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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 12, 1921)
in THE BEE! OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1921. 't " s I' j: H i I I h if If if is 4 t ! it 4 3- v- 1 n a. ) TheOmaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. NELSON B. UPOIKS. Publisher. MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED MESS Tlw Muritd Preee. M MM If Hat a a tnembet. M a e'utlftlj wittier) to Um um fM iniMxwtlo 4 til orwe diapauses eiotliod u II w m) eUterwlet nwltud la (hie Bauer. eo4 alao Um kaal un ruMMied kmln 411 MM si publleelloa of out evemel atiiit'iMW are aieo BEE TELEPHONES Print R?nnn Kieaaiiie. Aik for Tvr 1 1W1 Utt UeutrtuiM or IWa Watilea. iywr A WW For Nlfbl Calls After 10 P. M.I Edtrtirui Itwartmnu ......... Trier I'ln-utttlna iMparlmeD! ........ Adnrlitlog UtpartiMnt .. OFFICES OF THE BEE Main Of in irtti and Pamela IS ttooU K. aViuia Bide Oul-ol-Town OfficMi tsa nnn ai , wumnmoo Count! Blefft Nee York Tle Trie 1001 Kit S Si un a Parte freeee MltoK. Heaore The Bee's Platform 1. Nw Union Passenger SUtion. 2. Continued improvement of th Ne braska Highways, including the pave, ment of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha with Brick Surface. 3. A short, low-rat Waterway from the Corn Belt te the Atlantic Ocean. 4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. A STATE BUILDING PROGRAM. , '-No proposal recently made to the people of Nebraska deserves more careful consideration than that contained in the letter written by Mr. John Hogc of Grand Island and published in The Bee. It deals with a condition that has slowly been developing, and which is now ap proaching an acute stage. The public buildings owned by the State of Nebraska are decaying, some of them already having reached the point where to repair them is to waste money. Pro vision has been made for' a new Mate house; additional buildings are to be erected on the university campus, to replace others that are obsolete, but nothing is being done in a general way to take care of the hospitals, asylums, re formatories, homes and schools Jnaintained by the state and for which the need increases wfth each year. Many of these buildings 'already have passed the accepted period of usefulness, and should soon go out of existence. v The state has been liberal, even if imprudent, in- caring for the needs of its citizen and its wards. Repairs . and improvements have been made on structures from time to time, in an effort to keep them in service and to meet mod ern requirements, but this can not go on indefi nitely. Take the'Asylurri for Inctfrables at Hastings, for example; it was bui(t when John it.' Thayer was governor, more than thirty years ago. While it was modern in its days, it is lacking now in much that goes for such an institution nowadays. The state has spent large sums of money in repairs and betterments on this institution, and lias kept it up to the high est possible point, yet it falls short of being what it should be today, and can not be made right short of reconstruction.- The same is true" of the Hospital for Insane at Lincoln; the sol diers' homes at Grand Island and Milford are decaying; at Noifelk, Geneva, Kearney and elsewhere public money is being spent to' carry on business m quarters that are inadequate as w,ell as inefficient. The. needs for these insti tutions is not going to be less in the future, , Mr. IToge makes no final suggestion as to what' should be done, beyond the evident fact that some policy snould be adopted. He merely calls attention to a neglected bit of public busi ness, and points out the imperative need of do ing something to remedy the situation. While Hie general policy of the state has been to tarry its' own insurance on all public buildings, it has set apart no fund to care for, the replacement of any that iniglit be destroyed, much less mak ing' arrangement for the item of obsolescence. This is 'not wise management, and a private enterprise conducted on such lines would ..end in failure. . ' However, the tiling to do is to face the fact and provide for the future. The present legis lature can well devote some part of its time iiio an inquiry along the lines indkated by Mr lioge, and perhaps find a way to ake care of tile public buildings. A definite and continuing program for building in Nebraska is one policy that commends itself because of its prudence and possibilities of economy. f erendum," the verdict of which was so emphatic and unmistakable. The foreign policy of the incoming administration is promised to differ materially from that of the present. - It was this prospect that led to the result of the election, a fact the next president perfectly understands and which will ceftainly have its influence on, whatever he does. -- ' ' f- Selling the School Bonds. With no purpose to hamper the Board of Education in its effbtts to dispose of the $S, 000,000 bond issue, but rather to expedite the transaction, The Bee ventures a sugges tion. It is that the interest rate be increased to a point that will induce purchase, but that the bonds do not be sold at less than par. .Reasons for this are obvlbtis and should have some weight. The city gas bonds arc being offered ir. the bond market at a price to yield 5.2 per cent; this fairly fixes the credit of the City oi Omaha. It is possible the credit of the Inde pendent School district of Omaha is not so good, but it ought to be riot far front that of the city. If this is true, bonds may well be disposed of inside the 7 per cent limit, and at par. , It might not be unwise for the board to offer thle issue in small iofs to the citizens. Omaha bought government bonds very liber ally, and the citizens might be willing to take some part of this issue of their own securities. A Line 0' Type or Two Haw to the (Jae, let the culpa tall where they tamy. : Harding to Have Clear Field. l The decision of President Wilson to take ho further part : international affairs will be ap proved generally. ' Not pique, but an apprecia tion of the verdict rendered inxNovember sup ports the president in his attitude. He could settle nothing in the name of the American people at this time, and it is doubtful if he would be accepted by the powers as authorized to negotiate on important and continuing prob lems. His plans laid at Paris have gone sadly askew; not only did Americans decline to accept the League of Nations, but Italy, Jugo-Slavia, Poland, England," France and Belgium have varied from- or joined in modifying settlements and adjustments reached at the great confer ence. International observers agree that Wilson's idealism has been violated in both letter and spirit in the days since the final gathering in the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles. Mr. Harding's policy, as far as it has. been outlined, is getting support not only ahome but abroad. Developments at Geneva' showed , that an "irrepressible conflict" between the as sembly and the council of the League impends, the disaffection of Argentine amounting to a little something more than mere bumptiousness on part of that country. This spirit will not be quieted by the ; soft words supporters of the scheme are uttering, by plausible arguments in favor of a continuation of what is looked upon r by many as an impossible arrangement, or by affecting to ignore the opposition of American republics. V - The suggested association of nations will approach the problem from a different angle, planning for rational control and disposition of international questions; not merely a renewal vof the old.methods, but, the preservation of in tegral independence to each country while pro viding for adjustment of differences affecting any or all on a basis of justice, setting right as the standard and not political expediency. Such an association does seem practical as well a' desirable. Its machinery maybe simpler and less liable to derangement than that of the League, and its product promises to 'be as at tractive in form and as serviceable in quality. Mr. Harding will find the question in its status quofjjust where Mr. Wilson left ft when Ivt had reffjurse to the "great and solemn ref- Cuba's Checkered" Career. There's trouble in Cuba again.' As usual, 4i centers about the question of who won the election for the presidency. Although the dis pute is ostensibly over the counting of the votes, beneath this is the menacing fact that the Cubans hive not learned the primary Jesson of democracysubmission to the will of the majority. , ') ' Maior GeneVal Crowder has gone to the island on a United States battleship, arid is at work on a solution that probably will avoid any necessity for armed intervention such as was seen during' the revolution of 1906.. At that time, William Howard Taft, then' secretary of war under RqosevHt, headed a peace commis sion backed by 5,600 American troops undei Major General Bell. Mr. Taft said then tnai u was Cuba's last chance, and settled the dispute without sirious conflict ! . Concerning the friendly intentions' of the United States Americans will ha.ve no doubts, and yet it is but natural thai the Cubans shouta not be entirely easy in their minds, although the effect of this will be only good it it results in early pacification of internal disputes'. For more than a century the Ufiited States has felt a particular interest in Cuba. Jefferson cov eted It and declared that itMcquisition by Great Britain would be a calamity to us.- John Quincy Adams declared that the laws of political gra itation would inevitably draw it toward the American union The slave owners, after the Mexican war,' engineered attempts to annex Cuba, both by purchase from Spain and by fili bustering expeditions. Later, President Grant threatened to en .a bloody ten-years' insur rection by Intervention thit would have meant annexation. , v The war of 1898, however, demonstrated to the CubariS the friendship and honorable inten tions of their great, neighbor. This confidence should have been enlarged by the withdrawal of Mr. Taft and the troops after the rebellion of fifteen years ago. Conditions in Cuba cannot be said to have, gone from bad to worse, and the sentiment of the Utjijed States clearly is that it be given every chance 'for self-government, with only such aid as is necessary to preserve world order. r Administration Flotata Itself. The remarkable exhibition of facing both ways that is just now being given -at Wash ington by the cabinet is a sign of the consti tutional weakness oi the Wilson government. Donal O'Callaghan, lord mayor of Cork, is present iri the country in defiance of -the im migration law and of the passport regulations.; He came as a stowaway, and ordinarily would be denied at the port where he entered and returned on the vessel that brought him hither. His purpose in coming is plain; his presence here will 66 no harm to anxThat Is riot the point that holds attention. The Department of Labor, which has first jurisdiction Over him under the immigration laws, says his case is not disposed of, but he is released on his own recognizance pending deliberation. The State department says he is here in violation of the passport regulation, arid demands his deporta-' tipn, but defers action. Meanwhile, Lord Mayor O'Callaghan lectures h New York, vis its other cities, and plans to appear before that astonishing tribunal, "the Commission of 100," to testify as to, the condition of Irish affairs. No materia objection will be laid against his conduct in any way; he has sought to serve the cause he has espoused in the way he thinks will do most good, just as did' his predecessor, the devoted MacSwiney.- What excites comment is the course of the United States government, which does not dare ignore its own laws and regulations on the one hand, and equally dreads offending the Friends of Irish Freedom on the other. O'Callaghan need have no fear of de portation so long as matters stand as they do. Mary Pickford's chauffeur, who has left California and come to , Omahabe'cause he couldn't stand the climate there, will never dare return to Los Angeles for fear of being hacked up against a stone wall by the native sons. The British government promises not to ar-, rest De Valera if he-keeps silent, which is oni, another way of saying that he will be taken into custody as soon as he is found. We do not locally have a $30,000,000 bond sale frequently, but when We do little time is wasted on it drie was over with Monday in less than three hours. President Wilson, who is reported to be working two hour a day now, can taper pff gradually until March 4, when he joins the ranks of unemployed. At that Mr. McAdoO could not make any more of a "flivver" of the Ford iactory than he did of the railroads. " "Shoot to iilj" doesn't sound humane, but It does have a ring that thugs will better heed. Money used to talk, and is even now recov ering its voice. ' What is the passcort regulation for, anyhow? TO TONY SARG. Tony, dear deity of, blocks and strings. Whose hand draws back the curtain of the years! Through cloud and mtst of memory appears A happy vision of departed thing, Your tiny actors with their gesturing. Their puppet passions and their mimic fears- I Kip and his wife,' his dog, his daughter's tears Oh, what a vanished joy the whole play brings' While little people in your audience Shout out in pleasure at Nick Vedder'a fun. Or watch grey Hudson's sprites, with features ''tense, We elders gaze along a vista, whence From our young past there smiles on everyone. The kind-old features of Joe Jefferson! , ANCHUSAj WE see by an account of a lecture in the east that Major rutnanrhas been bought with British gold" again. Which reminds us that our remittance is three weeks overdue. WILUE THE TOWN DEMOK. ' . (From the Buslinell News.) ' There Was quite an excitement last night at 12 o'clock when some of the rough boys of the town started to ring the church and school bells. William Sllberere was seen firing his cap gun. WE have just wired a request to Mr. Jimmic Whittaker, at Cochrane, Ont., to bring home with him a pair of those "mameluke dogs," as we think of starting a newspaper zoo. Adventnre of a Master Mind. ' Sir: In response to an urgent request. I re cently went to Marion. As I reached the w. k. porch-I was somewhat embarrassed, by the sight of all those other master minds, and for a Urn In alienee I leaned heavily against a column you Know how well I do that Soon, however. I was inspired. I stepped boldly forward and threw Elihu Root off. Then I pushed Hughia blooming lilacs Into the frost-blighted ones in . the yard. I continued In this course until the lawn was a writhing mass of superlative men talities. Finally the president-elect noticed It "What are you a-dolng of, 8tone Phiz?" he inaulred. "Just dusting the Attic salt off of the front porch," I responded. 'You know, it was the way x otiiu iu bIUHG PHIZ. CLASSICAL WHO'S WHO. A versatile poet was Qulntus H. Flaccus. An. excellent man, though acquainted with Bacchus. i He lived In a villa Just off the main street, And as "Horace" was known to the Roman elite. O. F. B. MR. MELLON of Pittsburgh is boosted for a cabinet position. His friends say he is ripe cnougn 10 oe piCKea. . , TO St H. v X I think that when thou wert first born and came Fresh from the hand of God, there was a sheer And Heavenly quality about thee. Dear, That few clayed spirits have. Thy very name Spells loveliness and like a quiet flame Celled in an alabaster vase, thy love Sweet as a little child's, asks nothing of The one whose way it lights. The world's loud fame Is but a breath and gold a wasting dross Consumed as cockle In a soul like thine; It is like thee that 'neath thy heavy cross Thou has found place to ease the hurt of mine. Well paid is he for adverse fortune's rods Who hath for friend such a good friend of God's. G. V. B. GALESBURC-'S Hotel Custer has sprung a new one on the gadders. Bub reports that, in stead of the conventional "Clerk on Duty, Mr. Rae," the card reads: "Greeter, Rudie Hawks.". WHO is so chatty as th chatty tailor? Writes an Omaha member of the profession? Should you not be in line for duds, you will kindly convey the correct impression of the downward trend. Prosperous N. Y. to you." Problem of Conduct. Sir: I had dinner with John an I Mary the other evening. John and I are nearly brother and sister, being double first cousins. Mary had oeen downtown, indulging mttne present-day, middle-class method of shopping; that is to say, she looked at the price mark on the articles she wanted, looked at the money she had, and came home. John does not love her any the less because of this method of shopping, but he deplores the necessity; so after dinner he tried to express hla sympathy by reading the ads to her. "Here are excellent women's coats at thel Boston store ror sib.75," saya he. "I won't go there," says Mary "I simply couldn't ask a salesgirl to show me a coat for an excellent woman. " John smiled and turned to Rothschild's ad. "What are you looking through the ads for?" asked Mary. "Underwear for men that, can be re lied on?" John looked and was perplexed. He fs a dear cousin, but his mind is well, mascu line. "Clever, wasn't it?" he asked me when Mary left the room. Of course it was a Joke and all that but it was nice the wav she said tt, and did I really hlnk she meant it? I re- tusea io answer, Because my answer might in criminate myself, but told him I would write and ask you to help him, for all the Line fana know that you are a smart man and read learned books about affairs feminine and fem inist. Now, please,- won't you teach this per plexed male how to determine whether Mary is joshing him or trying' to be nice? ELIZABETH. ' THE effort of W. Sfto explain things to his boss has got him in deeper. Among gadders, reminds one of 'em, it is known that hotel maids do not report Ipr their regular iiutie9 until 7:30 a..m. REFINED CRUELTY. Sir: A sign in Atlanta coarsely announces: "Lynch the Tailor." If the poor tailor must be bumped off, would It not be more refined to send him to the Ontario Barber Shop in Chi- How to Keep Well By DR. W A. e Quaallooa conctrnlnf byfiane, aaaltalloo and prevention ol diiaasa, submitted to Dr. Evans by reader oi The Bee, will be answered personally, subject to proper limitation, Where a stamped, addressed envelope is enclosed. Dr Evens will not make diagnosis ar prescribe ior individual diseaaes. Address letters in care of The Bra. Copyright, 1920. by Dr.. W. A. Evans. cago '. i C. E. R. OR he might be sentenced to six months in the barber shop of Peter Yell in Palo Alto. "We trust, another communication con cludes, "your further consideration of the sup porting references will thoroughly cover and satisfy your erroneous anticipation." SONG. Counting am I the days now When I shall hear again Robins on many a bough, Singing to weary men. , Hearing, the dark bough shall bud; Hearing, shall I rejoice, Feeling my fountains of blood Leap to their cheery voice. - Counting am t the nights long, Dreaming dreams of mine own, Tuning and crooning a song For the first crocus bloom. LAURA BLACKBURN. A COMMUNICATION to La Follettc's Magazine is signed by W. E. T. S. Nurse, N. Y City. What is the "S" for? ' The Blunder 'Bus. I'd rather ride atop a 'bus ' Than any other place; So every little passing twig ; Can hit me In the face. - Q A. It - SUNDRY subscribers have ffdvised us that the date line shows on the reverse of the Line's heading. Yes, sometimes. It is a question of the page registering in the pressroom. TO Frank J. Wilstach: Cut 'sands of the seashore' out of Dictionary of Similes. Substi tute 'as numerous as a bank or trust company's vice presidents' " F. P. A. WE, too. find Mr. Wilstach's Die. o. f., and have jotted down a long string of substitutes. EXAMPLES: Dark: Dark as the inside of a Marshall Field Bus. '.Noisy: Noisy as a Ford in neutral. B. L. T. NOT ALWAYS DANGER SIGNAL. A small amount of albumin in the urine, unaccompanied by casts, may not be very significant especially in young men and perhaps young women also. A year or wore ago we found an account of the effects of Hthlotics In young men. Then It was found that boys who had played hard games of tennis, foot ball, run mara thon and fhorter races and engaged in other competitive sports were fre quently found to have some albumin in the urine. , Dr. M. Nicholson found that 10 per cent of a group who. had Just played foot ball had albumin in their urine; IS per cent of a group who had Just run three miles were similarly af fected". But Dr. Barrerigar, while agreeing with these observations, did not think It meant anything. He examined a group of 70 men who had been found to have albuminuria as young men 10 . years before. Twenty-eight of them still had some albumin in the urine, but none of them had any other sign of Bright's diseases. Dr. D. C. Parmenter, working with the students of Harvard university, found that a very large proportion, especially of the younger classmen. had some albumin In the urine. The proportion affected was 5 to 7 per cent. Of 33 track team candidates. 7 per cent had albuminuria, 6 per cent of the hockey players had It, 4 per cent of the foot ball players had It. Only one of the players on the first eleven was affected by it. It is seen that the symptom was about as prevalent among the athletes' as in the general student body, but no more so. He examined some upper class men who were known to have had albuminuria when lower class men. He found that the disorder had not developed into anything serious. The conclusion that he arrives, at is that albumin uria, especially among men of col lege freshman age, is quite prevalent irrespective of athletics. He took the boys with albumin uria and examined and analyzed them more closely to discover some reasons. Of the 40, six Mad heart trouble of one sort or another. A man with heart trouble should watch his kidney action with dis crimination. A little albumin in the urine may be the only evidence that his compensation is not quite what it should be. .Some of the six had irregular or rapid pulse. Another factor of major conse quence' was bad posture. Four of the boys had s inal curvature. Others who were without spinal curvature had various posture faults. . Another important factor was nervous makeup. Some of the boys who seemed all right in other par ticulars were on edge most of the time, were lacking in nervous poise and stability. The majority of the cases gave evidence of beine transitory. The urine contained albumin at the time of the first examination, but not on subsequent examination. 'He. did not think athletics was much of a factor in bringing on alubmlnuria. He did not think a little alburnlnurla Without casts or other- evidenoe of Bright's disease in a young man was of great sig nificance. At the same time it was wise to consider the symptom for what it was worth to try to find a cause if there was .one and to correct the cause where possible. You Need More Sleep. A. B. writes: "Will you please tell me what is the cause of my tiredness? Every morning when 1 get-up I feel tired. My head dues not exactly ache, but it feels heavy and sometimes 1 can hardly keep my eyes open. I work In an office from 9 to 5 with an hour for lunch. When I have nothing to do but alt at my desk and think I. nearly fall asleep, Do you think It Is because I do not get enough Sleep? 1 never get to bed before 11 p. m. as I go to night school. I get up at 7. Do you think if I keep up night school it will In jure my health? I am 16 years and 9 months old. Do you think I need a tonic?" RErLY. You are not getting enough sleep. You get less than eight hours, and you need at least nine. ' Skin Needs Grease. J. L. II. writes: "I have been troubled for the last two years with winter itch. It Is very troublesome, especially after bathing. Will you please publish a remedy for this condition?" REPLY. , To get relief grease the skin. A grease containing witch hazel may be better. A good local application is known asTrthe Dew of Sahara. A grease containing a little carbolic acid is very soothing, but must be used with caution, particularly if there are scratch marks. It absorbs and poisons. The real remedy Is to live in a cool, moist air. If you have bath itch use a shower instead c.-f a tub bath. If you use soap be certain you wash it all off. Use only. good grade soaps. Many persons with bath itch use oatmeal and borax instead of soap. Some grease themselves clean, using neither water nor soap. . .Have Kidney's Examined.' Mrs. J. M. N. writes: "Will you please tell me if there is ca. remedy for ankles that swell? I cannot wear low shoes one day without my ankles swelling terribly. I am 5 feet, and 1 inch tall and weigh 121 pounds, so I do not think it is because I am so heavy." Offers Boil Romedy. , Mrs. G. S. writes: "To get rid of boils each one must be Isolated (with cotton and adhesive tape.) I had somewhere between 15 and 30 on my neck before I got rid of them." Might Increase Exercise. J. F. K. writes: "I am 62 years of I age. Never been ill since a young lad. Slee fine. No pain of any kind.1. I walk a great deal, out no otner kind of exercise. Do not smoke or drink and eat very little meat. Fad my blood tested today. Doctor said it was high 160. Dqyou think I should exercise more--tennis, golf, etc.?" REPLY. A blood pressure of ISO is high but not excessively so. Have your physicial examination completed. If no organic disease Is found take about 25 per qent more exercise, 25 per cent less meat and eggs, keep your bowels regular, and let it go at that. . 0 II " JIM MFJJT..'V. .1 I A I S t . . Does He Know Oninha? North Platte, Neb., Jan. 9. To the Editor of The Bee: The Sunday edi tion of your paper carries a very in teresting and valuable piece of rend ing matter by L. F. Harrison "Pul piteering Is No Life for a Lounge Lizard." To the average out-of-town visitor, one gets the impression tha Omaha is a city of lounge lizards, especially if you stop at any hotel In Omaha. Evidently the only place with anv morale about it is the Sal vation Army, when it comes to stop ping at public rooming houses. Omaha Is certainly no place to taKe a preacher s son between the ages of and 60. Omaha, with its large hotels amusement halls and other entertainment is certainly rotten to the core. One, to be convinced, not only convinced but satisfied, should take in "a good time in Omaha. Omaha has a great army of church working people, headed by the men of their denomination, and should in every way be respected and cher ished, regardless of creed, providing their belief is in doing some good toward their people, and suppressing crime at all angles. If you, the edi tor of The Bee (a leading Omaha paper), and all the citizens of Omitha were to resume work for 10 minutes and think of how Omaha could be improved in a moral situation, espe cially as put to the transient visitor of Omaha, would It not make you ask this question of yourself: "What part of this program do I have, and when and where does the show start?" It's time Omaha 'la taking care of herself and citizens, and there is no time like the present to start cleaning. It can be done. JOHN A. EDNER. Wash-Day Needn't v Worry You We call for and deliver your wash: launder each bundle separately. You pay by the pound the fairest, most sat isfactory way. To preserve the life and beau ty of clothes we use Refinite Perfect Soft Water. ttxvreme test Place your Ideal .-piano Drid v ' ; 1'witm tot are ten ! ' ytzxs old. Compare .Xtone,art4 action, and re5onance. a .Arguments will be needless. TKe Mason 6f" Hamlin will prove itself the urorldV finestr ijianotar rio) rtsJx us ro snou? you xxAy. 1513 Douglas St. The Art and Musk Store mtSdium feryenar Idle, but Orderly. Calvin Coolidge out of a job is a problem which is difficult for us to appreciate, yet that is what his retirement from the governorship of Massachusetts this week means. He is faced by the problem of a $32 a month house on his hands and no chance of employment on the old farm in Vermont during the winter months. However, after March 4 he will begm to draw S his salary from Uncle Sam for presiding over i the august senate, of the United States. Bur-;S linctou rrce Press c1 nijj p-- r : 1 V. "OV XBUSINESS IS GOOD THANH Y0lf ttffajj , You Are Invited to Hear J Ted Lewis at Bowen's Step in any time and we will gladly play any of his most popular Records for instance : "Tired of Me." "I'll See You in Cuba." "You Can't Get Lovin'." We have a complete line of Columbia Records for your selection, as well as all the models in Columbia Machines and, as usual, you make your terms. OAAHAS VALUE CIVINS 3T0K . MVMtb T KTWfCNIie aM Howard, Between 15th and 16th LV. Nicholas Oil Company A SUGGESTION . The most difficult part of saving is the "start." After the initial step saving becomes a habit. Thou sands have said, "How foolish I was in not beginning earlier." The Ne,w Year is here -you should begin saving systematically save something each pay day the surprise will be yours when you realize the amount saved with so little effort. We do not suggest that you "Save to Spend' but it is a very comfortable feeling to know in case of necessity you have an available fund. One dollar or more will open an account dividends are compounded semi-annually. All fundi invested are loaned on improved real estate secured by first mortgages. We invite you to avail yourself of the services and secur ity of our Association for the accumulating of your savings. Conservative Savings & Loan association j & ff & r n e y South Side A;ency, Kratky Bios., 4805 South 24th St. ;.. .S,..!.r-Ni.-u ii- Xzli uXOIOZUUDxO! JA'OCCOCCQDQQJJOJ TOItOMoQoSiXiyO-'t irOCODCtQ0LO ifinrn ii iin u-p-rim innnm Jliftoi EitiriraA?! h ii y u II 11 II II H n :mjuQOIh!CiQoqOuQi; h n i i i i i i fl i OOOChjCQDOOlOJ HHOOCO-ODnjOO 'oDuuCO-OQulOj II St It IL llH II I'll I f'ii!iniiiiiiiiiiiimiiu!;iiiiiii:isijiii:iii! I CADILLAC SERVICE v and REPAIR DEPARTMENT S ' 26th and Farnam Streets We make it richt. Our satisfied customers are our best asset. Have your Cadillac attended by efficient cupnule me chanics ' who through con stant rraciiee can do it for less in the Ions run. J. H. Hansen Cadillac Co E Service Department Guy Wheaton, Serv!; Mffr. Harry Reid, Shop Manager S inillllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllMlllllllir? OjyOCO! nil ii ii y"W hiiM!IifVV HBfflfiffl EPOpOooq til 11 ft 11 IL II. yQQQCM II ilnUHli. UUiitejijiiuiit iini. 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