Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 10, 1920, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, MUD AY,' SEPTEMBER ID.
The Omaha Bee
DAIIY (MORNING) EVENING (SUNDAY
THE BEE PUBLISHING COM PANT.
KELSON B. UPDIKE. Pabliihn.
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tk iaMiM mm. at wok ItiBNlii mat. M ax
tlrtnH aautla to Um on tat pvMtoattoa af all nam dlWa
araditai to H or not ataaralaa anAtaa ta tala pipw. aa4 aiaa taa
tool nm sublMMd Mil Ail flgbu of BObllcatloa of out apaeiai
Bee telephones '
DaWrawW " " Tyler 1000
Far NIfbt Call Attn 10 P. M.t
Mtntat Papaitnanit Trior 100M.
CreslUJoi Ptpartawat Trior lMfl.
tarortMm Paaartmant ......- Tylor )00L
OFFICES OF THE BEE
i Main omoo: 17th and Fun Ml -
Council Bluffi II Seott Jt I Booth Sioa Hll K St
Ont-of-Town Offkooi
Him Took MS Tlfth An. I Wuhinitoa 1311 O ft.
surer Bioc i ran rraaea an mm at. Honora
The Bee's Platform
I. New Union Passenger Station.
Z. Continued improvement of tha Na
brash Highway, incluaVhf tna pave
ment of Main Thorough far loading
x into Omaha with a Brick Surface.
3 A short, low-rate Waterway from tha
Cora Belt to tha Atlantic Ocean.
4. Homo Role Charter for Omaha, with
City Manager form of Government.
OPPORTUNITY AND LIBERTY.
Laying aside his prepared speech at Hamline,
Senator Harding moved his hearers to enthusias
tic applause by his remarks on Americanism.
He referred to America as "a land of guaran
teed freedom and opportunity." In those simple
words the senator summed up the basis of our
country's greatness. Here, as nowhere else on
earth, the individual has his chance. Here industry
and thrift are rewarded, and the man who toils
and saves will inevitably prosper. No man in
America is condemned by tradition and economic
. environment o follow his father's vocation,
willy nilly; none is required to make shift as
. best he may while waiting for another to die
that he may succeed to permanent employment.
The careers of the two candidates for the
presidency is the best possible illustration of
what America holds. Neither had anything out
;of the ordinary in the way of a start in life.
They came from modest homes in small coun
try towns, had only tle early advantages that
are in the reach of every boy in the land, and
started on the race of life with no undue advan
tage over any. Governor Cox has reached the
distinction that comes to those who are listed
as millionaires; he is the first of that class to be
nominated for the office of president in the his
tory of the country. Senator Harding has not
-accumulated a great store of the world's goods,
but he has made for himself an honored name,
jjhis election to the United States senate in 1914
j by the people of Ohio being a genuine proof
,;of the estimation !n which he is held at home.
!! These men are examples of what may be
'achieved in America. Nd foreign born citizen
may hope to become president, but any has the
'fullest of chance to attain any other position.
And it is to retain and preserve to Americans
y that guaranteed freedom and opportunity that
' the republican party aims. Harding's candidacy
is a pledge of this to all. j
Middle West Labor Condition.
A special investigator of labor conditions in
the middle west, writing for the New York
eWorld, finds a big change since Labor Day in
p919. Instead of a shortage of unskilled labor
he finds a surplus appearing, which includes
,semi-skilled labor. In other words, instead of
employers bidding for labor.v labor is now seek
j( ing employment.
I; The "World's man says this' operates to in
crease efficiency. It also will result in gradual
reduction of wages,) he thinks. He finds also
a considerable increase of open-shop sentiment,
especially in cities where automobile manufac
ture has slowed down and many thousands of
!men are out of jobs as a consequence.
One employer who installed a machine guar
anteed to turn out 50 pants an hour was get
ting only 35, he tells the World. He
?sent for an expert to see what was wrong w'rtn
Xwt machine. Thereupon the man on the job
trturned out 65 an hour with ease. The expert
left without having to look the machine over,
it being evident that the workman was de
liberately reducing the output. He continued
to do that very thing. Men were at a premium
then. But now it is different. This particular
'employer started a different wage scale, and
'now the man on the machine is paid for what
he produces.
This is what is going) to happen everywhere.
The shirks are being retired for honest work
men who want to do a full day's work. In
this is seen the change. The employer is still
glad to pay very high prices for efficient work,
but is not now compelled to pay them for loiter
ers and men whose aim on the job is not to help
the employer, but to sting him to the limit.
h A Hook Baited in Vain,
i More and more the American citizen, male
and female, sees the real meaning of Article X
of the covenant of the League. While Governor
Cox sees in it only notice that "the Powers of
. the earth must keep off the grass," and declares
."that is the whole meaning of it," the American
citizen sees also that it is his son who must do
.the fighting when some Power gets on the
. :grass. If we enter the League with Article X
pas it is, we bind ourselves to send our soldiers
;and sailors to help in every war that breaks out
; in Europe. And Wilson and Cox say it must go
without change.
,5 A people deliberately deceived by a candi
date who "kept us outof war," is not going to
'swallow the Articfe X hook, particularly now
' that the women of America have the vote. They
do not want their sons to fight the wars of
Europe and they will not vote for a party that
Intends to sew the United States up to Europe
"or a candidate who waves the League of Na
tion flag instead of the Stars and Stripes.
;jti , ,
;V Why Omaha Needs Home Rule,
jsj One of the many matters tentatively touched
I upon at the "open forum" session at the Labor
?Temple was that of home rule for Omaha. Com
jnissioner Towl touched upon a single phase of
the general question when he said, "We should
,have the authority to finance our own improve
ments in our own way." The process of going
o the legislature for permission to do things
tthat are needed for the good of a growing city
5s tedious and expensive. .
V Limitations existing in the charter were
placed there for many reasons, some having in
1 View one set of circumstances, some another,
-W all intendeds to circumscribe the authorities
in their activities. It is not proposed that any
necdeed restriction or prudent safeguard is to
be done away with. The charter should not
make it a wide open game for the city com
missioners, but the decision as to what is good
for Omaha ought to be with the people of
Omaha. ,
Parcels Post Store Delivery.
The domestic life of Omaha is to be fur
ther improved by modern methods, as it has
been determined that purchases at local stores
will be delivered through the postoffice. That is
the true meaning of the service of parcels post.
One of the arguments used when the system
was being presented for adoption by the Post
office department was its convenience in this
direction. An important factor in merchandis
ing is that of Cost of delivery. People have not
given the matter much consideration, although
it has been carefully inquired into by the mer
chants themselves.
The first comprehensive study of the prob
lem was undertaken by the automobile makers,
when they sought to adapt their vehicles to
comme'reial uses. A survey was made of the
larger cities of the United States, Omaha in
cluded, and it was discovered that the cost of
delivering a parcel was roughly in the neigh
borhood of 10 cents. The cost varied in locali
ties, being' affected by the varying conditions
which controlled traffic, but the discovery was
made that not many merchants had properly
weighted the item in their list of costs.
Delivery is chargeable to overhead operating
expenses, and the first result of the disclosures
of the survey was an addition to cover the ex
pense. Introduction of the automobile lowered
the cost,! because it was possible to cover more,
territory than with a single vehicle. Systematiz
ing routes helped some, and economies were ef
fected in other ways, but the total of cost
mounted steadily, because some factors could
not be controlled.
When the postoffice takes over the work it
will have several distinct advantages. One is
already established routes, another that there
wijl be no overlapping. Instead of a procession
of delivery wagons chasing one another over
the streets, the government wagons will pro
ceed in order throughout the several zones, cov
ering their assigned routes on schedule, eliminat
ing the present expensive duplication of effort,
as well as providing regularity in service. Mer
chants will know the exact cost of delivering
parcels, and so will be enabled to fix definitely
the value of an item that has been more or less
elusivel The stability of the service ought to be
a decided improvement, even over the best of
private systems, and the public generally should
be gainer because of its introduction.
Old Persons and Young.
Old people have always been doubtful of the
future of young people. They are justified in
their doubts, because a certain proportion of
the young inevitably go wrong. The old Nick
attends to that in spite of all the old can do. But
while the young of today have a different line
of amusements, frivolities and hazards - from
those which faced the old people of the present
fifty or sixty years ago, temptation is essentially
the satnenow as it was fifty years or fifty cen
turies ago.
There has been little change in the funda
mental characteristics of virtue and vice, good
habits and bad, right tendencies and wrong,
since the beginning of civilization, and so the
old should not worry overtime because of the
new things which lure the young into indiscre
tions. On the other hand, the young cannot find
good ground on which to combat the prudent
admonitions of the old. The old have long ex
perience and observation to justify their anxie
ties. They have learned, perhaps through bitter
humiliations, that certain kinds of conduct al
ways end unhappity and the young will do well
to heed them, rather than impatiently to scoff
at their advice. The young person, if blessed
with a grain or two of wisdom, may well reflect
upon the undoubted fact that the aged friend
has only his or her welfare at heart.
As a rule the young person who heeds the
counsel of elderly persons greatly profits thereby
socially, morally, physically and financially.
Parents and old people are useful, else they
would not have been tolerated and honored by
so many generations.
The Revival of Prise Fighting.
When war came on boxing and prize fight
ing came with it as a necessary part of the
training of soldiers for hand-to-hand encoun
ters. War is a brutal thing, the chief purpose
of the soldier being to kill. He must do this
or be killed himself, either by long distance
missiles or close-up jabs of the bayonet.
As the purpose of war is to kill and destroy,
so the purpose of prize fighting is to disable
and paralyze the ability of the opponent to stay
on his feet. Like war itself, fist fighting is
brutal, and' when scientifically done by trained
athletes, is a sight the squeamish may well shun.
Boxing is listed as a sport, and may fairly
be considered such up to a certain point. But
when' pressed to a knock-out it is something
repulsive to1 many persons perhaps to the ma
jority, although the demand of the public for
every detail of bloody fights arouses doubts as
to our advance from savage delights. At any
rate, a public sentiment against the prize fight
built up by many years of educational effort
seems to have been wholly swept away by the
war.
With a multimillionaire candidate for presi
dent the democrat, who loves to call it "the poor
man's party," may be pardoned for stuttering a
little. ' , vt
Secretary Danielson says the tlafe fair needs
more ground. All he has to do is to convince
the farmers in the legislature of that fact.
Dollars saved and safely invested in Septem
ber are worth more than October or Nevember
dollers.
Do you think that Italian tremblor was a
flare-back from one of the Los Angeles "fires?"
Tammany is beginning to take some note of
the fact that Mr. Bryan is not spouting for Cox. J
Maybe Omaha can get along another, year
without that "inner belt" traffic way.
New Hampshire made its position on the
League of Nations plain enough.
A pretty girl is especially winsome when
dressed in gingham.
Who crowded "F. R." off the front page?
A Line 0' Type or Two
Mm to Hi Llm. tot Dm aalaa fall wra thty ay.
FURTHER successes for Gen. Wrangtl are
reported. Or. as Comrade Trotrky recently
sent word, "This is the beginning of the end of
Wrangel."
"I LOVE him most" Mr. Harding is speak
ing of Hamilton "for the way in which he did
things. He was content to use other men as
the instruments of his great work and let them
take the credit." But why not go further and
say that Hamilton was never president of
Princeton, and that his first name was not
Woodrow?
Mind-Dislntcgratlng Problem of Conduct.
(From the British Weekly.) '
The Rev. Francis Stamford Hope is an
attractive preacher, much admired by va
rious young- ladles ot his congregation. He
in unmarried. At a bazaar held in aid of
the church funds Miss Grace Gordon offers
him a box containing half a dozen fine cam
brio handkerchiefs, with the remark, "You
cannot refuse to buy these, Mr. Hope, when
I have taken the trouble to embroider
them . with your own initials." Mr. Hope
gazes in surprise and dismay at the letters,
"F. S. H.," beautifully worked. He is much
annoyed and feels that a great liberty has
been taken. What should Mr. Hope do?
WARNING to prophets: Keep away from
Lorimer, la. Miss Truth Stoner lives there.
SELF-RESTRAINT OF THE CONSTABULARY
(From the Galena Gazette.)
Although several extra policemn were
on duty during the fair no arrests or no dis
turbances of any kind were reported. s
"ONCE aboard the lugger," which happened
to be a yawl, we disposed ourselves in various
uncomfortable positions and fell to criticizing
the poor taste of the castles and pavilions along
the shore. (No wonder the millionaire gets tired
of his castle after living in it a while; it must
bore even him.) Thc-yawl being put upon an
other tack, Cap'n Burnett brought out Lawton
Mackall's "Scrambled Eggs," and read it aloud,
to appreciative responses of, snorts and cackles.
In fact, this paragraph is merely a boost for
"Scrambled Eggs. May we not recommend it
for your Christmas list? It is" a small book
and a merry. .'. .
ONE of the most interesting Ithings about
sailing (after the fall of night and the inevitable
withdrawal of. the breeze) is the spirited discus
sion of tha question. "Are we making headway
or sternway?" The skipper alwayi plumps for
the affirmative; he is an optimist. But there are
pessimists in every party, and these insist that
the light oh the point is getting farther away
instead of nearer. Eventually it is conceded that
the pessimists are right, and the next question is,
"Are these provisions enough to last until morn
ing?" And some one recalls that the box of
cheese sandwiches was not opened at luncheon, so
the situation is ,ot wholly desperate. ;
Another Instrument Overlooked by Percy .
Grainger.
(From the Wichita Eagle.)
Members , of the Princess orchestra
thought EarJ Brlcker the drummer had? ee- -cured
some new sound effects with his
drums, but investigation disclosed that it
was merely a squeal in Bricker's chair which
rang out every time he moved about. It
was decidedly novel, if not altogether mu
sical. A DELEGATION of Socialists ha? returned
from Russia with the news that Sovietude
leaves everything to be desired, that "things are
worse than in the Czarist days." Naturally.
The trouble is, the ideal is more easily achieved
than retained. The ideal existed for a few
weeks in Russia. It was at the time of the
canning of Kerensky. Everybody had authority
and nobody had it. Lincoln Steffens, beating
his luminous wings in the void, beamed with
joy. The ideal had been achieved; all govern
ment had disappeared. But, this happy state
could not last. The people who think such a
happy state can last are the most -interesting
minds outside of the high brick wall which sur
rounds the institution. , .
"Tell Me a Story."
(From an interview with W. L. George.)
Why do people read stories? Is there a
fundamental story hunger in people, or is the
craving for a good yarn an artificially stimulated
taste? I do not believe that. the question can
be arfswered as simply as that. If we get down
to fundamentals we find that the thing that
mankind hungers for is illusion. We labor, and
we do not like it, and so to console ourselves we
Invent an illusion about the nobility of labor.
We want to be great, to be noticed, to have stir
ring adventures, and because life is common
place we Invent the illusion of romance hence
the story-telling art. If I should analyze the
old craving of "Tell me a story," I should divide
it into three primary illusions. First there is
the illusion of the glorious, bright, beautiful
world the roseate world that one may see only
with rose-colored spectacles. It is an escape
from the world In which plans do not work out
smoothly, situations are not pat, ambitions are
frustrated. Second, there is the illusion of the
world of adventure, in which things are hap
pening thick and fast, in which men and women
are lifted out of their ruts into bright new paths
of stimulation and achievement. And, as this
illusion works out in a story, the commonplace
reader sees himself in the person of the brawny
and handsome hero,' and, of course, gallops
gloriously through all the adventures. The third
type of illusion is the illusion of humor. It
represents the philosophy of the man with a
good deal of digested experience, who, finding
that things will not go' as he pleases, deliber
ately builds up for his intellectual life a world
of cheerful cynicism a world of laughter and
merry doings, in which the blows of real life are
softened by a refusal to take them, seriously.
And the kind of illusion that any person seeks
in Action depends, as I see it, upon the kind of
treatment he has had from life.
AN Indiana paper refers to her as" "Galaker
chy." Ln New York this becomes "Galakoitchy."
CONSIDERABLE LITTER.
(From the Waterloo Courier.)
For sale, two sows with pigs, ducks and
geese. 333 La Porte Road.
CALL no man happy until he is dead, said
the ancient Greeks. Still, we met a man yester
day who has just found, in unpacking hjs house
hold goods, stored for some years in a ware
house, eight bottles of cherry bounce. What a
magnificent bounce.
FAIRLY SAFE. ;
Sir: The advertisement of a hotel mentions
".Vacancies Now Open." Am I correct in as
suming that this condition will prevail until all
the occupied rooms are filled ? R. G.
How to Keep Well
By DR. W. A. EVANS
Quaation coacarnlnt fcffltoa, aanita
tion and prevention el diaeaaa, ub
mitted to Dr. Evan ky readara of Tha
Be, will b anaworod poraonallv, aub
J act to pro par limitation, wharo a
(tamped, ddreeaod envelope i an
cloaad. Dr. Evana will not make
dlagnoala or prcrib for Individual
diaeaaea. Addreaa latter in can of
Tha Bee.
Copyright, 1920, by Dr. W. A Evan.
"THE liabilities of the Pond Bureau are
given as $60,259.20, and the assets $72,044.54."
New York Evening Post.
Or, as you might say, bones.
SHORTAGE of paper, we read, has "forced
German publishers to, the walv" Why tlon't
they use the wall paper? B. L. T.
, Use of Money.
Mr. Gompers made one pertinent observa
tion. It is purchasing power that the toiler
needs. The number of dollars are not so im
portant except in the payment of debts, public
and private. Houston Post.
The Real Issue.
Of course, the league of nations is an issue
of the campaign1, but our advice to candidates
is to talk about the price of ham and eggs when
addressing the gravel-train vote. Columbus Des
spatch. , ; i
All Set for the Big Show.
Now that the picture of the sisters and cousins
and aunts and darling little ones of all the can
didates have been published in the newspa
pers, the American people can vote intelligently.
Troy Times. , ,
u . Safety First
For the benefit of those automobile drivers
who slow down to 95 miles an hour on the
turns, we ought to put sideboards on the roads.
Seattle Times.
1 Eternal Separation.
Some folks don't believe in having a treasure
in heaven because they don't think they'll have
a chance to spend it there. Arkansas. Thomas
DRY SUMMERS KILL BABIES,
The French-Canadians are rather
disposed to resent the charge that
they have an awfully high baby
aeatn rate.
They do not dispute the facts as
snown by the statistics, but they
resent the inference always im
plied and often expressed, that the
high baby death rate is a result of
neglect or bad housekeeping or poor
mothercraft. They .say that they
snouia not be compared with the
vices whose women have one or a
few babies and can concentrate all
their attention on the small family,
out wnn the peoples whose women
have families of ten or more.
The French-Canadian mother not
infrequently has ten children, and
occasionally as many as twenty.
Nevertheless they and their doctors
are trying hard to get their baby
death rate down to the lowest level
possible. Dr. A. Jobin of Quebeo
argues that heat and lack ' of hu
midity are important factors in in
font mortality.
In very hot weather the babies die
at a rapid rate because the milk
spoils rapidly, because the flies
abound, and also because of the ef
fects of the heat directly on the
baby. The temperature of the skin
of a baby is higher than that of an
adult. They lose heat to the air
faster than adults' do, and their heat
production is on that basis. If they
are dressed too heavily and cannot
lose heat as fast as they should, the
temperature of the body goes up.
He says babies not infrequently get
sunstroke or heat stroke when the
temperature of the air is only' 70
degrees Fahrenheit.
Maurel has shown that a baby re
quires only two-thirds as much food
in hot weather as fie does in cold.
If he eats as much in hot weather as
he did in cold he receives one-third
more than he needs, is overfed to
that extept, and gets tetter or some
other rash, bowel trouble, or some
other bad effects of overfeeding.
A hot, dry summer is harder oa
babies than one in which there is
plenty of rainfall. Turcong proved
that in France the drought summers
were hardest on the babies. .
In 1915 -and 1916 there was very
little rainfall in the vicinity of Que
bec. The pastures burned up and
the streams got very low. The pol
lution in the drinking water taken
from certain streams was unusually
concentrated, and many adults as
well as children suffered from diar
rhoea. In a certain low section of Que
bec, where about 50,000 people live,
240 babies died in 1915 and 216 in
1916, as compared with 136 in 1917
and 118 in 1918. The average rain
fall in the last two years was two
To taste LORNA DOONE
Biscuit is to know a new
delight ir ddicioun, tender
shortbread. Buy a pound
today.
NATIONAL BISCUIT
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w ' I
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Be . sure 'and investi-
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' You can purchase a
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1513 DOUGLAS ST.
The Art and Music Store
CARUSO CONCERT, OCT. 12
and a half times as great as that of
the first two years.
Another factor in Infant mortality
is hot houses. The interior of a
small, thin walled house becomes
very hot on a hot day, considerably
hotter than the outside air. Keeping
babies outside or in some cool place
lessens the baby death rate.
Heart Mny Improve.
Joe McD. writes: "I am a boy go
ing on 15. 1 have been lying in bed
for seven months with heart trouble.
For the first four months my heart
was decompensated, and later It is
compensated. I am getting around
a little now, but my heart shakes
my whole chest. It is a double mi
tral lesion,, and I have kidney trou
ble. "1. How long do you think I will
still feel my heart shake my chest?
"2. How long do people live with
such heart trouble?
"3. Do you think my heart will
ever get decompensated again?"
REPLY.
If you have .established compensa
tion you have reason to hope you
can live a long time. Do not be im
patient about getting around. If your
heart shakes your chest, it is not
likely that you can get around much
without doing yourself harm. After
you can exercise without disturbing
your heart you will find that your
heart muscle will build "up Just as
your other muscles do. Good luck
to you. ;
lie Governed By Pulse.
. R. E. J. writes: "An X-ray exami
nation has shown that one of my
lungs Jiad an ulcer that has heiled
and now the other shows a slight af
fection'. 1 have taken physical ex
ercise Shall I continue, to what
extei aid what exercise will be
most ujneflclal?"
REPLY.
The amount of exercise you should
take should be regulated by the ef
fect on your pulse, temperature and
sense of fatigue. If you have any
fever, rest quietly in bed until the
fever abates. Do not take any ex
ercise which causes your fever to
nnma nn nc inftronnA vmir nulsa rate
more than 10 or leaves you leenng
fatigued, in tne aosence 01 any 01
these effects continue your present
exercises. .
General Wrangel Near
City of Alexandrovsk
' Constantinople, Sept. 9. (By
The Associated Press.) General
Wrangel, head of the anti-bolshevik
forces in south Russia, is within 12
miles of Alexandrovsk, the head
quarters of the field staff of the 13th
soviet army, dispatches received to
day report. 1
Five Greek Transports
Have'Vrrived at Ismid
Constantinople. Sept. 9. (By
The. Associated Press.) -Five trans
ports of Greek troops have landed
at Ismid, on the Gulf of Ismid, 55
miles southeast of Constantinople,
nnd are replacing the British forces
there, according to advices received
today.
"bur Physical
Condition
is reflected
in your face.
a.
w 1
1
Have an Examination.
E. S. writes: "Would you please
elve the reason for ankles swelling
so. after you waiK any lengtn 01
time? Is there a remedy? Please I
tell me what I can do, as they hurt.
and swell-almost as large as my
calf."
REPLi.
Have a physician examine you for
heart disease, Bright's disease and
cirrhosis of the liver.
Instant
Ipostum
A BEVERACI
totum Canal Camaaa.
Ruddy cheeks and a clear
eye are generally indica
tive of health.
On the other hand,a sallow
complexion may indicate
that coffee is causing the
indigestion, sleeplessness
ana upset nerves which
are responsible for your
condition. .
InstantPostum
instead of coffee will prove
"There's a Reason"
MacUby
Postum Cereal Co, Inc, Battle Creek, Mich.
BRING 'EM TO
LIFE AGAIN
your last season's
clothes --- they looked
sort of discouraging
when you laid 'em away.
but we can put life,
style, ginger and wear
into those clothes again.
they'll fairly snap
back into life again When
in the hands of our mas
ter workers. . ,
Phone Tyler 345 and
say: ''Dresher, we are
going to try you out.
Send a man."
DRESHER
BROTHERS
CLEANERS
221117 Frnam Street
Never was there a better
time to add the
of a
PIANO
to your home
Come in see and hear the differ
ent models. We know you will be
delighted with the action, tone and
case designs.
Prices Are Not Prohibitive Easy Payment If Yotf
Prefer
r7
Tha Honus
of Pleasantl
Dealings,
X
warn.
Fifteenth
and I
Harney.
USE BEE WANT ADS THEY BRING RESULTS
AUTO
LUNCH
SETS
Going
Away?
There's a lot of satisfac
tion . in .knowing that
your baggage creates a
favorable impression
in knowing that it's ab
solutely right-our
stocks 'of travel bag
gage are adequate
bags and other luggage
of the finest quality ma
terial and workman-ehip.
Omaha Printing
Company
We have them in a varie
ty of styles and sizes
to the motorist who en
joys a trip to the open
country and who has had
an otherwise pleasant
trip marred by a messy
lunch the convenience
of these auto lunch sets
will be apparent.
Thirteenth tit Farnftm
i