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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (July 4, 1921)
THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, JULY 4, 1921. TheOmaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY TUB BFE PUBUSHWO COMPANY NELSON a UPDIKE. Fubliaher. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vt asaMlatad Press, nf vhlal Te n If a mtnbtr, H -Mount eatUlafl UIMMln t".blloUoo of HI owl diftob radited la It or not otharwite erMited ta this Piw. M fcxal Dm ubitid herein U nlfcu of tmDiicauoa w AMMtckM are ) MHWi BEE TELEPHONES Print Breath scnuce. i for AT lantic 1000 Fee Night Cetle After 10 p. .i .MMertel DeputoMM AT Uotlo 1011 f 1H1 OFFICES OF THE BEE U Seatt K. I Bout Side. liU Boalb Hie Canon BIert Jfe Tori CbJoate Out-of-Town OMkeei HK riftb e. i Wsanimtoa . Mil . O M. But Bids. I I'uii. franee, 430 Bae 8V Honors 77i ee Platform 1. Now Union Pinfr Station. 2. Continued improvement of the No braska Higbwaye, including tha po tont of Main Thoroufkfaroa loading into Omana, with a Brick Surface. 3. A abort, low-rato Watorway from tbo Corn Bolt to tbo Atlantic Ocaan. 4; Homo Rulo Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. Our Nation's Birthday. Each succeeding year adds to the significance pf the Fourth of July. It no longer stands ex clusively for the birth of the American nation, but has conie to be recognized as marking a dis tinct event in the upward struggle of the human !race. The abstract statement, of the Declara tion of Independence are slowly being translated into concrete application, not for America alone, but throughout the world. Mankind's hopes tend aspirations are splendidly set forth in that Immortal doctrine, the utterance of men inspired fty devotion to the holy cause of human liberty. "7 We have not done all that might have been expected of us; we have done some things well, and some that are not especially creditable to us, but through all our muddling we have kept the faith. Injustices yet exist in this land, but they are not the gross and inhumane offenses of the day before July 4, 1776; inequalities persist, and buffering, but the unfortunate are no longer so hopeless nor the victims so helpless as they were hcn the old bell boomed forth its message from the beflry of Independence Hall. Self evident truths then declared first caught man's imagination, then his reason, and now they are acknowledged even if not practiced universally. And who shall say that as passing years bring better understanding, the fullest meaning of free dom will not in good time come to all men? Americans have learned also something r themselves. Such zeal as inspired them in the beginning has been in some degree tempered by experience, and they are coining to know that all races have not viewed the boon and blessing of liberty from the sane standpoint. We have gone about as Galahads and Lancelots, afd we have sustained some disappointment in,that we have not always been accepted by .oHi'ers at our own valuation. Now and thenrse have stopped long enough to attend to mat'ters at home, with the attendant shock ofyfjfscovering that all is not as "lOffight'be hcreT'T'ortunately, we have a way of determining our disputes, even if the process is not ultimately conclusive, but ever leaves the question open, mat tact is tne satety valve mat permits escape of pressure that otherwise, would be dangerous... But we are learning our faults, 'and by introspection, rather than through com parison. One hundred and forty-five years is not a long time in the history of the race, but nothing since the first Christmas has touched man's life as did the Fourth of July, 1776. Comparable only to the Gospel of the Galilean is the Declaration of In dependence, liberty under God the core of each. !As the one broke down the oppression of sec tarian dogma, so did the other defy political despotism, and believing the one and practicing the other, man may walk upright before his Maker, conscious of his strength and mindful tf his obligations. No More "Golden Rules' Why? Chief of Police Dempscy has ordered that no snore "golden rule" summonses be served on of fending motorists. Immediate arrest and possibly fall sentence will follow detected infractions of . jthe traffic laws. '" Why? Because a few motorists ignored the law, broke their word, and failed to appear for , bearing. Therefore all must suffer. All the way along it has been the few careless, reckless, will lul drivers who have made the trouble. By far the majority of those who handle the thousands bf cars that use the city streets are careful; they bbey all the police traffic regulations, are con siderate of others and watchful for their own safety. These must suffer, however, along with the rest, because a few can not or will not abide by the rules that are made for all. Jail does not appear to have much terror for them, but it is the fond hope of the bedevilled public that the authorities may find a way to make the reckless drivers take some care for others. Until these are tamed, the menace will not be removed, and the thoughfu! motorist will bare to suffer just because the indifferent de cline to be decent. Making Some Progress to Normalcy. With peace actually restored, the declaration In favor of disarmament given the character of authority to call a conference on the topic, defi nite plans laid for cutting cost of government, and initial steps toward a new tariff settled, the administration may justly be said to have moved in the direction of normalcy. Harding has been in office four mouths today, and has definitely established a policy that means good not only for America, but for the world as well. Each step ja has taken has come in order, after due con Aivation. fire cf all, . he has restored constitutional government, in that he has given back to con gress its rightfur place in the scheme of things. Jealously and successfully maintaining in all re spects the dignity, power and authority of the ex ecutive, be has cut the leading strings which bound the Capitol to the White House for years, and has set the legislative branch of the govern ment to functioning on its own responsibility. Some sharp differences of opinion have arisen, but the president has not sought to coerce mem bers of congress in their action by any of the numerous means his predecessor employed. . This is not because Mr. Harding lacks the Qualities of leadership, but prqves his ability to ' ; 9 . exercise his capacity for direction without mak ing himself a dictator. That congress has re sponded is well proven in the moves that have been made for the extrication of the country from the muddle in which the republicans found it. Each of these steps justifies the hope that was expressed at the polls last November, and is a source of added confidence in the future. Nor malcy still is some distance ahead, but we are on the way thither. Railroad Labor Shows Track Clear. "There will be no general strike, unless the men are driven to it," says B. M. Jewell, presi dent of the Railroad department of the American Federation of Labor. His utterance is not cryptic, although susceptible of at least two in terpretations. The one most likely to be placed upon it is that the men involved are inclined to accept the reduction in pay ordered by the wage board. The fact that the vote on the question has been close shows a divided opinion among the men themselves, easily understood; neither side is anxious for the interruption of employ ment incident to a strike; the one is ready to remain at work with a less rate of pay, rather than to accept enforced idleness with no pay, the other wants to remain at work, but is re luctant to let go any of the contents of the pay envelope. Both realize that the lowering of wages is inevitable. The attitude of the men in this matter is most encouraging. A year ago there would have been no question as to the outcome. The "out law" strike then raging, those participating re fusing to wait for the decision of the wage board, which finally was in their favor, showed the temper of the men. In truth, those who got the relief then measured out by the wage board well deserved all that was awarded to them. The great inequalities in the pay schedule, concern ing which so much complaint has been made, did not result from the award of 1920, but were created under the original McAdoo proceedings. What really is of interest is that the men are sufficiently awake to understand that acceptance of a reduction now leaves them better off than they were a year ago. In a general way the cost of living has gone down. Some peaks are still protruding, and against these the wage earners come more in con tact than those situated differently, but in the main today a dollar will buy considerably more of things needed in the home than it did a year ago. This is what the railroad men understand. One' reason for complaint yet exists. While the wage for the man is receding, that demanded for'' the dollar is not. Although dividends are vanishing, interest rates are mounting. Where capital for operation or extension is borrowed, the charge is higher than it has been in many years. This simply means that the old inequal ity in the division of the product of labor is continued, the portion allotted to interest ac count being disproportionately great. Another adjustment will have to come here before he balance is attained. With a general letting down of wages, now in process of application, ought to come a revival in industry. The Federal Reserve board reports that the readjustment of prices has not yet gone far enough to make a positive basis possible, and that considerable yielding must be noted before the general level will be held satisfactory... Op posed to this, as reported from the same source, is the slow but definite improvement in the in dustrial situation. Indications now point to a real revival of business with the waning summer, and with the great crisis in the ' transportation, section fairly well passed, reason for confidence in the near future's promise is strongly supported. Alas for Alaska. Things are not going well in Alaska, and tnat rich district is said to be in danger of continuing to lose population unless something is done to better conditions. President Harding's desire to find out at first hand just what is wrong is reassuring, for the nation will put more trust in his findings and opinion than in the claims and counter-claims of the warring factions in that northern territory. A belief is extant that selfishness of conflict ing interests engaged in exploiting the resources of Alaska is responsible for unsettled conditions and heavy loss of population. The government owmed railroad appears to be a storm center about which the rivalries rage. Towns on this line and towns which rely solely on their harbor facilities, instead of co-operating for the general good, have taken an over-dose of civic pride and are hacking at each other's foundations. These enmities, which have been common in many pio neer regions, of course are fostered by a class of men who seek their own private gain to the detri ment of all about them. If Alaska is to prosper and progress, the gen eral needs must be given first consideration, re gardless of the desires of this man or that cor poration. In the event congress disposes of tax and tariff questions in August, President Har ding intends to make a persoqal investigation of affairs. Double benefit may be hoped for from such a journey, for in addition to gaining a knowl edge of the facts, he will also be able to en courage teamwork and perhaps stimulate an era of better feeling in Alaska. " No Monopoly ' in Sea Power. As a substitute both for competition in naval armament and for proposed agreements limiting construction of new warships, a good deal is now heard of a plan for the pooling of the American and British navies. As advocated by A. G., Gardiner, a noted liberal publicist of Eng land, the naval alliance would be directed, "not to any selfish national interest, but to the en during peace of the world." This suggestion, which is being favorably re garded by some of the eastern newspapers, is not in harmony with the traditional distrust of the United States for an entangling alliance, and is only a variation of the idea of policing the world which was contained in the League of Na tions arrangement. To dominate the rest of the globe by force or terror is not to assure lasting peace or international friendship. All other na tions would be suspicious of the honorable pro fessions of the joint naval force and new hatreds would arise, ultimately to burst forth in a strug gle to free the world of this new dictation. After pondering deeply for some days over the plan of Senator Hitchcock for a bank of nations, which would issue a world currency to be secured in part by the bonds of European nations, the Omaha World-Herald has .dropped all partisan bias, disregarded the fact that the senator owns the paper, and has taken a bold stand in favor of the proposal . Zionism is Not $ Surrender Morgenthau Declares That It Is Most Stupendous Fallacy in Jewish History Mdrgenthau Declares That It Is Most Srupen dous Fallacy in Jewish History. "Zionism a Surrender, Not a Solution," "Wrong in Principle, Unsound in Its Economics, Fantas tical in Its Politics and Sterile in Its Spiritual Ideals," is the pronouncement of Henry Morgen thau, former Ambassador to Turkey, on the great scheme to populate Palestine with Jews. Mr. Morgenthau's views are set forth in detail in the July number of World's Work. Last month the convention of American Zion ists was the scene of the dramatic climax of an internal conflict within the world organization of Zionism. This breach in American Jewry has thrown the whole policy of Zionism into con troversy. It even suggests the advisability of re appraising the Zionistic conception itself. That conception is gravely disputed by many American Jews of the first rank. Mr. Henry Morgenthau is one of these leaders among the American Jews who reject the Zionist theory. Mr.-Morgenthau in his article in World's Work says: "Zionism is the most stupendous fallacy in Jewish history. I assert that it is wrong in prin ciple and impossible of realization; that it is un sound in its economics, fantastical in its politics and sterile in its spiritual ideals. It is a retro gression into the blackest error and not progress toward the light. I will go further, and say that it is a betrayal; it is an eastern European proposal, fathered in this country by American Jews, which, if it were to succeed, would cost the Jews of America most that they have gained of liberty, equality and" fraternity. ' "Zionism arose out of the miseries of the Jews. It was offered as a remedy, a release, a plan of action which would provide a road to happiness This is the secret of its hold upon its adherents. The promises which it offers arc so dazzling, that Jews everywhere have rushed to embrace its faith, without stopping to examine them closely or to calculate whether they can be made good. "Let us examine the pretensions of Zionism from essential angles: Is it an economic fallacy? Is it a political fantasy? Is it a spiritual will-o'-the wisp? "First, its conomic aspect. I assert positively that it is impossible. Zionists have been work ing for thiry years with fanatical zeal, and backed by millions of money from philanthropic Jews of great wealth in France, England, Germany and America, and the total result of their operations, at the outbreak of the World War, was the movement of 10,000 Jews from other lands to the soil of Palestine. In the same period, a million and a half Jews have migrated to America. "The notion that Great Britain would for one instant allow any form of government in Pales tine, under any name whatever, that was not, in fact, an appanage of the British crown, and sub servient to the paramount interests of British world policy, is too fantastical for serious refu tation. , "The truth is that Palestine cannot support 9 large population in prosperity. It has a lean and niggard soil. Not only must agriculture be pur sued under the greatest' possible handicaps of soil and water, but it is subject to the direct competition of far more favord lands in the very agricultural products for which it is distinc tive. A great industrial Palestine is equally un thinkable. It lacks the raw materials of coal and iron; it lacks the skill in technical processcss and the experience in the arts, and, above all, it is not in the path of modern trade currents. ' "What of its political foundations? Is Zionism a political fantasy? I assert most emphatically that it is. The present British mandate over Palestine is a recognition, by the great power of the world, of the supreme political interest ot Great Britain m that region. "But this article will be read chiefly by Ameri cans; such influence as it may wield will be par ticularly upon American minds. Nowhere in the world has so glorious an opportunity been offered to the Jew. Generous America has thrown wide the doors of opportunity to him. "Jews in this country have been or are mem bers of every Legislature, including the senate of the United States; Ambassadors representing the person ofthe president at foreign courts; officers of the judiciary in every grade from jus tice of the peace to justice of the supreme court of the United States. "He may freely choose his mode of worship, from the strictest of orthodox tabernacles to the most liberal of free synagogues. The evidence ol opportunity in business is so overwhelming that it need not here be wearyingly recapitulated. "The enlightened Jews of America have found the true road to Zion. The proudest boast of all these men. and my proudest boast, is: 'I am an American.' None of us would deny our race or faith. Wc are Jews by blood. We are Jews, though of various sects, by religion. But as for me (and here I am sure I speak for a vast body of Jews in the United States), if I were Dressed to define myself by any single appellation, I would unhesitatingly select the one word Amer ican. ' - "I resent the activities of Dr WnV.m ann a n n his followers in this country. Zionism looks back- warn ana not torward. it would practically phce in the hands of seven men, steeped in a foreign tradition, the power to turn back the hands of time upon all which I and my predecessors of the same convictions have won for nurtpk-p. here in America. 'The Jews of France have found France to be their Zion. The Jews of England have found England to be their Zion. We TewY of Amni-ir have found. America to be our Zion. Therefore, I refuse to allow myself to be called a Zionist. I am an American." 1 Do Men Love Music? My only purpose, my sole wish in this article, is to show that the leaving of all aesthetic ques tions to women has serious consequences. One result of this is that music has almost ceased to exist as a masculine pleasure. In Philadelphia, for example, it is impossible to have a concert in the evening for the reason that many women can not very well go alone. Music is the highest, the most vital, of all the arts; good music is filled with precisely the harmonies, which men recognize and applaud in their more obvious ar rangements. A little understanding, a little ef fort, is necessary; but the reward, a pleasure as long as life and beyond the assaults of any mis chance, is above measure. Yet an amazing num ber of men, who should be far wiser, think that music, the playing of the piano, is effeminate. I hey believe this, not for an intrinsic reason, but because music has been so wholly delegated to women. The women had in the intervals of feeding tha children and preparing for dinner nothing better to do than strum at Chopin; but the men were importantly engaged in what? the shredding cf codfish, the floating of Texan oil on the troubled waters of private financial dreams, or holding in the clouds the price of wheat and the price of coal. Joseph Herge 'heimcr in the July Yale Review. American Supply Ample. Those girls from Ireland who have got as far as New York on their way to a career as moving picture actresses shouldn't have the no tion that there is any shortage of such persons in the United States. Not only are there plenty of them, but there are plenty of imitations of them, who crowd the streets in the shopping districts every pleasant day. Indianapolis News. They Made It a Joke. The prohibition authorities, who are asking the public to refrain from making jokes about prohibition, might have better luck if they would begin by establishing prohibition. Indianapolis News. . Signs of the Times. "Drive slowly and see our beautiful city," in vites a sign in a Columbia railway station. "Drive fast and see the city jail.": Kansas City Tirns. How to Keep Well By OR. W. A. EVANS QiiMtlon concerning hygiene, aanitatioa and pravantion of disease, eubmltted to Dr. Evana by readere of Tha B, will ba answered personally, aubject to proper limitation, wbara a atampad addraaaad anvalepa ia enclosed. Dr Evana will sat maka eHegnoeie or prescribe for individual diseases. Addraaa ltttara in cara of Tha Baa. Copyright, 1921, by Dr. W. A. Evana CURBING TYPHUS EPIDEMICS) ments which fitted around wrists ana necK. i ne trousers were hock- A correspondent from the southwest writes that there ia a little Mexican typhus in that part of the country. She wants to know what precautions should be taken. A recital of the method which proved successful in the typhus hospital at Warsaw, Po land, will supply helpful informa tion. This hospital took none but the very worst cases and gave them the best of medical and nursing care. The typus hospital was a division of a general hospital and those in con trol strove to keep the disease from spreading to other patients in the general hospital and also to keep their doctors, nurses, orderlies, cooks and general help free from the dis ease, in order that they might be able to care for the sick. This was the plan followed: The theory on which they worked was that typhus is spread by lice and in no other way, but that a single bite from an Infected louse is all that is required. Patients sick with typhus were brought into the delousing room on stretchers. They were stripped of all clothing and placed on a white enameled tame ntiea with white rubber pads. Every hai on the head and body was slipped below the "nit" level with barbers' slippers. The body was then washed with soap and hot water. The scalp was not washed because they found that lice would bore deep under dan rlrnff and would not be washed off, while the water prevented the oil next to be applied from strimng in - After the drying, the SKin every Tthpra wa nainted with a mixture of equal parts kereosene and light wood oil. The clipped hair fell on a white rubber sheet. The nits ana eggs in this hair were killed by boil ing. The patient's clothing and the stretcher were carried to the steril- ixnie nla.nt and there treatea. All the personnel were deloused In tho same thorough manner. The at tendants wore specially made gar More Laws for Relief. Omaha, June 27. To the Editor of The Bee: Changed conditions in the economic and social life of the people of the United States has brought to the very doors of every citizen a necessity for an industrial and financial readjustment that can not, with impunity, be longer ig nored. A problem that must be met and which to meet and successtuiiy solve will tax our resourcefulness to the utmost. At a time when we find foreign nations securing loans for the ask ing from American bankers, our Liberty bond issues are selling far below par, and American industry is unable to secure the necessary funds to finance itself so as to prop erly employ the 4,000,000 of Amer lea's unemployed. In spite of the seeming scarcity of money, reports Show that the federal reserve banks are bulging with surplus funds. The Federal Reserve bank of New York holds the distinction of carrying more than 103 per cent, covering on outstanding paper. And the scarcity of money today is nothing more than the manipulation of the federal banking system by American financiers. Congress should compel national wealth to be more evenly diHtrihnted. Congress should take immediate steps to remedy the present financial conditions. Laws should be passed Dreventing the manipulation of the federal reserve system. In various states of the union more than 10 per cent interest on money is consmerea usury, while today the federal bank system has a flat rate of 6 per cent, it also has a Drogressive rate in ad dition of 8 per cent, which permits it to discriminate against Dorrowers and charge some 6 per cenc ana others 14 per cent on the rediscount' ing of paper; and this act alone per TnitH hankers to manipulate the in- target rnt nf the COuntlV. It IS nothing short of a criminal practice and should be prevented by law; the federal reserve system is compelled by law to hold 35 per cent in reserve against deposit liabilities, and con Rhmild comDel these banks to make loans to the federal loan bank at anv time-their reserve passes du per cent, and were this law in effect 'at the present time the farmers and cattle raisers of the west would not be facing the bankruptcy conditions they are now forced into by reason of the fact that tne rcaerai iarm loan bank has no money to loan them. Another remedy to relieve the present financial conditions would bf for congress to pass a law per mitting Liberty bonds to be turned in for federal 'reserve notes or tp circulate at par for all public or nrivate debt: and the interest on these bonds should be discounted which would save the taxpayers of the United States over l,ooo,ooo, 000 annually; it would force money back into the channels of commerce thus affording employment to our 4,000,000 unemployed at a time when the nation's industries are nrapticallv at a standstill. If American industry is to stand the test of this financial crisis the American people must refuse to Buy foreign bonds, for every dollar spent in this manner goes to nulla up lor eign Industry at the expense of our own. And if tne umtea states gov ernment were to increase the present gold standard to double its present value or $41.34 per ounce, and it is in their Dower to do so tne ainea countries today, holding 68 per cent of the world's gold, would be able to pay to us their entire debt to Amer ica of JlO.OOO.ooo.ooo in goio. ROY M. HARROP. Complain of Police Treatment. Omaha. July 1. To the Editor of The Bee: An article appeared in the evening issue of the World Herald June 21. regarding confes sions that were supposed to be made to some one connected with the Om aha police department by John Mel vln and William Cahalll. It seems an automobile tire was stolen and Melvln and Cahalll were arrested for the crime regardless of the fact no evidence of any kind was pro duced to prove the charges. Both men were arrested and after being taken to the police station Russian tactics were employed time after time upon both Melvln and Cahalll in an effort to make them admit a ci ime they were entirely innocent of. Thev remained silent, regardless of all brutal methods Inflicted upon them by different members of the police department. As a matter of fact if any doubt exists in your mind regarding our physical condition send a representive of your paper up here to examine us. Also if it is not too much trouble would you kindly ask tha head of the police department to produce those so called confessions? Thanking you in at.ticlpatfon for favor asked. JOHN MELVIN. WILLIAM C AH A ILL. , ing-footed much like sleeping gar ments for children. Cedar wood oil was sprayed around the neck, wrists, and ankles as a louse re pellent. On going off duty the at tendant removed these special gar ments and they were placed in large galvanized cans and sprinkled with flaked naphthalene and left for 12 hours. Experimental lice placed In garments in this can were always found dead at the end of the 12-hour period. ' The floors of the ward were gone over with a kerosene mop. Since body lice live in clothes and only go on the body to feed, the cloth ing removed from patients was thoroughly heated and the seams gone over with a hot Iron. Following this plan with care as to minutest detail not one physician, nurse, or other attendant or helper developed typhus and the disease did not spread to other parts of the hos pital. This was in marked con trast to some experiences in typhus hospitals. A great many physicians. nurses, and help in an orainary typhus hospital die from typhus. In bad epidemics many typhus patients die from neglect, even starve to death because so many of the phy slclans. nurses, cooks, and other helpers are laid low by the infection. The deaths of Ricketts and Husk from typhus while studying the dls ease show how difficult it Is even for careful men to escape being bit ton by an infected louse In times of epidemic. Among the outstanding lessons In this experience are: Lice may bur row under dandruff and thus save their lives; the need of clipping the hair and painting the skin of the scalp and body with keresone and cedar wood oil; the use of cedar wood oil as a repellent; the use of flake naphthalene in a closed vessel for 12 hours to kill lice in ciotnes; but that should not replace heating and Ironing with a hot iron. Mash Uie Mosquito. R. R. M. writes: "I have Just suc cessfully put into effect a new war on mosQuitoes. I attack them high In the air,, on the ground, on the wa ter and under the water. By means of martin houses . I get martins to catch them when flying; by means of young pheasants I catch them on the grass and bushes; by means of young ducks I get them on the wa ter, also on land; while submarines, in the form of goldfish, attack them from beneath in various ponds. This method has been entirely successful. Last year my garden and the neigh borhood of my house was infested with mosquitoes, keeping me In doors. It was worse at the begin ning of this year. Now I am prac tically immune. My method is bet ter than draining or oiling in that instead of being unsightly, it is at tractve, and instead of being expen sive, it is profitable' REPLY. ' Congratulations n your inventive ness. In controlling yellow fever in Guayaquil, Ecuador, and in Menden, Yucatan, they found minnows bet ter than oil to destroy wlggletails in water. Our old friend, Campbell of San Antonio, has long claimed that bats are the best mosquito destroy ers. Perhaps they could not match your martins. AppendlcUs and Rupture. F. D. A. writes: "1. What are ths svmptoms of appendicitis? 2. On what side does it come? 3. What are the symptoms of a rupture?" REPLY. 1. Colicky pain, nausea followed by fever, steady pain,- tenderness, in crease in white cell count. A. As a rule right side, front, low down. 3. Swelling in some rupture situa tion. Swelling may disappear when person lies down. Force of a cough is felt in the swelling. Gurgling may be felt. Maybe tenderness or pain or both. English Girls Refuse to Wed Lady Askwith Says They Don't Know How to Care For Babies. Take Care of the Cause Job writes: "Can you tell me of anything which will prevent the hives? I have had them every month or two for over a year." REPLY. Find out what causes you to have hives and avoid it. In most cases the agent is some food which most people find wholesome. London, July 3. "Girls will not marry and have babies nowadays be cause they do not know how to take care of them," said Lady Askwith at the annual conference of the Asso ciation of Teachers of Domestic Sub jects. "For the making of a home good temper is wanted," continued Lady Askwith, "but above all we need in telligence. Only a woman can make a home; in that respect women have a monopoly that no one can take from them. "The things of importance in this life are a good home, good food and comfortable surroundings. Cooking and domestic arrangements, partic ularly in the cast of London, t are a shame to the nation. That s not because any one is wicked about it or wants to be uncomfortable, but simply for the lack of organization. "In the old days there was not so much of that awful snobbishness about the things done with the hands and with the head. It is a silly idea that there is anything de grading about manual work. The snobbish idea of modern times has produced more division of class thin anything else." University Instructor Will Go to Constantinople Valentine, Neb., July 3. (Spe cial.) -John F. Ninas, .formerly of Valentine and for the last several years instructor of mechanical engi neering at the state university, left for Constantinople, where he has contracted to teach mechanical engi neering at Roberts college for the next three years. Cheyenne County Wheat Fields Swept by HaiJ Sidney, Neb., July 3 (Special.) The first damaging hail crop of this season in Cheyenne county swept a strip of wheat five miles long and three miles wide north of Potter. It was damaged from SO to 100 per cent. One farmer, who did not carry hail insurance and whose crop was completely wiped out, is selling out 1 Cupid's Bow Lips Is Latest Fad; Surgeons Do It Sewed, Smile Is Most Recent Discovery of Beauty Specialists Across The Water. lt- Xtrs.y E.Corty- New York, July 3. Women o: rominenca in New York have bee. interested highly in the news from Taris that Mrs. William E I li s Corey has had an operation to transform her lips into a Cupid's bow. A French beauty specialist per formed the feat for the former Mabelle Gilman, actress and sing- . - er. As Mabelle Gilman she was wooed and won by Mr. Corey, formerly president of the United States Steel Corporation. For some years the Coreys have lived at the Corey Chateau in Paris. The Cupid's bowy-or the sewed smile, as the operation is sometimes known is one of the most recent discoveries of beauty surgery. The lips are cut deftly at each cor- ner and then caught with one or two stitches so as to take in whatever lip is necessary to bring the mouth to the disired size. Then the fulness is taken from the lower lip by remov ing a strip of skin on the inside. The edges are sewn together to draw the lip in and decrease its drooping full ness. By drawing the skin tightly at the corners of the mouth any wrinkles will disappear. The tiny stitches are removed within a day and all scars heal withitvtwo weeks. THE CURTIS HOTEL -:- MINNEAPOLIS -:- In the heart of Minnesota's famous lake region. The newest, largest and most distinctive hostelry in tha city. Ratea average $2.80 the day for room with private bath. Phone DO uglas 2793 aaaaaaasaaaaaaa I II ttaataV i X OMAHA RAJS?, I xar 4) PRINTING ffe V "1J COMPANY If5lll jssss, sS sEfcpM J COMMERCIAL PRIOTERS 4.TH0GRAPHERS STEEL OlE EMBOSSERS loosc ceAr Devices (3360 cgBEBnaB TO EUROPE By the Picturesque St. Laurence River Route MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW , Sailings Every Few Days from Montreal and Quebec to Liverpool, Southampton, Glasgow, Havre, Antwerp No, Only Useless. E. G. I writes: "Are Vichy and Ki?sini?en tablets taken for obesity harmful?" REPLY. No, but not effective Ocean voyage shortened by two Delightful Days on the Sheltered St. Lawrence River and Gulf EVERYTHING CANADIAN PACIFIC STANDARD NONE BETTER Apply to Agenta Everywhere or to R. S. ELWORTHY, Gen'I Aft., Paaa. Dept, 40 North Dearborn St., Chicago CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY TRAFFIC AGENTS Not The Morning or The Evening Bee --But Both DO YOU remember when you used to read the same news in The Evening Bee that you had read at the breakfast table in The Morning Bee? Or maybe it was the other way around, and you read in The Morning Bee what you had read the day before in The Evening Bee! - You won't find that in The Bee Morning and Evening TODAY. . The Bee is not a "warmed-over" newspaper nowadays. The Bee doesn't have that "warmed-over" taste. The news you find in The Evening Bee is distinct and different from that you read in The Morning Beeand vice versa. The Policies Are Different The Morning Bee specializes in state and national news, in market and financial reports, comment and gossip carried by Associated Press, Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee leased wires and special telegraph and cable from every part of the world. The Evening Bee specializes in local news and in entertaining features. The best features and the most important news are in both. But the emphasis is different. Not only the most important local news is in The Evening Bee, but the humor, wom en's affairs, human interest of daily happenings in and about Omaha are there. The Morning Bee carries important local news but places emphasis on the big news from everywhere politics, trade, conventions, agriculture and the like. The Two Are Not the Same 77ie difference is so marked that there is enjoyment in reading both. Man Omaha men and women read The Dee Doth Morning and Evening and like it. WHY NOT YOU? v Atlantic looo THE OMAHA BEE r