the two. The modern intense applica
tion to business and striving for wealth month
after month and" year after year, without the
proper mixture of recreation and rest, is what
is bringing old age upon men young in years.
When to the inescapable worries which attend
money-making are added constant meat eating
and he inhaling of tobacco smoke, one may in
crease bis age thirty or forty years in six or
eight actual years. The meat gets the kidneys,
Dr. Rincbart says, and the inhaled smoke gets
the nicotine poison through the lungs directly'
to the heart. The moderate use of meat and of
tobacco, if the smoke is not inhaled, is not con
demned, but the wise man who reads the doc
tor's article will irresistibly be drawn to the
conclusion that when one reaches 40 it is not
too early to begin taking heed lest premature
- old nge overtake him.
Trade With Soviet Ruaaia.
Wrmission to trade with soviet Russia, ust
granted by the government to Americans,
amounts to little more than taking" official
cognizance of a state of affairs already existing.
A considerable traffic has been maintained for
many months, sustained by various' subterfuges,
chief, of which has been consignment to a go
between. Similar conditions have prevailed in
other of the allied countries, wherever in ex
portable surplus existed in any line. Great
Britain and France admitted this some weeks
. ago, when they adopted an expedient somewhat'
akin to that now taken up, by the United States.
It was inevitable that this should be so.
ftThe move does not carry any recognition of the
soviet government, which must continue to
,; work out its destiny under the ban. A year
ago, when Jan Smuts was taking. farewell of
i" England, he warned the public that recognition
ft of whatever form of government the Russian
people adopted must eventually be accepted by
the world. It might be a modified soviet or
ganisation, or something else, but if it met the
needs of Russians and was of their own making,
then, said the great Boer leader, civilized gov
ernments would necessarily have to deal with it.
Lenine and Trotsky have learned quite aJ
! little in the last two years. They are moving
accordingly. "Soviet" Russia is progressing
towards such a stage of stability as indicates"ttie
; approach of a crisis in its government What
1 the near future may determine can not be
guessed at. but it is reasonable to expect that
Russia ,will in time resume its place among the
1 great responsible nations of the world. Traffic
' with outsiders is one sure avenue for the com
: ing of better things for the people there." They
m.v not have much to sell, not ability to buy a
rcaf deaU but no iana hoios more of promise
for material and moral progress.
Better Use of Fuel.
One of the sweet uses of adversity is to
teach us how to properly employ and therefore
better enjoy-the things we have. This is be
ginning to be appHed to the use of fuel, follow
ing a shortage and the accompanying high price.
, While coal was cheap and easily obtainable,'
prodigality in its use led to extravagant waste.
Any sort of apparatus that would contain fire
was considered good enough to burn coal in,
and the fact that 95 to 98 per cent of the heat
value f the fuel went up the chimney in the
form of unconsuwed gases worried nobody very
much. Finally, in Omaha, for example, the
obscuration of the sky by dense clouds of black
smoke, the constant falf of soot to defile every
thing below, and the pollution of the-air by
noxious gas. led to an anti-smoke crusade. ;
Everybody knew that the smoke nuisance
"was ii proof of extravagance "ami waste., by t "o
lnty cared a great deal. Improper and in
tnwn evie i-r heating plants were put wtO
service, just Is they always had been, and Ve
:.'. : 1.-' ;' ' .
clouds of black smoke continue to roll out from
chimneys, advertising to the world the care
lessness of the owners. Now that TucI is scarce
and costly, the search for relief is somewhat
feverishly carried on.
Proper combustion depends on one thing, the
admission of a sufficient quanity of atmospheric
air at or near the temperature in the firebox, so
that it will readily combine with the gases that
are liberated by the burning fuel. For big power
or heating plants this is fairly well achievedby
a number of so-called "automatic" stokers It
is the small heating plant that has not yet been
cared for. The inventor who will devise a fur
nace that may be installed in a home or an
apartment building which will approximate per
fect combustion will do a great deal for a world
that is weary of smpke and pestered by
profiteers. V
Why "Home Rule" Is Needed.
The plight of the Board of Education is
another argument in favor of home rtile..
Through the peculiar combination of increasing
prices and restrictions as to its tax-levying
power, the Independent School District of
Omaha finds itself with a "red ink" balance of
a little more than a million and 'a half dollar's.
Dormant funds have been "borrowed" from
until almost exhausted, and the treasurer is
finally compelled to' issue warrants to the teach
ers, payment of which will be deferred for sev
eral months. The inconveniences of this is ap
parent. Teachers who have been working for
low wages will be compelled to sacrifice a part
of their earnings, because of the discount on
warrants.
If Omaha were . governed by a charter
adopted by its own citizens, an emergency of
this kind would scarcely arise. Power to fix
the tax limit would be in the hands of the city"
council, with such checks and safeguards as
would protect against reckless extravagance,
and the predicament of the schools would easily
be avoided. No one questions the willingness
of the citizens to provide properly for the
maintenance of the schools. Nor does anyone
accuse the Board of Education of mismanage
ment of the affairs tliat are entrusted to it. Costs
of administration and management mounted
faster than they could be met. The amount of
money that can be raised by taxation under the
present limit is insufficient to meet the needs
of the schools.
But Omaha is powerless and must wait until
the legislature, assembles in order 'to get the
authority needed to raise the cash that must be
had to carry on its most important function, that
of operating the public schools. A few months
ago the police and fire departments were
similarly handicapped. This condition can be
remedied whenever the citizens take over en
tirely the business of the community. Why
wait?
These Be Decadent Days.
There conies to cur desk a beautifully printed
little volume called "Vanitas" the Latin word
meaning empty and vain. The foreword on
the cover justifies the title. It says the author,
Paul Eldridge, "is thoroughly convinced by long
study and meditation that life is mud." We are
further enlightened by the statement that "he
takes delight in slapping Life in the face." How
does he do it?
H writes of God in this fashion: -
God is a little girl"
Gay and mischievous.
That likes to play with' mud. , .
One page is devoted-to Ghosts. Here follow
its ' entire5- contents:
Dead leaves
The wind rolls on,
Scaring little birds
That rocked on them.
Do birds rock on leaves? But let us pass on.
On Flirtation we -have another entire page,
whose contents follow: i
You are a dainty Birdlet
SwinRing giddily
On the frailest twig
T am a gray-eyed Tom-Cat
Watching
Alas I You never fall. ...
How can men write such things? And how
do they get them printedin Boston, Of aft
places? And what manner of men can read
them with patience? The foreword speaks of
them as "exquisite poems." Gosh!
Figures on Personal Extravagance.
An official report shows expenditures for
luxuries during the last fiscal year 'of $8,710.
.000,000 an average of $7 a week or $364 a year
for every family in thefcountry. v
For tobacco men spenj $2,110,000,000, for
automobiles $2,000,000,000 changed hands, and
for candy $1,000,000,000.
In the hundreds of millions-range cigarettes,
perfumery, face powders, soft drinks, non-essential
furs, and musical instruments.
Anothef big item in the fist is carpets, rugs
and clothing of finer qualities $1,500,000,000.
What a bad hour the contemplation of these
"figures would give Poor Richard, who sought to
establish thrift in America.
Superstition Yields Profits.
Not since the 13-15-14 puzzle of twenty-five
years ago, which made it's inventor a fortune,
has a plaything brought its originator such rich
returns in cash as the ouija board. The BaltU.
more Presbyterian responsible for it is a mil
lion dollars better off because of his adaptation
of the old planchette board. He gave it the
name "ouija" by combining the German and
French words for yes. and now says: "Yes,
yes; t is a good thing,, financially." But as a
medium for spiritual communication he regards
It with his tongue in his cheek. ' .
A Landlord Spurns Gold.
There are smiles to be had in all directions
if we will but look for them. Take the caseiof
Max Gold, for instance, who owns a hotel on
the seashore near RockawayiT-which is leased
to one A. Lipschitz. The Gold family went
down to the hotel and rented quarters at $100 a
week. Then the tenant raised the rate to $120.
Mr. Gold refused to pay. Thereupon Mr. Lip
schitz called his porte'rs and evicted the Gold
family, bag and baggage.
. Isn't that delightfully amusing? The owner
of a hotel bounced by his tenant I vWe must
read Emerson's essay on "Compensation" to
get all there is out of this incident.
. Ohio accepts her honors cheerfully. Every
politician in the state is willing to fill some fat
federal office.
Our guess is that Mr. McAdoo is the worst
-staaa rtrtstirt f 4 si i A i ' t - '
. yJ I V fc I ill ,111 iv -f
News print prices may bow before Harding
and Cox V "'
A Line 0 Type or Two
M,w la th Lino, lat tka lulii Ml htr than .
IO.
Bewildered, patient, lost in life's wild maze
uf curious, endless ways that lure me on,
I wander, witch-enchanted, weary, wan.
Where light Is misted, nights are ghastly days.
Still whispering wlldwoods chant glad lisping
lays
Of warbllnir hymn and leafy benison:
Yet blushlnf? blossoms tell of (tlory gone
Before mirage' magic, haunting haze.
Through shower of sunshine as through glitter-
Ing rain.
By sobbing seas, past cities' towers tall,
Past hearts of friends that fade as flowers fall,
Thus onward ever wends my questing vain
On flitting as the halcyon spurns the foam,
For in my breast God's gadfly has We home.
RIQUAK1US.
WHEN the so-called American people sus
pend business from Saturday to Tuesday, one
discovers how needless is a large share of
human activity. It is impossible to get any
thing done in those two holidays, but half of
the business you wish done could wait in
definitely. Telegrams are not received, the day
they are sent, but few telegrams are urgent.
There is no news in the newspapers, but there
is very little news any day if one follows Dr.
Lhot s advice and omits every paragrapn or
column which begins, "It is said," "It is re
ported." "It is expected," or "We learn from a
well informed source.
WHATEVER THAT MAY PORTEND.
(From the Daily lowan.)
Slater has proven great ability in hurling
the discus and holds a national record
throw for the last season. His failure to
place at the recent conference was a big sur
prise, but the confidence of the coaches
and fans is still ebbing at high tide.
WE all know that Scotchmen get on well in
the world, but some of us may not have known
why. Mr. Bonar Law explains. The Scotch
man has an ineradicable love of education, and
to gratify his passion for learning he practices
thrift. Dod ay!
The Clock In SlagcluncJ.
(A. B. Walkley in' the London Times.)
There is another way of-playing tricks with
the clock, by making it stand still for some of
your ypersonae;es. while It ' ticks regularly for
the rest. A. E. W. Mason, In one of his stories,
gave an extra quarter of an hour now and then
to one ot the characters that is to say, the
clock stopped for them during that period, but
not for him and while outside time, so to
speak, he could do all sorts of things (if I re
member rightly he committed a murder) with
out risk of detection. Rut the great magician of
this kind is Barrie. The heroine of his Truth
about the Russian Dancers had a sudden desire
for an Infant, and within half an hour was de
livered of one; a remarkably rapid case of
parthenogenesis. The infant was carrifed out
and returned the next moment a child of 10.
"He grows apace," said somebody. These were
cases of the clock galloping. With the heroine
of Mary Rose on the island it stands still, so
that she returns twenty-five years later td her
family precisely the same girl as she left them
We all know what pathetic effects Barrie gets
out of this trick with the clock. But he has, of
course, to assume supernatural intervention to
warrant' them. And there you have the con
trast with the film. In the "spoken drama,"
poor, decrepit old thing, they appeal to that silly
faculty, the human Imagination; whereas the
film has only fo turn some wheels quicker or
slower and it Is all done for you. under your
nose, without any imagination at all.
How to Keep Well
By Dr. W. A. EVANS .
Ouratluna romernlng hygiene, nl
tatlon nnd firrventlon of Utaeuie, nuIi
mltted to Or. Kvan by rmler oi The
lire, wlU b annwerrd prunnlly. ul.
J ret to proper limitation, 'where
tamped, arttlrwed rneelope I en
eloned. Ir. Kvnna will not make
dlairnoiila or prenerlbe for Individual
dlKennea. Address lettere In rare of
The Bee.
Copyright. ::o. by Dr. W. A. Evan.
WHEN KIDS SWALLOW PINS.
If a child swallows a button, what
is to be done about it? Th depart
ment of health of New York devotes
a bulletin to answering this and sim
ilar questions.
The first question to decide Is
whether the object has been swal
It wed. The child's testimony on this
pcint is not always reliable. Infor
mation as to the size and nature of
the foreign body should be secured.
Next an X-ray examination made
tc locate the object. This picture
should include the entire abdomen,
since objects sometimes pass the
stomach readily, but tateh some
where else in the digestive tract.
YOU may recall that two or three years ago
a prominent brewer asserted that modern beer
is the result of developing a process handed
down by the Egyptians. We now suspect that
the intervening centuries were devoted toStudy
ing how to clarify the brew. As the secret is
no longer of value to him, will some ex,brewer
advise us how he cleared the stuff?
Chiggcrs Must Bo Blossoming, Which
Reminds Va That
When the enterprising chigger is Vchigging
And maturing his felonious little plan, -He
loves to climb the lingerie and rigging
And tunnel into Annabel and Ann.
The chigger then with chloroform they
smother.
His Jlttle hour of pleasure then is o'er.
So take this consideration with the other,
A chigger's life is pretty much a bore.
ALTHOUGH the U. S. is technically at war
with Germany, we trust that the entente has
been restored between A. F. Poppa of Chicago
and C. H. Momma of Hamburg.
A POMK OV MAY NOT KNOW.
(Lament of the Spanish minstrels over the tak
, ing-off of Joselito.)
Go not to the meadow.
The flowers have faded.
For the king of the matadors
Lies dead at Talavera.
From the star-spangled sky
A star has fallen.
The brightest light
Of the bullfighter's art.
On May 15,
In Madrid plaza, ,
Jose had bad luck
And the right was a sorry one.
While he was being hissed
A spectator shouted madly,
"May a hull kill thee
Tomorrow at Talavera."
A calamity, indeed.
That cry portended, .
For Jose was tossed
And at Talavera died. -'
When Joselito fell
Undpr that terrible stroke,
H pressed his hands to his stomach,
Where the wound was.
And on the ground he lay,
That unequaled torero.
His Jifeblood flowing out
From the great rent.
THE friends of Ireland (and who isn't?) are
looking for'aid on the wrong side of the At
lantic. Have they forgotten what Kuno Meyer
said. "Germany must fight Ion till Ireland is
free?"
Saratoga In 1850. .
s "Into a tall tin tumbler he dashed little
blocks of Ice, clearer than the i-learest crystal,
which clicked and rattled refreshingly. Then
he turned in the liquors with acareless but ac
curate fling, and sprinkled In bits of fragrant
mint, with a due allowance of sugar and a very
thin slice of lemon. Then holding jhe tumbler
aloft in his right hand, he kept up for half a
minute an endless pouring into Just such an
other receptacle In his other hand, and so on,
back and forth, as If he were prestidigitator.
stretching a foaming ribbon between the twoj
vppjpeis. mis none, wun a rinsing rap as lie
set a glass goblet on the counter, and Into this
went the mixture, cold, strong, and sparklin;
with little hubles, each glass having a long stem
of clean white straw standing upright in the
blocks of Ice: for the true enjoyment was to im
bibe th nectar through such a conduit."
MANY of those 30,000 new readers which
the Trib recently gathered, without the aid of a
net. are advising us that Puis & Puis are dentists
in Sheboygan. The last word in this wheeze
was pronounced by an old contrib, who sug
gested that if the second Puis were a son, the
firm should be Puis & Fils.- '
HOW TALL THE CORN IS GROWING!
(From Corn Belt Pig Tales, Dubuque.)
The young" ladies of the ifflre quietly
slipped out to ITnlon park and had dinner,
besides doing other things.
BY the way, who is the bridge-whist author
ity now? B. L. T.,
v
.' ; -"The Strenuous Life. .
Hustling farmer (at 5 o'clock in the' morn
ing, trying to awake a young town chap, who
has hired -to the farmer for the summer): Hey,
there, young fellow wfke upi Get a move on
you. Here it is MoiVday morning; tomorrow is
Tuesday, and the;next day is Wednesday. Half
the week gone, and nothing dune yet I Country
Gentleman. !i x
If the object swallowed .is a pin
or bone it is Important thoroughly
to examine the back part of the
throat, because bones and pins lodge
there occasionally. To Jo this wrap
a towel around a flnser and use this
finger to keep the teeth ftpart. With
the index finger of the other hand
explore the back of the mouth thor
oughly. It is important not to.rrive
purgatives to dislodge pins, Bones
ami other sharp pointed object s. On
the other hand, give plenty of such
dry foods as bread, cereals, corn, po
tatoes and wheat bran. The popular
custom of giving cornbreai made
from unbolted cornmeai is a good
one.
If the foreign body has passed into
the windpipe the rule ds that violent
coughing and strangling will reveal
the fact. The following devices are
sometimes effective, fioldlrg the
person by the heels with head hang
ing down, slapping him between the
shoulders, tickling the bac'; of the
throat to induce vomiting. However,
a foreign body may oass into the
windpipe without causing grat ir
ritation. I have in mind a man who swal
lowed a chicken bone down his wind
pipe and did not recognize the fact.
It lodged In his lungs and he was
treated a long time for consumption
Eventually he coughed up the bone
and his consumption got well.
Lerche reports many cases of
bones in the windpipe, lungs and
oesophagus, some of which did not
cause an excessive amount of cough
ing or strangling. Surgeons now
succeed fairly well 'n locating for
eign bodies in tliPj' windpipe and
oesophagus, using X-ray and other
instruments, -and in extracting them.
The bulletins advise that slight
cuts be covered with a clean band
age; that no antiseptic be used.
That slight burns be dressed with
sterile vaseline.
When a person .faints he is to be
allowed to lie quietly in a horizontal
position.
It's Good For Mutch's.
Reader writes: "Unless I interpret
you wrongly you have stated at dif
ferent times that there is little or
no virtue in deep breathing. By
which I understand is meant taking
now and then at least long deep
breaths. As I remember, Mr. Roose
velt,' explaining how he developed
from a rather weak and puny boy
to an athlete, said it wis done by
practicing deep breathing. Was he
mistaken about it?"
REPLY.
Mr. Roosevelt was not always
right ' He built himself up as he
said. His deep breathing exercises
served to develop the muscles of his
chest and back, but beyond that
they did no good.
Better Be K.xnmitied. '
- E. S. writes: '-'i have always
walked a great deal atiu taken a
moderate degree of physical exer
cise. But recently I find that jt I
go through any physical or 'deep
breathing exercises, 'or awhile aftpr
my heart beats at the rate of 100
o more a minute ind I cannot get
my breath. Sometimes I waken at
west
For Help Kxtoiidcd.
Lincoln, Neb., July '. To the
Editor of The Bee: In tehalf of the
Nebraska, State association of the
National Association of I.cttei Car
riers I wish to thank The Omaha Bee
for the loyal support given the letter
carriers through your oditorlal col
umns at a time when we were striv
ing so hard to get a raise in salary.
It was through The Bee ana other
papers that we were able to get our
cause before the public and eventu
ally get a raise in salary.
Every letter carrier a traveling
advertiser, so depend on us to boost
The Bee. W. D. SHEAR. ,
State Secretary National Associa
tion of Letter Carriers.
night and cannot take a full breath.
My ankles are swollen noet of the
time. 1
"1. What 6hould I do to relltve
this? -
"2. Should I give up all physical
and deep breathing exercises outside
of what I get In my work ar.d walk
ing? I drink one quait of milk a
day, but eat no meat or white bread.
Does one's diet affect the heart?"
REPLY.
You probably have Vart disease.
Have a physician examine you, es
pecially as to the condition of your
heart, kidneys and thyriid. If you
have organic disease you must regu
late your exercise on ihe basis of the
condition found. It is not likely that
your diet lis a factor in your case,
though your diet is not a good one.
American
State
Bank
; Capital $200,000.00
' 18th and Farnam Streets
y Founded on Security 1
Built on Service
JULY 1, 1920 '
Start your Savings Accounts with us now.
This Department has increased $150,000.00 in
& very short tinte. .
Many of our customers say:
4 compound quarterly interest added to -the
account
Funds on demand without notice- ,
To be able to make deposits the first ten
days of month without loss of interest for
the month -
are conveniences they desire.
For idle funds waiting for investment at a higher j
rate, this Department will pay you well while you
are investigating. . ' )
YOU ARE INVITED
Deposits In this bank are protected by the Depositors" Guar
anty Fund of the State of Nebraska.
D. W. Geieelman, President
D. C. Geiselman, Cashier
: H. M. Krogh, Asst. Cashier -
Sugar not used
in making
Grape-Kuts
-nor-reQuired in '
serving, because this
. unusual cereal is so
sweet from natural
sugars developed
from .the grains.
1 8 6 9 WmmmM
-
t .-
A franchise to manufacture gas was
granted to the Omaha Gas Manufac
turing Company in January, 1868. Two
lots near 11th and Jackson were leased
to the company by the city on Feb
ruary 19. 1869. at a rental of $5.00 per
year. '
By November, .1869, the company
had 198 customers. The price was
$5.50 per thousand. Electric light
came in 1883.
You are invited to transact your
banking business with a bank that was
in business in Omaha twelve years be
fore the town had gas lights and twenty-six
years before it saw electricity; a
bank that has continued without
merger or consolidation strife 1857.
f irst National
Bank of Omaha
uunnnno
yvnjr mtr t
I is supreme
V I
Ml II
-onaest-livfd piano m
the world bar none.
Ask for a guarantee
from the maker or
tetter of any otKcr
piano equal to th
Mason Hamlin
guarantee.
SucK a guarantee
will est t given
because it CAnnot
Aik us to .
showjou
wh
7V
wJl
i. a it ill 1 m
HBaJM 1 I a Jl
n lis,
3
I
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an
BED 3
3 CROWN a
3 GASOUNE 3
Q Q
H H H H H H H
1513-15 Douglas Street
i "The Art andt
Music Store""'
A Symbol of Service
Aed Crown service stations don't
just happen to be always nearby.
The man who fills yours tank
doesn 't just happen to be obliging"
and courteous. And you don't
always merely happen to be served
promptly. This is all part of the
service you get when you stop at
a Red Grown, sign, you carry the
rest away clean, greater mileage,
full -powered gasoline Red
- Crown. ' v v;tv,- 3;
And when you use Polarine Oil,
the ideal motor lubricant, our ser
vice and your satisfaction is com
plete. Start using, them both
today. At your nearest Red
Crown station.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
. (NEBRASKA)
: , OMAHA