' - . - - ' . . '.' , THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1920. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) . EVENING SUNDAY THB'BEK PUSLISHWa COMPANY. NELSON B. UPDIKE. Publishar. . MCMBEKS OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS "WMa rnm. at Tht m u a aiamDar. It -!fMi wUUaa to 111, um for vuhllratlai at til n,wi diiplolt vMlud la II or not elliwwlia cffdiud Id tats nr, and tlto It, jUmtc puaHihadjmln Ail rtfkt at puMlutlee of out apodal j ' BEE TELEPHONES STr. TOS, Tyler 1000 . T9r Nlht t11 Altar 10 P. M.I Motrin! Darartmmt .......... Oraalatlm Department MTanwi !0 Department OFFICES OF THE BEE TjUf IWOt Tyltr 10OIL XtUt 1001. ' Main qmca: ITtft ui4 rsnuua Omta bibRi u 8oou m. i tout atu Out-of-Tawn Offleeei ?W Tort m rinn An. I Wukmstoa varan ciuttr tuai. I MUM M. mi a at. Btanr Bids. I Porto fronts ISO lut at. Honors The Beefs Platform , 1. New Union Passer Statiea. 2. CenHaueai improTemaat mt ta Now t braoka Highways, iaclueliaf Ik pae- snent of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha with Britk Surface). 3. A thort, low-rtte Weftarway from tha i Cora Boll to the AtlsmtU Oaean. 4. Homo Rulo Charter for Omaha, with City Manogor form of Cawrnmaat. - WELCOME OUR NEXT PRESIDENT. . , Omaha hai tht proud' distinction today of welcoming senator Harding, utanding si the city furthest west where' h will jnake a public . address during his campaign for the presidency. Omaha welcomes him, not only as the, chosen candidate of the greaf republican party, but as the man on whom will undoubtedly : rest the responsibilities of the government affcr March 4, 1921., . .. :. . . '- . Senator Harding will learn through his visit i here what the spirit of the 'west really Is. He will, be-greeted cordially and enthusiastically ,b)r thousands of loyal republicans, who look on him as being the great leader he has proven himself, We do hot feel that we are stating it too strongly to' say he will also be given s cordial greeting by thousands of democrats, who have made up their minds to vote for the candi date who stands firmly and uncompromisingly fop the American constitution and all that it Contains. ; v - Nebraskans bive slight personal acquaint ance with Senator Harding, but they know him ' as a man who faces an issue squarely, who s Stands four-square on public questions, and whose earnest appreciation of Ills position is clearly reflected In his unwillingness to jalter with any. He .has made, and is making, no V pledges he does not expect to be called on to redeem and therefore he is promising nothing ' that will be beyond his power as president of v thj United States! He ias no capacity for art ful dodging, for saying -one thing and meaning ' ' another, and does not pretend to be alt things , to. alt men. He is for one thing, straight and . square all the time;4;! That is why the people ' of; the west have ' turned to him in confidence that he wilt make good for America when he en - ters the Whits House.' v The Importance of his address at the Oma ha Auditorium this evening can not be over stressed, It will be his message to the electorate, not only of Nebraska and western Iowa, but throughout the great empire of which these sre a part and to the whole country as welt. We do not anticipate his utterance, but we know he 'will say "nothing In Omaha' that will alter in any j sense the things he already has said on the is sues' that are uppermost. He has discussed frankly, candidly and sincerely every great ques tion that is pressing for -consideration. His "front porch" speeches have given a defsaite index to the mind and character of the man, and assurance to the citiieni that all governmental . problems sre to be. taken in hand with' honest v determination to solve them in a way that will A. be for the best interests of the country at large. The prospect of Senator Harding's election portends far more than is involved in a mere V ; change of administration. It means the begin- ning of s period of eons tructive readjustment, """" of encouragement instead, of restriction of en- terprise, of solid growth- and substantial de velopment. Nothing of social or moral advan - tage that has come to the land through expe- rience of the last seven years will be sacrifteed, but such gains will be consolidated, and with a 'return to rational administration of .public affairs will follow the renewal of confidence that must exist, before, real, progress ? comes. 'For these end many other good reasons ' Senator Hardipg will get a welcome in Omaha that will convince h(m of the sincerity, not v V only.; of the city's hospitality and generosity toward! distinguished guests, but of the actual purposeof trje people to attest their faith in him by. giving. him' their vote in November. , ' ' Rights Undec Compensation Law, y The supreme court of Nebraska has broad ened the application of the wbrkmen'a compen-, aation law by a ruling that a man can not waive his right to full compensation in a settlement , made out of court. This follows the logic of a rule laid down many years ago that a man could not waive the rights of his "dependents to Ve " cover in case of his death through accident, ' Slowly the law is being developed in Nebraska .to a point where it will be of some service. The statute itsejlf is a cripple, so to speak, because of exclusion from its provisions of a very large '' class of labor, but in time this omission will be ' cured, and the benefits that are intended will be ' extended to include all who work in Nebraska. The humanitarian purpose of the law. is well understood, necessity admitted, and only the . - form of Its application is lo be determined. Em ployers generally are' in favor of it, none being . averse to granting the relief that is due the vie . tim of Industrial mishap. Experience has not progressed to the point, where exact rules may be laid down, but each decision of the supreme - court is helpful, in that it does make adminis tration of the Jaw plainer and those affected by it thereby are given a clearer understanding of . what is to be expected. 1 1 ' Light Shining in Russia. Acceptance by the soviet government of Rus- sis of terms laid down by ttie Poles for the armistice, together with reported successes of the army of Genera! Wrangel, indicate a weak- ening of the Lenine-Trotaky control. Close ob servers have for some weeks professed fo see signs of early dissolution of the Bolshevik com bination, under which such havoc has , been -wrought In Russia in the three years of Its as- ' cendancy. ' Among these, may be cited General Felix Agnus of the Baltimore American, astute V sad broad-minded. 1st a recent issue of his paper General Agnus gave as his opinion, the statement that light is breaking in on Russia, basing his conclusion on the willingness expressed by the peasants to purchase the lands they hold, paying into the general coffers the purchase price rather than to turn it over to a private concern or indi vidual. This recognition of property rights is a certain sign of returning sanity; It was the land .hunger of the peasant, the passionate yearning to owq and control the'acres on which he lived, that led hirn to accept first Kerensky and then Lenine and TroUky. The same desire for possession also led him to resist to the ul timate confusion of Lenine the efforts of the soviet to nationalize the land. While the city industries were brought under the communistic control, (the farms never have, and on this failure, the whole bolshevik Scheme has wrecked. Its failure to make head way against Poland and the steady increase in Opposition centered under General Wrangel, has just about written finis for the most astonishing experiment, in the matter of extent, the world has ever witnessed. It was doomed to failure from the first, because it ignored the experience of all history, set aside economic laws, .violated natural sentiment, scoffed at religion, and de fied and denied God. Russia will rise and be come great in time, with a government that meets the needs of its people, because it will spring and derive its powers from the people. ALineO'TypcorTwo Haw to tha Lin, lat tha quip fall whar thajr may. GOVERNOR COX has finished his 10,000 mile run.. He got a good many miles per gallon. 'Hello, Daw! What Do You Know?" Sir: ' As soon as Dave learned he had wotf out fur the legislature In the primary he started celebrating'. An hour or so later a reporter asked him for a statement. "All right," said Dave, "1 know two things. The first is thai I'm nominated and the second is that I'm drunk. SIM NIC. ALMOST our favorite author is the Adams family, from John Quincy'dpwn: and we were pleased to find OldEd Hunt of our predilec- 'shelf for the works of the Adams tribe, and 1 as a mark of special esteem we have reserved a niche for F. P. A. j j ' Implacable. (From the Morgantown, W. Va., New Dominion.) Sufficient evidence has been collected for the arrest of the person who entered my. "There Were Giants in Those Days." A friend of The Bee sends us this little story concerning a base ball idol ofan unforgotten day": Apropos Of the base ball scandal, when the lovers Of true port are humiliated by the fall of popular idols, I haven't seen anything in the newspapers about the story of Kike Kelley and A. L. Spalding. You remember that Mike Kelley went with the brotherhood and Spald ing realized .that he was the keystone of the arch of seceders. He sent for him end took him Into the backroom of his place of busi ness and laid ten one thousand dollar bills on the uble, and said: "Mike, it's yours if you wilt quit the brotherhood and come back to the league." At that time Mike didn't have street car fare in his pocket.. He looked at. the money and then he looked at Al Spalding. His lip quivered and he said: "I can't take it, - Al, I have given my word to the Doys. Alter a moment he said: "I'll tell you what I will do,.AU I would -fast like to borrow a thou sand." Spalding handed him a thousand dol lars and said: '"It's yours, Mike. It's worth that much to know that base ball players are absolutely on the square." It seems to me that this is a refreshing story to remind, some of the old-time base t.1t fan, that Koe Kail vt1ai,A altvtVM ' ; been and still are the cleanest sports in exist ence. -. . It is good to be reminded of this.' The inci dent recalls the "glory of the game of 30 years ago, or more. Out of the. mist of the past looms up the figure of "Big Dan" Brouthers, and alongside, of him comes "Jim" Thompson, who could hit the ball as hard as "Babe" Ruth ever dreamed ot doing; Deacon mrdie Richardson, "Jack" Rowe, "Silver" Flint, Wit- liamion, Burns.'Carruthers, O'Rourke, Corcoran, Goldsmith,, "Smiling Tim" Keefe, "Brudder Bill" Gleason, "Hick" Carpenter, "Wid" Conroy, Roger Conner, Radbourn, and so on through a long list of well remembered heroes of the game, few of whom left it with more than' their last month's pay in their pockets, but against the home and took therefrom one dress and one pair of shoes, belonging to Mrs. Henry, who is away for her health. The party has been seen wearing the shoes. Forty-eight hours will be given the party taking the above named articles to return same and place them on the porch. .. JKSSE HVHENRY. (From the New Dominion of the following day.) The stolen shoes have been returned to my residence. The party will be given 24 hours more to return the dress, or answer to me ' in person, why, or run the risk of arrest. JESSE H. HENRY. "BENJAMIN BILLS will talk on' What Many Architects Lack at 6 p. m.'J Art Note. We fancy that what they lack at that hour, or a little later, is judicious combination of Gordon dry and Vermouth. ,"t 1 Go as Far as You Like. Sir: With your kind permission I will knock Mr. Hammond in your col. He praises H. K. Webster's new novel, "Mary Wollastbn," as a fine study of real life in Chicago, and' describes how Mary married a piano tuner who played a saxophone In the orchestra and was stuck on Debussy, Walt, Whitman, etc. My experience of nearly seven dectraes is that this is not real life, ttiough It . may be Mr. Webster's way of Indicating eccentric traits in a eub-hro. Never have I met a human being who knew much more about Walt Whitman than his name and the two titles, "Captain, My Captain," and "The Song of the- Drum." Aloof, remote, and wearisome critics place him among the Illuminati - and rank his yawp stuff with the great bards, but no body reads, remembers or quotes him.' He is pretty near as big a balloruthat won't descend as Tammas Carlyle, the "fireside" philosopher. Where do people git this stuff about Whitman as poet? PICADOR.- WE agree with our correspondent that no body, speaking generally, reads, remembers, or quotes Whitman, Picking up a bulky book of quotations, in which almost everybody is in cluded, we do not find a line ascribed to Walt, As for the general public, it confuses him with Walt Mason. History's Little Repetitions. (From Livy's Rome.) Ho was the first king who violated the custom derived from his predecessors of con sulting the senate on all subjects; he aa ministered the public business by domestic counsels. War, peace, treaties, alliances, he contracted and dissolved with whomsoever he pleased, without the sanction of the people and senate. j RESTAURANTEERS (the word combines the idea of an eating place with profiteering) might distract tho attention of their patrons with a line from an ad in the Horseheads, N. Y.,; Re porter: "Nburishmcnt is a prominent charac teristic of our foodstuffs." This takes your mind -off 4he pricef . ; inuian summer. . How to Keep Well By DR. W. A. EVANS Ouoatlona coucernlni hyilana. sanlt lion and Brtvontion of dltaaoa, auk-. mlttod to Dr. Evan hy raadara of The Baa, wiU ba antwaraa parsonally, cub joct ta prapar limitation, whera I stamped, addraaaod onvelope la an cloaod. Dr. Evaaa will aat maka diasnoala or proacriba lor Individual dluaaea. Addraas letters la care of . The Bee. Copyright. 1920, by Dr. W. A. Ivan. Upon the far horizon, , through a haee- ir mii.nl a iiu-a a fr nnn' nr rnminn. Kiiini . ..... t . ..1. i .v- h "i" - rr : names 01 none 01 wnom siana sucn a mar as The setting sun, making tne pool a rose, that which blackens the record of eight of the late Chicago players. . j Those old-time ball p lay erst were not thrifty; they did not get any fancy pay, but, how they could play ball I It might not hurt anything if some of the moderns would look up the rec ords of the bygone days. U I . . I "! ' ' Exhaustless White Coal. - The search for fuel has taken' Great Britain into Persia and Asia Minor, where rich stores of oil are found. Francef- has, underthe treaty of peace, been assured of large supplies oj coal from the German .mines, whereupon the -Ger-mansturn to water-power as a , substitute. 1 . As prices of coal and oil-rise, the world will avail itself more and more, of the inexhaust ible energy Offered by its streams.. While the supply of fuel is exhaustible, so long as rain continues to fall and rivers to run, water-power will be available for turning the wheels of com merce. . - - . . y 1 ' Cjhcap power from its streams has made the prosperity of more than one city on this con tinent, from the Pacific slope to Winnipeg and New England. Several stretches of railroad have been electrified by harnessing the .rivers. In a recent test at Erie, Pa., an electric loco motive pushed two steam locomotives off their feet. -To "discover the'relative powers of tho engines, two of the largest steam locomotives of the Erie railroad were coupled up, and headed against the electric giant. The electric pushed the old timers bsckward along the track with both their throttles wide open and driv ing wheels working their utmost to hold their own. This electric' locomotive Is designed to be used on a western railroad in the mountain ous district. If in 78 feet long, 17 feet high and weighs "265 tons. It has 14 axles, 12 for drives and two for guides. It is so designedthat in coasting down grade it generates electricity which is sent back into the line to help other trains up hill. ' ' ' The advantages of electrification are many, among them being the saving pf coal, the elimi nation of much hauling of coal for use on the railroads, cleanliness and power. These quali ties, setting aside the question of relative cheap ness, are enough to warrant wider use of cur rent from water power. 1 v George White, is now looming up as some "claimer, his announcement t'st Cox will carry both Ohio and Indiana alnreit entitling him to first placed : ' Cox "ducked" the Hayes celebration, and did not by doing so help his case in Ohio any. Maybe he doesn't care for the home votes. v Mark Tapley had nothing on the average democratic booster trying to make himself think Cox has a chance. . .Governor Cox is about to. start a new tour. Wonder if he will dig up. any new issues. ' - i u v Republicans should keep in . mind it is the senate the democrats are after. ' They say now the league was not an issue in Maine.' Well, something was. , , , . . ' , Senator Harding: Here we-are, r'arin' to go. "Babe" Ruth still finds business good. . We Should Worry. And now the time has arrived to begin wor- w oan. ndment. Dallas News. Ctr vet Ilka a wine within the Grail, ablaze. Like girdled monks together met at day's Decline, to make new vows ere they repose, TUe gathered sheaves, it seems, to end the woes Of famine's threat, commune beside the ways, And lo, their mingled voices you may hear;. -Or is the sound but that ofcrickets old, That chant sweet hymns of autumn, far and hear? The soul, elate, serene, through manifold Bright dreams and hopes, put off her pallid fear. Knowing what store shall thwart the coming cold. Oa O B IN the far-off 'nineties, as a banker reminds us, they used to hand it to the unsophisticated in this fashion: A windjammer at the fair grounds was lambasting "Wall street with all the power of his bellows. "Now, look at this, he cried, taking out a newspaper. "Yes, friends, just look at thisl" He read aloud: "TheNew York banks-cleared today $463,000,000. Think of that! Cleared all that in one day. Rob bers, I tell ya. Robbers 1" j ' The Sentimental Texan. , 1 Sir: It was In Boomtown, Tex. 'A little flower gtrl of approved Victorian type was sell ing violets near the railway station. Boomtown boasts 4,000 oil-crazy men and about 40 odd (to be charitable) women. The flower trade was not exactly brisk. A cold norther had brought a vindictive drizzle in its wake. The violet vender was obviously miserable, and ap propriate tears mingled with raindrops on her dirty little, wan little face. :' A huge Texan, wearihg a prodigious dished sombrero, stood on the station steps. His rov ing vision encountered the shivering flower girl. Mild Interest, curiosity, concentration, flashed over his face In quick succession. A new emo tion, pity, was welling up within him; the stress was transparent. Suddenly impulse crystalized into action. He strode across the muddy street, laid a violently condoling paw on the child a frail shoulder, and rumbled huskily:- "Aw, dont cry,1 Httfe girl. I'll buy your gawdam vi'luts! UKlUOrS. GOTHAM'S garage owners have locked out the- striking "service" hands and are operating on a, basts of stoVage only. If the information had not been publicly conveyed the owners of the cars might not have discovered the difference. Brighten Up Old Glory, f -" "Sir: I would like to apply for the position of renovator of United States flags. Most of them are dusty, faded, and generally poor speci mens of the glad emblem. Bend them to me and I will do them up free ot charge. RLBY. A MOST obliging touring agent is George Wetherald of the Pike's Peak region. Sezze: "Any information you wish to know, would be pleased to tell you with pleasure." I'"- Rawther Clever, Eh, Watson? . "( , f (Prom the Cardiff Western Mail.) Ilow an entrance was effected is a mys tery, although a broken window near the door affords a clue. "GOING south. Will sacrifice my cloth ing." Classified ads. . ' BETTER not stop this side of Miami. THE THUNDERBOLTS OF JEHOVA. ,fc (From a Denver Journal.) v A squad of policemen late last night . failed to find two "wounded men" whom John W. P. Jehova telephoned he had shot. Jeliova said he fired at melon thieves an believed he had struck at least two. "BrnU, Where the Nuts Come From." (From the Brasll, Ind., Times.) I will lecture on the sin and evil effects of tobacco and coffee from a scriptural and physical standpoint, on the streets of Har mony Saturday evening. Come everybody to ' hear and help me cry against this terrible curse. R- CLOE. WE see by the Decatur Review that "Eve lyn Means to Wed A. Stroid, jr." MAN and superman. B. L. T. TESTING FOR HAY FEVER. When the making of skin- tests to find the cause of hay fever becomes Aiiiiversal we will begin to make headway in the control of that an n.-ivlna- condition. With the information gained from sxln testing, picking a hay fever re Sirt will become a scientific pro cedure instead of the gamble it now w. Furthermore, a kind of vaccina tion known as desensltization offers a better prospect" for an ultimate cttnerally effective cure than any thing made use of In former times. The skin tests to find out the causes of hay fever and asthma not due to organic diseases are safe, sim )e. not comfort-disturbing and rea- eonabty acourate. They can be made by the general run of physicians with testing materials to be had on the market. The only drawback is the largb number of tests' that must be inade when the patient can make no suggestions or offer no suspioion-l ti to the cause of the attacks. Vaccination or' desensltization is not so simple a matter as skin test ing, but it does not offer great dlffl culties for the forehanded and per b! stent Of course, there is little that can be done for the grasshopper who sings all summer and becomes Interested in prevention after his nose begins to run and his eyes get red. '..;..-'..... In a study of hay fever made bj Dr. Gottlieb two cases were found to be due to tag alder, two to oat, fbuf to golden rod, 14 to ragweed, four to red top, ' two to plantain; three to timothy, six to yellow daisy, three to sheep sorrel, four to rye and four ;to orchard grass. 1 These testa were made in New York City. I dare say the tests made bv Df. Walker In Boston showed afferent distribution. Studies made i'.i other sections of the country no doubt would have given still other proportions. In cases of bronchial asthma bac teria absorbed from the air passage! may be responsible in Just the same nay that pollens are. In some of these bacterial cases the lake from which absorption occurs is the nose., In others suppuration In other parti of the body is responsible. Dr. Walker reports 10 such cases In his list and Dr. Gottlieb three. Among the cases in this group are found most of those benefited by opera' tlons on tho nose , Many cases of, bronchial asthma duo to bacteria are being treated by vaccines. Reports giving results will appear from time to time. Dr. Walker finds that asthma due to pol lens, dandruff and most of, the or dinary causes result in eye aymp toms. In the erases due. to bacteria the eyes did not run and were not con nested. , In his practice, If the eyes are involved he rules out bacteria a the cause. In some cases Sensitive to pollens and also to bacteria, he found that after removal of the;sen sitiveness to pollen the patient was abl to overcome the sensitiveness to bacteria without help. Many of the bacterlally-caused . cases were cured by vaccination. - experience Shows Peril. K. L. C. writes: "1. Is it dangerous to cut the toenails on my foot? 1 hftve had gangrene and lost my left foot from cutting my big toenail. 1 had diabetes. 2. Can you tell me Why my Tight foot and hand always are numb? 3. Is it possible for gangrene to set in my oth;r foot if I do not cut it or draw tne oiooa in any way." , REPLY. . . , 1. Your own experience proves It's dangerous.- 2. Some persons with diabetes com plain a good deal of numbness. In ADVERTISEMENT CASCARETS "Th Work while you Sleep", Do you feel "under it he weather"? Feel bilious,' cohstipated, headachy, full of cold?, Cascarets tonight for your liver and bowels will have the sun shining . for you tomorrow. Wake up with your head clear, stom ach right, breath sweet, and skin rosy. No griping no incon venience. Children love Cascarets, oo. 10, 25, 50 cents. Not Ancient History. Omaha. Oct. 5. To the Editor of The Bee: Do you remember way back in 1815, after the Lualtanla was sunk. When the president ad dressed a large number ' of newly naturalised Americans at Philadel phia. ' Dfendinir his spineless foreign pol icy he averred that there was euoh a thing as being too proud to fight. This altogether new tenet of philoso phy and logic no doubt had its in ception in the fertile brain of our 'president at the time the w. k. "new freedom:' was put to work. However, thla is not an essay on ancient history, so we will return to the subject a,t hand by explaining that the president wanted it known that the European war then raging, was a bit common, to say trie least. It simply wasn't ''being "done", .by Americans that year. As the French have It, it wasn't quite de rlguer. At other tlmss he chose equally delightful themes. "No more un- ligbteousness in Germany than in the entente." after the murder of Edith Cavcll is one that will not down, to say nothing of his famous ' edict ahdut being "neutral in word as well a In deed." under 'ordlniiv circumstances a Ay one who would deliberately drag these family skeletons out for dis play ought to be shot. unt men a aemooratio national commltteaV and a democratic press put on so much "side' 'as to intimate tnat they f6el constrained to apolo gize to the world for the actions of tne republican opposition, it is our turn to assert that if the foreign pol icy ,of the" United States ever wan dered into such asinine pathways as it has under this administration, we will Quit As this writer sees it. the United Plates need not apologize to the world tor 'anything, but the demo cratic party will do well if It suc ceeds in living down some of Us bad breaks In the next 50 years. , E. SOPHAGUS." I More About Ireland. Omaha. Oct. 5.-To the Editor of The Bee: As a reader of your valu able paper, I would like to use a little- space to correct a few state ments made by" Charles E. Edwards about the north of Ireland... I think I Ojught to know a little more about It than he does as I was born and lived there for 20 years. Mr. Ed waids says that Ulster is the best part of Ireland, real farms, swamp cleared, etc That is all true, and that la why the Scotch and English Mcked1 it out for their settlement when they came across the rhough." That's Just why the Bloans, Elltnons. Jamisons and hun dreds of others are oecupying tho lively farms onca owned by our Irish forefathers, who were thrown out of their homes and given a "hungry" mountain farm Instead, sometimes Kiven nothing; simply because the Orangemen could give the landlord a few fat turkeys through the wlnterj as payment for his "Kindness" in making- the above exchange. Mr. Edwards says there Is no loafing or boozing, all are so, ambitious, he thinks. I want to tell htm that ha has never seen a drrfnken Orangeman oi he would thln different, because In the north of Ireland, on July 12, you coufcl see men by the, score both drunk and disorderly, but never too drunk npt to be abln to curso tho pope Soino of our' f IneHt and best neighbors were Protestants, but not Orangemen. MRS. HAN O'CONNOR. 2608 Fowler A Venue.' These chilly mornings you should fire up a little with good GOAL Tha Kind Yon Get From the UPDIKE LUMBER & COAL CO. Phone Walnut 300. many the arterial wialls are thick ened. In. many there is considerable1 acidosis. This explalnSRnumbndsa and other disturbances, of circulation. - S. It la: In the first place infection may get through the .unbroken skin. In the second, place gangrene may lesult from, the condition of the- blood, the blood vessel walls and the tissue. , ' One Day Blanket Sale . . i t Blankets Priced at Bowen's - Enabling Everyone 1 to Buy. kit over shipment of blankets and comforts has greatly over stocked this department, so we shall set aside one day (Thurs day, Oct. 7th) at which time blankets and comforts will be on sale at prices enabling house wives to secure new, warm and comfy blankets and comforts at practically wholesale prices. It will no longer be necessary for you to try and get along an4 other winter with your old Man- kets, but come to the greater' Bowen store and secure enough blankets and comforts to redress every bed in your home. Look for announcement in Wednesday's papers. m pi BtYTI An Observation. . , , The 110,000,000 cards needed to record the population of the United States in the new cen sus' made a stack more than 10 miles high. With out machinery it would be almost impossible to manage a census nowadays. It took seven years Uncomplete and publish the census of 1890, and nine years to complete the census of 1880. By means of electrical mechanism which punches something like 4,000,000 cards a day, the cards are now sorted and tabulated in weeks instead of years. The device also saves expense and eliminates error. Indianapolis News. - ralo 1 saW" Jfi No Chance for Rats or Mice IT is logical to build office furni A ture of steel, because steel of fers convenience, strength, dura bility and protection. The choice of progressive business concerns it GF A listed It is the complete line filing systems, desks, tables,' safes, shelving, counter heights and busies. i GF Allitetl cannot burn rats or mice cannot gntw it, neither heating systems nor climate can affect it. Let us give you more Information about this 'Complete Line GFAIhtttb Phone Tyler 3000 for ' representative. ORCHARD &WILHELM GO' on m - 1 '- - ' MasonWimlm occupies a. really unique place among all pianos. j . Certain utw ical or mecKanical iiri-J provements endow it i with" a Beauty of borvA I responsiveness bPeictiox 'and a resonance grow jrvg more ana more dejigktul witk years or loving "care such, as can he found ixv no other piano in tne world, bar none. Jdus do show you whv:. 1513 Douglas Street The Art and Music Store 1 Caruso Concert October 12 HAVE YOU NOTICED that ' HOTEL ROME CAFE is now open a la Carte Service also 75c Luncheon $1.50 Table d'Hote Dinner 5:30 to 8 P. M.( . ' ; ROME MILLER jii I in . i Inn i I I II ii in !! IV in III! Mil I I jl aVIti a a ci n, f C Trade MaA Registered PLAYER ROLLS are Better For Example: These Rolls '$lMjJach 1198 As the. Years Go . Drift ing By. - V, 1206 Hawaiian Twifight. 1208 March Militare. ' " " 1201 My Rose of Yesterday. 1210 Pretty Little . Cinderella. 1200 )Vhy Did You Leave Me? 1220 T-AUce Blue Gown. -.-1224 'Down the Trail to. Home Sweet Home. - ' 1221 I'd Love to Fall Asleep v " and 'Wake Up in My " ' - Mammy's Arms. , . 1165 The Lost Nest. 1222 I'm in Heaven When I'm in JJy Mother's Arms. - We pay postage on shipments of $3.00 or mora on lest amount add 5c a roii. - ; If you can't come in Phone Douglas . : 1973. ' '.... , . fThe House of Pleasant .Dealings" MltML'S V II Fifteenth and ' Harney, Omaha Have You An Rainy days come from time to ' time. Prudenjt folks provide them selves with umbrellas which they keep conveniently located to pro tect them frortl tha storms when they comev Be prudent; provide yourself with "an umbrella in the form of a Savings Account in the Savings Department of the First National Bank So you will be protected against the storms of life that sometimeorother, without warn-., ing, overtake all of us. The time to prepare for the storm is while the sun is still shining. Am S.yV -fry first National iBankof Omaha WW aK Li Phone Douglas 2793 Wi Ifll njktip Officio OMAHA PRINTING COMPANY 'EJUS i . - n n . ! C7 . rfA sSw"" I K3 av aaaaaaa-aaaeaaa-a M- - - T -m I nani tea MSi .fW,.iir"-ri Tf7r rs rii - , - - - .V-aawTava..-iarii"ai CCHMRcwt Printers LrnfOGRApHERs steel die Embosser iOosc.tcAr.otviccs CV .-ff..a-.rp. lAJr 1111 r . jaj.. A