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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 11, 1921)
The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THS BEE FUBLISama COMPANY, NELSON B, UPDIKE, FablUher. . i H.I, MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS , . TM Axitfi Fna, et wWefc TIM Bm It BMatxr, la lMllr MIU4 M Ik UM for puMiuUoa M (11 urn dinwtain rrxttwt ta tt or Mt MharwlM credited la tfeu fptr, u) 4l th I soil mi iiMMie twain. All nliU of puMlMiioa ef in atKCltt 4ivtck tie tiaa wwrti. . : ' BEE TELEPHONES Print Bfuirn Iicrnnm Ait for Tw1v 1 fifMV Ut Dwrlttwl or Pfor. WtntwL I Jrr AUW Pr Nlsht ail Alter 10 P. M.i XdUorUI DtjMtttMct .......... ClreuUtlo VmtnmmA ..... aimttriaf Dp4rtHal ... orricEs or the bee - Main Omnt: ITU tni rtraaa Ceiwoil Huff . - IS Boou St. I Bout Bid Out-ef-Teira Offices Tjl 1M0L Trltf lftML u s at ' Ti tn Fifth An. Wuhlniton 1311 0 ft CbIom twr Bid. Ilttlr,mac, MBu8t Honor v" Tte Beefs Platform 1. NewUaloa Passenger Station.. ' ' 2. Continued improvement of the Ne braska Hif hways, including the para mant of Main Thoroughfare leading , into Omaha with a Brick Surface. , 3. A abort, low-rate Waterway from tha Corn Bait to tha Atlantic Ocean. 4. Homo Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. v : Vote on House Roll No. I. .. The Water board's bill to give itself para mount authority to determine the time and man ner of submitting jhe municipal electric , light plant issue to the people has been defeated .by the lower legislative house. ' The adverse vote is 1 so decisive, 62 to 35, that it would seem to be final; it is hardly conceivable that the house will, reverse itself, even should the senate pass the identical bill pending before ' it. - The defeat Is likewise the most emphatic of any .administered to the water board in its many legislative battlee Two lessons may be drawn from this result and the events which led to it. .A ; The people of -Omaha and the state have confidence in the Water board s administration" . of the water plant. ; That has been proved re- peatedly by votes cast in Omaha and in Lin coln. The Water board has been upheld in Its requests for necessary power to handle the iw- .terests intrusted to 'it. The Bee believes that the board has deserved this confidence and still ' deserves it . r But neither Omaha nor the legislature be lieves that the 1 Water board is omniscient. Neither believes that all power should. rest with the board." House Roll 'No. 1 was defeated primarily because the legislators realize that the people of Omaha now have power to handle their own affairsl that this Jill merely gave added power to the Water board. The legisla tors answered that their only interest lay in giving the people power; ; the distribution, be tween rival agencies did not interest them. -The lesson for the Water-board is to continue to devote itself whole-heartedly to -doing well the job given jt, without craving additional power or duties.,: ' , . 'The second lesson lie in the,, further,-evidence that the legislature does n6t care to have its time occupied by efforts to settle questions of purely internal policy in Omaha. It expects Oniaha to do that ,The sooner Omaha accepts its constitutional right of home rule the better the legislature will be satisfied and the better able Omaha will.be to solve its problems. v "Mididle Class" Democratic: Party, While the George White tommittee expects next week to bring in its verdict on, what ailed the democratic party just before it gave up the ghost and went out of business in November, ''its action will not oe conclusive. Mr." Bryan will 'not make public his" determination of the fates until after the middle of March, conse quently we will have to spend the greater part of the Lenten season in wondering, just wbat form the- alibi will take and whether resurrec-I form, the-alibi will take and whether resurrec tion is possible. However, one of the Bryanttes has given as his personal view; that the dear de ceased went to its doom, because it had too many generals and too few privates. - In his reconstruction program the great commoner pro; poses to remedy this, " by having alt privates and no generals. The middle class will, be .charged, with the duties and responsibilities con nected with the management of the party al ways of course allowing for th fact thaOJr. Bryan will tell them where, when and what to do, retaining unto himself, also the approval or , disapproval, of the result, just as he has since he took over control of the party in 1896. The McAdbos,. Wooleys Whites and Coxes are to be sidetracked, but they will have the privilege of Coming in as middle .class democrats, but hot to assert any of the privileges of leadership. Omitting the aristocracy and the proletariat, the bigwigs and the rag, tag and bobtail elements of the party, fs a happy idea. Mr. Bryan's new organization may not cut any especial figure in ' the great game of national politics, but it will be respectable, and that counts for something. State's Rights and the Railroads. ; A Wisconsin state senator is moving to se cure the restoration of state's rights, especially that which gives control of railroad rates. He not only appeals to the. legislature of his own state, but to those of other states and. to con gress to have restored those constitutional guar antees of sovereignty tnat have been so sadly in fringed upon of late years. Why not carry the move back to its logical conclusion, and again set up a condition that prevailed at the close of the Revolutionary war, before the adoption ol the Articles of Confederation, when each of the coloniesf considered itself a sovereign state and sufficient unto itself. Revive the spirit. that led Connecticut to set up a tariff wall against . New York, and the other elements that brought confusion into the life of the people, happily, dis pelled by the adoption of a constitution that re served to each of the states its sovereignty, but gave congress the control of interstate com- ' xnerce. ,.'" ' K : '?: ' ' ; ' . ; ; : ; ' -T- "'. ' The doctrine of state control of railroad rates within the borders of the states is well estab lished, but such control breaks down at the bor der. This was settled by the decisions of the federal Courts, and while it has been productive of some inequalities, generally the effect . has - been good. The railway service of, the United States was sadly muddled by lack of co-ordir.a- ' tion among the numerous rate-making . bodies, and the multifarious schedules existing before the war came on were a source of endless mis understanding and disputes between the earners and their patrons. . A serious effort to straighten this out has 0 - been made by the" Esch-Cummfns law, and it is not improbable that in good season a basis will be reached for an agreement between interstate and intrastate control that will be harmonious and equitable. When that time comes the trans portation-industry will be restored to usefulness because it will have the assurance of stability as far as it may be established by law, but a "revival" of state's rights, will not materially help in bringing this about American Legion Boxing Bill.N ; . The state house of . representatives has over turned the .recommendation of a standing com mittee that would have killed the bill legalizing boxing bouts and providing for the regulation of such bouts and of wrestling matches. The bill is to come before the house on its merits: " The quality of a proposed law may be judged sometimes, though aot always, by the nature of its support and opposition.- That seems to apply in this caseviThe boxing bill has the whole hearted support of the American Legion boys of Nebraska. Similar , bills have the support o the Legion in other states. These young men were not thought to be of weak character or evil motives when they bared their breasts to enemy machine guns in the recent war; in the communities in which they live and what com munity has not some of them? they were getter ally . esteemed before the war and ' have been since as men of character, of honest purpose,.! courage. They symbolized "red-blooded Ameri canism." : Collectively, they are "red-blooded Americanism." Against the bill are ranged two groups. There are those who oppose "prize fights' and who fear that any boxing bout is,but!a prize fight under another name. , The Bee has no quarrel with those who' oppose the boxing bill con scientiously on this ground, , It suggests that they may be too fearful, that they may be jack ins in their trust in their fellow men,, lacking perhaps in that human quality embraced, in tak ing a. sporting chance on the type of manhood that' makes up young America, Their motives, howeverVare not to be questioned, although the breadth of their vision may be doubted.; ,: :: But -there is another group, opposing .this bill. ' That is the professional promoters of like wrestling matches and outlaw prize fights arid boxing bouts. Men of this stripe are to be found, in" person or by proxy, doing stealthy lobby work against the American Legion bill, They are not friends of clean sport They are its enemies. They have nothing in common with the conscientious objectors, They want to de feat clean sport so that they can continue to ply their trade in outlaw sport ; ' Insofar as backing is a test, the odds are all in favor of the boxing bill. It is American Legion vs. fake promoters. 'Perhaps the best way to test" the law is to give it a trial. We feel reasonably certain that if it does produce evilesults, the Legion will be among the hrsi moving; to secure its repeal. Wrong, of Child Marriages. -, Plato advised that men should marry- be tween the ages" of 25 and 33, and set the ideal aee of ,a bride at 26. Modern science, which has supplanted philosophy as a guide, has";. reduced .the. age for both men and women to between 23 and 26 years, never with the woman older Jhan the mah. Thus in the case of the interrupted honeymoon of a boy of 16 and a girl .of 17, love flouted both ancient and; modem;,counset "There are; good physical and psychical Tea-sons- against such early marriages, although it is vain -Ife' expect; them to; influence the course of vouthfiil romance. Until character 'is formed by maturity,!' none, of us can be sure what; any other will become.; Harmony Of interests neces ...v t0T iiviifc together can hot evert be promised ,at ,that age..The seriousness, ot marriage is oe yond the comprehension of a child, and what should be a sacrament becomes a parody.':;'!: ,v It is declared by "physicians that the average girl of 18 or 20 has not the vitality to .withstand,. the strain of marriage. At this age sne nas not yet reacnedhe period where certain inherited i.. ..;:n .1, farriacri and maternity would be extremely likely; to encour age predisposition to tuberculosis or other ills which might have been avoided by waiting to marry at it more mature age. All the world loves a "lover, and more will envy these striplings their youthful ardor than will scorn them for it But, at t same, time, when a mistake such as this has been made, the kindest thing to do is just what was done, sep arate them and try to induce them, to be chil dren once, more, s ' ''i' y Mother o Mine. .; Police reporters know with what frequency men being arrested speak regretfully of the pain that their deed or its detection will cause their mother. "This will kill my mother", i a phrase often heard. They do not say that their mother, will disown them, or cast them off, but only that they have brought sorrow on her gray hairs. ' 4 , Men are but boys grown large in body, and mothers remember this though the world so', often forgets. The story was recently told of the end of an eight-months' search for her son which led a South Dakota woman, into a score of western states. Undiscouragcd, she persisted until finally he was found in the United States military prison at Leavenworth. Nd sense ot disgrace marred the discovery that her son yet lived. He had quarreled with an officer and de serted his regiment, just as he may have threat enedas boys often do, to run away front home after a parentai rebuke. That was the way she regarded his misdeed, and her return home was filled with the happy .belief, in the words pt,P)t dispatch, "that her boy . soon will gain his re lease and join her." ' v ' Knowing that on shore a crowd of master minds awaited him, Mr. Harding may well have, given thanks that his house boat was stranded on a mud bank miles away, V.--. The Texas governor, who . believes the legis lature should act also in an executive way, Will have to rewrite the American theory of govern ment --"y.' ',,. ; j- . ;:,',,., 'S..'-' ':',' The discovery of a fertilizer which kills weedsj if authenticated, ought to do a lot to keep boy on the farm. :'' " ' ' .: . -" :.'''.' No really proper young woman these days would ask a kilted Scotchman how he keeps his knees Warm. '.- " ' , '-' , Why not be an optimist? It costs no more than to be a pessimist. Congress is going to make the army more exclusive. , .-.... , . 7 THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1921. A Line 0' Type or Two Hew to the Line, Ut the auipe fall where they aUy TO MARGERY. Tell Margery That her dismal picture of the bachelor Whose girt married eomone"else, Is affecting and effective; -But before I dissolve into a Lacrimal puddle, 'Or get mad and fight somebody. I want to take. a. slant ! At the other fellow. STONE PHIZ. "WE cannot," writes Charles Whibley. "look back upon, the year 1920 without a feeling of shame. ' Not one of the gallant promises made to us by our politicians has been kept We have not a land fit for heroes to live in, and even if we might boast that happy land, there are not enough heroes to people it." THIS IS BECOMING TERRIBLE. Sir: Congress ought not to wear its heart upon its sleeve for Dawes to peck at. i , JAMES PONTIFEX. , "THEY," replied Mr. Chesterton, referring to American newspapers, '"contain an awful lot of news." Kervoolyvoodire "awful" and "lot?" Is G. K. trying to kid somebody? ; . A 1MI Fighter Asks Help. Sir: My brother gadders, when opening. their wares in hotels, display prominently Ion the dresser a photo or photos of alleged wife or sweetheart. I'm only a young fellow, and haven't either, and heretofore business has been so good that I haven't felt the need of one. But with present conditions, and in line with the policy of "1921 will reward fighters," I want an appealing picture to which I can point and say, "There's the little Jady I'm fighting for." - Can you fix It up with the beauty contest editor to send me the photo of a nice girl of standard size and weight stock shade, who has that look In her eyes of enjoylrf .Jaiz but dis liking Greek acrobats, reading the S. E. P. but not following the serials, plucking the eyebrow but not wearing galoshes, and enjoying a sirloin steaK with 'onions? I'll feature the picture 'n every sample room in Dixie, and when occasion warrants may even kiss it sentimental like Tours for better business, v " H. G. C, "SPEAKING of galoshes," writes a co-ed who slings a nasty buckle (in the phrase of an other fair 'correspondent) "how about those members of the faculty (fern.) who neglect to fasten their h. s., and who pass up and down the room seemingly oblivious of the tinkle-tinkle?" . " ' . ;' : ' : NOT PE'fisntIOUR'.''" V''1.-''".:-. .. . ft (From the Macon Record.) . , He waa taken to Decatur Wednesday for 1m X-ray .examination. Georsra Glenn, the " . undertaker, accompanied him.. " f . AT this stage of the oroceedinea in Irelind it might be" well to' introduce what Mr; Red mond once termed the true spirit of concilia- uon among Jinsnmen, , '.. ; The Toonervllle Fire Department 1 'jV- y (From the Toledo Blade.) m ! Upper Sandusky When an alarm was turned in, the hose cart, pitched to a deliv- ' ery truck was rushed to the scene of the1! conflagration. . A wrench to connect - the hos to a water plug was missing, and after considerable delay a . messenger roturned from the ataUon with the tool. When the Jiose was attached to the fire plug two fire men, encouraged bythe shouts of bystand ers, gallopea jn the direction of the smoking residence haulipg. the hose end while the reel on the ear spun round. . They discov- ered the noizle ,was missfng. Someone rushed the nozzle from the city hall and again the firefighters turned their attention, to the house, where, by this time, black cloud of smoke Was pouring from an upper story Window. A cry went up for "ladders." 'L tound th' t0 ha be" 1" at the station. While they were being brought up frosn the rear neighbors, at the entreaty of Mrs. Smith, threw several -buckets Of water -on a biasing carpet in her bedrOom and ex tlngulshed. the flames. , The fire chief,' in-' terviewed 'following the fire, stated in ex pianaUon of the delfty that the firemen had stored their equipment for the winter. MEMORY fails-US: What wm thm aAL venture of "The Pink Shirt?" We have fecov ered the earlier chapters, but the shirt's last an- pantion escapes us. Some ancient reader may ' FOR THE BUDDING COLYTJMIST. Sir: PerhaDs our nh nnrt.r. late Simeon the. Stylite, would be interested in u iT lau!T B announcement this noon of ruuoing- tiara-- sweet Cider Sauce. '- Even I didn't c-pt tha 'nio i u first casual inspection. Thero a lni. thoughts that lie too deeply hid for tears. " P. D. S. PERCY": GVmnvv"i tins Tex, mcluded a piece "m cannon tvU AJ you remember what Arthur Whiting queried wc ioi mm we naa neard . Uraingcr Amorous Inter udes: "You mean Hammerous imeriuaes, aon t your ...... The Tooher ville Snow Shovel. " (From the Crown Point, Ind., Register.) . " 1J PJ" "n'ortunate that the snow shovel' tnat has-been used in cleaning the ice and snow off the walks around the court house should have been misplaced during the ' warm weather of the past month. When it ' waa needed so badly this week, no one waa ' aoie to find it an as a consequence, every, body who goes into or comes out of the court house has to risk: their necks, their dignity and occasionally their chances of a peaceful hereafter by walking over a walk that is lia ble to fly up and hit you in the small of the back, or thereabouts almost anytime. If any one has seen the court house snow shovel lately will they please bring it -back or report where it can be found. - - MANY old favorites elill are to be found in "Wit. Wisdom, ami VnikL. ' i M?r,9.reat, Example, this from W. M. Evartsi "While Hayes occupied the White House, the water at his dinners flowed like champagne." ' DISSEMBLING HIS LOVE. ' (From the Monitor, Ala., News.) Jrer.iBOrry t0 report that our old friend J. H. Galbraith is again confined to his bod with sciatica. We trust this la the last spasm, . . "NEW Jack-a-Bean dini'nc rnnni fum It in-. used twd months; will sell cheap." El Paso Herald. That is the kind that I.nnU Tann h-k d;.' apartment furnished with. Carljlo as a Sllngcr of Slang. '("Education and Citizenship," Graham.) When Carlvle finishprf m Pn.nh r,-i,, tion he sa d to his wife: "I know not whether this book Is worth anything, nor what the world will do with It, or mlsdo, or entirely forbear to do, as la likeliest: but this I could tell the world: you have not had for a. h any book that comes more direct and flaminaly from the heart of a living man,") . . ;, 'LISTEN, 'MY CHILDREN, AND YOU ' SHALL HEAR." . . Sir: May I offer member1 f th, iriomu stock in a new automobile-wheel concern In Te- icuu 01 wmcn j. j. .air is president, Ora Jus tice, Vice president, and J. F. Angell, treasurer? v . J. C. F. WHAT is vour favorite traH Wan? Tin you know of a better than "The Show Case With a Conscience?" FOR WHICH MUCH THANKS". Sir: The Heramlner, relates that James K. Hackett has refused to play, the title role in "Mary, Queen of Scots." Gosh, but this Is a rsllefl v .. ' - G. D. C. ' a". - y Of All Sod Words .' Die traurigsten Worte von alien "Wlr sind so' getallenl gefallen!" ' ESPECIALLY GOOD FOR THE COiUC KIND. '",.-:- V (From the Tri County Press.) Photographs are good gifts for all oc casions. Use them for Valentines. Chase . : StUdiO. 1 . . IF Mark Twain today were hiring "air artist by the week to curse that stranger," we could suggest the artist." B. L. T, - : Should Wear Galoshes. f " More power to the Chicago policemen who are going to wear dresses to catch purse snatch ers, but what are they going to do with their feet? Indianapolis News, . How to Keep Well By OK. W. A. EVANS QtMatiaaa eeBceraiaf avfteae, aaalta tiea and BrevMtiea ( dleM, sub mlttoS te Dr. Evans Mr ewaeere ! Tka Bm. wUl mm aaiewered ereeaally. ' . ' What ' -Omaha, Tne Bee: I eubjeet ta araser UsalutlM, where a eteaiaedi aaaraeeea eavetea te en- deeed. Dr. Evans will net make aMineels er areeeiiBe lor iboivmimi llwHt, Awi lettere te ears ef The Bee. Copyright. 1(21, by Dr. W. A. ZTaas. or at. some ices every slbla to do so, not say I'm a CATARRH DOESN'T POISON BODY." . nose movie Admitting that the normal mucous ot . the mucous membrane is harmless or even beneficial, that does not- answer tha question about nlotures in catarrh of the head. Does it harm a man who has catarrh continually to swallow nasal mucous The answer is to Increase la no.- ...'.( , The reasons' are these: When ning the shows that physician uses the term catarrhal he never "works has reference to the secretion of ' But there mucous, a helpful and not a harmful the considerations referred to above. product, w nen a jay man usea tne The entire movement ot which the movie censorship agitation right now is a Dart is a menace to our term catarrh he has reference to condition, usually of the nose, lit which is produced a large amount of constitutional secretion, composed of , pus ; and the United mucous. , that the In so-called catarrh of the head there is a chronic infection of the nose or some ot the sinuses opening from the nose such as the one over at 12. She a t or 4 - year the eye. There are several of these sinuses; or the principal seat of pus infection may be some part of the is a -size too projects. ae-Detitp. for nose or throat membrane Itself. The product is a mixture of pus and her. She lost not ' control ' mucous. A good deal of this secre tion may be swallowed In the course trembled and of a day. ' to take her have nlenty Is there any proof that it harms? I have ever done for her helped her. Specialists have seen her. but could hot tell - what was wrong- or offer- None. The mucous contained Is harm less. The pus is a mixture of white blood corpuscles, epithelial cells from the membranes, and serum from the blood. All of these are harmless. There remain pus cocci sua-aesuon. six and the other children are bright and normal." v 1 x and the Chemical secreted by them. A well -man constantly swallows saliva containing large numbers of hydrocephalus. Her. mental develop ment is poor. Sueh children are very apt to have convulsions. Probably pus cocci ana tneir secretions., wny is ne not poisoned? 1 . In the first . place, when germs nothing ean and their products get into the stomach, the probability is that they will be digested. Whatever ef their substances gets by the digestive ap paratus is made , harmless by the liver. The- doing of that work is one Of the principal functions of that largest and most important gland. ' When a man swallows a glass of milk he swallows more germs -than a man with catarrh will - swallow in nose secretion in a day or a week. When a man eats a generous portion of "high" meat his liver will be called on to do more work destroying the. bacterial products re sponsible for the "highness" than the catarrh man's liver will, destroy In a month. . A piece of odorous cheese will call on the liver for work -beside which the work occas toned ny catarrh is trifling. . Of course, to have mucous lnra branes which produce the normal amount of mucous and no more is better. ' Of , course, the man whose nose is -constantly 'manufacturing a. mixture of mucous and -pus is some what Haeommoded thereby: He may be made somewhat uncomfort able, particularly if he lets his mind dwell on the subject and develops out of it a neurotto tendency. But statements that the constant drip ping down his throat causes In digestion or' that awallowing his nose secretion causes catarrh of the stomach or catarrh of the system, or poisons the system, are without foundation, ' ,,';" -f : Haa Serious Condition. "-' Mrs. J. A JsV Writes?' "t wonder If you could tell ree what alls my 12-year-old girl; . For Seven or eight years she has what we home folk call the 'shakes.' She never falls, hut la unconscious, I am sure, for a minute or two,, and has tto control, of herself at times. She is large end. more fully developed than most girls . This BUI of Fare, was prepared" ... with an Imrnersion . Heater Ovenette -Grill . Percolator 'i:-'-NL''v1" :;.HMl- L mmZH. WWW J- te' Vafeiif 3t- fctt'' .(! WppfTip. lie" " .. V-... ' S. ML.. '. - ...,.,... , ' . .V Censorship Contains. on foot to establish a virtual dicta torship over the secular affairs of our nation is beginning to assume large preporttona and la- a distinct menace (e our clvllutatloa Are we going to . here a union of church and state again," this time under Feb. I. To the Editor of am opposed to tne pas sage by our legislature ot any mov ing picture censorship bill and X am a member of the First Baptist church of Omaha and attend there other church four serv Protestant rule? Now, Sunday when it la poa estant -and not a Cathellq and I've been watching this sinister ahadow creep on and on. In connection with the church It Is a part of the new thoology and .higher criticism we are supposed to have - grafted In so readerawlll kindly culprit because I op- censorship in Nebraska. Now, I have lived in states where they have censorship, including Pennsylvania, and I've seen moving from Germany within all these states and Ne years and has taken braska movies are no worse than they are in Pennsylvania or Msry. land.- The only result of censorship theological schools by . We have heard so the Catholic church - tne expenses or run po'ral power again, but. government; experience the danger He now? the theory of censorship oversealoue and ' intoxicated with the prohibition victory. Would now out in practice. Is something more than have the state close allthe Of recreation and enjoyment to all the people and force everybody to sro to cnurcn lour times day whether they he not There Is a great . liberty as citizens ot State Tne movement the church is foraettlng Protestant preaohers have and 'more part'xularly its' : mission; neither reform nor -world salvation Is accomplished in such sn absurd has the intelligence of - old child and her head manner.-, The business, of the church Snd its .ministers, Protestant or Catholic, is- hot to attempt to oper ate" the machinery - of the world's governments, but It' very com. mon thing, In Omaha especially, to g6 te church every Sunday in a large. Her roreneaa She also has a ravenous Once I had har In a home feeble-minded, there they dieted her flesh and ooimi her nerves at all. shook so, that I had month and listen , to. the home, where she could . to eat. Nothlnr that talk about almost everything except the Bible and its truths. This moving - picture bill Is evidently an outgrowth of something like - Jealousy of ' the preachers because their ' congre gation prefer to be entertained at a movie show Instead of at church. She is the fourth of REPLY. It is probable that your child has This preference Is natural. instinct when by nothing else, go to church to worship and when they hear and see the same things they would have at the movie, but in net nearly a sensible and entertain te done tor ner. - Start aPund foraHome Share in The Conservative, backed by the best possible , security First Mortgages mean . Savings Aecount to ,which you ean dd some thing every pay day. , Comfort in Old Ace May Ijs secured by shares- in The Conservative, . which an backed by the best possibl , security .First Mortgages. This means a Pavings Ac count to which yoo can- 44 eomething; each pay . - day. ; - '.j . " r-. ' . '- .'' ':: Educate the Children Begin new on that Savings, Account. Shares in The Conservative' are safe backed by First Mortgages on real estate. In thirty years share holders nave received dividends twice each year -January and July.. Because the - money . is carefully invested sold safe, thousand of Omaha citizens are shareholders.--. ,, ' J;:;., ? ; . : s Why Not&gintdy? - m'ii -f"-ili'' '' -'-':" -' ' h'1' "'' '' ; Iht Conservative SaVings and ' Loan Aiocution tenth Side Atracy, Kntfcy Brae, SO SmtOt Uth St ;:::. : The ladies of Omkha r invited to' call at the Electric Shop and hear MISS C E. CRAIG, ' . .y . Heme Economist, lecture on and explain the advisability of using Electric, Appliances in the home. ' Miss Craig will be at the Electric Shop until Saturday night only, hence we advise your coming as early as possible. , Six Course Dinner for Four Soup Purer of Tomato (IsssBersiea Heater) Broils d T-Bone Steak 1 , Baked Potatoes Creamed Peas . - Hot Roll or Toast (Grill aad Ovenette) Porcupine Apples in Lettuce Nest , , . , . -. : i .' Anfel Fod Cake . . , (Oraette) Vanilla Ice Cream -, " Percolated Coffee Imperial Cheese - Toasted Marshmallows . Cracker This Six-Courf Dinner wss prepared tricity of less than five) cent. Nebraskaf1! Power Co. fOTUBtCftl ing a, manner, they naturally con elude that the church can't com pete with movies at the movie'a bus- ! tnsss. . Can you blame them? A few years ago when the old preach ers preached the Bible, the movies away from cnurcn. in prweners a today would attend to tne ousin-. they are tailed to they would havet larger attendance, i-r ....'' So It is to the interest of all the people to see that the preachers In their misguided efforts to bring the kingdom of Ood to the earth before It Is -due don't carry their program too far. Let's be -done with movie censorship and -tell the preachers the millenlum wIM '-not come by movie censorship, or by prohibition, either," for that matter. J, RALPH DYKES. I'm a Prot tha. last few oar leading storm. much, about seeking tern Visits the Penitentiary. Omaha, Feb. 8. To the Editor ot The Bee: Went to Lincoln on the 8th with Mr. Ray Abbott, and vis ited the penitentiary, and met the warden, Mr. Fenton. He and his assistants are as nice as they can -be to prisoners. I talked to some. of the priaoners; they say Mr. Fenton la as good a man as they ever met He le jtiKt as pleasant, to the pris oners as he-cau.be. i- '.-.' I didn't regret the trip to Lincoln with Mr. Abbqtt. . --."' DICK KENNEDT. 1014 South Eleventh Street where does Preachers, avenuea every nun Christian or danger that la place preacher WfereSf censorship issupmns Men, by til II Lonflejt-livrd piano in tne wow oar none. Ask for guarantee from the maker or . seller of any other piano auaj to the Mason tr Hamlin guarantee. Such guarantee wiu be qwtn because U cannot pe iven. AkustA sKowou IWertmrkrl- Our Pianos pill appeal to voa. Our guarantee pill satisfy you. Our service mill please vou. Our prices and terms interest you: So Ml the fact that our $300 Pianos are the equal in value. as the terms are easy. I03 f 53 Douglas SL The Art and Music Store at cost for elec &lraraliij mm t it it w in . f V- : r my"Ji mi l A M II T If II ,i4Hasa4 . J :. . . . ... n II -mmT. a . wm nfc. ei - Bl m h f - i c i - ii i r . e . t