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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1922)
'1'IIE IW: OMAHA. SATU11UAV. SIAIttll 23. IMS. TheOmaha Bee MORNING EVENING SUNDAY. ?HK flue rituJattiKq run rati y mi-son . tri'ur, rkiun , mtB, I.. ..! MEMBER Of THE ASSOCUTEO rUS TV mim4 . af lit if awakae. H .'t llMf t t'- h M Ww..,..li f i M. U M trfu, -ai u, ),. .4 M tfc KM IMhutnl ia 411 11.14 at rVlM t t4l 4HM M )nl n IM 1 awcbe a UK 4 f lUH, Ifc telM t,lUrU Ml f.fn,ll,, '-l Tee nil clretilatioej ef The Omshe Bee for februsry, 1922 Dily Arfe ....71.3(K Sunday Avcr ..78.1125 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY R. nRrWER, CmmI Miuiw IWHK . HOOD, (wulaiMe MmM I nil la see' uktcrikee' eefere ate tkis 24 ? ef M.rth, l2i w. h. quivcv, Naur rue iiy jq coiiff f.tw!. joined iH the republican inJuriijf m supporting tf Jordwey bill, The ifut)!i(in pt$ . fur iltt Item and 41 jgtiii.t; th tJfiuKMiif vote U W far and iittit. If the. drmH-rt newspapers au4 crttoit r 19 continue attack upon the Fordnry j!n, Ihrjf nmU proceed itH the knowledge. lh( hey lte no iiiflueort upon the members of t!i4?ir own party ho hold the re.ptwtibility tf action. They way oppee l.e re public an house (Un lor a bonus by woid, but their jarty rep irirumivri in the hmie have approved It by rVrd. , PEC Ill-ErHOMJ Frnsie Br.nfh lufhinf, A.k fr the t'rrieent or frn WaniH. I ar AT Untie Nuhl (all. Aft.r 10 r. H i KtJitnrUI 0CQ trrt.iii, AT Untie 0;l r ISIJ, 0KFIC Main Offlr. ITih n4 f.rn.m C. Bluff Stoii bl. ftonih lti0 4 I. tlih 8U Hm York Hi iflli A. Wuhintton-jan C. Si. Oiir.go tTJO S(i BIJf. J'.rii, rn- ;!0 Bu SI, HoMr , Ratification of the Treaty. 1 lie four-power Uealy, unJrr which the Lniie4 Siaic.4, Urcat Itrjuin, I'miicc aiiiTJajiaii 9gtte to 111.-1i11t.ti11 the peace of the world $0 tr n the l'acilic ocean h concerned, has been rati fied. The senate Rave it the substantial vote of t7 to 27, or five more than the constitutional ma . jority of two-thirds of.tliosc present and voting. . An outgrowth of the arms conference, not Contained in the agenda, but found to be nccci , sary in order to make effective the coin ; pact for the liniitation of navies, the four-power ' treaty has met a remarkably stubborn resistance. Tart of this emanates from those so-called "irre , coucilables," which includes Senators Johnson, Borah and LaFollette, and part from the demo crats, who sought only to make possible political capital out o fan effort to discredit President Harding and Secretary Hughes before the world. - Some, phases of the debate were astoundingly ( unprecedented, for example, the deliberate chal lenge of the veracity of the secretary of state, made by Senator Borah, who questioned whether '. Mr. Hughes had writttcu the truth in his letter " to Seuator Underwood, and Senator Borah's ". equally remarkable attempt to discredit the presi . dent because a New York attorney said an un-- derstinding had been reached by and. between . the United States and England with reference to a naval policy to.be pursuqd as against Japan. Democrats confined their, attempts mainly to offering amendments or reservations, embodying features of the League of Nations Compact. These were varmly defended by their proponents, most of whom especially appealed to possible prejudice , of foreign-born citizens, as"'the German -and j Irish against Great Britain and the Russians.' ; These" efforts to distort the treaty were met by . resolution opposition, but were persisted in to the ; very end. , 1 The ratification of this treaty tusufes the com- pletion of the vvork'pf the arms conference," and ;1 denotes a signal '.ruimph for President Harding' ; un n'S attempts rot carry - out ttie promises he '; made during his campaign. "All the world holds the Washington conference, to have achieved a ; great '.service for humanity, and only: political :. tricksters sought to undo it. Even those demo ' crats Ivho sought vindication for; Woodrow' Wil - son were actuated by something less than.'a sin :J cere desire to serve their country and more by a ft motive, of party loyalty. ' ' " ' h ; Artierica is now before the world as a nation where?" right rules and not Expediency; where y justice and a hope for human honesty takes place ': of the' brutal forces of material strength. The; United States has in fact as well as in name be come "a leader of nations along the path of civ- V: t , -" I Bloodshed in Ulster More Than Crime. ,: 7 The terrible state of-'affairs that prevails in Ulstef is a shock to the world. No need to par- .ticularize, or to undertake to apportion responsi j ;bilityfor the crimes that are committed there. Religion, nor civilization, nor any good cause can be served by means that have been adopted by desperate men to carry on feuds whose bloody' .roots take hold in a past that ought to' be but is not forgotten. Hatreds and bitterness centuries old are called into new life, and terror spreads trom one end of the province to the other. Free dom can not rest on such a foundation as is laid in mbrder and arson, nor is the future imade more certain. The world expects Ireland to set tle' its; own affairs, and it looks to Irishmen to establish law and order in their own land. This can not be done until the fires of fanaticism have been quenched, and men of all faiths come -to understand that political freedom includes as well xeligious freedom, and that there can be no liberty or happiness and prosperity fot the island :until men are free to worship God after the man ner of their own choosing. Ulster is today a reproach to Protestant and Catholic alike, to the Orangeman as well as to-. the Sinn Feiner. Neither of 'these can openly espouse .the work of the gunmen who hold Belfast in a reign of sterror, and both should boldly disown and (promptly act ,to stop the red riot. If a civil war must come to decide the relationship between :' North' and','South Ireland, to determine the political as well as the economic future of the island, let it be war, and ot a succession of ruth less, bloody assassinations. Ireland will not be free uniil religious bigotry has followed British ; oppression to oblivion.- v Democrat, in Desperation. The 3rttitnu pf the closing debit? n the four-perncr trrmy five a fir iew ef the situa tion of the opposition in the senate. Prrlupi never M4i tuitt an exhibition ef piitiM't petti lien presented to the oiM c wj exhibited by Srnior Keed, Ilitv'hcock, Glai and Carray, all dritwcrat. and Bouh, the iinplacattle foe of all trcatir that hold anything that looki to the etubliktiinrnt tf relatiom brtween the United Siair and any other power in ear'th, lUving exhautted every device and Used up every weapon in the arieiul of partisan politics, the democrats fell back rn what is maybe the abiolute limit of hypocriiy, and ict up at a rea son for rejecting the trraty that the niiniter who invoked the blening of God at the opening session of the conference was forbidden to utter the name of Christ. Think what this means! Can anyone conceive a mini.ter of the Christian irliiiion delivering a prayer at a public gather ing of any sort after being forbidden to mention the name of thrift? Many prayers are tittered Ly devout Christians, ministers and laymen, ad dressed to God, the Father of All, and with no specific mention or reference to the Son, and no religion suffers thereby. At the Conference were i.sac third men of varying faith, but all with the one God; even the Japanese and Chinese delega tions had in their membership many Christians, and surely no offense could be given any when a prayer was sent up to God for alt those. An effort so deliberately made to involve the treaty in a welter of sectarian dispute, so direct an appeal to bigotry and intolerance, deserves the rebuke it is certain to receive. No greater insult could be offered the intelligent Christian believers of the world than is contained in this silly charge. ' , Squaring the Circle. : Nebraska voters may now view the dish the democrats are preparing for them at the next primary election. The so-called Jackson day banquet in Omaha foreshadowed the purpose, when the formation of the Jcffersonian club was announced, with a tried and trusty group of hand:picked leaders in charge. At Kearney on St. Patrick's day further progress was made, and now from Lincoln comes "the word that makes the forecast complete. A petition devoted to the candidacy of John H. Morehead for governor is being circulated. With Keith Neville as chair man, Ashton C. Shallenbergcr and Arthur Mullen as fuglemen, and John Henry Morehead as a candidate for governor, the aspirations of Gilbert Monell Hitchcock for a third term in the United States senate now are safely guarded by men he can trust. The circle has been squared. t CJThe Bonus Bill Progresses. : " Passage of the Fordney bill by the house, of representatives does not settle the bonus issue, but it doeS contribute'largely to that end. ;Out of all of the discussion, uncertainty and even tur moil of many months there has ' come now a definite plan for recompensing the men who of fered trie limit of sacrifice for their country. The solution, does not have the approval of the presi dent or the secretary of the treasury; the atti tude of the senate' is uncertain. Nevertheless it as a definite and real achievement because' it tans that "the supporters of the bonus -at last hav reached a degree of agreement that has pro- duceS a vote of 333 to 70 in the body which is, as nearly yis any. body may be in our government, directlyVepresentative of the people.' ' A significant fact is that the democratic minor- . '-- ' - -''' ; Margot and Her Message. Many Omaha people went to listen to Margot Asquith and came away with two minds, and . maybe more. Whatever they may or may not have expected to hear, they are pretty sure they heard something else, and so can not be entirely sure i the notable lady was not, in the delight ful argot of the upper classes of her own country,- simply spoofing. In the first place, Margot has no message. She came into prominence first because as the wife of a great leader in British politics she had an opportunity to meet many notables in those moments when their visors were up and their guards down, in other words, when they were just ordinary mortals, men and women doing and saying the things that men and women do and say when not on dress parade. She sat with King George, then Prince of Wales, as he waited for the announcement of the attending physician-, that, another heir to the crown had been safely ushered into the world. Her husband, by reason of his high office, was in attendance to see that no substitution took place. On this and similar experiences Margot predicates her claim to a hearing. Democracy likes to view royalty unbraced, en dishabille, and revels in those little intimate anecdotes, as to whether the king takes one or two lumps in his tea, if he likes sheep's head and turnips, and a long list of stuff of that sort that does not matter, one way or the other. And this is what Margot has to sell. Her book is a' dis appointment to those who read it as a contribu tion to history, for it sheds no light whatever on the course taken by England. It piques but does not satisfy those who follow it from idle curios ity, for no scandal magnificent is disclosed in its -pages. It has one trait that stands out clear, the assurance of its author, in that she discloses com monplaces and attempts to make them inter esting because they are attached to the names of the great. And Margot Asquith has done what many of her like have done turned the in satiable cufiosity of Americans into gold. The Right Medicine. News item: , Roy Perkins, 1315 Ogden street, was fined $25 in Central police court this morning for reckless driving and his motor car was im pounded for thirty days by order of Judge W. F. Wappich.' v . . . ..rr- Next' to impounding the driver, impounding the car is the best bet.. - ; ;.;' ' New , York City reports 32 homicides, 83 holdups and 40 robberies since the first of this year. Property loss through the major offenses is set at more than $750,000. The problem of crime is beginning to take on the proportions of a national one. Local governments everywhere seem to lack the force or detrmination to pro tect citizens. - . '. According to'the point of view of the' reds, the "former capitalist" who has. pleaded guilty to robbing a store merely was running true to type in the act, if not in the confession. Secretary "Hughes perhaps realizes ' that " no amount of reassurance will move an irreconcila ble senator, therefore he writes for the record tinly, . - The Husking Bee lis Your Daij Start HWithaLau$h OUR CEREAL STORY. Spring In XrbratUI And eftuson the d) i Will r again rows of the succulent mif e. Green shoots a -iproutiui, in summer grown tall, An 4 uaen witn em to i. tiu.wcd in lit fall; The farmers will grow iu enough to unite, If we guarantee lhm a reannable price And as lor that surplus, we'll all do ur share With corn In some lorm en each day's bill o( fire. It's gxd for the halih and that's no cause to blush When ordering bow J el good, old corn-meal niun. Complexions grow dear without cosmetic trash, On Johnny cake, com flakes and rich succotath; torn make the boys huky, and maidens agree To "nutcir them with charm at the fall huiking bee There's engendered a race that We point to with rude When a corn-fed Xcbraikan takes a corn-huker bride, PHILO-SOPHY. The legal measure for corn is the bushel, not the gallon. March is a windy mouth, but with so many people getting their cars out of dead storage and others buying new ones, we need a sulplus of w ind to blow up all the tires. Not to mention the supply needed by the auto talesmen in disposing of their wares. "Do right and fear nothina" is a eood enough adage as adages go, but in the case of the man whose letters are being offered as evidence in a breach of promise suit, he feels it would have been better changed to "Don't write and fear nothing." BAD BREAK. , Here lies Jonas McQuake, His faults were mighty few; He made hut one mistake, He drank his own home brew. 4 -Maque. - TODAY'S IDLE-THOUGHT.' Nine-tenths of the conversation oeddled ' in this old world is telling someone something- he already knows and the balance he doesn't believe anyway. I was kept awake all nieht recently bv an aching molar, but the next clay the wife mus tered up courage to go down and have it out, and I've been sleeeping fine since then. She went to a ' painless dentist and he lived up to his advance notices, -she says. She could tell by the way he smiled that it didn't hurt him a bit. , A recent article on sanitation claims that "the progeny of a single fly during a summer often amounts to 1,427,694." Suffering swatter! Imagine what it might be if the. flies married,, . City dads, in solemn conclave assembled, have voted to assess-barbers $2.50 a chair. Barber who 'drives a tandem set will fatten the kitty five smackers. ... Great .whisker chine is wondering if this is another fax to be pas;ed on to the ultimate con sumer. : Barber who chauffeurs the little electric runabout about the base of a guy's skullpiece will now collect wheel tax in addition to regular fare. : " . Stiff-hearded , neb who boasts that he takes after.,his father will wish he had resembled the mater '.' Double-chinned commissioner and one withf 'protruding Adam's apple , will cheat hot towel artist by' rolling their owti. - ' ' Aforesaid ordinance further provides that' bar ber can't nractice until he has been in business a year.' Which is same as buying a tight pair of shoes which you can't get on your feet until you have broken 'em in.. . - Next! ,w- '-" V ' . LIGHT OCCUPATtON. , Spring poets long to: write a rhyme, Myself, I often try it, I pen an ode I think sublime , And then no one will buy it. ';'-' ' Lesseel When does 'at wine'ship sail? Vise me a passport for South America quick; before the rush. ' " ,; ' " ' HOW ABOUT THIS', TOM? - Dear Sir: Mr. Tom' Quinlan, now manager of the Brandeis Stores of America, while atteend ing school up at Blair back in the 80's tells of a teacher. Miss Annie Loose Hat, that was re quested to answer the question:' If a young hen is a pullet, what is a rooster?" Ask Tom what happened. , R. L. N., ; Craig, Neb. - A REAL' DE MOLAY. " If his heart is soft and kind, If to others' faults he's blind, If when evil crowds his brain He does let it crowd in vain Then'he's a real De Molay! If he sticks up for his right, If for country he does fight, f If when things are dull and blue He continues to be true v Then he's a real De Molay! , , Be his conscience bright and clear, If he holds his parents dear, . '. Tf when manhood he does reach ' ' He does strive to aid and teach . Then he's a real De Molay! How to Keep Well r on, w. a. ivans QuMlius wwaii k !. ..Kll.lha 4 prevmtiM ( dim.. awkaUMMl M lr, t.uit ky .. v Ik SWw. w ill k aM4 MII. wkMl M r liaiualM. k Hmp4 tli.M tmwlf I wU4. t. kill mi (Mk 4 1. ( or ,..( r Mi4Mt Summi tmiikti Uii, Bert Williams PURE MILK PROPAGANDA. It is nrl Jnfrniillin that the eltlM .f .o and 1m furnich the public htth problems of the pres ent day. Thy are not Urs r noueh to hsva tha kind f helih domtrtmrntii needed f'tr t!i prmefiinn at tha an4 they ra too Ur uml mm. tltx (or Ih tftlth proieenon f. roruea ny m ioiunn of rural jif. Or. to twi It more rruripy, ih potl whrt live in mii-lt riii are unwilling it) ty fr a derfe f tro. teiion for th liealili if funull coin )rn Ida wtih tlin nwea 'f pro- ieiton lor property which in'v pro. via ror ny police ami nre depart mnta. Tho linpa fir Improvement In h'litih roritlnlnna is In a growing Inii'leney on lha part of u-h I'iiirs ana miiiill town ( fi the facia. fh rminy will follow, There ii before ma two sTtlona nf rppnrt on a nubile hcatitt aur- vcy ntmie in i-afnyett. inn., ann Tlppeesnoe county, Indiana, In 1931. One ot tliK4deala with milk, the other wllh watr. lAfaveita and Wert Lafayette no- iwcen thiii lmva fliKluiy leu than Stf.OUd neoiita. The iHttrr placa In lha seat of Purdue univirliy, from whlrh lnmltution Dr. WUey furM forth aoma 30 odd year ago to trad the rovarnmant eruwdpa ngaliwt poor foods and adultaratcd druga. Thin renort on milk makes one wUh thut Ur. AVIlay had stayed In Purdue long enough to clean up me milk nupiily of Lafayette berore tackling the natlon.wldo reform. I find that In 1917 Lafayette had a death rate of 20.3 and in 191 one of 18.8. and that uniformly ita aatn rata runa much higher than that of the congested city lying a few miles to the north of it. The health commiimlnnor of thnt city claims that; thanks to pasteuri zation, he has not found any miiK horne contagion for six yeara and hla death rates from dtseaaea fre quently borne by milk, auch ae diarrhoea, typhoid. sptlc aore throat, tuberculosis and scarlet fever, are very low. The milk supplying Lafayette is hauled 15 mllea or loss and reaches the consumer within less than 24 hours, and often within less than 12 houn after it leaves the cow. And yet seven.tenths of it con tains more than a million bacteria, and samples were found with as high as 40,000,000. Tho farmer does some cooling, using spring water for the purpose, yet over half the milk sold waa found to be of a temperature between 80 and 90. and, the remainder ranged between ja and 99, (f the 12 nittlc prod mere he names wara aivt-n only seven had ever tubr,Mlut p.ip,J (ri whale or in pun. Tina in spiia of the gnrl estimate thai In thai aeoiimi smut. Where about nne.fifih of ilia dairy eow ara tuberftiloM, The repot ier nude 19 reeomroen dftdoim. The nioat Important waa (hat pMteurUatiMti of the milk by the urniing meuioi na nial tnanrtnlory. A eeoond waa I hat Hie enmmunliy provlda liaetf Willi milk lHrrir. I'rotmhly Ifiyeit and lha lJ. fivetie milk supply era not worae Ihun other lliea i.f lha uma una and their milk aunpih-a. ir lamyciia kiiouM mak piinieur- l'uli.kn ,.iti.liifniv krt hIh.iiI.I hII other i-ltira i.f the wma aeneral elsa. iiere a wuai i am womiering nown hera at the bottom of thla ariU I: Wli. 1 It .IiaI lii nl.t an4 veil agricultural colli ge and ita great nuiry il.nmfnl limn in iiina Influence on milk produeera and milk tntiittiira livioa' wllhln a radlua of It nillrg? VM rireal anil Crackers, Mr. l- A II m'.lta. "Via nil c-nnslder a fruit diet alone suffH-leiit nouriHtiinent (or a woman ouritig her flrat pregnancy? Ii'm ,1m..l tr.tnna.11. I A. nt. trt retain food on my atoma-h, and 1 have a aenaation of nauaea. at in tervale throughout the day. I have linnn. atrlnlW In lh fruit dial. my appetite repelled anything else." KEPLT. T do not. TIiam I. n enli. cliitm.A f hal VAllr ft 11 is due to lack of nutritional bn lance. One good way to prevent and cure nausea of pregnancy la to ant bread mnA r.rlrf.PB h.fnr Krttn If tu nt aotl during the day botween meals. This la a rula-of-thumb cure discovered and confirmed by hundreds of preg nant women. The system seeme to need starches and augars In abund ance at mis lime. Operation for Drooping Lids. B. W. V. writes: "I am a boy ot 1. T waa born with the Jld of my left eye paralyied. The lid droops n4 th.M harrllv anv atrenelh In it at all. my eye being about half closed. That la as lar as i can raise my lid. "la there nnv way I could strengthen my left Hd?" RETLT. Mnnv eases of this kind can be cured by operation. Nothing else avails. . 'Twould take too long to tell you'.'" Just how perfect we should be, -But in all it's just a problem, As no doubt you all can see; These factors make a unit, The unit is the whole, , .i. So, fellows, let us strive, And let the unit be our goal! , ' Herbert Goldstoue. . ."!' : '' ;' '' ,"i' "How do you like these twin beds?" 'asked the polite salesman of the bride who was pick ing out her furniture. ' i "Why,. I think they are cute, but " with a slight blush, "we haven't any twins yet." '. , '. . ' ,' .'. . '' ' .-. x v Silk hosiery can no longer be classed as un derwear. -:' ; ' . ,-'-:.';; -'. . s; ISN'T IT THE STUFF? ' To married men we give advice , On how to make their home life nice, To ward off strife, adjust the trials Of Hymen and bring nubile smiles . A quarrel cannot last very long i '- If men admit that they are wrong. . a - AFTER-THOUGHT: About the time a man decides to agree with his wife, she changes her mind. '':'"-;. ' PHILQ. Law Minus Ethics. - Generally speaking it may be ethical as well as legal to lock up a jury for the night, but in states where the jury is mixed, ethics are mixed also. Common sense would avoid the issue, but some of the wisest judges are lacking in that little particular. Brooklyn Eagle, 'FOLLOW THE BEATON PATH' When ShoppingIt Pays DRUG WANTS $1.00 1-pint Imported Olive Oil, per. pint .692 15c Venida Hair Nets, 2 for 25t 10c Eiona Hair Nets, doz.50d $1.10 Nuxated Iron...(89d With $1.00 box Vitamine Tablets FREE. 30c Resinol Soap 21 30c Cuticura Soap . . . .22ct 30c Packer's Tar Soap 19 $1.00 Youthcraft, for the hair, for 89d 50c Tooth Brushes 25? . $1.10 S. S. S 89d $1.25 Lyko Tonic .' 98 ' $1.00 Grant's Vita-Vim Tablets for 69 "Nature's Remedy Tablets for.i.-ilTd 35 and 685 75c Milk's Emulsion. -....48 Help eliminate the Rat Pest by using' BurnUmUp Rat Slayer, box -SS. , 60c: Formamint Tablets. .48 ! $1.25 BayerVAspirin 'Tablets, ' bottles of 100 86 , 10c Wanous Shampoo Bags, 4 for ..,.25J 30c Mentholatum 17 '$1.15, Swamp-Root 89 30c Laxative Bromo Quinine for 22 60c Beaton's Emulsion Cocoa nut Oil for 34 Auto Strop Razors with Strop and Blades. . .89 $1.00 Auto Strop Blades for ...65t Gillette Blades for ...79 50c Durham Duplex Blades for 39 50c Milk of Magnesia. . . .39 $1.25 Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ........... .98f $3.75 Horlick's Malted Milk for , $2.89 TOILET ARTICLES AND . , SUNDRIES 75c Pinaud's Tivoli Face Powder 45 60c Sempre Giovine (Jovenay) for .44J $3.00 Hair Clippers, special for 81.49 30c Colorite 19 Boncilla Outfits, 'complete, for 81.89 $1.50 Pinaud's. Lilac Vegetal for ..:....:.-...,....98 35c' Cutex Preparations . .25 70c Sal Hepatica ..45 $1.25 Piver's Azurea or La Trefle Face Powder. 73 $2.00 Coty's L'Origan Face Powder .......... .79J 50c Djer Kiss Face Powder for 37J 60c ',i lb. Theatrical Cold Cream, Beaton's, for.35 60c Newbro's Herpicide. .39iJ 15c DeMar's Cocoanut Oil Glyc .. erine or Violet Toilet Soap, 8-oz. cakes .....10 Per dozen 81.10 , 50c Lucky Tiger Hair Tonic for 39t 50e Pebeco Tooth Paste for 36d 50c Pepsodent Tooth Paste for '. .... 3Qgy 50c Orazin Tooth Paste for 34t $1.00 Krank's Lemon Cream for ......... .......... 73tf 12c Jap Crepe Toilet Paper for 7d Per dozen 80d. CIGARETTES Camels, Lucky Strike, Ches terfield and Sweet Capo- rals for 15 Cartons :..$1.45 CIGARS Don't MUs This Spacial 15c Sirena (Corona size), . 2 for 15 Box of 60 ..$3.50 3 for 50c Sirena (Non Plus), 3 for 25t Box of 50 34.00 15c Mozart, Rosa 9 Box of 50 $4.50 10c Musina 5$ 10c Tamerettes 5ci .Add . 5c per box or carton . if mailed. PERFUMES $2.00 Djejlkiss Extract, per oz $1.10 $3.75 Ideal Extract, Houbi gant's, per oz. $2.10 $1.75 Jickey Extract, per oz $1.00 $3.50 Bluet (the latest import) for $2.60 S8.00 Coty's L'Origan Extract, in original 2-oz. fancy pack ages, for. $5.48 CANDY 50c Puzzle Peg FREE with every $1.00 box of " Johnston's Chocolates Saturday. 80c Pound Jordon Almonds, Saturday and Monday, per pound . 49 $1.00 Allegretti Original Chocolate Creams, Satur day only 69d RUBBER GOODS 2-qt. Velvet Red Rubber Com bination Fountain Syringe and Water Bottle. 2-qt. Velvet Red Rubber Water Bottle. MAZDA LAMPS The Original and Reliable 15 to 50-Watt 40 60-Watt 45 Fuse Plugs, 10 to 30 amperes, for 5 Mail Orders Receive Our Prompt Attention BEATON DRUG CO. 15th and Farnam ffwa; Iks M ai(iaa htt. The daih of Uit uiUUma re. mote an influent )ti iill, eir tsinntant (( iiiiiriiriaii.e la great. er than lha pubiin that ka . la amuaed ia likely ii realua. f Afri ran da.'nt, ha had the mt.rla iiU iy ft original Idenmy huh inter. aais, the eraunauiy win, h eomes pre hul ne and. ebu git, the f.'Uliy ot Mlf-edueaihin. )ia M-ltol as the theater: (ighlly resrderl t-y lha tired huaineaa. Iml, paten he lea. lioa4 aa lha tomimruton mul p-i, lha a-liool uf Aea.'hlun, Kurii'ijea and sSooliOiliMi, Aa lha old ia adapied Iheniarlvra to tlmr il iy and emelled In the auhlmia, tlrt Wil. llama a iaptad himself id ln rra and escellad in the rldlculoua lie enliv ened many dull scene by Ins rente drollery, ami carried hlmeelf Willi a personal eluofne.s w tiiih t'lnimett tin eonaltletitioii in.n ma annniea i-nuni not eoiiimand. lie drlfied im run. dltinna periilUrly NdvaiHHgcoiiM to hut type, l-'un, disiiiHt fnun Intel, leriual or aalirical imrpiHM. am the demand of the hour and he knew poaMbly scarce knowing iw lie knew (he way In supply it. Ilia pecuniary rrwarda far surpneaed I hoes of the average profeaeltntal man. Vet thinkers and tcaihera gludly paid tribute to Ins drollrtlea and thanked him for a clean and decent standard of entertainment. Siiitt III many burnt -cot Ii imitate o li nt beft ebi i.t iiMmiain. Ilia .itila l.uiiii r was not inertly a inrl.ui.ii jf !( iu J. i,iii, ii taa an ihirr if uiu-n, viui iilmili.' ai"l aiuHlir, Ma dl'Ud lti'S tt bu fiuiiHV iliut tti r nt irminieni h. irnnit bint to aiuily, and If the l.iiitll nf M..IUIX that niskea ma wttiile wotid kin tniirerd hmia-nf lit tniMikal ! irrdaiiiiimiu e nte Ilia giHgetilta jS ti'iins an I eUhitiiila iiiei'lianiiiis nf liietmly an.f ,'lnUU' whli-tt i ttnitUtilied a III. ttng hai-kgreun-l fr In genuine ai c UimITi-,p itini.lv, Ili1i Katu'a It, V, II. II, V. Il-lifter Vutstesd fid I 'lli hliurg rlciiiuit. 8lBlrg Harmonize Your Home with a Beautiful Brunswick "Console" (Plays all makes of Records without special attachment.) We have them in all Period .types and woods. Queen Anne $225.00 Colonial 250.00 Stratford , 300.00 Cambridge 350.00 (Pa y m e n t s to meet your re quirements accepted.) NOTICE We will take your old-fashioned Upright Phonograph in trade at present day value. - , i ' The Art and Music Store 1513-15 Douglas Street Berg Suits Me KUPPENHEIMER Made CLOTHES FOR MEN , ' and Young Men $35 $40 $45 $50 KUPPENHEIMER suits are not just ordinary suits. Not by a long shot. Wonderful woolens, exclus ive weaves and color shades. Brimful of style. Get FANCY MIXTURE SUITS $20 $25 The price souhds'cheap, but the Berg label tells a different story to the man who knows good clothes. Gaberdine Coats $18 to $40 Top Coats $15 to $45 What Spring Offers in Haberdashery New . Manhattan Shirts . Vassar Underwear Interwoven Hose Van Heusen and , Lion Collars All Eyes Are on Yeur New Hat That's the way you feel but if you know your hat is right, you don't care if the world looks at it. We Have Them S2to$10 1415 Farnam St.