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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 15, 1920)
i 8 THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1920. t ;TheOmaha Bee . DAI1Y (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, ! NELSON & UPDIKE. PublUhtr. MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tn AaKiclated Pre, -or which Th Bee It n ember, li ex ttunrele entitled to lie uee for publication of all iwn dltpalebee refuted to H or not otherwla credited In Uilt pent, and aleo tn Kyti new puDutnea Herein. u runt of ouoncitioo el oar (pedal dt ip tehee ere tleo reamed. BEE TELEPHONES ' . Print Branch Excnani. Aat for th Twl 1 fiOA Dapiruseul or Penan Wanted. ljer UW For Night Call Afttr 10 P. M.t Editorial Department Trie 10001 Circulation Department tjin loosi Adrertlih-if Department Tiler 10091 OFFICES OF THE BEE J " shin Office: 17th and Faroes . Council BluXTi 15 Scott Ht I Soi'.th tilde !31l N St Out-of-Town Office) Ne. Tork tS Firth At. I Waihtntlon - 1SIJ (1 St CHmy)0f Sieger Bldg. I Parte France . Bue St. Bon ore la JAe Bee's Platform 1. New Union PassengeY Station. 2. Continued improvement of the' Ne braska Hiehwavs. including tk un. ment of Main Thoroughfare! leading. into umaba with a Brick Surface. 3. A short, low-rate Waterway from the Corn. Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. 4. Home Rule Chatter 'for Omaha, with City Manager form, of Government. THE VOTE IN MAINE. as a The only serious Question concerning the outcome of the election in Maine was as to the ttize of the majority by which tfie republicans. j.would win. The returns show a majority ibeyond expectations, and may be taken rfair index of the trend of public opiwipn. if! effort was spared by the democrats to ,:?present their cause --to the voters of Maine, for ;the leaders of the administration party realize jthe importance of the expression that comes ijfrom the first s'tate to vote. So the cause of the gj-cague of Nations 'was argued with vehemence, ;with persuasion, and with all the plausibility v isjthat denotes the intense desire of its proponents ( ito get it before the people in its best possible v iflight. Especially did the democratic advocates isaddress themselves to the women of Maine, seeking to beguile them again as they were in j;J916, when the deceptive slogan, "He kept us Eout of war," was used to fool people into voting j9r Woodrow WilsonM"he answer the women re turned was to vote the republican ticket. v ;i - The total vote is proportionally much heavier Ethan usual, showing the interest taken. It is !'remarkable for one fact, that the democrats vrbarely held their own as compared with two .jjyears ago, while the gain on the side1 of the '-rqpublicans is such as admits of but one con delusion that the women, an theformer, sfay-at- i horne voters came out this time loxexpress their .disapproval of democratic policies and blunders fctsnd to give impetus to the nation-wide dete'rmi :n?tion to put an end to the one-man government ;-'j)f the United States. Maine's verdict will be accepted as the y 'jjdeiberate judgment of the voters, and will have the effect of confirming' the sreadilymounting 'belief that the Wilson star is setting, and that . i ; with it goes down all hope of the democrats to retain power. While not a doubtful state, in l , any sense, the influence of a judgment so em 'phatically expressed can not be denied. "As J.Maine goes, so goes the Union," is an aphorism ,. t familiar for many years, and its true significance ' i was never so apparent as . at this' "time. While 0six weeks of campaigning yet remain before the ' presidential vote is taken, this first test of the v$"sugaring off" of public opinion is so undeniably A conclusive that it may be accepted as accurately vlforeshadowing the end. Cox's defeat now 'ap ! pears to be as certain as anythjng not a fact ac complished can be '"" t ji - Falsehood and False Pretense. . ;. It is unsafe to trust a singleutterance of (Governor Cox or his campaign managers unless ' (fortifier! by documentary eyidence of nnques litiotfed character. In Montana wcfind'hhn seek ing to hoodwink the farmers by professing that $bur entry into the League of STatio6 "would !. make, unnecessary the ' buildfhg of battleships, J the money for which might be (uscd for Jand j reclamation. Those are words pi Cox." Con-, ;trast them with the official record of -Wilson's' v -i plans when he thought the Leaguepf Nation 'S.would go through. The administration then de- i& manded the adoption of a program for prodigious expenditures for new battleships and . il;the strengthening of the navy. There you have '1 the actual contrast betweena slippery politician m if . and the policy of naval increase he is pledged to carrv out. Atv enormous naval oower is the )t first requisite for our membership in the League, and a great armv is the second, both shown bv ij!;the official demands of the Wilson adminjstra- jj ton. . V , f . x Doubtless our readers have read the claims put forth by the-democratic committee and pVess that Cox was the influence that trave. Ohio j her.workmen's compensation Jaw, her eigbt-pour ij day.'-lier insurance against occupational disease, and the prohibition of child labor. I He did nothave a thing to do with either of them. He was in congress when they were adopted in Ohio, partly by legislative, enactment and partly by constitutional convention. And ''jj while the constitutional convention was being ;3 addressed from time to time by republicans. and ! democrats .tlike on the questions, involved in ; their work, Congressman 'Cox lias so little 'J standing as a studentof legislative anf consti ; tutional questions that nobody thought -for 'a ; moment of asking for his views on any one 1 3 of the matters." In those days his conferences :: r Iflrrrelw with the. committees of the brewers I md distillers, and the saloon-Keepers" organlza-I'-tions, the combined influence of which won him ! his first nomination for governor, just "as the j( Murphy, Taggart and Brennan influences got h behind him at SarVFrancisco. t . In.all Mr. Cox's political career in Ohio he had the support of every doubtful, questibnable ' and unsafe element of the population. v is hj oyster. He has the key that niaytinlock for him the real treasures of life the learning, the usefulness, the distinctions and , honors which mean so much to yojith, however drab they may turn with old age. . Haepy boys! with every possibility in their grasp, needing only tirnye and occasion to honor their names .when college has trained their brains and equipped them, for fine careers. Cood luck go with them all! , The Campaign in' Nebraska. ' While little enough effort has so far been expended on 'the general political campaign in Nebraska, ft has not been wholly neglected, nor are signs wanting that voter are concerned r as to the candidates and the party platforms. In the democratic appeal for tynds is foreshad owed the outline of the campaign that party expects to make. It will rest on the usual as sumption that the democratic party is the pro tagonist of progress, the champion of the people, the haven of rest for the oppressed, the down cast, the weary and disconsolate. We are will ing it should, so proceed. v , This year there are neither oppressed or downcast in Nebraska; nobody is, weary, and none are disconsolate! We have no'Adullamites in this state, where the most, bountiful harvest ever garnered has filled the bins and grantfries to overflowing, where comfort and content is the lot of all, and only those are discouraged who habitually see the hole and not the doughnut. v As to progress, it might be-'well to inquire what the democrats did to improve the Admin istration of public affairs in Nebraska during the six years of administration of John H. Morehead and Keith Neville. So far as easy memflry serves, the record is a blank. This will be more carefully examined as the 'days go on. Contrast try with the redeemed pledges of the renuhlic.in 'party. In its platform, of 1918 the republican party in Nebraska pledged itself to give the stat?"a better business administration, by adopting a budget system, by the elimination of unnecessary expense, Jthe cutting out of du plication and oveJapping in official function of the various boards pf appointive officers, and a. more careful oversight in the expenditure of money for public purposes , This has been achieved toy the so-called "code bill," which is the chief object of attack on part of the democrats, and the; repeal of which is meant whenever one of ' them talks-about "progressive" government It is the democratic idea to return to the old wasteful inefficient plan of government by boards and commissions, whose appointments rest with the governor and enable him to construct .and maintain a more or less serviceable personal polcal machine at the expenselof the' taxpayers The choice is for the voters to make; whether they are ready to endorse the real progress made by the repub licans, or are readyto go back to the expensive system that seems; so dear to the heart of the democratic politician because, of places it pro videg on the payroll and the comfort that flov7s from a connection with the public treasury. The "code bill" is only one of number of progressive measures adopted vby the repub lican's, buNit alone is sufficient to commend the party for its redeemed pledge, and for its efforts to be6terco'nditiohs of life in the state by estab lishing efficiency in poblie business. . v u , - . " Great Issue Fairly Met ' The reply' made to the Californians, by Sen ator Harding with regard to the Japabesjxiues tion can not be misunderstood. The senator frankly and freely stated his position on the point involved: As a people and a nation . . r . we do have the moral, the natural, and the legal in ternational rights ito determine who shall or shall not enter into our country and partici pate in our activities. With' a new realization of the necessity of developing a soul distinctly , American in this republic, we favor such mod ification of our immigration laws and such changes in our international understandings, and such a policy relating to those who come among as, as 'will guarantee to the citizens of this republic not only assimilability of alien Torn, but the adoption by all who come of American standards, economic and otherwise, . and a full consecration to American practices and ideals. " - Senator Harding carefully distinguishes be tween racial differences and racial inequality He bases his position solely on the matter of differences between races that amount to non assimilability, and which bring continual fric tion wherever the two come into contact. This was the thought behind the HayTakahira "gen tleman's agreement," abrogated by Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan, who foud him self more in sympathy with the position later taken at Paris by Woodrow Wilson, when he turned down the Makino "racial equality'reso lution, ' Californians will be protected in their fights under the republican administration, "j't no af front will be visited on the" Japanese through telling them plainly again what they have, al ready been given to understand under previous republican presidents, that they can not' settle or acquire lands in the Pacific coast states. A Line QMype or Two New to th Line, let tlx lulpe till where they nay. -f- missiippps governor is gently taken to task by the Jackson News, because in speech of forty minutes he committed 278 errors of grammar, not including errors of pronuncia tion, such as "boogit" for "budget." "This com ment" says the News, "is more by way of kindly admonition than carping critioism." And it concludes its kindly admonition oy trecommendx ing the ' Governor to read Hamlet's advice to the players. USE or misuse of the English language has figured to a surprising extent in politics this year. S. W. N., listening to Mayor Thompson, jotted down, the phrases, "He has been a traitor to you and I" and "The government that pro tects you and I." and the inclusion of Webster among the Presidents of the United States. This is an educational campaign. We like the. SocOflrlr-Fore and Aft. Sir: ly husband ordered a suit, but only the coat and vest arrived. He wishes me to ask you which would be the better sign to wear when he appears inipuBlic, "Pants' Applied For" or "Trousers, in Transit." E. MONTANA people are peculiar. They do not merely clap their hands when a candidate scores a point; they rise on their toes arid cheer. No matter how flat-footed the candidate's state ments may be. 'Strawnry! '.' WHY GIRLS LEAVE HOME; OR, CAN YOU BLAME JlER? (From the Philadelphia Bulletin.) The father of th$ girl reported hervdis v appearance to the police this morning. He said she left home about 11 o'clock last " night,-soon after the family retired in her night attire. "ALWAYS wind up your watch and verify your quotations," was a bit of ancient wisdom. Recommended, with the substitution of quotas for quotations, to Comrade Cox and other ac cusatory Democrats. AN obol for Walter Bojanowski, who, when offered a special meal before his execution at Sirg Sing, shattered the traditions by saying, "The regular prison fare is good enough for me." ' ' IN WHICH YE EDITOR TURNS A MATTER OVER IN' WHAT HE IS PLEASED TO CALL HIS MIND. ( (FFftm the Ppcos, tW., Enterprise.) Recently a young lady sent the editor word that he "had missed a jrery important news item," and said, "I was in swimtning at 1 o'clock in the morning last week." Since turning the matter over in his mind sev eral times the editor has concluded that it is important not so much as a news item but as a safety gauge to our ycuing people. In Texas girls cannot take a midnight swim in , the river or a ride to Phantom lake in the afternoon for a midnight bath in that clear pool without laying herself liable to have a cloud. cast upon her fair name. She may . be as pure the driven snow and as fair as the angels in heaven, but some one will, look upon her with suspicion, and soon a scandal is started and God only knows where it will end. , . i an honest man.' Taxicab chauf $4,100 purse to teacher." News "HERE'S feur restores item. But what that money? was the ttacher doing i Leaving for College. Wehave little hope for the youth who is off to college tins' year just because it's the thing tOdo, andNfho is more concerned over the silk shirts and other clothing he it taking Than in his books; whose mind is full of thoughts o fraternities and foot ball, dancing and sports, and who carries with him no determination to excel in his studies. He" will be a dawdler in college, as the writer was, and 'not get one tenth vhat is coming to him. 7 But far the chap who leaves home deeply grarefu! for the opportunity U parents are giv ing '!. !.a a' v;elj-refined intent to make every rc ;n college count for his future what a glorious prospect beckons I The world Responsibility for an Alleged Crime. "I do not care to say anything"how on the presidential campaign," remarks Mr. Bryan, but he also says; "Our failure to enter the League, of -Nations is -a crime against the I world." That seems to have some beating on the campaign. ispnngheld Republican. Indeed it does, and upon Mr. Bryan's view of whose criminal conduct is responsible. It will be remembered that the Commoner labored diligently for the acceptance of the reservations which Senator Harding and a large majority of the senate supported. Our failure to enter the League was caused by Voodrow Wilson's influ ence fever those senators he could control in his stubborn determination to fasten the handcuffs of Article X on the wrists of the Ajnerican God dess of Liberty. ' , And now even the democrats of Georgia, by a whopping majority, have repudiated the League with or without reservations, and Wood row Wilson with it. And just thinkl F. Roosevelt told us the Maine women were going t vote for the League. How could he have made such a mis take? - v ' Jones of Washington 'reports $3 campaign expenses, and Allen of Kansas 80 cents. Their loving friends are yet to be beard from. Our democratic senator is also afraid of the "oligarchy," He once denounced King Caucus, "Moo. What Qmaha really wants is service from the gi plant, price to be settled later. i , . - .. i - As of yore,' "Maine went bell bent." The Mortuary Wheeie. Sir: Crossed Spoon River yesterday, and fancied I could hear echoes of its Masters' voice rising from the little cemetery. The night in West Liberty was spent in counting the trains that passed under the hotel windows. I re peated Madame de Stael's slogan (or was it Re camier or Yale?) anent the crimes committed on the name of Liberty, and arose and shaved. I shall add the headline. "Cork Mayor Sinks S16wly," 'to my collection of mortuary wheezes. The other on? was born when a newspaper re ported that Victoria was dying' by Inches. "As a ruler should," I chortled. J. U. H. "JANE COWL continues to have the Pacific Coast supine at her feet." New York Times. Knocked -'em flat, as it were. HALLUCINATION. - Sir: May I not acknowledge the extreme compliment which you have bestowed upon me by using my contributed "Ponzied Finance" as Vour very own? GLYMPH. The phrase-was quoted, was it not? That means old stuff. "Ponzied Finance" was pulled by a Boston journal twenty-four hours after I'onzi became famous. 'IN connection with the International Con gress Against Alcoholism there is to be a "soft duik exhibit.". Can. you imagine anythjng of mow compelling interest! Perhaps the Rev. Dr. Btraton Could Be Engaged to Pronounce the Denunciation. (From the Decatur Herald.) V There win be dancing in the pavilibn all afternoon. Rev. P. A. Havlghurst of the First Methodist church will give the invoca- tldn, and Rev. Fr. Jeremiah Murpfcy of St. ; Patrick's church the benediction. ; ' A DRY COVERING. I Sir; I have Just seen the inquiry abou-old copies of the Saturday Evening Post. The standard practice is to use them for shingling poultry houses and garages. Hoping your con trlb will ask a hard one next time, I am as usual, , - W. S. A SHEET from a calendar labeled "Septem ber 31" reaches us, with a noc from J. R.: "'Anniversary of the day John D. gave me two gallons of gasoline1 for nothing." IN '"The fiddles -of Merlin," Alfred Noyes begins: i "fell me, Melin it is I , . Who call thee ..." Do the advocate of "me" really think that would sound better if it were- v "Tell me, Merlin 'it is me . V Who eajls thee" .V .?x NOT 'ARF. . ' Sir: truckman who has been hauling for the gowfTnment tn Chicago told a South Bend truckman that he was hauling liquor for Mr. Dryntpple. Not bad, eh? SHOLES. . THEBIGGEST BANK IN THE UNITED ; , ' STATES FOR ITS SIZE. (Ad of the Bank of Italy, San Francisco.) With the exception of -certain banks in New York, Chicago, and Boston, the Bank of Italy is today the largest financial institu tion in the United states. ' i ; TOM WATSON'S success, in Georgia in structs us, children, that straws may blow one way and votes another. . i ' B. L. T. r 1 - ' A Housewife's Paradise. ' Tf coal shduld go much higher most of us wilLwant to go and live in the favored French village ot unauaesaigues, in ine vuvergne moun ; tains, j It is built in the crater of an inactive T volcanQ. A number of stone-covered wells fur- nish boiling water, which flows thrpugh mains i beneath the row of houses. Not a chimney is to be seen m the village which is surrounded with snow-covered peaks' from October to May. Neither stoves nor ranges nor boilers are to be found; neither coal nor woodV nor any other .kind of fuel is used there. But the houses are qlunuG warm pvpn when trip tpmrnratiir nut side is below zero. In. the floor of each house ' are several holes leading to the main pipes. To heat a home the covers of the hedes are re moved; to prepare a meal, a pot is lowered to the flow of boilingwaer; on washing day all that is necessary is to go to the large pool of hot water which is always ready just outsil the village. Edinburgh Scotsman. . Bouncing mugnters now, ( x The father of the bouncing baby girl can now go about proudly announcing "the new voter at our house." Daughters have achieved a new importance. 1 And the man with seven daughters, loom! just as big in the eyes of the wrd politician as the man with the seven sons. Cincinnati Times-Star, m i i mm' n'ei-" i wi Consequences Invited. . Unless the republicans -retre Mr. Hays as chairman of their national committee,' they must j accept the consequences. Governor Cox. Hays stays bring on your consequences Svracuse'l'ost Standard. How to Keep Well By OR. W. A, EVANS Queation concerning hyftent, unit tioa .and prevention of die, ub mitUd to Or. Evans bjr ruder el The Bee, will b anawered personally, sub ject to proper limitation, wbsro a stampad, addrassad envelop is ea cloaed. Dr. Evans will not make diacaoais . or prescribe for individual dUaases. Address Utter in care of The Be. Copyright, 1S20, by Dr. W. A. vsas. DON'T TASTET'SUSPECTED FOOD. Nobody in this country knows bot ulism any better than if any one knows it as well as Dr. E. C. Dick- aon oi an rancisco. Tnererore, we turn gladly to his article on the sub ject in a recent number of the Cali forma State Journal of Medicine. Dr. Dickson has been investigat ing this kind of food poisoning for years, ana since 49 or the 6 g Ameri can outbreaks have been traceable to products put up on the Pacific slope ne nas naa exceptionally good oppor tunities to study the condirion. Some observers, hold that food containing bacillus botulinus and enough of its poison to kill is so ob viously changed in taste and smell that no careful person would be en dangered. . With this Dickson does not agree. Unquestionably fodd spoiled by ba cillus botulinus has rancid or cheeselilre odor, and in many case it is distinct enough to serve aa a warning.- "I have personal knowledge of cases,1;' Dickson says, "where spoil age was so slight tltat after smell ing and tasting it persons have eat en it and been' poisoned fatally. I am convinced that smell and taste ore not evidence enough." He inpartlcularly warns . women against tasting food which they sus pect to be bad. He says there is a growing list of women killed by tasting foods "which contained the botulinus poison. Suspicious foods must pot be tasted. They must be condemned on suspicion. The bacillus botulinus only grows in packages, from which air has been excluded. The bacillus can be swallowed without causing harm, but, on the other hand, if it has grown in an airtight corner it secrets a violent poison. While the bacillus itself, at least in its spore stage, requires a high degree . of heat for its killing, the poison eas ily is destroyed by heat. The boiling temperature, kept up for a brief time, is ample to destroy it. ' All known epidemics have been caused by lasting food to see if it was good or to food served un cooked, such as salads, string beans, asparagus, olives, apricots and pears, As fa home canning against com mercial canning, Dickson says he knows of four outbreaks due to commercial canning and several times that number due to home canning. The, question is one of the temperature to which the product has been heated before be- with alLL in food tpoisoning the stomach snouia De wasnca out, even xnougn the spoiled food was eaten several days before. Dickson recommends that those who can get it take the antitoxin. Don't Mean Anything. J. M:VB. writes: "What is the cause and what is the significance of veins appearing on the surface of the skin, usually on the legs, especially back of the knee, ex tending up and down? I have no ticed some people have them more than others and some are purplish red, hile others are blue or al most black. I do not mean raised veins. What is the cause? Is there, any prevention or cure?" I REPLY. . - Some physicians think the pres ence of such blood vessels in the skin, over the liver is significant. About Omaha's Culture. ' Oraaha, Neb.. Sept. 10. 1920. To the Editor of The Bee: Every now and then something occurs to expose our presumptuous affectation ot culture. This week there is , at the Brandeis thcVUer- an opera company that paya us the undeserved com pliment of supposing that we really appreciate good opera rendered by a competent company of talented artists. They are thoroughly dis illusioned by an attendance Of a few score of real music lover. Those of us who live in Omaha and know our -people realize that only by making it a social event can any artistic effort receive the necessary popular and financial support.. If this opera company had been spon sored by the Society of the Fins Arts the house would havs been packed, all the newspaper critics would have raved over the "won derful performance" and incident ally have described the gowns of the ladies in the boxes and said some rice things about the "culture of our people," while the patrons would have raved about the opera because the leaders of the society had told them it was good. Of course there would be more conversation about the gowns the ladies wore and who was present than any discrimi nating talk about music. If there are any faint beginnings of real culture in ou midst they are along musical lines because there are more people Interested in voice cul ture and instrumental music than any other form of artistic effort, and if the attendance at this week's operatic entertainment is a measure of our appreciation or music as a people then we are a sad lot This is most discouragingvto those who have hopes for the grWth of culture among our home people. It is best to face the situation and realise that we are without everi an ambition for true culture, for in that alone can we hope for a betterment, but so long as we gauge our growth by the success of a meyement as measured by the attendance of so ciety dllletantes we are only delud ing ourselves, and to what an extent is tbrcibly .drawn to our attention by the lack of appreciation and the small attendance at so thoroughly artistic an occasion as the week of grand opera Just closed. The words of Lincoln are commended to our attention Vyou can fool all of the people some of the time, some of the pepls all of the tithe but not all of the people all of the time." Let us realize once for all that ap preciation of good music, fine paint ings and good literature lias nothing whatsoever in common with social attainments and if we are sincere in our desire to encorfTage , the BTOWth of culture and refinement let us divorce it from the patroniz ing blight of fashionable society. DISILLUSIONED. No one claims that such blood ves sels on the legs are of any sig nificance. i Send Snake Bite Fatalities. H. L. H. sends an account of the death of a young girl at Georgewest, Tex., due to rattlesnake bite. This in thd second death this year which he has brougkt to my attention. I hereby ask any one who hears of or reads of a death due to inaita hit t-i send ine notice giving some de Vails whenever possible. -; Slight Shock" Won't Hurt You. O. H. S. writes: "Does a small mock of electricity injure the body in any way? If so, why?" ! - I REPLY. No. - . CADILLAC Recoiniized everywhere t for its . PERMANENCY of -' VALUE J.N. Hansen Cadillac Go. Omaha Lincoln CARUSO I Is Coming V ' v t omei Hear the phono graph that can be a 'xylophone . Signer Friseoe astonishes thousands of pawboille&tn with itukj notjou? A boge tbeatre-andicnce vaits expectantly. Intense quiet ' reigns. Signor Frisope, world's foremost xylophwist, cOBMSntothec ( and plays his xylonbone. Suddenly he eseQl paring. But the music goes on! Tben curtains in tb backdrop part. The Kev Edisoa is rertsrL II . -4:as takes up Friscoe's perfcRS anc, and1 is Rt-C'-nurro it nlone. A theatre-full of pocpk ' sit dumbfouoacd. 3k NEW EDISON "Th ftaaejait mSkmSml" That New Edison is an Official Laboratory ModeL, UasaespOesfls of the Original LatwrnroryMi4. Mr.Kdisoa tpeat 14,000,000 das ing sevea years of iuusbiiJ sad atjfjktst to petia tfas original. r. W also hare s exact tfroISrae sf the &.OO0.i OktgnaiU LsAor r.tory Model. We gnajaotm it is cSpahrQ of t&e same rarrmrk-abiepecewaMMatterSiejoor rnjeoes ptajmgjapa, 4n The, Edie lhp Omaha Auditorium Tuesday Evening, , k October 12. 1920. By special arrange rtient, weare able to of fer our ' patrons during Subscription Week, which is from September 13 to 18, inclusive, choice seats, available in ad vance of the public sale date. YBUSmSSS IS GOQOTHANKmA VI. Nicholas Oil Company For Rent Typewriters and Adding Machines of All Makes" Central Typewriter ' "Exchange Doug. 4120 1912 Farnam St. flow on 'g? 1 i hour lorvq will its rorte 1 - .1.1 lhat is a. question, wki you should ask of any new piano, the tone , of which, charm's and de lights 'you. t , It will last as v long as the sounding-board retains its arch rT- i lherev is but one piano in the world i the in which the sounding board is so constructed " . it will rteuer flatten, jfs a riMcrlt, & tone is im M perisjhaly eacrtizz. ill its to CIS w llww von and WHY. With the easy N payment plan this house assumes, there is no valid reason Avhy you ' can riot HAVE A PIANO Instruments as low, as $365 of a renowned type, guaranteed dura ability and tonal beauty. Just see how every in strument is priced, in plain figures. Cash prices on the payment plan. . 1513 DOUGLAS ST. The Art and Music Store CARUSO CONCE TT, Ocf.12 Bee Want Ads Are Best Business . Getters. v -. Chicago: N E W 7Y O R K D i r te c : t Route Through Service via Nickel Plate Rbad Along the. South Shore of Lake Erie , -: ' PULLMAty, DRAWING ROOM, SLEEPERS ANJfPAY COACHES ( v 1 , Parlor Car and Dining Car Service , x . ' La Salle St. Station, Chicago J. LI DEASE, District Traffic Agent - . Traffic Representatives A. B. Burrows , W. H. Cunningham 21 S RilUriv Eserueia-ei. Kansas Citv. Mo. CLEVELAND U F F A L O mm UJ3 Douglas Street The -Victor Store Of Course We Have All the "Caruso" Recowls laajAissrfejesfa ' Coach Carpenters-and Car Builders Wanted The Denver Tramway Company wants coach carpenters and car builders who have had some experience in street railway repair work. High wages, moderate living expenses, and a cood town to live in. , Apply At Once THE DENVER TRAMWAY CO., x lJth and Arapahoe Streets Denver, Colo.- ' On August 1st a strike was called on our property. On August 7th by vote of the union the strike was declared off, but many pf our former employes have refused io return to work. . v. Shiiltz Bros., Owners 313 South 15th St. Going Away? it- I ... . MS T Let; the Omaha Printing Company supply your lug gage .needs. "Our bags and suitcases Bxe the most com fortable yet i they possess all the qualities-oi dura Ibilits roominess and style. Omaha Printing Thirteenth" at Farnam ''