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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 28, 1921)
THE JihU: OMAHA. FRIDAY. JANUARY 28, 15)21. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) F.VENJNG SUNDAY 'i THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. NELSON B. UPDIKE. Publisher. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tha aetorlated I'reaa, of wtleb The He Is s tccmfxr. ! -rtusltely entitled to tlie um for iniblirailon nf all nam dispatches rrilitad la II or not utturntwi orodttrd In this ptiwr. and eleo Ui local noes published herein. All rights of publication of out special 1:iptfhae (I s!so watered. 1 BEE TELEPHONES Prints Brinrh Pirriante. Aik for Tvlatr 1000 tlie IWpartuient or Person Wauled. aaa awv For Nlfhl CalU Altar 10 P. M.i Editorial Department Circulation Department AdTertlilni Department OFFICES OF THE BEE alsln Offlpa: 17th anil Farnaai I.. UC011 BluITi IS hVott Ht. BoutH Hide Out-af-Town Officee: IS Klflli Ara. Wsehlnston Vkw Tori Chicago Tyler 100(11. Tyler I'xmii Trier lOOi'l S3U 5 Bt. tr,n a st I Bti-iar HMj. I rrls. France, 420 Kue St. Ignore The Bee's Platform 1. New Union Passenger Station. 2. Continued improvement of the Ne braska Highway, including tha para mant of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha with a Brick Surface. 3. A short, low-rate Waterway from the Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. 4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. btiore the legislative bodies. Frank Vandcrlip, who is out with the suggestion that an auxiliary advisory committee be elected to assist congress at least has made a frank admission of the vacant spot in government, and it seems ex tremely likely that the last hasnot been heard of the idea of occupation as well as geographi cal representation. Public Morals and the Censor. Whatever affects private morals directly in fluences public morals, for the one is a reflec tion of the other. Consequently any discussion of the one must in some degree include the other. If it is necessary to circumscribe the in-, dividual in all his movements, prescribing for him what he may do and emphatically setting forth what he . shall not do, then it is because tiic individual has failed in the regulation of his own conduct, and must submit to the corrective arid repressive attention of those who are to be trusted because of their wider experience, pro founder knowledge and more effectual self-control. Are we confronted with such a state of society ? One of the alter-cffects of. the war was a natural relaxation from a tension that strained humanity almost to the bt caking point. Much of the resilience of man's moral nature was lost because of the long continued drag on its .springs, and when the load was lifted these did not immediately fly back to the- form of prewar .propriety. Some manifestation of this took the shape of music that appealed to the primitive, lances that gave greater expression to the nat ural than the artificial elements, to exhibitions of various sorts whose details disturbed when they did not actually shock sensibilities attuned to the excellent quality of ' goodness attained through long development. On the surface ..iMs might seem to indicate a breaking down of the fiber of our people. More experienced - observers have accepted !ic phenomenon as. but a natural accompaniment af the generally disordered condition of the world, feeling confident that as other matters of life were adjusted, so would the morality of the people assume a more encouraging appearance. Deep lying sentiments are not moved by the surface ebullitions, nor is it at any point appar ent that our national character has suffered seriously or extensively because of the momen--tary presence of the things some deem uncl-, sirable. v Those who arc devoted to repression through legislation may well consider the problem in its broad as well as its narrow phase. The Bee has ever strongly advocated decency in all things: it has in the past set its face resolutely against the meretricious and unclean things tendered the public in guise of amusement, aW it has no word of defense or apology to make for them now. Xor can those who aiv threatened with the over sight of censorship present themselves as en tirely blameless. They have invited the visita tion, and need not be surprised that the move ment has influential backing. The Bee, however, believes the be,st answer is to be found in the home. Fathers and moth ers know what sort of amusement is whole some and what is bad, and they are charged above all others with the care and control of their children. It will be easy for them to exer cise such supervision over the amusements of the little folks as will preserve them from con tamination by keeping hem away from unfit ex hibitions. Adults know Tight from, wrong, and if they only can be induced to indulge proper discrimination, the unworthy will soon disappear for lack of patronage. , But it is both unwise and dangerous to give into the hands of ryiy small group of men and women the power to decide, what may or what may not be offered for the" entertainment of all. Public morals should not lie subject to the de cision that rests on the taste, bias, prejudice or predilection of a chosen few, no matter how wise, experienced . or otherwise qualified they may be. Existing law is ample to prevent the exhibition of indecent or improper shows; pub lic opinion is the final tribunal in which a de cision is to be rendered,-and this should not be restricted to the opinion of a board. Censor ship implies a control that is not in keeping with the ideals of our' government, carries with it a thought of intolerance, and promises only trouble for all concerned. . Schwab and the Public. N Americans will be slow to think that Charles M. Schwab was engaged in a conspiracy, to swindle the United States government through his connection with the Shipping board's build ing operation. Nothing in his remarkable ca reer suggests such a thought. For mere money he has no need and therefore may be considered beyond its influence. . Through many years he has 'had a princely . income, but never has he exhibited any sign of money madness. Money to him has meant merely a means, not an end. He has been in the truest sense a builder, de veloping a great industry to a wonderful state of efficiency, improving its processes, expanding its capacity for service, and giving to the world benefits of his genius for organizing and execut ing gigantic plans of construction. Such a man is unlikely to turn grafter, just at the time he has reached the pinnacle of his fame. It. was to Schwab that Kitchener turned in the moment of his greatest nee1, and it was Schwab who provided the . great warrior with the means of stemming the tide of German on slaught. When the operations of Bethlehem Steel attracted the attention of the stock market gam blers, they sent the shares skyrocketing, Without being able to actually deal in one, because Schwab resolutely set himself against the spec ulative movement. Had, he been avid of wealth, there was his opportunity to have turned hun dreds of millions into his private-purse. Such extensions of the capital, stock, of the corpora-v tion as were authorized went for the erection of new and the extension of existing plants. Schwab was not looking for money; he sought only more steel and better steel, and he gave it to the world. ' Only a day or two before the' storm of scan dal broke over him, at a dinner in Baltimore, he expressed his wish that his monument should take the shape of a forest of tall chimneys, blazing forth the birth of such continual flood of steel as will give the world its needs through ages yet to some. Schwab has come up from the material yard of a steel mill to be the foremost man ia the industry of the -world. He did this through; his sheer ability, his unrelenting dili gence, and his impeccable honesty. Calunyiy has assailed him. but he is formally exonerated, and may stand before all men, erect and-justified. Schwab is not a grafter, and the American people will be plad to know it. A Line 0' Type or Two Hew te the Line, let the quip fell where they knay Keeping Out of Politics. Nothing coula be more futile than the attempt to keep economic questions out of poli tics. The effort to maintain the old-fashioned idea of statesmanship which shall deal only with political 'problems and which considers that a nation where everyone is allowed to vote is' the last word in democracy is a flat failure. The world war did much to hasten the coming of the new industrial statesmanship, calling it did, on men skilled in business and industry to shoulder the burdens that politicians found beyond their capacity. Today in every nation two quite separate powers exist the political and the business or industrial. ' Efforts of the political branch, to tinker with the industrial have not been a suc cess, and efforts of the industrial to influence th political have been characterized by an equal amount of blundering, as witness the Adamson law and the attempt to legislate on questions concerning fair prices, trusts, railroads and any number of. cases where popular rights and rights, of propertysand labor are involved. Appeals still go v to have the natural eco nomic laws of supply? and demand repealed, am! efforts are constantly made to accomplish this. Meanwhile, supply and demand both fall under a blight The fiction that the economic side of life is uite apart from the political side is ex posed i almost every other bill-which comes Useless Instinct of Rebellion! ; It U impossible, of .course, to be in favor of j anything without being against something else, i but there so often is too much emphasis on the ! mere fact of opposition. Men. may be opposed j to certain conditions and filled with righteous I indignation, but unless they have a constructive plan with which to replace the old method, their j activities are of little avail. Too much reform agitation has gone" little farther than, mere opposition to men in office j or established, institutions. We 6ee it when elections result in turning one set of men out. and putting another lot in their place. There n no plan, nothing accomplished. It is easy indeed to assail the men in power, for the feeling alway$ exists that they are responsible for everything, even clown to the state of the weather. The world today is suffering from a shortage of facts. s Even in cases where careful research has made the fact available, they play less part than prejudice in deciding great .questions. It is as II. G; Wells recently said in discussing Winston' Churchill: - But what a pitiful and dreary project this is to be an anti! To have no faith of yoir own. no ulan of your own, to build nothing, to cultivate nothing, but to devote your life to ranting denunciation and to thwarting and overthrowing the efforts of other men. , , Mr. Wells was speaking on that subject which looms so large in his attention just now the establishment of peace and civilization on firmer foundations. "The class war," he says, "is after all as 'anti' a thing as nay. Bolshevik and antl-bolshevik are but left and right of the same thing, two divergent expressions of im patient, undisciplined and unenlightened minds." ' , Respect for facts, desire for truth, and un willingness to act without having a constructive plan these offer more promise for the advance ment of progress than any of the heated and pointless appeals to prejudice, hate and mutual distrust. Making a Business Pay. One of the counsellors at the local retail merchants', conference speaks with authority, be cause he has built up a splendid business in a small community. When he tells how to suc ceed, he does so with the conscious knowledge that he has succeeded. Examination of his statements reveals . no magic formula. What ever he has done rests on the solid foundation endorsed , by' age-old experience. He mixed brains with 'hard work; and out of it came pros perity. -His credit and his custom .alike rest on character. . But these. afe merely the machinery; to set it into motion and get results, motive force is needed. This was supplied by enterprising advertising; he told the public what he had and then delivered the goods. He does not say so, but we will venture the assertion that no cus tomer ever went out of his store carrying any thing that was not what it had been represented If he advertised a bargain, he furnished the bar gain. . Patrons were attracted to his place of business by offers that allured them; they were held by serviee that secured their interest. -That is all. . Honesty, enterprise, proper manage ment are the three great requisites to success, and without them, or either of them, no mer cantile undertaking can live. And this man. as every other who has made his business a shining light in the world, found the people through ad vertising in newspapers. S.VPIENTI.l PROSODIAE CCUXARIAFt I mix my bread In plain apondees, larnblcs serve for grating cheene, Iactyls arc useful for beatlnpr up cake. v An amphibrach serves me when mince-meat I make. Omelets take a trochee brink, Pyrrhic mayonnaise I whisk! Thus with fork snd spoon and beater I mayIx both meat and metre Into food and verses airy, Free from curses culinary. CooklnK thus becomes a, pleasure -Set to fitting beat and measure. t "Anacrunsl, orasis, stresses, These apply to my successes: But when cakes and pastry burn Then from lyric terms I turn, and without hesitating: for i sinnle second to weigrh the merits or demerits! of Vers t.ibre, 1 address myself to pure unvarnlShed prose, best indicated by the dash and the hiatus. While I curse the saleratus! ANCIIUSA. THE lord mayor of Cork now has a sea man's certificate and permission to ship aboard an outward-bound vessel. His plans are re ported "indefinite," and one wonders what arc the duties of a lord mayor of Cork. SMATTER MILOf (From the Clark County Democrat.) This is to state that myself nor any of my family will buy any more goods at Graben helmers' store in Marshall. Mllo Combs. T INCLOSE t. a.e., and shall be most grate- im tor your reply, writes a ladv to Amicus Poo. Puoth Gibbon:. "Nor should I complain of the intricacy ot ootnic alphabets and Greek charac ters, since very-day, and in a familiar langmge. I am at a loss to" decipher the hieroglyphics of a iemaie note. A COLLEAGUE' OF GESTA ROMANO RUM? Sir:, Recently a class was Questioned with reference (to the philosopher's stone, and thitfl was Drougnt to light: "Philosopher Stone Ssaid that gold was a finished-product of nature. He discovered that it whs necessary to. have air In order to have lamps burn." CHEMICUS. MR: JOSEF HOFMANN intrigues us.Here is ,an artist who can play anything, except per haps. Debussy; .yet. through indolence, indiffer ence, or perverseness, he offers an all-Schumann program the Symphonic Variations at one end. the Carnaval at thc.other, and four or five short pieces between. Mon Gosh 1 And to make mat ters worse, he plays the entire program without leaving the stage, thereby defeating our purpose to walk out on the Carnaval! WHY YE CMPOSIT6&R WAS TINNED. (From the Spencer, la., Reporter.) The guests were seated at one long table graced with a centerpiece of yellow roses, from which radiated strands of Smallpox and rosebuds to the ends of the table. A CALF which" Dr. Van Winkle was treat ingin Silem, la., kicked him in the head, since which time he sees- double. A white mule could nt do better. ' THROUGH A HOTEL WINDOW. Mr. W. L. George In the. purriOit instalment Of "Hail Columbia." j A study in American psychology. Appearing in "Harper's, Pays undeserved homage To the diligence, and industry of Chicago 1 business men Because Of an evening. From his hotel window. fie counted the lighted offices In a building across the street. And presumed That tho offices were occupied i I3y untiring captains of industry Topping oft an eight-hour dav. When in reality The occupants weVe A, group of ladies From Jugo slavia swirling: indifferent scrub-rags And shaking the languid broom. All of wmcn proves That' it is sometimes unsound Ta-deduce too much From observation Through a. hotel window. M. J. B. ASIDE from his super-mathematics, Dr. Ein stein is understandable. He prefers Bach to Wagner,' Shakespeare to Goethe, and he would rather walk in the valleys than climb the mounr tains. THE GTJJY'S PROGRESS. -Sir: The evolution of the Rev. Guy Kyle: .Free Methodist, freethinker, freebooter. CALCITROSUS. SAD and bad as is this, world, it cannot be so bad and sad as it seems to the cheery crew who write the New Republic. QtfERT: HOW MANY CARS DID THEY, SEE? (From tha Dubuqua Times-Journal.) Two ears driven by F. G. Fuller and Ar thur Dubbla collided at Thirty-fourth and -Couler avenue- about, 10 o'clockThursday morning. , "BELOW," writes a firm in LigonierInd., "is a copy of a letter we received today from one of our creditors." But as we have received the same letter from lour or five othersections of the country, we fear another attempt has been made to take advantage of .our innocence, i - THE VETERAN. ' (Minnesota Version.) v A mournful son. of old Kerchook, He wiped a tearful eye, "Oh that I had a good old jag, Again before I die, I I ean't drink Foker's Bitters. For in my cap and gown I have been drunk at Toozes', In Minneapolis Town." How to Keep Well By DR. W. A. EVAN$i Question concerning hygiene, (nuta tion and prevention , of diaeaae, aub mitted to Dr. Evan by reader of The Bee, will be anawered personally, eubject to proper limitation, where a temped, ' eddressed envelope i en icloaed. Dr. Evan will not make 'dlagnoai or prescribe for individual dieaaea. Address letter in care of The Bee. Copyright. 1921. by Dr. W. A. Evn. ox RtH-onslruot Our Hwd Law. ; without the positive knowledge tnai lis money n worm, The estimate that one out of every five per sons in the United States attends a school of some kind probably includes . dancing school, Sunday school and the school for scandal. The New 'York crime investigation which re ports that chorus girls rank high in . character must be true, for the ladies in question .can not be accused of concealing anything. Smokers will never be convinced thathe cost of living is down until th 10-rtiiran of tobacco reappears.. ' vAi )F( His buddie said, "Pray calm yourself. And eome along with me. For in my dusty garret a Jug of 'Busy Bee.' It has a kick like Capron's. Its sting is like death's frown; I, too, was drunk at Toozes', In Minneapolis Town. So arm in arm they fetched that Jug. He took a shot of "Bee," And though it broke his shoestrings, , : He tossed off two or three, But still he walked aeren and straight, His face still wore a frown; For he'd been drunk at Toozes', In Minneapolis Town. E. E. K. .MUCH "valuable correspondence" was lost in a fire that ravaged Mr. Harding's headquar ters in Marion. So if you don't get that post office you Will know,why. ST. AUGUSTINE. Sir: The porter on the Seminole Limited calls it "Snogsteon," and the prominent club woman here speaks of it as Senaugusteen," the accent on the ultimate. H. H. O. "THINKING as One Walks." Doc Evans. "Meaning," conjectures Fenton, "that if one is bow-legged one is likely to think in circles." Or if one limps, one is likely to come to a lame conclusion." Or if Roll your own. NEW. MOON. What hast thou in thy silver barque, Q Moon? "I bear Imperial freight unto tho twitlgl)t Star. Ln! she appears, and I shall hail her soon And lade with dreams her golden-gleaming ' car." LAURA BLACKBURN. , ACCORDING to the Milford Herald, a young couple were married "under the strain of Mendelssohn's wedding march." THE VILLAGE OMAR LOSES HIS OUTFIT. (From the Fort Dodge Messenger.) Lost Grass rug and ukulele between Shady Oaks and Fort Dodge. Finder please notify Messenger. OF course vou noticed that the drive against 'the breweries is headed by Col. Ntitt. B. L. T. Playing Safe. A few more suburban robberies, and the gro cers may decide to deal only with such customers as can -whisper the password through a bullet proof door. Indianapolis News. Hopeful. It will soon be so that a cowman carsell a couple of cowhides and go buy a pair of shoes wit the nonej Albuquerque Journal PULL DECAYED MILK TEETH. ; The milk teHh are apt to decay I before the time comes to shed them, j When decay appears in these teeth ! the parents sometimes consult den I tists. and when they do they not in frequently get conflicting advice. One dentist advises leaving in Mary's teeth JUst as long as possible, even though decay is extensive. He says unless tho milk teeth are left in as long as possible tho jaws will not develop properly or the nearby teeth will xlido in to the vacant space. In' consequence Mary goes on having toothache, tender teeth, and maybe rheumatism or St. Vitus' dance. Johnny is taken to another dentist, who says tho de cayed teeth should come out. Be tween tho two opinions parents are left Jn a state of perplexity. There are three reasons for early and extensive decay in tho milk teeth. Many of tlym are forming their crowns in the Inst month of fetal life and many children are born in bad health and with low vitality. The remainder aro form ing their crowns during the first six months of life. In no other period is there so much severe ill- cialists in ness. All of this means that the proven beyond will.- n.. n... 1. P ' ... quality. in the secoud place, there is no other period of life fn which tho teeth are so badly neglected as dur ing this first 15 years. Not even the caeful people have the habit of daily cleaning the baby's teeth. The children a little older are not much better off. . . In the third place, the great phy sical activity of children calls for a carbohydrate diet, and such a diet makes for decay of teeth. An English practitioner. Dr. F. S. Steadman, has long advocated the very free extraction of decayed milk teeth. He says it accomplishes very little to fill the cavities in milk teeth because the pulp is so large that it lies near the surface and is nearly always infected when , decay is present. When he finds 'a shallow cavity with no evidence of an ex posed pulp he fills it at once. Of course, the pulp can, be infected without bcins exposed. If the pulp Is infected he extracts.' The fibectiims to extracting tho milk teefh, -Dr. Steadman says, are not valid. Ho finds that such chil dren masticate their food well. sjHe has paid special attention to the charge that in such cases the Jaws do not develop well and ho finds no basis at all for the, statement. The charge that the nearby teeth tend to slide Into the vacant space he finds to be of little practical im portance, except as regards the back teeth. The molars which erupt at six years arc permanent teeth, and not milk teeth. If the teeth are drawn after the six-year molars have oc cluded this Is not likely to happen. In other words, the objection is not valid if the child is' over 7 years old. The sliding can' be guarded against in1 younger children by periodic dental care. The advantage of extracting de cayed milk teeth is that it prevents toothache, sore teeth, sepsis and in fections du to absorption from teeth. r Everybody Wearied. It- is stated by a financial author ity that the federal tax collectors are in danger of breaking down un der the strain. So are the payers. Boston' Transcript. Faiibiuy. Neb., Jan, 2 1. -To the Editor of Th lioo: For the past few years, during which lime the writer has been connected officially with the surveys of a portion of our state, he- has also had the opportunity to study more or less at short range, the problems of road building and maintenance, and the operation of the laws governing the same. Uo has noted the attempts of our legislatures since 1913, to instill into these laws those things that were ! Intended to advanco ' rather- than hinder, and abe lias also noted a gradual awakening of tho people from the lethargy of trying to apply half-century-old methods to. present day conditions. Tho progress 'made toward tan gible results under these laws is gratifying. To tho open mind,, it Is necessary only to cite our own De partment of Public Works, and wtiHt it. has done toward the improvement of our system of state highways. To tho skeptic, this statement probably does not appeal, for nil ho Rees in it. even if he takes tho trouble to visit the department in Lincoln, is a lot of engineers and draftsmen working out plans that mean to him no more than so much Greek or Latin. Or perhaps ho may see the project en gineer and his helpers on the works, working out some knotty problem in the shade of a tree instead of out in the hot sun, and proceeds imme diately to advise the department that three men aro loafing on the Job. But, thanks to an adequate system of accounting, in the hands of spe- their line, it has been the danger of suc cessful contradiction, that It pays to know what one intends to do before starting to do it, and furthermore that there is more money wasted every year in the building and main tenance of county roads under fos silized methods, than the entire op erating expense of the State High way department for a like period. Why then attempt to patch up old laws governing the county road work? - Instead we should - clean the slate and draft a new code, and stop wasting the taxpayers money. This leads up to the real subject to whidh the writer wishes to call attention. Itoad building is getting to be more and more a science. It has its problems of drainage, grade establishment, population to be served, eharacter of traffic to be handled, money available, etc. These are- essentially engineering prob lems, and while it has been said that road building is 10 per cent engin eering and 90 per cent horse sense, yet if this 10 per cent engineering or the lack of it is rotten, the whole soon deteriorates to the scrap heap. Divided responsibility, too, one of the worst elements Jn any organiza tion, must assumo its share as a con tributor toward inefficiency, while we go merrily on "passing the buck." Tho amount of money ment an nually on the county road systems in the state of Nebraska, will in many of our counties exceed $100,(i00. Granting that the county boards are conscientious In the use of this money, the fact remains that in the majority of counties it is spent without a plan of any sort, and also the county got while a record system to .make pos sible a measure of the efficiency of one method or 'structure as com pared with another, is 'scoffed at as a refinement not ln the interests" of economy. As a solution to the chaotic condi tion obtaining at tho present time, the writer suggests the following: First. Broadening of the author ity of the Department of PuUllo Works to include tho entire road svstem of the state. Second.- Appointment by the De partment of Public Works, of the county engineer, who Bhall also be the county surveyor and have churge of all road work in his county, under the supervision of tho Department of Public Works, but who may be removed from office for cause. Third. Provide that the county engineer shall be a licensed pructi tioner. Fourth. Elimination of the elected road overseer, and substitu tion of experienced grading outfits. Fifth. Redraft ail road laws around the county engineer as tho head of the highway department. Sixth. Provide for the prepara tion of a complete record of the road system of the county, and the installation of an efficient cost ac counting and budget system.. Seventh. Define the relation of the highway department to other county officials. Eighth. Make the board of county-commissioners an auditing and advisory body only. The adoption of a system in which the foregoing Is embodied, will under the most unfavorable nditions pro duce no poorer results than aro now being obtained, and will accomplish three potent things toward effi ciency. First. 1 Responsibility Is placed upon the shoulders of one man, who must show results. Second. All work is guaranteed expert supervision and accurate cost rocords. Third. Methods- are standardized. duplicate designs eliminated, engi neeilng co.-tts reduced to the mini mum, cost of production ledmioil, efficiency increased. In short, tipply to the county high ways sauo business principles the same as a private organization handling a like amount of money would do, and the first bieiininl will be able to hw, without added cost to the taxpayers, a marked decrease, ln the cost of doing things, and a substantial reduction of tho debt now standing against tho roud and bridge funds of a majority of tlm counties of the stutc. D. Tl. RICH. OPEN FORUM the PARIS PEACE TREATY TO-NIGHT Y. M. C. A. J. J. BOUCHER Discussion Leader ' Each Thursday P. M. 8 o'clock Columbia Grafonola And Columbia Records Hear the Latest Columbia Records It's a pleasant practice to drop into our store and hear the new Columbia Records. You'll like these TvelGot the Blues for My Kentucky Home " "Sweet Little Stranger" We will sladly play them for rou. Dr. G. D. Shipherd , and Dental Associates Who hsw ben Tfitb hint many years, are now in ' their - NEW OFFICES SIXTH FLOOR SECURITIES BUILDING Pay Us a Visit Coma Any Time. 613-20 Securities Bid f. S. E. Corner 1 6th and f-ernam, Entrance on 16th Street. Phone: -Tyler 2732,' 2733. First Church af Christ. Scientist, ef Omeha, Nabraika. Anneuness a FREE LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE By Prof. Herjaaa S. Htrlni, C. S. B., of Concord. Xew Hunpshirr, AT THE CHUBCH EDIFICE St. Mary's Aveaus sad 24th Street Monday Evenlna, Jan. Slit. 1921, at S O'Clsck Tuesday Evening. Fab. 1st 1921, at I O'clock The Public Is Cordially Invltid te Bs Present Mr. Herioir is s member of the Board of Lei-- lurosoip or uie Mother cnmvh. Tne Firsts Church of Christ. Scientist, ln Boston. Ms. T True, flie Aason & Hamlin is he tyorld's highest- priced piano. cTrus, also not one dollar oPhishigIv er price is spent irv gratuities to fimous artists for heir use or he yiasDn frlfamlirv in concert or recital Jis cannot Je saidoanv o&er great piano in he word. The many dependable Pianos this house ha carried in stock for the last 47 year ia prima facie evidence that you receive 100-cent dollars in honest goods. 1513 Douglas Street The Art and Music Store Bee Want Ads Bring Results. Don't Be Envious Of your friends and neighbors who have been get ting Dividends from their shares in The Copserva tive. It is easy to get into the Savings Class. ; EVERY SHARE IN THE CONSERVATIVE PAR TICIPATES IN DIVIDENDS. The more shares you own, the more dividends you receive. In nearly thirty' year o shareholder in The Con servative has ever been disappointed on dividend dates January first and July first. Thousands of shareholders are leaving their dividends, increasing their balances. , YOU SHOULD BE ONE OF THE THOUSANDS Saving something each week or each month is a Habit worth cultivating. Come in and talk with one of our officers about it. If you have funds not working, not earning, put them to work. &fe Conservative Savings & loan association J ff ca r n o y South Side Aency, Kratky Bros., 4805 So. 24th St. '-Clerk- Operator Slenoqrapher Repairman Lineman' Telephone Employees Have You Opened Your Savings Account? ' i TO TAKE ADVANTAGE of the generous offer of your Company the Northwest- - ern Bell Telephone Company to help you save, you must open a savings account. One Dollar opens an account in the Savings 4 Department of the United States National Bank. Your company Avill do the rest Open your Savings Account TODAY. United States National Bank N. W. Corner l&th and Farnam Streets -J The Bank of PERSONAL Service V