Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 11, 1921, Page 8, Image 8

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    THE BEE: OMAHA. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER - 11. 1021,
TheOmaha Bee
DAILY (MORNING) KVKN1NU SUNDAY
1UC Sk.lt fCbUSHINU COMPANY
KUUN ft. tTDUE. Publisher
MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Condi Bluff!
Tb circulation of The Omaha Bee ea
Sunday, November 6. 1921, was 72,006 eopl.
THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY
CHARLES S. YOUNG, Busiaes Mntr
ELMER S. ROOD, Circulation Meoaiar
Swora la 4 avkacriWI balora m Oil 8th day of
November, IMI.
(Saal) W. H. O.UIVEY. Notary Publio
The Bee Platform
1. New Ubm Passenger Station.
2. Continue! Improvement of the No
braaka Highways, including tba pave
meat of Main Thoroughfares leading
into Omaha with a Brick Surface.
3. A abort, low-raU Watarway from tlio
Cora Bolt to the Atlantic Ocean.
4. Homo Rule Charter for Omaha, with
City Manager form of Government.
"When War Drums Throb No Longer."
Washington today bears the hope of the
world ai truly as ever it was centered on a sin
gle group of men. In our national capital will
formally assemble representatives of the leading
powers of the world, gathered to debate, con
sider, weigh and decide on measures that will
set the world a little farther on the way to uni
versal peace. , Wisdom dwells in these men, lead
ers in their several countries, wisdom born of
experience; they confess deep devotion to the
ideals of civilization, and a high resolve to bring
about bette conditions for mankind. In these
professions the world has faith, and it will be
a sorry tragedy should the conference miscarry.
Eminently fitting is it that such a conference
should be assembled in such a place for such a
purpose. Washington is the center of the life
of a nation which for almost a century and a
half has stood a great monument to righteous
liberty, freedom founded on justice. One hun
dred and forty-five years is not a long time, when
set against the centuries through which man has
struggled upwards, but it measures the duration
of a great thought put into practice. In 1776 the
idea that underlies and supports our great Con
stitution, and on which rests the foundation of
the Republic, was only a theory, a dream, just
as a world without war is today. Is there any
reason why, a century from now, men may not
look back to the home of the Pan-American
Union, as we do to Independence Hall, and bless
the .hour that called the delegates to decide that
the time had come
When tbo war drums throb no longer and the
battle flags are furled
In the brotherhood of man, the parliament of
the world?
That ideal may be unattainable, but it is
worth striving for. .As Washington is the cen
tral element of a great nation devoted to all the
things that are highest and best in life, so the
building1 in which the sessions will be held typi
fies in itself the very object for which the con
vocation is evoked. If a group of republics, self
governing and independent, may exist in amity,
composing their differences without resort to
arms, submitting to the judgment of courts of
arbitration rather than to the issue of battle, is
it not possible .to extend to all the world such a
beneficent custom? ': '
Suoh has been a dream for countless ages;
claims resting on formulas issued in 1918 or 1917
are idle when history is considered. It is not
true that history is a record of a succession of
wars entirely; in the record of man's climb to
wards the light may be found many proofs of
his yearning desire to live without war. Never
in (II the long account of humanity's endeavor
to improve has the fire on Liberty's altar shone
so brightly as it does today; never was there
such reason to hope that the curse of war may be
removed, that its burden will be lifted from the
world, and that Justice and Mercy, attributes, of
God, will rule on earth. ,
Mystery of Food Prices.
Some changes have been made in the cost of
living in the last year. The decline in the price
of food, which is the main item of the average
household budget, has been greater than in any
thing else. And yet as compared with 1913 food
prices are about SO per cent higher. There is
i government bureau which compiles statistics
on the cost of living in various cities, and its
findings art always interesting. For instance,
it announces that in the year ending October 15,
there was a decrease of 23 per cent in food prices
fat Omaha. The same showing was made in
Kansas City, but the decrease in Memphis was
26" per cent, and in St. Paul and Baltimore 24
per cent, while in Washington it reached only 20
per cent.
With 1913 food prices rated as 100, in Omaha
and Philadelphia the level now is 151. This is 5
per cent greater than the rise in Memphis and 9
per cent more than Little Rock, although it is
better than the showing of Washington, Rich
mond and Baltimore. The confusion becomes
greater when figures are presented which indi
cate that while in a number of eastern cities a
decline of from 1 to 3 per cent took place be
tween the middle of September and the' middle
of October, in Omaha prices went up 2 per cent,
while in Baltimore, Philadelphia and Kansas
Gty there was no change.
Having obtained these statistics, the next
undertaking should be to explain them. Why
should Omaha, which lies amidst bountiful fields,
in the very center of the food belt, undergo even
the slightest increase in living costs while other
cities which are supplied with much of their diet
from these very fields and pastures, enjoy a drop
la prices?
As near as can he estimated, the demo
crats succeeded in carrying Kentucky and Vir
1 nnni im the recent elects, but little else.
Armistice Day: 1918-192!.
Three years ago today such a shout of joy
went up from earth to heaven at never before
tad stirred the echoes. It was the universal ac
claim of the close of the most terrible war that
ever involved mankind in its destruction. All
lands and all peoples united in it, for it brought
to victor and vanquished alike the relief that
follows passing of a dreadful scourge. No time
was taken then to reckon up the accounts or to
strike a balance; Indeed, it is yet too soon to do
that accurately. Unrestrained the long repressed
feelingsof the world found vent as the stress and
strain of the campaigning fell away from all, and
the day was marked with tuch rejoicings as
never before swept around the globe with that
electric thrill that marks all men as one family.
Today, the nation stands at the bier of an
Unknown Warrior, one who paid in the last full
measure for Liberty, Beside America we find
the greatest nations of the earth, vicing with us
and with each other in expressing their honor
able sense of obligation to this soldier who sym
bolizes to all the devotion that won the battle
for free men. Humbly and devoutly the nation
joins with them in acknowledging the service of
that valiant group of which he was one; their
valor the proven buckler behind which the future
lies safe for mankind. His tomb in the mag
nificent cemetery at Arlington Heights, where
sleep the honored dead whose lives were
pledges for Freedom, will always be a sacred
spo-
When Spring;, with dewy fingers cold,
Returns to deck their hallowed mold,
She there shall dress a sweeter aod
Than Fancy's feet have ever trod.
There Honor comes, a pilgrim irray,
To bless the turf that wraps their clay,
And Freedom shall a while repair
To dwell a weeping herlt there.
All the things hoped 'for as a result of that
war have not yet come to pass; but the passions
that surged so high are surely being stilled, the
fires of hatred are slowly dying down, and obli
gations forgotten for a moment are being re
sumed. Injustices remain, wrongs have not
been righted, and many hideous evils still lurk
to vex the world. Yet none of these is sufficient
to daunt a race that could face and conquer the
awful monster that threatened to rend and de
stroy all our ideals and our institutions.
Marching today behind the bier of that silent
soldier, the people of America will resolve as
highly as they have in other days that the sac
rifice of the men who are represented by the
Unknown shall not have been in vain. Armistice
Day, 1921, sees us nearer to the fulfillment of our
hopes, a realization of our aspirations, just be
cause we are true to our ideals. Our destiny
is that of mankind, our hope the hope of the
world. To all the world the message goes out
again today, that America may be depended
upon, and that silent tomb in Arlington will ever
stand a symbol of that pledge.
Two Great Works of Art
Where Ceremonies Will Be
Held Today at Washington.
Make Omaha a Great Airport.
The. only important air route in the United
States passes through Omaha. This trail, blazed
by the' air mail, promises to become the main
highway for mail, passengers and light freight,
with branches radiating north and south. Start
ing in New York and passing through Cleve
land, Chicago, Cheye'hne and Salt Lake City to
San Francisco, this 2,650-mile path through the
skies is considered by experts to be as definitely
established as though it were paved with brick.
Before it can come into general use, how
ever, thoroughly modern air terminals must be
provided. Omaha must look forward to the time
when it will become a real airport, into which
airships will sail as seacraft into a harbor. The
small landing field which has been maintained
by the Chamber of Commerce near the Ak-Sar-Ben
grounds, is admittedly inadequate, and in
addition its lease is about to expire. The cham
ber has endorsed the new location on the north
side which was used in the recent air meet.
A permanent choice must soon be made.
Aviators and aeronautical engineers say that the
new field is well adapted to the purpose. It will,
be necessary to raise the center, install tile drain
age and cover the surface with grass. The
straightaway of a mile and a half is considerably
more than the minimum standard of a 1,000-yard
runway. Planes may take off in any direction
from which the wind may blow and still land
safely in the event of engine trouble. There are
no high obstacles, and there is room to expand.
The location near the Missouri river will be an
aid to night flying, since the gleam of the river
provides a clear trail.
In good time each city along the airplane
routes must establish a municipal airport. Oma
ha's new charter permits the voting of bonds
for this purpose, but it is hardly to be believed
that the public is yet ready to approve this ex
penditure, beset as it is by so many pressing
needs. Until the right moment comes, private
support of a landing field will be imperative.
In all senses of the term, Omaha's future is
in the air. A well planned airport will add im
mensely to its importance. As new air routes
are established and air transport services are
operated between the centers of population, the
presence or absence of suitable terminals will de
cide their course. Omaha now has the advan
tage, but to hold it is not a matter of chance,
but of planning ahead.
(From the Washington Star.)
The ceremon!c at Arlington on Friday will
direct national mention to the structure that has
lately been added to tne national capital though
located in Virginia. This vast amphitheater of
purest white stone has no counterpart in Amer
ica for architectural perfection and proportion,
Its locatiou is unsurpassed, on the heights over
looking the city of Washington, with the Poto
mac in the near foreground and the buildings and
monuments of the federal city stretching back
with the Maryland hills as the horizon. Out
wardly, especially when viewed from the front,
the amphitheater Is not as striking at when it
is entered. Then it wonderful appeal is felt. Itt
proportions are perfect, and its dimensions ap
propriate to the use for which it was designed,
In the clear sunlight it shines jewel-like. Empty,
it it eloquent of possibilities. Filled on cere
monal occasions, it is an inspraton.
In this structure will gather today notables
from foreign lands and representative American
officials and citizens to participate in a ceremony
of unusual import, the rebunal In American soil
of an unknown soldier who went to France under
the Stars and Stripes to fight in the world war,
Those who planned the amphitheater had no
conception Of the possibility of such a use, such
an occasion, tor years there has been an aniphi
theater at Arlington, but compared with the new
it is a tiny place, not much larger than the
rostrum alone of the new creation. But the lack
of size does not lessen the significance of that
old place of gathering. It has been the scene of
many stirring assemhblages. Some of the na
tion's most eloquent men have spoken there. And
it should be preserved always as a touvemr
of the the first work of national commemoration
of sacrificial patriotism.
Across1 the river from the new amphitheater
rises the latest of the national capital memorials,
that to Abraham Lincoln. Though not formally
dedicated, it is now open to the public, and
it proves one of the most remarkable of architec
tural successes in this country. From its portico
through colonnade are gained vistas of Wash
ington, even now,' in the incomplete state of the
approaches, thrilling in their peculiar vividness
and effective composition. The massive statue of
the war president dominates the interior and
gives all beholders a deep sense of the great per
sonality of Lincoln. At night bright lights shin
ing upon this classic pile cause it to stand out
in the darkness of the park and river beyond. To
the. east gleams the dome of the Capitol, that
structure of unequaled beauty, shining like a
beacon. The memorial, lower and of different
form, bounds the great park on the west. In no
other city in th world is such a scene presented.
Building Ships for Junk
Recently wc were moved to lay some em
phasis on the fact .that the nations are doing
something more than talk about reducing arma
ment. The news that a number of high class
vessels, none of them a dozen years old, and
stationed at Mare Island navy yard, had been
ordered into retirement preparatory to being
junked, offered the text for a short pointing out
of the folly of expending millions in building
ships which, in the course of a very few years.
will be declared obsolete and unfit for "action,"
although still seaworthy in every respect.
The other nations which will be represented
in the approaching conference called to consider
the limitation of armaments, are now, and have
been for years, as we have, pursuing this plan of
retiring and junking, after a few years of serv
ice, vessels which it cost vast sums of money to
build. The plan has been inescapable in the mad
race between maritime powers to keep "up to the
minute" in new equipment, as a preparation for
war. A warship, in this century, is tailed old in
a half .dizen; years or less, lacking one-or more
new devices for tiring the greatest number of
shots at the longest range.,- It has been a mad
world, but, because we are all in it arid of it, it
has fallen out that, in a lucid interval, a consulta
tion has been called to consider ways and means
of at least reducing the most acute symptoms
of the mania, if a complete restoration to sanity
is not as yet hopeless.
In-the meantime, pending the lunatico in
quiriendoi our recent junk sale at Mare Island
is being thrown into the shade by announcement
of a coming event at the Philadelphia navy yard.
There the battleships Maine, Missouri and Wis
consin, the cruiser Columbia and the monitors
Ozark and Tonopah are soon to be junked. Their
aggregate tonnage is 53,000, and their total cost
was above $30,000,000. The battleships and
monitors carry main batteries of 12-inch guns
and now are declared obsolete, though all were
on active duty during the late war as station or
training ships. The cruiser Columbia, one of the
fastest' warships engaged in the Spanish-American
war, also served against Germany. Replac
ing these' ships, should the high joint commis
sion in. lunacy proceedings disagree on diagnosis
and curative treatment, would cost many mil
lions more than at first. They would come high,
but we would have to get them back, remade
"up to the minute," for junking again in a'i
few years. All the great naval powers have
been reducing armaments in this costly way for
two decades past. St. Louis Globe-Democrat,
How to Keep Well
Bf OR. W A EVANS
QueetkHtt caxarafaf avflaaa, aitatlea) aad prevoatlea al disease, aueatltlec)
to Dr. Eaa my reeeero al T Baa, will aa aaswerad peraeaally, sua last ta
, araaar llaallallaa. whan ateaapW addressed asivelaee ta aaeleaedl Dr.
fcvaa rlll aat aaaba a U ' ear araatrlba lac Individual disease.
Addree latter t re al Ta Baa.
Copyright, lltt. fc Dr. W. A. Ev.aa.
The Steady Grind
Youngstown Shows the Way.
Out of Ohio has come much that is inter
esting, some instructive, some worthy of emula
tion, and not a little that "just makes 'em laff."
After Artemas Ward, perhaps the utmost in the
latter direction is the result attained in Youngs
town at the "municipal election held on Tues
day. A man who had been a resident of the city
less than six months was chosen mayor, because
the voters did not know him and did know his
opponents, presumably. His platform promises
to oust the street cart, install motor busses, abol
ish the police force and permit spooning in the
parks. Which of these planks attracted the sup
port of the women, who are accused of responsi
bility for his success, may be left to conjecture.
The world outside, however, will watch Youngs
town a little more closely hereafter. It has
gained tome unenviable notoriety because of its
Industrial conditions, but may redeem this by
showing a new and higher type of municipal gov
ernment .
The worst luck one could wish for the French
"Bluebeard"' it that he might be allowed to
marry one or two of the hysterical women who
are writing him love notes.
The rest of the country still has its doubts
whether the people of New York Gty know
enough to govern themselves. t
I
The fellow who knows how to grind gets
there in the end.
Some people are always looking for sky
rockets. They, believe human affairs are guided
by the genius of luck. They believe in a Santa
Claus for adults. Ihey expect to wake up some
morning and find themselves wealthy, famous
and powerful. But the chariots of tire never
appear. '' The golden lands that lie at the end of
the rainbow are never reached. Across their
firmament the meteors of great success never
flash. t '
' If there is anything that a well-balanced man
over 30 ought to know it is that genius is gener
ally nothing but hard work disguised in fancy
clothes.
It's the steady, grind day after day in the face
of ups and downs that makes a fellow's dreams
come true. ..-
Constant application, persistency and dogged
determination are the qualities that win at last
Shaking dice with fate is a fool's game. His
tory records 'the victories of no man who was
not a day laborer in life's harvest field.
Good luck is the rarest flower that blows, and
it blossoms mostly in the gardens of imagina
tion. If your rival is a steady grinder, look out for
him. Thrift Magazine.
Civilization's Primal Bases.
They are burning corn for fuel in the west
ern states. And in Russia hundreds of thou
sands of people are dying for the lack of it
Truly transportation and distribution are the
prima! bases of civilization. Without them we
would live and die like the savage tribes of
Africa. Chicago Evening Post. 1
ABOUT SKIN CANCER8.
The Connecticut department of
health says cancer la not a nerm
disease, that it la not hereditary,
and that there should be no dl
grace In talking or dlscuislng It or
In going to a phjrelclan for a diag
nosis or treatment.
Every persistent lump beneath the
skin is a warning sign. All such
lumps are by no means cancer, but
Innocent growths may Decome can
cerous If neglected. Any sore that
does not heal, particularly about the
mouth, lips or tongue, la a danger
signal. Picking and Irritating such
sores, crocks or ulcerations or treat
ing those skin conditions by home
remedies, pastes, poult toes and
caustics Is playing with Are.
Warty growths, molies or ouier
birthmarks, especially those subject
to constant Irritation, should be at
tended to immediately It they
change in color or appearance or
start to grow.
Avoidance of chronlo irritation'
and removal of Just such seemingly
Insignificant danger spots may pre
vent cancer.
All of this Is taken word for word
as it was sent out to the publio for
use during cancer week.
I hone they will follow it up by
still other bulletins on the same
general subject going Into more de
tail and discussing cancers In other
parts of the body.
Let us stick, for a few words, witn
skin cancers, but discuss some other
details.
Nearly every man more than 60
years of age and every woman be
yond 70 has some kind of a rough
place on the skin somewhere. The
greater the exposure to sun and
wind has been, the greater the
prevalence of such rough places.
These rough places are not can
cers. They are changes in the skin.
due partly to age, partly to lack of
grease In the Integument, and partly
to exposure to tun, wind and drying
generally.
They do not look well and they
sometimes change Into a very mild
form of cancer. When that has
been said the indictment against
these rough places . has been . con
cluded.-
As a rule they call for no treat
ment. It may be well to keep them
greased. Sometimes capable physi-
einns remove them with X-rays, ra
dium or carbonic snow.
Aa a rule thev should not be
tampered with. Scratching them
picking off the scales and all such
procedures are unjustified. If, how
ever, such a patch changes its char
acter, if It becomes red or hard or
oozes or ulcerates until a hole is
formed, or becomes sore or painful.
the chance Is very strong that it has
changed or is changing into a skin
cancer.
When such changes are evident
and the man with tnem can recog
nize them by the appearance or the
feel of the thing, treatment is called.
. Fortunately such skin cancers are
.4
What Public Really Needs.
A spokesman for the National Coal associa
tion sayt that the public should have a better un
derstanding of the coal problem, but what the
public needs more is a better understanding of
how to get the money with which to pay the bills.
Boston Transcript
He Also Said: "Shoot to KilL"
The mailt will be moved," sayt Postmaster
General Hays, President Grover Cleveland
made a similar remark on a certain memorable
occasion and the mails' were moved. Pitts
burgh Chronicle-Telegraph, - .
(The Bee offer it column freely to II
reader who oar to dlaeaaa any public
queatlon. It reqaefct tba letter be
reannablr brief, not over J00 word. It
also bulat that the nam of tbe writer
accompany eaeh letter, not neeeeaarlly
for publication, but that the editor may
know with wham be i deaUnf. The Bee
doe not pretend to endorae or accept
view or opinion ezpreaeed by corre
spondents In the Letter Box), .... .,
Farmers and the Unions. .
v Greeley, Neb., Nov. 4. -To the
JSditor of The Bee: Taere was a
time not so very long ago when
unionized labor openly despised the
farmer .as being several notches he
low the chesty craftsmen in the
social scale and general intelligence;
they were more, than willing to line
up with the funny paragrapher and
take a shot at the bewhiskered
farmer. But apparently times have
changed, for now labor shows a dis
position to make love to the farmer
to pat htm on the back and assure
him that their grievances are iden
tical, in that they both are under
paid for their labor.
But why, one is tempted to ask,
this sudden love and affection for
the rude and uncouth farmer7 Is
it real or assumed, or merely
prompted by self interest and self
ishness? .
The railroad workers try to con
vince us that higii operating costs
have no connection with high
freight rates. Perhaps that is
true, but to the average farmer
such an assertion doesn't seem very
convincing, for there surely must
be some little connection between
the two. Now the farmer is prac
tically barred from the markets by
prohibitively high- freight rates.
Here is a case in point: A Greeley
grain dealer shipped a car of corn
to Lewlston, Idaho; he got 1350 for
the corn, and he, or somebody else,
paid f $26.54 freight. Isn't this
a ruinously high freight charge,
dangerously near a "holdup?" But
the holdup in this case is done "in
the name of the law and with the
gracious , approval . of the law's
interpreters.
Who is to blame for this, the
railroads for holding up the farm
ers, the unions for holding up the
railroads or the) Interstate Com
merce commission for ' permitting
the robbery?
Mr. Daly assures us that the
boilermaker has a hard time living
on $150 a month. But he probably
doesn't know that that is $150 a
month more than the farmer gets
for his labor this year, and he has
to provide a home, food and cloth
ing for his family "yust the same"
as the boilermaker,- for even in the
country one has to wear some
clothes to satisfy the conventions
and ward oft the elements and eat
enough food to preserve life.
How long this can be kept up Is
a problem to some people, but not
to a great many farmers. For them
the problem Is already solved, for
they are "deflated" or squeezed out
of existence, as farmers, with the
result tnat the urbanite win pay
more for his living next year than
this year for overproduction will not
be a factor In his favor.
MICHAEL, O'CONNOR.
easily cured, except they have bten
badly nglected.
Treating iln Worm.
'Mrs. 8. writes to Interested
Reader! "If your little boy's eyes
and muscles Jtrk and he kicks and
toasea at night, examine him closely
for Pin worms. Vou will perhaps
find as many aa a doren or mora. I
They are little lra than halt an
Inch long and as thin as a thread.
They live right at the end of the
rectum, and are very hard to see.
Worm medicine does no good, as It
does not reach them. Injections In
the rectum are the only way to
destroy pin worms and the worm
eges."
To Ik-more King Wornitk
O. O. wrltrs: "I hsve had " ring
worm for the lnt Ave years and can
not get rid of it. In the winter It
does not worry me much, but during
the summer It Itches nearly all the
tlino. What shall I do?"
REPLY.
Kvc-iythlng depend on the loca
tion of the eruption. As a rule, pro
ceed as follows: Full out the hairs.
Paint once a dny for four days with
tincture of Iodine. After that wash
dally with hyposulphite of soda solu
tion, 20 per cent. If the eruption Is
on. the scalp have the hairs re
moved by X-rays and then treat
the eruption as above.
It's Modified Starvation.
A Reader writes: "Is a butter
milk diet taken entirely Instead of
food reducing? How much should
be taken and how often?"
REPLY.
Take nix ounces or one glassful
at 7, 12, 6 and 9 o'clock. You may
become constipated. If so use an
enema every second or third day.
Remember this Is nothing more
than a modified starvation method.
IIow to Eat Bran.
A. ' K. P. writes: "Please let me
know what you can about the differ
ent qualities of wheat bran; also
its nutritive value for human food,'
and any other methods of eating It,
except In bread, especially without
cooking.".
REPLY.
About the only difference In qual
ity relates to cleanliness. That in
packages has been protected from
insects-and mice, freed from dirt
and heated. In , other particulars
that in the sack is the same. It
can be eaten raw with, fruit, cooked
as a cereal, made Into bread muffins
or cakes.
' ,1 i
Probably Not Reason.
Lou writes: "I have been using a
preparation that Btops perspiration
at the armpits and now my chin is
breaking out quite a bit Jjo you
think It is from that?"
REPLY.
No.
m
j
Artists' Materials
Make Your own Xenat Cift NOW
and Um the Fallowing Material.)
N AMI. LAC, la all color and lak and
while) at ID par can. tor uaa on wood,
clue, ehlaa, baadi. Ivory; fin tor eandy
boiaa, ahoe traa nd book end.
BATEEKO DYU, In all hda for el.
in oa 1 1 Ik bluuie. erarf and pillow
rover each packate, S5 or complete
t ol eolori, was. brush, etc., ti.SO.
PERMODC1XO, the clay for making
beads, hat pins, pendants, elo.. and ds
corated with cnsmslaa. cane. t6e.
PARCHMENT chide for boudoir lamp
and candlac. Ready stamped with a dc
cla to be colored, at 2c each.
Oil Colore aad Water Colore, in (etc and
In tubes. The former from 10 to $7.10,
and the tube from It to aOc
The Art and Music Store
BUSINESS IS GOOD THANK YOlA
LY. Nicholas oil Company
n
The Reward
of Success
No matter when you start, you
have your fair chance to success.
, Honest effort at your work regu
lar deposits of your savings
bring a sure and just reward.
The Conservative
Savings & Loan Association
1614 Harney
OFFICERS
. M
wXW 1614 Harney VLjZ
a PAUL W. KUHNS, PnUfA. LYONS, Sec. ' Tj
E. A. BAIRD, Vice Pre. J. H. M'MILLAN, Tr. H
When in Omaha
Hotel Henshaw
American State Bank
18th and Farnam Streets ;
5 Interest on Time Deposits
Present you 4 Certificates of Deposit and we will pay the in
terest up to date and renew at 5 for 6 or 12 months.
In our Savings Department we pay 4 interest, compounded and
added to your account quarterly. Deposits made on or before the
10th of any month are considered as having been made on the
first day. . ;
We invite your banking business. .V, ' -T
All deposits in this bank are fully protected by the Depositors'
Guaranty Fund of the State of Nebraska.
American State Bank
W. Ceiselman, President
H. M.
Krofh, Asst. Cashier
D. C. Gclselman, Cashier
1
USE BEE WANT ADS THEY BRING RESULTS
Where Vnde Sam Is Weak.
, We are tired of seeing weak or
wicked state governments wink at
lynchlnpa and entirely in favor of
letting; the federal government try
its hand. But if the United States
doesn't try harder than it tries to
enforce the provisions of the con
stitution conferring the suffrage on
negroes, v conditions will not be Im
proved veYy much. Buffalo Express.
Weakness of the Flesh.
Dan Baker, the court house cynic.
remarked to us the other day that
he bet the average man kept an
ere on the temptation from which
he prays to be delivered. Maryville
(Mo.) Democrat-Forum.
A Thing of Duty.
The tariff is a thing of duty and
toy forertr. Fltchburg Sentinel.
How Much Does Lubricat
ing Oil Cost You Each Year?,
I
u i ii i
era xx b
goring -gB
: motor y 1
I 3
WW fl
' rututitttyin VKrvuu Jj
-? 1V I I
Automotive engineers say that oil of
the wrong body, failure to replace old
. oil with fresh oil and neglecting to keep
oil up to the proper level cause fully 90
percent of all automobile engine repair
bills. So the real cost of lubricating oil
is determined by your repair bills. ,
Oil of the highest quality and cor
rect body is the truest economy. It
protects moving parts against wear and
prevents bearings burning out. It keeps
compression tight and assures maxi
mum power and mileage from every
gallon of fuel.
Polarine is the most perfect motor
oil we know of. It maintains a protect
ing oil film in the closest fitting bear
ings and a fuel-tight and gas-tight oil
seal between the piston rings and cylin
der walls.
Polarine is made in four gradeslight,
medium heavy, heavy and extra heavy but
only one quality. Get the proper grade for
your car next time by referring to Polarine
chart at our Service Stations or dealers and
you will start cutting down motoring costs.
Write or ask for a Red Crown Road Map
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEBRASKA
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