f 10 THE BEE: OMAHA. SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 17. 1921. J TheOmahaBee DJUIV ir.tlJLUWl) ... WEXIXC-fcUNUAY MaBajMBJMStaaa (BWMM IV BaSlSa1 TUB BIB rOVUSHIKO COMPANY EUOM B. trOUC rbltkM MCMBCB Of THC ASSOCIATED Pt . ... uh - la a - la m m4iu U II N M - (K4IU4 -U He. Mf avatfal mutm eia Hum lma. Tka Mi Mtar af tka wm at Cut- UlUa, k t m ausoni aa eiicttuya wu EE TELEPHONES Kn.tn at umic 1000 Far Nitkl Call AlUr 10 !. M. Itfliantl PJinH ATlaaUe lU IM orricu or the bec Ottt-MVa OMka . . . . i a m The Bee's Platform 1. Nw Uaioa FMer SUtiaa. 2. Cofiaul Improvement ml th Ne braska HitawTi, including th pa snaat af Maia Tkaraugafaraa ldif lata Omaka with a Brick Surfaca. J. A abort, lew-rat WaUrway from ika Cara Bait ta Ika Atlaatia Ocaaa. 4. Haaia Rut Ckarlar far Omaka, with City Manager farm af Government. Magnificent. But Not Sensible. The cite of the man who went to jail rather than pay alimony to hit wife will win tome ad miration for hit determination, but hia judg ment it not to be commended. In the end he will find the courts of the country are not lightly to be defied, and eventually hit case will have to be heard and determined on its merits. At the same time the incident may serve to arouse a little interest in the general subject of alimony. Under no circumstances should the husband be permitted to avoid any of his obliga tions to his spouse; that would be unjust and unfair, but with the newer relations established by amendments to the fundamental and statutory law, perhaps the ends of justice will be served if very close investigation were applied to all divorce suits, especially those in which a con siderable amount of alimony and a liberal at torney fee is asked by the relator. As a rule the court informs itself with suf ficient accuracy as to the financial situation of the husband and issues a temporary order ac cordingly. No fault can be found with this pro cedure ordinarily, for the offended and frequently abused wife is entitled to the relief granted. Now and then cases turn up in which examination of the motives might disclose a state of affairs that would justify the court in denying any relief be yond that oPdivorce.. So long as marriage par takes of the nature of a civil contract, dissoluble by judicial procedure, it should be competent to inquire into all the conditions surrounding that contract, and to discover if all had been faith fully observed by both, parties. I '.'. Omaha has witnessed some cases in which the external evidence at least was such as in clined folks to think the contract was made in the start to secure a nice award of alimony at the end. Only the courts can stop such pro ceedings, and they should be ready to act prompt ly when such a case appears. A man is entitled to some protection as well as the woman in this regard. ' ' ' f - Japan, China and, the Conference. Prediction that Japan will not agree to the agenda prepared for the coming conference on armament and 'other questions at Washington rests on the rather slender foundation that the Shantung question was settled at Versailles. It was not; China specifically declined to sign the treaty because of the provision awarding the Shantung" peninsula to Japan, and the United States, which at the time objected to the award, has not ratified the treaty. This, it would seem, leaves the Shantung award in ruach the same position as the Yap mandate. As one of the victors in the war, the United States has some thing to say about the terms on which the sequestrated German territory is to be disposed of, and it has not consented to the terms that give the disputed regions to Japan. China has declined to conclude an arrange ment with the Japanese in connection with Shantung prior to the meeting at Washington. It is wise on the part of China to thus support the action taken at Versailles. Japan offered terms for settlement that left its nationals in a preferred position .in Shantung, particularly in Kiao-Chau, involved the cession of Dairen and other ports, and laid on China the burden of maintaining railroad terminals and other public works for joint use with the Japanese.' Such a 'bargain is hardly more supportable than the di rect occupancy of the territory, while negotia tions would lend respectability to the proceed ings under which the "twenty-one demands" were enforced In May, 1915. A sentiment in favor of requiring Japan to "come clean," and for the ending of the Japanese alliance with England, in order that peace on the Pacific may be assured, is springing up. The mikado's government notes the setting of the current, and very' likely will be found at Wash ington earnestly striving to save something of. the rich reward grabbed at so little expense of capital or energy as' hs share of the war. It is not probable the future of China will be settled there, but it now appears the Chinese will learn they can have justice. ; Shirt-Sleeves in the Lunch Room." " A court in Oklahoma has set up another landmark for democracy." By an order just re corded, it is permitted that a man without a coat may go into one of Fred Harvey's justly cele brated eating houses, and insist on being served. Thus the glorious freedom and traditions of the west are preserved. Some of us can remember the time when Fred Harvey was glad to get cus tomers into his eating houses, regardless of garb. Cow punchers in chaps sat alongside rail road men in overalls, and these were flanked by travelers and tourists, indurated old-timers or nervous tenderfeet, and all enjoyed meals that made the system famous.. A little later Rome Miller had a similar string of "twenty minutes for refreshments" places along the Elkhorn, run ning up into the Black Hills, and all. sorts and conditions of men sat down together around his board and loosened up to the tune of four-bits wbes the meal was over, and nobody ever dreamed of noting what the other fellow was veariof. or if he were clad at all Maybe in th flight of years i'nc thou dear old di) ithini hatt com to a pass litre tht Inhabitants cn e fastidious about some things, but the day is far di.isnt when a man tan not walk into in citing houc and mount a stool without being formally garbed. Wt hope it neer does tome. I U-J.Jt Whom Would You Choose? The heavy responsibilities that burden Pres! drnt Harding can scarcely be understood by the average citisen whose chief connection with the duties of government arises only on election day and who devotes the rest of his time to support ing hit family and paying taxes. The single task of arranging and carrying through the Interna tionsl conference on disarmament, it is not too much to say, is greater than most men face in a lifetime. This is brought home by a questionnaire trnt out by three organizations asking a straw vote as to who should represent the American people in the Washington gathering. One of those re questing expression of an opinion is the Woman's Committee on World Disarmament, and the others style themselves the Foreign Poliry as sociation and the W orld Friendship bureau. 1 he inquiry as to who is considered best fitted to at tend this meeting is followed by dotted lines on which 10 names are to be written. Almost any one can select one or two suitable delegates, but the imagination is liable to be severely taxed to think of many more. . But once this is accomplished, the second question forces itself upon the attention: "What qualifications should be reouired in every Amer ican member selected?" One may glance back over the tentative list and be unable to discover any common quality except perhaps that each has one's confidence. The third inquiry is: "What points of view and interests, besides the political and financial, should be included aud represented in the membership of the America t group?" Thus is brought up the problem of thr advisability of occupational representation, with labor, agriculture, business and women as pos sible candidates who should be given a voice. , It is well to have this matter forced on the at tention of the public, and there can not be too much discussion and thought given to the dis armament conference. But not many are sure enough of their own judgment to desire to have the decision placed in their hands. Here ap pears to be one case where the ballot could not be relied upon. If there had been more lively interest in this momentous event, perhaps a referendum might have had its possibilities for good. . But the people have left the responsi bility entirely with the president, thereby at least paying him the compliment of trust in his ability to meet the emergency. . De ValeraY Awkward Dilemma. Ineptness in address has brought the Irish situation to a virtual impasse. Eamonn de Va lera's ultimatum to Lloyd George has ended the confabs, the invitation to a conference at In verness having been withdrawn. What the next step will be only the evjtnt can tell. De Valera may, but in all probability ' will not, withdraw the note that put an end to negotiations at a time when all seemed to be progressing favorably. Short of this the way to a resumption of dis cussions between the British cabinet and the Irish representatives does not appear. .... , ', 'Terms offered, to Ireland included all Sinn .Fein'' demands with the exception of absolute separation; this England will not concede, and in this stand the other nations of the empire agree. A dominion status, such as is enjoyed by Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa, with complete autonomy over ' finances, and with the undiminished advantage of mem bership in a great imperial assembly of nations would give Ireland . a- splendid position and ample, opportunity for the working out of na tional plans and aspirations, revival of the Celtic language and all. And this, Lloyd George as sured -De Valera, is as far as the British gov ernment will go. De Valera's answer to this is:. Our nation has formally declared its inde pendence and recognizes itself as a sovereign state. ; It is only as representative of that state and as its chosen guardians that we have au . thority or powers to act on behalf of our people. . " f To deal with representatives of Dail Eireann on this basis is to accept as established the as sertion of independence, Lloyd George declined to do this. If De Valera and his associates in sist, then negotiations for which .the truce was established are at an end, and a condition pre vails which can not continue. Either the, de struction of war must be resumed or the people must rid themselves of present leadership and get behind men who can bring peace to Ireland. . Omaha's Country Cousins. " It is to be regretted that the Douglas county fair is not better advertised in Omaha. The ex hibits which were shown in Waterloo this week compare favorably with those of any other part of the state.. In fact, first honors at the state fair were won by the display of Douglas, county. What is sometimes forgotten is that the city of Omaha does not include-all the activity and wealth of Douglas county. Just beyond our borders orchards and fields as fine as .could be desired are to be found. Fine hogs, fat cattle and splendid dairy herds abound. Out there in the farm homes the boys and girls are being brought up amid a life far dif ferent from that now known by the younger generation of the city. - There are chores to be done,; small duties that for many cjty boys do not exist; instead of the movies there are only books, games and the pleasures of intimate con tact with nature, and in many ways it seems they are. learning to be more useful than are their city cousins. The girls gather in their com munity sewing clubs, and with the boys com pete in pig and calf clubs. Indeed, it appears that life in the country has been vastly improved from" the unbroken drudgery that drove so many to the cities in former years, while city life may possibly have slipped back. . ' " " W'hen next year's county fair rolls around it is to be hoped that the invitation to attend will be more widely distributed, and that Omaha may be more largely represented. "Jim" Riley's famous weather, "when the frost is on the punkin' and the fodder's in the shock," is almost here, and welcome, too. President Harding, it may be remarked, has made a good start, but he appears frequently in a week end. The. spectacle of an auction of. unemployed men, cuts too deep to be popular. ' , . Speaking of hitching wagons to a star, they sre now tying tin cans to one. I The Husking Bee It's Your Uaij Siari It Wiiha Laugh lOV up, HUMAN' NATURE ON TARNAM STREET. Human nature is much the ame In old and young, in high or low, V all applaud well-played game, We gsre alike at the passing show; And curiosity's not confined To any sex or race or creed, It is a common state of mind ' That hungers and must find its teed. Each day I see upon the street A motley crowd that stops to gate, And brogans tread on dainty feet While silk rubs cotton in the maze; I stop to sre what is the thing That foolish crowds will stand and Uew Some monkeys playing in a swing And 1 find I am gazing, too! PHILO-SOPHY. Nonsense is the kind of sense the other fel ' has. It is all right to be a dreamer sf you jump up and hustle when the alarm goes oft. It is charitable to be kind to the weak, but it is also wise to be courteous to the strong TWO ARE COMPANY. In the parlor there were three The parlor lamp and he and she, Three makes a crowd beyond a doubt, And so the parlor lamp went out OIL. The man who bums the midnight oil Gets small return for all his toil, It is the man who sella the stuff . Who reaps the shekels, aure enough. GREAT DAY FOR THE RACE Judging from the way the skiei clear every day leads us to surmise that King Ak has a pull with the weather man. a Bryan, they say, looked younger on his re cent visit to Omaha. Has he by any chance found in Florida what Mr. P. de Leon failed to locate? "Why don't you speak to your little school mate when you meet him?" "Huh I He comes to school in a Ford and we go in a Cadillac HIS MASTER'S VOICE. We opine there will soon be a new position under the civil service for which examinations may be looked for changing the needle on the postofhee phonograph. See where a husband of 40 years' standing lias had his temper ruined by attending the movies. . Probably annoyed by persons reading the sub-titles. STILL HERE. We kissed Miss Summertime goodby To speed her on her way, We turned around and gave a sigh To greet an autumn day; With summer's love still in our mind (How could we soon forget?) A backward glance' we gave to find Miss Summer with us yet. IN THE POSTOFFICE. Human's jig music Stealing everywhere, t Jazzy strains of ragtime . Pulsate on the air; Latest variations, March and nightingale, It's just Will Haya way of Speeding up the mail .'.'''. AFTER-THOUGHT: The pen is mighty, but it wouldn't accomplish much without the ink. PHILO, Married Women in Industry Women prominent in professional life and philanthropic work dissent emphatically from the theory of Mrs. bamuel Gompers that when worn en whose husbands make a good living seek business positions they not only take bread and butter from someone who needs it," but also detract from the interests of their homes and children. In the opinion of one of Mrs. Gomp ers feminine critics, a wife s work outside the home tends to improve it. "The children gain in self-reliance and independence, and the reahza tion of their mother's activity deepens their char cater." Certainly the subject under discussion is not a new one. Is there indeed much more to be said than has already been said, on one side or the other, of what has come to be an academic ques tion? Married women do engage in business life, and the home is still there apparently as it was before. If it is impaired in any particular the deleterious influence must be traced to other con ditions that those caused by the mother's activity as a wage-earner. The discussion will doubtless continue, but can it possibly alter the case? If it is assumed as true that the home suffers from a wife's participation in industry, will , the fact ever actuate remedial legislation? And if Icgisla tion is sought, of what nature to become effec tive?, : ' As for taking bread and butter from someone who needs it, all the laws and preachments can not prevent this condition of things. Given the desire to work tor a salary and the capacity, mar ried women will seek positions regardless of considerations of abstract social justice. New York World. It Doesn't Pay. v Franklin D'Olier of Philadelphia, former com mander of the American Legion, speaking at Chateau-Thierry to dedicate the new Roosevelt bridge over the Marne, said: "Let us dedicate ourselves to the task of impressing on our public leaders the lesson that we know; that war does not pay. Such a sentiment, 'coming from. men. who fought, means more than if it carhe from those who never knew the full significance of the de struction of men by their fellowmen. Mr. D'Olier was not speaking for he purpose of a pleasant interchange of ameniti 3 he voiced the feeling of those who fell as well as those who are spared. The true soldier does not need a reminder that the glory of war is only in the sublimity of de votion manifest; not in the killing. It is those who never fought who require to be told that war should be abolished as a heinous crime ot man against man Philadelphia Public Ledger. ' A Kind Word for the Record. General Dawes says the Congressional Rec ord should be discontinued, but something can be said for . the much-abused publication. It prints nothing about prize fights, murders and divorce scandals, and is free from the exasperat ing habit of beginning a story on the front page and continuing it on page ten, column six. Shoe and Leather Reporter. Explained at Last. ' Squirrels on the golf links at Carleton Place, Ontario, it was found, had carried away over 500 golf balls and hidden them away in their winter nests. Oh. that s tpc reason the squirrels follow these golf chaps around, eh? Kansas t;it Times.- . , -J -. . . . . How to Keep Well DR. w, A. CVAMS . QuctliMS Hml. hviwaa, Mio tic m4 pmaaiiaa ! imi uk MIU4 u Dr. kr frt M TIm Km, mU to a'4 prMUr, uk)cl ! p ft lualUlM, vSwi IIMH4. MfUM4 ! St Um4. Dr. tu III mm mtkt iuimli MMcnto lar tMvt4ual IMM. AM'M Th Sm. tctlms Is mis ! Cwriakt, IS1I, kr Dr. W. A. tM. Dog Hill Paragrafs Br Ceoige Bingham A traveling man stopped at the Tickville hotel Monday of thit week, TEACHER'S COMPLEX TASK. It ia well for tha teachers aa thy begin their year'a work to under stand what llivy ara up aaalnst. Th distribution ot arhcMil chil dren into group graded ftcrordlne to mental ability a determined by Terman in accepted aa approximate ly correct. Klxty per lent have avraa Inteltlavnce. Tha member ot thla troup ran move along through si'hnol Ufa linking tha grade according to cheduls, paulng th examinations and meeting tha other tcNta aa they and laid down. Above then la an other group rnmprlHinz about IS per tent who ar brlahter than th average, but nevertheless g't along fairly well In school They learn rather too quickly and raally and therefor have enerey which om us wlclv but whlih sets others into trouble. Above this mnr than average bright group ia a group of auperlnra embracing somewhere about S per cvnt or th whole. They ar ao much out of th ordinary that they constitute a problem for th teach ers. A few of them are great trouble maaara. Now, going back to th average group and rating downward, we nrst encounter a group of dullards mining up aoout is per cent or tna whole. Many of thes ar dull be cause of physical defect. Tha mem ber of thla group ar difficult. By working hard with them an earnest teacher can keep a fair proportion up to grade. Below thes are the reebl minded, making up about 7 per cent. Most of thes will dron out or school whenever they can and will quit for good Just as soon as in law allows. Thin classification wna mnd be fore the world war. Thla grouping or soiaiera and other person ob served by draft examiners durlns the world war by the use of mental testa proved the approximate cor rectness of tha Terman grouping. But hold! The teacher's troubles ar not at an encT: Besides physi cal conditions and mental ability It Is necessary to take personality and behavior into consideration. Aa Dr. rearc Bally says, the rent purpose of education Is the upbuilding of character, the transmutation year by year of the untamed savage pro pensities with which a child romes Into the world into co-operated and directed forces. Without this transmutation of the Infantile primitive Impulses Into an adult co-ordinated self-control th individual remains against or out side the social order. Some part of the children In schools are insane, some have de mentia precox which Is apparent at the time, and somo have mental types which will be classed as de mentia precox as soon as the Indi vidual becomes engaged In the con tacts of adult life. Some are anti social. Some are asocial. The prob lems of personality and behavior are Just as real as those of physical deficiency and mental capacity. Un fortunately there are no statistics or groups along this line available for teachers. Charity Never Faileth ; , Probably Not: Yes. Mrs.. A. E. B. writes: "1. Will my son ever entirely overcome the slight deafness he has had since the scarlet fever? . ' '2. Will salts every morning re duce one and is it harmful to the constitution?" - i REPLY. 1. Probably not. 2. It will not reduce you and it Is harmful to the constitution and by laws, and against the rules of order. Well That Baby'a Weaned. Mother writes: "I am a nursing mother, and the baby, 18 months, has gone to the country for ten weeks. My breasts are becoming lull and very painful. Is there any. thing I could do to dry up the milk? Is the condition dangerous?" REPLY. Bind your breasts so as to press them nrmly and evenly. Tou need do nothing: more. The condition is not dangerous. It is well you weaned the baby. lie is the same one that was there last year. Jefferson Potlocks seems to think that there are not near as many fleas now as there used to he. Yam Sims says there are just as many, hut that there are several other menu brs of the family for them to get on now. The Tidings reports that Raz Bar low was a business visitor in Tick ville Saturday afternoon. This is the second time his name has been in the paper in the past few months, and he is thinking about starting a scrap book. WHY- "The Orange Cure." ' G. T. writes: "Will you kindly tell me what the orange diet is, and whether it will help fleshy peo pie to reduce? I am only 28 years old and am Ave feet three inches tall rnd weigh 1S1 pounds. I sure do want to reduce, but want to follow a diet that I know Is absolutely rac ommended by a doctor." REPLY. There are ' many fruit cures and the orange cure as one of them is given by Thompson as follows: The cure lasts six weeks. Begin by eat ing an orange before breakfast and another before retiring. In three or four days the breakfast consists of several oranges, a small quantity or bread and butter and a little coffee.' During - the forenoon eat several oranges. For dinner some meat and potato, green vegetables and oranges no bread, pastry or dessert During the afternoon oranges. At supper a little sago in milk, and oranges. Thompson says this diet is adapted to the treatment of chronic constipation, the cure of some cases of obesity and some of gout. . Better See a Doctor. F. X. M. writes: I am a young man suffering from amoebic dysen tery. I have taken quinine and nl trate or silver irrigations, l no ticed that you recommend Ipecac and its alkaloids. Will you let me know how to buy it, also how it is to be taken?" . . REPLY. I do not think you will succeed very well treating yourself for amoe bic dysentery. Ipecac can be bought in any drug store by anybody. Eme tine is an alkaloid obtained from ipecac. It is given hypodermically. Most drug stores carry emetine. . A Financial Miracle. Mose Smith and Tom Thompson rrived at Detroit -from the south and obtained employment at a small factory. Mose lent Lem S10, and spent six months vainly trying to collect it. Then he became threat ening. Yo" Lem," he said, "io1 don pay flat ten dollars wnot yo- owe me, I has de law on yuh." 'Don' yo' get pestiferous, r.iggah," said Lem. "Ah don" owe you nuttln." Yo' don' owe me nnttin? ' said Mose. "Di'n ah done len' yo' ten dollars what yon ain't paid back? Tell me dat" . 'Shuah yo' did." 'Den how come yo' don ow me nuttin?" 'Cos de intrust done et up . the prins'yal." Forbes Magazine. , Mora Garaces Than Homes. It Is asserted that America isl building more garages than homes, but there are still a few more auto mobiles than IIif?3- Pittsburgh Dispatch. Does a Vacuum Bottle Keep Things Hot or Cold? Since time immemorial men have been seeking a device which would retain the heat or the coolness in liquids, but, despite several inven tions which approximated the de sired result, it was only of late years that the use of the vacuum bottle has succeeded in approaching the goal. Even savages, however, havo been familiar with the principles of the "water monkey" a porous bot tle which cools by evaporation due to a draft and the fact that articles wrapped in a blanket or some other heavy covering .will retain their low or. high temperatures considerably longer than if exposed to the air. It is this latter device that really explains the operation of the vac uum bottle, a container made in two sections with a space between from which the air has been extracted. If the substance which we desire to keep cold were to be placed in the interior bottle or container and this was then wrapped in a newspaper,, a blanket or some other poor con ductor of heat, the substance would remain at a low temperature for sev eral hours ' because the heat , would find difficulty in penetrating the cov ering. . Precisely the same thing oc curs when we wrap this bottle in or surround it with a vacuum, only the result is achieved ' for . a greater length of time, owing to the fact that heat cannot jump 'over' or pass through a vacuum needing air to assist it in making its journey. If the vacuum were absolutely perfect, that is if there were no air whatever in the space, substances placed in the interior container would remain hot or cold for an indefinite period. However, a perfect vacuum is ex tremely difficult to attain, which ac counts for the gradual change . in temperature of the contents ot- a "vacuum bottle." : ' (Copyright, 1921, Wheeler Syndicate Inc.) (Imi lb htm lark Tim ) "nut whether I her b tongues, lhay ahall cease." Th voleea In discussion a to th caunea of Rue. sia's plight and in negotiation a to way of rll( have, for tn time, at any rate, ceased. And now only th poignant cry of RuaaU Itself I heard. It la uttered In th on Rus sian word "pomosch," which mesne "Help." Behind th impnetrabl wall which, standing on th morn ing horizon, has cast e dally shadow across th whole of th western world, war, plagu, pestilence, dis cs and famln huvo bear, preying upon a people who, as ill door I opened, ar found helplely facing death by Hundred of t!iuiunria, and van million. How wltlraprrad th suffering is It I not now poa slbt even to entlmat. though a dispatch from onVlal health aourcea In Moscow puts th number nf survlng children alone at i.ooo.nno. Tha ofllrlitl fnuiln) paper, l'- moach, publlihed In Moa ow. and I nuoted by th correapnndent of the! Times, who has recently bi-en per mltted to enter Soviet Ruaala. d pieta condition which ar not sim ply distressful: they ar ratantro- phic; "without equal In hiatory," as a Russian editor and puninner now In Berlin haa said. It la not merely that ptopl in certain areas have but bran, acorns, bark or grass for their dally bread: or that th fields her and ther ar burned and bare, wher only Death haa -eaped a harvest: or. that cholera 1 so prevalent and virulent In a city of lass than 150.000 that ther ar from S00 to 700 cases In a day. with a mortality of 76 per cant: or that locusts hav In certain pl.tces de voured all that th drouth haa lift. It ta that conditions, of which such Instances ar given, ar typical of whol province whose population ar fleeing by thousand and tena of thousands, aa If the oay or wtatn had com. It 1 not now th tlmi to ask the reasons why. In respons to this cry or "pomoscn tnat rues rrom Russia's woe, there can be but one answering word that can be under stood, tha word for that which per sists, when tongue and prophecies and knowledge cease or .'a'l or pais away. And this response must be en such hug scale a to leave no doubt Of th genulna sympathy of America, whose nilHlortun this is as well as Russia's or Europe s. The Times would make nppeal to Its readers were it not that .ha Ameri can relief administration has at the moment funds In hand .sufficient to provide all th food that can be. transported to the starving districts in the immediate future: but when the time comes that more 1 needed to help those millions who have known the burning horrors of the summer and survived to face the freezing rigors of the Russian win ter, America must be ready with that charity which has never failed, and will not fail so long as America has that which she can share with another in need. Universally Acknowledged! THE. BEST PIANO L! aykr ay Urn I Your Jdmt, Pleas. Mason & Hamlin Grands 11,660 up Kranich & Bach Crsnd $1,250 Sohmer Grand $1,200 Vote & Sons Grand $900 Brambach Baby Grand $695 Allowances mad uiad plaaos and periodical pay ments planned. Our rfinlhd piano bar gains in standard Mahogaay, Walnut and Oak Upright Pianos, priced from $159 and batter. Payments as low as $1.50 par W.ek. 1513 Douglas Street The Art and Music Store '"Rstotravurc Section en exceiorstU maauma Jlcryoa adverimnc? Common Sense By J. J. MUNDY. Take the Wife Along. .... v Wives need play spells as- well as husbands. The golf fiend' who spends so much time on the course out of bus iness hours that he neglects his fam ily excuses himself on the plea that lie needs recreation, relaxation and fresh air. But what about. the wife and the little children growing up? v , Don't they need fresh air? - Would your wife be so ncivws, so despondent, so restless as she is at times if yoU provided a ,way for her to get fresh, pure, out-of-door air, ar you can get it? .' "All men are sclfish,"."a married woman was heard to remark, "when it comes to their own personal en joyment." ' , ' , - . But you need not run to cover on this statement. - . "Of course," they may not intend to be selfish," she went on, "but they think that a woman can rest, sleep or get out afternoons if she wishes. But this is not what we want; we want the companionship of our own husbands td take us about. To a great degree this woman is right. The golf, tennis, rowing or hik ing enthusiast is likely to be so car lied away with his sport that he for gets that his wife is entitled to a play spell, free from family cares. Copyright, 1921, International Feature Service, Inc. .THE STORJB OF THE TOWTT O'coats O'coats O'coats - ' Oh, Man! What a Sale Overcoats for Everybody All Weights All Kinds All Sizes ' 400 to Choose from Only Two Prices and Values to $40.00 Values to $60.00 Browning, King 6? Co, 15th and Douglas Sts. ; Harry A. Abbott, Mgr. Many Motorists Violate - New Parking Regulations Many motorists failed to observe the new downtown 30-minute park ing regulations which went into ef fect yesterday. A parking limit of 30 minutes has been imposed within district bounded by Howard to Dodge streets; Fourteenth to Twen tieth; also on Farnam as far east as Thirteenth and along Sixteenth, from Davenport to Leavenworth streets. ' " . I CHOCOLATES I l l Iv inntK-circle, x X. CANDIED S I Financial Skies taring Ask about, our easy payment plan for the wonderful "Nokol" oil heater. Phone ATlantic 4040 Ask for Mr. Squires President L. V. NICHOLAS OIL CO. OMAHA We caa only install 30 mora burners this month. ii 1 " i - - 4 2