Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 15, 1920, Page 6, Image 6

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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: AUGUST 15, 1920.
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ONLY 2 U. S. MEN
HAVE INCOMES
0FS3, 000,000
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Treasury Figures. Show 28
Who Derive $2,000,000
Yearly, While 13 Exceed
$1,000,000 Annually. ,
Washington, Ausr. 1'4. Two men
in thfc United States confess to hav
ing incomes "in excess of $3,000,003
i year, according to information-ob-ained
at the Treasury department
today.
" Twenty-eight admitted having in-
' confes of $2,000,000 "dp," while 13
others say that their incomes are be
tween a million and a half and two
, millions.
' Of those whose incomes exceeds
$50,000 6,064, about tne-third of the
tctal number, are residents of New
' York state and half claim New York
City as their home.
,. New York Has Most.
' The 28 richest taxpayers are not
' evenly distributed. About one-half
of them live in New York. Two,
resident in Baltimore, are said 'o
have found the manufacture of mu-
V Jiitions exceedingly profitable; -one
lives in' Michigan, one in Ohjo, two
in Pennsylvania and one-in Rhode j
island and one m Texas.
Of the total wbo gave their in
comes at $50,000 or more last yiar
only a small proportion are really in
the millionaire class, their earnings
:u many cases representing swollen
wartime profits, or the proceeds
from large undertakings.
Millionaires Cautious.
On the other hand, internal rev
enue officials point out that many
millionaires stick to conservative in
vestment, bearing small returns, an(W
that their incomes dig not exceed
$50,000.
There are 1,271 in the $50,000 to
$60,000 income class, 901 in the $60,
000 to $70,000 class, 658 who have
$71,000 per year to $80,000, 472' who
Jiave $80,000 to $90,000, 374 who
have $90,000 to $100,000, 1,084 who
. have $100,000 to $150,000, 476 who
: have $150,000 to $200, 263 who have
$200,000 to $250,000, 131 who have
$250,000 to $300,000. 134 who have
$300,000 to $400,000, 74 who have
' $400,000 to $500,000 and 40 who have
$1,000,000 to $1, '500,000 incomes.
Printers Prepare to
Wage Fight to Secure
Shorter Working Hours
Albany. N. Y.. Aug. 14. An un
successful attempt to bring the issue
of the New york printers vaca
i tion" last fall upon the floor of the
annual International Typographical
Union convention marked the clos
ing hours of the convention last
night.
Leon House, president of New
York Typographical Union No.
6, however, advised a meeting of
printers on the subject in another
hall following the adjournment of the
convention.
In the closing hours the conven-i
tion ratified the,44-hour negotiations
of 'the executivex council and the
United Typothetae of America at
Chicago, whereby it was agreed all
publishers under he jurisdiction of
the Typothetae and all prinf-rs un-
' der the jurisdiction of the Inter
national Typographical union enter
'negotiations to establish the 44-hour
week without decreases in wages.
The old age' pension limit was
. reduced to 60 years and a guarantee
made of a pension of $8 a week to
all printers reaching that age after
20 .years of continuous service. The
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convention opposed graniiiiK i-arus
to disabled veterans trained in gov
ernment printing schools
Doctors Would Starve if
Breen's Rule Was Followed
Attorney Keeps in Touch
By Taking Daily Jaunt
In Park.
-The early morning outer need not
be alarmed if he should meet a tall
man in Hanscom park along about
six bells a. m., wearing overalls, old
shoes and without head covering.-
Introducing John Paul Breen. tak
ing his morning walk in the park,
listening to the twitter of the birds
and getting himself in condition Aox
the day's work?
Mr. Breen, a well-known member,
of the local bar association, has not
found it necessary to remain at home
one day during the last 40 years on
account of illness,
His daily regimen is to rise about
6 o'clock, don an ld pair of shoes
and overalls and then Sally forth to
the park, where he walks briskly up
and down the hillsides for 30 to 45
minutes. He then junlps into his
bath and later eats breakfast.
, Men Should Exercise.
"Every man who reaches middle
life should take regular exercise and
thus minimize the possibility of a
breakdown," said Mr. Breen. "I
have lived near Hanscom park for
nearly 20 - years and nearly every
morning, except in severe cold
weather I go out for a nlbrning
walk, rhis exercise stimulates the
circulation and otherwise aids the
proper functioning of the body. It
gives zest for breakfast. It is wrongy
to eat breakfast. within a few min
utes after arising or before taking
exercise or a bath. I have dumb
bells and other apparatus at home
for use when it is not convenient to
go to the park." f
He said he was not boasting about
the fact that he has not taken a
whole day oiffin 40 years on account
of disability. The only illness he has
suffered in two scpre years was .in
attack of hay fever. Headaches and
other aches-are almost unknown to
him. '
"Early to Rise.".
"I have been following this sys
tem for vears and I know just what
it will do for a fellow if he keeps it
up," he added. "Aside from tne
physical benefits of these morning
jaunts, one gets in close touch with
outdoorlife. Did you ever hear the
birds sing when the sun is peeping
over the eastern horizon? Did your
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nostrils ever dilate to the fragrance
of the' woods in the dawning of the
day? If you lie in bed until 7
o'clock and then rush to the break
fast table and then" to the street car,
you don't know you are living."
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Receives Japan's Reply'
Toccupation Note
Washington, Aug. 14. Japan's
reply to the American note protest
ing against Japanese occupation oi
the northern rart of the Island of
Saghalie'n was received today at tae
Stale department
Hie not was described as a
lenfflhy one and it was understood
. thaf- it went thoroughly inty the
whole question of the Japanese
policy in Siberia. The document, to
gether with ihe original American
note, may be made public' next week.
Omaha Storage Company
Adding to Floor Space
Within 60 days Omaha will have
the largest cold storage plant west
of Chicago, rive stories, with a
floor space of. 154 by 132 feet, are
being added to the plant of the
Omaha Cold Storage company at
Eighth and Farnam streets. P. C.
Hyson, manager of the warehouse,
states that the 11-story. building will
have a greater capacity than any
in Minneapolis, Kansas City or St.
Louis.
The People's Ice and Coid Storage
company is alstf making improve
ments in its plant at Thirteenth and
Chicago streets that will cost $100,
000. X v - j
Planting of Trees Is '..-
. 'Necessary for Future -
Prosperity of State
Plains of Nebraska, Swept for Ages by Forest Fires,
Y Became Almpst Barren of Timber and Early Set
tlers Were Wasteful Better Legislation Needed.
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Bv T. -W. M'CULLOUGH,
Flames 300 Feet High J.eap
From Burning Gas Well
Bakersfield,- Cal.. Aug. 14. A
column of flame 300 feet high leap
ing from across Standard Oil com
pany gas well in the Elk hills, 30
miles southwest, was visible here
early today. The well is in the vi
cinity of that which bured several
days last August with a loss of ap
proximately 500,000,000 cubic feet
of gas. , ; ' x
Clearinq House Reports
; Show Gain In Reserves
New York," Aug. 14 The actual
condition of clearing house banks
. and trust companies for the week
shows that they hold $18,575,730
reserve in excess of legal require
ments. This is an increase of $3,
404,610 from last week.
Consume Much Cotton -
" Washington, Aug. 14. Cotton
consumed during July amounted to
525,405 bales of lint and 37.7C3 bales
of linters, the census bureau an
nounced today,
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Nebraska has no waste lands.
This is the conclusion of Dr.
George E. Condra, director of the
Nebraska Conservation and Soil
Survey, in his report for 1920. Every
acre of Nebraska soil is capable of
producing something i of i valuable
service to man, but every acre of
the state's great area is not em
ployed as it properly might be, nor
us'ed in the way to which if is best
adapted. , :
Nebraska is popularly reterrea to
as a treeless state, .Dy wnicn is
meant that it has none of the great
forests that characterize other re
gions. Several reasons may be
ascribed for this situation. The one
most generally advanced, and per
haps most tenable) is that firespe
riodically swept the great prairies of
Nebraska, burning off-the grasses
and with them the young shoots
that might have developed into
splendid woods. .
Fires Before Man's Time.
These fires were started- before
man s time jn some of the many
ways froni which they now orig
inate; spontaneous combustion, re
sulting from fermentation of decay
ing vegetation; a bolt of lightning
striking in the right spot, or any one
of a number of other causes, but the
effect was always the same; the open
spaces . were swept clean by the
flames and sprouts, and saplings
went with the lesser 'growth.
so, wniie the regions to the east
of the Missouri saw endless forest
spring un after the elacial ice ca
had melted, the nlateau to the west
rising in its graceful sweep from the
river to the Rockies, vas left so
bare as to deserve the( name of tree
less. . ,
Here and there along the water
courses grew a thin fringe of Cot
tonwood, box elder, or some other
varieties of timber, but the broad
stretches between were barren of
trees. -
v Early Settlers Wasteful.
Early settlers found in these
clumps or groves wood for' their
uses and made havoc among the
limited patches. Their present needs
were more imperative than anything
the future held, and they were not,
even at the best,' conservationists.
Many creeks -and minor water
courses were completely denuded
of the slight timber that lined their
banks, and the growth that gave the
"Pine Ridge" its name went swiftly
down as settlers cut the pines anil
cedars for log buildings, fences and
firewood.
Today the traveler through Ne
braska might get an idea that the
state had once been forested, so
numerous- are the farm groves. These
are all Of recent origin, however, the
response of thrifty, energetic set-,
tiers to the slogan sounded by Julius
Sterling Morton, "Plant Trees!"
"Arbor Day Means Much,
Arbor Day means something to
Nebraskans, and the beautiful groves
that surround all the older farm
homes, the Vwind breaks" and wood
lots, are all proofs of how zealom
ly the admonition of thefar-seeing.
sage of Arbor lodge j has been
heeded. 1
t is worthy of note here, however,
that the so-fcalled "timber culture"
law, under which many a claim was
filed and many a Quarter section
passed from public to private owner
ship, produced little if any lasting or
serviceable effect in-he -jyay of
actuallv inducing timbe culture.
Nebraska ! sou will grow trees. It
also grows crops more immediately
profitable and of larger demand and
wider service to the; world. Some
portions of the state, though, will
not produce wheat or corn, or even
grasses in advantageous quantity
under existing conditions. Experi
ment has proved that these wild and
unattractive lands will grow trees.
Quoting from Dr. Condra's report:
Pines in Many Places.
"Pines - occur at a number of
places in the western part of the
state. Growing among the pines
are red cedar and a few junipers.
Most pines occur in the Pine Ridge,
Wildcat Ridge, North Platte and
Lodge Pole areas, occupying about
500 square miles. The trees are at
their best on Pine Ridge, being 12
to 24 inches in diameter and 40 feet
or more high. The trees are quiti
free from disease and the timber is
of good quality.
"Pines are also found in good
stands along the Niobrara, as. in
Schlagle canyon south pf Valentine,
north of Ainsworth and irt Long
Pine canyon. The broad leaf species
of the east and the pines and cedars
rom' the west meet along the
Niobrara. .""
Experiments Successful.
"The federal government hsi ex
perimented with tree-planting near
Halsey, and shown conclusively
that certain species can be grown on
the sandhills of Nebraska. Many
ranchmen, profiting by this ex
perience, have beautified their places
and grown large windbreaks for
protection. ThevResTer,ye now has
several hundred acres ot very gooa
nine" forest, which can be seen
from Burlington trains as they pass
through the Middle Loup valley
abova Halsey.
"The utilization of forests is a
problem in Nebraska. Trees occur
m mixed stands, and there is no
definite market for their products,
The people do not understand the
use of the axe and the saw. Fire
wood Has little , Memand, because
coal, is used Generally. Lumber
comes from other states, and it will
not be possible to produce lumber
in Nebraska in competition with
large lumber districts andtheir
methods of distribution.
"Trees are used mostly in Ne
braska for windbreaks, and parking
purposes, for which the selection of
species has not been . very gooa.
Also, the trees have received little
care and it will require much ef
fort to repair the trees ot JNe
braska's parks, streets and lawns."
Intelligent Attention Necessary.'
What we intend- to suggest is
that Nebraskans give more intelligent-attention
to the problem of
forestry. , '
It is not proposed that we under
take to enter into competition with
the great timbered sections of the
world, or to vie with Washington
or Oregon in the production of
lumber. What may be done is sim
ple enough? Jhe so-called "sand hill"
segion-of the state embraces an area
of approximately 20,000 square
miles. Some of this is available, for
farming, some for grazing, but most
of it is idle because it does not per
mit the profitable employment of
methods of agriculture or stock
raising now in vogue.
But all of it will grow trees, es
pecially pine trees.
Just now the world is Jooking
over its stock of timber. One of the
results of the war was to waste an
enormous Quantity of wood. In'
England Old trees of centuries ,of
growth were cut to Jfteet the ic-
mands of the army. France sacri
ficed many acres in excess of its
normal cutting in both public and
private timberland. Governments
there are taking immediate steps to
replace the trees. Germany had
long conserved its timber, and had
even imported from Russia, Poland
and other neighboring lands when
an actual excess of home-grown
trees was available, looking pru
dently ahead to the day when its
neighbors' sutjply would be ex
hausted. Government Plans Replacement
In the United States, the govern
ment is negotiating -'with owners of
trreat - timber tracts. studying
methods by which the forest may be
preservedyby replacing used timber
with new growth. I his nas been
proven practical in Europe and
other countries, and as far as it has
been tried in the United "States it
has been successful.
We have no indention of going
into detail on this at the moment.
The great areas of the sand hills in
Nebraska. iPt present idle, may be
made to bring forth pine timber.
Uses will be found tor the trees
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wnen iney are grown, onuuiu
lumber be not available, the im
provement of the soil, by reason of
the numus crearea, win jusiny ure
forestation of this region.
Extension of the grazing grounds
from which Will come the beef herds
of the future is an incentive. -Many
uses for the small trees suggest
themselves. A jack pine in the sand
hills will produce a fence post in
10 years. Nebraska has and will
have considerable use for fence
posts. The lumber here produced
can be used for making boxes, berry
and fruit baskets and crates, butter
tubs, egg cases and slack barrel
cooperage stock. Thousands of car
loads of this material is used in this
state, all shipped in from abroad.
Conservation Possible.
One of the sights noted from a
car window down about the middle
of the "Maryland peninsula" was a
saw mill alongside a canning fac
tory in a small pine "forest," where
fruit and berry boxes were being
turned out and going almost straight
from the saw to the iactory, where
they were being filled and sent to
market. That is real conservation,
and is not an altogether impossible
picture for Nebraska. v
Ihis topic js not new.' L. t. Har
rison of York long agolroposed it
to the people of the state, and espe
cially to the legislature. The Bee
printed a number of articles from
Mr. Harrison, giving the result of
is extensive experiments and ob
servations. His suggestions were
supported by the editor of The Bee.
The federal government has shown
us that Harrison was right. If his
dvice had been taken when first
given, the state would now beget
ting the benefit of a huge growth of
pine and other proper timbef in the
sand hills. It is not too late to
start. Time will be required, for it
takes years to grow a crop of trees.
If the legislature will consider
this question and set about the work
f gradual anorestation of the bare
lands in northwestern Nebraska,
orking along a definite and com
prehensive plan, it will be doing a
real service to the citizens o the
future. Those now here who hap
pen to be left in 1940 or 1950 will
r-rse up and call blessed the men
who made possible the advantages
of a real pine woods region where
now only sandy wastes and scant
vegetation exists.
C0AST-TaC0A?T
.PLANE. ARRIVES
AT TUCSON, ARIZ,
Forced Landing; Departure
Causes Broken Propeller
Flight Resumed Saturday
Tuscon, Ariz., Aug. 14. One of
the all-metal airplanes which recent
ly completed a transcontinental trip
over the northern route arrived here
at noon Friday on its wav from l.os
Angeles to New York. In hopping
ofi for El Paso Ffidar afternoon it
was forced to land in a patch of
mesquite bushes near the city and a
broken propeller forced the ma
chine to remain here over night.
The flight will be resumed today,
Pilot E. E. Allyon of Ueve
land announced.- Eddie Ricken
bacher, famous American ace, and
John M. Larsen of New York were
passengers.
Allyon made a spectacular descent
of several hundred feet when high
temperature is believed to have
stopped the motor. The propeller
was twisted off in the mesquite.
Longshoremen to Resume
, Work If Request Granted
New York, Aug. 14. Coastwise
longshoremen, who have been on
strike here since March 12, voted at
a mass meeting Friday night to go
back to work Monday morning, pro
viding the steamship owners get rid
of the strikebreakers they have em'
nloved.
'They agreed to submit their de
mands, including a wage increase ot
15 cents an hour, to arbitration after
they teturn to work. A committee
of the strikers will wait on the
steamship owners Saturday and re
port back to a special meeting of
the longshoremen Sunday,
Don't Forget
Pyramid
If you used this famous
treatment for the relief ji
itching, bleeding or protrud
ing piles or hemorrhoids,
pass the word along to
others who may be suffering.
Almost every druggist in
the jU. S. or Canada car
ries Pyramid Pile Treat
ment irt stock at 60 cents
a box. Don't accept substitutes.
roastr BusiHtiS
"mm
Scott AtrroToum ST Store
irtrijvw nm r nvMun 4vf CAnrtM
OMAHA.U&A.
am ran.
Mote Home I
"Lest Ye
., Forget"
Sanitation our hobby
Quality our standard
Courtesy our slogan.
ROME MILLER
wmtm
Money kack without queseco
if HUNT'S Salve fails In the
trestment of ITCH. ECZEMA,
RINGWORM, TBTTER or
otbcrtcbin lam diseases. Try
a ;S cent bos at our risk,
Sherman A McConnell Draff Co.
ft ft-V .
to M .
HEAVY
Hoisting
E.J.DAVIS
1212 Farnam. Tel. D. 353
II , II
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A New Idea in
Dental Service
An office organized and systematized to
produce better 'and more firtistic dentistry
without confusion or waste of time.
Following the policy of the best Hospitals,
we have the different1 lines of work dpne by
specially skilled men, and are in consequence
able to render better service, in less time, and
at much lower prices. '
We are glad to explain in detail the many
attractive features of our, service. -
TEETH
'nors ci en no n
Uentisfa
i '
1324 Farnam Street , Corner 14th and Farnam
Phone Douglas 2872 v
. -
Pffl
AM
Eistuk-Pav When Cured
K A mild system of treatment that cares Piles, Fistula an4 otaei
Rectal Disoasea ia a short time, withoat a sever snrcieal -eratiom.
No Chloroform: Ether or other seaeral anesthctia ajsed.
A care ruaranteed in every esse accepted for treatment, and no money ia to ho paid antl
eoraa. wms lor sook oa Kectal Diseases, with name and testimonials or ator taws
!, prominent 'people who aav beea permanently cured, . , .
DR. C K TARRY Saaatariuaa, Patera Trust Bide (Bee Bide.)- Omaha. Nek.
I Udhs
$50,000
25,650 Barrel Gusher
Not Far From Our Property
r' That great Gushfer of the Texas Company, in the
Gulf Coast District is right now, according to reports
issued August 7, 1920, producing a N daily average of
25,650 Barrels. This is the largest present flowing well
in America. It made and paid $875,000.00 an eleven
days. Our great High Island property positively
should produce from 25,000 up to 75,000 barrels per
day. Why not? Location means everything. Learn
the facts. )
, , You are reading these ads every day. Why sit idly
by and let this exceptional deal slip through your fin
gers? Spend a postage stamp. Get our Gulf Coast
Bulletin, Know the truth. Your neighbors are buying,
we want your order. Have you a hundred or two and
not much more. Keep it and you will always have not
much more. Don't let anyone advise you to keep your
little money, while they are using their money buying
our Leases and have the chance of making a fortune.
Your little money will get away from you some time in
some way. Take my advice. Fool the Jinx that has
been following you al your life.
Make your money work like a Banker and business man.
Your Banker is making a profit on your
J "i
Win with the Winners.
money, in his Bank.
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Get it out and into Oil Leases that give you
a man s chance to win in a big way. The world calls a man who
has little money and afraid to use it a boob and a mollycoddle.
and laughs at him. The wise man lives in good homes, rides in
automobiles, while the man afraid to take a chance walks, always
dodging the fellow in the automobile. One lives in fine homes,
the other fellow lives on the back street in poor neighborhoods,
almost in poverty. His family suffers all because he is not man
enough to take a chance. That wife and children deserve better
things. What is $250.00 in a life's chance? Answer me that. .2-,
Play it on a Lease with us at High Island, Texas, as hundreds of
Nebraska people are doing. We ask you to do it now before ; ,
these Leases advance in price, which they are going to do very
soon. Use your red-blooded brain power, wake up, come out of
that wit, change your affairs, give yourself and family a chance. ?. .
Make yourself the equal of any man. To do this you must make V-
a lot of money.
We offer you that chance for ayery small amount
of money.
1
' We have salesmen iii Omaha and in nearly every Town in'
this State. Have hjm tell you all about our plans for making
your fortune. You don't have to buy unless you want to. It costs
nothing to have himexplain. Write for bur bulletin, or have a
salesman explain. How can you pass judgment on any, proposi
tion when you don't do a man's part and look into the wonderful
merit of our deal? A five-acre Oil lease today costs only $250.00,
a chance to make $50,000.00. Make us prove this to you, and we
can do it. Think oTthat 25,650-barrel well in the Gulf Coast Dis
trict Don't you want to know about big things or what? Why
marvel at the ability of other men when you have greater ability
Make your money, work, get into the activities
These Leases are going over tha top into big money. Go
within yourself?
of life.
over the top with us to a fortune.
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we have worked long and hard in ourftime, but forced our-.
selves into big money because we took a man'schance. We are
appealing to you to better your conditions and make a fortune,
and we know that you are with us. Personally we think our Leases
are immediately over a great volcano of oil. We will drill our.
well at High Island as a thorough test, and fully expect to develop
a great gusher. This should make your 5-acre Lease sell quickly
up to $50,000.00. We are oil operators and know that this is th
best offer you ever had. , )
Man can't you understand that' we are doing a big man's
part and trying to help you. We need your help also. We don't want
the millionaires they never made us a dollar. It is men of mod
erate means that we are talking to-in a personal way in this adver
tisement, and in our bulletin; and by letter. We want you as our ,
friend, join with us in this great chance. 1 Let us make you a for-
-IP
tune. We would like to talk to you personally at our office, face
to face, man to man. We feel certain you would put your money
in with us. jShoot $250.00"for once in your life with men who can
not afford to lose. v We believe it will make your fortune. Your
Lease holcls good for years without operating it and without rental
and no taxes. Just $250.00 purchase price is necessary.
Read our ads in both The Omaha Bee and the Daily News,
send for our bulletin,send us your check for $250.00. We will
select your Lease personally. Address "all communications and
mark them Attentidh Sales"Departmerit, Gulf Coast Development
& Refining Co. and make all moneys payable to the Company.
Thanking you for giving this matter your deep consideration.
'Remember our prediction : These Leases are going over the top
into big money. , ,
Most respectfully submitted,
' , Gulf Coast Development & Refilling Co., '
' 740 First National Bank Bldg.,
' Omaha, Neb.
. . : Long-distance phone, Tyler 398.
Don't fail to read our ads in The Bee and News every day
something different . .
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