i I- M m I.-IT THE BEE: OMAHA, SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 1921. 1 - - ...... .. . . " "I : I 1 TheOmahaBee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPACT NELSON B. UPDIKE. Publisher. MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS VIM Aaoetu Praaa. of hJeh Tb fin U a mambar. hi n ttaai?at. antlllad to Ui dm fot putrilutloa of all am dtnauhat m&u4 l It r a oUi.twtaa radilrd In thlt papar. and kin n lal Mwt pabllih her.lru AU rldiU of publication 1 out aiclal dlapatoba. art alas raatnad. BEE TELEPHONES Print Bran oh Bxebanf. Aik fot AT 1.nti 1 OfWl lb Papataunt or Ptaoa Wanud. ,lu,s WV Fr Night Calls After 10 p. m.t Maria! Bactrim AT lull Utt ar IMI OFFICES OP THE BEE Couosll XtoK Km yk Hub OffbMl lrtb aa4 Varnaa ' U Boot St. 1 Beum Bid, VM tovtk liU Si Out-f-Tva OlfWaai M Mt A. I Waahlaatoa 1111 O M. Stat Bid. ' Fatl. aTanat, 4M Sua SV Hoaor The Bee's Platform 1, New Union Passenger Stalled . Contlnuarl Improvement of the N breaks Highways, IncluUinf tk pave, ment of Main Thoroughfare leading Into) Omaha with a Brick Surface. 3. A abort, low-rat Waterway from the Cora Bait to th Atlantic Ocean. 4. Homa Rul Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of GoTernment. . -I . .. eyce-jMun anftaffPr'ApaB WW g para in Lon- 9n the ojjljlient and Must Nations Bleed to Live) One would hardly turn to the financial sec tion of a newspaper for spiritual guidance or in spiration. Bread and butter matters far re moved from the finer side of life furnish the topic of discussion there. Yet there are pioneers among these business men and commercial ex perts who have penetrated far enough into their subject to discover that it- will not do, to eliminate all considerations except that of dollars and cents .. a a . e . uom ineir caicjuatrais. hat in th from a tri eebnical survey l exettajiee. rates ot iaierar flttwr market fetfot. are ft bra, iasftd these words,. GrtWtftirr leadership is required for the world on U questions affecting international peace and economic and social relations, and that leadership can only be given by America and "Britain." It is important to notice that the call, is for the whole people of these lands and not a hand ful of politicians, statesmen, or any set of self appointed spokesmen. Something very like a personal revolution is suggested for each indi vidual. The thought is not of the need of any specific program such as was outlined in the covenant of the League of Nations, but of an al teration more fundamental and real. Keen ob servers can now say with Walt Whitman: Were you looking to be held together by lawyers? . Or by an agreement on a paper? or by arms? Nay, nor the world nor any living thing will so cohere. Clean, hjndj and pure hearts, not threats of force, agreements between diplomats and nicely balanced alignments of nations will bring peace Vnd solace to the distraught world. Reduction of armnrnts or disbandment of armies can give no assu. ne'e of the elimination of conflict; bat tles fought hand-to-hand with knives and a words were more deadly than any seen in mod ern times. Appeals to the parsimony of the pub lic, or to its fears, will always, be unavailing. Were war to cost all, the people would give it to protect themselves or their honor, and if war were to become a struggle in, which no non eombatant were safe from poison gas or aerial bomb, that would not suffice to keep the peace. ' All such devices, are vain if unaccompanied, by the removal of racial and nationalistic antip athies and by the elimination of selfish and purely mechanical causes of international fric tion. International peace is linked vitally with social and economic progress and with personal and public morality. The British financial ob server who joined these things together in his market letter saw this, as sooner or later must everyone else. Only when the people of the world feel a human bond, unites them in spite of their differences of opinion, their diversity of cus torn, and language and the lines on the map only when civic spirit equals military enthusiasm, and not until the- community of interest which de mands that no nation shall profit at the expense of another is recognized, cart there be any assur ance of lasting peace. whose treasury was short, replied:. "Crtllon, six words: neither the one nor the other." This king delighted in quick answers of this sort Once he met a priest walking toward the palace and asked him abruptly: "Where do you come from? Where are you going? What do you want?" Without hesitation the reply came, "From Bourges, to Paris, a parsonage." "Yon shall have it," said the monarch, not willing to be beaten in conciseness. Another instance is one in which a courtier introduced a relative to Cardinal Maiarin with the "assurance that he had Only two wordf to say. "Two words; I am wilting to hear them,' said the cardinal; "two words, but no more.' The applicant bowed and. said: "Cold, hungry.' The cardinal promptly answered: "Fire, bread" and gave him a pension. Living a Tolerable Life. There are, some people who are either on the heights 'or !ri the depths, whose existence knows no placid middle course. They may be moody and uncompanionable one day and the best of company the next Unfortunate indeed is one whose disposition' is so much the prey of circum stance. ?a nether that circumstance pe getting out of the wrong side of the bed, eating the wrong food, meeting the wrong person or what not. May it not be true that one who' takes life as it comes, requiring neither great joy nor in viting sorrOw "by risking too much for the sake of pleasure, gets more that is really worth while out of the world? "Not pleasure, but freedom from pain, is what the wise man will, aim at," said Aristotle. One can not achieve the highest enjoyment without life seeming dull and ordinary when a return to. normal conditions becomes in evitable -he story is told of a millionaire who lost all Jb fortune except a few thousand dollars in a single day. His fall from the heights of pros perity so affected him that he committed suicide. His brother, who had been poor all his life, was 4he only heir, and he died of joy on the very day he heard the news. There is no particular moral to that, and it may not even be true, but the fact remains that it is not the pleasure enjoyed but the evils es caped that go to make up a happy lffe. , The Soul of Wit. Are the French a talkative race? The elo quent flow of oratory from the lips of Vivian! on the two visits of this statesman to America, a torrent of impassioned words impressive and pleasing even to those who do not understand his language,1 has served to amplify such is pressfea.' . However; when Marshal, Foch crosses the Atlantic" to attend the Americas Legion eon vtntie this fall a Frenchman may be found few f. words, almost taciturn. .. ' t There have been - famdus Frenchmen who were gifted with brevity rather than eloquence, such as Crillion.'one of the bravest officers of Henry IV. Being in need of funds to pay his soldier he went to the king and told him shortly: "Sire, three wordaj mote? or. Uava." Henry, Nature's Mysterious Balance. The dependence of one form of life upon an other is vaguely recognized, but the general rule that Nature preserves a balance that is disturbed by man at his peril is oftentimes forgotten. Thou cant not atlr a flower Without troubling a atar. So says the poet, contemplating the web of life. Sometimes, however, science discovers ways of co-operating with Nature to the vast benefit of man. There is, for instance, no obvious connection between fishes and malaria. Yet Spanish scientists, it is announced, have induced their government to import minnows from Gcor gia as a solution of the plague of malaria which infests many districts in their country. The parasite which causes malaria is disseminated by the mosquito and the larval mosquitoes are de voured by many fishes, particularly by the spe cies found in our southern waters. One reason why the Barbadoes are so re markably free from malaria is said to be that the mosquito larvae are eaten in such large num. bers by a small fish which abounds in all streams and pools. The decadence of ancient Greece is laid by some historians to the presence of malaria- bearjng mosquitoes which enervated this splen didrace. The idea of one of the greatest civiliza tions the world has seen being overthrown by the puncture of a mosquito is truly amazing. Transplanting or extermination of animal life does not .always have the beneficial result that is hoped for, however. Back in 1850 the house sparrow as imported to the United States from England, under the mistaken impression that it would combat insects and caterpillars. Experi ence has shown that this was a mistake; the sparrow not only drives out other birds, but eats grain and is a thorough pest Australia had a much similar experience with rabbits, and Jamaica with the mongoose. , Rats brought in from Europe by ships over ran this West Indian island, and the mongoose was brought from India to destroy them. This greedy little animal first exterminated the rats and then turned to satisfy its appetite on poultry and ground birds. Lizards which gave great service in destroying injurious insects were next attacked, and soon plants and animals began to suffer from the unobstructed multiplication of bugs and ticks. Naturalists are certain that the importation of small fish from America to Spain will be bene ficial as a weapon against malaria. The mos quito, like the house fly, serves no known useful end in human life. t . , . i . 1 i i J, Unbrokea Tie With the Past Survivals of primitive customs in modern life are numerous, indeed, even such a seemingly natural act as shaking hands being handed down from the days when two savage men extended their right hand to each other to indicate their friendly intentions since no weapon was grasped. Many are the pagan observances that continue unbroken even though modern man considers that he has parted pretty definitely with the past. Even those practices which have been dropped by the elders are kept alive by the children. Counting out rhymes, which furnished the primi tive method of divination are an instance of this. ,An investigator of the curious found 57 such rhymes in use in Massachusetts, although 80 per cent of the children used one, "Eeny, meeny, miny mo." The swain who pulls at the petals of a daisy, muttering, "She loves me she loves me not," is also repeating a fortune telling oper ation that goes back through the ages. Hide and seek, we are told, is a survival of wife capture. The mature game of dice was known in Roman gambling houses, and before that was a method of telling fortunes rather than of foretelling ruin. The Indians have dis carded the bow and arrow, which have been adopted in child play. Children far removed from rural life sing the songs of harvesting and sowing that have been sung for thousands of years,such as "Farmer in the Dell" and "Ring Around the Mulberry Bush." In this age of the motor car it still is a joy. to the children t5 play horse, and long after this animal may have disappeared, it is safe to Say, hobby-horses and canes will be ridden astride in the nurseries. . These may seem to be trifling things, but they represent a very real fact: that while the outward life of man seems to be far removed from that of his uncivilized ancestors, many of his ideas, customs and prejudices have been formed, not on a basis of reason, but by unedu cated, even uncivilized ancestors who designed them to meet the needs of their own age, and ac cordingly they may not be altogether logical or suitable for the present state of the world. It sometimes seems fortunate that debates never settle anything. A team consisting of three students from Bates college, Maine, was de feated by English debaters at Oxford while up holding the proposition, "Resolved, That the American policy of nonintervention in European affairs be approved." A young woman in Zion City has been ar rested for wearing sleeves exposing her arm below the elbow and a blouse displaying her neck below the collar bone. If this rule became general throughout the nation every jail would have to have an annex " ' .Villa is said to have reformed and one report from Mexico refers to him as a "veritable Billy Sur.day, spreading peace and good wi!L" Yes, yes, but what about the collections? Congresswoman Alice Robertson presided over the house of representatives in the absenee of Speaker Gillette the other day, and the ship of state never Inhered. " Why arrest the man accused of trying to blackmail Charlie Chaplin? Real, punishment would be to cast him in a movie play with the comediasj ' . . . . 0 The Husking Bee Hj, Your Dau Start ItWithaLauSh THE MARRY MONTH OF JUNE. Cupid with unerring aim Does his willing victims claim- Plightrd troth a golden moon, I 'Tis the marry month of June. Lovely maiden now takes hope With life's problem she may cope Trusts her prince will seek her soon, Tis the marry month of June. Love now' has a golden chance. This a time of gay romance In the garden' lovers spoon, Tis the marry month of June. Let tis hope nd vain regret Cause the honeymoon to set Let' fond hearts e'er beat in tune, Tis the marry month of June. PHILO-SOPHY. A kiss that isn't endorsed by the heart is only worth face value. SPEAKING OF SIRENS. "I've got to get a new siren for my ear." "That so? What became of the blond?" a "What a lovely complexion. If it her own?" "It ought to be. She bought it and paid for it" BACKWARDS, O TIME. Live in the present, not the past, We're told in sage advices. Yet in the past our lot we'd cast To get those prewar prices. - When Opportunity knocks some wen. peek out of the window to see if it fSKtWhltf Work, . ., i- - We sometimes feel our tnfer&rfe the. presence of a wise guy who knw t ill, hut we usually garner a Iktle consolation front, the) fact that he is always the easiest picking for the. con. man and the fake stock promoter. Though it may not be strictly according to Hovle. when hearts are trumps a diamond usually takes the trick. Occasionally or oftener. we hear a maiden referred to as a decided blond. Well, we just wish to rise and remark, Mr. Chairman, that we know a few brunettes who are decided, too. Yea, very! POLLYANNA STUFF. 0, why should the spirit of mortal repine, And srive 'wav to fear and doubt. When there is so much that is good and fine, And to manv thines to be glad about? There is sunshine for all and its golden hue Like the dew on the flowers, is tree And how can the law make a Sunday blue When folks have the HUSKING BEE?" Since the days when Trajan built his justly celebrated column in ancient Kome, column con structing has been carried on with more or less avidity, until at the present time it is enumerated among the fine arts and is the favorite indoor . ' - -I t-!i.- I I -A sport oi a certain ciass oi amuiuuus anu imiu- working newspaper writers. But old man Trajan was a wise guy, as I re member him. He didn't attempt to build his column all bv his lonesome. Not any. Nope, Trai was one of the biff town s most sociable citizens and when he took it into his noodle to erect a column, he organized a "Column Build inir" Bee and sent out a chiro to the neighbors. Thev resoonded with alacrity and other tools, wtih the result that SU Trajan naa to ao was Sit around with a sef Of blue-pnnts and a . - . . . , r 1 I menonone. ana wnen ine worv was nnisneo, as carved hi name en the cornerstone and ankled off with the major portion of the credit. Now." folks, Trajan didn't have any copy- ...... -1 " T -M. ... A t- - nent on sociamiuy. lct us, iuu, uc sutiauic. Tust as the "BEE" is vour newsDaoer the news paper for the home, so is the "HUSKING BEE" i your column. iomc on in anu ncip uuuu u. n you've got a laugh in your system or a funny , . , i . L.. J it a lU. oca lurKintr in vuur tiaiiium, naiiu i w "HUSKING BEE" and let us pass it around. This is vour invitation. Anecdotes of prominent people newspaper bulls or other live stock anything that tickles your tunny Done--ana to the first reader shooting a snappy contrib. over the plate, we will award a set ot genuine nana nainted doutrhnut holes, suitable for framing. And remember, folks, that brevity is the soul of a column contrib. and the waste basket yawns for the lengthy squib. There has been rumors of making the "Husk- inor Bee" a dailv feature, instead of Sunday only. All those who feel that they could, stand it seven or eight days a week, with variations, olease sienifv bv wavinsr the right eye. - . . 1 i. .L. tyes or nose snouia De sent oy man 10 inc Editor, of J,ne tfee. IT'S EASY TRY IT. To write a rural ballad Is very simple when The ink s in the Ink-well And the pigs are in the pen. " DEM P. vs. CARP. Last chance to comment on the world's great est sporting event. By next Sunday it will be all over but spending the jack. What's Your Name Today ? From the New York Journal The one fixed, immutable law of society is the law of change. In a frantic endeavor to avoid bbredom at any cost, the men and women of the social world change their clothes, their pleasures, their homes, their continents, even their husbands and wives with really re markable rapidity. Milady wears a danclnir frock twice then elves it to her maid. Her husband spends month in New York, a fortnight at Palm Beach then Changes Amerl ca for Europe. It a exciting; and must be a bit hard On the recording anrel to keep track of all the mi orations ana metamorpnoaes. But here's the newest in the way of social variations. They're all changing' their names! Mrs. John Knickerbocker is becoming Mrs. Van T wilier Knickerbocker or, maybe, Mrs. Van Twlller Jones. It' frightfully puzzling! Sometimes, of course, there seems to be method in the madness, when for instance, a matron of society has discharged her husband, she Just naturally doesn't want to be re minded of him any more than necessary. If she marries she ean change her last name. But suppose "he doesift and he does? Does she wish to be known Mrs. John Knickerbocker No. while her successor is hailed Mrs. John Knickerbocker No. My dear, how annoying! She therefore simply changes the name that comes after the "Mrs. There is, for example,- the social leader whose calling cards read "Mrs. Belmont Tiffany." . But Bel mont Tiffany has taken unto him self another wife. So the one-time Mrs. Belmont I has now instructed her friends to address her as "Mrs, Cameron Tiffany." And there isn' any contretemps whatever that is. Likewise, we have the former Mrs. Herbert Harrlman, who since she Obtained her divorce has become Mrk Brady Harrlman. And there are others. As Tenny son who was , himself & lord and moved in the best society might have expressed Its latest little fad 'Let the smart world spin forever down.- the ringing grooves of change!" How to Keep Well By DR. W. A. EVANS Quattieas concerning krr'M aaaita tioa mni prtvanttoa at (U, aub mittad to Dr. Evaaa y raadara of Tho Boa, will ba anwrd aoraonally, aubject to proaar limitation, whero a atampod. addraated tnvclopo la on cloaed. , Dr. Evan will not mak dlninoaia or prcacrlb for Individual dicac. Addrea letUr In car of Th. B.a. Copyright, 1921, by Dr. W. A. En. as 1. as 2 Smokes at $4 Each Wall Street Journal. "That house took $17,000 worth of cigars from me last year," said cigar man who has been dealing with the big men In Wall street for 40 years. "It Is astonishing how many high grade cigars some of the Wall street houses take, brands which the general public hardly ever hears or, "The Olympian smokers are either dead or retired from the street. HOW' ever. John Gates, who frequently gave me -an order for 2,000 prime cigars at S4 apiece to distribute among his friends was one ef my best clients. "Charles Gates frequently dupli cated the order. "J. P. Morgan smoked specials at $2 each, a cigar so strong and full that one had to be a real man to tackle it I remember showing one of these to Dan Held, who smokes tho best. He Immediately wanted 1,000 and although J. P. M, was not a client of mine I got the tinplate man a similar cigar from the special factory in Havana. "William Leeds smoked J 2 cigars at the rate of five to 10 daily. "I remember a woman coming to my office and ordering 1.000 cigars at 11 apiece with toe proviso that no advertisement ot any kind should appear on the box or cigar. I as sured. her this would be all right andt the order waa addressed to Theodore Roosevelt, at the White House. The. lady was a relative oz tne same name. Roosevelt usually smoked a 15-cent cigar." Of Course Not A resident of the rural districts', Louis by name, brought a load of hogs to the local stockyards and they were sold by Ben, another native of the fatherland. Later in the day Louie was digesting the account of the sale, when Ben approached and inquired: "Louie, did your nogs weight as much a you thought they would?" Louie replied: "No. they didn't. but I didn't think, they would." Indianapolis News. Safety First Grover Cleveland Bergdoll's ap plication for German citizenship may be taken as a certain indication that Germany is not preparing for a new war. Life. , A Bit o' Cheer Each Day o ' the Year By John Kendric Bangs. Preliminary Announcement. Dempsey is two-fisted fighter which isn't so much. Carpetier is fore-handed. He has en gaged passage, home on a hospital ship. The Fizht By Rounds. Rd. 1 Dempsey opened with knife and fork to the wieners. Hot dog Hies up, hits jack, re opening cut over eye. Dempsey mixes with the salad and pushes knife to face. Clever work keens him from cutting mouth. Gets hot biscuit in stomach, but is saved by the gong. Trainer warns him against over-eating. Carpentier toyed daintily with the fried frog legs. Landed grape juice punch to stomach. Spent balance of session figuring percentages with gold pencil Draws circle around winner s end. Gong. Rd. 2 Dempsey toddles to table as dinner gong sounds. Clever footwork shows result of doing five miles a day on road-map. Jack set the alarm for 9 a. m. and takes the count. OLD AND NEW. 'Neath the Sun there's nothing new? What care I if -that be true? Laughter's older than the hills Yet it holds a deal of thrills. Light is old as time they say, Yet with joy it fills my day; And the oldest thing I know, Love with all its warmth and glow, Is the dearest gift to man Since life on this earth began, And however old it be Still is ever new to me. (Copyright, 1921, tr th MeCInra News- - paper eynmcaie.) A Part of the Whole I am a part of the wholo,' A part of that which I ! And all of the thing that ar, They ar a part of m. I am a part of the whole, A part of eternity; And alt of the thing therein They are a part of me. H. M. HOPEWELL. Carpentier opens with fast session of Tiddle- de-winks. Takes count of seven to make last will and testament Takes count of five while seconds marcel pompadour. Deschamps hypnotizes Georges with shot of eu de Cologne from atomizer. The Frenchman smiles and feigns cheerfulness for benefit of news reporters. Plainly worried. Wishes war hadn t ended so soon. Takes night-cap and erawls to Ostermoor. Rd. S Demo, doesn't believe in carrying an argument into the third frame. Carp, can't The poor fishes. " .'' It Is a mean man who will start a quarrel when his wife has her mouth full of hairpins. .'. ISNT IT-THE TRUTH? Married life is very nice In spite of comic wheezes v Friend wife will listen to advice, And then do as she pleases. ) AFTER-THOUGHT: Not satisfied, with the job done on Mother Eve, woman is continually inventing improvements. rtl MILK AS A BABY FOOD. If a ' baby cannot get mother's milk, either from his Own mother or A wet nurse, most people think that cow's milk la the best substitute. The advantages of cow's milk are these: When properly diluted It makes a food which a baby can di gest easily and from which It can get carbohydrates and fats for heat and energy, protein for growth and re pair, vltamlns to stimulate growth and other vltamlnes to ward oft dis ease lime with which to build bones and teeth, and other needed chemi cals. The ingredients are present in about the proper proportions when the milk is prepared according to simple formulas. Mothers are fairly well acquainted with methods of preparing cow's milk for baby feed ing. The disadvantages of liquid cow's milk are these: Milk Is a good cul ture medium for bacteria. Under city conditions the milk is a day or two old when it la consumed, it is produced a long distance from the point of consumption, and must be handled by many people. In other words, the disadvantages arise from the difficulty in having It come to the baby clean, cold and fresh and uncontamlnated by bacteria, capable of causing disease. The advantages of certified milk are that it is safer than raw liquid market milk, that it is more uniform in butter fat. and that it is cleaner and colder than the ordinary market .product. The disadvantages ot certl ned milk are: it is expensive, it is less safe than pasteurized milk, and. as a rule, the cows producing it have not had as much pasturage ana fresh green feed as have the cows producing market milk. The advantage of properly pas teurized milk is that it is safer than any other milk. There is less chance that it will convey tuberculosis from the tuberculous cow and less chance that it will spread typhoid, septic sore throat, scarlet fever, and other human diseases wnicn are mux borne. Its disadvantage is that it contains somewhat less antiscorbutic vltamlne than raw milk and there fore that the babies must have more tomato Juice, Irish potato, and orange Juice. The above statements relative to the several kinds of milk relate to milk for babies. Children over 1 year of aga derive advantage from . M . . P ... J oeing lea Home iihik. uiu uisa.uva.u tage from being fed too much. The advantage lies in the vltamlnes it contains and especially in that vlta mlne which is necessary for normal growth. Aside from the vltamlnes needed, it contains the lime needed for the bones and teeth of the grow ing child. The disadvantage relates to the danger of tuberculosis of the glands and bones, which, danger can be guarded against by cooking or pas teurizing the milk. Milk is a bulky food ana children who get too much of it become pot bellied. . Children between 1 and 3 years old often get too much milk. Older children rarely get as much as they should have. that exception. It is all right to give condensed milk. What it lacks you supply with ' fruit and vegetables. There is no objection to the honey. Keep her out of doors as much as possible. Continue training her to be calm and orderly. Whooping Cough Treatment Anxious Mother writes: "1. How long do children have the whooping cough? 2. Do you know medicine or treatment that would cure? I. . .ii.i. . vn.nit.l where IB intra an; vim. - I eould take them for treatmentT REPLT. 1. It is only contagious for a few weeks. The danger of pneumonia is limited to the earlier weeks, but the cough may keep up for months. I. Vaccines are of some service. Benzyl bonzoate gives some relief. In the main the disease runs its r-t 1. .... kA.nl. course. . evuio vmco im. v.y- tals for contagious oiseaaes in wnicn they take cases of whooping cough. Phone DO uglas 2793 -J. U OMAHA PRINTING COflPANY nm j Wttf fjTJS fMMM' n ii if mls i a rf ei. iaaiy.1 M" CwWttftCtAl PR1rmRI-lfTrlORAPt1IR$ SntlDietMtOSSflt lOOSt LCAf Devices Self-Rlslng Child. Mrs. G. R. writes: "My baby is' 13 months old and I try tc feed her as follows: Breakfast, 7 a. m., egg yolk, oereal, cow's milk from cup, bread; 10 a- m., bottle; 13:80, po tato, bread, green vegetable; dessert, followed by bottle at U ( pi m., orana-a Inlne: 1 ri m.. frraham crack- era, potato, bottle. I give her hone occasionally on her bread. Is it safer Also her bottle is oi condensed mux and lime water, which she has dl gested well since 2 months old, when it was necessary to give it to her. Should I put her on cow's milk now? She naps twice a day, but only about an hour or an hour and a half. She is very fretful at night Does not actually waken if patted or rocked. She pushes her head uo through the top of her bed till I have to rise and pull her down at least twice. Is this due to habit or wrong diet? What should I do about it? She has six teeth and walks supported by ona hand. She is. bright and active, but takes cold easily, head or bronchial colds. Has one at present which, the wet weath er seems to cause to hang on. Has plenty of fresh air when pleasant suppose she gets into drafts oc-. caslonally through creeping. She had diarrhea and fever during the, hot spell in April. Weight satisfactory." REPLY. Babies of that age frequently find egg difficult to digest. I should say you are feeding her properly with BUSINESS IS COOD THANK YOlA LUNicHoub oil Company THE f iRE AND RADIATOR HAN. )'-anyM'" 320o.I3Ui St. PhOn'ftPou9.t603j Bring in Tour Films OtTR finishing depart ment, through up-to-date methods and equipment and expert handling, can help you get the kind of pictures you want. To use a slang expres sion:. "We're there at the finish." fSes Robert CenpttsrCo. Eastman Kodak Co. 1813 Fernam Street (Branch) 308 Se. 15th St. Omaha, Neb. 1 tv every register, as through1' out me "wnoie gamut or tone, transctfTvientr parity ana. rcjoivarice is trie 5oui-5ati5rying gift of the ' TXXOi t9mlK Hn sT L MM ifyyy Liisft. I eu 1 1 aT . S Lusicizms of keerieff: -ZLttn. most Kiaklv &exieoce6. artfofcr marvel at its matchless tonal beiuxty, and. wonder at its cause. secret lies in the reuplcctionajf and epocn-makinq "tension resonatorT of this piaivpfSrtev 'ttiri o vocttht miracle o 6me vcrroccqht hytfite szmpjg device P Following List of Pianos Have Price Reductions: KranicK & Bach, Sohmer,Vdse & Sons ,Brambach, Kimball, Bush Lane, Cable-Nelson and Hospe, Meldorj Player Piano mi $395 on Small Weekly Payments of $330. Dunbar Piano only $2f5 on Weekly Payments of $2.50 This'Sale Is Rapidly Closing A I 1518 Douglas Street The Art and Music Store DU A akcnvkarl in M nuoui uwu in 1110 if uin y u n n - D D he did not realize the impor tance of careful investment. It could be no more than a side issue. A $5,000 loss awoke him. It impressed him with the heed of invest ment experience. D D D On the advice of a friend he visited a Trust Officer. He found out all about corporate custodianship. The arrange ment was made and has been a source of satisfaction to him ever since. He has had no other losses. And he receives a steady, dependable income from his securities. Read up on our service to the living as well as our Eatato serrice in our Trust booklet. 0 II D H Ittltei. !ai?5 Smat (Ermtpa ttg I tLht Httifri. &latffl Knttottal ftmft 1612 Farnam Street Omaha, Nebratka 1 i -l-ai!