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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1920)
THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1020. -i hi The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) -EVENING SUNDAY V: 1WC BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, ' NELSON B. UPDIKE, Publisher. ,vlV; MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS . .... The AMMittm Pmu. ol WHICH TM He is mmtwr, M uv . tlwlnlj annum, to an Cot ptiblkwuoo of ll am dlwetoMs essrtlM M U or (I oihtrwtn endltwl In this ptiwr. d the U ; '. knl wi siNietw4 Iwrtiii All rifht of paktleMlao of 001 NMtlil ; aupttctue. se elea rennet, BEE TELEPHONES' Prttt Rrtnrk Bsntient. A foe UK TvIaw 1 (Wl Dopwlawl or Ptrann Wultd. J19T 1 WW . For Niiht Call Altar 10 P. M.i Mllorttl Deiwrtmeni ......... CltruUilon Detwitmwl 4dmUitn DepsrUDenW OFFICES OF THE BEE . . ' Mi omee: tth end ruiu OMmU Bluffs ... m fkoti m. i tout (id ' Out-of-Town Officii IN rifta An. I Wublnfton vs 5r if Trier ioiwl Tllt 1WML mi H st Hew York CbtUfo . 1111 O M. SUser Bill. Pun rnwst 2t But St. Hanora 1 The Bee's Platform 1. New Uaion Passenger Station. 2. Continued imDrovement of I Ha N. braska Highways, including the nae ment of Main sl horouirhf area IuiImii into Omaha with a Brick Surface. 3. A short, low-rate Waterway from. the Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. .. 4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. A MESSAGE FROM "T. K." , Th rA A rtc a ... 'i A 1 l mr jj; Robinson may well be deemed a message from Sther brother, who was so personally and de servedly popular in Nebraska. She not onlv in- 4 terpreted.h4sj'hope and" aspirations, but she- 2 uiuugut uui 'jiiuiiiaie glimpses or tne man, his Jjvfsions for bis country and his ideals for hu- nianity., And these had Jo do with an associa tion of nations, a league, a compact, a covenant. I i,or, whatever form it, might take, under which IS'this nation cquld live hi harmony and oroKres- Isive relations with all 'other nations, and war fjwould be remple if not forever banished. t But Theodore Roosevelt was a practical :man, who did not 1ct theTvisions of the nieht ..ibefog his footsteps by day; He knew full well fiiwhat difficulties lie in the way of attaining his ' j.ideals, and while be realized the necessity of, and advocated constaitreadiness for self-de-fense, he was not an apostle of violence. -As a ;young man he spent some time on the frontier, , T.where outlawry was common enough and as ! J'befitted a good Citizen, he took his full part in suppressing that outlawry. He there learned a 'I lesson that served him well through" all his life. t'PWalk softly, but' carry a big stick," does not 111,1116311 togo hunting for trouble, but to respect fEinc.;iaw ana ine rignts ot otners and be- ever ready to defend your own. That was the Roose velt who .appealed,, tq Americans, and ; whose memory is revered by them. As a student and a man of.,,affairs, he felt I the impulse to aid, even to lead in establishing fitranquility,throughoiit the world. The fact that :Jc won the Nobel Peace prize should demon J;strate this. That he!was the chief tactor in briligihg to. ah end" iTiear' between' Japan arid Russia Is another proof of : his devotedness to ;peace. Yet he was only for a peace hat did not surrender the dignity, the safety of the United States of America. feid that is why he Fixould not endorse the Wilsonian policy. If! America first" is the message Mrs. Robin- son Dungs, Deueving u wouia De inac ot tier brother. .-We. also believe it would. Make this rtbe safest country in the world, and it.will be the leader among nations. No selfishness in jthis, merely a serious effort to fulfill our na tional destinyas"1t has been visioned by the great leaders of America since the beginning, puf "shirt "sleeve" diplomacy is not that of Europe; w'e" tiavjjbeen free from the intrigues auu y.ui3 aim iictvc uisgiutcu inc uiuur civinxt- tions, and which are part and parcel of their national existence. For the, sake of the world as well as for our own, we should so remain. ;! Who can doubt where "T. R." would stand today, were he. yet.alive?Xs a progressive, for ward looking, hopeful man, he would yet be Slighting for the land Jie so dearly loved, and would not be giving any aid or comfort to the democratic party or its candidates.. The mes sage his sister brings might well come straight 'from him:- ''Close up the'ranks!" , ' one entirely smooth face among the specimens of facial pulchritude. Since then the proportion of smooth fates has-greatly increased, and the moustache is a vanity has undergone conspicuous changes. In 1894 it was permitted to ramble whither it listed; in some cases spreading like a lambre quin over lips and chin, in others trailing down into elongated wisps after the 'fashion cultivated" by Chinese mandarins. At present tfie closely trimmed or the, very smart military eye-brow moustache m most popular. The pomades, bril liantine and stiff wax of former days have all but disappeared from the barber shbps as whis ker dressings, while the oils and dyes are. all tabooed. Some sweet day veven the, perfumes may be abandoned May that time speedily cornel ' Consider the Widow. , The young widow, in any aspect is sufficiently alluring," if she has inherited property.she'is irresistible as a magnet to attract -men vybp know., exactly what they want, which is her money. Sad experience in innumerable in stances classifies her as an 'easy mark in N the. J lists of adventurers whose business it is to prey" upon women., It is common knowledge that a large amount of.cashvor even a fat balance, in, bank, in control of a widow-, is as hard to keep intact as a handful of 'cjulctftitveri She simply cannot help picking her own pockets, in most instances. , v , ; Before the first gentleVain has fallen" on tht grave her husband, if he has left her a hand tome estate or a considerable life insurance fund, she is approached with suggestions that she make investments.'' Heaven help her then if she is without experience in the care of money, which is air too frequently the case, and admits to her counsels strangers who profess a desire to place her funds advantageously. She will be promised safety for her principal and", a sure 1 income from it and will get neither.' It seems a harsh thing to sav. btit candor compels the admission that even the relatives f e. amiIv '"ends of the widow are not al waysN safe advisers for . her. Too often they are overcome by an abominable desire to profit from, her inheritance, and do, not hesitate 'to despoij her estate. What, then, shall the widow, bewildered by the loss of her natural protector, do? To whom shall she turn?' Obviouslyio some bank or trust company ' whose reputation is above suspicion, there to learn her financial A, B-j.Cs and Be taught that a small income as sured for life is better than a few years of spending followed by a competitive struggle ior a living in her later years. . But there is something far better for the widow than this. It is for her husband, while living, to insure her against the hazards men tioned, by .making a Sound trust , company the.. hnal custodian .aftfl executor of his estate, bound to invest ieimonly the highest class of securi ties for hev,beiiefit. ' That is the strongest as;i surance a. man, 'can. give his wife of financial 1 Sad Day fof Base Ball If ,we were a more susceptible nation, Sep tember 28 iwoutd hereafter be observed in fast-' jng and sackclotflrl for it brought so much of Teat sorrow to--the people that it almost marks ii 'national calamity. The shock that followed ilip- confession of Edward Cicotte, famous f mt chcr. and I oe ackson. eouallv famous out- iicjlder, of the renowned Chicago White Sox, is jcohiparable' to few things in our social history. iJ'An idol has fallen, the fans know their con- ifidence has been abused, their faitH betrayed,' and" they have no recourse. It is indeed a sad frliw frti" Koc Kail TVi oramA uil1 cnfv!v tnr the great majority of the players still are hon jeslji; nobody doubts this, and the popular insti tution will not tall because a tew ot its sup ports have crumpled.,. What. is, prpven by the; experience is that human institutions still are human, that" the flesh is weak, and that men will yet succumo to temptation. -- Hair and the Man. , 1 1 The vanitv of women has never enualled that of men. During uncounted generations of tribal ! lllife it was the man, not the woman, who deco j ;tated himself with feathers, furs and paints. He ilfollowed the same law of nature that gives the ibrightest feathers and Jopnots to bird cocks, the ' .ICOmo ana -spurs oi auingrny 10 inr; rousicr, na ;;the shaggy mane to the lion. 1 ilvWith intellectual development and the prog- !';iress of civilization man learned to gratify, his : jyanity by achievement by winning wealth and ! iidistinction rather than by personal adorn : iiment; ia alt things but the hair on his face, to ! liwhich he still clings, but ' with a weakening ;5graprPerhaps masculine love of whiskers will i Tever be entirely eradicated, because it is con ajjenital, born of a natural law.". Whiskery grow ; jlbn men's faces' as spurs grow on roosters' legs. Jt The last ; fifty years, the period of greatest 1 iikdvancement, in Tt, science and invention, Ijchows the decided trend of men's vanity away S roth hair on: the face. Photographs of men miAnrmsr the Civil War oeriod eive mitte iltestimony of their fondness at that time for afl : :he hair they could possibly produce on their iSfaces. .The full-bearded man was everywhere. ,Mirhirty', years later-the waning of the whisker 'Ane is noted. The "History of Omaha," pub- tisheiiin 1894, eohtaih's 51 steel engravings of ne then prominent in the city. Only fifteen of 'Sihem ahow full beards." Nineteen have mous ttaches only. Sixteen display various combina tions of chin, iide and neck whiskers, with only incurtibtnt on a prosperous man, young or "old, more jirgenr xnan -inis r It is not'to be denied that women are gain ing in financial wisdom, that many of them are capable of conserving property put in their DOS- session, but the number is so smalf that of any list of widows selected at random, a great ma-j jority will live more comfortably and securely, on a small income from a trusteed estate han' they will if placed in full possession of property and left subject to the importunities of all sorts of people. ' . Real Hope for the Race. When the announcement is made that a 13- year-old boy has passed the entrance examina tiorifc for Harvard, and is about to take up his studies at that venerable fountain of learning, no one is inclined to break out in a sweat. The world has kn6wn many such phenoms, and has largely lost interest in them. It still recognizes the value of scholastic attainments, and knows what the boy must have done, but it is willing to take him for granted and let the matter rest.. But when it is also known that in addition to being,pbssessor of a bulging brow, this young ster has swelling biceps, and has aided his home team in winning many 'games by his ability to swat the ball, then the great American public will perk up. "Babe" Ruths are not very many while the iofty-domed high brow is getting so numerous asrto be in the way, but the com-- bination of the two is the rarest thing imaguia ble, and should be valued accordingly. There fore, it looks as if Harvard has a real treasure, A Line 0 Typeor Two ' Hn la tli Lin. M Hw ! tall wtiwo Hwy HI. END OP A LETTER TO A FRIEND. Bo now you know how well with me all Is. But this alonei8 wanting, the true bliss Ot seeing my frlond's face and hazel eye Benignant, glancing clear tranquility, . '' ' Quick" to be smiling, quicker to be grave. Then do you read this, smiling; do 'you save AU tne great thoughts which move about your heart . . And foster them until you shall Impart In very freedom. Nothing on the earth Is sweeterMhan such converse, or more worth. Shall we not sLt and look upon the .clouds Crimsoned- by sunset, wateh the veil which shrouds , -The flying moon. ere she can make escape, And speak of gentleness, of many a shape Heauty has worn? Shall we not once more walk With arms not touching, and a rest from talk Until fresh utterance will not be denied, . Or some eye-gleaming can no longef hide Beneath the thoughtful lid? Yes,' my deak, friend, "When you have come Content will not soon end. ITALY'S bolshevists learned their economics in the Russian schools Afttt seizing a factory the idea is to sell off the raw material anM everything else in sight, in order to pay the help and raise wages. This process eliminates th, fac'tpry,' which is" the end desired, because a ' factory is a; svtnbol of work, and work pre vents a Country from being what that intellectual titan, Morris Hillquit, calls "a place fit for free men and women to live in. ,.. , SOME men attempt the Alps in the ava lanche season, while others shake hands with John J. McGraw. , i SINCE, obviouslv. Mr. Arthur Burrace Far well was not bored by'Aplirdtiite," might we suggest another romance by the same author, "The Adventures of King'Pausole?" Aside from the character of the sculptor, who is the most finished . . in fiction, "Aphrodite" doer not amount to much;" but" "Pausole" is diverting from start to finish. DEPARTURE OF A RED IMMORTAL FOR THE HAPPY HUNTING GROUNDS. ' (From the. Pierre, S. D., Capital-Journal.) I. M. Detson sent a casket to Lower" Brule agency re-day for;the burial there of x Mrs. Poor Chicken, an Indian woman. . MR. LACK AYE escaped from hissocial call on Mr. McGraw with a convehtionalPotts frac ture. Who sups with McGraw takes Potts luck. He should also have a long reach. C OLD JUNK. (H. M. TomTinson.) "I can't make out what you see in- those craft," said my-' companion one, morning. "They're mostly ancient tubs, and at the most they only muck about the coast. Now a P. & O. or a Cunarder! . .That's something to look at." Yet I "could potter about an -ancient hooker or a tramp steamer all day, when I wouldn't cross a quay to a great battleship. I like the .pungent smells of these old craft, Just as I in hale the health and odour of fir woods. . I love their men, those genuine mariners, the right diviners of sky, coast, and tides, who know exactly what their craft will do in any combina tion of circumstances as well as you know the pockets of your old coat; men who can handle a stiff and cranky lump of patched timbers and antique gear as artfully as others would the clever length of hollow steel with its powerful twin screws, . ' ' But when my" slightly contemptuous com panion spoke I had no answer, felt out of date and dull, a-fogey and an idle man. I had no answer ready none that would have satisfied ,r f ; .i i- T , mis Drisx young man, none uiu wouia noi nave security in .case of his death. Is there any duty L.BmBA nLind trivial him. tie leu me. some otner visitor naa leit oe hind Stevenson's Ebb Tide, and trying to think out an excuse that would quiet 1 the qualms I began to feel for this idle preference of mine for old Junk, I began picking Out the passages I liked. And then I came on these words of Aftwater's- (though Stevenson, for certain, ..Is spnaklng for himself): "Junk .-.only old junk! . . Nothing so affecting" as ships. The ruins of an empire would leave me frigid, wtjen a bit of an old rail that an old shellback IM leaned ott in the middle watch would ring me up all standing." ' . , "ChlcVi Favorite Flea." About two hundred years ago a young "man of 21 years in an English, university transited from a Latin classic a poem having the titfe above. His brother was suffering with a broken leg, and had requested him to send apecimen of .his talent, in versification After two hours work he had produced the following: '' As over fair Chloe's rosy cheek Careless a little vagrant passed, .. .. - , "With artful hand around his neck, ; A slender chain the virgin cast. .. , As Juno near her throne above, ' Her spangled bird delights to see; ... As Venus ha her fav'rlte dove, t . Chloe Bhail have her fav'rite flea. Pleased rfhis chains, with, nimble steps - He o'er her snowy bosom stray'd; Now on her panting breast he leaps. Now hldss between his little head. ' .. Leaving at length his old abode, , He found, by thirst or fortune led. Her swelling lips that , brighter glow'd Than roses in their natiye bed. ' t s - " " "Chloe. your artful hands undo, Nor for your captive's safety fear; No artful ha'nds are needful now To-keep the willing' vagrant here. Whilst on that heav'n 'tis given to stay. (Who would not wish to be so blessed?) No force can drive him -fence away, - - . Till death'Shall seize his destin'd breast. Such lines are not in fashion now. We quote them only because their author was John Wes ley, founder of Methodism. They were written before his mind iurned to serious matter! of life, religion and, death; and they .show, .in-i cidentally, -the thoroughness with which Latin and otherHhings were taught at Oxford college itrJ724. ' ' - v." , , '; " , "THE funniest thing you ever, printed was such-and-such," is a remark addressed to us wirh more or less frequency; and if never has happened, that any two persons mentioned the same item. Therefore 'if fifteen or twenty of these funniest things coulcNcolIectea into one column it would make dangerous reading for a person with a weak' heart, would it not? That is reason enough" for not doingjt. But we are ihquisitive to knpw .what you.'.think was the funniest thing printed hereabout. "ONE can write bVt'ter without; an education Whan with it,". -maintains the lady who wrote 'iUncle Sam of Freedom Kidge..' And one has only to look through themagazines of the month to see Kpw. true that is.. Education is likejy to produce Jiterary self-consciousness. WE should not be flabbergasted to learn that a pool of gamblers is bribing -Babe Ruth to knock the ball over the fence.". Yoi can't conj yince us that his liotriers are accidental ' YOU SEEM TO BE EASILY AMUSED. Sir: A sign on a hotel in Corwith.'la., reads: "Good Meals, 50 Cents. Extrary Good Meals, 65 Cents." That "extrary good" struck me as being extra funny. - P. F. YOU don't- have to carry your lunch in a dinner pail, girls. You can put It in a music roll, and then people will think you are on your wajr to your. vocal Jesson, instead of to a vulgar 'office. "IT seems to me." writes a man. to Vox rPot), "that The Voice of the People is degenerat- ;Vhat does' he oppose the department, was in augurated for? ' A. Something of That Sort. Sir: A garden-seed bouse has one window filled with poultry supplies foods, egg-produc- e.rs,: lice-killers, etc. A part or tne aispiay is a number of chickens who spend their time frantically picking lice off themselves. Zero in advertising? s. t y . - F. H. M. WHAT we like about Mr, Cox's bunk is that it is "pure bunk." Avoid substitutes. Don't take "something just as good. .. ., ; "MATCH the President." indeed. None but himself can be .his parallel. . - "HARD Vmes?" No. "Nevertheless,"- ob- serves -Mr. Tu hus Roscnwa d. we may be com pelled to go through a period of readjustment." V THP 'Vnnorrnraflnn .-!f1 arisp- anrl sincr "Period of readjustment, come again no morel" The pert proprietor of a grocery, iii East Twenty-fifth street, is nothing it not good at re oartee. :' ' The other day, rather early in the forenoon, one of the good wives "in ,the,iieighborhood steoned into the store and inouired: 'VAny real fresh eggs?"- (Great emphasis on he "real fresh.") ' "Oh, yes, ma'am," he replied. "Some just laid this mornine. A day or two later, somewhat earlierxin the forenoon than before, the good wife again dropped into the store and inquired: f "Anv more of those real fresh eKirs?" VVhereuoon the erocer cried to his clerk: "Run to the back room, boy, and see if this morning s eggs are cool enough yet to sell. Indianapolis News. , "Campaign manager are not so much Con cerned over what the "bull moose" leaders of eight years ago are going to do as to what the voters plan for the ballot box.. ( ....... - 1 ; 4, u Three hours and twenty minutes, Omaha to Chicago, is going some, even as the crow flies, v ; - . '--v : Things must be getting serious when Josephus Diniels goes to save South Carolina." Some White Sox got very much soiled. . A Dream. , The board of education was at. it hammer and tongs when one member cried. hotly: "Our reform schools are empty names. 1 hope the day will come when they will be in reality what! little Willie thinks tney are. . v - "Willie,", said the mother, 'I don't like the looks of that little boy you were playing wltli on the street today. You mustn't play with bad little boys, you know." : "Oh, but he isn't a bad little boy," cried Wil lie. "He's - good little boy. He's been to the reformatory school twice and they have let him out each time oni account of good behavior." Lo Angeles .. . v How to Keep Well ..' By DR. W. A. EVANS Questions concerning hygiene, sanita tion and prevention of disease, eub milted to Dr. Evans by readers ol The Bee, will bo answered personally, sub ject to proper limitation, where a stamped, addressed envelops is en. closed. Dr. Evans will not Disks diagnosis or prescribe (or individual' diseases. Address letters la care ol The Bee. Copyright, 1920. by Dr. W. A Evans. ABOUT CONJUNCTIVITIS. A correspondent wants to have an article on conjunctivitis. The con Junctivia is the mcmbrano) which covers the exposed part of the eye ball and then lines the inner surface of the eyelid. Since it must be ex posed to the air, and warm moist tissues do not stand exposure to the air well, some special cleaning pro vision is required. The tear glands secrete a salt so lution which sweeps across the membrane, washing the bacteria and dust down the tear duct into the nose. The solutions sold as eye washes are not so effective as the tear secretion. The lids and lashes help to-clean,. and finally, the mem brane Itself is resistant to infection. Conjunctivitis is inflammation of this membrane. A simple conjunctivitis ,dueAto dust or ordinary bacteria gets well without treatment in a few days. A boracic acid wash can be used if the patient wishes to do something. If the patient - needs glasses and his eyes are under strain he may'have a mild oonjunctlviti? with red borders to '.the lids. , or recurring sties. , This form of conjunctivitis calls for prop erly fitting glasses and nothing more. v Measles shows itself first by sore eyes. The redness ana swelling start in the lids at the margin and spread to the eyeball. Chronic conjunctivitis, not- due to eye strain, may . be -: trachoma or granular lids. ".Any. suggestion of granular lids should bo investigated, nee many cases are due to tra- cnoma, a very serious contagious disease. , If tliA AVAhalla ara td an thorA ia no history of swimming, drunk enness, or exposure to intense light to explain It, the first point to no tice is whether there is much sup puration. Much the most virulent forms of conjunctivitis are those due to gonococcl. This applies to purulent conjunctivitis -in adults and babies. The only surS method of diagnosing gonococcal conjunctivitis is by microscopic examination. If diagnosis and treatment are de layed even for a few hours the sight is almost certain to be lost. Treat ment must be with silver salts. It must be very active. Pneumococcus conjunctivitis looks almost as threatening as the gono coccal form, but it does not threat en vision to the same extent. If it is diagnosed by the microscope, treatment ia with different forms of quinine solutions locally. Milder forms of purulent con junctivitis are those due to the Koch-Weeks bacillus and the Morax Axenfeld bacillus. These forms are expected to get well, but ulcers of the cornea with corneal scars are likely to result. Treatment is by local applications of a solution or zinc sulphate. Pink eye belongs to this group. Since inflammation of the deeper parts of the eyeball causes rednessl of the conjunctiva it is importanrto know them apart. In conjunctivitis the engorged blood vessels are plainly seen. When the conjunctiva slides over the eyeballs near the cir cumference as. the eyeball moves tne blood vessels slide with it. When the trouble Is deep in the eye the congested, enlarged sliding conjunc tival blood vessels are not in evidence. A sty is a suppuration of the glands at the border of the lids. A chalazion is a cyst of a gland of the lid border. Pierygium is an over growth occuring on the eye of men exposed habitually to an excessive o.mount of dust and sand. Sit t M 0 oest ..aaV To-ilnuwHted." The Bee Ib in receipt of a letter from a traveling man who writes Trom Lincoln and signs himself "In terested." The letter can not be published on account of the fact that it contains statements that are Vbelous per se; nad if the libelous statements are cut'out there ia little left of the letter. Singlo Trapk Street Car Lines. Omaha, Sept. i'7. To the Editor cf The Bee: Seeing they are about to tear up Farnam street and repave it, why. not single track all the business district where street cars must run? For instance, tho Harney and Farnam cars would go on their -east route on Harney street, and when they make the west route would go on Farnam. That is, from Tenth street to Twenty-fourth street The same with the South Omaba line. Park. line, Leavenworth line. They would all go north on Fifteenth street from Howard to Webster and south on Sixteenth street. Also do away with tho iron guide poles; that is, the poles that hold the wire that sup ports the trolley wire.j These wires to go into the buildings. They would do away, with one t'-ack, also away with the iron poles, the expense of same, labor Included, less accidents, less confusion. It would beaitlfy the flowntown streets, make the streets look wider, gain two-thirds, of the space now oc cupied by the street cars. Street car traffic going one way on the street. Automobiles could pass be tween street car and automobiles parked. No iron poles on the side walk, which is a bad sight GEO. E. YAGER. Influence of Vanity, Probably the reason that s the higher railroad rates have not cut down travel Is due to more people wishing to show that they are able to pay ihe price. Knoxville Times- Gazette How About Political Speakers? It is no easy matter' for the man who Is Wl wrong to find anything that is ay right. -Toledo Blade. comfortable results of correct living generally shine right out in the faces of people , who drink POSTUM v " Adeligrrtfulty flavored beverage -. . ; Healthful and All-American Sold by jocers. ur Money s Worth and then some, when you btiy 'any one, or all, of the several items quoted below. Housewives from v every section, of the city wait for bur,- weekly special values, then come, .buy and save, as nowhere else are values offered the equal of these. 3 lbt. Granulated AOn Sugary only. . . . 'xi-C Blue Karo Syrup (l'-lb. cans), 2 cans, 9 only sCuC Vulcanol Stove Polish (paste), 2 cans OC only j . . adJL POST TOASTIES, a break fast food par epecel- OCn lence, 3 pkgs. for. . . uC Bowen Brooms, QQn each .1 ...... . OOC y 16th at Howard St. It Can Be Done Women who think their plush and velvet coats cannot be successfully cleaned and restored should try, The Panto rium. vNo matter how badly soiled or faded, we can clean or dye them arfd make them look like new. ;:! So long as the material is good one cannot afford to discard such garments we can easily make them . last another 'year. Make us prove it we guarantee satisfaction or no pajL. . , N Pantorium "Good Cleaner and Dyers" 1515 Jones Street, Phone Douglas 963. SoutK Side, 4708 So. 24th St., Phone South 1283. Guy Liggett, President -y!- for 23' Years. N B. "We pay return charges on aU put , of .town orders. Send us a trial order. . T. ' . 1 wc tninas create piano valcie -and desirability: beaut? oPtorte, and perma nency oP onqirval musical qctaHty: CIrv botK of uvese ihe We Have Illinois Coal n - In spite of short supply we have now in stock a limited tonnage of high grade ILLINOIS COALtwo kinds, .and the usual sizes. ILLINOIS COAL is the most economical fuel available in Omaha. It furnishes most. heat per dollar and meets every requirement for, cooking and heating. We urge immediate storage of the coal you need for the winter. v ; You will benefit, in quality, service and price. Sunderlancl Brothers Co. Main Otice. Eatire U Floor KeeliiL Bldf., 17th aad Harney Sts. ONE OF OUR YARDS IS NEAR YOUR HOME sect. piano is ac1cnbWie(lged: supreme try countless numbers or master musicians and music overs. . ffiaiesi- nna Hiqfwstpmi There are eleven other. Notable Pianos in our stock tp select from over-100 Piano3 and Play ers on our floors, all priced in plain figures at the cash prices, or if desired on pay ments. Pianos from $365 and up. Players from $595 and better. 1513 Douglas St. Remember Caruso Concert Oct. 12th These Cool Evening and Mornings Mean vtv A T where you want it whn you want 'it so why nohave it. MAJESTIC .ELECTRIC HEATERS The Majestic gives you sun-warmth without fumes or fire, without smoke or odor, without dujj; or fuss, without work or worry. It permerits you to bathe or dress in a comfy heat breakfasf in a warm room; in fact, you-can have heat where and when you want it. Order a Majestic today and be comfy. Nebraska fanwn at fifteenth "YOUReiTCTWC Co N Location The location of your bank is an important consideration. In selecting a site for its new build-' ing, the First National Bank had in mind your convenience. That is why the location at the Southwest corner of 16th and farnam was chosen, giving en trances both' on Farnam and 16th street, You will find this the most accessible location in the dry. The twof rincipal car lines pass the doors ; it is on the main au tomobile artery, and is in easy walking distance of the princi; pal jobbing houses and retail stores. Individual depositors wiil find the location especially convenient f irst National Dank of Omaha Phone Douglas 2793 WeWiHitaitotrOfflct OMAHA PRINTING COMPANY ,222, ass aikt OSUKB BMiUSl fAMM set Mcuiswrt fsrS' f IU II I Commercial PwimRs-ttmoiuMRs - Stecldic Embossers LOOSC LCAf OCVICCS USE BEE WANT ADS THEY BRING -RESULTS V