"1 - TUt? DPT?. OUT At? A NTTPTnAV SPPTTTM RPP M 1Q9tV ' i "i ' "' m , ' ' " " - " "" i . ' - " i 3 id it t n (" V; I The Omaha Bee DAE? (MORNING ) -EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. NELSON B. UPP1KE. Publisher. ' MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PKESS The Aaaoctatatf Prase, of whlek The Bull! BasatM. It i tetUUd to toe uh for paBltoMlos of til sees dlaeetcbea tredited to II or not'.oUiarwIae ertdlud In till ppw. and elso the local "twa saoltahed htrtta. All rights of Mhucslioo of out special UHun are sue imnit BEE TELEPHONES frta BrtMk tntun Ask rot Us Tv! 1000 OuwitaMM or Person Wsnted, 1 J1" IUW For Niffct Calls After 10 P. M.I (Mttorlal DMrtmnt ........... Tlsr lOWt Circulation ntparunant Trier IML Adnriltlaf Department .-- tjlet 10ML OFFICES OF THE BEE Main Office: 17th and Paras IK Scott et I South Bid S31I S 8L Out-of-Town Official JM Fifth Are, Waihlnaton IStT O St. Stater Bid. I Par 14 franc 420 Boo St. Honors Coudl Staffs Km Tork TAe cc Platform 1. New Union Passenger Station. 2. ' Continued 4nproyeraent of the Ne - brat ka Highway, including the pare ,.. meat of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha with Brick Surface. 3. A short low-rate Waterway from the Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. 4. Homo Rule Charter for Omaha), with City Manager form of CoTernment. WHO CONTROLS THE LABOR VOTE? In this as in every other election ,of recent times, a great deal of interest is felt in the temper of labor as a group, and the turn its great political power will take at the polls. Never in the history of the .world has the opportunity ,been greater, nor the strength of the labor group been more fully recognized. Knowing these things, the public is prone to attach undue im portance to certain expressions or assertions from leaders of labor. Samuel Gompers, who has personal influence such a is given to few among the workers, advises the labor vote to . throw its strength to Cox. Resting on this, the J democrats have set up a claim to the full meas i tire of labor's political power, and already count the votes bf the organized workers as cast on their side. -It is well to remember, though, that some other influential leaders of union labor 6 liot kubscribe,to the Gompers plan in its entirety. They are not carried away by the specious rea soning of the president of the American Feder ation of Labor, whose .fealty to the democratic ... party is as yet unchallenged. Fpr example, the president of the California Building Trades council and a former president of the California State Federation of Labor report on the result of their interview with Senator Harding: . We have found, after a most satisfactory conference that Warren G. Harding is sym- fiarttntii with nroraniprl laHrtr in ite ffoafr for legislation to care for the wants of men, women ana children ot America. Another sign of the times Is the action bf the Massachusetts State Federation of Labor, which went on record three to one against the League of Nations. The Nebraska State Federation of Labor in effect endorsed the farmer-labor party, and other evidences of defection from the Gom pers group are plenty. Chairman Hays had on his new advisory board William Hutcheson, president of the Carpenters international union, "-art-organization of more than 40&.000 men. This' loes not mean that all the carpenters will vote for Harding, nordoes it suggest that Mr. Hutch eson will contract to so deliver them. T. V. " O'Connor, president of the longshoremen's- in ternational body, has also declared himself in favor of Harding, and others of the great, labor leaders of the country are well known to be republican in politics. , - . The lesson of all this is that no man or set of .men can deliver the vote of the American working men en bloc The union man, no mat ter what his affiliations otherwise, remains an , individualist in politics. He will vote for Hard ing, for Cox, for Debs, for Christiansen, or not -at all, as his conscience directs, and so vindicate -now as he always has, his right to be counted as an American citizen. The labor vote is Hot . controlled by heads of the labor organizations. An Awful Chill at Atlantic City. - f ..Solid support of wet delegates nominated Cox at San Francisco. Mr. Bry;tn knows it. Mr. rMcAdoo knows it. The Anti-Saloon league knows it. Every brewer, distiller and ex-saloon keeper knows it His nomination was arranged . for at French Lick Springs by wet leaders from "New York, New Jersey, Ohio, Indiana and Illi nois, led by Murphy of Tammany Hall, Tom Taggart of Indiana and Brennan of Chicago's red-light district. ' ' -Imagine, then, the feelings of the New Jersey Liquor Dealers' Protective league, in session at Atlantic City last week, when a message came that Cox had tol the North Dakota farmers he wouldn't interfere with the prohibition amend ment and had always voted v dry! It flabber gasted them. I But in Dayton and other Ohio points, such IS ' Cincinnati, the wets just laughedl They really know Cox there. What if he did tell the Dakota "farmers" he was dry? What are farm er for in a Cox campaign but? to be fooled? Don't they know it in Ohio? Indeed they do! To be sure, the wet game here and the dry game there, has a chilling effect on voters, who ' want a reliable, honorable, high-minded man for president. But Murphy, Taggart, et a!., wanted ' wet man, and they got him, fes a matter of fact. Like seeks like in , politics. But those New Jersey wets felt as if they bad knock-out drops; and they may well be apprehensive. Thy bave a many-minded, many-sided candidate with what the New York Tribune calls "a dispersive ness of character" that is shocking. Better Pay for State Officers. ;C One 0f the really important proposals for ' amending the constitution of the state had to do ;with increasing the pay of the state officials. vWhen the constitution of 1875 was adopted . $200 a year was looked upon s fairly liberal Vr the salary of governor of a frontier state.. .jtTi a sotii then would enable the executive to live in respectable comfort, to maintain such station as was expected by his constituents, and to retire from office little if any the worse in pocket. No governor of Nebraska in recent years has been enabled to defray his personal expenses ot of his salary. Each of a long list of occupants of the mansion at Lincoln has done so not only at a sacrifice of his personal inter ests, but also at considerable cost in the way of money over and above what the state allowed him. There is no justice in this. No man shonld -be expected to serve the public at his own charge, while the existing circumstances fixed condition that only a wealthy man could meet. 'Tht man of moderate means could not afford to be governor of Nebraska, In a lesser degree, but quite as important, the ruleapplied to the other elective officers of the state whose pay was fixed by the constitution. Judges were re lieved somewhat by an amendment adopted a few years ago, but the othef servants of the state had to take office with, full knowledge that their salaries would not only be noncompensatory, but might not even meet the cost of living. That the, voters realize this is evidenced by the en dorsement given the section that Will put the amounts on ttie pay roll at a more modern figure. W f ' a . ' In' Honor of the Pioneers. It is not recorded that the Puritans were very much on parade; in fact, the accounts that have , come down to us from those days confirm the opinion that display of any kind was dis tasteful to the stern men and devoted women who are grouped under that designating title. They were ostentatious in seeking the opposite of ostentation. " Yet we think they would have approved the parade which passed in the streets, of Omaha yesterday, commemorating incidents and episodes in their history. For, down under his sober garb in every Puritan breast there bea a human heart, and ii he forbore to do the things some of his contem poraries took pleasure in doing, it was not that he did not appreciate the cftmforts of life, but because he felt it laid on him to sacrifice much' here on earth that he might gain the more above. His abnegation was heroic, simply because he did know and was able to withstand the allure ments of the fleshpots. Therefore, he would have had delight in the beautiful picture pre sented by the floats, which "illustrated history so accurately and so pleasingly. v Those of Cavalier descent, whose forebears landed at Jamestown just before the Mayflower tied up at Plymouth, looked with approving and unenvious eyes on the pageant, for they knew how their ancestors reveled in such display, and took full measure of the joys of life, making use of the blessings bestowed on man by his Maker, accepting with grateful heart the plenitude of nature's bounty to the honor of the Great Giver. In these modern times the same "division of view may be noted, the austere, the ascetic and the indulgent mingling now as then, and so the sacrifices and struggles of the pioneers are re membered, just because they were earnestly and sincerely put forth in an. endeavor to benefit mankind and better conditions in the world. It fs well to revere those memories, and not to lose sight of the fact that we have inherited many of our choicest possessions from those pioneers, and in the mingling of their, blood have pro duced a race that wears with pride the guerdon of freedom they handed down. - Suppressing Socialism. At this distance it is a little difficult to judge the motives that actuated the New York legisla ture m unseating a second time the socialist members" from New "York City districts. If it is an attempt at suppression of socialism, the course is one that smacks of stupidity. Radical ism has demonstrated to the satisfaction of any thinking individual that it thrives on repression. The only certain metnoa 01 counteracxing socialism in any of its manifestation's is to meet it in the open; If it can not be met and defeated by reason, it surely can not be put down by force. Onr government has rightly :takln hold of' some of the more fanatical leaders of the red movement, when they became real dangers, and has sent ,them to prison, but this doesnot meet the general aspect of the problem. That New York has become a hotbed of radicalism is a shame to our civilization. We. have invited foreigners to America, and have permitted them to swarm and kennel under whatever of condi tions they might establish for themselves, with out regard to the possible assimilation of the mass into oun citizenship. The blame for this rests primarily" with the Americans themselves. If we are to teach these people that the Con stitution of the United States affords the great est safety and utmost liberty, it must be along lines that do not involve violation pf rights guaranteed under that constituiton. We must get the socialists out intojhe open, meet their unreason with reason, defeat their fallacies with effective argument, and rout them on their own ground by showing them social justice effective and for all. That is the only sure way of mak ing real American citizens of them. Perils of Campaign Tours. The wreck of Governor Cox's train, which happily resulted far less seriously1 than it easily might have, reminds us that the business of cam paigning has its perils as well as its thrills. The candidate who sets out on the grand swfig around the country not only undergoes the dis comforts incident to prolonged travel, and these are serious enough, the hardships' entailed in the physical effort to meet a new group many times a day, to have alwaysbn tap a speech of some kind, but he must also realize that almost anything may Happen to Kim. Sometimes even the excess of precaution may lead to a mishap. Governor Cox is not the first to experience these dangers and discomforts, nor will he likely be the last. So long as the American people de mand a close-up of its candidate, just that long the candidate will be ready to give it. 1 Yet the "front porch"-has its strong adherents, mainly because it indicates a dignified appreciation of the honor and- responsibility involved in the nomination and a desire to give a properly con ceived exemplification of the same. Socialists at Rome are trying to break info the Catholic churches- That is about the last place to look for a socialist. -'Cox ought to be in position to testify to the condition of the railroad? after the government got through with them. "Don't train your boy to be vice president," advises "Tom" Marshall, out of the depth of his experience. No one does.' Evidently the Poles have not been informed that the League of Nations had got them out of war. Guessing at the identity of the king and queen will give way to certainty in a few hours. Wonder what Cox will tell the Mexicans when he jMj3jfciear the, border. Henry seems to jave more effect on h. 1. than he did on the war. ' c. of Prices coming down? It' about time. Hint to Lone Wives. The Milwaukee girl who is pictured as hav ing "Found a Husband on Golf Links" should remember the process. She may want to find him aeain some time. Kansas -City Star, A Line 0 Type or Two Haw I tk LIm. HI lha tolia tall wkara Irjtj My. AS there are a thousand 3oors to let out life, so there are a thousand doors to let in death, and none of these may be barred against it As an example, the explosion in Wall street was not more striking han the fall of the flaming airship ipon a Qiicago bank. We were reading only thi week of the ancient sage who, warned that he should be killed by something falling, retired to the desert to escape his fate. When his hour came, an eagle flying high above him dropped a'turtle on his head. f- A MAN may, drive a cartload ot bombs through a metropolis, and touch them off when the time seems good; but let him try to trans port half a dozen cases of whisky and see how far he can go. Such personal liberty as remains is enjoyed chiefly by crooks and lunatics. .V Joke on the Ladles. , Sir: Vox PopTrltlclses you for mixing in poli tics. Doesn't Vox know that that is where the best jokes come 'from? Who else but politi cians would have thought of giving women the vote and nobody to vote for? C. M. W. IF Lenine has the Carnegie idea,' that it is a disgrace to die rich, he can easily get rid of what gold he controls by starting a newspaper like the London Herald in every large city on the map. If the process still seems too slow, he can back a few high-brow theaters-. DRINK TO ME-ONLY WITH THINE EARS. , (From the Erie, la., Times) At this lecture there was no two ways -about It. The big crowd that Jammed the hall to its capacity drank the wonderful lec ture with eager ears, WHEN we'read that the Japanese had form ed a radical cabal called "Omo Tokyo" we could make nothing of it. But a Japanese gentleman explains that it should be Omoto Kyo, which is quite utterly different. It reminds us, more or less relevantly, of the ballade, "I loved you once in Old Japan." , . Variation of the Mothcr-ln-Law Wheeze. Sir: Add Hints for Husbands: In Tibet the bride's mother is eaten at the wadding feast. ("White 8hadow of the South Seas." SHENANIGAN; A SETTLEMENT in Ireland seems further i off than it seemed three or four years ago, at which time a rapprochement was almost reach ed. Mr. Redmond remarked: "I hope the con vention will be animated by the true spirit of conciliation among Irishmen," and Mr. Carson said: "Let us all go to the convention with open minds, but Ulster shall not be coerced." QUELQUE QUEEN. (From the Classified ads.) Situation wanted Proficient, reliable, regal etenog.-sec.;1 small office. Address N 413. ' WE had been waiting for some.. one to chal lenge Einstein's assumption of experimental evidence for the dogma that wave fronts are concentric with the traveling observer initially situated at the source. Sir Oliver Lodgehas obliged. And, as he lucidly remarks, it is safer for the physicist to postulate a special property and matter than to admit confused complications upon time and space. Very much safer, we should aver. Save the Profs! Sir: A story has It that a Bolshevist was found near the University of Chicago loaded to the gunnels with bombs. He admitted his In tention to blow up the institution because there were so many profiteers there. The poor simp had been reading the newspapers, which spoke freely of "Prof." Jones, "Prof." Smith, "Prof." Brown, etc. Abbreviations are dangerous. '" ( P. V. SPEAKING of almost incredible names, what would Solomon Eagle say if he knew that E. Hez Swem were a Baptist pastor in Washing ton, D. C? SUCH IS FAME. (From Dogdom.) Beautiful toy Boston terrier puppies rea sonable. Sired by Ring Lardner. T. A. Smee, Milwaukee. IN "Birds and Men," W. H. Hudson speaks of a one-eyed Portugese who used to spin yarns io his fellow workmen on the Plata river. One of these tales concerned a traveler who came to a town in which was a church without windows: "Front the door as he looked a small old man came out with a large empty sack in his hands. Toddling out to the middle of the churchyard he stood still, and grasping the empty sack by fts top, held it open between his outstretched arms for a space of about five minutes; then with a midden movement of his hands he closed the sack's mouth, and still grasping It tightly, hurried back to the church 'as fast as his stiff joints would let him, and disappeared within the door. By and by he came forth again and repeated the performance, and then again, until the traveler approached and asked him what he was doing. 'I am lighting the church,' said the old man; and he went on to explain that it was a large and fine church, full of rich ornaments, but very dark inside so dark that when people came to service the greatest confusion prevail ed, and they could not see -each other or the priest, nor the priest them. It has always been so, he continued, and it was a great mystery: he had been engaged by the fathers of the vil lage a Ipng time back, when he was a young man, to carry sunlight in to light the interior: but though he had grown old at his task, and had carried in many, many thousands of sack fuls of sunlight each year, It still remained dark, and no one could say why it was so." "THE Lord Mayor is Still Among the Liv ing Yet." Centralia Sentinel. ; Ja, er bleibt already once. W. L. GEORGE IN SENTIMENTAL, MOOD. j (From an interview with the illustrious feminist.) My own belief is that there is no such thing as a modern girl, and that the heart which beats under a shirtwaist of mercerized cotton is akin to the heart which beat under the fig leaves in Eden. THE Wurlitzer company advertises that it sells the Victrola exclusively to the exclusion of all other makes; from which, taking a firm hold of the pole, we vault to the conclusion that they sell only the Victrola. How About It, Antoinette? ( Sir: What has become of Miss Donnelly's anti-fat squad? Gone back to their Jiusks? I thought so. C. D. C. TWO pencils are received from the manager of the Davis hotel, Sullivan, Ind., in recognition oi the ad about his "Splendid eats and lawful sheets." Four years ago, he reminds us, we challenged the "1" in ."lawful." THE EXCITEMENT, TOU KNOW. (From the Tipton, Ind., Times.) ; Lost or strayed, red bow, going to have - pigs and will probably have them now. Pleasenotify Harry -Charles. "THERE has never been of late Anglo-French agreement about Russia." The Century. Vet they take a month to get to press. ' UNPREPARED FOR THE SHOCK. - (Martins Ferry, O., Item.) Henry Myers, 60, vegetable vender,", fell dead beside his wagon when a woman asked him the price of lima beans. NOT KNOCKING THE FRTS. (From the Dodge Center,' Minn., Record.) ( A. C. Richter and' wife of Morristcrtvn spent Tuesday at the Fry home, and the next ;day went to Rochester to consult the doctors. "THE anti-drys are looking for an' emblem. Why not the swallow?" F. P. A. THEY have a bird The Red Raven. B. L. T. , . "Say It With Flowers." If you consider her a wise girl, say it with sage. If you think her cold, say it with snowdrops and freesias. v If you desire to marry her, say it with a poppy. If you know she has a sweet tooth, say it with candytuft. If she impresses you as a sad girl, say it with rue. , ' ' If she is of a happy, joyous Mature, say it with gladiolas. t ' If she seems a prunes and prisms sort of girl, say it with primuia. , . - If you think her a sour, sharp-tongucd old maid, say it with snapdragons, catnip and a cen tury nlant. Boston Transcric ' persons. How to KeepWell By DR. W. A. EVANS Question concerning hygiene, sanita tion and prevention oi diaaaaa, sub mitted te Dr. Evans by readers el The Be, will be answered persoaally, sub ject te proper limitation, where e tamped, addressed envelope Is en closed. Dr. Evans will set snake diagnosis or prescribe for individual diseases. Address letters in cere of The Be. Copyright, 1920, by Dr. W. A. Evens. WHAT DUCTLESS GLANDS TELL. ' .The information contained in this story may not be of direct benefit to any person. It is drawn from one of those studies which physi cians so frequently make just for the purpose of seeing what they can see, for there still is much un discovered country, v Just as miners dig prospect holes, often serving no purpose except to show the rock formation, so re search physicians prospect here and there, making an occasional lucky strike. Dr. O. J. Rader examined the quality of is well ductless piands in 100 feeble-mind-ee persons dead of all sorts of con ditions. The ductless glands are glands, the secretion of which is absorbed flirectly into the blood stream. There is ample evidence that ihe secretions of these glandp are fiuch more influential in the development of both the mind and body than are the secretions of such better known, glands aa the liver and kidneys. Of these 100 persons with under developed minds more than half (51 per cent) wereSinderslzed. In the number about 75 per cent wre found to have some abnormality of one or more ductlesa glands. In comparison, of 100 cases of paresis only 26 per cent had abnormalities in the ductless glands. Paresis of the brain itself is due as a rule to acquired syphilis. It is logical to expect abnormal ductless glands in feeble-minded Welcome Ak-Sar-Ben Visitors Wly the in 1 The revolutionary device uuch makes , the sounding-board of the Mason Hamlin proof against deterioration is called the'Tension Resonator! No other piano has it which is why none is as long-lived ai the Mason fir namlm. Asiastosw Going Away? Priced Highest Prahtd Over 100 Pianos to Select From Whether you buy for cash or on the Hospe Easy Payment Plan, the price is the same. New Pianos, $365 and ' up; Refinished Piano's -from $185 up. 1513 Douglas Street The Art and Music Store CARUSO CONCERT OCT. 12 Funk, Nebraska, April 17, 1920. Bankers Life Insurance Co., Lincoln, Nebraska. ' Gentlemen: This letter is to inform you that your agent, J. J. Boasen, has just handed me your checki or $283.65, which is the accumulated surplus on my $1,000 fifteen-year bond. I am glad to tell you that I am pleased with the large amount of surplus, and it also seems mighty good to have my $1,000.00 policy paid up for the rest of my life and I understand this paid-up policy will pay me a dividend annually as long; as I live. I consider this one t)f the best propositions I know of to combine protection, savings and. investment. I con sider tjiis an excellent plan for every young man, and I recommend your company as-being' careful and con servative 'and an excellent company for any one to place their insurance with. Yours truly, CHARLES A7 PETERSON. If You Desire an On the other hand, there is no reason to anticipate abnor mality of these glands In case of paresis. The distribution of abnor malities among the different glands is pituitary, 40 per cent gonads, 38 per cent; superarenals, 27 per cent; thyroid. 19 per cent; thymus, 12 per Belief in Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 20. To the Editor ot The Bee: In the Sep cent; others, 6 per cent The pituitary is a gland located in the skull and' surrounded by the brain. The gonads are tUe rex blands, what the ' newspapers just now are calling interstitial glanis. The suprarenals are glands lo cated near the kidneys. The thy roid, located in the neck, is rather generally known. The thymus is a gland located behind the upper part ot the breast bone, lying above the heart. ' Ir. most of the cases there seemed to be something wrong with several of the ductless glands. The pitu itary gland seems to have some thing to do wUh growth. Many of those with abnormalities of this gland grew t be giants, others are dwarfed. It is significant that ab normalities of the pituitary led ili other changes In frequency. The gonads came second. The remarkable change in size and shape of the body and in the tember 17 issue of The Bee to an editorial entitled "Burbank's Blun der." Burbank is credited with the statement "that belief in God and immortality are superstitions." The editor implies that Burbank, Edison and Henry Ford, not having speci alized in theology or, being special ists in things other than theo'ogy, are not qualified to know of Cod and immortality. On what data does the editor base his premise that Burbank and Edison, being met: o&jclentifio education are to tally laming in spiritual education T Does scientific education render a man incapable of grasping truths (if truths they be) immortality? If so, believe that the man more capable of receiving such than the mouthers about God and im mortality, i The editor says, "They do not be lieVe because they do not know. . . I presume that' the editor be lieves because he does know! If he does know, how does , he know? His statement of how he knows, without an excursion into the realm of metaphysics and emotionalism, the mind during puberty known. Close observing, well 'informed physicians ofttimes can recognize persons as being, . for instance, - of the too-much-thyroid type, of the too-llttle-thyrold type, or other ductless gland types, by their ap pearance, their mental type or their conduct. ( Dr. Rader hopes that in some way or other in time his observa tions relating to abnormalities of the. ductless glands in feeble-minded persons may have'ractical value. would be interesting. And he should differentiate between feel ing and knowing. " Many people have derived much fun from Henry Ford's ignorance of some facts of history. This Ig norance was made manifest at a law suit while Ford was; on the wit ness stand being grilled by a law yer. It has been said that the law yer made Ford look like a moikey. It does not require a great flight of fancy to picture what the lawyer vould look like had he been on the stand and had Ford been '.he ques tioner. Just why should Edison's knowl edge be limited to electricity or Burbank's to plant life? Isn't It barely possible that a thorough J knowledge of electrical phenomena How To Fight Worms. E. ' M. B. writes: "Please tell me what to do to expel pinwormj from the system of an adult and from a child of 2 years." - REPLY. Enemas of quassia tea or of salt water are generally effective. r 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 ship. ' - ' : V Omaha Printing Company Thirteenth at Farnam :USE BEE WANT ADS THEY BRING RESULTS: Assets $17,400,000.00 Agency or Policy Contract Write Home OX God, makes a man as capable of grasping the Great Mytery as if his training had been in a theological school ? Isn't it barely possible thai a thor ough knowledge of plant lie makes a man as capable of gracing the unknowable as if his training had been in journalism? ' A man may be ignorant about history and still " know as miic.t cbout God and immortality as the high priest of an accepted creod. C.-O. SANDSTROM. 2931 Campbell Strest. Cold? Not YetS But, 7 You Know How "All -of -a -Sudden" It Gets Cold in Fall. Let's. Clean and Press Your Overcoats and All Other "Fall and Wintry" Things. Phone Tyler 345 DRESHER BROTHERS Dyers Cleaners 22 1 1 -1 7 ' Farnam Street about God and why so? I of eciencc- is AUTO LUNCH SETS t- We have them in a varie ty bf styles and sizes to Jhe 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 rwill be apparent. FIFTEEN-PAYMENT LIFE POLICY Matured in the OLD LINE BANKERS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY of, Lincoln, Nebraska Name of insured. .Charles A. Peterson Residence. Funk, Nebraska Amount of policy $1,000.00 Total premiums paid Company $662.25 SETTLEMENT Total cask paid Mr. Peterson $283. 65 And a Paid-up Participating Policy for $1,000.00 Office. Lincoln, Neb. I m ( V. 4