THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, JULY 15. 1920. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. KKLSON B. LTDIKE, Tublleher. MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tlit AasuwintM Trru. nf rhlch Thf l'.M li a mmbr, 1 -elull MUtlnl to till llu (or util K:KUoli of all ntwi dtipatctxa ww1u1 to It or not ottitrwlto emitted In tfiii pipr, and alto tha local newi publlihed iKr.in. All rights of puMicatioa of our oaclU dispatches ar alt tNmed. 1000 BEE TELEPHONES Print Branch Firharifa. A ik for th Tvl. Dararunant or rvnn &ntfv1. yr For Nifbt Call Altar 10 P. M.t Editorial Papsrtmmt ........... Trier IMWt Clrrulatlon rnrtniNit - ......... Trior 100HI, adtsrtialni Drturtmmt Trior 100 L Council Bluff Sow Tori Ckleaso OFFICES OF THE BEE Main Ofriro: 17th anil Famam 1.1 Hoott ft. I South Bids 3311 H Bt Out-of-Town Office! I8J Fifth Ate. I vhinton 1S11 fl 8t Street Mil. I flrla Frao- 420 Buo St. Honor The Bee's Platform 1. New Union Passenger Station. 2. Continued improvement of the Ne braska Highway, including the pave ment of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha with a Brick Surface. 3. A ihort, low-rate Waterway from the Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. 4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. DECADENCE THE PROPER TERM. A correspondent takes The Bee to task be cause of some comment the editor indulges relative to vers libre. Tin's enthusiast espe cially resents the suggestion that "free verse" is in any way symptomatic of decadence, and argues with vehemence that mere rhyme and rhythm have nothing to do with the expression of poetic thought. His defense of the four lines that liken God to a little girl playing with mud is indicative of his conception of poetic thought and imagery. If we concede his explanation that in the dainty and dexterous free verse form, with its natural simplicity and naive conception of a capricious Deity behind life's muddy chaos, augmented by the free cadence of the rhymeless lines, the composi tion is a true poem. then this argument fails and he is justified in his assertion. Let us examine the matter carefully. Art is an effort to express an aspiration, it may be in one or another form, but always an endeavor to bring forth tangibly a conception of beauty or truth, and the two are so nearly akin as to be one. This impulse for expression has followed man through all his experiences during count less ages. Just as his mind has expanded, so has his vision, and his forms of uttering that vision. As a Rosa Bonheur or a Joshua Rey nolds compares to the crude scratches or plain daubs made by the caveman on a tusk or the wall of his burrow, so has man advanced. But our correspondent prates of "simplicity" and "naive conception." Those are the exact characteristics of the cave man's work. His life was simple, his brain undeveloped, his concep tions naive, and his power of expression limited. Therefore, he was "natural." Life is more com plex, just because man has made headway, mor ally, intellectually, and materially. What was natural in the beginning is no longer true; what is true today will not be tomorrow, save as it relates to the unchanging fundamentals. The rude images scratched by the savages of ages ago, or molded by them from mud, as well as their ululating chants, were to them the ap preciable outpouring of a soaring soul, yearning for higher and better things. Just as their pots, heated by hot stones, have disappeared before better ways of preparing food, so do their poor drawings and feeble attempts at song diminish in comparison with painting and poetry of today. They are of interest only as they serve to mark the steps by which humanity has come up from the darkness. "Vers libre" is without rhyme or rhythm, white as "jazz" is rhythm without melody, and these are the lowest forms of expression in poetry or music. That modernists have turned to them does not detract from this. They are savage forms, and intruders in civilized society, even though they be endured because of their appeal to the primitive, something of which still lurks in society, and because the syncopated beat of the tomtom is more readily acquired than is the skill needed to properly play on violin or piano, while the rhymeless form of verse ap peals potently to those who are too indolent to fit their thoughts to the majestic mold or simple measures developed by and accepted as the at tributes of genius. So, then, in turning to these primal outlets for thoughts that swell within, the "modernist" has recourse to the methods of the savage, and is decadent. Finally, if God is "capricious," then He is well likened to a little girl playing with mud. If He is the eternal, omnipotent, immutable Creator of all that is, whose laws operate with certainty and precision, then the mind that con ceives Him as subject to caprice is undeveloped, immature, and surely subject to such limita tions as warrants the adjective decadent. New Era for Omaha Building. Today sees Omaha headed in the systematic regulation of buildings and business distribu tion. Under the terms of an ordinance that now becomes effective, the city is divided into dis tricts and zones, the uses of which are care fully specified. In certain parts of the city only residences may be established; tenement houses are barred from these districts, and may only be erected when permission has been given by adjoining property owners. This pro tects the citizen who has pride in his home and ; its surroundings against the unwelcome presence of a big apartment house or similar structure whose existence would dispel the exclusiveness that is just as much a part of a real home as is the roof on the house. Other provisions limit the use of property for business purposes, for industries of various kinds, and clearly outlines what may be done and what is forbidden in each of the zones. A maximum height of 175 feet is fixed for the sky scrapers, while the city is generally divided into four zones in which the building height is desig nated as 35 feet, 65 feet, 125 feet and 175 feet The object of course is primarily uniformity in appearance; it will also produce the grouping of buildings' as they may be classified by use or occupation, and should have a direct effect on me future growth of the city. Just how the new arrangement will affect values Is" yet to be determined. It should have a stabilizing Influence, especially in the residen tial section, where buyers will no longer be re quired to purchase as extra lot in order to in sure the future against unwelcome neighbors, la ,otbr ronei it will bring about somewhat imflar conditions, fof buyers are assured In ad- terprises, and will calculate accordingly. Finally, it does away with the incongruity which often accompanies growth, r.nd in this regard ought to be welcome. Are We Doing Our Share? Every once in a while somebody rises up and points an accusing finger at America, tell ing us plainly we are shirking our duty to stricken Europe. We are regaled with pictures and stories of the starving babies, the horrors of pestilence-ridden communities, and all the deplorable and shocking details of the devasta tion wrought among humanity by famine and disease. The inference to be drawn from this is that America has ceased its activity in the philanthropic field, and is therefore directly responsible for the misery and suffering that has come to the unfortunates in Central Europe. Some recent information from over there may change the aspect of public thought in this. One of the unpleasant facts, not made sufficiently prominent, is that much of the ter rible state of affairs now existing in Budapest and Hungary is because the socialists have put a boycott on the suffering land. Trainloads of food, medicine, clothing and other relief sup plies, furnished by Americans, are held up at Vienna and other stations, because the Czech and Austrian railroad brotherhoods refuse to transport them to Hungary. American indiffer ence is not to blame for this. Only the blind and stubborn passion of headstrong men seek ing their own ends is responsible for the pro longation of the awful misery that exists in Hungary, and these men professing to be de voted to human brotherhood! Nor can any charge be laid against Ameri can action because the Poles rashly undertook to seize from soviet Russia a large section of territory beyond the natural boundary line of Poland. Herbert Hoover has ordered the Amer ican relief workers under his direction to stick by their posts at any costs, and not to retreat before the oncoming bolshevik armies, that they may continue the battle against typhus and other plagues. No sign of laxity is noted here. Sir Eric MacDonald, secretary general of the League of Nations, makes report that during 1919 and the early part of 1920 America con tributed $218,600,000 worth of medicines, foods and other supplies to the relief of Central Europe. This does not suggest neglect or nig gard disposition on part of our people. The truth is that Americans have heard and heeded the call of Europe's suffering people. From our abundance we have freely given, and are continuing to give. Perhaps we have not done our full share, but certainly failure to enter the League of Nations has not slackened the generosity of our people, who have liberally shared their plenty with the destitute, justas they always have and always will. Trouble for the Third Party. Occasionally the expected happens. It has at Chicago, where the forward-looking, backward-moving radicals of all shades of redness from the pale pink of the parlor bolshevist to rose lake of the out-and-out anarchist have foregathered to form a "party" and enunciate a platform. As was easy to foresee, the "labor" group has swallowed the others chiefly because its lung-power was greatest. With such time tried and fire-tested talkers as John Fitzpatrick, "Abe" Lipkowicz, John Walker, Duncan Mc Donald, "Jimmy" Rodriguez, and James A. "Seattle" Duncan to do the shouting, what chance does a shrinking , violet like our own Arthur G. Wray stand? His philosophy is drowned in a maelstrom of sound, a whirlwind raised by the gyrations of the dancing dervishes, who yesterday were socialists, today are "labor leaders," and tomorrow will be some thing else, but always extremists in whatever they undertake. And just as they have en gulfed the "48ers" so will they overwhelm or wreck any movement to which they attach themselves. A remarkable manifestation of the uncer tainty of the leaders of this movement as to their desires and how to present them is af forded by the submission of their platform to Robert Marion Lafollette for revision. The "party" admits in advance that its platform must fit its candidate, not its candidate the plat form. Any alterations or emendations Lafol lette makes are agreed to in advance, on the easy terms that he accept the nomination. So the party finally simmers down, not to what Pinchot and the "48ers" want; not to anything Townley and Non-Partisans prefer; no stern and unflinching insistence on single tax; no ringing demand for the soviet government of the United States, but merely the views and opinions of one man. Any way you look at it, the gatherings, now grouped as one, balance so closely on the line between tragedy and comedy that the onlooker doesn't know whether to laugh or be sad. The First National Bank. There is a poisoned leg in Connecticut caused by filthy lucre rubbing against a calf in the "first" national bank. The woman sufferer had so large a roll on her leg for safe keeping that it chafed the delicate skin, excited a pois onous germ to activity, and there you are! If the dear creatures will carry their cash in their stockings, somebody should invent a sanitary covering for it that will safeguard them from pestiferous microbes. Senator Sorenson, who is an undisputed authority, tells us that Deuel county was named after "Bill," and not Harry Deuel. What we said for Harry goes for "Bill," too. The State Journal thinks a lot of office holders will want to stick for the new state house. Any old capitol building is good enough for most. Local divorce courts have shut down for the summer, but the family row will go right on its devastating course. The way things are going the air mail prom ises to affect the corn crop of Iowa quite materially. A platform that is too radical for Senator Lafollette must be a bird. Ak-Sar-Ben is also getting to look like a League of Nations. The "third party" fl not wasting time on a dry plank, either. Thanks to the local bankers, ma'ams get cash. the school The American Country From the Boston Transcript. As the Manchester Guardian is probably of all British newspapers the most consistently friendly to America, and also the best informed concerning these states, so little understood in Europe, we may regard with benevolent and ap preciative interest a recent account, in its col umns, ot the American country, in which some of the nuisances connected with travel here are pointed out. The article is by Henry W. Nevinson. a very well known correspondent of the Guardian, and a man who has written several pleasant and instructive books. He has been spending a little time in the United States, and he had while here what appears to him to be the eccentricity of traveling by day in order to see the country. It is here that Mr. Nevin son makes a slight mistake in his story. He says that Americans never travel by day that they go by night in order to escape the de pressing effect of the advertisements that line the railways. So hideous, he avers, are these disfigurements that "Americans and English visitors alike are driven to travel by darkness, creeping into little coverts set in rows one above the other along the. length of carriages, and shut off by heavy green curtains; there they lie stifling for want of air through the long hours of night, heavily asleep or listening to the wails and gnets of a mother and babv in the stifling birth overhead, until in the dim morning a dark attendant comes to shout the name of an approaching city, and it is time to crawl up the carriage and wash in the cupboard at the end." Pvot a bad pictura that, indeed, of rail travel in our enterprising but over-publicitied land. It is quite true, as Mr. Nevinson elsewhere says, that our American enterprise has threatened our national sanity. Not to any sort of advantage will you see the country between Boston and New York from a car window. But we do not travel by night in all cases otherwise the day trains would not be so crowded as often they are. Greater distances, and a keener pressure on our time, do indeed force business men to travel much by night. But there is still a saving remnant of people who prefer to travel by day, and who, in their traveling, manage with dis criminating and experienced eye, to pick out the scenes of beauty from between the sign boards people who know well the exquisite rural pictures along the Connecticut river, and the rich meadows of the Susquehanna, and the green and sunny slopes of the Shenandoah val ley, and are not insensible to the flowery and fertile loveliness of the rolling prairies of Illinois and Iowa. And indeed, Mr. Nevinson, in his charming story, proceeds to qualify his own not ill-meant exaggeration by describing the scenes he saw from a car window in a trip from New York to Montreal through Vermont and the Champlain valley, and back by way of Ithaca and Cayuga lake. He finds Vermont like Switzerland, and notes the odd "covered bridges" as a picturesque feature. The air along the way, he finds, abounds in good smells, "such as make a Swiss as homesick as the horn of his mountains." Everywhere he notes the pleasant copses of wood, and the white farm houses "with picturesque green shutters as in France." At Ithaca, he found Cornell the "most beauti fully placed university in the world;" "on either hand the plateau is cleft by mountain gorges with precipitous and rocky sides. Torrents leap down them as in Scotland or Wales. From the plateau one looks across a broad valley to a green and cultivated hillside that might be in the loveliest part of Gloucestershire, and you know the proverb, 'As sure as God's in Gloucester shire.' " Surely this makes us want to see Gloucester shire! To Mr. Nevinson, Ithaca is a vision of Theleme; and though he leaves it with regret, he delights in the Catskill country through which he returns to the metropolis its "green and lovely valleys, much like the Chilterns, along the banks of quiet rivers," where the people live "in villages and small towns that all look like garden suburbs, because the houses stand iso lated each in its garden, without fence or hedge to suggest the meanness of property." Let us be thankful that so keen an observer, even though he seems to have seen no more of our New England than a. bit of Vermont, finds rural America beautiful and let us also hone that the hideousness of some of our railroad travel of which the discriminating Englishman complains, will be in time relieved by the ameliorations now in progress, or being earnestly agitated for. Foreign Trade If Europe is as greatly impoverished as is commonly supposed, how does it happen that our total foreign trade for the fiscal year ending July 1 amounts to $13,000,000,000 and is almost three billions in excess of that of last year and more than three times as great as in the year prior to the war? American exports will prob ably exceed eight billions as compared with two and one-half billions in the year ending July 1, 1914. It is true that a larg gain is shown in the commerce with South America on both sides of the ledger imports and exports and trade with Asia has increased about 60 per cent, but last year Europe sent only $373,000,000 worth of merchandise to our markets, while this year the imports from the same source will amount to considerably more than a billion dollars, not withstanding the belief last year that stricken Europe would have no surplus for export. Making allowance for the increased prices which swell the totals measured by dollars aud cents, there appears also an increase in volume of the goods handled. This is really the most encouraging sign of the times. There are enough dark pictures drawn of conditions in Europe. Facts like these throw in high lights and afford encouragement for the future. Minneapolis Tribune. Watch the Outdoor Fire Three young men who liked outdoor life once went to a lake not very far for a day's outing. They took along their bathing suits, and sundry articles to cook. They built a fire, swam in the cool waters of the lake when fancy prompted, cooked their lunch when hunger bade them, and returned home late in the evening. A few days later one of the worst forest fires in the history of the state was raging in the country about the lake. Everyone was quick to condemn the carelessness which had caused the fire, including the three young men. Yet it was their unextinguished fire that had done the damage. The youth of the cities of Wisconsin have a privilege shared by few city dwellers. Wis consin is rich in wooded land as few states arc. Lakes abound. Thousands of men take advan tage of the nearness of these lakes and woods every year. A few of them are careless. Through their carelessness they destroy prop erty of great value, which years cannot replace. Such destruction, though unintentional, is a crime meriting the severest punishment. Where fore, if you must build fires in the open, be careful. And extinguish every spark before you leave. Milwaukee Journal. His Last Effort Will Irwin, who talked in Cleveland recently, related a story that was new to his hearers. It concerned a colored soldier who was on nis way home from France. The oyage was a tough one and the colored lad was badly banged ibout. He was sick and sore and discouraged. "I want you'alls to understan'," he said, "that this is my las' worl' war!" Cleveland Plain Dealer. Test of Conscience. The censor of Chicago beaches says he will leave the question of brevity in bathing clothes to the conscience of the girls. It now remains to be seen whether Chicago girls have any con science. Baltimore American. There With First Aid. Consider the mosquito. The lonely angler sitteth on the bank from early dawn till dusky eventide, waiting for a bite and the mosquito leeth that he be not disannointad. Sclahl How to Keep Well By Dr. W. A. EVANS Queottnn concerning hygiene, sani tation and prevention of dlri, etib initted tu Dr. Kvana by reader of The lie, will be anaweretl permnlly. aub Jert to proper limitation, wuera a utaniped, addreaurd envelope 1 en-, cloned. Dr. Ivan will nut make illna"noal or prescribe for Individual riteae. Address letter tn care of The lie. Copyright, 1920, by Dr. W. A. Kvna. ri IK UheJZ m ox LAW AND SCIENCE COLLIDE A prominent New York physician. Dr. E. S. Kishop, Is awaiting trial on charges of violating the Harrison anti-narcotic law. Dr. Bishop is a professor in a incdical school, a member of the American Medical association, the American Public Health association, his state ami local medical societies. Ho is a man with a laise consulta tion practice in diagnosis, and has hat! service as the medical attend ant on the alcohol, narcotic and pris on service of Uellcvuo hospital of New York city. Dr. Bishop's claim is that his practice is in accord with his medi cal opinions, hat his medical opin ions are based on a large experience, that they can be successfully de fended scientifically and that ho has the right both to his opinions and to practice under them, especially so long as it cannot bo shown that he has been actuated by desire for money or Rain of other sort. Our in terest is in his views on morphine addiction and methods of curing the addict His theory is that morphine ad diction is a definite disease, and the morphine) addict is a sick person. According to the theory when a person has become addicted to tho drug he acquires an ability to make an antibody for it which bears some what the same relation to the drug that, say, diphtheria antitoxin does to diphtheria toxin. When an addict takes his accustomed dose of drug it balances his antibody. When ho la not under tho influence of his drug he has symptoms clue to the effects of the antibody. These symptoms are as follows: Vague uneasiness, restlessness and sense of depression and weakness, followed by yawning, sneezing, sweating, excessive mucous secre tion, nausea, vomiting, purging, diar rhoea, twitching and jerking; in tenso muscular cramps and pains, abdominal pains and distress, irregu larity of the pulse, "poor circula tion," lowered blood pressure, face drawn and haggard, pallor deepen ing to grayness, exhaustion, collapse and, in some cases, death. Dr. Bishop has seen some cases in which death has been duo to opium addiction disease, and not to any intercurrent malady. When an addict comes from under the influ ence, of his drug these symptoms de velop in the order named. The pain, suffering and eventual collapse are just as real as these symptoms ever are in any disease. When a full dose of drug is given the symptoms dis appear in order inverse to that in which they appear. The dose necessary to establish the drug balance can be very defi-. nitely determined. This balance can be maintained for as long as a day. It is better to give the dose neces sary to maintain balance at a single daily dose than to divide it into sev eral doses. When an individual Is in drug balance there are no symp tcms by which the addiction can bo determined. It is only when too little or too much has been given that drug ad diction is suspected. (Dr. Bishop's method of treatment based upon these opinions as to drug addiction will be given tomorrow.) Better Consult Physician. F. C. M. writes: "For a constant headache in the pituitary glanda above the eyes, how much pltuitrin should I take? In taking pituitary ONE OF THE BIGGEST LINENS SALES EVER HELD IN OMAHA WILL OCCUR ON SATURDAY Union Outfitting Co. Makes Big Purchase of Linen Below Market Price. Sale Bring a Saving of Hun dred of Dollar to Omaha Homemaker. Many months ago the Union Outfitting Co. placed a big or der with one of the largest mills and importers for a large ship ment of high grade Table Linens to be shipped in July. The contract price for these goods was so low that in copar ison with the prices such high grade linens should bring today, the reductions are little short of sensational. The sale includes hundreds of Table Cloths and Napkins, as well as Wash Cloths. Huck Towels and Turkish Towels in every desirable size and quality. This Special Purchase fur-1 nishes further evidence of the increasing Buying Power of the Union Outfitting Company, lo cated just over the edge of the High Rent District, where, as always, you make your own terms. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I III !! i TWO MONTHS ! and you will be getting ; out your heavy clothes. Why not avoid the fall ! rush and have us clean ; and repair them now? Now is the time to i have your jackets or ; overcoats relined, altered or repaired. I Look them over now ! you may find the moth? : are at 'em. I THEPANTORIi V; 1 "Good Cleaners and' 1 Dyers." ; 1515 Jones St., Phone Doug. 963. " So. Side, 4708 So. 24th : Phone So. 1283. I Guy Liggett, President rainless Dentistry. Omaha, July 12. To the Kditor of The Bee: In this mornlriRs' edi tion of your paper an editorial under t lie caption of "The Painful Profes sion," the query is made why the tooth doctors do not advance with painless methods as haveuhe stom ach doctors and other ' specialists. I .ot me Help to set tho writer of t hut editorial aright and also speak of the injustice done your readers and the gross misrepresentations made of the "Painful Profession." In the Ilrst place, there is no profes sion which has to do with the hand ling of human ills that does so with less pain than does the dentist. The dentist has advanced along lines of painless operations in a way that no other profession has. The dentist is acquainted with more, means of actually performing painless opera tions that are really painless than any other profession. Let ma men tion just one accomplishment that rests almost nlone with the dentist, namely: Conductive anesthesia or nerve blocking. This local means of anesthetiation deadens or numbs tho region in which the operation is to he performed and this region only. The techniquo of this anesthetia tion is complex and difficult; in fact so difficult that perhaps a scant handful of surgeons or practitioners of any sort in tho entire city of Omaha outside of the dental profes sion are capable of its accomplish ment. The dentist's office through long tradition and perhaps some small reality has been held tho bug bear of pain. The dentist has long used nitrous oxide oxygen, and to day tho hospitals and other "doctors of the stomach and childbirth," to which your article refers, are just now awakening to its use. The dentist long ago commenced urging tho using of nitrous onhIo o.ygen for the travails of childbirth. This anesthetic, which is so mild and sweet and pleasant with no bad aftvr effects, is far superior to chloroform or ether, and is no more harmful than the coffee one drinks each day, and in the case of childbirth abso lutely in no way interferes with tho labor. Of advances that have been made in the past 60 years none ex ceed that of bringing about painless operations by the dentist. W. W. WARD. D. D. S. gland extract is there any danger of causing tho disease of which you spoke some time ago that disease which increases the growth of bone in the head, feet and hands? Is there danger of any other ill effects from an overdose? How can an overdose be distinguished? I have been to many doctors who diagnose nerves, stomach, tonsils, teeth and give all kinds of mysterious and In effective remedies. I am afraid to take anything the effects of which I do not know. I have taken a med icine containing a mixture of glands. This helped, but was not sufficient. I had to take too much of the thy roid to get enough pituitary." REPLY. The different parts of the pituitary have different effects and are used fc different diseases. Giantism is due to disease of the pituitary, but I have never heard of a case of giantism due to taking pituitary. I advise you not to take any pituitary preparation except on tho advice of your physician. 8 Extract Teeth Without Pain Moreover I ue only the BEST of material for all bridge and plate work and all work leaving this office i ready for inspec tion by any state' dental board. m. 1 . F. CROOK 206 NEVILLE BLOCK, OMAHA Entrance on 16th St., at Harney Tyler 6117 Hours: 8:30 to 6 Open Sundays Until Noon. Jerry Calls nn Irish Convention. Omaha, July 13. To the Editor of The Bee: The sincere friends of Ireland who are working in har mony with the delegates of tho Irish republic are arranging to call an Irish race convention at some cen tral point. This proposed conven tion is most essential to get rid of a contemptible coterie of counter feits who have been dominating tho policy of the Irish-Americans for do cades. "Honesty is the best policy." There is an old adage which says "Everything is revealed by time." This clique of political highbinders and their satellites surpasses the Dublin Jackeen, Carson or Bloody Palfour. Come weal or woe, those who were ever and always faithful and true are not disheartened by the action of the politicians. Every sincere friend of humanity Is with Ireland. Tho great heart of Amer- TBA0C USINESS1S C0OO THANK YOU lea is with the Irish republic, truaj to the teachings of tho fathers of the republic, It could not bo other wise. The only thing needed is an Intensive eampnlgn of education t capture the intellect of America. I would suggest to a, dozen or more of tho elite of the race, lay and cleri cal, Kev. Kiit hers Ahem. Klannigan, Judge, McCarthy. Shine. Stenson, Patrick Duffy, John Donnelon, M. J. (irmly, Anthony Monohan, John Hush, K. E. Sheehan. to exert them selves and try to get the Irish race convention held at Omaha. Tho con trnl locntion of Omaha can be urgecf upon those interested In the conven tion. JERRY HOWARD. "Milch" Cow Is Incorrect. On May 24, 1919, tho Missouri state board of agriculture decided for tho first time in official action that "milk" cow would be th term used Instead of "milch" cow. On April 1!1. 1919, tho I'nlted States De partment of Agriculture announced that hereafter it shall bo the federal policv to say "milk" instead of "milch" cow. It Is fondly rped that, tho word "milch," will drop out of use now and forevertnore. Missouri Clip Sheet. Strength In r.ars. Inability to wiggle your ears Is a sign of weakness, says a physical director. Which accounts for a mulo being o strong, eh? St. Louis Globo-Democra t. LV.NICH0LA5 Oil Company K. M. A. A first - class Church School for boys of good character. For cata logue address Col. Henry Drummond The Kearney Military Academy Kearney, Neb. . Why the fakt&lamliit 5 ltinroma The revolutionary device which make5 the sounding-board of the Mason gr-' Hamlin preof against deterioration is called the"Tension Resonator! No other piano has it. which is why none is as long-lived ai the Mason Cr" Hamlin. Ask Di 'ifcar U7 I V If m Priced Highest PraistrJ 1513-1515 Douglas Street THE ART AND MUSIC STORE Phone Douglas 2793. rasn . . w & OMAHA IffiJllELJ I PRINTING FgTll 4 'd CONPANY:P5ig I K tsssss S siior SMI . B5Mfflts n",u" fiwww " ComuRciAt printers-Lithographers - steel Die Embossers VOOSC UAF DEVICES Says: L. V. NICHOLAS "Business Is Good, Thank You'9 when it is Advertised Electrically Our sales department will be pleased to explain fully the merits ol Electrical Advertising and how economically it can be installed and maintained. YOUR ELECTRIC famam i Fifteenth, service comrwy Power' Co. 23l4M.StSo.Sids an m HUi Hi iiltTitahil tml, I jf ipyiluitiJiiiiii'iaitiiiMiJiiiJiiiiAiliiliilMiiliiiiiliUlTl