7 A' THE BEE: Omaha, tumuai, imuttMrJKK 21, 19'JO. "1 V ' i . i ' I; f The Om aha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THE BEG NELSON PUBLISHING B. UPDIKE, COM PANT, Publisher. . ,. MEMBERS OF' THE ASSOCIATED PRESS " TIi aiaoctatsd PreM, at wbtek Tba IM H aiambtr, la ohulwl autltled to tbt m tot publication at all naas diiralcbaa cradlted tu It i Dot othtnrtM emtllKl In this wiwi. ao4 a 10 tk liwal nwl rublUfcad karain. All ttgbu at pubUctUoa of out apadal duMUbM ara alto mml ( , BEE TELEPHONES , Prtrata Branch Biohanta. Ak tor Tvlr 1000 tb DapanBWtit Of Pernio Wanted. 1 JICI iwu For Night Call Aftsr 10 P. M.s Bihtortai Departm'tit .....--Cirf ulilinQ Jjepataient AOiettltlDf Deputmmt - , OFFICES OF THE BEE if (la Offlca' 17th and Paraam CoueU Bluffs ' IS Boott W. I flouih Bid Oul-of-ToWa Otficaas Kaw folk . IM rtftb AM. I JWanhlnrton Trl 10001 Ijlef 1003L Mil N 81 OklOaSO 1311 O St. Btatar Uldt,; I J- aria Franca IIUjBua SU Honora The Bee's Platform ..' 1. New Union Passenger Station! , . . 2. Continued improvement of the Ne i braska, Highwsiys, including the) pave stent of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha with a Brick Surface. 3. A short, low-rat Waterway from the ,. Cora Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. !. 4. Horn! Rule Charter for Omaha, with . City Manager form of Government. 'yw t 'in i til 'J-jr3s 1 .-...ji ,1 j. r.y-sm. , att ; v- . IMMIGRATION: MENACE OR BLESSING? . Divergent views in the senate as. to the need for suspending, ' immigration laws to prevent eatry to the United States of the crowds now pressing hither from Europe will not .astonish any. If the United States senate is noted for. ar)y one thing; it is the Variety 'Vof( views its members can entertain as to a particular ques tfpn of public, policy or interest. The present instance is in line with the senate's traditional aspect. ' . ' ,' - " . , What is very certain is that a stream of mi gration the greatest in- modern history has set in from central Europe. The United States has been and is receiving aliens at a rate beyond any of its previous experience. Records show that so far these have been largely of a desir able type, coming from western Europe in Ithe lhain,1' provided wjtht sufficient means to permit their becoming' established here;' many of them are skilled orkV,?? ' while' the unskilled are of the more intelligenclasf.' ; ejynd this looms a iiiuch darker clqud., Reports irom Riga bring news of hundreds 6f thousands of peasants from soviet territory, destitute arid forlorn, struggling to reach a seaport from whence they may embark to a land where the "brotherhood" of com munism does not prevail. Tales are told of entire "villages depopulated, only the aged and infirm, those inca.pable ; of marching are left. Roadsides are lined with bodies of the unfor tunate whose strength has failed, and who have died. Groups hide by day and travel by night, to avoid the marauders who swarm and pillage the pilgrims, without mth. It is a veritable liegira, such a has not bejen. known for cen turies. A statement, recently: published, says the racial problems will be transferred from Europe to America if the movement goes on. " i; America can not look with indifference on such a spectacle, nor contemplate unmoved the predicament of the victiriTs of the social cataclysm that has followed ,t"ie close of the great war. ' Neither is it to be expected'that ,we jeopardize tne"entire future-;by -admitting:, fop,, the', present and unassimilable mass of destitute and indi gent from -Europe. No true American "wants to s"hut the door of. opportunity to any, yet he realizes that he owes something to his own. country, to its institutions, and feeh that in some way their perpetuity depends on the protection they receive now. ' ' ! Prohibition of immigration for' a year will do little harm. We have been contributing to the relief of the , starving in Europe for years, and will continue to do so. Our hope in this respect has been that thjey will give over their squabbling and settle down to work to support themselves, i. Readjustrritnt at home has not pro ceeded far enough to justify taking on any com plications. Unempjoyrrfe'ht is steadily increas ipg in the United States, so tfiat no shortage of 'labor is threatening.; .Manifestly, the best argu ment in support of the bill to restrict immigra- ..'.- 1A - J . --t ...i lion rests on a pruaent rcsuivc io pruieti our stlves, Senators w;hd are oppbsed to the policy . may be brought td see irpm this light, but ap ' parentJly enough to pass the measure favor it. ! It is far more vital to the immediate future of the United States than the Poindexter anti-strike bill that was railroaded through last week, and therefore deserves more attention. 11 -Y - -' - . l' Another International Crisis Passes. J It is not surprising to learn that especial care is to be exercised in choosing American diplo matic representatives, or that a number of able and wealthy? citizens are bidding for appointment s to these foreign posts. The necessity for prompt decisions, bold action and, scrupulous regard foi national honor is such that no one but a man perfectly sure of himself could now afford to -j accept the responsibility". -; V One has only to read of the triumphant con duct of Hugh C Wallace, American ambassadoi to France, to realize what might happen if the i wrong man had been chosen to this important office. A French statesman had given an official vJinner to which all the .diplomatic corps waf invited, among the number both the American and the German ambassadors." One of the host? approached ' Mr. Wallace with the -Tiews , that the German would tike tp nieet hiiru Relaxing iqto the vernacular, Mr. Wajlace asked his hos' to forget it,, and pointed put that although it might be correct for a Frenchman or a Belgian to say "how do'y6tt do" to a Germ.an, he could not overlook the fact that the United States had not ratified the covenant of the league of nations .or signed the peace treaty, and that so far as he was concerned he djdn't have to speak to any German, .for the two countries were still at war. " . "Tell him that I refuse to meet him," said Mr. Wallace,, ind-history does not record whether the Berliner, who stood within earshot, fell through the floor or merely tossed up hip lieels and collapsed as characters in cartoon? customarily do in 'such circumstances. The French are a race with proper respect foi .etiquette, and asVthe news of the heroic and punctilious attitude of s Mr.' .Wallace spread, he was surrounded' by a crowd of congratulation Even Baron Hardinge, it-is related, the new British ambassador, clasped his hand in admira- "The episode was much talked of in political circles in Paris today," says the cable message' Maybe now' tome of those French and English are . sorry thejL-signtd'. the covenant of peace. Look at the advantage it gives America to br out of it. ' " . O vindication of the Law. The execution of Cole and Grammer" term inates one of the longest and in many .ways most interesting fights for liberty ever conducted under the courts of Nebraska. It can not be said, in the light of this case, that the law relentlessly pursues one who has infringed its provisions. On the other hand, it has been proven that many safe guards and protections are thrown around one accused of a crime, and that the . law patiently hears and tests all of his claims to immunity. Public "patience sometimes is sorely tried by the procedure, but humane considerations de mand that no chance be denied the culprit whose life has been decla'red forfeit. In no other way can the law itself be satisfied, or the objections of those opposed to capital punishment be met. When a doubt is left as to the guilt of a culprit, or it is possible that all his legal rights have not been accorded him, then objection may rightly lay agaiqst the execution of the sentence. Therefore :it js incumbent always to patiently abide the slow-moving process of the cou'ris, be cause ;only thus do we in the right ..way sustain Jibe dignity, and majesty of the law, on which at last all our rights and liberties rest. ; , , While, in this case the-yattorney who repre sented tfce accused displayed not only extensive ,knpwledge "of the intricacies of the law, and ap plied that knowledge in a most persistent and itjgenions way,' it is not alleged ' that he was actuated by any mood of levity, or that he flip pantly" or frivolously interposed from time to tune -one after another of tKe points he raised. He. was an attorney, an officer of the court; bat tling for the rights of his client; not at any mo ment undertaking to thwart justice or to impede the lawy but always striving to vindicate that law. Thatrhe exhausted every means in behalf, of the men who sought him as a defender, is to his credit; that the law finally exacted the penalty is the state's justification. - Food Versus Clothing. - . , : ' The warmer the clothing in winter, the less' food is required, and if this scientific theory holds true, it would be an. easy matter to pick out the hearty eaters. Some there are, of course, who can afford neither heavy clothing! nor plentiful food, but for others light clothing'is a matter of choice, aad expensive choice at that, for 'while the cost of clothing for comfort is comparatively small,' the amount spent for ornament, is com paratively high, t Clothing, we' are told, is. a net to catch air, which is useful as a non-conductor of heat. It is on this theory that the best mefhod of dress is, said to consist of several layers of different substances and loosely woven textures. It is as if the body and its clothing were built as one of those vacuum bottles that defy changes of tenv perature. ' Loosely woven wool, consisting of 87 per cent air and 13 per cent solid substance, is rightly con sidered as ideal for winter wear. It is elastic and soft, has little contact with the skin arid thus creates a layer of air between the garment, and he skin, . It has the further advantage of not being wet by moisture, but allowing it to pass through and evaporate. Cotton , and linen, withstanding the ravages of laundering better than wool, find the greatest argument for their! use, in that quality. ' Fine linen is dense; containing ctnly 42 per cent air and 58 per cent, solid' - matter, and when : starched has rid -air' at "all in its -interstices. Having close contact with th skin, it ' conducts heat away and feels cooler, It is said that it takes thirty times as long for a given quantity of air to pass through linen as through wool tricotine, hence a lack of circulation that impairs the util ity of linen. Silk lies in a middle ground be tween wo! and linen. Cotton stockings con duct heat away a'third faster than those o! wool, and shiny leather shoes more quickly than those made of soft, loose leather. But these assurances avail not when one bun dles up too thoroughly for it is not so often the insufficiently-clad person who catches cold as the .too-abundantly clad. ' : Sensible protection from cold by clothing enables more energy' to be used for other purposes than keeping up -the' bodily heat, together with lessening the quantity of fpod required, which leads us back to speculation as to the diet of some of our young and charming friends. i. . ' Last Call for Fly Swatting."- . . 1 .What flies are left alive now are so fat and lazy that it ' scarcely seems sportsmanlike ' to htmt them down, and yet "a swat in time may save ninety and nine next spring. These languid surviyors that are floundering about the warm kitchens and dining rooms should be killed at once, as they have fattened for hibernation for the winter months, in preparation for emerging from winter quarters about Easter time and raising their summer progeny. A bulletin sent out by the Merchants' asso ciation of New York urges the importance of killing houseflies seen between Thanksgiving, and Christmas. The fact that in many cfties; this disease carrying insect has ,been : eo ' largely eliminated does indeed make it advisable; not to relent at this crucial moment. '. " On the same morning that certain conclusion? might have been drawn from a "shooting affray in the Philippines, two men were killed fn 4 race riot in Kansas, thus demonstrating that, latitude and longitude are purely geographical terms and have little to do witfi altering human nature. i ' . Twelve thousand emigrants . recahed New York Sunday, anxious to hold a Christmas cele bration under Old Glory. This is why the immi gration law is getting consideration;'' ' ! A Line 0' Type or Two Htw to the Line, lat tha qutpa fall whara they may., Another lame duck is cared for, John F. Nugent of Idaho being set onto the , Federal Trade board. This is one problem that Mr. Harding will not have to face. Cabinet makers are rapidly exhausting the roll call of eligibles, so that none can complain they were not at least mentioned. The Iowan who forgot his name and his home can trust to his landlord identifying him on or about the first of the morith. ' . If the Greeks will kindly lock up all the squirrels and the monkeys, Constantine will now proceed to reign. - - - ' , ,'. V MORNING IN IOWA. , L'a coldV rough, gloomy mornlnK! "uainst yenow aawn uit biiiuao Of neighbors chimneys tains the air. Reminding me that yon grim, white-capped cone, Which like a second Rainier stands in my back yard, Like him of ash and cinders built, now calls -For more upbuilding. That white bloom Which last night's now hath left upon His smooth and awful sides must now Be sicklied o'er with more and yet more Ashes. ' What's that I smell buckwheats? And what's-his-name's pig sausage? It is? Aha! ,Oee, what a peach of a morning! ' ABD-EL-KADER. THE two stenogs 'in the L coach were dis cussing the opera. "I see," said one, "that they're going to sing 'Flagstaff.' " "That's Verdi's latest opera," said the other. "Yes," contributed the gentleman in the adjacent seat, leaning forward; "and the scene is laid in Arizona." "AND THAT'S THAT." (From the Quincy Herald.) . I will not be responsible for any debts contracted by my wife, Florence Hlntz. Albert Hints. Albert Hlntz advertises he will not be re sponsible for any debts contracted toy me. Nsver was. I pay my bills. Florence Hints. A CITIZEN of Chugwater, Wyo., fell while passing a house that was being moved down the street, and was run oyer. His experience is be lieved to be unique. . - Attention of Old Ed Freschl. ; Sir: In Milwaukee the other night I noticed one of the o's was msising from the "Holeproof Hose" electric sign, making a hole in it. H. P. , "P. J. FINNEGAN suggested the police pad lock the cars of motorists who refuse to obey the present thirty minute parking rule." i Would it not be better to pour kerosene on them, and set them afire? 7 REFERRED. t-!' ? Sir: fence the new rule compelling coaches td' number their foot ballplayers has proved so advantageous to spectators, why not pass a similar one regarding grand opera singers? , ' . C. G. C, JR. ' ' IF the British empire were not so busy crumbling it might take official (or officious) notice of the rioting in Manila. . "Beg Ypur Pardon." (From the Tipton, Ind., Tribune.) . Editor Tribune: Through the columns of your paper, I wish to say that the article ' : ' - about my husband is not true, but only lies - made up by some one of several much worse ". I than Tedon. We fuss a little once in a while, ' but when it comes to fighting that is not i true. Of course Tedon drinks. Everyone V knows that, but it Is his affair and concerns no one else. Tedon has enemies,' I guess, , because they are jealous he makes an honest y living without working. If other people will attend to their own affairs, Tedon and I will -.' attend'to ours. You think I am a little frail ! .: woman; you have not seen me lately. I tip rj the scale at 156 pounds. Tedon is a good provider,' and if he spends his money for ;.v White Mule after he has taken good care of mts-and'our two babies; it is no one's busi ness .but ours, and as far as sympathy Is ' 5 concerned, our back yard is full of it. It " looks as if you people who are always knocking Tedon, would give White Mule, Lemon extract, Hostetters Bitters, Beef, . Iron Wine and Nitre more attention. A ' great many homes would be happier. AT the Quaint Shop in Sterling one can buy ead necklaces, "so beautiful," as the shop quaintly puts it, "that every woman will want a string to wear if she hasn't anything else." -THE OLD-FASHIONED IDEA WAS ' THAT THEY STUNTED A CHILD'S GROWTH. (Health hint in Illinois State' Register.) ' Q. How many cigars may I give my daughter? She is five years old. A. The growing child should have at least a quart a day and more if it can bo supplied. . "MILLIONAIRE Dies After " Trying to Figure Up Taxes." Headline. - v i . Innumerable mental break-downs from the same cause do not get into print, PUSSYFOOTING IN OREGON. 7 (From the Portland Oregonlan. .Wanted, by the Anti-Saloon League of Oregon, definite and accurate information . concerning moonshiners, bootleggers, or any violators of the prohibition law; all com munlcations treated absolutely confidential.' . ..'Address all communications to P. O. Box -..82, Portland. , .. , '; THERE was a debate in Benton Harbor last night, and the announcement read: "Five compe tent judges, half of them men and Half women, will render the verdict." . A Lure for Ireland's Salmon Trout. N Sir: Let me'recommend a red hackle. We once knew a buxom red headed Heilan' lassie who, on account of the salmon, wouldn't made In the burn if the water was high. . . . ' RAB DHU. , - OVERHEARD in a smart (very) shop: Male Customer: "What would you suggest for two very old madis?" Smart Clerk: "Two old men." THE POPOCATAPETL OF APOLOGY. . ... (From the Kearney; Neb., Hub.) In making mentton of the court calendar '' in the Hub yesterday,' -the transposition of ar line made it appear that William Moody was ' charged 'with murder, whereas Harvey Graham was intended. ' The charge against Moody was burglary. A part of a page was "pled" Just at going -to press, and the transposition was unhappily made in rear ranging the linotype lines for the form. The Hub makes this correction with a sincere apology. SEE W. J. Bryan for rriilk cows." Sarasota Times. Avocation of a master Chautauquan mind. The Second Post' v (From the superintendent of a fishing club In Wisconsin.) . "Just had a letter from Johm- last night, and he says the trout are fine, 'and he also informs me that he as fell in love with one of the .. girls -and will get married in the spring, Just as soon as he can run his ford. Says she don't know much but thinks she would be all right around the house, especially in the winter to pick trout eggs, etc." G. E. THORPE, principal of the Boone high school, has a stenographer whose initials are F. A. T. So his type-written communications carry the suggestion: "GETFAT." PRESENCE OF MIND OF P. HANS FLATH. , ". (From the Wichita Eagle.) One young lady In the first row at the ' Palace theater, Monday afternoon, became so absorbed in watching Charles Ray she lost her -equilibrium. - At least this is what it is supposed she lost, for she slid from the 'seat under the brass -'railing and alighted on-the organ pit, all on her own Initiative. ,, P. Hans Flath grasped the situation and played some very loud music. FLAPPERS, think E. F., should be warned of the dangers of kneemofiia. .. , THEY ARE. ; ' Sir: Have . you heard of Packard's Ford .Garage in Poynefle, Wis., and Miss Bonnet's Millinery Shop of Portage? Or are they in the same class as "Puis and Puis of Sheboygan"? ; COMTE DROLATIQUE. CLASSICAL WHO'S WHO. ' What lovely Paphian goddess From the white foam arose? Venus. In drugstore windows She wears elastic hose. - ELSIE. AMONG those mentioned, for . diplomatic honors is Mr. Wrigley. May we not suggest Yucatan? B. L. T. Almost. It takes almost as much will power to re fuse an inheritance of a million dollars as it does to turn down an offer of a ride in an auto when one is walking downtown for exercise. Toledo Blade. A folding Christmas tree is the last something. - I i , word If a tariff will belo. farmers are saved Why Pathetic Figure? The ex-Enfiress Eugenie left over $lt),000, 000, and now a lot of people are wondering why she was alwayi referred to as "a pathetic figure," How to Keep Well , By DR. W. A. EVANS Quaationa concerning hyglane, sanita tion and pravention of diaaaaa, aub ntittad to Dr. Evans by raadera of Tha Baa, will bs anawerad paraonally, aub , jact to proper limitation, where a atamped, addreeaed anvalopa ia . s cloud. Dr. Evans will not make diagnoais or preecrlbe for Individual diaaaaaa. Address letters in care of The Bee. Copyright, 1920, by Dr. W. A. Evans. ASTHMA AND CONSUMPTION. Most of us are of tho opinion that asthmatics do not have consumption and consumptives do not have asth ma. ,The notion prevailed that there was some sort of an antagonism be tween the two conditions. Many an asthmatic has consoled himself for the inconvenience of his present ail ment by thinking, "Well, bad as it is it protects me from consumption, which is worse." Somo authorities of the olden time admitted that asthmatics contracted consumption sometimes, but claimed that when consumption developed the asthma got well. In recent years Investigators have found that a lot of old asthmatics are really old con sumptives, j Soca found that of 700 asthmatics carefully examined BOO had con sumption. Pottenger found that seven out of 75 consumptives in his sanitarium had asthma also. Dr. E. B. French found that in 49 cases of open ;', consumption living in their homes in one district in Chicago, six were afflicted with asthma also. In ordinary bronchial asthma there is a more or less chronic, per sisting bronchitis as a basic work. The bronchitis subject becomes eas ily susceptibia to the chemical se creted by the bacteria in his bron chial tubes, Just as other men be come susceptible to eggs, and still others to salmon. When this sus ceptibility is developed the man gets a condition of his bronchial tubes somewhat akin to that of the skin in hives. He yearns for air Just as the hives man yearns, for the privilege of scratching. . ,; V The asthrna part of the picture Is the difficult breathing. In most cases of cansumptlon there is considerable bronchitis. That is where most of the sputum comes from. If over-susceptibility to the secretions of the bacilli of bronchitis Is developed asthma Is the result. On the other hand, what is to pre vent tubercular infection of a' lung where1 there Is chromic bronchitis? As Dr. French says, the practical angle to this matter is that a lot of Old asthmatics are careless spitters because they think their spitting does no harm, whereas they are con sumptives and are doins much harm by promiscuous spitting. Again, many people assume that because they are asthmatics they cannot contract consumption and they expose themselves unnecessar ily. Finally, when doctors and nurses are told a person has asthma they are apt to pass the case over lightly, thinking consumption out of tlie question. Dr. Freilich thinks every asthmatic should have several ex aminations once a year at least in order to rule out consumption. Asthmatics who hav.e fever, lose weight, have night sweats, a rapid pulse, or who spit blood should have a careful chest .examination for con sumption. An asthmatic should be careful about his sputum, seeing that it is properly collected and destroyed. . , Causes of Heart Murmur. H. H. C: writes: "I have a-baby boy 1 year old-and the doctors tell me he has murmur of the heart. Is thl onrahlA or will he outtrrow it. and what can I do to have it cured? When he was about 6 months old he goj' the rickets, but tho doctors tell TJfie&oes " 'Siivo the School Lautls. Omaha, Pec 17. To the Editor of The Bee: "Jours of yesterday con cerning the state keeping our re maining school lands as an heritage to our children and to those chil dren yet nnhorn was an editorial of sound common sense. On two legiHlatrve occasions I have had an' humble part in killing bills proposing the sale of our remaining school lands to individuals We have killed them with thta problem in the State's- financing, namely: The two sections, 16 and 36, are school sections, 1,230 acres in each town ship, torevcr Bet apart for school maintenance if our legislative hands could have been kept off them. In eastern Nebraska most these lands were biireainod awav to '"friends" at $7 per acre. In later years the price per acre was some more, but most the good school lands in eastern Nebraska went for such ridiculous prices of sale to "friends." Had" thes lands been held in trust to the chldren and no return received on them up to now, the so-called permanent school funds of the statewould be a fabulous sum in lands. Had they been leased to poor home.-wisb.lng farmers at one-third reni.al of crops, raised, this rent annually would be more to the school funds every year than the J per acre price the Btate received on good lands, and if 1,280 acres of land in a township at one-thitd lease of crop would on the good lands produce $7 per acre, a sum of $8,960 per annum, would today pay all the school teachers' salaries in the rural townships of eastern Nebraska where these lands are lo cated, leaving only the school house, books and fuel to be provided for by a small taxation on each district. Were these school sections al lowed to be leased only at a one third rental annually, why,' Mr. Edi tor, our se-called permanent school funds w6uld be fabulous, as I said, and two sections in every township, with a fixed rental value of one third the crop would be an ever ready barrier to excessive leases made for private lands. A wise man should profit hy the mistakes Of the past. So should we. What our legislators should do is to provide for the leasing of the remnant of this princely inheritance to our school children rather than the giving of it away, i ' How any man who Is a father and a grandfather ould countenance a law to dissipate these lands of our children, I can't somehow seem to. understand. TRENMOR CONE. "BUSINESS is good thank YOrf LV. Nicholas Oil Company You May Wear Your Army Overcoat, If It has been dyed to any color other than the olive drab, or if it has been al tered so that it is plainly not a regulation Army garment Our . expert workmen thoroughly, understand how to change your Army clothes into civilian garments, and the charges for such work are really reasonable. Phone Tyler 0345 We Will Explain It All. DRESHER BROTHERS CLEANERS-DYERS 2211-17 Farnam St. Will Place a Columbia Grafonola In your home for Xmas. All styles to select fpom, $32.50 to 1250.00. Latest record hits on sale. Schnoller& Mueller Piano Company New Location, 1514-16-18 Dodge Street . Phone Douglas 1623 me he hasn't the rickets now. Would that have caused the heart murmur? Will you kindly tell me if it is serious? ' , ' . . RE.PLY. . There are several causes of heart murmur as well as several condi tions of which this is a sign. An answer true of one would be untrue as to another. Have your physician tell you whether the murmur is con genital, whether it- is bacterial, whether it is due to anemia, whether it is caused by a crippled heart valve. If all children were exam ined it would be found that many have heart murmurs. In most in stancesMhey get along well; have no symptoms, and the heart appears to be entirely normal until the person reaches middle life." LannBtafskMaBBBBaKatraieaalaBBn CHRISTMAS SUGGESTIONS - i . Let a Grafonola be the "Home Gift" this year. .The charm of it never dies. Unlike! an ordinary talking machinej the Columbia is made for a life time of beautiful use. ' In Bowen's Grafonola De partment you will always find your favorite Kecords, made by the world's greatest ar tists. Columbia Eeeords will be appreciated as Christmasf gifts, as they will be a con tinuous reminder of the thoughtfulness of the giver. And, as usual, you make your own terms. American State Bank 18th and Farnam Streets Capital $200,000.00 RESOURCES OVER A MILLION Deposits in this Bank are protected by the Depositors' Guar anty Fund of the State of Nebraska. . CREDIT IS PROGRESSIVE Local success local reputation creates local credit. . As a( business expands, extending its acquaintance and broadening its market, it develops character and is entitled to credit f ' CHECKING ACCOUNTS of firms and individuals solicited. ' 4 compound Quarterly interest added to your account in our Savings Department. Funds subject to withdrawal without notice. D. W. Geiselman, President D. C. Geiselman, Cashier , . H. M. Krogh, Assistant Cashier i ; Ten More Bargains From the Xmas Yellow Tag Sale For TUESDAY Only W 1 1111 "cagagBMl"!,'j; 1 1 IKF It n I In keeping with our aimouncctutnt or.ijuu,day we will place on sale each day ten different bar gains in new and used Pianos and Players. This series of sales started with a bang on Monday morning so get ii). early and make your selection from the Ten Specials for Tuesday Including: , " Camp & Co., Bennett & Co., Stetson, Chickering Kimball, at prices from 125, S135, $185 $200 up to $365 for the new ones. . Also your choice of-five., jnew Player Pianos . : at $405. . 1 -Terms 24 Equal Monthly Payments. ustte do. . . 1513-15 Douglas St. The Art, and Music Store Phone Douglas 2793 iar ("hi L OMAHA 'iBL.E 1 ir v f printing Ggpiiiiin h COMMERCIAL PRIMTERS-llTHOGRAPrlERS STEEL DIE EMBOSSERS LOOSE LEAF DEVICES USE BEE WANT ADS THEY BRING RESULT Splendidly Equipped Well Operated Delightfully Comfortable Diner Serving at 6:15 TICKETS-1416 DODGE STREET (Douglas 1684) . and BURLINGTON STATION II UUWWUW 7 !nfn. .'""f i: