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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1920)
t, e f r- The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THE RKB MJBLISHINQ COMPANY. NCL60N B. UPDIKE, Publiahtr. MEMIKM OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TM AmoIUMI rrssi, W vhlck Ths Bt It a rantxr. ts u clntl miiUm I ths m for publlrstton of til ms aupatahss cndltsd Id II of not MIrlM rndlud In Uitt hpw. ml slss tk low) atws publish! btrain. All t1SU of DufcUMUoa of oar teseltl dliMltlM tl rwtrrtd. . BE TELEPHONES PrlttW trtacb. Ktaltant. Art ff TwIav. 1 OOrt tu jMtutwal oc IttMi Viand. ' . lyiwiwv ' Per Nlekt CeHs After 10 P. M.i KditorUI DtrurtiMflt .......... ClrnUstlsa Iirtmit ......... admtitiaf poptrtmat ......... OFFICES OF THE BEE TyUr lOoX Tl )0OL Tylat WOOL lltln Offtest irtk Md runts 11, Boom St I loutu kidi . Onl-l-Tva Of f less t Coaadl Blaffi Sit K St. KswToit CbicMO tM Fifth at. I WtMilBfton isii a at fltflser rlta. I Parts franco llO'Kna fit. Bonots, The Bee's Platform 1. New Union Passenger Station. , 2. Continual imprerement of tha Na breska Highways, including tha pare mant t)f Main Thoroughfares leading Ufa Omaha with a Brick Surface. 3. A short, law-rata Waterway from tka Corn Bait to tka Atlantic Oaaan. 4. Home Rule Ckartar for Omaka, with City Manager farm of Government. FARMERS AND FEDERAL RESERVE. The farmers have a genuine grievance. They have on hand the fruits of a wonderful harvest, and are facing a falling market. Lower prices on food products mean' to them lessened profits and in many cases actual loss. This latter-eon-titigency may be obviated to some degree if not entirely by a reduction in the price of things the farmer has to buy. Unless this is brought gbout, , a serious and unfair disparity will be presented in the market. At the moment the farmers place the blame on the Federal 'Reserve bank, ytch has ex erted its power of control over credit in a man- ner they consider detrimental to their interests. It is unfortunate, and in a large sense unwise, that the first step towards deflation should have been taken, as it has been, at the txpense of the farmer. To be sure, the great consuming public welcomes the prospect of cheaper food, for it must eat, whether it wears clothes or not, but the problem has another angle, and deserves consideration, from that point. When the farmer's purchasing power is reduced, and it surely is when his return from crops is cur- , tailed, general business is adversely affected.' Thus the blow that lands on agriculture re bounds, to affect general industry. It is not alone the farmer, however, who has been affected by the ait of the Federal Reserve board in putting on the brakes. Other branches of industry And commerce have felt the effects of the slewing down process, not so immediately, perhaps, but just as certainly. Recovery from an orgy of high prices, complicated with a spree, of speculation, is not pleasant to view, but it is inevitable. Readjustment is under way now, and' the business of the country is being Yet down from its war time stilts as rapidly but as care fully as possible, to the end that its fabric suffer as little as possible during the operation. Some relief for the cotton growers appears . in the proposal of big German concerns to pur chase 2,000,000 balesn nine-months paper. Such a move has its attractive phases, for it not only '-" promises an outlet for a large amount of cotton that must find a market somewhere, but will also ensure the revival of industry in . Ger many, providing employment for idle workers there, who most be fed," and consequently will call for some of the surplus food of the country. , There is the beneficent circle. The main question is whether the German paper is bankable. That will be for the Federal Reserve board to decide - in a general way, although the interest of private ' capital is more direct than collateral In fact, there are several avenues along which flie Federal Reserve board can move to assist the agricultural industry of the United States in its present predicament -aside from that of ex tension pf credit on warehouse receipts. But the greatest relief to the public as well is to the farmer will come when the value of a bushel , of corn or a bushel of wheat is more equitably reflected in exchange for commodities the grower must purchase. That is the real measure of value, and not how many dollars and cents. v - V ' Buttoned Pockets, Right and Wrong. Squandering money is beginning to be looVed upou as a form of vulgarity, and thrift is be-. coming more and more respectable. There is the necessity, however, of distinguishing be tween thrift and false economy. If the world should button its pocket.; and buy nothing but the barest necessities of life, many industries producing useful articles would be forced to shut down and "at least half of us would , he without work. " It is true that every penny wasted is a direct ' injury to the community. In the last few years, for instance, it was demonstrated that every ton of coal unnecessarily consumed lessened . the already sh6rt supply and raised the. price At the same time it is true that thrift does not consist in Jiving in a cold house or not wearing clothes suited to the season's temperatures. It is lack1 of economy to go without sufficient nourishing food or to read-with poor lights , to cut down the bill for electricity or gas. . Men who appear at their offices n soiled clothing may save on laundry bills, but ,are the losers in the long run through the bad impression created by their lack of neatness. Thrift demands the jpurchase of wearing ap parel, furniture, tools and utensils of good qual ity. Cheap,' shoddy goods soon have to be Inmt, while a subitantial article even when . worn and old remains useful and carries good appearance. Xor can it be said that one who spends freely for books', pictures or travel is necessarily thriftless. If one obtains enjoy ment in this way, and is able to set aside in addition something for a rainy day, this may be a good investment An example , of penny wisdom and pound foolishness is seen in those school districts where ' the wages of teachers are kept so low that there is constant change in the staff, with resulting failure of students to pass, causing their educa tion to be prolonged at added cost to the tax payers. Business men who refuse to make im provements fhat will add to their productive capacity are not thrifty, nor is .the employer who requires his clerks to stand continuously, when they might be sitting down at odd times and thus conserving their energy. A washwomen in Chicago died at-her uib " only the other day. In her stocking was found more than $2,000, and in a sayings bank, $5,000. These were her, savings, obtained at 'the cost of a long life in which she had denied herself sufficient food, clothing or rest. It was per haps her intention to live her last years in ease, but through her neglect of the present in her hope for the futu her aim came to naught. The true idea of thrift is to earn more than you sptnd. Just as factory owners set aside something out of their profits each year into a depreciation fund with which to rebuild their wornout plant, so each of us should endeavor to make our wages sufficient to give a personal depreciation fund. Few of us can hope to be rich, but it is within the reach of most to acquire by industry ami economy sufficient to meet our wants and provide for old age. Forgiving the European Debt Now conies William Jennings Bryan with a renewal of the proposal that the debt owed the ' United States by various European countries for war loans be cancelled. His argument is that such an action will lessen the burden, remove restrictions to trade, and in its general effect tend to stabilize conditions and produce better relations between all. lands and peoples. Neither the suggestion nor the argument is novel. Long ago it was brought forth', and re ceived considerable support from generous men and women. Then, and unquestionably now, the sentiment abroad was against the plan. Neither of our debtors seeks the boon. Most of them have specifically declined it. Aside Itom the fact that they do not relish the thought of having victory tinctured with such wholesale charity, the action would involve thenj in something even less palatable, that of forgiving others similar debts. It is possible, however, that some arrange ment might be worked out which would Operate as did the $10 bill in the old story, which passed from hand to hand around a circle, canceling with each exchange a debt, till it finally came back to its original owner. That is neither an exaggerated nor uncommon experience. In fact, it is the ordinary course of commerce, and is as possible between governments as individuals. However, most of Russia's debt is due to French peasants, who invested their savings in the loan;, loans made by .England came from funds subscribed by English citizens to the gov ernment's war loans;' this is true of the "money loaned by, the United States to its associates. Any transfer, therefore,yf the debt must ba to the people and, does not operate to extinguish the obligation. A more important debt just now is that of four and one-half billions dollars owed tt Amer icans for, goods delivered and not yet paid for by European consumers. This is what is clogging the stream of trade, not the govern ment loan. .When private enterprise has suf ficiently revived, and private credit has been restored to a healthy state, the flow of Com merce will, resume its normal state. America can well afford to wait in the matter of the war loans, protecting the industrial interests of the country in Ihe meantime by carefully conserving the home market to the home producers. With this secure, the rest can take care of itself, while the ten billions owed us by the European pow ers will be a very substantial guaranty that war of a world scale will not soon be entered into again. Ouija and the Home Fires. Omaha has just had an exhibition of what may happen when the occult mixes into the do mestic doings of the average family. v A wife who was getting along very nicely with her hus band and babqr consulted, for some reason not made clear, a clairvoyant, whose cards, crystals and other, nieins of communication witn the things outside mortal ken, told her the husband was doing unpretty things. This appeal to a rusting woman's jealousy had the natural ef fect. In the course, of the ensuing family fuss' the wife disclosed the source of her information, whereat the husband took such action as will probably render the clairvoyant more circum spect in the matter of divulging what the "con trols" tell her concerning the ways of husbands when wives consult her. It is pleasing to write the conclusion of this tale, which points its own moral. When the husband had acted with such prompt and vigorous decision as landed him in police court charged with assault on the seeress, the wife's faith in things material returned, and, she, vows henceforth to trust the man into whose life She came as an helpmate and equal partner. Men and women will succumb to temptation in the future, just as they have in the past, but it will be well to have better proof than that af fordedSby an ouija board or a' pack of cards before accusing them of wrongdoing. : Another Worthy "Drive.", On Saturday. the citizens of Omaha are to be asked each to buy a "button," the proceeds'! the sale to go to the purposes of the Humane society. It may be necessary to make a special appeal- for this' organization, but it should not be so. It name tells its purpose; volumes could not record its activities, and only the recording angel knowsMhe good it jias done. It does not restrict its services to animals, although to them it gives great and sometimes sorely needed at tention. Suffering humanity is benefited in many ways through the agencies of the society, whose mission it is to relieve misery and lessen pain wherever it has a chance Its agents move un obtrusively but efficientlyabout their business, and deserve the support of the public. There fore, when you are asked to buy a button to morrow, do So, with the full assurance that the money you give, be the sum large or small, will go to the commendable work of ameliorating in some degree the sufferings of those who can not help themselves. . , F. D. Roosevelt, whose initials stand for "Feather, Duster," as Colonel. Harvey tells the world, is declaring that the opening up of new tracts of v irrigated land will reduce the cost of living. There must be a hole in this, for according to rie census, the need is more farm ers rather than more farms. Mr. Gompers is fair; he admits he only con trols ohe vote, but he has the right to advise others as 16 how he would like to have, them vote. ' Senator Hitchcock says the president agreed to his reservations. But it was the Lodge reser vations the senate voted for. Governor Cox has unearthed a new conspir acy. This time it is to defeat the league. He may yet be surprised. Cha'rman White must think the campaign a joke' : : THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 15, 1920. A Line 0' Type or Two How to) ths Lino, let tka quip fall whtr. they may. "WHEN a party fails in statesmanship . . . it should be retired, that iti leadership may be reformed." says Mr. H oover, in formally giving his support to the Republican ticket. Which is only another way of expressing our theory that it is nearly always safe to vote for the party out of power. This, as Mr. Hoover agrees, is the real issue, of which the- league and the tariff are mere subdivisions. The Season Opcits. - Sir: On pae 96 of the S. K. P. for Oct. 9, a gent shoots his cuffs. V. S. QOINO SOUTH FOR THE AVINTEU. (From the Boston Traveler.) Question Are there any prohibition laws similar to our 18th amendment in Hon duras or Cuba? Is there in either of these countries any law corresponding to our Mann act? B. B. L, Answer Neither Cuba nor Honduras has a national prohibition law, or any law corresponding to our Mann act. O SHADE of Claude Debussy, for whom the bells of hell or heaven go tingalingaling (for wherever you are it is certain there are many bells great bells, little bells, -belts in high air, and bells beneath. the sea), how we should re joice that the beautiful things which you dreamed are as a book that is sealed to most oi those who put them upon programmes; for these do not merely play them badlyfctliey do not play them at all. Thus they Cannot be spoiled for us, nor can our ear be dulled; and when the few play them that understand, they are as fresh and beautiful as on the day when first you set them down.- t Police Protection, Perhaps. Sir: A houseman at a Chicago hotel gets six months for robbing a guest. Query: How does the management geby? , PAT KAY. CONSIDERING hotel profits in Boston, Mr. Gallagher, U. S. District Attorney, says, "It is hard to believe that business men, dependent on the public for a livelihood, can go on from day to day, without conscience and common honesty, levying such tribute on their fellow citi zens." We should amend that to read. "It is easy to believe," etc. The Tribe of Gouge is as old as civilization-. ' 0 BRIGHT SAYNGS OF THE BETTER HALVES Sir: In traversing the Cave of Winds, I bumped my Jiead against a stalactite. Friend wife came up in the pinch with "Watch your sfoop." Applause from guide and others of the party. , H. A V. "THE meals you eat here make 'you think of home," advertised a restaurant in Marinette, Wis. They do, no doubt. We Are Seven. x On board the Prlns Hendrik, Sept. 20. Here, on this boat, I've met and talked with Ein stein, ' himself ; and he is all right! He lias shown the keenest interest in my personal (as distinguished from' tny own) attitude to hio theory of Relativity; and I rather pride myself that Pve convinced him that he is on the right tack. He was like a child In his delight at meet ing one of the seven other persons in the world intelligent enough to comprehend what he thinks he means;' but, modestly, 1 told him all about you, too: and he says he has.just gone to his cabin, a bit uncertain as to the Scotch we've had here In the North Sea that as soon, as he thinks of a good one he'll make the Line al though, as he playfully boasted, he seemed to think that the Line, ttself, might be proved to be an etherized deflation from the sheer. , F., D. "THE crew of the train," relates the Elgin News, "fired at the men with revolvers, and nearly succeeded in wounding one of the ban dits." ANOTHER SOUL IS DEVASTATED. (From the Spring Valley Gazette.) Manager Cassidy of the Hick's park base ball teaiwtielieves he has unearthed a con spiracy among members of his team to throw the base ball game last Sunday. His suspicions were aroused when he discovered that three of his players had money invested In a base ball pool. The score in Sunday's game as 5 to 0 in favor of the Park team at tha end of the 5th inning. Some of the stars commenced playing like amateurs un til Princeton secured the lead by scoring six runs irhe next two innings. The man ager is "brokenhearted over the disclosure. HOW wonderful are the adventures of some souls among masterpiecesl Critic Krehbiel finds the playing of a Brahms concerto by Gabrilo witsch unsatisfactory not.- of course, because the pianist panned thacritic some time ago for panning Mahler; and Critic Finck finds the con certo overlong and overburdened, and the en tire second movement unnecessary not, of course, aotause he is congcnitally incapable of appreciating Brahms. There is one very suc cessful reply to the persons who say, or par rotize, that "Brahms is dull." Ask them to point out the dull measures, to give chapter and verse. "How to Listen to Music." Sir: My effort to soak up some culture dur ing a visit to a Boston Pop concert was ham pered by nervous apprehension lest the wait resses serving soft drinks on the main floor1 drop or rattle their trays of glasses and dishes; but I never heard a clink. If you shut your eyes you can really enjoy the music. C. D. "WANTED A good woman for house keeper. Thomas Gritton, Tipton, la." Cedar Rapids Republican. - No Afrodeets need apply. WHY' NOT FINGER BOWLS. Sir: I happened on a reunion of deaf and dumb folks in southern Indiana the other dayl What was it the height of when some thoughtful soul placed a pitcher of water and a glass on the stand beside the principal speaker? PUNK. YOU learn from the ad that "four million Perfection Heaters are now in use and are pro tecting thousands of homes daily." And you may figure, if you -have time, how many heaters arCj required in each room. PRAY EXCUSE OUR YAWNING.' Sir: I nominate as leader for the cross country hikes of the Immortals, Mrs. Lightfoot, President or the patrmnoers jiud oi ausuii, Tex. GENE. "SOVIET Army Facing Dissolution." Dissolution follows disillusion. GOSH! BUT WE'RE SLEEPY. Sir: May I not suggest a cursory examina tion for Sam Damm of Dickens, Ia? D. B. A. SAY IT YOURSELF. .(From the Davenport Times.) Exclusive room In beautiful private home on hill for gentleman on tw,o carllnes. 986, Times. BEFORE we doze off we may as well record that Florence Ice won a prize for cake-making at the Minnesota state fair., B. L. T. J V Poor Return on Investment. Some one said that the paper in which meat is wrapped cost more than the meat. "Yes," snorts the Chula News, "and makes poorer gravy." Kansas City Times. A Suggestion. . Federal authorities say California potatoes must be fumigated before they can be imported into Oregon. Cooking them iyonnaise ought to give the same effect Portland Oregonian. New Campaign Songs. The pessimists are predicting the advent of a new.campaign songsomething like "Father's in the kitchen and mother's at the polls." Atlantic Constitution. Works Both Ways. Many a candidate who was never a prohibi tionist is glad that he does not have to put a bill on the bar in this campaign and see it melt. Detroit Free Press. Or a "Situation." When a statesman runs into a brick wall and sees no way to get over or under, he emits a few sharp yelps and calls it a crisis. Baltimore Sun. And No "Spare." "Is the human mind tireless?" queries the Literary Digest. No, we should tav, but it is running flat. Boston Herald. How to Keep Well By DR. W. A. EVANS Queotiona concorninf hygiene, aonita tion and prevention el diseaie, eub milted to Dr. Event by reader et The Bee, wlU be answered personally, sub ject to proper limitation, where a stamped, addreeoed' envelope ia en closed. Dr. Evans will not make dlacnosis or preocrlbe for individual dlseasee. Address letters in cars of The Bee. Copyright, 1920, by Dr. W. A. Evan. NO JAP RACE SUICIDE. In California the- Japanese make up more than 3 per cent of the total population. To the average California the Japanese question overshadows all others. The Californians are twilling to vote democratic or republican, or wet, labor or antilabor, and well High unanimously, if either of these parties convinces them that it and it alone has a workable solution of the Japanese question. In the bastraci there is no great reason for unrest on the part of more than' 96 per cent of the popu lation because of the presence of the loss than 4 per cent. What is the reason for the disturbance? My inquiry concerned the health as pects of the question. I 'was told that the birth rate among the Japa nese was very high. Dr. Hassler, health commissioner of San Francisco, told me that the picture bride law has not operated advantageously '.n California. The women brought over are quickly dis posed of. Every woenan imported is married at onco and begins produc ing children within a year. If the woman fails to bear a child within two years site is sent back or be comes a servant or prostitute, whereupon the would-be father or ders another prospective mother. That the birth rate is very high and the average number of children to the family is largo I heard on many sides. A university woman, for many years a teacher in various parts of California, told ine that cer tain sfWiools are given over wholly to Japanese children and that inthie rural districts a school with 20 Japa nese for every wnite child is not un usutfl. , The Japanese girls berin bearing ehildren when very yoivng. A young Japanese man and wife settled in a fruit region. Both worked long hours. Thewoman had a baby every year. About 13 "years later the chil dren of this pair -were bearing chil dren. ' Before the whites began to think the situation serious their schools were filled with the grandchildren and children of. Japanese aunts, uncles, nephews, nieces and cousins sitting side by side and reciting in the Same classes descendants of less than 25 yells' standing. I was to,lil that the Japanese crowd into narrow quarters and live in poorer houses when they first ar rive and in rural communities. On the other hand. Dr. Hassler tells mc that in San Francisco they obey the sanitary laws. When the cityeouncil passes a health ordi nance he sends a copy of it to the Japanese consul and asks him to promulgate it among his people. This is done, and obedience is almost 100 per cent. , I learn that the proportion of Japanese in city and coVinty hospi tals and sanitaria is less than, 3 per cent of the total. population. They have brought in no new diseases. Plague and leprosy have been Chinese contributions, but nothing of the kind is charged to the Japs. i. The Jap is small in frame, but with well developed muscles. Obesity is practically unknown among them. It is certain that the opposition to the Japanese in California is based on economic considerations, and health is not a factor. could go to work. I am married and have one child. I do SO minutes' exi ercise'and walk around all day. I hope that I can get your advice." UEPLY. If you are free from fever and your exercises perature nor your pulse you are on the right road. Do not become over zealous and exorcise too much. . If your exercise induces-v fatigue or causes a temperature over 99 or a pulse over 80 it is dojhig you more harm than good. . if so go to bed for a while and whsn you resume exer cises begin with a email daily task and slowly Increase it. Depends on Temperature. A. T. writes: "'I am a man of 20, 5 feet 8 inches tali, and weigh 166 pounds. I have had hemmorhages and was told that I have tuberculo sis. I am feelimj fine and think I A Good Eoad Is Three-fourths of the state's roads were years ago. r r : f ; ; . , NEBRASKA'S, present road-building program calls for the immediate .construction of 4,508 miles of state highways. 65 of the. people live on these highways. $5 of the people live within five miles of them. THIS system of sxate-constructed and state-main-A tained highways (built in co-operation with the federal government) is the foundation of asaetwork of good roads that will ultimately extend to every citizen's front door. Do You Want this Work Continued? I If so, Vote for Governor McKcIvic for Redection! Republican State Central Committee, Lincoln, Nebraska Jony Again Sounds the Tocslu. Omaha. Oct. IS. To the Edttor of The Hee: We celebrate today the an niversary of the birth of the Ameri who is to blame s. Fellow oltizens, awake, arise. "The) West Awake." We'll watch till death for sake. JEUHY HOWARD. ' Judge Leo JEatclle. can navy. But. alas, alas, we are not as great on sea today us we should be. On this date 145 years ago the Continental congress ordered the construction 'of the first cruisers, which were fitted out for the pur pose of interchanging supplies in tended for the British. John Barry, a native of WVxford. Ireland, was commander in the infant navy, and was honored with one of the first naval commissions given by con gress. From observation I am con vinced that thero is a conspiracy or propaganda abroad for the recon quest of America. This Is the great est nation in the world, and the im mortal Declaration jf Independence exposes the tyranny and treachery of England's Klnx George 111. Therefore, It behooves us to guard jealously the blessings bequeathed to us by the fathers of tho republic, and to watch with jealous care lest the legal successor of said monarch and the oligarchy, which inspires him deprives us of our rights, either on land or sea. John Barry" and those of his race did their part nobly throughout all these years. Another controversy confronts us to day; the Intrigue at the ballot box. Consequently every citizen should Omaha, Oct. 13. To Tho Bee: Not a creed Judge Lee Estelle, but 'a world Christian, a man who loved- human ity and who found excuses for Its human frailties, a man wlth heart and sympathies as large as the na tion he so loved . and served. A friend? Never on this sphere a truer, better one. For years tho writer, a very close personal friend, was with him In health and In sick ness. Always he was the same kindly, helpful, gracious gentleman, and when death stalked 'Vlthln, and whose presence he fully recognised, his splendid mentality remaining with him to the last, unmoved by fear- he remained the same kindly soul that he was In Health. One mora of '.lie splendid Old Guard, so badly needed in these cru cial days, has passed to that great unknown beyond, leaving behind memories, benedictions, but which can never take the place of the per sonality of this neighbor and friend. GEO. B. CHILD. go to the polls eloctlon day. If those who are elected are not satisfactory,' These chilly mornirigs you should fire up a little' with .good COAL The Kind You -Get From tha UPDIKE LUMBER . & COAL CO. Phone Walnut 300. raise neither your tem Itjls Easy to Break. a Dollar aiidthen how the change melts away! .'. . Why; not save your dollar - and make it work for you? ' Invest it, keep a part of each week's wages, or of each month's pay and place it in a Savings Account" YOUR ACCOUNT. r , . Tile breken dollar the Bpent dollars-gets away .isone forever, but YOURS the saved dollar ; grows and GROWS and GROWS, accumulating through YOUR systematic savings plus our semi annual dividends and is all YOURS. x Start your savings account with us at once and watch it grow. Every dollar protected by the highest class security obtainable FIRST MORTGAGES. Prompt and courteous service. You .are always welcome. The Conservative has for nearly thirty t years paid semi-annual dividends. Assets, $17,250,000.00 . - Reserve,' $650,000.00 South Side Office, 4805 South 24th Street. Conservative Savings & loan Association & ,x& Af c3 r n o y jS - It gee v-ant ads are hnsinp. o-pttr to Every Farmcr's ioor! this Extravagance? in this condition two 4-508 miles of the state's roads will Be in this condition by 1 92 1 if he work of the present administration is continued. WHEN SHADOWS FALL. Oh, for tho lilt ft tlto youth-time ont As It wolln frim tho hesrt f" For tho paaston ml st nf Its life I lonu Kor th Joy of tho unafraid. Even tliouiih. with Its rlyus.' trtubls bohio scor. t.lfo mukoe of lt closing s. aires-; Vot th hrsrt may si limes Hour the erflo of chimes SHU rinsing with undying urge. Oh. for tho 1yn when the sens run htgll For tho tsng of tho rhllllng breere! S:nce the victories of Ufa nre won when le try, , And nnver while living t . Though time hs grown old and t Journey's well spent. With murage ami fnlth undismayed, Hearing compass and oar. We eet out from the, shore. With the Joy of the unafraid. Los Aogoles Times. ox 'America's the Editor of Christian was tone so rarefy beautiful. so tcrre fhat it is deservedly termed "sublime makes fhe . indispensable to pianists who are not influenced hy price or financial gratuity irseeking a perfict expression oFfheir art-. Our Prices on Pianos 1 and Players challenge the world. Whereas, necessities have increased in cost from 50 to 200 per cent, our Pianos and Players have advanced but a fraction -of this percentage in price or terms. The $5- per day labor ing man can more easily sup ply his family today, with our low priced instruments than he could when earnjng one-half this sum. - Just call and see what $365 will buy on $15 monthly pay ments. JUIoapedfjj. 1513 Douglas Street The Art and Music Store. ,' ..V Sti " - ' -.8:35j. 4 i I T. ' 1