Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 14, 1921, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE BEE : OMAHA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 14,' 1921.'-
TheOmaha Bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
THB BEB
NELSON
PUBLISHING
B. UPDIKE,
CO.MPANT.
Publisher.
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
. Tna ataxlata trim, af wblri tki IM U I Dtmbif. It
oluttrtlt tuttUtd to tat um for pjbllculou of til ntw, tfltpttclii
i-raura n or dm ouitrwtM oimiim
Iwal awt ruMltbtd htralD. All rlifalt of
Ultvtioifa art tltt IMUMi .
atloa ol til atna dltptteial
In (kit mpw, tad tlto tot
of aublkttloa at ou wkiii
recovers h's individuality and nukes himself the
central figure. Their faults art those of human
nature, and they differ from others who have
gone through great perils, only in their lack of
reticence. . .
A Line 0' Type or Two
Htw ta the Lint, Itt tk qulpt fall wbtre tktjr majr.
BEB TELEPHONES
Prlutt Brinoh Kichania, At for
tbt Dativuuuit gf Fmea WauKd.
Far Night Call Afltr 10 P.M..
Kditorlal Dapirtmait .....
Iraulttloa rxptriniwl
AiltrUtlna DtDtrtimliit ..-.....
OFFICES OF THE BEE
turn Oftlctt ITtb intf ftrt.ua
Council Blurt . 1 8000 at. I SuUto Slut
Owt-ef-Tewo Offlcee:
N Vot iS rift Art. t Wuktfiitoa
Tyler 1000
Trltf 100IL
lt ioati
Tjitt 100DI
tSU M 81
I'qluua
8IW Hid.
1111 a iu
rifit franc 121 tat BL H uoert
The Bee's Platform .
1. New"Uaion Passenger Statiea.
v
2. Continued improvement of the 'Ne
braska Highjraya. including the pava
mailt afvMaJn Thoroughfares leading
into Omaha with Brick Surface.
r " '' .
3. A short, low-rate Waterway from too
Corn Ball to the Atlaatic Ocean.
4. Homo Rule Charter for Omaha, with
City Manager form of Government.
FUEL CONTROL BY GOVERNMENT.
,.- The Caldcr committee report, recommending
Vloser federal control of the coal mining indus
try, which will probably be extended to include
the entire fuel field, opens an interesting vista.
Just how far the federal government may law
fully proceed in the direction is yet to be de
termined. Close construction of the Constitu
, lion of the United States will surely develop a
yrave doubt as to the power of congress or the
president in the matter of control.
Practically fuel is a public necessity; theo
, "netically it is subject to the police power.of the.
government, winch has been stretched in many
ways to meet emergencies or to provide foc the
comfort of all as against the interest of the few.
We, may question, however, if t is the duty of
the government to see that its citizens arc all
ucll housed, further than the- obligation admit
ted to wovidc for those who can not help them
selves. The fundamental principle of individual
liberty, which is asserted again and again: by,
the" courts in llic doctrine of freedom of con
ti'act and in other specihVapplications, contains
also the corresponding principle of responsitiit
ily. that is. that each individual must nfovirle
tor himself, satisfying his own heeds and grati
tying his wants through the result of his own
efforts.. If this view is sound, then the individual
is txpected to provide fuel for himself or suffer:
from cold. ,
It may have been a, mistake in the beginning
to allow the great coal beds of the country to be
taken over for private exploitation. Yet that
wias seemingly supported by good public pol
icy, in that it brought the use oOhe fuel to
millions who might otherwise have been deprived
of its service. Our industrial and commercial
me, in laet, our whole social existence Is in
volved' in the fuel industry. This being true,
the inquiring mind is faced with the necessity
of answering why we permit this basic element ;
of social existence to be controlled by a com
paratively small group of owners, who have the.
rtnu;r tn arhitrariiv fiv flip nrirp limit the enn-
ply, and otherwise- manipulate the situation to
their Own benefit and the public detriment.
The, answer to this will be that the general
experience of the country vith the fuel industry
has been otherwise' than detrimental. Only since
the disturbance incident to the war has there
been acute complaint.' Governmental regulation
did not produce the relief expected; it did not
check profiteering, in fact it apparently provided
better and safer means for extortion, some of
which have been applied to ; the limit
Now that the Colder inquiry has lighted upborne
of the dark places in the fuel game, the clamor
for regulation will increase. If the coal barons
feel the pressure, they will have only, themselves
to thank, because they have invited the process
by their tactics. '
, But this doe's not-answer the main question.
Has the president the power, or can congress
in peace times clothe him with authority to
regulate the fuel industry of the. country? Is
coal mining a government function, the same as
railroading or steamboating? v
.' While the war was on the constitution was
suspended, and the president was vested- with
autocratic powers; now these are stripped from
him, and our government is going back to its
safe mooring. Business is to be re-established
on sound principles, profiteering will vanish un
der the pressure of competition, and perhaps
even the coal mine owners may come to be con
trolled "more effectually by the law of supply
and demand than ever they wilLJje by govern
ment regulation.
4 A Relapse Into the Primitive.
Blood runs hot, even in the trozen norm,
though all differences were sunk in the struggle
for life in which the three navy balloonists wan-
tiered across tne snowy wastes oi northern
Ontario once freed from, the perils that kept
them in comradeship, grudger flare up and bitter
words find vent
''.. Lieut. Stephen A. Farrell found on arriving
at civilization that Lieut. Walter Hinton had
written a letter from the Hudson Bay post,
where they found safety, in which was told, a
remarkable story. Farrell was represented as
falling exhausted and urging his comrades to
... . . ' . i ,
go on without nun, or even-io use nis ooay as
frt Hinton. wntinat to his wife and. no doubt.
ishinp to reassure, her trembling heart, de
scribed himself as in the pink of condition and
told of stripping Farrell down to his underwear
... . . t . . ! .
It is interesting-to compare the letter written
k Ur third member of the oarty. Lieut. Louis
A. Kloor, jr., who wrote atter tne rescue to a
friend in New York that "Lfcdtenant Farrell is
. I 11 1 -Ma mftcf ff tti wat'
weaK aim win iv imwv.. ..-j.
r Be that as it may, FarrelU upon learning of
the published accounts basea on nimon s leuer,
struck him on. the jaw, and told the, newspaper
men .that he suffered much less than his com
panion on the adventure, , It now develops that
.he is a champion navy pugui iuu uww pnuv?
himself; on his strength. ' i '
f These pages from the romance of real life
Mtrriaca lflllV tale from Tack London, who so
lAian Tfl Til F in I lie ui,ua v t
snows. This was a elaose info the primitive.
- ;nmn1iratMl onlv bv the modern facility of the
- . --- it 4 I '
postal service, fcacli manSt;riiie artven oy ioc
otlife to co-operate vvith his fellows intone eom
non aim on being released from the .necessity,
Aiiifria't nn1nrhta trr1livint
The action of the j&strian government in j
requesting the"' Allies to take over the adminis- ;
tration of affairs in jhaf country, beginning with j
Saturday of this week,' calls attention to one of :
the remarkable outcomes oF the war. While i
it was through Austria the trap was sprung,
the fate of that patchwftrk empire seemed de-
termined from the first, if victory had ifome
to the Central Powers, tin- (".frnianc.in Austria !
would have been driwrf more closely to the.j
Raiser's empire, and the eventual absorption of
the lesser would aurejy have , followed. In
event of'defeat tli dismemberment of the em
pire was inevitable. What actualjy has taken
place,' however, could not have been" foreseen.
When the Czecho-Slovakian republic was set
up boundaries' were extended to include Bcv,
hernia 'and Moravia, and with them some slices
of territory which might hive been alloted to
the Magyar's,' while a considerable German ele
ment was.includdd srfong the southern border
of Bohemia. This started the new republic off
with something of a problem, which has not
diminished since. One f the effects of this
has been to set up a guard on the borders al
most as rigorous as that maintained along the
firing line on the western front. Political pros
perity may follow, but-the economic -situation
is deplorable. Bohemia, Austria, .Moravia,
Hungary, a land divided racially and religiously,
with many differences in tongue and manners,
are economically one, interdependent and neces
sary to thus happiness of each other. Separated
as they are, and one ' recent visitor says it is
farther from Prague to Vienna or from Prague
to Budapest than from Prague to New York,
each suffers, and Austria, finally the weaker and
less self-contained, of the three, has collapsed.
In Hungary they expect the return to'the
throne of a Hapsbiirg, either the former Em
oeror Charles or Jiis cousin. Archduke Tosebh.
The permission- sought by Austria to unite with
Gefmany has been denied, btit a better solution
has not yet appeared. It may be the good offices
of the great powers can be effectively used to
secure freer intercourse and exchange of com
modities - between what'wdee the three grlfcat
divisions of the Austrian 'empire, for so only;
does it appear .cither of them can be wholly
prosperous and successful. Whatever is done
should be done with Some expedition, as the
suffering is growing with each passing day,
and even the bitterest enemy of the former
proud empire, can scarcely wish greater humili
ation for Austria than has overtaken her since
that fateful day , in. Jiily',M9l4, when the ulti
matum 'was dispatched td Serbia.'
,' , THE OLD HARPKrt.
fsedesman, pray me a prayer; ., x
My garden 1 trees are bare, - ..."
The winds are charged with- snow
And bitterly they blow. , ,
Town and Country Population.
Over half the pc6ple' in the United States
lve 111 towns or ,ouu or more jnnauiiaius.
Many solemn sermons will be preached on this
text, reminding us of the decadence that follows
as the. country dwindles andihe town .waxes.
Yet those who' irt inclined 6 look on the pic-'
ture as a somber presentation of our national
ctuirse should be comforted with the thought
that while 'the rural population' has lost its pro
portional relation to the whole, its importance
has not been lessened nor its activities dimin
ished. The farms of the United States last year
produced more than ever irt our history, enough
for all the - people and an exportable balance
that not so many years ago jwbuld have
amounted to pretty fir total yield. The people
who live in town are employed in useful occu
pations. Only a- negligible few, very rich ior very
poor; belong to the jtlle class. While theysdo
not produce the food they consume, they, do
bring forth things that are needed inrhe world,
and orovide the. market for the farmer. Thus..
tlve bafance is preserved. The lugubrious lines
from Goldsmith's delightful poem '
III fares the land, to hastening; Ills a prey,
Where wealth accumulates and men decay.
vilf spring into maiiy minds, but they may' be
smiled at so far" as the United States is con
cerned, because with our rabidly mounting in
crease in wealth with no corresponding deca
dence in manhood may be noted. We have tht.
bold yeomen, just as we dicj in ;the beginning,
and we have the equally bold artisans and
clerks, whose service to humanity is as neces
sary .and whose devotion to freedom is as un
questioned as if they all lived on 'farms.
Business Kcks Up.
Quite a number of mills and factories that
closed down , ever their inventory periods are
reopening, and a -decidedly itriproved and more
cheerful tone is reported in general business.
Toledo and Detroit are among the cities in,
which greater activity is developing, and the
number of unemployed is confidently expected
to begin decreasing soon.
The success of the New York Automobile'
show has given an optimistic tinge to the whole
industry. A million cars wear out each yiar,
and these will have to' be replaced, in addition
to meeting the demand frort persons who have
never had a car of their own, it is said.' This
would seem to afford a solid basis to one line
of Intsmess. that was especially hard hit" in the
economic readjustment. High rates on railroads
are counted ' on to increase the sales of their
potential competitors, the truck and the pleasure
car. ' " ; ' . --.-'
Restriction" of output in other lines appears
about at an end. detail buying at the year-end
sales has been heavy enough, according to re
ports from important centers, to necessitate re
placement orders' within the next few week?.
With goods bought at the new price levels filling
the merchants' shelves,, and with consumers
short of irfany articles that they have not been
buying' freely, business is expected to take on
new life. The important thing is that the' public,
should realize thai prices are now down as, far
as they will go, oe thaKif they do fall farther
in some lines through lack of demand, the con
sequences might be serious amf far-reaching.
Rapid City is not v violating any speed
ordinances by adopting the" city manager plan,
but it is moving fasttfr than many of its larger
neighbors.
Seventy per' cent of Nebraska's population
is classed as rural, "an evidence of the impor
tance of agriculture in the state. '
"Dry" ocean - liners are a
meut "but a poor investment.
good
advertise
y It is apparent there was more than one bur
glar working in Omaha.
Anybody else wishing to fly to Washington,?
' - s - '. ' - " .'
V They blow Into , my h,art :.
And1 tear my dreams apart;
They frighten .Love from home,
The cold white hills to roam.
,t Vlas: my driftwood fire
' Is out, my storm-swept lyre
A 'tvreck; and none to caxe; .
- Bedesman, pray me a prayer.- - 1
, " V .r-i.s ' XAURA BLACKBURN.
"'UPON! learning thaf Mr, Harding was in
favor of a Jefferiiian inauguration; Hon. Cal
Coolidge tanceled his ofrfer pr a new made-up
necktie. , , ,
V NOT TKJHAT'lT'S CRACKED UP TO BE.
(From the Hillsboro, N. H.,"' Messenger.)
Bartlett I' Brooks .was ; not very much
pleased with the climate of Florida, it being
very Tiot In the day time and cold at night, .
a. -change of some 40 degrees. ' Not finding
congenial employment and being accus
tomed to being busy, he returned. s
PROHIBITION i agents spiUed 1J0.O00
ouarts of liquor into the Kutters of Waukegan,
but as it probably was very bad liquor no regret
need be felt. , -
Open, Please, x
Sir: Inquired the dentist as he finished
cleaning: up the debris of an ancient third molar,
"Do you feel that air?" "That air what?" re
sponded the patient, a late resident of the Ken
tucky hill country. S. J.
! t HAVE yoa heard the present-day equivalent
for Wine, Women and Song? "Bevo, Your Own
Wife and Community Singing."
OTHER DEMOCRATS NOT OVER IT YET
- 7 PLEASE WRITE.
: j (From the Kalamazoogazette. ) -
Oil Election Day, Nov. 2, I got on the
'. one-man car at about 4:30 o'clock at the
'corner of Rose and Vine St. and the car
nave such a jerk that I fell, for ward and was
hurt quite badly and am not-over it yet. .
Will those on the car who saw me fall
please-call me? Phone 1091-J.
-STICKERS on L-platform placards read:
'If I should die tonight Where ana with whom
shall I spend eternity? And we observed that
some purist had added an 'm' to one of them.
Efficiency.
Sir: On frequent trips to your city one
picks up many valuable impressions. While in
a large office I was attracted by the, industrious
manner in which an entry cleric wielded his
pen, although-It frequently carried no ink and
there were blank spaces over which he, had
scribbled but "had entered no record. Curiosity
demanded an explanation, which was politely
given to the effect that the Efficiency Expert
had restricted the .number of dips to 24 per
hour. When the record seemed important it
was occasionally necessary to wait for time, but
usually no harm was done by allowing the pen
to-run dry in spots. Upon thanking him and
apologizing for usinfe ten minutes of his time,
he brightly replied that no harm had been done,
as he was thereby four dips ahead. C. C.
THE headline, "Morris RunsvAmuck," moves
H. N. C. to suggest the7 form turned in by a
reporter for the New York Word: "Morris
Runs a Horrible Muck." "
1 THE DAYS OF REAL SPORT.
(From the Menominee Herald-Leader.)
Ten Years Ago Today: Henry Albright
is in serious danger of losing one eye a.4
the result of being cut by, a beer glass in a
rumpus last evening in Michael Bottkol's
saloon. - i , ..
"EASTBOURNE--For winter months; over
looking sea. Conducted on absolutely spiritual
lines." British Weekly. , , - .
Sounds like the bourne from whence no trav
eler returns, i-', '..' . .. . .
t The Strand of Dreams. '
Sir: 1 Now while Tlitzli sojourned in the city'
of Pms'fTTie fell one starry evening into a dis
course with Gtyrh, a comely priestess of the
high goddess Rhet. And Gtyrh with gentle
words warned the minstrel of the vagabond
folly of his philosophy, so that he was'r.earl;
like to be wistful that it was not for him whole
heartedly to serve the meticulous Rhfet in com
pany with the gentle Gtyrh, for. the dark eyes
of the priestess were soft and "kindly ' as the
nignt. . ; v -' .-'
"But In Rhet T cannot believe," querulously
cried Tlitzli and from all his heart," "for it is
Bh'uti I seek always, whom they call Arh't in
the Island' ultramarine. Yet Her I may never
find in the city of Pms'I, nor at all among the
ways of men. ' Though in' Yosme's smile she
mocked me, and I havd seen Her betimes among
the stars, or when the night-breeze sighs on the
vague shore beside the wistful sea. So then I
strum idle melodies on my lute-guitar, essaying
thus to sing in plaintive words my way to
Her. . . ; ."
"But thus you will jUrely never And happi-,
ness nor any comfort at all," said Gtyrh re
proachfully. For she did not write versesa,
"I am Tlitzli," replied the minstrel. "Indeed,
it is a question if anyone oares at all for the
songs I weave from fny music-be wUdered mind;.
certainly not they who serve the high goddess
Rhet these hundred years, for perhaps rightly
they deprecate the words of any unfortunate
enough to be colleague to tlieir confused genera
tion. Yet are your eyes, gentle Gtyrh, kindly
and very soft when I whisper to you on my lute,
guitar. And tomorrow I shall sing wistfully to
you of my Strand Of Dreams. For there is a
'certain sweetness even in' idle despair. . . .
x -r- riq- "
THE wave of economy in Washington is of
the spigot and bungholc sort.
.-THE VALVE-HANDLE SNEEZE.
Sir: The handle on the vatse is missing, and
I can't turn oft the. radiator. The room was hot;
and I've had to "opfen wide the windows, open
Wide the door." "The resultant draft has Just
brought a series of "kerchoos" out of me.
Valve-handle sneezes, I called them.
SIM NIC.
'. MISS EMILY DAVIS Weds Mrs. Charles
Parmele. Wilmington, N. C, Dispatch.
Why don't tne men propose, mama, wny
don't the, men propose? ,-
' Civilization's Twin Temples. '
Sir:- Took fifteen minutes to discover that
the leather-lined . sanctum at one end of the
Pullman was the Tenple of Talk. The remain
ing two hours convinced me that the other end
was the Temple of Talc.'-,-' HOWCOME.
THE HIGH COST OF TODDLING.
Sir: At the Opera Club a popular yoifhg
lady remarked that in one evening's '"toddling"
she had completely worn out the lining of her
waist. ' , x H B. K.
OUR immortals will be interested in a con
test in the North Dakota senate., -fr. Gust
Wog's seat is' in danger. '
BETTER LATE THAN NEVER.
(From the Walsh County, N. D., Record.)
. A quiet wedding occurred Friday, when
Francis A. Tardy of Bemldjl, Minn., waSj
united in marriage to Miss Leeva Mess.
THAT two can live more cheaply than one,
at least in Hicksville, O., is shown by a room
sign plucked by L. B. R. from the Swilley hotel.
It reads: "This room rents for $1.25 per night,
single; $1 per. night, double." ' - '
He Should..
" Sir: Mr. Treetop, 6 feet 2 inches, is a porter
at the St. Nicholas Hotel, Decatur. Would he
add anything to the - landscape gardening sur
rounding the Academy of Immortals?
- W. N. C.
"LOST -Pin, vicinity Bryn Mawr L station;
racket shaped pin. Edg. 7458."-r-Classified ad.
Here's a pin you can hear drop.
, .WHY THE EDITOR BEAT IT
(From the Marengo Republican-Xews.)
- ' Baptist Church, 7:30 p. m. Popular
evening service. Subject, "Fools and Idi- jf .
' ots. A large number areespected. (
THEY might t least have a poverty ball for
the inauguration.?' . . ? ; B. L. T.
How to Keep Weil
By DR. W. A. EVANS
Qutitiant concerning hyflent, sanita
tion aa prtvtntiaa pi alteata, tub
mittee ta Dr. Evant by readers at Tht
Bte, will ba aatwered personally, aub-
-ject te proper limitation, wntra a
tamped, aaaVcatao' tnvelope it an.
elated. Dr. Evans will not maka '
diainoaia or ' prtacriba far Individual
ditaaata. Addrett lettera la cara ol
' Taa Baa.
Copyright, l20.Tj Dr. V. A. Cvaoa.
' A Solution.
"-You arc looking for ' an apartment, dear
friends, and wc arc looking for a servant.' Why
nt live with us and do our work?" Le Rire,
Paris... : ;
CHASE AFTER VITAMINES.
In determining the value of foods,
it is necessary to know how raany
calQrtes they contain, how . much
protein, carbohydrates, and fats, .AH
this is so well established that in
some Slates, the' Jaw requires that
m the case of cattle feeds Informa
tion ou those points be- carried on
the label. - Hut, in addition, it is im
portant to know how much mineral
salts the foods contain and. how
much vitaiuines. ' . ,
The subject of vitamlnes is a new
one and much concerning them re
mains to 85" discof ered, but a dozen
or more laboratories are working
away feverishly trying to supply the
missing data. One of the vitamines
is that which prevents Scurvy. On
this very important subject a lot has
been learned this year.
Summer milk is a very much bet
ter antiscorbutic than winter -milk.
When cows are fed dry facds and
even silage their milk Is poor In the
antiscorbutic principle, but in tht
spring, when they begin to get on
the pastures, their milk immediately
becomes a better protector against
scurvy. "
If , a nursing mother eats plenty
or rresh vegetables, fruit and fresh
meat, her milk contains more of
the scurvy preventive. . If she eats
less of these foods and more dried
food and preserved meats her milk
contains less of it.
Although mifk is a fair antiscor
butic, it is less valuable as such than
raw fruits and vegetables, accord
ing to Drs. T. B. Osborne and . B.
Mendel. TMie vitamine which pre
vents scurvy dos not stand heating
or, drying" well. For instance, -it
is less abundant in pasteurized
milk, boiled milk, condensed milk
and dried milk than in unhcated
liquid milk. -
There is considerable of 1 It in
fnesh raw. meat, but a good deal
less in the same meat after it has
been cooked.
Cooked thoroughly, there is very
little of it left.
1 There is less in dried vegetables
than in fresh ones. Much depends
on how the drying is done. If dried
quickly, -considerable of it is saved.
Hess and Unger found that old po
tatoes contained very little of it,
though new potatoes contained con
siderable. Old carrots had consider
ably less than fresh ones.
In fact, so rapidly is this principle
lost that as between eating properly
Sried vegetables and ' vegetables
vVljioh have heen kept on hand for
months without drying the former
ire the better. None of the other
vitamines are so unstable as this
one. In fact, all the others are fair
ly stable, standing both drying and
cooking fairly well.
The need of this antiscorbutic
principle, is the only leg the raw
food fad had to stand on. Not
much t it Is needed, at 'that. An
apple or an orange or an occasional
glass of ' fresh cider supplies about
ail we really need.
. But let noono think antiscor
butics are unnecessary. It may be
that we who live where there are few
privations riever will have scurvy
OX
' Religion afttl Politics,
Omaha. Jan. 10. To the Editor of
The Bee: Perhaps it is a wholesome
thing to have such a discussion of
the question or having the name of h,P- "d to encourage schools and
God in tht fundamental laws. And
perhaps nothing will conduce mote
to. clear and lntellifet thinking on
the subject than a reference to the
constitution of Nebraska.
The preamble is this: "We, the
people, grateful to Almighty God ior
tir freedom, do. ordain and establish
the following declaration of rights
and frame of government, as the
constitution of the state of Nebras.
kaA'.-,iJ .. -'- . w ...
. In Section 4 of Article I are these
words: "Religion, . morality 'and
knowledge, however, being' essential
to good government, It sball be the
5
You Are Invited ."
to Hear (
Ted Lewis
at BowenY
Sterj in anv time and we
will crladlv Dlav anv 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
vour selection, as well as
all the models in Columbia
Machines and, as usual,
you make your terms.
. " , :
OnXHASVAUK (IVINS STOW
aeaua n icmu a w
Howartl Between 15th and 16th
as did the British troops at Kut or
as did the old-time sailors. . Never
theless, most of us will arrive at
May 1, 1921, with just a few vague
symptoms of one sort or another
which will Indicate a little bit tf
scurvy and which will pass away to
our increased comfort as soon as
spring radishes and , other spring
foods become available. .
Wheu tlio Record is Mixed.
A. C. C. writes: "1. Has natural
water vitamines? 2. If so, will
chlorine kill them? 3. What are the
effects of too long use of clorine
water?"-
REPLY.
1. No. .;.
2. Answered by 1.
3. Although chlorine has been
added to drinking water used by j
many millions or people ior. auoji
10 years, the medical journals ana
health journals do not contain
articles showing or claiming that
the chemical does harm. There are
some who claim it drives men to
drink beer and wine, but the record
on that point has been considerably
mussed up lately. ,
duty of the legislature to pass suit
able laws to protect every religious
denomination in the peaceable enjoy
ment of its own mode of public wor-
menf and who saw nothing but
"economic" conditions.
Jf these expressions are not in ac
cord with the proper Idea of social
order and of government, then sou
member of our last constitutional
convention should have had the in
telligence and .the courage ti pro
pose that they be cut out. .Did atiyoiio
nee and .the courage ti pro-
the means of instruction.'
Of course some member of the con
stitution wrote these words. They
did not write themselves, and the
constitution was not adopted without
knowing that it contained such ex
pressions. If some historian oan
give" us the history of these passages,
I -wish he would do so. I think it
is safe to assume that the name of
the person wb wrote, or who pro
posed these Words, was not Lenlne,
or Trotsky, or Karl Marx, or that of
any other person who was blind to
tne spiritual element in good govern-
niake siu h a Proposition? Probably
many who will read these words Jhat
I have writtgn here can recall with
enthusiasm and admiration the xlht
of the sod school houso ami the sod
church that symbolized so beautiful
ly the distinctly American ideas ami
aspirations the thorough mixture of
religion and politics, without any
narrow and 'tyrannical sectarianism.
Where else in the world has there
been a better exhibition of govern
mental truth?
Was Nebraska started light, or
was it started wrong f
BE HI AH F; COCHRAN.
PREPARATION of Ihc Income Tax
Return is subordinate to making the
audit. Both jobs should be done at the same
time to insure correctness and to simplify the
- "Wor. Richards
Richards Audit Company
. ""-A National and Highly Trained Organisation.
PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS and AUDITORS.
INCOME TAX SPECIALISTS.
W. M. TREGO. ' 705 .W. O. W. Bldg.
; Resident Manager Phone Tyler 5601
Detroit, New York, Chicago, Minneapolis, Omaha,
StfLouia, Tulsa, lint, Saginaw, Windsor. -
IS
Needs L0112 Treatment.
' II. J. writes: "t. Can syphilis be
permanently cured after being in the
blood (with about six weeks' treat
ment) for two years? 2. Is there a
municipal clinic where I can obtain
advice as to a competent specialist?
3. Is there a government clinic?
KEPLY.
1 fivntiille whfiii tVift InfofHnn
has, existed for two years, caanot be
cured by any treatmenrin six weeks.
Where active treatment is begun im
mediately after infection it will cure
in six weeks or less..
2. Practically all of the latger
cities now .have municipal clinics for
treatment of syphilis. .
' 3. If vnn mean state arovernment.
most stao health departments- foster
local cnnics. xne ieaetat cunica are
for sailors, commercial and military
ex-sailors, soldiers and ex-soldiers.
You Have Winter Itch.
Junior JE. write's: "Will you please
let me know what to do or take
for itch? It mostly bothers my two
thighs and many a night of sleep I
lose because I cannot help scratch
ing. What would you advise?"
REPLY.
See that the, air in your room
s cooler and more moist.. Do not
have so much cover on your bed.
Grease your legs. You have winter
itch.
American State Bank
18th and Farnam Streets
Condensed Report of Condition January J Oth, 1 921
ASSETS
Loans and Dis
counts $1,007,703.15
Furniture and
- Fixtures .... 10,000.00
Expense, TaxeB X
and Interest
Paid 5,496.46
Bonds,. Securi
ties and Other
Assets 1,534.93
CASH AND
DUE FROM
BANKS . 216,611.55
$1,241,346.09,
j. i ,
; ' LIABILITIES -
Capital $ 200,000.00
Surplus and Un- . '
divided Prof
its ..... 6,5.98.54
Bills Payable... 90,000.00
DEPOSITS 934,933.72
Guaranty Fund. . 9,81,3.83
' ' - 41,241,346.09
" - v '
Deposits in this Bank are protected by the Depositors' Guarantee
Fund of the State of Nebraska. -
D. W. Ceitelman, President D. C. Geitelman, Cashier
H. M. Krogh, Assistant Cashier
F
"or tluwti willing to
DaV the oricc rriarvn
value beyond comD&r
ison is offered by the
r Ir Leautv
or tone it is recognized
gerusrally as having no
equal. And its strperb
tone outlives that oC
any piano bar none
Li buck or action it
is inimitably responsiw
to any mood or emotion
Highest priced ii is
and highest praised.
Ijryestigafeand YOU
mul have none other.
1513 Douglas St.
The Art and Music Store
D ...
A
loaau
thsrearemanv
unidemimd
imitation loaves
of
-
Insist upon sscino
pur TRADE MASK
It on every GENUINE
loaf-Know whsre
your bread comes
WWII.....
TETEE$INfi.PtQAD BMUNO CO.
Alto Makers of TIP-TOP Bread.
A SUGGSTION
. ,The most difficult part of saving is the "start.",
Af ter the initial step saving becomes a habit. Thou
sands have said, "How foolish I was in not beginning .
earlier." : . N :"
The New Year is here you should begin saving
' syitematically save something each pay day the
- surprise will bo yours when you realize the amount
.. saved with so little efforts s V
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 -dividend are '
- compounded semi-annually. , Arf funds invested are loaned!
V improved real estate ocureet by first mortgagesi-. r ' ';
We invite you to' avail yourself of the tervicea and secur
ity of our Association for the accumulating of your 'savings. t
CONSERVATIVE
savings & Loan Associ AtioN
j & s sr a t n o y ,
South Sidt Acency. Kratay Bros.. 4 SOS Soutk 24tk Si.
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