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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1920)
'l'HK BEE: OMAHA, FK1DAY. MOVEMBEK 1VZV. J Tut Omaha Bee A)AILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY Tffc BFE PUBLISH1NS COM PANT, NELSON a yOl'DIKK. PublUher. MEMBERS OF fUE ASSOCIATED PRESS r!iiiTl witlilHl ,10 tin dm for imblictlion of all fieya duratclue nu omrwiae rmiittd m mil tpr, ana eiao ta .1 itrmu. au nsu or DutinceUoa ot our apeoiai virdllea to It yi.it dint'tfrtie are bih) n hfr telephones Print Brurh Kiclniu. Atk tot 1 (fCi M Lxptrvuieiit ur INirwi Warud. JlCT IWW for Night Calli After 10 r. M.t ttttitpnai Ueiiatitnent itrrulatlra Itepartaieat .' A Jierniln lMxrtwint , OFFICES OF THE BEE aUIn Ofrtee 17th ntl Firnam Cronoil Bluff, IS Scott St I Smith Side ' Out-of-Town Olflcwi New York , i 8SH fifth An i Wutiitittim Chicago Tyler lOflOl ?jtlff ltvl, lie 100UL 1111 X St 1SU O 8. Magei Bid. I I'trli y4110 420 Rui rlu Honort JAe Platform ' .s 1. New Union Paatenger Station. 4 " 2. Continued improvement of the He braaka Highway, including the pave- . ment of Main Thoroughfare) leading ' into Omaha with a Brick Surface. - 3. A abort, low-rate Waterway- from the Cera Beit to the Atlantic Ocean. 4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. . - . been in possession of that port as a bone of contention. Serbia now has what Austria long denied her, "a window on the Adriatic," and with the group of little kingdoms and princi palities that make up the Jugo-Slav combination, imay pursue its business undisturbed by the feel ing that the world is shut off from any access to Serbian markets, other than as permitted by an unfriendly power. If this knowledge will have any tramquilizing effect on the Balkans, the work of D'Annunzio will not hare been altogether farcical. All in all, the settlement is a fine ex ample of jvhat may be done through counsel by he -interested parties without outside intexfer- pnr k X WHEN THE LEAGUE MEETS. On Monday of next weelc will begin the first really important session of the League of Na- tions. Judging' from accounts coming through . Yom' Geneva, it will have a full attendance of delegates and sufh(a cloud of supernumeraries as" will make any former asreinblage of national conferees" seem small. The real interest for Americans will flow from the action of the body with reference to' the changes that may be made , in the jframework of the covenant. Advance an nouncements that changes are to be made in the agenda for the session, and amendments to the covenant are to be considered warrants the assumption that the result of the -"great ami solemn referendum" in the United States is se riously -accepted by members of the league. ' A" year, ago Lloyd George and Clemencean, after intimate conference, caused it to be made '."known in Washington that they weie not averse to accepting the Lyedge reservations; very re cently Leon Bourgeois, the president of the league stated plainly that Jie did not Consider Article X at all vital to the institution; Gfolotti of Italy does, not look on that provision as para mount, and from the first France has made more of the suspended tri-partite agreement between that nation, England and America than of the League of Nations. As a matter of common seVse, France is far 'more secure under pledge of immediate assistance from the United States than it could be through the .processes of the 'league. . , . . V All of these signs point in but one direction that of an approach to the United States by the other powers of the world, and a readiness on their part to accept such form of association as win oe agreeaoie 10 mis country, ine resun of thej election y properly interpreted to mean that Americans are in no mood tosurrendei their independence to a stipergovernment, but are ready to join tn serious undertaking look ing to the abolishment of war, if such an end , can be achieved. To this the republican party stands pledged , . - Expressions from Argentine and Brazil with cference to the Monroe Doctrine will not se riously affect the attitude of this country in the assertion of its established policy. Argentine was and is adversely, influenced towards the United States by a considerable elenjent of F.uropean population; Brazil has something of 4 the same sort to contend with, yet has never assumed an attitude of distinlt unfriendliness such as has on. several occasions marked ex pressions from Ben06 Aires. One thing in favor of the Monroe Dostrine is that under it our government has found many opportunities to hi of help to the weaker nations of America, and'without pulting any into leading strings or 1 under tutelage. Where it has directly interfered with the course' of political affairs in any of , these countries it has been to their advantage. European schemers will very likely continue to . foment jealousy of the United States among the people of South America, but it is not prob able that such efforts will greatly modify the course of history. v With our national character firmly estab lished, the United States is in the better situa tion today, and can w'atch with equanimitjthe course of the assemblage at Geneva during the next few week Maybe from there will 'come something that can be ,a,ccegd over' here. Rights of the Aild Paramount. In passing on two cases, each involving right of a father to the custody of the child, the su preme court of Nebraska has laid down the rule that at times the right of the child is para mount to that of the parent, This is supported by the logical conclusion that the natural right . of the parent carries with it an equal responsi bility, and only when the father is able to and willing to give hisoffspring the care and atten- 1 tion necessary to the proper upbringing of a child,, is he entitled to its control and custody. Nothing 0 the doctrine of substituting state for parental "control is involved in the decisions; merely the proper intervention of the court to safeguard the future of an infant. When all parents are brought to realize that their duties exceed their privileges in the matter of children, and that they owe deep responsibility to the lives they have brought into being, much of trouble and misery will be removed. Parent hood entails definite obligations, and these must be fully acknowledged and carried out to the best of the parent's ability before his natural rights can be pleaded in support of a claim for custody. 1 y Nellie Magee: A Helpful Woman. It would be a bold but thoughtless person who would undertake to measure the good that flowed out into a' sordid world from the old City Mission, down on Tenth street. Only the Recording Arigel could give the sum total. But there are hundreds, maybe thousands, of 'young men and women alive today wli will jecall that they, go't aid and comfort when thevneeded it most at that humble institution. As children of the poorer, homes, the foundhere Help and sympathy. They got warm clothes and serviceable shoes, and they got other things tKat'mean even more in a child's life the Christmas or other entertainment in the winter, the picnic, with ice cream, a street car ride or sonTe other such frolic in the summer, and many an hour of recreation. . was in the beginning of things, before Omaha had any"" public playgrounds, or, .or ganized effort to care for these neglected Onec Nor was it only the children who went to the mission for help. Many a man and many a woman, who found the load pressing too, heavily on them, whose strength was failing in the struggle, found there the help needed to give -the courage "and strength necessary to going on. Many a sorrow was healed, many a trouble smoothed out there. It was, a beacon whose light streamed for many years into what was then "darkest Onfaha," and it was Nellie Magee who trimmed the lamps and kept them burning. - ITers was- the unfailing' patience, the tender ness ,that intuitively grasp'ed' the problem and knew just what would, cure the sore the quick est. x It was her motherly instinct and sisterly sympathy liat won the hearts of the little ones, cheered the souls of their elders, and iriade the 61d City Mission a real fountain of help. And now Nellie Magee has ended her useful life: Most of Omaha knew hervon!y as a name, but thos to whom she gave1 tha, service which can not be measured by earthly standards will sin cerely sorrow that she is no more, but will f e- joice to think she has at least entered the rest she so richly" earned. , ; Finnic a Fine Example. Italy and Jugo-Slavia have come to agree ment with regard to the Adriatic That im portanf bit of water does not become effectively v a closed sea, but as long as there is understanding between the parties to the convention about to tfe concluded, outsiders will enter by permission and not altogether-by right. However, this is not so much in point as is the fact that the set tlement has been reached by" composition and accommodation between sovereign states, with out regard to the lines drawn on the map at Paris by our president, or taking into iconsidera. tion of any of the proceedings there had. In the "main the settlement is on-the basis of the con vention of London, a distinct victory for tht, Italian' government, although in having Fiume. aa an JndprwTidpnt free ritv the Tno-S1av are pubstantially better off than they would have j "Bridal Suites" to Be Lower. Hotel men in New York urge one another to reduce the schedule charges for bridal suites. This, of course, will be reckoned as a conces sion to the demand for lower prices. It is said to be in the way of "encouraging matrimony," but we can' think of several ways that would be mor effective. A "bridal suite" is not an abso lute necessity, but "room ancjliath" is, and the average young couple, sojourning m a great city on the trip they only take once will be far better pleased at the prolpect of being able to secure a comfortable room with the adjuncts and conveniences comporting with modern ways of living than they wiir at having the gorgeous grandeur of the bridal suite, marked down from $225 to $200 a day. If the landlords really want to encourage matrimony, let them begin to let dpwn the figures on the right-hand side of the bill of farevfor example, so that the customer wijl not have to follow the Near East practice of' reading from right to left in determining what he is going to eat. America in the past has practiced shirt-sleeve diplomacy, but there is no precedent for the premier of Poland who goes down to the office without a collar, and the Polish relief agency may find it necessary to spend 25 cents in order to eliminate this disturbing note in European politics, as this"point is not covered in Article X Kansas City should spruce up some of its downtown alleys and throw them open to pedestrians, in Ihe opinion of a city planner, who suggests that they could be canopied and well lighted, v This would have been great idea if the need for back entrances had not been abol ished by the prohibition amendment. Every once in a wiilc some nation pays a sincere compliment to America by discussing a change to the republican form of government. Holland is the latest, and no doubt the royal family considers this only a kindof bblshevism. Those three wild burros that came to gaze at Harding' on the Mexican border undoubtedly were democratic mascots, and everyone knows what made them wild. Governor McKelvie1 apparently does not please the democrats what few there are any better after election than he did before-- - Ten thousand corn buskers Can find work in Nebraska, and earn $6 a day and board if they aM hustlers. Josephus Daniel having got that list of medals out of his system, may now retire in peace. Just try to think what life would be withput a telephone at all. v ' ' ' Sugar bids fair to beat all back to normalcy. THE BEAUTIFUL CITY. When I have come to a golden towrrwhere little faces glow -And over the highways up and down the feet ' of children go; When I have come to a steeple and stoop- where dearest childhood dwells, That is the Beautiful City, dear, and me for its wonder-spells I ,y, r It lies whereIaughter and romping are anj music of many things "1 v That are glad for the gladness of babyhood till their very gladness sings; H And always Jhe spirit of tenderness and love and pity and cheer - Is part of the soul of its loveliness, haunting and hovering near. " i ' Little ones leaping in sunshine streets with light on flossy hair, ; ' Cheeks with red of the legal rose therBeautiful City's there 1 -The Beautiful City of 'Little Child, that fairy and elfin Town, Where Love is the 'spirit iof happiness goes dancing up and down, ' , k --Baltimore Sub -' ; .: - 7 --.v. A Line 0' Type or Two Haw te to Una, lt the quip fall when they may. 'WHAT," ask; a f. c, "is the use continually inveighing against the younger generation?" There is no use, lady. The younger generation is the younger generation. They seem to us as hopelessly inane as wefeemed to our elders. Wjiere it is possible to compare the sexes, as at a college, the girls today are more inane than the boys; but' perhaps they always were. The boys are more restless than they were before the war, but they are settling down, and justifying Arnold Bennett's perhaps superfluous contention that men are .intellectually superior to women. A CITIZEN of Lawrenceburg, Ind., had a. black cat. In attempting to kick it he fell off the porch and broke his neck. The cat, con cludes the story, was uninjured. If you have read Poe's "Black Ca" recently you will recall points of resiiblance ANOTHER GOOD LOSER. (From the Fredonfc, Kan.. Herald. To my friends, who so nobly assisted nie, I want to say, "Thank you, to my enemies, who so maliciously and slanderously as , saulted me, I ,'wa.nt to say,-"I forgive you." I ask God to orglve you now. I pass back liato oblivion. In a short time I shall be laid to rest beside my wife in the Buffalo oemetery to be forgotten. The good work I helped to start In Wilson county will live ... on forever. " A. J.'Orendorff. THE allies quarreled among themselves dur ing the war, a"nd have been quarreling ever since. A world war and a world peace are much too big jobs for any set of human heads. ; - , ACADEMY NOTES. , fv Sir: If there Is a school of expression con nected with the Academy I nominate for-liead of it Elizabeth Letzkuss, principal of the Greene achool, Chicago. CA1.C1TROSUS. Sir: It will be positively incredulous to you (as a friend of mine puts It), but the faGt re mains that the Reverend G. t. Pius is minister of the Second Baptist Church, Clumbus, Ohio. NICKIE. "WHAT the Republican party needs now, for its own good, is an intelligent oppositidn. But where is it to come from?" the valued Post. , From California and Idaho.' Or don't you consider the gentlemen intelligent? ( wen, tiare and Medium. Sir: wonder what the Front Porcrr thinks about? Evanston's interpretation of the Bible: "Check your little children to come -into me." Art' Oklahoma woman cafteria owner steps forth and cops a seat in Congress. She doesn't believe in waiting. A former Chicago street car conductor wins the Nobel prize for literature. KThe pen is mightier than deserving the fare "So weve decided ... to get 6,000 How to Keep Well, By DR. W. A. EVANS Quealion contyrnint hylan, aanitatian and pravantlon of dlilaat, aubmittcd to Dr. Evana by readeu ot The Bm, will b anawercd personally, aubiect to proper limitation, wher a tumped, addressed envelop Is enclosed. Dr. Evans will not make diagnosis or prescribe for individual diseases. Address letters In ears ot The Be. . 1 Copyright, 1920, by Dr. W. A. Evans. ' IT SEEMED AS IF ALL KNEW Recently a woman wrote from Cal ifornia that her husband had been told by a physician that he had pul monary tuberculosis. The husband made light of it, kaytng he had a heavy cold and that was what the doctor meant by pulmonary tuber culosis. She had her doubts. While she did not know, she had never heard a cold called by that name and she suspected something else. "What is pulmonary tuberculosis?" she inquired. She inquired about night sweats. She also asked wheth er pulmonary tuberculosis was harm ful, i It appeared that she Is a Chicago woman in California for tho winter ancUplanning to return with her hus banfl to her Chicago home next spring. The letter indicates that she is intelligent. " The spelling is per fect and the composition indicates that the author wenj through the grammar school ut least I have served as president of the Illinois Tuberculosis society and been on the board of the Tuberculosis in stitute for"20 years. While serving as health commissioner of Chicago we conducted a referendum cam paign for a municipal tuberculosis sanitarium in which both the ertfat political parties had their candidates a part of the campaign speech, The Chicago health department and each of the agencies enumerated, including the municipal sanitaria and dispensaries, have prided them selves on their odiicational work. The Chicago health deparement is incorporated as an educational in stitution. Tons t paper and barrels of ink have been used to tell the people ab6ut consumption. I know because It has been my hobby. Yet here, 20 years after a contin uous campaign of education was be gun, we have an educated, intelli gent woman, who apparently does not know that pulmonarj tubercu losis is the same as consumption Her husband tells her it is the same thing as a heavy cold. Either he does not know differently or else he is disposed to hold consumption lightly. The refusal of people ta meet their consumption situations fmnklv and KCl O.UUU , .,- ... . i. - . Royal Tailored suits and oyejeoats in actual elc- 1,"" rm3S matter thousands "and thousands of rim na T1 Vi ?i rtfo-lif- olw nra tt nnt nntt. THOSE 25,000 boUhevist missionaries which ' onoiX...nnd that ' herlrnnm 1 windows Lenin is reported to bCsending to the United : should not be sealed to keep it out States would have a more cordial welcome in likewise has been told over and over r M 1 T.I 1 I aerain All of this means that there still culation on the backs of Manhattan men." Ttlb-adV Back-sliders, so to say. Q. A. R. the Cannibal Islands. MODERATED DETACHMENT. Sir: The Dean has Just suggested that per haps you never heard of the Superior who, at Retreat, cut short his conference on "Detach ment from the World" in order to catch the last train into Dublin for the horse races. ' , KENT. IF a ruling by the, SupremeCourt may be disregarded by a state, why contend that Ihe proper form is "the United States is," instead of "the United States arc?" 7 THE RIVALS. ( , " In that Golden Age of the mystic past JVhen the gods were young and th world was new, And the' laughing glances the dryads cast As they danced in the glades with Pan and his crew ' Rivalled the gleam of the dawn -on the dew, And the piper played with a will; , In the fragrant shade of a flowering vine, ' 'IJeath an arbor that bsd to the tavern door, Love and Death sat them down to, their wihe To exchange the news and to learn the Tore Which each'could Impart from his ample store And the piper played with a will. As they warmed to their wine and-constraint gave way And discovered the thoughts of each inmost soul, , , - With a subtle abandon they both gave play To the paegidhs that governed each intimate role And each from the other some arrows stole, And' the piper played with a will. So from that day down ti the present time The bitter decrees which the Fates allot Have summoned- the young and the strong in their prime, Have ordained Senile Age to linger! They gloat In condemning old satyrs to dodder and dote! And the piper pla8 with a will. W. C. F. , THE first sign of "crumbling" on the part of the British empire that we have observed is the welcome extended to the "quitk lunch," That SMALL TOWN HI-JINKS., J , (From the Columbia City, Ind., Post) ' At the home of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer . Weeds, Wednesdayt evening; a party of friends of the above named com pletely surprised the couple after they had gone to bei. The back door being left open by their son who was informed of the event. The party marched into their sleep ing apartment. The Mrs. hearing some disturbance made her escape behind a dresser but was soon located and dragged from her hiding place with her heart in her mouth. She said she was only embarrassed a little because her gown was too short to hjde her toes. Mr. Weeds was somewhat un fortunate by getting his pants legs twisted, thus delaying him a little in getting them on. , y "CALIFORIA novJ has passed another anti Jap law." Viscount Kaneko. We supposed the Japanese objected to the contraction "Jap," but apparently we were mis- intormea. ' i are a great "many people who have not been reached with the story and the work of education must not be stopped.. This was Just what Ken wood found to be true 6f Great Brit ain when in 1915 he got a chance to look behind the scenes. v ' ;.' V- - Lt(f r Pay. Saints. y A.Mormon writes: 'That in Mor mon sphoolsjall pupils are vaccinated every seven" years. The Mormons strongly advocate athletics and teach personal hygiene to young children Mormons strongly condemn drinking and cigaret smoking, but when a Mormon does smoke he throws his 'stumps' into a rubbish box" v ' ' It's Used for Anemia- " A reader writes: "Can you tell me what bowler's solution is given for and is it go6d for the blood?" "REPLY.) ' Fowler's solution is an arsenic mixture, It is given as a tonic in anemia and also for its effect on the skin in some chronic skin troubles. It is also given as a tonic in chronic malaria. It is good in proper cases for aHk. three of'thsa rroups. " ' It's Not HaTOfuI. Mrs. P. E. H. writes: "la the Juioe of half a lemon with a pinch of salt in a glass of water, taken before breakfast every morning, Healthful or harmful? I had thought it was good for ona, until yesterday, when I was lold it made one anaemic." . - REPLY. If you are constipated or have a tendency to scurvy ir do not get enough vegetables or fruit lemon Juice before breakfast will help you, otherwise not It will not harm you. Anger as ivp iToviuor. V. R. G. writes: "I have been leading a book by a London doctor regarding the curing of disease with charcoal - acacia charcoal from Italy, and prepared-by electricity. "I. What is your opinion of it, and where could It be purchased ? "2. I have a blood pressure of 8S; should it be 125 at my age. How can I bring it to normal Y REPLY. 1. Sounds fishy. 2. The remedy for low blood pressure is training. Get in a busi ness and become Interested in it Try to make it go with all the en thusiasm you can cultivate. Take up a.ime competitive sport, such as base ball or tennis. Play it hard Try to win. When you lose get mad about It When you win get "all het up" over your victory. Indulge in emo tional outbursts. Cultivate the Pol lyanna cure. If you dan carry out tnls program you will find yourself cured. THIS CRIMSON FLOWER. . The Ppppy. This crimson flower shall sver tell Of those who triumphed a they fill. Who sleep at peace all dreamlessly; 'This flower shall fit memento be For those whose days w-ere ended wel To lowly mansions where they dwell Love brings the rose and Imrnortallo, But bears away o'er land and sea This crimson flower. ; The cheers of victors overswell The martial dirge and tolling bell, While blows tkclr flower, who kept us free; ' Nor bloom from blest Elyslan lea Shall match, in sweet Lethean epell This crimson flower I C. O. GALBREATH. Columbus, O. (From the Mahnomen, Minh., Pioneer.) A Mahnbmen miss had an experience thia week that should he a warning to .oth ers. While taking her Saturday night bath she reached from the tub and took Hold of the wire which furnished a small electric heater, to pull it closer to the tub. As soon . as she took hold of the wire a circuit was , formed and she could not let go. She screamed for her mother, who luckily1, was 'near, and was released from her uncom- fortable ; predicament before any damage was done.- "PARIS. Mrs. Lawrence Fitch, wife of trie delegation from Milwaukee . . ," Milwaukee Journal, Whereupon the editor cabled an expbnation. "ALL y;Ou CAN DRINK FOR FIVE." Strt Sign liT Danville: '"The Best "and Largest up 0lC0ff.ee- In Town, S cents." Where have I seen, a somewhat similar sign? Where HAVE I, seen It? . .." SIM NIC. concern In , icu.i auvciinca. a ncac vii lies tu corftinue until replacement warrants a , change ejtnero a nigner or lower oasis." v I IN Tokyo the Bosui-Ro Hotel frankly bills it as "Chestnut Pudding." j . , - , , ' DO YOU MEAN ' SHE fUO HERSELF IN 7 (Soutb. Bend item..- ' With Miss Menken again in the holex S:hich she Treated, tne company coming to outb Bend Contains the entire original cast ' THE only hotel thai-is frank enough to admitt is the Mock hotel in Thomasville, N. C. . WE fear that Indian surilmer is tusgespielt. a. ju 1. PRICES are "plunging," but a co: Scots1)lufr,( Neb., advertises: "These 7 0 Jjie maker? &e matchless cimAHutiitm uiuuii Same With Some Self-Mate iften. It Isn't the. rooster'a early risintr that makes him unpopular it's his talking about it. Wal nut R.idge Blade. - , 1 . 1 M 1 1 I A Humane Mississippi Secretary. ! 1 Secretary Little has called a meeting of the Fat Men's club for the first cool night in this month. Prentiss HCounty Advocate, ITutpim pianos have set a nee? standard, of tone purity- and lonqevii and nave had couraqe te stop at no eerisey to attain Mason 6Hamlin is ffigfiert priced ; Ifjg'6es6 praised ,Our linejf the very highest type of Pianos represent - twelve tiif xferent' factories, any one of them is a credit to our ouse., vThey are sold with the Hbspe Guaran tee, at the plainly marked price whether, you buj for" cash or on time? ' OS 1513 Douglas St. Ask , to hear" theArt v Apollo Reproducing : Piano. It's a .iWonder. x CARPETS CARPETS AT REDUCED PRICES AT BOWEN'S You will find at Bowen's Low Ebb Prices you can now Jjuy carpeting by the yard to your individual saving advantage. Carpets for rooms and carpets for stairs or hall, or office, from the finest Wiltons to the less expen sive Tapestr Brussels. The large assortment of patterns in Lowell and Bigelow Axminsters, heavy figured Wiltons, Velvets and Tapestries, also many grades of plain Carpeting-! 'n Rose, Mulberry, Gray, Taupe and reen,1 together jvith the extraordinary re duction in price, is making a strong appeal to the pub lic. You, too, are asked to investigate. Advertisement. ijalture or the Ouiin. . Omaha, Nov. 8. To the Editor of The Bec , It is conservatively estU mated 'that over a million people" consult tho ouija board nowadays. IsiCt it rather disappointing to think that not one ouna board nredtctcd that New York would bo one million majority in favor of the republican will have to g-o way back and ait down. S. CLIKFOUD DILL& party? If just one board had tipped mAmn',iai? OrpoM-d lo 1'ouiKalu. Omaha, Nov. 8. To the Editor of The Dee: Notice oy your Sunday Is sue, some order, with the help of the county commissioners to tho amount of $2, BOP, in to erect n foun- tain on tho court house grounds lo the memory of Governor Cumin;. If the taxpayer ure to partly pay for a memorial, why do we not hav something erecte-1 In memory of all the notable pioneers of Nebraska, and not select Just one. Only a few years will soe 11 a in , need of an addition to' our court house, then what will become of the this off the fortunate devotees need not envy the wealth of Rockefeller. Think of the hots a thousand to one that could have been placed on such an unbelievable message! What a lost opportunity for the dif ferent controls to make themselves and their devotees famous. It Is enough to shako any one's belief in the ouija board. If the ouija board cannot foretell the future, what good isyit? We know all about the past and the -present. A -w more such breaks and the ouija board controls An outdoor fountain In this coun try can only b usod 'about seven months In the year and always will be a roost for tho sparrows. A TAXPAYER. ' Easy Morloy fierce. It Isn't an economy wave that eo many lines of business complain at. People are spending all they set as usual; they're Just not getting so much or working so nuch, Hous ton Post. v 2: You Are a Share Holder t In THE CONSERVATIVE if you have a Saving Account -with them. It was .organized to help members save money. Dividends have been paid , regularly for NEARLY THIRTY YEARS to every shareholder. THE CONSERVATIVE has helped thousands of citizens to acquire homes in Omaha. . . Every dollar is carefully and safety secured y FIRST MORTGAGES. There is NO SAFER plan of investment. - Start a Savings Account and help build up Omaha , and at the same time have the satisfaction of know ing your money is safe and drawing good dividends. South Side Agency, Kratky Bret, 4A0S So, 24th St. ' Conservative Savings 6 loan Assocr ation y 6 V & t n o y If there is an unpardonable sin in business it la probably the sin of actpg on "approximate" figures. A total that is approximately right is also "approximately" wrong. - -Richards. Richards Audit Company A National and Highly Trained Organization. PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERS INCOME TA SPECIALISTS. - J. A. ABBOTT, - Resident Manager 70S W. O. W. Bldf, Phone Tyler 5601 Detroit, New York, Chicago, Minneapolis, Omaha, St Louii, Tulsa, Flint, Saginaw, Windsor. UNION PACIFIC CHANGES TIME OF TRAINS effective i November 14, 1920 For Full Particulars. Ask ' V Consolidated Ticket Office, 1416 Dodge St., Telephone Douglas 1684, or Union Paiaenger Station, Telephone Douglas 5570. ' ' We kiiaw a young man who carried ALL of his money with him at all times. Very often hq would have as much tfs 150 dollars r in his pocket. When asked why he carried . such ' a lare amount of money, he replied: "Oh, I may need it some time, and I like to have it handy." He had it hanfly, very handy for a burglar, who relieved him of.it one night when he was on his way home. , This left the young man penniless; every cent', he possessed was stolen . , a'! Get the Savings Habit ' Are you like this young chap, carryinjg. large sum of money in your pocket j-YVould you be "fine'pickinV' for the thief. Open a SAVINGS ACCOUNT in our SAVINGS I3S PABTMENT! SAVE a little of your income ,EVERY WEEK! Have it handy, for the "Rainy Day;" you'll need itl . 4 ' ' United States National Bank The Bank of PERSONAL Attention . i 4 t. - v , IhJs Clock Is Always Correct f N. W. Corner ,16th and.farnMLSU, r N !