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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 26, 1920)
.i - J i 7 Ml- '3 -... THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY! . NOVEMBER 26, 1920. 4 i " 'V "I The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY ' THE DEB M;OUSHINU .COMFiMY, f NELSON B. (JflMKK. ' Publisher. MEMBERS OP THf ASSOCIATED PRESS . Taa AMnniud Pnm, af UIk Tat Um It 4 mtnlm, ta .lit). sntiUaa to Um an ft iiMtuo 4 all aawa aat rraaltaa lo H m M Mtanrtt rnditta In Ihlt rat", ant also nm am rww straw, All r I Ail rTfalS of tuWIotth at is also tha oat aaaaiaj BKE Null Bras Rnkuita. IM OtDWtJMUt at I'mwo rr INI! Kditartal DaMrtnx UrcvlMlon Uwsri Caaaatf Bltffi Sal f" TELEPHONE M , T..1-- 1 AAA Altar 10 P. M.I fflsr 10ML ' - ..2..-.'. . 4im lunar AStartlMns lM4rta.i .......... llr NWuL OFUCM Or THE BEE aula ofr.wr ,,'ti. 14 rwnua is Ml JK. I Sown nid Out-af-Tawn Offlaasi NfW Tot la nfta t I WtshlPSloa oicaso Bianr man. Fsrli Wane lid Km Mil M St un a m. . Honor The Bee's Platform .1. New Union Patssnfar Station, 2. Contlnuaal improvctnsat of the Ne braska Highways, InslNslIag tha pave, meat af Main Thoroughfares leading Into Omaha with a Brick Surface. 3. A abort, low-rate Waterway frem tha Cera Bait to too Atlantic Oceea. 4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. 0 ROMANTIC LOVE AND DUTY. Until face to face with an emergency none of u tan truthfully nay In what manner we will meet It. , That is why tome of those 'discussing s the heroic action of the intended bride of Keith Collins in revealing his connection., with the great mail robbery venture the guess that they would have protected him instead of sacrificing their romance. In; great moments of decision such as came to this Omaha girl impulse' does not guide,' but the long training of lifehood, a subconscious power that iV scarcely recognized in ordinary times. , , ... , Romantic love cannot be rightfully set up above the call of social duty, and it was without loubt UTe duty of this young woman to aid the , government in apprehending the criminals re sponsible for tha Council "Bluffs train robbery. Romantic love, it is plain,' is not guided by reason, but often overwhelms it The voice of reason telling this perplexed girl that at mott her fugitive honeymoon could not last more than a few months, and that a man who had been dishonest in one case might act with equal djshonesty against her in another, might con ceivably go unheard. Something deeper than real on, nothing less than good' home' training in the fundamentals of honest conduct, would then have come to the rescue. Jn refusing to marry him, but at the , same Jime ' refusing to aid in his apprehension, the same factor applies. The problem is muth weightier for a wife, united by. the ties of love, home and children to a man accused of crime. The law recognizes this in setting it down that no wife shall be required to testify against her .husband. In this same federal case the youthful wife of one of the minor characters has come forward with her babe in arms to declare her husband inno cent. In advanqejpf aTjudiciaJ finding, it is im possible to estimate the truth, of this ttatement. This young woman speaks irpm her faith in her husband, and the knowledge that he hat been honest in his dealings with her, avoiding bad company and refusing to associate with his relatives, who are more dearly accused. It is as posiibe to admire : her. wifely devotion as to admire the contrasted action of the fiancee of that other man who has fled jylthout meet ing" the charges against him.' y , , - Agef' Propaganda. . Everywhere in the world are those willing to do your thinking for you. This is the age of propaganda, the insidious means ; by which interests and causes of various kinds, some worthy, some utterly eelfish afld unworthy, en deavor to reach the minds -or hearts othe pub lic Without impugning tlje motives back of propaganda, it can be said with propriety that this is not the way tq treat an intelligent peo ple. What Americans want is facts on which to base conclusions .that ' they are perfectly able to reach for themselves. The trouble with propaganda is that it 'presents one;, side of a question and remainssilent on the other; Even governmentsrrely on this unfair piece tof strategy. Duringthe war all, nations hired press agents to bolster up the courage of the ' people.' If you have any doubt of the patriot ism and honor o Americans, you may consider the propaganda Issued from various bureaus at that time was juitifieoV butto Others, a lie Is a lie, whoever utters it,' and ' with consequences slow to come but far-reaching. Today scarcely , one of the disturbed districts of Europe does not maintain a press bureau of its own n the United States. Some of them, aa Russia and Ireland, maintain two opposing s propaganda depart ments. I " ; Newspapers, realizing that their function is to give trie public the news, divert this deluge of biased information into the waste basket al most without exception. In these days of doubt, misgiving and unrest, there must be some re sponsible institution to t-which the people can look for the plain fags pnjrwhich, to predicate their reasoning. A nation swayed by prejudiced information, haying only 'one ' side of public questions, could scarcely function as a democ racy, i ' "(' : Death Rather Than, Beggary.' ' .The world perhaps '. has grown calloused to' suffering after the horrors of the war, and, al though the worst famine in forty, years now exists in 'China little ,is' heard of it. In five northern provinces, Shantung among the'm, a drouth has left 25,000,000 people with "about 8 per cent of the normal supply of food. The American Red Cr4ss has sent $500,000 for jre lief, and the Chinese . government is raising $1,000,000 for similar work, but this, it is said, will only touch the finges of the immense 'prob lem which must Include hot onljr temporary sustenance, but irrigation, projects, for the future. f ' "Chinese papers' ste the, most hope la pro viding work by .which thi. inhabitants of the stricken 'area may make' hfir living, Jt is in- , teresting to readthst:-. self-retpecof the people is such . that they prefer supportinf themselves to living on charity. "Famine suf ferers are committing suicide on 'wholesale ?cale by, poisoning their last morsels with ar senic the chairman of .the Pekin .chapter, of the American Red Cross reports FanjHies in Tientsin and, the surrounding ' country are said to jump to death in Myert rather than ask for food, and large nuitfrs to commit luicide rather than plunder. - ... ". " '.- Pcoolc with these characteristics . would Seem Jio be a sturdy lot, well worth helping. Missionaries declare that in some districts not a blade of grass is growing, every leaf has been taken frpm the trees and even the bark haft been, consumed. " However speedy the reliet millions of coolies will die from lack jnf food this winter. , ALincO'TypcorTwd H4r te the Line, let the aaipe fell where they Buy. Lenin Might Look This Up.,- t From Mot cow we get the cheering informa tion that 5,000,000 American workmen will be unemployed by the end of the current year; also that a couple of deputy commissars are coming over to organize the irfle into soviet. Just why they should lend two when one would ordinarily he a plenty is not clear, unless- it be that Comrade Lenin wants to do a complete and thorough job while he is at it. We suggest he start at Sheboygan, where the shingles, used tcWcome from. The citizens up there have just made a demonstrator? that ought to interest the great giver of all good that ema nates from Moscow. Sheboygan has a city council of twelve members, nine of whom are socialistic. It also has a gun that formerly be longed to William Hohenzollern, when he was in the war business. Acting on the humanitar ian impulse that has guided Lenin, Trotzky and the rest through all their course, thy nine sw cialists voted to banish the gun, symbol of strife and the domination of force, to the city toot house. That it a place about as safe as any from socialiitintrusion, for none of the comrades would voluntarily go there, tools being also associated with toil. Therefore,, it was appro priate that the jemblems of war and work, both happily banished, from that dear old Russia, and soon to be exorcised forever from young and unhappy America, should be kenneled together. What, however, must we say to the re generate citizens of Sheboygan who disregarded the magnanimity of their counc!imen,'ahd with a headstrong perversity x that is painfu to con template, actually dragged the cannon through the streets to the place originally designated for It, and there set it up, an evidence of their total Inability to realize the dictatorship of the proletariat, the extinction of the "booxhwahsee," and a lot of other things- Jeering the while at the discomfited comrades, who ylewed the pro ceedings from the windows of the Sheboygan hotel de vllle. Lenin should look into this. It might do him good. ' x Pessimists to the Rear. A careful survey oi the situation in the United States will reveal many supports for the faith generally held in the future of our land. A scattered group of pessimists is exer cising itself with considerable energy to spread the gospel of depression, but warnings irom' them should not be mistaken for the prompt ings of prudence. Sum up the factors that eon trol the commerce and industry of the land, arid take a look at the result. The great crop yield assures ample food for all home requirements and some for sale. Railroads ate coming out of the tangle into which they were plunged during the war, and for the first time in years the transportation system of, the country is ready to serve. Surplus stocks of. manufactured goods are being absorbed at a rate that is most satisfactory Credit ts being safely deflatedr Demand for housing ensures activity in building lines; the revival of many projects that were postpdned because of themore vital pressing needs of the war promise to provide employ ment for many men In all lines of Industrial activity. Readjustment of prices is also mak ing such headway as justifies the belief that new and more supportable level will be reached before long, with many of the existing sharp inequalities smoothed out Finally, the' result of the election gives assurance that the eoming years will see the1 government conservatively administered. All of these things point to but one conclusion, that the coming, days for the American people are to be busy and prosperous ones, with plenty ;of wOrk, good wages, and comforts for all. The order of the day should be: "Pessimists, to the rear!" .CONSIDERING the pictorial advertise ments, A. B. JValkley finds that that triumphant figure of the active, bustling world, the business man, divides his day'somewhat as follows: 'He begins with his toilets which seems to center in or near hit. chin, which is prominent, square, firm and smooth; even the rich,. velvety lather cannot disguise it. The business man collects safety razors; he collects collars, too He seems to be in the habit of calling in his friends to see how perfectly his shirt fits at the neck. Once dressed, he Koes to ht office and is to be .found at an enormous desk bristling with patent" evicc, picasantiy gossiping witn another busi ness man. You next find him in evening dress at the dinner table, beaming at the waiter who has brought him his favorite sauce.' Lastly you have glimpse of him in pajamas, discoursing with several other business men in naiaman. alt sitting cross-legged and smoking enormous ci gar. J. his ts the end of a perfect business. day A 8PLENDID RECOVERY, . 1 (.Waukeeha, Wla., item.) Jlr. and Mrs. ,J. Earl Stallftrd are the proud parents of an eight-pound boy, born at the Municiplal hospital thia morning. ' Mr. Stallard will be able to reeuine his v duties as county agricultural agent by to morrow. ; 1 "FOR SALE Lot, or will trade for Rnv- thing. Inquire Amos Lutlman." Auburn, ins-, otar. ' How about a biography of -Governor Cox? "HOPE IS THE DENIAL OF EXPERIENCE." Worn are the words and hoar ttie" imager Which fill the silly verses that I flign. ) : Compact of quaint conceits in nowise mine, ' But borrowed from the past, unconsciously. Some other means than sonnet might t free My rule-rid pen from tedious confine . And with my plag-arlsms Interline i f a Phrases Of new -and fine felicity. j, Still I insist the soniet must lugire.t s The eerie treble andhe bass depressed f That alternate through my proslao state ff, In artless music inarticulate ? in recompense for all my tuneless pleading '' v Yet may I make a sonnetworth her reading.' . i PETRARCHINO. How to Keep -Well By DR. W A. EVANS f, ti.i.itloai concarnlua kviiina. imitation and arevenUen et dlMate. eubmltlai a. n. . U.. . Tk. n.a ..III k aaaararaJ baraonallv. aublaCt nrooor llmltaliatl. whara a atanwatf. add aa nyoloM la ancloied. . Dr. by roadar Even will net main diafno.ia or prescribe "Isr Individual diaMaea. , Mtws Ma care f The . t i, ' wrlf bt, 19J0, by Dr. W. A. Evana. to Addraaa The' Failure of Police Raids:. The wholesale arrestb in police raids in Chi cago were as usual followed by wholesale re leases by the judges. Forays of this, sort can not be said to add to the respect in which the law is held. Non do spectacular cleanup cam paigns count for as much as quiet, steady pres sure pn evildoers. The very fact that the arrest of a thousand persons in a night is possible indicates that law enforcement previously has been slack. . Henry F. Mason, ax Justice o the supreme court-of Kansas, declared in a recent speech that English citizens obey the laws much bet ter than Americans. , The proportionate nuny bers of arrests in these countries bear evidence of this, and something might be made of the figures if the proportionate numbers of (con- 'victions also were at hand. Ole Hanton returns from abroad with the news that Europe regards America as, a Christ mas tree, but is to be believed that some of the happy family of nations have not done their shopping early enough. Nearly a million dollars has been oaid to b lawyers attempting to break the will of Mar shall Field, ant! ttfere may be some doubt as to whether the attorneys or the heirs will get the most benefit out of the estate. New Mexico's governor also Is coming in for considerable scolding because he has been too liberal with his pardons. Misapplied mercy is sometimes worse than x , 4 Those gypsy girls who attempted to rob a "bank while pretending to tell the fortune of the cashier should have studied their own life line to see if they would escape apprehension. 7 "The censorship exercised by mothers over their daughters' companions is- taking on a con dition amounting armed neutrality. to something more ' 1 than The theft of six bottles of whisky from the British embassy in Washington may yet be rf- ferred to as another Sinn Fein Outrage. cw . Still, if they save sugar away for a months, the consumer w6ild not be- even' - Some of those reduced prices have.. not reached much farther than the statisticians,; r . Political jobs would lose 1 their attraction for-some if time'' clocks, were installed. ' -The man sent to prison for stealing a trav iug bag will not need it fbr five years. POSSIBLY Premier O'Hafa of Japan woulf be interested in "O'Henry's Short Stor ies "whch a Dearborn street bookseller offers. . SXOCKINa UPOR THIS WINTER. ; ' ' (Prom the Oroton, Vt, Times.) ' Saturday Charles Hatley, who lives on the1 edge of Topsham, brought us a collec tion Of beets and carrots which takes tha leather medal for also and weight to .date. They were raised by James Hatley. Four carrots Weighed seven pounds . and two ounces, the largest being two and a quar- ter pounds.' The beet was a whopper, J 6 inches in circumference and 17 inches long-, weighing seven pounds and a quarter. Hope We haven't frightened off competition. Can ' anyone beat lit Are there any more twin . cabbages or Other Vegetable curiosities? Who Will take the prise T-..-EvpryboVw Js i , welcome. Try your luck. . , , , ''' . "AFTER the ladies had almost exhausted themselves talking, they were invited .tothe din ing room and revived with 'dainty refresh ments." Benton Republican. " -' After which they relumed discussion .of the servant problem and the cost of living. ' ' Mind. Wrecking Problem of Conduct, ' " ' . (From the British Weekly.). ' '; - , IVO Johnson has' a favorite 'umbrella, .with unusual ivory parrot handle. One ., day he places it In the stand at a big shoA,. . and when ready to leave the umbrella has disappeared. A month later the 'piano tuner calls at Mr. Johnson's and leaves the , Identical umbrella in the hall. What SfiOUld : Ivo Johnson do? . . v - 1 - - '"MY wife has thrown away her pill box: also myself,', writes Mr. J. A. J., Chicago." Adv. . The complete emancipator ' ,..-.'" THE IN!NS OF LOVE. Where sleep', the fairies, now that flowers are . dead? 7 . ' :, ' Where make they now XlUnla's fragrant bed? The winds axe chill, the boughs are bare, the way -j M- Are choked with snow; ah, these are frosty days For little folk that love the gentle air; ,'. r No trace of fairies find we anywhere. Apd yet, Just now, as dozing by the fire, ' I sate, to music woke 'my idle lyre, . . ? r As though there playei stmong its tutteftll strings , , r V- tTnnumbered fays with starry wands and wings, Binging the songs of long-forgotten springs.. Where sleep the fairies ndw that summer's flown "V : . Within those hearts that ever are their own Those inns of love whose ccay chambers hold Seclusion warm against the bitter cold, When lambs lie snuggled in the littered fold And the lean year is white and bent and old.' ' , LAURA BLACKBURN. "G. K. FENN, of the Chicago . Heights branch, will discuss Cardiac Arrhythmias fol lowed by & A. Casey.'? Bulletin. Or Casey at the Beat. BEWARE THE CHAIR. (From the Palmyra, Wis.,' Enterprise.) ' A Sullivan woman was quite seriously Injured recently- by falling from ' a bench. When the industrial commissioner was here, recently he cautioned especially about get ting upon a chair and said that a large per centage of injuries is a result of that kind , of an aqpident. IN the ' cemetery at Burlington, Wis., the finest stone bears the inscription, J'rl.'C L. Bacon." ' Kf Sic Transit Gloria. ' Sir: fine boardedthe Chicago limited at a western city, and after having directed the dis posal of her luggage in the drawing room and removing her' hat, repaired to the diner. Tall, stately, with a costume well chosen and stylish, she swept majestically to the table assigned her. Irresistibly beautiful, the crowning feature was her luxuriant Titian hair, which fairly, scin tilated aa the rays of the dropping1 sun earessed the silken tresses. v - Late that night A freight train passed, and a swinging box car door "side swiped" the lady's . sleeper, breaking the windows. Alarmed by the craajar she rushed frantically from the compart ment and did a Paul Revere down the a vale, en . dishabille and minus her crowning glory. Without her wig she was bald as an ostrich egg. The colored porter, dozing on his camp stool, suddenly roused by this vision, came near jump ing oft the train. ' OLD TJMER. "MRS. PHILLIP SCHOTTLER of Mari 'liette keeps a pet skunk to scare away the .mice and rates." Wisconsin Conservationist , : i It should serve as well for a burglar alarm. THE SECOND -POST.. ;'ts (Received by a clothing company. ) , , JDear Sirs: I received the suits you sdjit me I but in blue not gray as I said. Don't try- to send.me your refuse, I am sending themtback. I ain't (Sblor blind or a Jackass, you, shouldn't treat me as that.-' I understand your wife Is-mak-in coats for ladies now. Have her' make one (dark), for my wife who Is stout42 with a fer neck. Now send what I asked for,' the old woman is pellicular.- The trousers you sent wouldn't slip over my head. Ever faithful etc. , A Fig for Privacy. " 1 ' ' (From the Des Moines Register.) ' ' Young married couple at Bristol apart ments, wish to share a room with young . woman. Home privileges and meals if de sired, v . : j "COLONEL COOTIE of Marshall is 'ill with the flu." Boulder News-Herald.- Boy, see if Mr. Orr is at his easel. . ' -, IT IS EATEN BY-ADDICTS, V. . - Sir: Prowling around North Clark street, ws lamped this sign: "Good drinking coffee, Bc a pf Hod." We are curious to know for what Other purpose it is used, now that prohibition has set in. 4 R, R. m. ,f OMORROW is. the day we believe, for lengthening the column five agate lines. ' . B. L. T. Reincarnated. 4 The tellow ,who used to blow out the gas,' now steps on it, Chicago Daily News. REASON FOR THANKSGIVING - Thostv intoresled in human health have exeeptinnal reason to be thank ful this morning. Never in tne nis tory of the world- has there been euoh a period of good health as that which has . blsseed ji durUig the Jast six months. . .. : x So low has the' death fate been that weyhave saved since the great epidemto- of JnfUiensa enough lives to offset tlrt excess of mortality of ihni vv aiul moat ot the aavlnsf has taken ' nlaco . within the last la. months. - , t The United Rtntes - esnsus ofllce publiehesva weekly statement of mor tality rates in bt large American cltle For months the average rate of those cities has been around 11 per 1,000. About iS-per 1,000 is nor knal. During many weoks nearly a doren of these cities have had death rates undery10. New York and Chl oago have been in the list of cities under 10,-occasionally. In fact Chi cago's October rato'was 9,8. Its Sep tember rate; 0. - ; . r- The New York city bulletin says In the week of October 80' tho death rale of that city was 9.li 'The rate for the corresponding week in 191S k 0.08. The monthly .pMblication "of the New York state, board bf health indicates that the health Of the peoplo of the entife etnte has been extraordinarily good.-'Reports to the same effect come front ail over the country. We had the ureclleted wave of in fluenza in midwinter of this year, but it was not Widespread, did hot last long, and was not bad. For this we should be. thankful. For the first time in its history Chicago failed to have an increase irt Its death r&te during July and August, the'so-called summer peak. "No dou-ht there are places where they still have a summer pep K, especially in the warmer sections, but nowhere did the curve of deaths daring hot weather mount as high as it did in former times. The procession of white hearses in hot weather Is much shorter than it was 10 years ago, For this we should be thankful. Typhoid fever is booomlng a rare disease. For this ' we should, be thankful..- . The consumption rate is .coming flown year by year. It was predicted that a yoar'g long awell of consump tion would follow the great influents wave. So Mr from this being trite. there are many .reports that the fail in. consumption in 1920- has -been more rapid than in any otner year. Forvthe first time in history no TO KNOW AND NOT KNOW. TO i Wnen I am latd away beneath -the sod, Ar.d tny spirit soars away to God, When my casKet- crumbles to aecay Ana tins oicl tramff Teturaa 10 ciay. . Will I, transformed;--" above Somewhere, !:. And from my eminence up there i t . Look down and trace tho life below?. I lived, and would I have it so? t -Fray let me choose the things I see All others. Father, hide from me. - I would nl)t se'o the v wrought . y my misdeeds to others taught: ' The wasted years, the talents hid. Live ovor these years? Christ forbid. T-lroush the quaint old homestead I would : roam : - i.'. Where I flrBt ktfew the love of home, With tta old'sshtoned flreaJace. ti Its tlow athwart tny mother's face, Ai there She rocked. Or talked, or read,. To dad nfl me. 'til tlhw fol" bed. , ! I'd tha brush-g-rown, winding- creek krtm who bends I used te sneak. -WHB houtidlns heart and searching eyes To take tha1 wild ducks by surprise. And wher I bagged the cottontail, , , The. eJUlrrl, and. elusive quail. T would not see the poverty That all about me now I see. The wasting bodies, pain, disease No Father, bids my eyes from these. I'd trace the paths through the hilly glades , Where I Romped- and raced , with rural - maids; , "Out past the church in the countryside ' Where one ot them became my bride. Where in after years wo knelt and prayed With our own rural country maid. - v. Would I through mortal eyss thus see - Where. souls Immortal only be? Or would contentment thera be mine, -To gate oil naught but scenes dtvlneT QEOBOK B. CHILD. great waves of disease have swept over the civilised world in tho wako ot war. While this- horseman ot the Apocalypse is riding arouad tho fringes of civilisations) America and northwest Europe have been spared. No waves of typhoid, f over, vene real ..'disease, malaria, and Bven years' itch have afflicted" us. Such has not been the case in the past. Nor have "we been troubled with cholera, typhus, or plague. While there wore a few casoa of tho Inst disease In a few towns, tho reports ftre that no cisea of human plague htive been f (run J even in these places In recent weeks. For this we should be thankful. In whatever direction we turn, wo find reasons to be thankful for 4he blessing of, good health. i',' , litatl A Healthful Life. " ;iA. R. T. wrltei "1. I shpuld like very muoh to know if ye.ast is really 1 good for clearing the skin, If. so: should two whole cakes be 4akn dally. -and-for hok long? My face- seems to have a yellowish apPcareftee.- . "S.'l drink two cups or cof fee daily. Is that too muoh?". 1 ifrls of service when used in con nection with such other measured as (a) regulation of diet, (b) active physical life, (c) sweating, (d) keep ing the skin clean, 2.' TWj Cakes a day is no liable to cftuse loose bowels. - 8, Most persons stand two cups of coffee daily.' iThatis an overdose for some people.! - - v , 1 I1" ' 1 V1U1 a Singlo Meaning. Prlnoe and pauper often. In these days, two words with a single meahlng. ijforfolk Virginian- Pilot. Nonpartisan Women Protest. Omaha, Nov. 8i To the Editor of Tha Bee: A deplorablo condi tion exists when 6ur chief executivo finds it necessary to resort to a wholesale pardoning of prisoners to make room in the penitentiary for the vast number of convicts that are being sent in from all corners; of the State.A ,. ., , : ; 'r .. All thinking veople realised that when Crime is. so rampant there must be some great underlying cause, something that breeds a. disregard for law and order. v ,4 dive men work, not only at a Hy ing wage but 1st a wage that will enable thorn to enjoy some of the better things of life, a wage that will make it possible for them to marry, tp have homes ot their own, and to feel that thoV are a part of this great ration. Remove he causo and you till W WIG UlHCHSf. . ' The rapist, however.. Is a degen i v-- : nht6ne so 'r&rey 1 tnaritisaeservediy termed, WHime-' . makeihe ' a . . ' Give Vour Furnace A Treat Buy Your Air:' COAL Thisf Winter From the UPDIlClt LUMBER A COAL CO. ' Phone Walnut 0300 , ' i erate." ho is not- so much aV, victim of ecnnemio oomlltions aa ai othet cilinlnala. His to be sura is a defect, but Jt Is a physical detect and should bo dealt with as such. A prison sentence wilt not euro him. As a group of women cltiaens or ganized to secure better govern ment and to safeguard- our homes and children, we tfka this means tot protest the pardoning and paroling of this class of criminals by.Qover tior McKelvle. WOMKN VOTER'S NONPARTISAN COMMITTEE. 0. Worst Is Yet to Come The Scotch "wets" should not fet-1 , too great elation over this succcsh. Tho "wet" victories were more pu- morons than the "dry" when th movement started here. rittsburE'1' Onsctte Times. 1 ooooooooooooooooc a-J Trade Kar lKaatstara4 PLAYER, ROLLS ape Better Honolulu pyes is a "roll that appeals to lovers of - this popular style of composition. Hear it tomorrow in our nw Roll Dept. MICKEUS 15th and Harney., cxxxxxxooooooooo u Can Be Thankful 11 I ensaDicto w ' I Always say 4 Bayer! AtpiraMs trade mark Bayer Maaufic tur MoaoacetiCaCideiterol Silicyhcacid. . r i DiamstS VJnn arp nnf tinfTuerfced by price prnnanciai gmtxdfy- it j seau nq a tetTect5 expression oriheir art- 7 ' Attend Our - , PLAYER SALE This Week. OS mm 1513 Douglas St The' Holiday Art & Music Store V ... " If you have a snug savings account, one that is safe beyond a, doubt, one that pays dividends regularly, Vou hae great reason to enjoy your Thankljrivlng. That condition is . 1 , POSSIBLE TO EVERY CITIZEN who is a wac earner or who is getting an Income over and above actual needs. ? Shares in The Conservative are backed by the best possible security-I irsf mortgages on real estate. These, shares are hot held by a few people .but by" thousands, all mutually Interested. ' For nearty thirty years dividends hove been paid promptly January- and July each year. The money you invest is ued to help people acquire homes In Omaha. J' . ... ;; ' "'-''' r '' '" Why nit begin NOW while you have a little surplus, or if you have idle money, don't hoard it better feecD it working. .. ' f Conservative Savings 6 loan association So'.ith Si A: scaty, Krathy Brj., 43CP South St.h V-i. B EWARE of the timo when 4-0 u are hot poai- tfve. When you admit uncertainty even .to youraelf, your head is in the sand and some thing unexpected may push you over or In deep a r as the case may be Richards. Richards Audit Company . " " A Natiaaat and HIehly Trained Orjanliatlan. . 1 , PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERS .. r INCOME TAX SPECIALISTS. ' ' i C I Han 1 1 11 1 in 11 J A. ABBOTT, 70S W. O. W. Bldf. Rctldsnt Manager " Phona Tyltr a 80 1 . Demit; New York, Chicago, Minneapolis; Omaha, St. Louis, Tulsa, Flint, Saginaw, Windior. r Blankets. Comforts i Have. Dropped In Price ;. ' i '. j at Bowen's - . ; y ; There isa difference; in Blankets -and x Com forts, especially in' their warmth and wearing and serviceable qualifies do not be satisfied unless you' get the Bowen guar anteed kind. They will give you, years of satisr; factory service. Another and very 'im portant fact to consider when, you buy, you want to know that -you are paying the right price. Bowen' Prke tags npvj ionger;Dear tne oia war prices, but the greatly re duced Low Ebb Priced are in etfect right how in every ..department at Bowen's, the Value-Giving Store. . And, 4 as usual, you'j .make your own terms. I , v",; Advertisement; I .. We. heard a young chap make this remark a few days This young man earned a lafgcjilary, but all he could see in his weekly pay check-wag a good time he i, gave no thought to the future. Often Ids associates would - say: "I envy Jack's disposition;' no iaatter what fiap- pens, he's always hippy. M. Bttt this young ;hap reall should be pitied, for his ,tomorrfw will be a sorrowful ; .- , V- ; ! " - '1 W SUIIIIIaa III Nil f -J TK . r i -J-':,,:-: one. Get the Savings Ha bit! t I . a aaaaBlBSaaaaaVlBaanaSl aBaaaak. V. II I . .1. W - M n. . Do-you figure a good time"today ant) 1t tomorroV takt eart of itself t .AVE a little of your income EVEUT weeb. . Open a SAVINGS ACCOUNT in our SAVINGS DEPABTAIENT. SAVE, prepare for the . future, and you'll never worry when tomorrow comes for you will 'iti v .Comfort, Happiness and Contentment, t' United States National Bank The Bank of PERSONAL AttenUoa. This Clock Is Always Correct If . W Corner 16th aad Tuum Ste ) -aaVs , f.' r i: in A