Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 13, 1920, Page 8, Image 8

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    THE BEE: OMAHA. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 13. 1920.
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The Omaha Bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
THE BEE
NELSON
PUBL1SHINO COM PANT.
B. UPDIKE. Publiahar.
MEMBERS OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tb Awocutxl ttm. of which TIM Ba It a mamtxr,
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alualnl wtltM to U4 for publicities i4 all 41
cfadlua la II or not MlMrwtn cndlM In thli Mmr. ud
ilinaoh
to th
ImI mm publMwil hln. All rlfhu of BubllcaUaa ot oar paoltl
BEE TELEPHONES
PriTtU Brueh Sie!)MM. Aril trip j T.I.. IfmTWi
tha txpananot Ptrwn WuUO. 7,er VW
Far NliU Caile Aftar 10 T. M.I
JUitorlal Diwnnl Trlr lONlL
x Orralttlo IXptrttiMfit ........... Trltr 100SL
Adnrtlihnl Jirun - - Tiler 100(1,
OFFICES OF THE BEE
Mils Ofrv: iTto tnd Ftrnia .
Cowl! Bluff IS Bootl St. I Iwu Sid 1311 R St.
Ont-af-Tewa OfficMi
Kw Turk at ntlh Am I Wuhlmtna J811 0 it
Chleaao " atanr Bid. I Pull rraaoa 4M Sim St. Honor
The Bet Platform
1. New Union PuMir Station.
2. Continued 'improvement of (km Ne
braska Highways, including 'tho pave
ment of Main Thoroughfare leading
into Omaha with a Brick Surface.
3. A hart, lew-rate Waterway from tha
Corn Bait to tha Atlantic Ocean.
4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with
City Manager form of Coveratnaat.
THE ISSU IN NEBRASKA.
, So far as the campaign has progressed in
Nebraska there is noted a determined and per
. sistent effort on part of the democrats to raise
side- issues, to befog the minds of the voters
if such a thing can be done. All sprts of in
. determinate, and collateral topics are being
lugged, in, and the assistance of the Non-Partisan
League, masquerading as an independent
party, is being invoked to further fortunes of the
' democratic candidates. ,
So fa,r as national issues are involved, Xe
braskans are chiefly and properly concerned with
certain phases vital to themselves.. They are in
'earnest in their desire for peace, but they want
it, only with guarantees for the safety of their
own land.l To secure this, they are averse to any
scheme that will tie them uft with the quarrels
of other peoples, giving to the United States
no opportunity to decide for itself on the merits
of the issue. Forty-six thousand Nebraska men
- responded to the call, and all "thje way from
Camp Cody to Argonne Wood they did their
bit. They do not want what they fought for
risked in the uncertain venture that promises
only to involve us still deeper in European af
fairs from which we fain would be free.
Nebraska also has a stake in the congres
sional elections. Six members of the present
congress are seeking a deserved re-election. If
the voters really want, a continuance of the ef- i
tort to restore American affairs to a sure foun-'
datton for national prosperity, a completion of
the task of clearing away the wreckage left by
the democratic administration of wate, already
well begun, they -will certainly vote; to return
Messrs. Reavis, Jefferis, Evans,' McLaughlin,
Andrews and Kinkatd to congress.
With regard to state affairs, the1 line is drawn
with equal sharpness. The democrats are most
aggressively attacking, the existing administra
tion because of its greatest achievement, that of
bringing business management to the state's af
fairs. Their misleading charges of extravagance
have fallen, for it has been shown conclusively
that the only increase in cost has been that re
sulting from the higher prices' that had to be
paid for supplies and the increase in wages
. necessary to enable state employes to meet the
advanced cost of living. Expenditures on ac
count of good roads, for maintenance of schools,
and for the construction of a new state house
are such as would have had to be made, no
matter who sat at Lincoln as officers of the
state. It is manifest, then, that no charge of
waste .or undue increase in' tax burden can
rightly be laid against the republicans in office,
; So far as the Code bill is concerned, we want
to repeat, -it was put on the books as law in
redemption of a specific pledge made by the
republican party in its platform of 1918. Dur-
. jng the short time the law has been in force it
has proved its usefulness, and justifies the pre;
dictions made for its operations. It is, perhaps,
subject to amendment in a few minor particu
lars, but the principle it contains is the correct
one,' and is being widely adopted for the hand
ling of public business. To reject it now is to
takt a step backward. -
No confusion should exist in the mind of any
Nebraska voter as to the issue. It is on national
affairs a choice between America or the world
first; for the state, the continuance of a strictly
'business management of public affairs, or a re
turn to the old .wasteful system of boards and
commissions, with their excessive payrolls and
inefficiency of operation. Buncombe that quote
scriptural texts and sets the' names of George
Washington and Eugene V. Debs irt brackets as
patriots should not be permitted to obscure theJ
essential, vital issue in Nebraska. - ,
To the Unregistered Voters.
This is a notice to all qualified voters who
have not registered as yet. They have until
Friday'of next week to get, on the list of voWs'
, for the November election. Unless they are so
listed they will not be permitted to vote. The'
law is explicitand inexorable. The election is
a most important event in the history of Amer
ica's great republic. It will not only decide who
is to hold office, state and national, but it will
have a direct bearing on the immediate future
of the country through the choice of those pub
lic servants, and for all the future because it
will settle one great question of public policy.
If you have an opinion" one way or the other on
the issues, if you have a choice between the
candidates, you should express it at the polls.
Ho civic duty is more imperative than that of
voting. All who are entitled to vote have not
yet registered. Do not put off this important
-preliminary u4il too late. Go today and get
vour name on the list. ' -
A Night's Ride From Omaha.
New pride in Nebraska inevitably results
from a visit to the western sections. It is
easy to get the idea from living in the eastern
part of the state that out west is a bleak waste
of ' sandhills and buffalo grass cursed with
infrequent rain and an oversupply of grass
hoppers, i .
A night's ride from Omaha wonld open the"
eyes of eastern Nebraska. Daybreak Svould
, show corn fields rich?" enough to satisfy any
farmer of the Missouri valley, wheat produced
in vsuch profusion that it cannot be moved,
and crops of potatoes and sugar beets that
suggest there are some things the west can
1 raise better than the east. The sandhills are
covered with grass, and battle range the pas
tures along the railroad. Nature hat seen to
it that not all the land is put under the plow,
but has compelled a diversified agriculture that
does not stake all on any one product.
. Borders of trees surround the farmhouses,
many of which are homes with practically all
the important'eonveniences of city life. The
towns are neither bare nor crude, but filled 'with
I a people hustling' with their, heads as well as
i.i-i- . . . i.'i.
ineir ieet. ine streets;' are pavea, tne nign
schools are, as, good as anything back home.
The value of the yearly agricultural produc
tion of Nebraska is nearly nine times that of
1897. Last year it reached the sum of more than
one billion dollars. In this increase the people
of the western part of the state played a leading-
part M
Who Owns This Country?
From the soapboxes arises a vociferous ap
peal in the name of the proletariat, and one of
the favorite stock arguments of the fervid so
cialist orators is that the great bulk of "the
wealth of this country is held by only a hnndiiil
of its people. The answer to this is easy. It is
given every day, but is not hearkened to as it
should be, Twenty-one 'million Americans sub
scribed -for $18,000,000,000 of Liberty bonds and
Victory notes. 'At least 75 per cent of the
original purchasers still hold these Securities? a
fairly respectable amount of capital held by a
considerable group. Nearly $900,000,000 of War
Savings. Stamps are yet in' the hands of their
buyers, another group fir from insignificant. So
much for the government securities. The Penn
sylvania Railroad company reports its stock in
the hand of 186,000, stockholders, 46,000 of
whom are ' women. The.' American Telephone
and Telegraph company, states that 19,000 of its
employes own stock in the company, and that
46,000 of tne others ar purchasing shares on
easy payments. United States Steel is , in a
considerable measure, owned by its employes;
blocks of jacking house shares have been par
chased by men on the pay roll, and in motor
and other big industrial concerns men who work
for the companies are' fast becoming share
holders. ' , : '
This does not take into consideration the
ownership that flows front the investments of
savings banks and life insurance companies in
the securities of industrial enterprises of all
sorts, in which every depositor or policy holder
has a direct interest. Even fraternal companies
are concerned in this, for the surplus of these
institutions ' must be . wisely invested for the
benefit of the members. Trades unions, with
money in their treasuries, hare invested in
bonds and otherwise for the proper use of their
funds, thus giving' even" their radical members a
stake in the general welfare as capitalists. .
Some 14,000,000 farms in the United States
are in the hands of private owners, while all
through the land in city; town, village and ham
let are homes of all kinds, owtred by their oc
cupants. The number arid value of these is not
computed, although the forthcoming census may
give some figures on them. However the next
time you hear a radical ranting about this coun
try being owned by the. "capitalist" class, just
remember that the definition includes every
body who has a bank account, a life insurance
policy, owns his. heme or his farm, a Liberty,
bond or a Victory note, a War Savings Stamp, a
share of stock in any sort of a going concern,
even a co-operative store, or holds a member
ship card in any1 onevof several trades unions.
If you eliminate the capitalists from among the
people of he vUnited States, the proletarians left
will be lonesonie.
Those 26,000,000 Women Voters.
Woman suffrage is 'working out all right,
according to that aged observer of political
straw's, Chauncey M. Depew. Once each year
it is customary for . this fine old gentleman
to be given extended space to air his views
in the New York newspapersi' This time
Mr. Depew was celebrating his 86th birtHday
anniversary, and from ,the summit of his age
felt entitled to dispense w-it and wisdom on
such subjects as women's right , to luxurious
styles, ase ball corruption and housing short
age. ' . ' -. '
"Women suffrage is working out all right'
he said. "Nine-tenth of the married women
will vote as their husbands tell them. The
other one-tentR will tell their husbands how;
to vote. 'But the single women will vote as
they please." f
Women suffrage is" working out all right,
but "not in any such way as Chauncey Depew
lightly asserts. The almost equal division of the
political meetings between women and men
attendants signifies a throughtful interest in
public affairs among the new voters. There
is no question of anyone being stold how to
vote, but the decision, it is fair to assert, will
be made only upon due consideration. The
woman or man who does not take encjugh
interest in the campaign to make up his own
mind will not hive-enough interest to take
him to the polls.
Under the woman suffrage amendment, more
than 26,000,000 women will be entitled (to vote in
the coming election. The estimated number of
men voters is 29,500,000. In Nebraska there are
327,000 women citizens and 388,000 men citizens.
Iowa has .664,000 women eligible to cast their
Ballot, and 729,000 men. Not all of the women,
ndr all of the men, will vote, but it is to be
depended upon that in the case of Joth sexes,
those; who go to the polls will know exactly
what they -want, and not feel any pressure or
dictation,
Democratic newspapers will have a lot to
take back when Harding is elected. For in
stance, there is the assertion that republican vic
tory would make the cash register the national
emblem. It will be interesting also to se an
editor eat a statement such as this: "It holds
us before thisworld and before ourselves as a
nation of recreants and cowards, heartless and
without' conscience ' , ;
Can it be that prohibition is extending to
Germany,, and that drinking there is going out
of fashion? Here is President Ebert going to
court, and making a comic paper detract the
statement that he had" been under the influence
of alcohol. '
Secretary Baker's discovery of who invented
the League of Nations is fit to go along with his
classification c?f Washington's soldiers, made in
the last Wilson campaign.
Julius, Barnes says '.'school is out" for war"
prices.' Teacher must have kept some after
school.
TristobaKTolou wouldn't know the placs now. j
A Line 0' Type or Two
Nv ta tha Lisa, Ut the auiaa tall wharo thay may.
A MUNICH writer who charged that Presi
dent Ebert was a souse has acknowledged his
error and agreed. to pay the costs of the suit.
As we remember, T. R. obtained a judgment
of 6 cents against a Michigan editor, but we
think he stood his share of the costs. A libel
u:t is like a wrist watch, the upkeep is. the big
item. v '
EVEN the democrats, says Secretary Colby,
are apprehensive that there may be something
in the republican claim that the country desires
a change. This apprehension is, we think, wi'l
founded.' Eight years of either party creates
in the people a longing, as Cicero observed,
not so much to change things as to overturn
them.
"LA garantie qui vous est donnee veut dire
aue lesvEtats-Unis feront passer de ce cote de
1 ocean leur armee et leur flotte."-From the
French minutes,.
That sounds specific; but as Mr. Wilson is
not a French scholar they may have put some
thing else over .on him.
v Cabboges and Kings and Things.
Sir:-, Romeo's, alsd, was a porch campaign
. If everybody Would afcree to buy only one
pair of spoes p. year, we mlghP alleviate the
paper shortage. v
Have, shock-absorbers Jjebn invented for
home hootch? Why not a toy ball head guard
to soften the Impact with tfie celling?
Mr. Cox has -finished his swing around he
circle. lie accomplished the circling, but we,
won't swear that he swung anything.
Oh, a merry life Is the colyum con's. Twice
have I had comrades In the clanging mart stop
me with, "Ha! ha! Dltf you see the one B. I
T. had this morning?" and then note one of
this writer's contributions. Pretty soft, as An
tony remarked upon sampling some of Cleo's
homemade wine. Q. A. ( R. ,
"FOR SALE Understood typewriter in per
fect condition." Savanna Times-Journal.
Usually, by the time one is understood it
requires more or less repair. ,
RELATIVES ARB SO TRYING.
(From the Sheboygan Press.)
Miss Marie Hackett has returned to Mil
waukee, where she Is resting at the Blue
Mound sanitarium after visiting with her
'uncle end aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Adolf
Pflster,! here.
"ALTHOUGH authors are not more of a
treat to us than legs were to the London
busman . we hunted up Lewis Hind, in New
York to tell him how much joy he gave up
wncn-edUing the London Academy, between
1896 and 1903. ' There have been two periods
in our fitful fever when it really mattered
whether a periodical issued promptly or sus
pended publication. The first was the days
when 'we waited on the stationer's steps for the
New York Ledger, that we might continue the
aerial by Sylvanus Cobb, jr., and the.other was
when we took in the London Academy, begin
ning in the late 'nineties. Mr. Hind has con
sidered the 'nineties in a longish introduction to
Stephens Phillips' "Christ in Hades," and we
shall acquire the book for this introduction, for
we never were able to run a temptrature over
Phillips.
Cot It Oat and lloW It to the tight.
Sir: In Wyoming we camped over night in
a deserted caoin. a iormer occupa.ni uu
mended a broken window pane with a piece of
the Tribune dated 1911. It was the editorial
noA and chnvAH ft nnrflnn of thA T,ine. MoHG.
the guide, read It over, and shifting a meditative
cut of fine cut, "'lowed that some one musta
been tryin' to see through that feller's Jokes."
HERE is one. Watson, that you may he able
to throutrh. From the Wisconsin State
journal: "Wanted Small furnished apartment,
3 business women. Bad. 6499.
AND THIS IS SOMEWHAT INTRIGUING, f
. fFrom the Edgewood, la., Journal.)
The Dometlc Science girls have various
sises and kinds f buttonholes.
"HYPOCRISY practiced in behalf of Cox
in 1916 was revealed by Schan.tz." Dayton Item.
A tenuous wheeze might be whittled out of that.
1 ritornelle" -
Tlitzli the minstrel x
thrummed his guitar
. to a dainty tune N
of K?ulamh'zar
that sang
on the strings
of his lute
TUUlI rippled a lingering bar
till the murmuring strings were mute
and the lisping moan
ot his lute-guitar
where is tne waroung
of Yosme's flute
Tclsslngly laughing Yosme
CL fitdT
smiles with the sunset
on Khulamh'zar
yesterday x
Yosme kissed me
Allarh!
alas for- yesterday
fled so far
with her lingering lips
that are mute
Tlltzle ripples
his sighing guitar
or is it tears
that are dripping
Allahr! ,., i
tinkling the strings
of his lute ' . riquarius
. & TTTTW mnrr accents, acute. Brave, a
doghouse, go with the above, but the only trend
ot modern verse, wnicn me compoauis mwu
able to go along with is its motion from left to
right. As a left-to-righter, Riquarius is easily
our favorite pecan.
SIGNS OF THE TIMES.
On Forty-second street, New York: "Low
shoes for men greatly reduced." On the floor of
a hotel In Centervllle, Mich.: "Laaies eeumg
Room." In a hotel at Cedarsburgh, Wis.:
Please do not use towels for cleaning snoes or
removing rouge." In the Colorado School or
Mines: "Lost Fountain pen. . uisappearmg pen
type."
"DEMOCRATS Meat Tuesday Evening."
Elkhorn Independent. The "part that went over
the fence last." , . ' .
YQJJ KNOW THE DANCE.
(From the September Tape.)
. Miss Matilda Shiver won the loving cup ,
In a dancing contest. A very beautiful sil
ver cup, too. Congratulations. , Matilda.
HOUSEHOLD HINT. .
Sir: Avlse the Immortals who mnv VA oV.
Ing new wallpapers after the moving that my
apartment agent sent, me first to Mr. Bunck of
Calumet avenfle and then to Mr. Bosch of Wa-
Dasn avenue. m. A. C. G. :
MEMBERS of the- Academy of Immortals
who may be planning to visit Colorado next
summer should not overlook Spruce Tree Camp
at Mancos. The proprietor is Oddie L. Jeep.
' B. L. T:
A "Novel" Mode of Travel.
Four women from Yosilanti have nrocured a
horse and a four-seated open carriage and are
driving at a leisurely joggling pace through
southern Michigan on their vacation. It is not
knowd how they happened to hit upon this new
method. Detroit News. - '
No Authorization Necessary.
G. O. Pto Let Women Decide. Headline.
The G. O. P. probably will find that women will
decide whether it lets them or not Kansas City
Times.'
. MAYFLOWER.
Tomorrow is another land
Toward which we sail today,
So let us be a Mayflower band
Upon our pilgrun way.
And this shall fye our mark of fame i
If well we sail tbe sea; ,
That others after us shall claim
They joined our company, t
We shall not konw that we are great,
We see not why nor how, - .
And yat the folks may celebrate
Thcee hundreds years from now.
, McLdburgh Wilson" in New York Sun.
How to Keep Well
By DR. W. A. VANS '
Quaatlons concarnlnf hyitana, aanllatlen and aravantloii of cUtaaaa, ubmltttd
to Dr. Evana by raadera of Tha Beo, will ba anawarad paraonalty, aubjact ta
proper limitation, wbirt a atampad, addraaaad anvalopa ta andoaad. Dr.
Evana will not maka dlafnoaia or praacriba for individual diaeaaea. Addraaa
lattara in cara ef Tha Bca. '
Copyright, 1920, if Dr. W. A. Evans. , N
MUMPS.
mal. The quarantine period for
mumps is a long oiui.
Even a more helpful suggestion
was one which Dr. Hess made sev
eral years afro. Mumps broke out in
a children's home with which he
was oonnected. He drew one-fifth
to one-quarter of an ounce of blood
from a child recently recovered from
mumps and injected It into the mus
Mumps is generally regarded as a
disease of minor consequence. "I
never have known a second attack,"
Kerley says, "a relapse, or a death
rom the disease."
Nevertheless army sanitarians did
not look with complacency on
mumps. They knew that In all wars
mumps ranks high as a cause o dis
ability. In 1915 ' mumps ranked
fifth among tho causes of ' disability
in the' United States army.
I have known of a school being
broken up and 4he students sent
home for the remainder of the ses
sion by reason of an outbreak of
mumps. , The managers of children's
homes .and asylums and the propri
etors of boardiiiK schools know that
mumps periodically greatly disturbs
the routine of such institutions.
Mumps affects people of all ages
but children between 5 and 15 are
most susceptible. It is milder and
freer from complications in children
who have not reached puberty.
The -cause of the diseaso .is sup
posed to be a coccus. Drs. Woll-
cles of a child
disease. Seventeen children thus in
jected escaped mumps, although
freely exposed to it. This method
of vaccination should be especially
helpful in Institutions.
Colic Hard To Avert.
Mrs. C. A. P. writes: 1. "Will you
please tell me what can be done for
my babe of 1 1-2 months old? She
has so much gas in her stomach and
bowels that she does not sleep dur
ing the day and only a little while
at a time through the night. She
weighed 10 1-2 pounds at birth and
now weighs 13 1-2. I have had her
Lto several physicians and they only
prescribe l teaspoon milk or mag
nesia after each bottle. Magnesia
helps keep the bowels open, but does
not help the gas. She cries most all
the time. .
2. "How much and how often can
orange juice be given a baby this
stein and' Herb produced an Inflam
mation of the parotid gland by in
jecting a culture of the coccus into
the duct. As is the case with
measles, the disease becomes infec
tious, very early In fact, before the
appearance of typical symptoms.
This fact makes a recent discov
ery of Dr. D. M. Cowie of impor
tance. In examining the inside of the
cheeks of mumps patients he found
a characteristic mumps, spot. He
separates the cheek' from the teeth
with the handle of a tablespoon. In
cases of mumps he finds a charac
teristic small spot opposite the sec
ond molar tooth of the upper Jaw.
At this point, if mumps B"e present.
age?'
REPLY.
1 1. How to prevent colic in babies
ls not an easy question to answer.
Try feeding her less. Maybe you
feed her too frequently. Try feeding
her every four hours. Maybe the
milk in the bottle feeding is too rich.
Nine parts milk
about right.
2. A dessertspoonful
spoonful once
he finds a small elevated, usually
pale, spot about one-tenth of an inch
In diameter and .with a depressed
red center.
Around this vhere may be red
patches here and there. This spot
wtth the red center is the ,opening
of the duct which drains the parotid
gland the glandL'which is. enlarged
in mumps. (
Cowie says this spot becomes
changed in celor and stands up like
a teat before the appearance of any
other symptom of mumps. Other
writers have said if the interior of
the inouth is closely examined signs
of mumps will be found there sev
eral days before any other snptom
of the' disease appears. . In other
words, mumps starts as a redness
of the mouth ond throat and the
Infection later travels up thf duct
to the gland. -
The hopeful aspect of these obser
vations is that they indicate a way
to diagnose the disease before many
people have been exposed to it
When a case of mumps has been
diagnosed the cfciUl must be kept
away from other children until the
enlargements have returned to nor
CADILLAC
Recognized everywhere
' for its '
PERMANENCY '
of
VALITE
J. H. Hansen Cadillac Go.
Omaha Lincoln
r,waW crri , .... m u
1 II! I peoplejsvlTL) il
' demand flavor, ;. 1 in
kfi V Cuality. and. 1 I lp
. SS - Known eveiywhei-binjit iBll M
VfeSTSJ x by the case for ijoilt home. Ml
Mk Anheuser-Busch JKf!
' f8! Ilk 1 StLouis
QMjlltA Visitors cotdially invjted f
Tpll ' Paxton& Gallagher Co. V- tJS
V lIlW Distributors, . Omaha' V if
; : . . , , J
. ; ; ; ; - -v.- . VI
"Too Much America.
Omaha. Oct. . To the Editor of
Tha Hee: On Thursday evening in
I going home on the street
aufiiuuig iiiu mrun.-imv.ura
rally at the Auditorium and after
hearing the most solid address I
have listened to for many a day. I
heard one young man on the street
car ask another young man what he
thought of the address of Senator
Harding. Hnjxplled. "too much
America," witlT a foreign accent
Such a man does not deserve to
live in America, nnd he should go
back to the country he came from
and made to stay there the rest of
his life. . .
I hold the same views that are
held by Senator Ho rah and it Is my
opinion that 75 per cent of the peo
ple of the United States are today
opposed to any league of nations.
This country has prospered and
grown grea,t for 144 years witUout
being tied up with the nations of
Europe and Asia, and we can get
along very well by ourselves for the
next 144 years.
It has been a bource of wonder to
me that The -Cee and' some other
republican papers do not make a
more vigorous fight for the election
of the republican national ticket,
when there are so many vulnerable
points of attack that can he brought
against the Wilson administration.
that had not had thel
Had the republican party Deen in
power for the last eight years and
had been guilty of the yast waste
and extravagance that we have wit
nessed in the last three years, the
democrats would be making the
most stupendous political fight
against us that tho country has ever
witnessed. The war cost is at least
I
5, 000,000,000 more than
have cost . had we had such a man as
Hughes or Harding at the head of
our national affairs. Yet with the
vast waste of public money, the e
publican press, outside of the Na
tional Republican, scarcely mentions
Lt in their columns. I suppose most
of the editors take lt for granted
that the people of the United States
are so tired of the Wilson admlnis
tration thpt they wll) vote to cast
to 11 parts water Is
)
to
a table-
n day. 1
SOUTH HIGH
NIGHT SCHOOL
v . - ,
23rd and J Streets
Opens October 11, 1920
V 7:30 P.M.
FREE COURSES IN
Accounting
Advertising
Bookkeeping
Business English
Business Correspondence
Chemistry X
Cooking
Commercial Law -1
. Drawing Freehand
'Drawing Mechanical
Electricity
English
Mathematics
Penmanship
Salesmanship
Sewing
Shorthand
Spanish
Spelling
Telegraphy
Typewriting
Wood Work
)
-School for Foreigners
Other subjects when a sufficient number register. Registra
tion" Room 8. Phono South 2321. ,V
Classes will meet on Monday, Wednesday and Thursday eve
nings. You are urged to register this week, if possible, but
you may enter on any. evening during the term.
Ill I ' I I ti.- A, ..j m.,.:- . , . U
th democratic administration
of power on tha second day of irfcl
month. , .
If the vote was as free nnd un
trammeled In the south as lt Is In
Nebraska, I doubt if Cox would car
ry any moro states than did Taft In
1912. It is to bo hoped that the
hundreds of thousands jf white men
who were compelled to go to
France and fight for Wilson's "democracy"-
from the southern states,,
will arise in their mjBlrt in the next
few wars and demand the right of
suffrage from the southern oli
garchy that keeps them from vot
ing for fear they will bo ousted frjtu
the power they are not entitled ta
have. 1 -
Cox had better see into the ollgarv
chy that runs tho southern states
today. Instead of howling about an ,
Imaginary senatorial oligarchy. Let
us make the majority for Harding
bo tremendous thm no more extrava-
gant administrations will ever win.
in our country' again.
FRANK A. AGNEW.
enrs after
it would
In vain nave pia.no -
makers striven to
produce a piano equal -
to tne matchless
injks superlative tone
beauty and truly in"
comparable resonance.
Ike. famous "tension
resonator of the Mason
& Hamlin (exclusive be
cause patented) makes
it proof against sue
cessfcil imitation also .
prooCagainst tKatr
deterioration which is
the ate of eweryother
piano in the xtrorld -without
excerption.
Our Prices on
m
Pianos and Players
challenge the world. Whereas ne
cessities have increased in cost
from 60 to, 200 per cent, our
Pianos and Players have but a
fraction of this percentage in
price or terms. The $5 per day
laDoring man can more easily
supply lys family, today with ou
low-priced instruments than h
could when earning one-half this?
sum.
Just call and see -hat $363 will"
buy on $15 monthly payments.'
1513 Douglas Street
The Art and Muaic Store
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