Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 20, 1920, Page 4, Image 4

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LIthe Omaha Bee
DAILY ( MORNING ) EVENING SUNDAY
THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY.
NELSON B. UPDIKE, Publisher.
rt MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Toe AnocUttd Pmi. of which Tht Bee ta a mamtwr, II
duarrelr entitled to tht nu for publication of ill diipatchee
a-edlted to it or not othanme credited to this paper, end aleo the
local aewa publtehed hln All riiata of publication ef our medal
llapetcaM are aleo manrd.
BEE TELEPHONES
Print Branca Bxcnenie. A ik for toe T-l.- 1 (fTl
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For Night Calls After 10 T. M.t
editorial Department ........... Tyler 1MW.
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OFFICES OF THE BEE
' ' Mam Office: 17th and Feroam
Council lUuffi IS Scott St. I South Side 3311 N Bt.
Out-.f-Town Officaai
New lore 8 Fifth Ate. Weinlnnton 1311 O St.
Chiciio gta Bldf. I Tarla Franca 420 Bua Bt. Bonora
The Bee's Platform
1. New Union Paaeeng.r Station.
2. Continued improvement of the Ne
braska. Highway, including the pave
- ment of Main Thoroughfares leading
, into Omaha with a Brick Surface.
3. A short, low-rate Waterway from the
Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean.
4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with
, City Manager form of Government.
ST. LAWRENCE PLAN GAINING.
The predicament of the railroads of the
Co U?Vted States is adding a great force to the
thi weight of argument supporting the St. Law-
I C . T 1 J
lauic-vicdi i-aKes aeep water way project.
business in all parts of the country is inter-
c" ..tA k.. .1.. i-.a:- .....
Ut mimu uy me iidinc congestion, aue to tne in
to., ability of the railroads to move the freight. This
ges is not because of the incompetence of the man
hl agement, or the shortage of help, but because
5tj of the inadequacy of the equipment and facili
Hi ties- Our government has just loaned the roads
mi $300,000,000 to be expended that emergency re
jj quirements may be partly met. And the total
tic amount asked for the St. Lawrence waterway
ha isonly $150,000,000, or half that granted the rail
of roads as temporary relief.
Sixteen years ago James J. Hill startled the
vXo country by declaring that the railroad systems
f,t would have to expend a billion dollars a year
v. for at least five years in order to bring their
Jj service up to a parity with business demands.
af The roads did not spend half this sum. Now
j;' we are reaping the harvest of that neglect. Hill's
: foresight was not accepted as sound, but he
j knew what he was talking about. Under present
conditions, the roads would be required to spend
w: t" least the whole sum mentioned by the great
wi builder in order to be in a condition to care for
L Pr.eSent day traffic, and no provision for the fu-
iuic wnaicver.
The proposed route to the ocean by way of
the Great Lakes and the stupendous river
means an outlet for the greatest producing
region in the world. Forty-five per cent of the
xportable foodstuffs alone come from the sec
tion that would be directly served by ocean car
riers using this system. Its feasibility is- un
questioned, its desirability is imperative, and its
utility means the emancipation of the farms
and factories between the Alleghenies and the
Rockies from a condition that now hampers out
put, increases cost of marketing, and delays the
circulation of wealth by holding up the current
ftf traffic. If thisregion is to grow, and it cer-'
talnly will, then its possibilities will be reached
quicker because it has ample facilities for seritj
nt its products to the consumer.
.,). Nebraska is vitally concerned in this, and is
generally committed to it. Support for the
project means much to the future of the state's
gifeat business of food producing, a fact that
should not' be lost sight of by any of its citizens.
; The Rich Man' Money!
Money only represents thing of greater
value, says Laooera Weekly in a oaracraoh-
recording the return from Europe of President
vauclain of the Baldwin Locomotive Works
wijh a hundred million dollars' worth of orders
in" his grip, which mean work at big wages for
a,' great number of Americans. "That kind of
big business helps everybody," says Capper's.
It does. And Mr. Vauclain is a olutocrat. he
f t ) ,
t itiremembered; many times a millionaire. Long
C a jo he had money enough to support his family
jj in affluence for generations to come. Suppose
I hi' had quit then and permitted his business
if genius to lie dormant, would not the cduntry
e hVe been the loser? We hear much of swollen
fortunes. and of the men who possess them.
Vhere are their dollars? Stacked up in vaults?
Not for a minute. They are invested to the
afflount of many billions in thousands of useful
I productive enterprises that give work and
wages" to millions of less gifted men, affording
i them-opportunity to acquire comfortable homes
ind live" happy lives, and so share in the earn-
l irtgs made possible only by the employment of
immense Capital under the direction of com-
f mercial genius.
I The. money save by the. "'little fellow," finan-
J iially speaking, represents the comforts of home
I ind family , arid respectability. The money,
j savedhy th big fellow the plutocrat repre
sents certain "things of greater value," which
j are included in opportunities for industrious
S men to thrive all over the land. He is av
densely ignorant man who hafhors a feeling of
hostility wealth.. Without its existence and
the industry and brains of those who control it,
the comforts and pleasures of the.entire human
race wOutd be reduced to a minimum. Wealth
is a measure of those achievements which add
to the happiness ("mankind. . ,
The Present Phase of Drinking.
He is a simple minded, credulous man wh6
believes a constitutional amendment, fortified
with federal and state laws, can banish all al
i6hollc beverages from this country. So long
is human nature remains what it is, and evil of
jnysort continues in a sinful world, drinks
with a kick in them will be made. The appe
tites of .thousands of years cannot be totally
destroyed by any sort of legal enactment or any
penalty, however severe. Crime continues' in
spiteHf law. A country may be bone dry legally,
but not actually.
It Is just' as well to understand this now;
and Jhe, writer says it with the bias of a mart
who has voted dry in local option elections and
tate prohibition elections, and used his per
sonal influence for national prohibition. The
liquor saloon has been put Out Of business, the
breweries and distilleries are gone. The open
invitation t6 indulge publicly in Intoxicating
drinks has passed away. The manufacture and
sale of brews, wines and liquors are no longer
legal. It is a tremendous reform that ha been
accomplished, under which we shall be a sober
nation, well rid of a cancerous blight that de
stroyed men by hundreds of thousands annually,
and levied an appalling cost bill on the people.
But for many years to come there will be
clandestine manufacture and sale of ardent spir
its, and much making of wines and beers in
homes. The fact should cause no discouragement.
We do not lose faith in law when there is a mur
der or a robbery. We need not grow excited
when we see evidence of drinking. There is much
to be thankful for in the banishment of the sa
loon. As time passes there will be less and less
crooking of elbows. It is now a matter of grad
ually putting the drink habit out of mind.
Did America Fight for the League?
In the wilderness of words that has sprung
up around the record of Woodrow Wilson in
connection with the world war, certain utter
ances stand out like forest monarchs.: Some oi
these may shed a little light on the platform
adopted at San Francisco. -That document starts
out with an eulogistic statement concerning
the League of Nations in which it says:
It was for this that America
broke away from traditional isolation and
spent its blood and treasure to crush a colos
sal scheme of conquest. It was upon this
basis that the president of the United States
in prearrangement with our allies consented
to suspension of hositilities against the im
perial German government,' . . . . Hence
we not only congratulate the president on the
vision manifested and tne vigor exhibited in
the progress of the war, but we felicitate him
and his associates on the exceptional achieve
ment at Paris. ...
What about the "vision manifested" by the
president? Did he haveit on January 8, 1915,
when he said:
Do you not think it is likely that the
world will some day turn to America and
say: "You were right and we were wrong.
You kept your heads and we lost ours."
Or was it on May 27, 1916, when he spoke
of the war, then almost wo years old, in these
words:
With its causes and objects we have no
concern. The obscure fountains from which
its stupendous flood burst forth we are not
interested to search for or explore.
This thought was still in his mind when, on
October S, 1916, he said:
The singularity of the present war is that
its origin and objects have never been dis
closed. They have obscure European roots,
which we do not know how to trace. . . .
It will take the long inquiry of history to ex
plain this war.
Maybe his earlier expression, that of Feb
ruary 3, 1916, gives a clue to his thought. It
was then he said:
I have tried toMive up to the counsel I
have given my fellow citizens, not only to be
neutral in action, but also to be neutral in the
genuine attitude of thought and mind.
How this neutrality could be maintained the
president expressed thirteen months later,
March 5, 1917, in this:
The war inevitably set its mark from the
first alike upon our minds, our industries, our
social actions. To be indifferent to it or in
dependent of it was out of the question.
His "vision" was evidently clearing up a little
then, and became much brighter on April 2 of
that year, when he declared:
The world must be made safe for democ
racy. Its peace must be planted on the tested
foundation of political liberty.
His "peace with victory," and "too proud
to fight" utterances are still in the public mind.
And remembering these things, how impudently
does the convention seem in its declaration that
we went to war and fought to establish a
League of Nations!
' Too Much Speed on the Road.
The record of automobile accidents for Sun
day is appalling, but is only a continuation of
the tale that has been told again and again in
the Monday morning newspapers. Family par
ties or groups of pleasure-seekers throng the
highways, and among the lot is somebody who
has ao 'regard for his own or the safety of
others., Rules of the road mean nothing to him,
no consideration of comfort or convenience ani
mates him, and he becomes the terror of all
who seek enjoyment in a Sunday drive. How to
suppress him is the problem. He frequently is
badly hurt in the wreck he causes, but often
enongh escapes to inspire him to "take a
chance" the next time he gets out. The worst
;.phase of his existence is that he appears to get
pleasure only in excitement, and finds this in
disregarding everything laid down by wisdom
and experience to safeguard the highway traf
fic. "It has come to such a pass that the owner
of a car, no matter how prudent and careful he
may be, knows that when he goes out for a
drive he does so at the risk of accident caused
by some reckless fool. The end to this is
plain. Either the speeder must be suppressed,
or the highways turned over to him exclusively.
The problem is up to the, police court judges.
The Beginning of an End.
"Fifteen dollar shirts marked down to $7.50,"
remarks an exchange, "means the beginning of
the end of an epoch." It does mean exactly
that, but just now we are more interested in
berry boxes whose bottoms are an inch from
the bottom, and crowded peach boxes whose
lower layer turn Out to be chiefly wadded
paper.
Is commercial honesty lost? Or with big
crops and falling prices are we to have honest
measure and a cessation of false pretenses in the
packing of food receptacles?
For Decency's Sake.
An editdrial on "Decency" in Sunday's Bee
contains these words:
In scripture and in painting the line of
decency is rather vague. .
It was written "in sculpture and in painting..
In the sixteenth line of the same article the
word important was printed "imported." We
let that pass, but the first error demands cor
rection. .
"Did you notice that the wind came from
the north on June 21?" queried the weather sage
of The Bee composing room Saturday. "That
always means a cool summer. It never fails."
Three cheers I Benisons" rest on this prophet.
May he never sweat in hot weather or chill in
cold. June 21 was a blessed day.
i . "!
Now the word comes from across the wa
ter that Col. House is advising Lloyd George
on the Irish question. Hope he has better
luck than he did when trying to steer Woodrow
Wilson at Paris. J
One bunch of local crooks has been over
hauled, but a lot of room remains for the exer
cise of thief-taking ability.
The president and the candidate both pro
fessed to be pleased. Wonder which knocked
under? '
THE BEE: OMAHA,
Women in the Pulpit
From the Baltimore American.
Has the Christian church made the best use
of its women? That is a question rarely asked
and never answered in a satisfactcry manner.
None can doubt that this is an age in which
woman is playing a greater part and a better
part than ever before in the world's history.
This country will soon give to women unlimited
suffrage in spite of the unwarranted delays and
inexcusable obstacles thrown in the oath of the
goal. -In both the great political conventions of
the year Women have played a creditable part
and have , been treated not only with courtesy
for their sex but with consideration won by their
clear heads and acknowledged ability. They
-were not mere ornaments in these national gath
erings but were seated there as delegates, did
all the work assigned them, did it well and voted
for the men they considered bestfi'tted for the
high honor of presidential candidate. In law and
in medicine, in spite of untoward opposition, wo
men have succeeded and not a few of them have
risen to high places in their professions. Many
instances can be cited of important original
work in every branch of medicine credited to
them. All this they have done in spite of the
fact that, though medical and law schools have
been forced to open their doors to women, no
sign of welcome has been placed over those
doors for them, nor have they been encouraged
to enter in.
It has been proved beyond the shadow of a
doubt that woman can succeed in law and medi
cine. Then why not in the pulpit? There are
in this country today possibly a dozen women
who have been ordained as pastoral work is
first offered them of their own. Most of these
charges arc in the rural districts or in small
villages and sometimes women have taken
them because no man would have them. Few,
if any, theological seminaries ars today open to
women and they cannot be expected to become
successful in the pulpit unless the seminary
training so essential to pastoral success is first
offered th em. Right here is the crux of the
whole matter. Training for such work is fully
as necessary as training for either law or medi
cine, and until the conferences and the assem
blies of Protestant churches, knowing this, take
action to offer such training to women on the
same terms as it is now giving to men, women
cannot make progress in the direction of the
highest type of church work.
Would women succeed in the pulpit? Why
not? Her devotion and her faith are beyond
question. Training in the seminary would make
her as well fitted to prepare a sermon as a man
and her earnestness founded on her true love
for the Master, would help her to send His
message home to her hearers with telling force.
That a woman thus trained could become and
would become a pulpit orator of convincing elo
quence who can doubt and those sterling and
loving attributes of faith, of hope, of charity,
which have given to women thrones in the
hearts of men since the world began, would
give her words and her work a power that men
might envy. In the church, as it stands today,
woman has done her part, but the part assigned
her. or allowed her, has been so small that,
while it has counted in the general result, it
has not been rated as absolutely essential to
either the existence or the progress &f the
church.
Why not make the best use of the ten
talents the Creator entrusted to women? The
church needs more ministers, sadly needs them.
Pick up any church paper and there you will
find a record of empty pulpits. There you will
find regrets that young men are declining to
enter the Christian ministry, seeking other fields
in which the tasks are not so hard and the re
muneration more generous. The true Christian
woman would never be deterred by such con
siderations. When she had once determined to
give her life to the service of the church no
thought of ease or of pelf could change her
mind. The argument that men would not be
influenced by her pulpit words must fall to the
ground when we remember that some of the
greatest of our American orators have been wo
men. The stage teaches the same lesson. There
the highest honors have been well-nigh equally
divided between the sexes, not of English-speaking
nations alone but in all lands where civ
ilization holds sway.
Not one sound argument can be adduced
against woman in the pulpit. The church needs
her there. Why does it not make this greater
use of her devotion, her ability as a true leader,
her willingness to play a greater part in the
evangelization of the world?
A Publisher in the White
House
It is an interesting fact that the presidential
nominees of both the great parties this year
are drawn from the ranks of the publishers.
In his telegram of congratulation to Governor
James M. Cox, Senator W. G. Harding
felicitates him, as a fellow publisher, upon his
victory in the convention, and Governor Cox, in
responding expresses his appreciation of the
fraternal feeling which has always characterized
the craft to which they both belong. Doubt
less both Mr. Harding and Mr. Cox recognize
the trials and tribulations which have been the
portion of publishers generally during and since
the war. A company conducting a publishing
business has not only paid corporation taxes as
have other corporations, but its publications
have been specially taxed for use of second class
mail privilege and that tax is steadily increas
ing, and discriminates unjustly against papers
located away from the geographical center of
the country, especially New York and San
Francisco. Moreover, publishers have had to
meet high publishing costs, such as paper,
printing and binding, ranging from 100 to 1,000
per cent over pre-war figures, while it has been
impossible to make selling prices keep pace with
such excessive publishing costs. Thus the pre
diction of still further increased costs in the
year 1921, especially for paper, give reason for
disturbance of mind of the publisher, who finds
himself unable to pass the increased cost on to
the customer.
It is to be hoped, in the interest of the pub
lication business, at least, that the peak of the
expense rise may soon be passed, and that
whether republican or democratic candidate be
elected, he will not stand up so straight as to
lean backward when matters arise having a
bearing on the welfare of the business of mem
bers of his own calling. Whether Mr. Harding
or Mr. Cox be the choice of the American peo
ple for president, let us hope that under the
new administration the financial and commer
cial interests of the country shall be conserved
and stabilized, the rate of taxation materially re
duced and that economical government will
again prevail. New York Spectator.
For Exceptional Bravery.
A colored soldier, returning to the southern
town whence he had been whisked by Uncle
Sam, and bearing a decoration on his manly
chest, was the cynosure for all the dusky belles
of the place.
"What dat you got pinned on you?" asked
one.
"Dat ain't nothin' but jes' a little ol' crow de
gurry."
"How come you get dat crow de gurry?"
"How come? Ain't no how come. Dey jes
gives it to me fer lettin" a French ossifer kiss
me." The American Legion Weekly.
All Personal Pride Lost
By the time a man's hair thins out pretty
well on the top, he spends very little time before
the mirror and never fails to call for boiled
onions when they appear on the menu. Hous
ton Post.
Converted Will Hays in Fact
According, to the Ohio State Journal, Mrs.
Heber H. Votaw, sister of Senator Harding,
was a "missionary in Indiana for 10 years."
Kansas City Star. .
Men Who Travel on Their Face.
"I never," boasted the shoe clerk, "forget a
man's face that I have fitted shoes on." Boston
Transcript
TUESDAY. JULY 20, 1920.
How to Keep Well
By Dr. W. A. EVANS
Qucatlons concerning hygiene, sani
tation and prevention ot dieat, mili
mlttcd to Dr. Evana by readers of The
Bee, will be anawered personally, sub
ject to proper limitation, where a
Mumped, addressed envelope is en
closed. Dr. Evana will not make
diaitnoals or prescribe for Individual
dlseanes. Address letters In care of
The Bee.
Copyright, 1920, by Dr. W. A. Evans.
wet air
to comfort.
is lost by
must drtnk
WHITE UMBRELLA IDEAL
SUIT.
It has been found that in hot
weather the human body does not
make less heat, but makes more
heat, assuming that the individual
is equally active in both warm and
cold weather.
If the individual, because of the
heat, decides to lie in a hammock
under a fan he will make less heat
of course. Thus indirectly does a
man make less heat in hot weather.
Th& regulation of the body tempera
ture in hot weather is accomplished
by increasing the loss of heat from
the skin and lunfcs.
If a man takes active exercise and
thus increases his heat production
he will continue to make heat at an
increased rate for some time after
he has quieted down. There is con
siderable scientific basis for the opin
ion that a cool bath at night before
retiring will increase the comfort of
sleep during- hot weather.
Since the question of comfort in
hot climates and hot weather Is so
closely bound up with loss of heat,
we are interested In the question of
clothes for hot weather.
Dr. A. Gibbs says that the ideal
raiment for the tropics is a large
white umbrella lined with green.
I have seen negro children on south
ern plantations dressed that very
way except for the umbrella. They
were more comfortable than were
the observers.
"Since the idea hot weather sug
gestion of raiment," Dr. Gibbs says,
"is not permissible, we should ap
proximate it as nearly as the law
allows." He suggests a large
brimmed helmet and a loosely fitting
white suit of material as thin as
possible. If a man's work makes
white impracticable he should wear
goods as nearly white as is practi
cable. Experiments with rabbits and oth
er animals show that black absorbs
beat rapidly. When one white and
one black animal of the same kind
arc exposed in hot sunlight side by
side, the temperatue of the black
one will rise faster, he will suffer
from sunstroke quicker and die
more promptly.
Between the body and the clothing
ia a layer of air which is both hot
and wet. If clothing is heavy or of
a close weave this wet and hot layer
of air is held next the skin and
causes great discomfort. Therefore
clothing for the tropics and for hot
weather elsewhere should be as light
and as porous as possible.
A. Breuil and W. J. Young, mak
ing inquiry in Australia, found that
some preferred cotton cloth for hot
weather, some woolen and some lin
en, but all agreed that the fabrics
should be porous and of lightweight.
A few garments are better than
many. A baby is most comfortable
when it wears a diaper and a slip.
If the weather is very hot it will
be well to leave off the slip. And
maybo the diaper can be dispensed
with on a hot day.
Since most of the surplus heat
Phone Douglas 2793
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Is disposed nf by evaporation of
lersplration, the clothing must not
become "wringing wet," and there
fore impervious to air.
Fanning by Increasing evapora
tion and changing the layer of hot
around the skin adds greatly
Since so much water
sweating, the individual
plenty of water.
Republican Platform Best.
Omaha, July IS. To the Editor
of The Bee: I believe that all vot
ers opposed to the league of nations
should aupport the republican can
didate for president The new party
should not attract these people. At
beat it can only succeed In winning
a few northern and western states.
It will not attempt to Invade the
solid south. Thus the old southern
democracy will be returned to power.
As between Cox and Harding, op
ponents of the league of nations
must choose the latter. The repub
lican convention drafted its league
of nations plank to suit Hiram John
son, an irreconcilable. The demo
ciatic convention not only indorsed
the league, but it threw the demo
cratic Irreconcilable out of the con
vention for the sole reason that he
stood for America and against the
league to preserve empires.
THOMAS LYNCH.
F.ye Washes.
M. L. W. writes: "Several years
ago my aunt gave me a formula for
an eye wash she has used for years.
She said it is a simple home remedy
for tired eyes and it was the regular
use of this wash which kept her
from wearing glasses. I feel that I
need this wash again, and as I have
forgotten just exactly what it Is. turn
to you for help. I believe it was:
To one quart of boiled water add
two teaspoonfuls pf camphor and
two or three teaspoonfuls of borax."
REPLY.
The formula of Dr. O. W. Holmes'
well known eye wash is aa follows:
Porax, 2 grains; camphor water. 1
ounce. It is one of the best simple
family eye washes and has been in
use in our family fifty years.
J. S.
Old-Ttmers Missed.
A chief of the Penobscot Indians
participated In a recent centennial
celebration in Maine. That is well,
but where were the Kennebecks, the
Androscoggins, the Aroostooks, the
Fiscatauquis, the Moosetocmagun
tics and the Molechunkemunks?
St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Nerve Will Do Wonders.
Billie writes: "1 have been ad
dicted to cigaret smoking and chew
ing the ends of cigarets for many
years. I find recently that or some
thing else has caused me a great
deal of distress. I have tried all
sorts of cures for cigarets but have
found that nothing so far has helped
me. It seems as if the cures have
weakened me and made me feel
worse than did the so-called cigaret
poison."
REPLY.
Repeat request and send stamped
addressed envelope. No cure will
work unless you are determined to
quit. The cures will not harm you.
Handing Vs One.
The American feels a sense of
outrage at seeing German women
working side by side with their hus
bands in the fields, and regards this
as mistreating the gentler sex. But
ho insists upon a tremendous amount
The Thoughtful Druggist.
Mrs. R. writes: "Upon bringing
in your prescription for hay fever
my pharmacist notified me that it
was entirely too strong. You pre
scribed: 'Four ounces calcium chlo
ride crystals In one pint of distilled
rrdn water. Take one teaspoonful
three times a day.' Kindly let me
know if it is all right."
REPLY.
Thank your druggist for his cau
tious consideration, but tell him he
is wrong.
"BUSMSSS good thank you'
LV. Nicholas Oil Company
Great Weslem Service
leave Omaha 7:20 am 7:30 pm
Arrl St. Paul 8:10 pm 7:30 am
ArrlM MlnneaiiOlli 8:45 pm 8:10 am
Through Sleeping Cara, Parlor
Cafe and Club Cara and
Coaches.
GRE1T U
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Has a Natural Slate
Permanent Attractive Tile Design
The Fastest Selling Roofing on the Market
Artcrafthas a positive guar
anty it applied according to
tne simple specification
printed on each roll.
Come in and Examine it
Sunderland Brothers Co.
Entire Third Floor
1 7 th&Harney, Omaha, Neb.
of work from his stenotraphtr anj
physical breakdowns from overwork
are common among women mpioye
in every American city. Erwjn
Rcsse-CarU in the Frankfurter Sett
ting (Germany). .
ADVERTISEMENT.
SAY "DIAMOND DYES"
Don't streak or ruin your material im
poor dye. Insist on "Diamond Dyes."
Easy directions in every package.
GIRLS! LEMONS
BLEACH; WHITEN
Make Lemon Lotion to Doublo
Beauty of Your Skin
Squeeze the juice of two lemons
into a bottle containing three ounces
of Orchard White which can be had
at any drug store, shake well and
you have a quarter pint of harmless
and delightful lemon bleach for fevi
cents.
Massage this sweetly fragrant lo
tjon into the frfce, neck, arms and
hands each day, then- shortly ' note
the beauty of your skin.
Famous stage beauties use lemon
juice to bleach and bring that soft,
clear, rosy-white complexion. Lem
ons have always been used as a'
freckle, sunburn and tan remover.
Make this up and try it.
in Cool Minnesota,
surrounded by big
forests and spark
ling lakes.
As a country and climate for goli
Minnesota is not excelled by the
Scottish Highlands. The dry high
land air, laden with forest fra
grance and cooled by lake breezes
is extremely healthful no hay
fever or "tired feeling." The golfer
of the Drairie country will scarcely
recognize his own game.
Then, too, think of the diversity of sports
in Minnesota. You can fish in the forenoon,
golf in the .afternoon, ride horseback, or
tramp through the woods, canoe through
charming water courses, play tennis, swim,
motor boat, or dance.
There art namereae good fell coarae to efceote
from in and about (he Turin CiHee, ana' la
(he big wood up north. The AoleJ accommo
dation! are wry good uni tht arfeep Arir. For
full information atk
Chicago Great Weatern R. R. Ticket Office
1416 DODGE ST. OMAHA, NEB.
Phone Douglae ISM
or addrees Marahall B. Craig, General Agent
Paaaenger Department. 1419 Fire National
Bank Bldg. Omaha, Neb. Phone Doug. 200
3
COSTS LESS
THAN A
SHINGLED
ROOF
AND GREEN
Surface and a
"V