Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 25, 1920, Page 8, Image 8

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8 THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1920. -t
. ,
The OmahaBee
DAHY (MORNING ) EVENING SUNDAY
THE BEB PUBLI8HINU COMPANY.
NELSON 8. UPDIKE. Publisher.
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A Aiseeiated Prm, ot wnleh The Bea Is in ember. ! tx
entitled to U um tor publlcatloa of all ntwi dlnwtebM
sredltsd ta U or not otherwise credited In this paper, and also the
leeal am published herein. All rtfhu ot publication of out special
sllspatstes srs also reamed.
BEE TELEPHONES
!Z2LZr?rZTJ - Tyl.r 1000
For Niht Cmll After 10 P. M.i
Rdltortsl Department Tyler WOOL
trails Moo DtparUMnt Trier 1008L
edirttjtni Department Tjlsr lOOtL
OFFICES OF THE BEB.
lltln Orflctl 17th and rnM
CoaseO Blufft IS Beott Bt. I South Side MIS M Bt
Out-of-Town Officeei
Htm Tern IS Fifth in, Waihlnslea 1911 0 St
Cblssfe Stent Bid. I Pull France 4M But at. Honors
TAc Jce Platform
, New Union Passenger Station.
SdContinued improvement of the Ne
braska Highways, including the pave
. , ment of Main Thoroughfare leading
'. into Omaha with Brick Surface.
3. A fhort, low-rate Waterwar from the
. Corn Belt to the Allan jc Ocean.
4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with
City Manager form of Government.
THE LIE IN THE PLATFORM.
Duplicity, deceit, deception by innuendo, mis
representation and the perpetual resort to half
truths have been characteristic of the course of
the democratic party in the United States for
some years. Beginning with the Baltimore plat
form, in which specific promises were made, to
which no attention ever was paid by thfl party
leaders, and coming down through the war till
now, the practice has been to gull the public to
J he limit. Take the Creel publicity bureau, ap
iroved by fhe president, and consider its record
of downright falsehood, such as the astonishing
account of the big battle with submarines which
never took place, and to which he name of
Josephus Daniels was attached. It remained for
the San Francisco convention to deliberately in
ert an unvarnished lie into the platform of the
Carter Glass, sometime secretary of the
treasury and now United States senator from
Virginia, carried the platform from the White
House to the convention hall at San Fancisco.
He was one of the enormous brigade of federal
officeholders and recipients of White House
favor who went there to extend the Wilson re
gime by securing the nomination of the "crown
prince," a plan which was overturned by Bosses
Murphy, Nugent, Taggart and Brennan. Sena
tor1 Glass is commonly credited""with having
written the platform. In it is contained the flat
statement that Senator Lodge had indulged in
language that denounced the Knox resolution
for peace. This was challenged at once. In
Harvey's Weekly for July 10 4s the following:
The Wilsonian campaign it is libellous to
call it democratic begins with a lie. We do
not now refer to the numerous misstatements
of fact which disgrace the San Francisco plat
form. Bad as they are, it is still conceivable
that concerning them there may be differences
of opinion or of interpretation. We refer to
the concrete, deliberate, malicious lie, which,
as we point out elsewhere, is exploited at the
beginning of the platform a lie concerning a.
'" matter of fact and of public record concerning
which a "mistake" is impossible; a lie for
which not merely the platform committee but
also, to deepen the shame, the president of
the United States, must be held responsible.
Referring to the Knox resolution repealing
the declaration of war, the platform says:
' "This convention can contrive no more fit
ting obloquy than that made in the Forum
magazine of December, 1918, by Henry Cabot
Lodge, when he said; .... 'We can
not make peace except in company with our
Allies. It would brand us with everlasting
, dishonor and bring ruin to us also if we un
dertook to make a separate peace.' "
Now, that is, what .Mr. Balfour once de
scribed as "a concrete, Cubical, congealed lie,"
'and was known to be such and in
tended to be such by its author. Sen
ator Lodge did not say that. in the Forum of
December, 1918, nor anything resembling it.
The words quoted are garbled from an article
v which appeared in that magazine not in De
cember, but in Tune, 1918, a difference in date
which makes all the difference in the world in
'the meaning of the words.
The platform makes the lying pretence
that those words were written in December,
or in November, 1918, after the armistice and
--therefore were applicable to the Knox resolu
tion. The fact is, as the inventor of the lie
knew, that they were published in June, and
presumably written in May five or . 'k months
before the armistice. ,
: When Senator Glass was taxed with this
falsehood, he sought to make partial amends by
issuing a new edition of the platform, with the
date changed from December to June, 1918.
Now the democratic official campaign book
comes but with the correction omitted and the
original declaration restored. How can such
conduct be palliated? If it is not a deliberate
attemot to bolster -dp a losing cause by down
right lying, what other name can it be given?
How" will the voters of the United States react
to so brazen an attempt to deceive them by the
reiteration of a statement, the falsity of which
is known to those who make it? Cox's blovia
ti&n about the "purchase of the presidency" is. I
mild form of offense in comparison toy this.
farmers say the commission men are "welshing"
on contracts made last spring. Perhaps both are
right and perhaps neither is. The great out
standing fact is that a bountiful yield of fruit is
going to waste because of the inefficiency or
cupidity of man. It is true that scarcity means
high prices ana maybe greater profits, while
plenty means the opposite. But what is the ben
efit of a bountiful crop if the fruit decays in the
orchard of field where it was grown? Much as
we "-deplore government regulation, this unfor
tunate condition, which has too frequently been
duplicated in other parts of the country, is a sign
that there is 'someting wrong in our way of, doing-
business, and if- it can be adjusted 'only
through law, then such regulation would be ben
eficial. Something should be done to give man
the full benefit of nature's bounty. ,
. Can Such Things Really Be?
"..Verily, the pathway of the democratic can
didate as he swings around the circle is a rough
and thorny one. Train wrecks are the least of
his worries. He has discovered something -far
more momentous than that.- It has been forced
upon him; reluctantty he admits that the news
papers are not using up their front pages to tell
the world vwhat he js talking about. As a mat
ter of cold, hard, iconoclastic fact, it would be a
great scoop, and probably would draw an "8-col-banner
line" should any discerning and per
spicacious newspaper reporter discover the se
cret the candidate so carefully keeps to himself,
and actually tell the waiting world what he I
means. But, is it strange that the papers of the
land, and particularly the republican papers, do
not devote their entire space to what he is say
ing. Maybe the real reason is that he is no
longer batting as high as a news item as he
was a matter 'of six weeks ago. The "front
page editor" likes to deal witlv live ones, you.
know.
Screw Loose Somewhere.
" Chicago reports that several million dollars
worth ol fruit is rotting in fields within a few
miles of that city, not for lack of demand but
because the farmers cab not get their produce
transported to market. Peaches selling at $2.25
a bushel in Chicago are being sold in Berrien
county, Michigan, at 75jnts, and many bushels I
are rotting, city commission men say nicy v.u
g neither carJnor crates to handle the crop,
Will Mr. Morehead Please Explain.
"It seems to indicate the republicans fear
voters may learn how th.Le.ague of Nations
would operate, and, learning this, also fear they
will want the nation to indorse it," says Ne
braska's democratic senator, who is the chief
mouthpiece of the administration in thead
yocacy of the league. Thik reminds us. A
state campaign is also in progress in Nebraska,
and the democrats have a candidate for gov
ernor who is gingerly stepping around the
edges, looking forvotes. In his behalf several
false issues are now being raised, as is the
custom with Nebraska democrats. They never
yet have won a victory on an open and shut
question. Several little matters jn connection
with the four years of John Henry Morehead's
administration as governor may require ex
planation. Just now what The Bee,, would like
to ask him is in direct line with the senator's
statement. Mr. Morehead, will you please tell
the voters of Nebraska just where you stand on
the League of Nations? Are you for it or
against it? Do you acceept the president's plan,
or are you for Cox's idea? A frank answer
to these questions may clear the way to the
consideration of other points in connection with
the campaign. ' !
A Line 0'Type or Two
, Hsw to Hit Lias, lot tht aulst Itlt ehort th my.
Dividing the Lares and Penates.
One of the saddest things man is given to
contemplate is the wreck of a once happy home,
a matrimonial venture come to shipwreck. The
high hopes, the roseate dreams, all the aspira
tions, ambitions and projects formed during
courtship and the honeymoon, lie broken and
scattered about, with the fire dead on the hearth,
and a blank end come to the path. To be sure,
every now and then one or the other of the un7
happy partners in Ian unequal match accepts the
division with something less or more than un-?
concern, having already laid plans for the future.
Such look ahead to a renewal "of 'bliss under
happier circumstances and have no time to
grieve over the debris of iheir smashed up part
nership. .., ;t
But in every case there, is a consideration
that arises to puzzle the bes of them. That is
the division of the household goods; chatties do
accumulate, and one or thf other has the right
to take them. Courts now and then- are of
assistance in disposing of these matters, to the
end that "alimony" has come to be a really
meaningful term. We are just now presented
with a case in point that is of unusual interest.
In New York a couple has agreed to disagree,
and one home will, no longer .hold them. They
encountered a rather novel complication. The
family cellar is well stocked, and both like the
liquors therein concealed. Showing their mu
tual regard and forbearance for one another,
almost enough to support another honeymoon,
they decided to share and share alike in the
liquid joy.
Here comes up the real problem, showing the
fly in the ointment. The wife that was is going
to new quarters, therefore her ex-husband is to
have the responsibility of delivering to her such
share of the oh-be-joyful as falls toier lot in
the division, rfow, when or by what means
he is to do" this does not worry her. She will
expect him to be on time with the contraband
liquor, and any time he fails or falls into the
hands of the dry sleuths, it will be his mis
fortune not hers. Another really good argu
ment against hasty divorce kiight be squeezed
out of this.
Fifty Home Runs.. ,
What is a home run? It is, in brief, the
greatest achievement of a ball player's career,
and that in effect means the height of ambition
for every real American kid alive. Not one of
them but has an interest in base ball, and not
one but looks ahead each time he steps up to
the plate, bat in hand, to the prospect of hit
ting that ball , so hard it will soar over the
fielder's head, and out into theistance so far
that he may circle the bases before the ball is
returned to the diamond. Some do and some,
do not realize this joy; many a head now bare
or gray, lifts and its dimmed eyes glow again
as the man recalls that time in his youth when he
hit one "where they ain't" and got the coveted
"homer." That is why all reverence "Babe"
Ruth, whose mighty prowess has attained to the
sublime record of having knocked fifty round
trip swats in a single season. Last year the "big
league record of twenty-nine of these "circuit
clouts" was put 8p, also by tlys Brobdignagian
batter, while the ultimate county heretofore at
tained in any league was thirty-seven," Thus
Ruth has passed not only his own but all other
endeavors in this line, and has set a mark that
looks mighty impressive. No wonder he excites
real admiration in a country where the home
run hit really counts for something. Thre is
no special moral to this; only that it pays to
do a thing well while you are about it.
Omaha's railroad business accented to the
tidy sum of $30,884,000 in 1918, which will give
you a basis for guessing how much it is now.
An Indiana poet who tried to sett some of
his verse to a Chicago packer found himself
suddenly in jail. He might have known better.
"Jimham" Lewis thinks he may be governor
of Illinois. He has visions almost as vivid as his
whiskers. - ' .
THE BRONTOSAURIJS.
Consider, boys and girls, the brontoeaurus,
A reptile by the Deluge overthrown,
Whose saurian playmates form a phantom
phorus I
In some remote Nirvana ot their own.
Perhapa they still behold our mundane gambols.
These antics which we clowns and Jugglers
play
This circus ring, so frequently a shambles
rotn Minsk to Munater, Connaught to Cathay.
a
Consider, children: when the Deluge drowned
him,
rAnd left him stiff and (not unlikely) stark,
Till Mr. Field so fortunately found him,
a)Wag h unfit to travel on the iArk?
Compare the human species, nature's peerage,
Survivors of his dim Jurassic past!
They might at least have berthed him in the
steerage1-
Or was he too IntelllgVnt to last. B. W. W.
PLAUSIBLY, he was too intelligent to last;
for one of the best little hypotheses places high
noon on this planet in the days of giant fauna
and flora. Since those luxuriant days the world
has been going down hill.
WNATOLE FRANCE said recently, Europe
is dying." Sir Philip Gibbs does not think the
case so bad, but he says it must be admitted that
Europe is very sick; sick because the war did
not spiritualize and ennoble humanity as "pre
dicted. They who did not expect this miracle
to come to pass were called cynics.
IT is pleasant to believe that the sun is
restoring us expended energy by condensation,
and that the so-called human race is in the morn
ing of its existence; and it is necessary that the
majority should believe so, for otherwise the
business of the world would not get done. The
happiest cynic would be depressed by the light
of humanity siting with folded hands, waiting
apathetically for the end. '
WHY THE CITY EDITOR LEFT TOWN.
(From the Peoria Transcript.)
"The good old days were not so good,"
said Rev. D. E. Williams. . . . "When
- the Israelites escaped from captivity and
were in the wilderness they had nothing to
eat but bananas. . . . They remembered
the good things of their (captivity, the cu
cumbers and garlic.
THEY who fear that the press of Chicago
is losing its influence on the electorate may be
cheered by the reminder that Carter I. "was
elected in spite of unanimous newspaper opposi
tion. It is the obligation of the press to supply
arguments to the electorate. It k not obligod,
as an English statesman once said.jto supply the
wit to understand, the arguments.
The Hectic Way.
Sir: We were discussing the tragic death of
an actress, and our hostess' pother, who had
been listening attentively, said:' "Well, what
can you expect, the way they went around to all
those cafeterias?" M.
ONE of the journalists whose melancholy
duty is to travel with the candidates and record
their doings, says that Mr. Cox often talks of
the past, because great-men lived in it. But we
(rather that Mr. Cox. like ourself, considers the
past only a preparation for the future.
v STILL GOING STRONG "PERSONALLY."
(Oliver Madox Hueffer, corr. from Mexico.)
M should like very much personally ' to
escort some of our self-satisfied factory
owners, t
WE seldom use the word "transpire," but
'when we do we use it correctly. And invariably
some smart member of the Alick family writes
in to tell uj how wrong we are.
' V, Lapsus Bcanl.
Sir: In the memory Tests I lamped the info
that the real, name of Bill Nye was William E.
Nye, whereas the humorist led his family and
friends to Believe that his name was Edgar
Wilson Nye. Could Bill 'have led a double life?
FRIEND OF BILL'S.
HAVE A HEART, SHORTY!
. Sir: Tell Shorty f haven't a job to tay' name
not even for myself. I beseech the loan, O
maenanimou Shorty. ' The address Box 641,
Albuquerque N. M. The promise Io oacK-
breaking, nrf pencil-marking, or aof-earing
heaiitlfnP"Aohrodlte." - ... K. S. C.
NEW YORK'S five Socialist, ttgislators will
likely be permitted to sit in peace; and peace is
theSeast of their desires.
TRIANGULATION IS VEXATION.
(From the Sheboygan Press.)
X will rtot be responsible for any debts
" ' contracted by my wife. nk gelr
OBSEVE, too,, the following from the Miami
Hald: r,
"Men and Wife Both Testify Tampa Resi
dents Declare Results Remarkable on Takinf
Tanlac." '
FURTHER, observe the following from the
Japan Advertiser: . T : .
"American Congressional -Party Much
Smaller Than First' Reports Indicated Dr
Reinsch's Dispatch Gives 20 Legislators and 21
Wives."
APHRODITE.
Who weeps for the old gods? For lo! still sing,
As e'er they did to young Pan's minstrelsy,
The laughing nymphs of deep valed Tuscany;
And still to marble shrines the shepherds
bring v
Gifts of the woodland in the emerald spring,
Still Arethusa in dark Sicily
With sweet voice greets the dawn; the purple
sea
Still owns Poseidon's ancient mastering.
But with a difference now.'- The once dead gods
Are living. Pallas, Pan, Apollo, Zeus,
No longer only images, or clds v
Of Cypriote clay, have garnered souls and
And Aphrodite, knowing love unpriced.
Wipes with her golden hair the feet of Christ.
G. V. B.
. WASHINGTON reports that the consump
tion of wines and liquors in the United States
was lower in 1919 than for fifty years. How does
Washington know?
ALL YOU NEED IS SOME RED FLANNEL
SYLVIAS.
(From the classified ads.)
Xo rent Going south. Have 5 rm.' apt.
and seal coat. Wellington 2324.
. "DESCHANEL is suffering; from neuras
thenia, and his mental conditiorl is worse than
his physical." United Press. '
. Something may be wrong with , what an
acquaintance calls his "mental psychology.
"THOSE who know Cox well," reports one
who has been studying him. "realize that the
whole trend of his mind is forward." What yoa
mightcall a forward-slanting man. If he should
slip he would fall fat on his mind. . N
THERE AIN'T NO SICH ANIMAL.
(From the, Marion, Ind., Chronicle.)
Wanted A healthy, food-Aatured, corn
fed dishwasher ,wio is willing to work for
good money. Ppone'813.
OH, 'yes; according to Good housekeeping,
"Harding and Cox. Both Favor Maternity Bill."
LET'S ASSUME SO.
Sign in Mason City, la. : "Pappas & Boyeas."
Do you suppose it's the old man and his sons? .
- - TIMOTHY.
THE Council of the League has approved the
purchase of the Geneva house. '
TF vnu rfon't fancv Chateau d'Esoacrne. how
r about The House of Cards? ' ' B. L. T.
How to Keep Well
. By DR. W. A. EVANS
Question concerning hyflra, lanlto
tlon and provontion of dlaouo, sua
tnifud to Dr. Evan by readers ol Too
Boo, wUl bo answered personally, eub
Ject to proper limitation, where a
stamped, addressed envelope la en
closed. Dr. Evans will not make
diagnosis or prescribe for individual
diseases. Address letters ta care of
The Be.
N Copyright, 1920, by Dr. W. A. Evans.
, Still the skidding car and the careless driver
continue to gather their victims.
Well, let's take a long breath and get back
pto work again. ? i
Long live the king and queen ! '
Oh. Wirra, Wirra!
The governor or the federal reserjre board says
the counry has nothing now to worry about ex
cept an early frost, which might damage the big
corn trop. Very well, then, let's worry about
the early frost. The governor of the reserve
hoard will receive the thanks of a bored nation
fnr tresMufff stinn Kna Citv Sta'
of
And Burglary. ., V
A Rhode Island woman announces that she
will run for the United States senate on a plat
form of "Women and Children First." She may
find that the rule works better in shipwrecks
than in politics. Detroit Free Press.
One Credit Mafic for Mr. Burleson.
A corporal in the 339th U. S. infantry has
just received offiaial notice that he is dead. Once
in a great, great while, these days, a letter gets
in ahead of time. Detroit News.
Too Choice to Exist
Beef prices have gone up IS cents,a pound on
choice cuts, but most people's idea of a choice
rut it a nrire rnt.aJSaltimore Sun
SOME SIMPLE EXERCISES.
A friend tells me of the great
good he has got from Walter Camp's
daily dozen exercises found in the
Handbook of Health. He asks that
they be given in this column. They
are mild exercises, intended to pro
mote suppleness and to keep brain
workers in some sort of condition.
The twelve are divided into four
groups of three each:
1. (1 to 3) Hands, hips, head.
2. (4 to 6) Grind, grate, grasp.
3. (7 to 9) Crawl, curl, crouch.
4. (10 to 12) Wave, weave, wing.
Stand in the position of a soldier,
hands at the sides.
Hands Raise the arms laterally
to a horizontal position, palms down.
Back to attention.
Hips Raise the arms. Place the
hands on hips. Carry elbows back.
Hack to attention.
Head Raise arms. Touch finger
tips behind head,' palms forward.
Force Elbows back. Back to atten
tion. Each exercise of the 12. is to be
repeated several times. Execute
them at times slowly, at other times
more rapidly, remembering that
.overexertion and fatigue or even
strenuous exertion are contrary to
the purpose.
Grind Raise arms sideways to
horizontal, palms up. Carry them as
far back as possible. Count 12 slow
ly and at each count make a com
plete circle about 12 inches in di
ameter, with the artns held stiff at
elbow and wrist. Forward, down
ward and upward. Repeat circling
in opposite direction.
Grate Raise arms sideways to
horizontal, then to angle of 45 de
grees above horizontal. Rise on
balls of feet and breathe in slow
and deep. Retu.'n to attention slow
ly, breathing out as the heels and
arms sink,
Grasp Raise arms to horizontal,
then carry the hands behind the
head, elbows back as in head exer
cise. Bend body forward, as far as
possible, keeping face up and to
ward front.
Crawl Arms horizontal as be
fore. Raise the left arm, palm up
ward, until straight overhead. Lower
right arm to side. Bend body side
ways to right. Curve left arm until
hand touches right ear. Return to
attention. Repeat exercise, raising
righ arm, lowering left, and bend
to left. .
Curl-fct Arms horizontal as be
fore. Feet 12 inches apart. Bend
the wrists and elbows downward,
curling the fists into the armpits.
Bend the head backward until you
are looking at celling. Inhale deep
ly and slowly as the head goes back.
(b) From position (a) carry the
arm straight forward from the
shoulders, palms down. Bend for
ward as far as possible. Eyes up,
face forward and arms pointing
backward. Exhale.
Crouch Raise arms to horizon
tal. Feet 12 inches apart. 'Squat to
Stato Has Hotel Inspector
Crd, Neb., Sept 21. To the Edi
tor of The Bee: I am a traveling
man ami read your paper every day.
Am very much Interested in your
letters and answers, so at this time
am asking a question which I hope
you will answer through the col
umns of your paper:
Is there a commission or any
thing In this State whose duty it is
to see that hotelse,re kept clean, if
so what Is its title?
Last night I slept In a hotel, pay
ing $1.25 for the use of the room,
not even running water, and the
bed warf'so full of bedbugs it waa
necessary to sleep on floor to get
rid of them.
Reporting the fact to the desk
ox
For Rent
Typewriters
and Adding
Machines of
All Makes
Central Typewriter
Exchange
Doug. 4120 1912 Farnam St.
!lllliiillill8ip4l!ijitfM
Welcome
Ak-Sar-Bpn
Visitors
Won&mmi
is supreme
VI 11
I
LonflMt-li vfd piano m
the world bar none.
Ask Cor a guarantee
from the maltpr or
teller of any other
piano equal to the
Mason Hamlin
"guarantee.
Such a guarantee
will ct. be given
because it cannon
txt yven.
AiV us to
show you
why
S7&
r.w r
HMejt prittJ
(Jtytrst raited
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 Pianos
j from $185 up.
1513 Douglas Street
The Art and Music Store
CARUSO CONCERT OCT. 12
heels. Body erect. Return to at
tention. Wave Raise arms to perpendicu
laPNt Interlock fingers. Describe a
circle of 24 inches diameter with
hands, moving body and arms but
not legs. Pivot on hips. Execute
circle in opposite direction.
Weave (a) Feet 12 inches apart.
Arms horizontal. Bed body to left
until right arm poinU forward.
(b) Bend body forward until right
fingers touch floor between feet
Knee must be bent. Repeat, turn
ing to opposite side.
Wing Raise arms to horizontal,
to vertical. Bend body forward
from waist until arms are pointing
backward and upward. Resume up
right position with arms horizontal.
These exercises are not to be hur
ried. Nor are they to be carried out
strenuously. The number of repeti
tions of each Is to be determined by
the wind of the individual.
was informed that they were sur
prised, as they didn't dream of such
a thing.
The bugs were not an accident, as
I heard other men complain and
have stopped here a, number of
times and always have found .con
ditions the same.
TRAVELING MAN.
Not So Bright.
The mother of Parley P. Christen
sen, nominated for president by the
new farmer-labor party, says ne
ways was a brigni uoy. uv
ably not as bright a boy as Senatoi
La Follette. who declined the nom
ination. KansasOtyTf-
Job for ruswyfoot Johnson. ,
1 They'll never have prohibition In
Ioland till they take the suds
away from General Plloudski.-
Knoxvllle Journal and Tribune.
Still Successful.
Talking about fool-killers,
the
grade crossing is one that functions
with steady success. Houston
Post. '
Bee want ads bring results.
LINDSLY FIRE EXTINGUISHER CO.
,ISfw Omaha Branch
Tel. Tyler 5093
Main Office
Des Moines. Ia.
Watchmen's Clocks.
Gravity and Pressure
Tanks.
iutomatie Sprinkle Equip
ments.
Fire Extinguisher Appara
tus.
Fire Department Supplies, abtk Smwa. Flra MiU nd L'Ben Ho,
Sprinkler Systems Repaired and Altered by Experts
DrexePs
Acrobat
Shoes
For Children
TNSURE maximum wear at
JL a minimum cost per pair.
Made on nature-ehaped lasts
to allow the feet to grow as
they should. Materials espe
cially selected to insure the
'greatest amount of service
and still be soft and pliable.
Not a tack or nail used in
making ACROBAT shoes.
You will find that one pair
of these shoea will outwear
two pairs of ordinary shoes.
Bring the Children
in Saturday. '
DREXEL
SHOE CO.
1419 Fey-nam Street
Mail Orders Solicited.
Parcel Post Paid.
COWgRCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Panoramas
Groups
Machinery
Views
Purnitui'e
We photograph
ANY 35
BEE ENGRAVING CO,
PHOTOGRAPHERS ENGRAVERS
TYLERIOOO
Phone Douglas 2793
WiWMifiirferOffictc
OMAHA
PRINTING
COMPANY
. fasMas
T MsetsT QAaii
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taunt asauai fARNM
mill w, m v ,
-avva orouraoniBi m m
Commercial Printers-Lithographers -steelOie Embossers
LOOSC LEAP DEVICES
TRADE
YOU DON'T
DRIVE WITH A
BROKEN WHEEL
"BUSINESS IS COOP THANK Y0u
BUSINESS IS GOOD THANH Y0U
r
And you should not make your motor work with
worn out oil. Oil breaks down and wears out after
500 miles' use. If used for a longer period wear
starts on metal parts.
Have the crank case drained out and CLEANED.
We have pitsand experts for the purpose.
We do the work with NO CHARGE TO YOU except
for the oil used.
Drive to the Nicholas Pits:
17th and Howard Streets 49th Avenue and Dodge
60th Avenue and Main (Benscn)
L V. NICHOLAS OIL CO.
Locomotive 1
and Auto Oils. -
Keynoil , '
'The Best Oils We Know."
Our Electric Pumps Insure Accuracy Your1 Protection and Ours
President
M
I
o
V
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HI