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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 26, 1921)
THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, MAY 26. 1921. TheOmahaBee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY NELSON B. UPDIKE, Publisher. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tbe Alanclated Prne. of wbl The Bee ti mtmlxT. U ex tlutiialr entitled to Uie un for publication til nwe dtapatones eredlted to It of ut oihnvlM omdltfd In Uin papar, and sin tbe ln.il ntwi published herein. All vth:i ol Dubllcetloo M our special dlipoteaw sre sis reaerted. BEE TELEPHONES Prlrate Branch Exchange. A for AT UntlC 1000 Uit Ueputmtut or I'uico Wanted 1 mntiG iww For Nl(ht Calls AfUr 10 p. m.i tdltorlsl Department ........ AT laotle 1021 or 10U OFFICES OF THE BEE Win Office: Km and Farnam Council Bluff 13 BcoU Bt South Bide. 4003 South Sith Bt Out-al-Towa Offices: New Tork ! fifth it I Winhtnuton 1311 O 81. Chicago Bteser Bilk. Fans. Franco. IK) Buo St. Honor The Bees Platform 1. New Union Passenger Station. 2. Continued improvement of the Ne braska Highways, including the pave ment of Main Thoroughfares 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. Concessions on Freight Rates. Transcontinental lints liavc accepted the fact that water competition must be met, and that inland points must have some benefit from the existence of the canal, and consequently ask per mission to make a r0 per cent reduction in certain commodity rates. Classifications mentioned in the dispatches from Chicago, where the an nouncement was made, includ a number of ar ticles of common use, and on which existing rates are all but prohibitively high. If the re duced freight tariffs find reflection, as they should, in retail prices the cost of living will be materially reduced in the central portion of the country. When charges for the long haul have been properly adjusted,, the shorthauls.will come in for consideration. They have been proportion stely increased, and are correspondingly out of line. Jacking up prices without regard to con sequences has had the effect that was foreseen from the beginning by those who took the trouble to look into the matter. An era of un wise and even reckless expansion brought about a situation that .could not endure, but the way back to normalcy in business is not so pleasant to travel as was the upward route. Big busi ness men long ago recognized the signs, and began to make preparation for the inevitable. Contraction of credits, and consequently of credit currency set in last fall, and has steadily proceeded. Dealers are wary about purchases, and sellers are equally chary, because the falling market affects all. When railroad rates were given the great uptilt the first effect was to put a damper on the movement to recovery, be cause it checked suddenly the slight current of business. With rates readjusted to conform to the ten dency of prices, it is not unreasonable to look ahead to a real revival of activity, and the sum mer months will almost certainly briog new life to- enterprise. Word from Nebraska farms is most encouraging, and in general there is promise of plenty of tonnage for the carriers, if they only accept a rate at which the business can be moved. The labor board signifies a scaling of wages to become effective July 1, and with re tailers following the lead of jobbers and whole salers and revising prices downward, the railroad managers have no longer any place to shift responsibility, and so accord the relief, that can not be postponed. Stability is not yet attained, but the. trimming process is going on steadily and rapidly, with the prospect that by fall business will be on an even keel again and the voyage may be resumed with confidence by all. Some peaks still project, but they will be much lower within another sixty days. Extra-Illustrating the Wage Hearing. , The pay-rolls ought to be' the best evidence of wages paid by the railroads, but these have not as yet been submitted. Magnates who ap pear" before the senate committee come equipped with certain cases calculated to illumine the point they try to make. One of the latest of these is afforded by Howard Elliott of the Northern Pa cific, who takes the case of certain Italian boiler inspectors at a New England terminal; These were increased under a classification that lifted them from the status of laborers to that of boilermakers from an hourly wage of 22 to 85 cents, and Mr. Elliott says that on a 10-hour asis they were enabled to draw $89 a week. If the latter figure is correct, then these men had V put in 92 hours a week, being paid for all over 70 at the rate of price and a half per hour. Two things are apparent here; the rate of 22 tents an hour is too low pay for men who are entrusted with the important duty of inspecting locomotive "front ends," and 13 hours a day rtd seven days a. week is too long to require wen to work. Four hundred per cent is per haps too big a jump in wages, and deserves- to Ve corrected, but the suggested remedy is too irastic. Debate on the railroad wage issue is tot helped by citation of these extreme cases, any more than is the whole situation benefited by pointing out individual instances of profiteer ing in other lines. Effort should be directed to establish a relation resting on justice, and not on what prevailed in a day that will never return. Improve the Farmer's Credit. It is business as usual on the farm. That is proved by the survey of agricultural condi tions in Nebraska .made by The Bee with the assistance of the county agents of the state. The men who produce the greater part of the wealth of Nebraska are carrying on in spite of all the discouragements that have been heaped upon them. It is business as, usual, in the sense of dig ging away at the task of producing food, but in some ways there is a touch of the unusual about it -There has been no lessening of production except insofar as lack of labor or .credit has forced limitation. The crops look good, and no foe is going to starve. An increase in dairying Is resulting from the unfavorable result of de pendence on grain crops alone. Cattle feed lots arc largely deserted because of the unfavorable prices paid by the packers, together with the lack of credit. This same inability to finance has resulted also in fewer cattle on the ranges. One conclusion is becoming apparent, loom- ing up as a menace that must be removed. This is that the banking system of the nation is better adjusted for helping commercial lines than for assisting agriculture. Thus, when loans to stockmen should have been expanded for the sake of production, they were contracted. Money has been hard to get even to carry on the necessary functions of farming, and interest rates have been high. Under the direction of President Harding the Federal Reserve board is now at work on a more liberal credit program. Governor Harding of the board is now visiting in the middle west to ascertain just what is needed and what can be done. He should have made this investigation months ago, but it is better late than never. Poland as a Danger Spot. Consternation is reported to exist in Poland -over a threatened invasion of Silesia and possi bly of Poland by the Germans. A demand is made for immediate action by the Allies to pre vent what may easily become a serious situation. Until the commission now at work has made its report, and the supreme council has taken action, the fate of Silesia is undetermined. On the basis of the plebiscite, the region belongs to Ger many, and that is very likely what will be de cided, unless it be established that the election Was unfair. Then the council will prescribe what further steps are to be taken. Poland has shown a peculiar course through the entire affair. That nation was revived as a result of the war, not through its own action, but by reason of the generosity of the Allies and the United States. As pointed out by Lloyd George in his speech, Poles did not fight for the liberation of Poland; some were in the Russian army, and others were on the side of Germany, but none of them aided in bringing new life to their own land. Unfortunately, since the nation was revived, its record has been one of annoy ance, when not of defiance, to the powers that set it on its feet and have aided in maintaining its life. The Korfanty revolt in Silesia is but the latest of these unruly manifestations. Discussing the responsibilities of the nations signatory to the Treaty of Versailles, the Balti more American says unless the provisions laid down in that faulty document are carried out, anarchy must result and there will be no peace for the United States'. That paper goes on: In the matter of Silesia both the British and the French are profuse in their contention that they arc living up to the treaty, but it appears to us that Lloyd George's way of doing this "is a better way, a sounder and a far less ques tionable way than that of Briand. The ques tion of Silesia may be of only secondary im portance to ourselves, but the question of the faithful observance of the treaty, with which is bound up the whole future of the world, is ' one that touches us most directly. Unless whatever of faith there is in the treaty be kept, Germany can not be held to the mark, save by the expedient of "sanctions," and these will lead to utter confusion. Poland is, indeed, the naughty child of the treaty breaking china, not only on the shelves of Europe, but in every pantry of the world. Delay in putting a stop to the fantastic pranks of those national zealots will be costly to everybody. The Case of the South Following Strange Paths Has Led People Into a Morass Why a "Christian" Newspaper Failed. A Chicago minister, wiser than his genera tion, has given his local brethren some informa-, tion with regard to the newspaper business that it would be well for all to understand. Referring to the failure of a so-called "Christian" daily newspaper, he explains that it was "doomed, to failure because it is an effort to go into the busi ness game without being willing to abide by the rules of .business, and because the public is not in a Sunday mood when it buys a daily paper." Two of the prime factors in the publishing game are here shown. To succeed in business, the publisher must play the game according to the rules. He is confronted from the outset by the fiercest of competition, and only as he has the ability to meet and outstrip that competi tion is it possible for him to make headway. A paper must be saleable, and to sell it must be attractive in appearance and content. Permaneffcy demands that it enter the homes of its readers, and to get into the American home it must be fit to go there. t Many minds must be touched, Sixty thousand copies of The Bee are delivered to subscribers every day, and each of these is read by at least two persons, a daily congrega-. tion far greater than the most popular of preach ers reaches in a year of pulpit oratory. Unless the paper contains some appeal to each of these myriad of minds, it will not hold them. Therefore, the daily newspaper is required to treat of many topics always in an entertaining way, devoting some portion of its space to. the serious things of life, giving sound and gracious advice and direction, that the public thought may be kept clean and wholesome. But the pub lic is not in a "Sunday mood" when it buys its daily newspaper, and it is no reflection on the morals or taste of the. American people that a "Christian" daily could not make headway. Playgrounds Under Welfare Board. A disposition is manifest by the new city commission to do away with the so-called recrfation board, and assign whatever of duties were under its control to the welfare board. Pos sibly this may be done without hardship to any body, and without diminishing the reasonable care of the city for the playgrounds. Proper oversight of the parks and recreation centers is necessary. Omaha is fairly well provided with these places for the youngsters of all sizes, and they have been well managed on the whole. Supervision is essential, that order . and safety may be part of the proceedings. A separate branch of the government charged solely with this does not seem necessary, especially as paid monitors are in charge" at each of the play grounds. Direction of these- may well be left to the welfare board, whose activities are quite as appropriate to the conduct of playgrounds as of regulation of dance halls. The sales tax plan may be abandoned, but Uncle Sam will have to get the money from somebody. With Mrs. Stillman and Clara Smith Hamon both in the movies, next winter's releases ought to go big. A lot of people in this world are living on less than $500 a month and keeping comfortable at that. Omaha will remember Dr. Edwards as ' a health comissioncr who tried to do his duty. If horses are all that is needed, King Ak's race meet will be a bummer. A 2l:S.tory church will be novel at least, (From the Baltimore American.) Sydney J. Catts, erstwhile governor of Flor ida, is in bad with a couple of grand juries in his state for alleged bribe-taking and peonage while he held executive office. Mr. Catts is a minister of the gospel and he was elected to the chief state office in Florida on his personal ap peal to the voters. The democratic party, usually supreme in Florida politics, lost out in the elec tion to this itinerant spellbinder whose knowl edge of the science of government was about as keen as an Eskimo's knowledge of equatorial conditions. Mr. Catts had a rough term as gov ernor and finally landed in the legal net. The officers of the law arc having a job of it to lo cate him and federal warrants have been issued for his arrest. Of course, it may turn out. that Mr. Catts was merely more ignorant than guilty as far as the serious charges against him go. The trial, if he is found, will determine the ex tent of his alleged criminality. But the troubles of Mr. Catts are illustrative of the strange paths followed by the south as a whole in governmental matters in the last gen eration. That section of the country, once noted as the chief source of administrative intellect, has delivered itself by and large into the hands of the mental bolsheviks. In Florida Mr. Catts rampaged around while the citizenry stood open mouthed in wonder. In Georgia Tom Watson, populist-pharisee, copied the same game and won it. In South Carolina Blease, jchu of the hill-billies, played circus and got the executive mansion. In Virginia for fifteen years a politico religious has been running things to suit itself and the result has been the disbarment from public office of men of capability. Westmore land Davis, a man of fair promise, was elected governor through a split over the fleshpots among the heavenly element, but his day of doom is near; in the coming election Virginia has the choice between an ancient fellow, whose chief ambition is to have his name go down as governor of Virginia, and a young hopeful of unimpeachable morals from the mountain sec tion. The latter will likely win, since he has the better God-fearing reputation of the two. Carter Glass is an outstanding man, but he made his mark before the present crowd came into con trol. Texas sent the sweet-visioned Mr. Sheppard to the senate and his moral speeches have been his chief contribution to the cause of progress. The exceptions which prove the rule are Alan bam a, which hung on to Underwood, one of the ablest men of the day, and Mississippi, which' "canned" Vardaman and supported John Sharp Williams. Arkansas and North Carolina have done neither bad nor 'good, though apparently they have failed to sink into the extreme intel lectual depressions politically characteristic of some of their sister states. A part of this political debacle in the south is due to the severe and long-continued after effects ot the civil war, which forced the south to let education go largely by the board. The educational efforts all through that section are gradually picking up now and an improvement ought to come within the next few years. In deed, an improvement is noticeable in spots already. But the lack of education in itself is not the whole story. Before the civil war, when democracy was not so prominent in the best so ciety as it is today, the bigger men throughout the south ran its politics. lhe so-called hoi polloi stood aside and listened to their "betters' and voted as they were advised. But demoo racy, the great leveler. changed all that.. The war shattered the real aristocratic element in the south and left the fate of the section in the hands of whomever could grab control. Every- Dody Degan to run amuck; it was very .much a case of "first come, first served." Finally, in many states, various anions the ministry who yearned lor political power began to take, hold of the reins. They managed to convince-the majority that the real test of a man's capability was measured in the extent of his horror of sin: sin being whatever happened to be enjoyable to tne. unchurched. ihese religio-political en thusiasts were hard workmen. Thev welded what amounted- to splendid political organiza tions wiiicri voted in a body, while the opposi- : ...... j . . .. r . , . . tion, uniea ana ingntenea, succumbed. ; That sort of business has been eoins- from bad to worse and is doing the same thing still in spots. In other spots there are signs of un rest, ot weariness in obeying the bunkumites. Until the south as a whole throws its bondsmen out doors and looks for leadership measured by intelligence it will never assume its proper pro portionate influence in the councils of the nation. How to Keep Well By OR. W. A. EVANS .Quoit ions concorninc hygiene, sanitation and prsvsntion el disease, submitted to Dr. Evans by readers of Ths Bet. will bo answared personally, subject to proper limitation, where a stamped addressed envelop is enclosed. Dr Evans will not make diacnosia a prescrlba for individual diseases. Address letters in cara of Tha Bee. Copyright. 1921, by Dr. W. A. Evans i An American National Council Reeotrnizino-. that- tli nr-erl (nr imnnni. tion work will mntitlllP fr,f" mantr vwrti iri nm ' representatives of various patriotic societies met. UIm .....1. '. XT r- c . ima wcck in ixcw iorK io jay plans ior we crea tion tff tin "Ma t inn a 1 Amfkrij. oau-!1 A Ui - - v iiu. ti'iiw iv.an ii HJiO meeting a national committee of twenty-five members was appointed, with full power to act; and the officers elected included President War hen G. Harding, 'honorary president; Vice Presi dent Calvin C. . Coolidge, Herbert C. Hoover and Mrs. Finley J. Shepard, honorary vice presi dents;. David Jayne Hill, president; Charles D. Orth. first vice president, and F. W. Galbraith, jr., of the American Legion, second vice president. The Tllpn anrl wnmpn tlioroff-tcA uil,n na . - . . ..... . ,, , ...wv.v.v, mil, aic operating in establishing' the National American :i t ... . .. .uu:icii are nroaaiy representative ot the best eleVnents in the American character; and under their leadership all loyal Americans should give their unqualified support in carrying out the un derlying purposes of the new council. - "The rnpmia nf Ani.rfnlcni lil.:.. - v. tuuLiivaiiiiiiu VYIIUIII UU prates are our most dangerous menace," said Dr. ijaviu jaync niii, at the initial meeting in New XOrk. "Some Of thpll fnpmipc ars.r.n e-..liea w v(l.ll( VIUVI are under cover, and -many are in foreign pay. jtuwever, in a general way, they may be classi- fieri ne i crn nnnco . rnIi. J C 1 - - J . : To combat these three foes of an 'effective Americanism demands intelligent team work and co-ooeration between all Amrnnni.nh'n. cies, and all groups of Americans interested in iitaiiiidiiiuiK inrousfiiout tne country a high tinaara or individual citizenship and a pure and undefiled nafrinticm Tn t grMn,ni;,i,i -r . ' r --..v.... ... i . v. nvwiiifjiiailllltrill ut this end, duplication of energy and machinery . ..... 01,,15111 centratcd on the fast nf 9imit,'n born in our midst, and implanting in their hearts tuu mums a consciousness ot the principles UDOI1 which Ampriran nrAiln.c. K. I , ,. . e.mk,,v03 lias uccn bunded. The oronosrd Vatinnnt tmfU. :t Dromises to nrnvirle incf cmi-V, -n.A: "monS the various Americanization agencies. When fully organized it should be a powerful force 111 purging American life of insidious in fluences which are seeking to undermine its health, and a force no less to be reckoned with m driving from cover the enemies lurking within our national household. Boston Transcript. DETECTING PYLORIC STENOSIS. "What is the cause," Mrs. A. E. B. writes, "of pyloric adenosis In an infant of 5 weeks? Is the child born with It? If so, why does it not show up before the fifth week? Is operation the only cure? Can the presence of pyloric stenosis be de tected by X-ray examination? "I think more publicity should be given to the symptoms of pyloric stenosis in infants. No medical books I have' read make mention f It as a cause of vomiting." I agree with you that the symp toms of pyloric stenosis should bo better known. Doubtless some babies die who could bn saved if the symptoms which suggest this diseaso were recognized promptly and acted upon at -'the proper time. In pyloric stenosis ,the ring- of muscle which shuts off the paHsage from the stomach to the intestine is thickened. It may be thick enough to form a marble sized tumor. That tumor can "be felt in the abdomen above vth navel and to, the right of it. This muscle Is not only large but it is irritable, and in consequence when food enters the stomach It claps down spasmodically and not only shuts off the opening into the intestine, but It starts wrong way muscle waves which usually throw the food out of the stomach, or in other words, cause vomiting. Now, vomiting is the long suit of almost every baby. When his stom ach is overfilled up comes the excess. Therefore, mothers are not disturbed by habitual spitting up and they should not be. But the vomiting of congenital pyloric stenosis is a different matter. All the food comes up rather promptly. If the child is given wa ter, that comes up. ton, If the ab domen is bared, wrong way muscle waves can sometimes be seen or felt and in many cases the little tumor can be made out with the hand. The vomiting is something more than a spitting up, even, more than an ordinary vomiting. It appears that the stomach forces the food up with some force. Whenever a child gets any bowel trouble it Is apt to have fever, vomit ing and diarrhea. Children with con genital pyloric stenosis vomit as If they were quite sick, but they have no fever and no diarrhea. Any young baby with no diarrhea and no con siderable fever should be suspected of having pyloric stenosis. Presently the child with pyloric stenosis begins to waste away from starvation. v Even then it does not have the facial expression of a very sick child, as it would have were it being food poisoned. Long before the facial expression of great weak ness, due to starvation, has appeared congenital stenosis should have been suspected and its presence confirmed by observing the type of vomiting, the relation of onset to the taking of food, the waves of griping without pain In the upper abdomen, the tumor, "the absence of diarrhea. X-ray examination and the ex amination with the duodenal tube clirtches the diagnosis. In some cases It is possible to make a diagnosis right away. In others some day or even weeks of observation are re Quired for diagnosis. Wh,n pnnp-pnitnt nvlnrtn ctannala na.s Deen recognized what can be done about it? That's tomorrow's story. Proper -Treatment Helps. A. M. writes: Can a girl of 17 be cured of leakage of the heart and acidosis? "2. Is there a remedy for either? If so, what should be done? "3. If acidosis can be cured by diet, what should the diet be? "4. I am 5 feet 4 inches tall. How- much should I weigh?" REPLY. 1. 'If the leakage of the heart is due to a deformed heart valve she cannot bo cured of that,, but the heart muscle can be put In oompen sution, whereupon the symptoms will disappear. Most cages of acidosis can bo cured. 2. For heart trouble regulation of exercise and work, medical control, digitalis properly used. For acidosis change of diet. 3. As a rule case's of acidosis do best when eating no fat, but living principally on bread, cereals, sweets, vegetables, and fruits. 4. A 17-year-old girl 6 feet inches tall should weigh 120 pounds. Irritating to Stomach. H. R. M. writes: "It might, be ol interest to the public, to be ad vised if the peel of the orange con tains any ingredients Injurious to health. It is a general opinion that one should not eat that portion of the orange." REPLY. It contains considerable essential oil and this is somewhat irritating to the stomach. Therefore, eating orange peel belongs in the same class with eating pepper, mustard, catsup, pickles. All highly flavored condi ments aro somewhat trying on the stomach. LV. Nicholas Oil Company Every Time He Knocks, He Boosts. It was expected that President Harding's policy with regard to the League of Nations would provoke some controversy in his own party. Senator La Follette has opened fire on him, and if the president were not an honorable man it might be believed that he had subsidized him. A knock from La Follette is worth a dozen boosts from anyone else in American politics. Toronto Mail and Empire. The Symptoms Are Suspicious. Judging from the way the nations are asking Lnclc Sam's advice it might be supposed that they were preparing the way to approach him forj loan. Cbicaao News, ,, Union Outfitting Co. Secures Living Room Suites of Bankrupt Chicago Manufacturer Entire Stock on Sale Satur day at a Saving of 50c to 60c on the Dollar. If you have planned on refur nishing your Living Room within the next twelve months you can save many a dollar on a Living Room Suite in tho sale which takes place at the Union Outfit ting Co. Saturday. The suites ne made up from the stock bought from the Cred itors' Committee of the M. L. Nelson Furniture Co. (Chicago) stock and are mostly of mahog any and cane upholstered in ve lours 'or tapestry. As always, you can make your own terms. Advertisement Radium for Goiter. F. M. wites: "If Mrs. B. W. will try radium treatments for her goiter I feel sure she would bee satisfied with the result. I had a goiter and was going down very rapidly until I took radium treatments." New York Woman Is Victim Of an Assault ty Burglar Yokohama, May 25. Mrs. Isabel V. Sturdevant of New York, who ar rived here May 21 on board the steamer Columbia from Honolulu, was assaulted last night while asleep in the residence of friends by a burglar with a club. She was taken to a hospital where her con dition is reported to be serious. Mrs. Sturdevant was found in a semi-conscious condition bleeding from a wound in her head. The burglar made his escape, leaving be hind a Jarge sum of money and a quantity of jewelry in the bedroom. Harding Returns to Capital After cry Stormy Voyage Washington, May 25. President and Mrs. Harding and their party returned to Washington today, the presidential yacht Mayflower reached her dock at the navy yard at 10:20 a. in., on the return trip from New York. The Mayflower had a rough voy age, virtually all the way from New York. It was said, however, that the president and his guests returned in perfect health, although their rest had been disturbed during the night by the rolling of the ship. Olcot lanarGi Bio hi IK4 it iO (II 5fc 1 T. rue, (he Aason & Hamlin is he tvorld's highest-"' priced piano. Irue, also not one dollar of his high" er price is spent irv gratuities to &nous' artists fir heir use oPhe Alasbn &HaTnTiT in conceit or recital Some Makes We Have Represented 47 Years Kranich ' & Bach, Sohmer, Vose & Sons, Brambach, Kimball, Bush Lane, Cable-Nelson. Terms if Desired 1513 Douglas Street The Art and Music Store 1921 . Applying a . Well-Known Slogan "Eventually, why not now?" has met the eyes of millions of readers of newspapers and mag azines, has stood out boldly on innumerable sign boards all over the country, and has flashed out in brilliant electric letters against the darkness of many a night. It is a good slogan. It ap plies so admirably to savings accounts that it seems permis sible to use it here. Eventually you must save, if you succeed why not now? Why put off Success? Open a savings ac count today in the Savings De partment of the First and be started tomorrow on the road to success. First National iBank of Omaha ft tight thargr of food fuatii wulfivtyou. lets of pew tr ftnbfirimfu- ruh,wttful mixture rw .'.Ml Vilnr straight-distilled Bed Crown Gasoline, too get lots of power from a lean, economical, clean barninjr nixtars. Write or ask for a Red Crown Road Map Why gasoline quality is the determining factor You can't see whether the gasoline comes into your cylinders as a fine mist or as a heavy spray. Yet that is the thing which largely determines the power and mileage you get from gasoline , The nature of the gasoline spray governs these things the power of the explosion, the completeness of combustion, the amount of gasoline for each piston stroke and the speed with which carbon will collect and the lubricating oil become diluted. Unless your gasoline, vaporizes readily in all weathers, , and unless it is uniform, you. cannot" adjust your needle, valve to give maximum power and it the same time maximum economy. Use Red Crown Gasoline which meets all U.S. Government specifications Complete and uniform vaporization, and a series of boiling-point fractions which in sure quick ignition and complete combus tion these are the characteristics of good gasoline, straight-distilled gasoline. . The Ked Crown Gasoline you can buy every where is this superior quality gasoline. It meets the standards required by the United States Government for motor gasoline. Look for the Red Crown Service Station 'The prompt, courteous service Red Crown Service Stations afford and the dependable gasoline and motor oils they sell add to the convenience, pleasure and economy of motoring. Drive in where you see the sign of the Red Crown where the little, but appreciated, courtesies such as free air for a soft tire, water for a hot radiator and road information and directions are cheerfully given. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEBRASKA Are you wasting Gasoline TTA as