Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, February 22, 1922, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE BEK: OMJtllA, WEDNESDAY. KEHKUAUY 22. 192
m
TheOmaha Bee
DA I Vi (MOUMNC) LVEN ING-SUN DA V
UlE tit rt'BUKHIKii COM TAN
tUON II. UI'OIKK. ruMiaa.r
B. !Rt.A.R, iidxrit Maiufar
MEMBER OP TMC ASSOCIATED fKESJ
Tm Awnu4 !' t auk Tta IN K a hiI, U aa.
PiVtm'f M)ttU4 I Il-a . M ail.attil f ftMa aiaWrfc
l'Ui ii a. t4h.ni. wwtnaa in ta ar. al .la
Ik l.ral pul0 4.nl t.i.1. All Ntt! f lvwUWalla f
itwd .i.a. a't tiau iMuta.
T4 Oiaafct tba It BMnlaf f Ik u4i ! f Orctt'
tstuata, Ik laMieaianf uuu4iir m autiUaui aietiia.
The circalalioa ef Th Omaha Be
' SUNDAY, FEB. 19, 1922
78,677
THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY
B. BREWER, Cm'I M.aaf.r
ELMER S. ROOD, Clreulatlo Maiuirr
t an4 auaairlba1 tolor at Ihlt 11,1 4a f (
Fabruary, lU.
(Satll W.H.QUIVEY, Nlar !
BEE TELEPHONES
'rival Branch Farhana. Aak fur iha .
ftppartmani or I'.rann Wnttd. r'ar AT lantic
Miahl 1 alia Attn 1 P. M.i Mlln'ial 1000
Vtyttxmtnu AT lantla or 10U.
OFFICES
Main OffUa J7lh anil Farnai
C. Bluff. U lt ft. South M 4tS 0. till) fit.
New Tork JH Fifth Ave.
Wa.hlnglon-Ult 0 . Chlfaao Itle Wrlly BUf
Jam, f'raac 42 Jtu Hi. Honor
Jjc Ztee' Platform
1. Now Union Passenger Station.
2. Continued improvement of tho No
braska Hithwayt, including tha pave
ment with Brick Surface of Main
Thoroughfare leading into Omaha.
3. A ahort, low-rale Waterway from the
Cora Belt to the Atlantic Ocean.
4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with
City Manager form of Government.
America Feeds the World.
Much nonsense has been lirirc about reduced
exports of farm products to Europe. A whole
(system of calamity propaganda has been built
up by democratic politicians out of the hallucina
tion that the emergency tariff act restricted in
terchange of goods abroad and accordingly
ruined the demand for foodstuffs. At a matter
of -cold fact, cxporta of fanii product! in 1921
exceeded all previous records.
The United States Department of Commerce
has justMssucd an illuminating statement which
nhows among other things that the total amount
paid for these goods amounted to twice At much
as the prices of similar products In 191 J. Doth
the volume and the prices were greater than
those of the normal years before the war. To
quote directly from the Department of Com
merce statement:
"As a matter of fact, the total volume of ex
ports of the principal agricultural products for
the year 1921 amounts to over 20,000,000 tons
compared with 10,500,000 tons In 191 J. In fact,
we exported the largest total volume of such
products of any year In our history. The prin
cipal commodity is grain, including grain prod
ucts, which alone amounted to 16,000,000 tons in
1921 as compared with 12,000,000 and 6,000,000
in 1920 and 191 J, respectively. The exports of
cotton exceed those of 1920, which is also true
of meat products, sugar, oil cake and meal and
tobacco. There was a slight decline in dairy
products and vegetable oils."
For these exports the United States received,
a little Jess thaii $2,000,000,000 as compared with
a little more than $J,OOO,0O0,000 in 1920 and a
little over $1,000,000,000 in 1915. Statistics arc
dry, but these arc full of meaning. The world's
population is increasing each year America
adds more than a million persons annually and
there is apparently ait increasing demand on
American farms.
Vast though the exports may be, about 90 per
"cent of our farnutuff is consumed at home. The
Department of Commerce states that a little
variation in home consumption may be a much
larger factor than a Variation in foreign trade.
"Unemployment and economic distress Jh the In
dustrial regions,", the report 'asserts, "usually
means a lower standard of living and a decreased
consumption of meats and other food products of
this class. The falling off in meat c&nsurnption
fclonc probably amounts to seven pounds per
capita.
Smaller use of meat quite naturally would af
fect the demand for corn, with which live stock
ls! fattened. 'The sum and substance1 of ft all" Is
that without any artificial financial measures
Europe has financed the purchase of its food,
and tliat stimulation Of the American market
through a revival Of industry and the abolition
of unemplo.vrtiCnt is the keystone of new pros
perity. ' ,
Deflate the Movies.
Some people simply Can't aland prosperity.
That seems to have been at the root of most
ef the scandals connected with moving picture
actors. Common sense would prescribe a lower
altitude for the stars of the screen. There has
been tremendous profit in the business of mak
ing film plays and quite naturally competition
for the services of popular actors has swelled
their wages,
A cut of 33 per cent in the price of film
rentals is asked in a resolution of the Motion
Ticture Theater Owners' association id New
York. They point out that there has been an
increase of $10,000,000 in the cost of hiring a
film while the amount of paid admissions to thea
ters has fallen $43,000,000. This is an excellent
suggestion,
If the producers would cut the rental price
Of their moving picture plays 'to something like
its old level and reduce the extravagant wages
paid to certain actors, the stars would be better
off, if accounts from Hollywood be true, and
perhaps the patrons of the tndvies might benefit,
too.
Now the Automobile Hotel.
Even with 'its wide streets Omaha is feeling
congested by the long lines "of motor cars parked
'along the eufbs downtown. Sometimes, especially
eftef having looked in tain along Farnani street
for parking space, motorists may wonder what
arrangements will be made in the future for the
rapidly increasing automobile traffic
Chicago comes forward with what is called
an "automobile hotel." . The plans call for a
25-story building capable ' of accommodating
more than 1,000 cars. Similar buildings, it is
said, are planned for Cleveland and New York.
A feature of these establishments is to be a regu
lar hotel lobby, heavily carpeted and equipped
with tverjr luaurjr $t4 coniiience. Suih tenr
ice, of course, roU dearly. The ha drive
car at a ntfaswe of economy will not frrl in
.-lined to regi.ter at thf.e hotels, pnubtte,,
however, thru are enough drivers wh rlaii't
have to think ef txprn.ra that will fk Ihrir
cars indoors and tip'tain t$ five more room for
others outside.
American Right, Abroad.
When J'rrf idrnt Wilson's second term of tf
fre was drawing o a cke he recalled (he
declaration of the Baltimore platform, on which
lie was first elected, to the effect that American
ciiueni would It protected in their legitimate
butinrtt anywhere on earth. This was sorely
neglected in the cae of Mexico, and was ignored
la a considerable degree during the first two
years of the World War. However, the nature
of the iiundaUrif following the Treaty of Ver
sailles brought the matter prominently to the
front, and the one thing that dlillngulahes the
fhort stay of Kainbridga Colby in the office of
secretary of state is his note to the Hrilisli for
cIkii office on the subject of American rights in
Mesopotamia. Secretary Hughes promptly and
emphatically reiterated what his predecessor had
set up, and this is now agaui presented as a live
topic.
The mandate is not intended to he adminis
tered in any way inimical -to the rights of na
tionals of any country, and especially will Amer
icans insist on equal treatment of Americans in
the mandated territory. The princlphj invdlved
in this is well established. A mandate carries
with it guardianship, and not exclusive privilege,
and the obligations of guardianship are such as
icquire the efficient administration of the man
dated region for the benefit of its inhabitants,
Mid do not confer the right to monopoly of ex
ploitation. Kecoguition of this principle by all
wilt add greatly to the prospects of restoring and
maintaining international tranquility.
Of one thing all may be assured, and that is
that under the republican administration of
American national affairs, citizens of this country
will be protected in their rights, anywhere on
the face of the earth.
Collapse of the "Roma."
Addition of another tragedy of the air, that
of the collapse of the giant airship, "Roma," and
the fate of those who were carried down to
death with the wreckage, will shock Americans.
We may never know the exact cause of the
failure; evidence that might have been left will
be destroyed by the flames that demolished
whatever was left after the explosion, and any
conclusion as to the weakness or fault must rest
on conjecture and tiot on actual knowledge.
What is known is that the big ship had been
well tested in Italy, by trial flights and in actual
service, and was considered stable and air
worthy. Flights to various cities of the country,
among which Omaha was included, had been
planned to give further tests to the vessel, and
to enable the aeronauts of the army to carry
oil a series of investigations that would be of
service in connection with development of
aerial navigation, It Is reasonable to assume that
whatever the cause for the disaster, it was some--jsj
sb.w jt Se pojDadxaiut 'OJjtioj puoXsq Suiij
riblc. Those who lost their lives in the wreck
will be carried on their country's rolls as men
who sought to add to the general store of knowl
edge, to advance the cause of human good. Their
fate will Only encourage others in pursuit of the
science, to the end that in time the passage of
the air will be made as reasonably safe as has
movement by land or sea. Man does not aban
don such a quest because one or many attempts
fail, but persist until victorious.
Normal School Nonsense.
Nebraska's board of normal school managers
has on many occasions drawn criticism by its
acts, some serious, others merely good'
ilatured objection, but it has never fully merited
the attention it is certain to receive on account
of its latest outburst. It is all right for the board
to Set Up and maintain a high standard for per
sonal conduct within its jurisdiction but when
it assumes to correct the- manners of those it
Can not control, it appears to be going some
distance afield in search of trouble. Smoking dis
pleases a great many people in the world, yet
there- are some so perverse as to cling with fond
ness to tobacco in one or another of the forms
in which it is presented for use. Men and women
alike are accustomed to smoking, and some very
able men( whose mental and moral equipment is
on a par with those of the school board, defend
with reasonable force and effect the use of the
hicotltious pfaht. The action of the Nebraska
board probably will have little effect on cither
of the great schools that come under its dis
pleasure, but may possibly deprive some of our
teachers of equipment they will need in order to
Successfully compete with a world that Is hot yet
entirely free from the tendency to do a great
many things that do not seem right to those
strict moralists who want to exclude from man's
use tobacco in any form.
It is all Very Well for the vice chairman of the
railway executives to scold the farmers for not
raising more meat animals, but he should look a
little farther into the case before he accuses the
feeders of neglecting their opportunities, Quite
a number recall how they had the society of the
pigs to pay them for their corn,
The death ef johrt F. Shafrotli will recall to
the minds of many Nebraskans pleasant
niemeorics of this really able Coloradan. His
title of "Honest John" was gained by deeds
rather than words, and his life was att opCn evi
dence of his sincefity in all he Undertook. s
. John D. having Sanctioned the marriage of
his granddaughter to a Swiss riding master now
knows how some other good American have
felt at a similar moment.
The 1-cent verdict for the American Legion
in the libel suit carries with it the vindication
sought, and that was the main point
Electric lighting experts propose to make a
statute shimmy.. Jers,ey .lighting has done that
frequently. i
Chairman Fordney says the house will pass
a bonus bill, which is equivalent to having it
&ne.
It is none too soon to start the spring rains
for Nebraska. .
However, Herbert Hoover is accustomed to
having senators oppose his plans.
"Mayor Jim" has them thinking, all right.
Paving contractors are hunting for work.
The Husking Beiv
Its Your Day
Start ltWihaLau6h
REAL FOOD.
(Indicated to Our "Maw.")
Throughout the week 1 til of thing 1
i tut do not Mtufy.
I gulp down torler; rJ rw on tfW
I 'mil 1 nearly cry
Willi rJ.'e at dishes t'ui I get
In restaurants and such, -'
There are nnr ( frr it tf
.No foodstuffs I can touch.
There's corned b'ff lush that no one knows.
W'hat'a in it. Then there' a slew
That looks as if it ailed for weeks
Urforc it tome to youj '
There's ham that seems la le all j!t.
I'otators raw then some
Viiliiittcred bread. I rat until
My nerves ate all undone,
BUT
When otd SutnUy rolls around
Ami 1 ho home to cut
Oh. man! The Iticiou tilings I sec
To rat there is a treat:
There's roasted pork and apple sauce,
1'oiatoc inanlied: then cske,
Deserts, Ri:.L FOOD! A million for
Those dinners I won't take.
Drtitus.
And by way of
PHILO-SOPHY.
Too many people spend all of today talking
about what they did yesterday and what they
are going to do tomorrow.
Looks like we'll have to put on an organized
hunt for Normalcy. Nobody teems to be able
to find it alone.
e
By the way, T'ltilo, I have a hone to pick with
you. ADotit halt a year ago l kickedini with a
contrib. It hasn't been stereotyped yet. No
fair reneging. Brutus.
Dear Brutus! I wouldn't knowincty. you
know. I have looked myself bimbo-eyed sqiut-
ing for your lost contrib. It couldn t possibly
have but no, I always paw over the contents
of the waste basket before consigning it to the
unknown from whence no scrapped contrib. ever
returns. I don't care any more about a snappy
offering such as yours invariably are, than I do
of my weakly pay check.
Lxcusc it, please?
THE FRESH THING.
(The tune is funnicr'u. the words.)
A woman and child approached the railroad
ticket seller's window.
Two to Duluth. she chirncd.
"Teedle dee dec," he responded, as he chucked
her under the chin. C. S. II., Burke, S. D.
A chiropodist can out-talk a barber. Hast
ings (Neb.) Tribune.
And yet he always remains at the loot ot the
class.
Let him who. etc. cast
first stone..
"Accused of Wanting to Live Nearer Sa
loons," says a headline.
Since when did at get to be a crime?
OUR ACADEMY OF IMMORTALS.
(Nominations always open.)
I'hilo:
Is the Mr.'Gumo of the Fontenclle anv rela
tion to Andy?
Mr. Stehr does conduct or run a meat mar
ket on North Sixteenth.
Mr. Blunt Goruni is a Morris employe. He
must' have done good Work during the strike.
THc lark in Chi. who took out an injunction
to prevent the girl vamping him is called Heller.
Must be some mistake, about that name.
, -Maque.
Yeah, and did you notice the yarn about the
champ lady swimmer? If you want to learn to
swim go to Helen B. Happy.
CUT OUT THE JAZZ CUT OUT
THE SHIMMY.
.''Will the removal of the brass band from the
radiator of the new Ford cars make them less
noisy?" Chadroti Journal.
ISN'T IT THE STUFF?
"No one love & fat man,"
Is the trend of many rhymes,
But we contend that that man
Is popular at times;
A maid will think a fat matt nice;
Her ideal and her beau
As long as he'll produce the price
Of box seats at the show.
CONTAGIOUS AND VIRULENT.
Deaf Fhilo: I've been glancing Over your
int. col. past six mo. Tried sev. times to dope
out contrib. Captured idea but couldn't get har
ness on. Answer me these:
(1.) Is writing rhymes an art?
(2.) Any known cure for chewing lead pen
cil? , Fox.
Dear Reynard: (1.) Sometimes. More often
gets to be a habit or disease.
(2.) Try typing 'em. You can't chew a type
writer. MENTAL TELEPATHY, STOSE.
"So I've opened a wireless Station
And thrown away the key,"
From poem by Ethel Meyers in Htisking Bee
Oh Feb. 12, in re. which E. Fordice, 2209 Leav
enworth, dot, dashes to inquire, "How could she
send messages if she threw away the key?"
MY HOSIERY.
The hours I've spent in darning sox
Are as a nightmare Utito me,
1 look them o'er there in the box,
My hosiery, my hosiery.
I pass the needle in and out
Among the holes both large and small,
And in my mind there comes a doubt
If I can ever darn them all
Six pairs of heels, six pairs of toes
Into the "finished" box are tossed,
And when at last I start the seventh I find
There's no more floss, hurrah!
There's no more flosS. S. F.
Tim says he knows a man so contrary that
he would oppose the Resurrection unless he
could bfow the trumpet and girt the order to
arise.
Our idea of a kind and thoughtful husband
is one who will read aloud to his wife while she
washes the dishes. x ' -
GOOD NEWS.
The icemen say there is a bump
Er crop of ice,
- And so this year the say a slump
Will hit the price,
The chief difference between i man and an
automobile is that an automobile works better
when it is tired. .
AFTER-THOUGHT: Buy the weigh, a
thunk of ice is one thing that doesn't expand With
tie heat. FHILO,
How to Keep Wei!
$, pa w. a gvA.s
QtwaltM lMUfi fclaa. aaalla.
m a4 iia t aM. auk
miii.4 t Or, . r r (
1a , eiU is avtiMMlIf
autjatt to ptft liamaiwa, kMa a
m4, aJ..4 aanat t
teu. Pi, ftiat w tit Ml pak
4 ('' mr an, it far tMitMu!
'wi. AeatM laiia.t to i f
lk 0a.
ENDOCRINE HARMONY.
Ir. Hi. rut a ,M.im hft.-r Jlrown
Ih.i.l tlidt Urr ait ctlii'l of til
boity, mind, ami Ul-poaliiim.
However. Iitteil ef making three
divUlona, he liea nijini and djia.
tliloii ti..tlier, au, then Hp the
foiiiijin4 armiii lulu ili.a. nf ihu
1'i.iy, I'v Mitrihiiitnir ili.,is. of in
iili!ijtiH i,t Mimi tnljsltt m called
uihrane of the rimtlfga k In ml a.
Winn i: i.f i im h aidiorlam
or wnii'lt lie rliiiklli e:
j I. fteaaotiina by t rirtlon
t'niln ui'tloit) uli .no in n inkn .l.u-
only In Hi iil.kii,.,, f nny fune.
lloiiltitf i,f Niiy f id,, rnit'ii rimt or
Ibhiim nlinili'M kUii.UI. and Ihu Lit
j I'T . l)l. I II I. in in lint imwillilA iJlll'lllK
'. I'.igo, inirt'lv crrrlirntlunal
roHMOIIIliB I llliiiwt. llllkaa r
koii n iMMtaihl after ilfalh.
8. No man I burn free. Through
put lire Ha la a. input e of hla emo
tion. a. No 1 mm nro equal, before
iim ww nr oincrwiHi.
4. Kitmlity of opportunity U lin
prnnlMi..
5. Tim mim of Mm e xnerk-nra of
Mankind throuKlioiit the uuca Ik
tlio only bam for aoelal onli-r. Thla
exiicrifiicu tin ahown that the inoro
'oiiiuiiiit Individual filial control
the Ipm competent In i.rdr In n
euro the Kieuiekt roo.I for both,
ami thua tho wciruro of noiiikliul.
. Tho Individual with tho better
ciuliiion of rndocrlmi harmony In
Hlwuy the mori competent. The
Individual with tli arrater porver
xloii of endocrine Imnnony I nlwnya
tns ion coinpcti'iit. tmth In body und
In fprehrullnir fucully.
7. Mini docM not rrnaon with Ma
lira I n alnnc, hut throiiRli the mutual
und harmonious functloiilna of tho
content ef tho ekull and all of the
endocrine of the two automatic
(vngul it ml vi'ciitBtlvel system.
a. Any dlhtui bancs of nny of thews
Intc-rrcluted croup prevent, cerebra
tion, if octet! upon to motivate ac
tion, in iilwaya (lcntrucllve of notinl
and political order.
3. iirror of endocrine balance In
mnle and fenintea of the specie
have produced many feminine men
nnd more nioaculitio women. That
instances of "pedal ability In indi
vidual of tho mnsfullno-ffminine
type has oeourred doe not prove
that women can in nny way function
or take tho place of man in the eo.
ir.oa. Nor dor tho converse of the
box conformation prove that limn
can take tho place of woman. In
both instance the physics), physio
logical, nnd pKychlcal conditions are
endocrine abnormalities and such
type are, in tho mnin, failures in
both sex characteristic.
10. Any theories ot aoclnl nnd po
litical economy that nro not founded
upon a thorough understanding; of
tho function of the endocrine in
their relHtlon to the determination
of the characteristics of tho indi
vidual, and tints the determination
of the nature of tho masses, are as
house buildcd on the sands.
11. The quality of the cerebration,
both emotional and intellectual, be
in dependent upon endocrine nnd
cerebral balance of function, and
thft balance being subject to Con
stant derangement, the predicate of
any postulate or proposition, and
thereforo no theorem of economics
1 ever finally proved.
12. Mallnperln. both of bodily
inferiority and of social discontent
(and by this I mean exaggerated
estlmato of oppression, exaggerated
class consciousness, etc.,) are evi
dences of endocrine-cerebral har
mony disarrangement, and the lat
ter is most dangerous to Society.
That OileajEO Itch.
B. J. T. writes: "Your article re-,
gardlng itching of the akin, which
appeared in your column this morn
ing, reminds ma of an itching I ex
perienced until several years ago,
when I discovered the cause, which
was wearing close fitting under
clothing, which wore the hair of
the slun down to or close to the
roots.
"A young doctor told me that one
of his professors had said that ex
cessive cleanliness, too frequent
bathing, often caused itchiness of
the skih. As I only bathed once a
day, and had been doing so since
long before the itching began, I did
not think this applied to my case,
and the obvious remedy did not ap
peal to me.
"During a short visit to Chicago a
druggist told lue it was 'winter itch.
I did not believe him, for 1 had
heard, as I believed, of all sorts of
itches, and I had never beard of
that. It must be some kind of itch
noi.niiaf tr, r'hicnorn. If there was
such an itch, and I bad not been
there) long enough to have adopted
the habits of the natives.
"I had oftoh noticed the hair on
my legs where the itching was
worse was tubbed off, and never
suspected that this was the cause
and hot the result of the trouble, 1
"I changed the texture of ray un
flerwear and tha itching sooft ceased
and did not recur."
Tuberculosis Suspicions.
M. O. E. writes: "1. What are
some'' of the sure symptoms of tu
berculosis? "2. Can one be afflicted without
knowing it?."
REPLY.
1. There are no sure symptoms.
Among the symptoms which cause
suspicion of tuberculosis, some One
or more of which are very apt to be
present in each case, are: Cough,
afternoon fever, easy fatigue, loss
of weight, loss of color, hemorrhage.
2. Yes.
Heavy Cold? Chest
M Clogged Up?
DON'T let It get a start, tit, King's
New Discovery will get tifcht
down to work, relieving the tight feeling
in the chest, quieting the racking
cough, gently Stimulating the bowels,
thus eliminating the cold poisons.
Always reliable. Just good medicine;
made to ease colds and coughs.
For fifty years a standard remedy.
All the family cad take it with helpful
results. Eases the children's croup.
No harmful drugs. Convincing, heal
ing taste that the kiddies like. At all
druggists, 60c
Dr. King's
New Discovery
For Colds and Coughs
feel Badly? Bowels Sluggish?
Haven't any pep" in work or play.
You're constipated! The stimulating
action of Dr, King's Pills brings back
old time energy. All druggists, ZSc
D PROMPT I "WON'T GRIPE
X. Kings Pills
Tk Km aflfi lia aduaai rrwiy I Ma
"" m a l-rite pMi.ii
rll. l lmw.ll thai IrflH, f
aMklr k'WI, bm tin to dt.
Iw U.i.la Ikai h ,wi f Ik t.ll.t
i-m, rh Intra, w afrMMMif
' trnl.il. !. fcui h4 ail.. !
kMi aim otuMN u I .iraiia. Ik St.
4nr et pn,m4 a radura aw rri
ttM mt iuu.u rti,m ) cm.
tlMMtdrMI la lb Irllrr Hal.)
l or ilio 1 nalic.
Wiiliou, Neti. jvb. 1.T. the
Mltur f The H.-: Aiircpn i.f thr
nw irealba mid thnr proappi't f
aurvivliitf ttm a.iuinlet f it, -....a,..
e be apace nay flint we date
bllely ! ouninp.l evidence f r.
Hulling fc.nuiy in .-him of oVm.,.
ratio iit ukpafivra. The l.lmu.tii '
Hlur liw a tu t. iomk lli.it "iha .-1
Hon, , ioiihm, buna tvlili Mr. Ilnr.l
I "if In tinting tho anialo In ratify
she trmtlra." VV have hem wntih
lot; In JtiHt i,at Hie attitude of
I lie niacin of Ibniiaht dm ibla aub
Jei t w mil, bp, nf i-utirutt wo lui.I mi
fHtt-aiivittii a in ri .ii.icati n. wi-i..i
I'll, fur th,.v M u II umvi'd. wt!
fur n a know, mi the virtue of
Ibo licw ftcitlta, vtblill III no way
nullify I rulll Ion tliut base- imne
down from Hie foundation of the
republic; tin not Miiiiifcniil,o the
Mi'iiiiih Doi-trlm. Ikiioim tho advice
of our dm piraidi'iit, tmr do vin.
b-iico in our ai'iiku of Jubilee, elihr
in uutneive or tu oiIhih, W be
lieve that all otlifr democrat lo or
aana tiro toini.cllcil o Mild Hie
pniiii nf priority f. too Star In Ibb
rpHoect. Tint m..i i.i.ii..h,.i.i .i..
ludd and liiiiiit In li spleen
and prejudice, will probably one
of tho Inst in iniiie In out of Hie
rant, jtut we predict that It will
conic. Jiikt at m Hi nt the hcnninr
ih depending on hi undefined bunk
ing sjHicoi in tide him over tho
rock nnd slum Is of our tinclmr
Icred economic bpii. The senator 1
pretty into und will probably kin
coed In livpnoti.lng oiue of u. but
not nil of t;s, nor enough of us to
i-Kcapo tho political landslide that is
Impending. Tho principal bualnesa
of tho senator' paper seem to bo
tu criticize adveiMely the present
nilmiiilMtriiiion, but Hotnetime Indi
cate Hlgns of lucidity, and we nro
wondering ir jt will ever net over
it evil way. Whllo It i telling us
all about republican fault and fol
lie wo want to call 11 uttentlon to
Ihl Holeimi. sturdy fact, that alnce
the birth of tho (I. O. V. It ha been
called to administer the affair of
tho nation 12 time and our politi
cal competitor, the democratic
lmrty. four time. You better come
in out of tho rain, for 1. I written
in tho star that tho senator who
oppose ratification by hi vote will
meet with an overwhelming opposi
tion at the bands of bis constitu
ency, torget tho league of nation,
put the World-IIeratU's shoulder to
the wheel and help to press on to
renewed prosperity. While Hie lamp
or nro bold out to buru. the vilest
sinner may return. We are hoping
for the best. C. H. GlLLitAN.
Answer "Obi ;roticli.s
Deshler, Neb.. Keb. 17. To tha
Kdltor of Tho lire: -Vhen I read
Old Urouch's letter t said to myself
lie ure hit the nail on tho head by
signing hi 'name Old Grouch. Ho
states in his letter if the farmer
W-ould Just tie content and let some
great constructive lender outside of
the farming interests, for instance,
some grain speculator or country
doctor (I would include Old
Ornueh), tell him. how to fun
hi business how much nicer it
would be.
I mircly would hale to liave Old
Orouch como out here and tell me
hojv to farm, er a doctor, or a
grain speculator, for I know what
they would do with tho farmer
they would take him for a sheep,
let him raise a good mop or wool,
then catch him, shear him, turn him
loose again to raise another crop,
and so on. I think if a country
doctor from Norfolk, Neb., and Old
Orouch from Plattsmouth, Neb.,
Would sweep their own doors they
would have nil the sweeping that
they would care' for.
Whero do you find a farmer that
will tell the doctor ahnt do with
lua tick peol'lrt, and svhf ahouKI the
fjiiiur be bord by omeoii4 that
b.ia nrvrr dona tl.i labor Oil Hie
frnt m lua lifts ami tlou'i know how
to bariiraa a iiiulu? Thank uu.
t'ariiit'r'a Unit, from IVudrr, u ni
l.iklii the Daiif auild. I won Id Ilk
In liur sour answer on old tiioinii
n't n Ihu hunt? 1 Hunk b
in. old b tn aoino tiifrr place than
I'l.iiumouih,
ANOTHKIt I'AltMKIt'H PON.
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Jacobean Oak
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It Pays to Read Bo wen's
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Howard St Between 15tb and 16th
AtststtsAtttiAitaVVSaVVVVVVVVV
WATCH US 1
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Eclipse lump, $9.25
Eclipse Nut, $8. 75
La Mari, Franklin County,
Lump, Elf, Nut, $11.00
Perfecto Somi-Antriracito
Lump, S 13.00
Advance Coal Co.
1704 Howard Street
Phone AT Untie 1813
COMING -hi RAM
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A Beautiful Piano
UPRIGHT PLAYER GRAND
Your Choice of Finishes, to Match Your Furniture
Your Budget pays the balancfe.
Ask us to explain the Budget Plan.
New Player
$395
New Grand
$635
New Upright
$265
The Arl and Music Store
1513-15 Douglas Street
Don't Pay for Carbon
A GOOD gasolene leaves little or no
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BLITZEN and VULCAN, straight run
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leave very little carbon. Both have
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add miles of life to your car and save
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They are GOOD gasolenes.
Two Good Oils are
Locomotive
Key noil
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a:
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OMAHA, NEB.
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