Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 24, 1920)
THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 24. 1920. ( 4 'J; 'Ii .1 ti i 5, i V li: The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING-rSUNDAY 1 i1 1 " THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. NELSON B. UPDIKE. Publisher. MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tki associated Prw. or wMeh The Bat is SMaber. M a.- alutiralr ntlllxj ts U ins for publication of all at elavatctias errtltd 10 It or not otnanrlss eraliud la (hit paper, e4 tin Ike Iwal newt putillihed harain Ail rlikls of Daktteslioa ei ow apscUl diapfttchct us alao marred. BEE TELEPHONES fSSiSTRT Tyler 1000 For Nlfht Calls After 10 P. M.l tutorial Department ........... Trier 1001. circulation Department ------ Trtar lbolL idiertlaiof DeparUnool .......... trier lftML OFFICES OF THE BEE aUIn Offlca; 17th anit rinu -Cornell Blurt IS Scott 8t I South Sida nil X St. Out-ot-Tewa Office i Knr Tork J8 rirtb are. I Wuhlairtoa 1311 O It. Chicago 8tager Bid. I Parti Franc 4M Bo St. Honor The Bee's Platform 1. Now Union Passenger Station. 2. Continued improvement ef tha New braka Highway, including tho pave mant ef Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha with a Brick Surface. 3. A short, low-rate Waterway from tha Corn Belt to tha Atlantic Ocean. 4. Home Rale' Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. - WADING IN A SMELLY WELTER. Article X of the Covenant of the League of Katfons binds the United States to preserve the territorial and political integrity of every nation . in tha League. There would be forty of these nations if the United States should be added to them. 1 Now conies the secretary of war, who was a politician in Cleveland, O., when appointed by the president, and without distinction as a law yer, but conspicuous in northern Ohio as the sort of city politician who is useful in "putting things over" in ward politics. He makes a speech carefully censored by the president, in which he says of Article X: Our president formulated it and forced its acceptance. We invented it. ... We fought for it as the cardinal principle at issue in the world war. The muddy-minded or the wilfully dishonest and untruthful Secretary of War (one or the other characterization is inevitable) telts us in words approved by Woodrow Wilson, that our soldiers fought tq fasten on the United States the obligation to maintain and fight for, if neces sary, the boundary lines and political institu tions of some forty nations! to fasten on our selves responsibility for the settlement of every foreign war, present and future! . . . Can it be beaten for fatuous foolishness and downright misrepresentation? Is it necessary again to recall the simple truth that we fought solely "to bring the Imperial German govern ment to terms and end the war?" Cox and Baker of Ohio telling the nation what it fought for! Two petty pacifists who opposed preparation for war and sought to capitalize the German vote as a democratic asset! Verily these be times of small men, low methods, and mean mentality in the democratic party. It is not surprising that the New York Tribune, in realization of the po litical situation at the close of the first phase of the campaign, is constrained to say: It is not strange Candidate Cox is rapidly "accumulating the repute of being the smallest and cheapest politician who ever secured a presidential nomination from one of the major , American parties. His mock morality, his" jumpings from side to side, his choice of ar guments that he apparently thinks have popu lar appeal, constitute about the greasiest hypocrisy our national annals, show. Calamity Turns to Blessing. The riddle Wherewith Samson confounded his enemies in Timnath could have no better answer than is reported from the battlefields of France. While, the devastation of modern warfare was being wrought throughout the fertile regions of northern France, and farmsteads were not only reduced to ruin, villages wiped out, water courses , changed or obliterated, and the very soil itself destroyed so far as outward indications proved, the thoughtful dreaded the future when so much of a productive area would be listed among the deserts of earth until kindly nature could through the course of seasons restore the fe cundity of the ravaged earth. So certain were all of this that the French government actually condemned a very large section of the occupied region as unfit for immediate restorative, effort. Nature, however, pays little attention to the edicts of man in such cases, and while the gov ernment experts were hazily considering plans for the recovery of these tracts, the good old dame set seeds to growing, and behold, the ground thought to be worthless came forth ver dant and fruitful. The terrible bombardment merely acted to stir the subsoil, and it has upset the preconceived notion that only the surface soil is fetile. That ground which was pounded the hardest, and where to a depth of four and even five feet it was pulverized by explosions, is now bearing the richest crops in France. Strangest of all, the lines of the filled-in trenches j may be traced through the fields of growing grain by the deeper green and sturdier growth of the wheat growing there. I "Out of the eater came forth meat," indeed. Cultivated by highly explosive shells and fertil ized by poison gases, the grain fields of northern France are now more fertile than beforehand this season are yielding crops richer by far .than any that ever bowed to sickle in that region. ; , Many Innocents in Prison Cells. An authority on prison affairs in New York says one man in every twenty sent to the peni tentiary is innocent of crime, and that of those convicted and imprisoned because of technical guilt, who had no intent to commit crime, be included, the proportion of those morally in nocent now in prison cells is one of every ten. The penologist's statement followed the. re cent release of a prisoner who had served eight months for a crime he did not commit. There are so many such cases that sentiment in favor of awarding damages to men unjustly confined is growing. As it is now, the innocent sufferer ; -jrip'y gets his freedom. After a state has de stroyed his reputation, his business, and his prospects by convicting him of crime, and possi bly kept him in a prison cell for a year before his innocence is shown, he has nrj recourse for the terrible injustice. The state assumes that it can dojno wrong. But actual facts often prove that it does do wrong of the most pitiable kind. Should the victirn be allowed damages for the unutterable distress, humiliation and sor row thrust upon him and his family by false con viction and imprisonment? There can be only one answer to that question. But the state says in effect; "The commonwealth may couvict you of crime unjustly, may keep you in a felon's cell indefinitely, may bring shame and disgrace to you and your family, but after it has done this it is your misfortune atone. It may have ruined you financially, but you shall have no damages from its treasury." A hard situation indeed; but trifling com pared with, the thought that 100 of every 1,000 convicts are suffering unjustly. One almost wishes the 100 were actual criminals instead of innocent men, so hideous is the punishment of the innocent for crimes they did not commit. Cox and the Campaign Fund. The democratic candidate for president com plains that the chairman of the republican na tional committee did not deny the allegation that the republicans are raising a fund of '$15,000,000 to use in corrupting the electorate of the United States, much of it to be expended in the pur chase of weak and irresolute democratic voters. Governor Cox shows that he proposes for the time at least to stick" to his first line of trenches. He has modified his estimate somewhat, for he has brought the total down from the hundreds of millions mentioned in his speech of acceptance to a paltry fifteen. Thus he admits that the task before the republican campaign managers is not as stupendous as he first thought. However, if the statement of Chairman Hays did not carry the definite and specific denial sought by the wily governor, that of Senator Harding surely does. The senator not only categorically denies the governors loose and sweeping statement, but challenges him to pro duce any proof to support his innuendo. Full information as to the republican cam paign fund has been promised and will be fur nished, as will also be the case with the demo crats, for it is required by law. This will lift the smoke screen behind which the democratic candidate has taken refuge. His insinuation that the profiteers are disgorging a considerable por tion of their loot in order that a republican ad ministration may permit them to retain the re mainder is worthy of a democratic politician. People who have suffered from the extortions of the profiteer are not likely to forget that it was under a democratic administration that the rep rehensible practice grew up and the unholy crew prospered A democratic attorney general, armed . with the power given by a democratic congress, supported by a democratic president, did absolutely nothing to check profiteering, while every pretense at regulation of prices by the numerous governmental boards simply sent the cost of living still higher. We wonder if Governor Cox thinks all the profiteers are republicans? Is it possible he has overlooked the course of cotton, for example? Has he forgotten that a number of estimable democrats throughout the land are engaged in business? His persistent plea for campaign fund publicity begins to have1 the sound of a squeal. State Department Nails Falsehood. The democratic candidate for vice president has had a blistering rebuke from the federal State department. His claim made in a speech the other day tWat the United States would have had twelve votes in the League of Nations by controlling the action of eleven little nations in Central America is characterized as wholly un true by the State department, as is also his statement thatx he himself controlled the vote of one of those nations. The measure of F. Roosevelt was taken byv the country when he spilled himself in that ridiculous speech, whose only effect otherwise is to anger the countries he claimed to be in the vest pocket of the United States. Doubt less the State department has heard from some of those little nations, and disavows F. Roose velt only to escape an international scandal. Far be it from us to give the democratic or ganization tips, but as a matter of fact' if both Cox and Roosevelt were muzzled until election day and permitted to say only what George White approved, their party would be better off. White has more political sense than the pair of them. ' ' Clear Out of Date. The decorator who prepared the stand from which Governor Cox spoke at South Bend, Ind., Thursday, placed a political ornament in the most conspicuous spot. Pleased with his work he stepped out for, let us say refreshment. Meanwhile a crowd gathered, a photographer with it, and when the decorator returned, a group of republicans, irt high good humor, were, in front of the stand enjoying the click of the camera. The decorator's centerpiece was a large framed poster of Woodrow Wilson's face, and below it in bold black letters were the words;. "He, Kept Us Out of War." The decorator saw the point and tore the poster down. Imagine a big democratic audience facing a slogan like that, as fully discredited as "Sixteen to One." Norway's Notion of the Motorcycle. Norway is banning luxuries, having already prohibited the importation of automobiles, dia monds), laces, paintings, pianos, silks, watches, furs, patent leather shoes and motorcycles. The listing of the last article as a luxury surprises. What conception of the motorcycle can justify its appearance on such a list? It is not rare, nor does it please the senses. It can hardly be classed as beautiful, attractive or mak ing an appeal to fine desire of any kind. We have always regarded its existence and use as justified only on the theory that it is an absolute necessity, a utility without which the wheels of progress would stop. Otherwise its manufacture and sale would surely be prohibited, for it is a constant menace to comfort, health and safety; that is to say, a nuisance on the streets of any community. Fort Crook ought to make splendid head quarters for Seventh army corps area. In fact, Omaha is pretty well prepared to take care of a considerable military establishment. New York democrats profess to believe 'that woman suffrage is a big boost for Cox. They do credit the women with discriminating judg America's showing in the Olympic games merely confirms the opinion most of us had as to the quality of our young men before they started for Antwerp. Our democratic brethren ought t,o go into executive session long enough to determine which way they are heading. Soviet Russia is now anxious for peace, with Poland. Are you amazed? Those Tennessee "antis" art cot good losers, A Line 0' Type or Two Nn to tti LlM. let Mi sJ fall alMrt War . fhat Poland is hopelessly enmeshed, and that Germany may join with Russia, is the dark-blue report of Colonel House; and we should proceed to worry over the outlook were it not for the comforting reflection that few dire forecasts are fulfilled. A raven that tries to perch on our bust of Pallas is likely to be knocked off with a pastepot. For Precisely the Same Reason. (From the Kansas City Star.) After you have satisfactorily explained why a chicken crosses the. road, tell us why some Jokes cross, the Atlantic ocean. August in New York was 60 beastly hot and wet that we were obliged to put our cigars in a humidor to keep them dry. YES AND NO. Sir: I noitce on a movie: "Norma. Talmadge in 'Yes and No.' She plays a marvel duel part. One the girl who succumbs; the other the girl with the firm, strong mind who says 'No.' " Wouldn't you say this is a good advertisement for Norma? I. R. F. S. The Garvey person dreams of a vast Ethio pian kingdom of which he will be king. Wilj some one oblige with a comedy entitled "Le Roi camuse?" "It's Time to Pass the Apples Round Again." Sir: From the programme of the Apple Shippers' convention: "Annual dinner, Louis XVI. room, Sherman Hotel. Gentlemen strictly informal; ladies unrestricted." R. D. H. "MODEL Perfect 16, for coat and suits; go out with local salesmen." Classified ads. No experience required. AH THERE, V. K.! Sir: I still have quite a supply of Scotch, London Dry and American hooicli left. When in this neck of the woods, drop in. This invi tation Is also extended to my former boss. V. K. Spicer. H. C. L. The French General Weygand is said to be coaching the Poles. Apparently France still has hope of collecting That Russian I. O.' U. For France can hope where even Scotland would despair. The Same Today, Yesterday, and Forever. Sir: In "The Golden Ass' a quaint anec dote Is related, illustrating how profiteers were punished in the second century, A. D. Then, even as now, the Joke appears to have been on the long-suffering consumer. Here is the story: ' When this was done and all my things brought into the chamber, I walKed towards the baths, but first I went into the provi sion market to buy some victuals for my supper, wherein I saw great plenty of fish set out to be sold, and so I priced part there of, and that which they .first held at a hun- , dred pieces, I bought at length for twenty pence; which when I had done and was de parting away, Pythias, one of my old com panions and fellow of Athens, fortuned to pass by, and viewing me a ,ood space, - in the end brought me kindly to his remem brance, gently came and kissed me, saying: "O, my dear friend Lucius, it is a great while past since we two saw each other, and more over, from the time that we departed from our master Vestius I never heard any news of you; I pray you, Lucius, tell me the cause of your peregrination hither." . Then I answered and said: "I will make, relation thereof unto you tomorrow; but what is this? Verily I think that you have obtained your own desire, whereof I am right glad. For I see these servitors that follow you, and these rods or verges which they bear; and this habit which you wear, like unto a magistrate." Then answered Pythias: "I bear the office and rule of clerk of the market, and therefore if you will aught for your supper, speak and I will purvey it for you." Then i thanked him heartily and said I had bought fish sufficiently already for my dinner, but Pythias, when he espied my basket, took it and shook it; so that the fish might come to view, and demanded of me what I paid for all my sprats.. "In faith," quoth, I, "I could scarce enforce the fishmonger to sell them for twenty pence." Which when he '; heard, he seized my hand and brought me back again into the market, and inquired ( ' of me whom I had bought such wretched stuff. I showed him the old man who sat , in a corner, whom straightway (by reason " of his office) he did greatly blame, and said: "Is it thus that you serve and handle stran gers, and especially our friends "! Where fore sell you this fish so dear which is not worth a halfpenny? Now perceive I well that you are an occasion to make this place, which is the flower of all Thessaly, to be foresaken of all men and reduce it into an uninhabited jock, by reason of your exces sive prices of victuals; but assure yourself that you shall not escape without punish ment, and you shall know what mine office is, and how I ought to punish such as do offend." Then he took the basket and cast the fish on the ground, and commanded one of his servants to tread them all under his feet. So doing was Pythias well pleased with the sternness he showed in his office, and bade me farewell, and said that he was content with the shame and reproach done unto the old catiff. So I went away, all amazed and stupefied, towards the baths, considering with myself the severity of my old comrade, whereby I had lost both my money and my supper. J- V. "Say Divorces Ruin French Family Life." New York Times. . At least they cut into it seriously. ' ' "ALL CLEAR" AGAIN. (Fromhe classified ads.) Personal Fred:.' Everything is O. K. now, and so am I. Mother is dead. Come and visit home soon. William. From the Yellowstone. Sir: The park is full of women in men's attire. On meeting them one Is at a loss to know whether to ask for a match or bow. Since the coming of the automobile the roads are much improved, and are sprinkled dally. The distance between Yellowstone Lake and the Can yon used to be about twenty miles, but since they began sprinkling the road with water from the Alum River, the milage has shrunk to six teen. Coming out. Just past the Royal Gorge, we were laid up for almost a day by a washout. There were two diners and the passengers having nothing else to do, literally ed themselves. The curio dealers are still on the Job In Cplo rado Springs and Denver, and you can buy hand carved Mexican leather belts from Kalamazoo and genuine Navajo blankets from Chicago. . OLD TIMER. THE ORDEAL OF WILLIE. Sir: As I stepped from the dentist's chair the starchv assistant announced "Willie Pervish next, Doctor." SQUIRE. A dispatch from Flossmoor mentions that "Doyle's hooked drives at times almost com pleted an arc of 360 degrees." The gentleman should confine himself to exhibition arcs. "The world faces a transportation crisis," says General Atterbury of the Pennsylvania. But what is another crisis more or less? Atta boy, Atterbury! u LH-HUH. Sir: If some one turns off the water in those shower bath ads there is going to be the dickens to pay. f H. W. L. An expert in applied science croaks that 75 cent gasoline is a possibility within two years. But hodie flivendum, as the Epicureans used to say. ' B. L. T. A Fiat-Footed Failure. While in London, Mary Pickford told Lady Desborough a new story atout Charlie Chaplin. At a fair in California a prize was offered to the person who could best, imitate the Chaplin walk. Charlie himself entered the competition, minus the usual mustache and boots. He was a flat-footed failure and the judges gave him the twentieth place. Boston Transcript. How to Keep Well By OR. W. A. EVANS -QuMtion concerning hyfiene, canita tiou and prevention of disease, sub mitted to Dr. Evan by reader of Tha Be, will b answered personally, ubjeel to proper limitations, where a stamped,' addressed envelope is en closed. Dr. Evana will not make diafnoais or prescribe for individual diseases. Address letters In car of The Bee. ' Copyright, 1920, by Dr. W. A. Evans. 3eSi j.jt'eiv CPS" SCURVY SCOURGES RUSSIA. While the brand of liberty they are having in Russia may be all right according to Karl Marx, it is proving hard on the people. TheJ .soldiers of the allies returning rrom sections of that country report that a large part of the population had scurvy at the end of last winter. . Dr. John D. Comrie, a Scotch phy--sician, wjth the north Russia forces, reports that scurvy is endemic to ward the end of winter in north Russia. The cases have swollen, bleeding gums, hemorrhages, bloody spots under the skin in various parts of the body, and pain and tender ness around the Joints. It has been 21 years since I have seen a bad case of scurvy with the symptoms noted above. That was a newly arrived foreigner who worked in a stone quarry and ate as that kind of people some times dOi But some of the cases of scurvy were milder. Some had not much more than mental depression, irri tability, pallor, and weakness. Some have Joint pains, which they call rheumatism, sciatica, neuralgia, or neuritis, and outside of that are without symptoms. There is some of this mild scurvy left in this country. A good many children with growing pains and babies with rheumatism have this sort of scurvy. It comes from.the prolonged use of a diet in . which there is not enough fresh food. ' In Russia even the best of them In winter get nothing but bread, cereal, preserved meats and tea or coffee. Babies live on milk, and that generally of poor quality, or boiled or pasteurized. Chick Hume and Skelton have shown that even fresh milk is deficient in the prop erties which ward off scurvy. The easiest and cheapest way to prevent and to cure scurvy found by Comrie was to feed germinated peas and beans. He steeps the peas or beans in water for 24 to 48 hours. As soOn as sprouting is well started they are removed from the water and laid between two damp cloths and kept there for 36 hours or there abouts. By this time the sprouts should be half an inch long. . They are then boiled in milk or water for riot more than half an hour and then served. Five to eight ounces of dried brans thus germinated and cooked is a day's allowance. v In a country where a person must live wholly on dried and preserved fcods this sprouting method is about the only means of preventing scurvy. It is likewise a cheap and not inconvenient method of curing the disease after it has caused so-, called rheumatism, spongy gums, and hemorrhages. As a .means Of cure Comrie found soured milk besfl of all. That is the remedy used by the Russian peas ants. Fresh meat and fres"h lemon Juice ranked second. Old. preserved lemon juice was almost without value. Germinated p'eas and beans ranked third. ! It's Well to Play More. 13. ,R. C.w rites: (1) Now and then I have trouhle in getting to (ileep, but after I : do I sleep well. Veteran Is Watching. Grand Island, Neb.. Aug. 18 To The Editor of The Bee: Mr. John Monroe of Omaha In your paper of August 17 account touched in his letter a precious point in the his tory of our late war on the point of compensation or bonus. He characterizes only one Instance that happen in the course of events when 3,000,000 men arranged themselves arounged the Stars and Stripes In order to defend this country from militaristic power and teach Europe democracy, but not as a party gov ernment. Our success so far as Wilson's 14 points goes is very poor, our troubles are not at an end so far as European lust for manslaughter goes. The only thing that is at an DRESHER BROTHERS ' Dyers- pieaners ' Hatters Furriers Tailors Rug Cleaners PHONE TYLER 345 Plant: 2211-17 Farnam Branches at Br ancle! s and Burgess-Nash Co. The longer I stay awake the more restless and nervous I become. I often lie awake an hour or two no matter what my bedtime. Is there anything wrong or is there a rem edy? 'I am perfectly normal other wise. (2) How much sleep should a normal boy of 15 get each night?" REPLY. (1) Play a little harder. Go to bed with your mind at peace, It does not matter whether you go to sleep in one minute or one hour. . (2) About nine hours. One's Paralysis; Other Restlessness. T. H. Z. writes: "What is the difference between apoplexy and neu rasthenia?" ' REPLY Apoplexy is paralysis' generally of oit side.- In most instances it re suits from hemorrhage Into the brain. Neurasthenia is denned -by Wood a- medical dictionary as a functional nervous condition marked by nervous irritability and weakness. The chief symptoms are insomnia, headache, feeling of constriction about the head, pain in the back, exhaustion after slight mental or physical exertion. Interesting Grows the Big Harvest Sale at Bom en s While Harvesting the Big Values Harvest These Values, Too. Grape Nuta . most delicious breakfast food to serve, ")r 2 packages abOC Bon ' Ami A kitchen Polish that will make things j shine, 2 packages 1 OC Haikins' Cocoa Hardwater Castile Soap j-Superior for the bath, delightful as a shampoo, perfect for all toilet uses, bar, only OC Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes, nr. 3 packages awOC (3 package io customer.) Bowen's Sweep-Well Brooms Painted handle, well made and bound, perfectly balanced. Har vest Sale Price, q O only eJejC Two-quart Ice Cream Freezers Handy to make frozen Ipps and deserts. m only UOC witiw ii i v 16th and Howard. Worn Out In Mind and Body Your child is quick to observe disturbances in your mental attitude or physical condition. And when he asks: "What's the matter. Daddy?" there's a tone of solemn anxiety in his little voice. The depression stamped upon you reflects intensely upon him because of his profound solic itude. He at once drops his playthings and rushes to your side, but his happv smile has disappeared and his buoyant spirits are gone replaced by a countenanofe of worry and a bearing of hopelessness. You owe it to the happiness and welfare of your family to keep trim in body and keen ia intellect. You are the sun and the inapiration of their livee. Dark, threatening- clouds horer over their head the instant you how aig-n of being "out of orts" or "under the weather." rai imperii ineir iuiure py nefiecuni your nealtn. I uyico The Great General Tonic will banish that "tired feeling" and dispel thatworn-oaa, look. It will renew your strength and vigor, overcome tha ravishing effects of overwork and worry, revive yout pirit and increase your bold on life. Being a refresh ing appetizer, a valuable aid to digestion and a worthy promoter of the general health, becauseof it positive re vitalizing and reconstructive value, it use is especially desirable in casesof subnormal conditions. If you suffer from nervous exhaustion, muscular or mental fatigue, or deficiency of vital force due to general weakness or wasting illness, you'll find "LYKO" particularly bene ficial. It tones up the entire system and keep job feeling fit. Ask your druggist for a bottle today. Sole Manufacturers V LYKO MEDICINE COMPANY New York Kama City. Me. For tale by Beaton Drug Co., 15th and Farnam St., and all retail druggists. LYKO la aeld In orlstnal packaf only, ItkapUtumabova.lUfUMall auaiatitutae rife Phone Douglas 2793 at wore 1st ni T M " IFWrSt&G ai,aai' ftWMtttif YbsrOflk OMAHA PRINTING COMPANY taaerrr na .4 USsMtfnis (nuua OMWIB FAnUM nJ.'U.iajw m.um) H COMMERCIAL PRIKTERS-llTHOGRAPHERS - STEEL 0 IE EMBOSSERS toosc icr ocvicrs end is the love for our veteran and hero of the lHte war. We were cheer ed and entertained when we left house and home in order to defend our flag and country. Two years inipr wo rtnrn. all is forgotten. ,..nmlanc, ot-A hlfiivn tn nil thA for.! n.p. In i-pp-finls tn kwninir our rtosi inn. tha vnrntirtnnl boiird has a t hard time to cet over its infancy. The Kovernment of the people has played comedy with the four-fold plan preaented by the American Lesion, an organization of world war veterans, but least we forget election is coming; and each and everyone of us who has a claim or a kick cominK will tell his tale and ask his constitutional representative how he feels about the compensa tion due to the world war veteran or the four fold plan of the. Ameri can Legion and I am afraid that thd comedy played in congress and senate of this great country of ours will turn In a tragic end for those who suffered from a lapse of mem ory. BERT BAHR. MARK - y'Seatw . -J 1 yh BUSINESS IS GOOD THANK Y0W LV. Nicholas Oil Company Dr. Brooktnan Returns to His Former Position Dr. Q. D. Shlpherd, Vice Pres. & Gon'l Mgr. Bailey Dental Co. Incorporated Dentists. DR, R. W. BAILEY, Pres. 704-14 City Nafl Bank Bid?. 16th and Harney. Phones D. 3420-3421. All the Way Service Joe B. Redfield K-B Printing Company does good printing plus. . .. . . . . It also operates a service, depart- ' ment that takes all the grief out of a direct-by-mail campaign. t Copy preparation, illustration, . printing, addressing, mailing. K-B Printing Company Redfield & Milliken Owners Printing Headquarters Harvey Milliken filKliiliiliiliiiMiuiiiiiiiiSiiiula.iiiiiiiliiluiiiiuliiinciiiiiiiiuiiiiiiliiiniiiliilMiiiiuliiluiiiliiliili.iiilhluiiisiiliii, a ii SOMERSET COAL ajaaaaajjjiBBBBBaBBBBBBBBejMsana saBBBBBBBaBejjBeBaJ For Hard or Soft Coal Furnace I m m Anthracite coal is hard and hard to get. Somerset, Colorado, bituminous coal is also hard, and the hottest coal we can secure, and 1 we have it in stock at all our yards. Prompt de- I liveries assured if orders are placed immediately. Updike Lumber & Coal Co. ; General Office: 45th and Dodge St. Phone Walnut 300. 43d and Charles St., Phone Walnut 557. 15th and Webster St., Phone Douglas 4452. fi;ii:l;il'l.il'!li:ilMliii:ili!i!iii!,l.,iiiisiii!'i.il :li;l.'i;ili!i 'I iiiI'Iiiiiiimii:i!i!iiiiiiiiiiiiikimiiii imi :i.!int I A V)