THE BEG: OMAHA. THURSDAY. Al'ltll, 6. IMS. The Omaha Bee MORXLNG EVENING SUNDAY. TB Ml rt'BUKHINq COMPANY fcMXiN B. I; Fill HE, fyhiiakef MIMICS Of THC AWOCIATtO MISS TV ii mi rw 4m tHtam . lauma hm M urn m t MwklMWI e 4 mm obu . ian k a a ee mliM hi IM IW. M w im iei m mm awa. aii r iwWwua at W tl4t U aua lamia. Tk Mtt UlMt, MM lalll ) IM akJl Rum s ClMV mi uixnLf ea eiieaUUoa au4ita Tka net cirtvUtie ! Tke Omaba Bn (or Mrc, 1122 Daily Average 71.775 Sunday Average ...78.365 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY a. aoewca. omi Mwr CLMCR S. ROOD. Circulaiiea Maaafar Sverv U suaairiaee baler a thla alb 4f ! AafU. ItU (Seal) W. M. QUIVEV, Netary rukue AT Untie 1000 BEE TUXTHONtS Prltate Braxh F-ithuif. Ask (or the rieteruaeal e I'eraoa Weal4. far Nlsat Calle A"T I r. M.I Mltanal Vaaartatnt, Atiaoii' mi or . officxj Mala OMee 17i aa4 Kama C. Bliilf. J Scott 61. South Hid 8. Stth 81. Me York 1 riftk A. Wualnfton 1111 0. St. ChWo IT2 Et'ier Bid, faila, r'raoca 4:i Sua 8t. Hooore President Harding's Leadership. A sentence from a Washington dispatch, re porting the proceedings in the senate on Tues day, defervet to be carefully studied. It reads: It also was said by White House official that Mr. Harding felt he alone was responsible for the conduct of an efficient administration and that he proposed to exercise the presidential appointive power in a manner that accorded with his own judgment. Along with this sentence should go the re peated assertions from democratic sources that Mr. Harding has "lost control" of congress, that his leadership has fallen down, and that he has allowed the affairs of the country to drift into chaos because of his lack of firmness and his vacillating policy. It is not easy to reconcile such statements with the clamor that is now being raised that the president is "inhuman" in his en deavors to secure efficient government by en forcement of the budget system, economy and other means. Mr. Harding has not been a leader after the manner of Woodrow Wilson, who assumed the pedagogic attitude immediately, and put con gress in the class room on the day of his in auguration. Our republican president during his campaign, in his inaugural, and on other oc casions, pledged himself to restore to congress its constitutional functions. He has not dictated nor threatened; he has not juggled patronage to secure votes. Have Ncbraskans forgotten how republican appointees held over, some for three years after their terms had expired, while the president balanced the plums between his secre tary of state and the senior senator from Ne braska? Mr. Harding is not a leader in that sense, and it is well for the nation he is not. The bonus bill well illustrates his attitude. He resolutely withheld from interfering with the power and duty of congress, allowing the representatives to frame the measure, which was finally passed with the approval of the demo crats, one of the; most inspiring exhibitions of representative government in action the world has seen since 1912. Not an act of congress is being directed from the White House, nor is it at all likely that the uproar of disappointed demo crats will deter the executive from the fearless, impartial discharge of his duty. The nation is to be congratulated that it has a leader in the White House, not a party boss; a constitutional executive, and not a dictator, sending orders across the town to the Capitol, to be carried out by a rubber-stamp congress. Democratic politicians may pretend to discern danger in this, but if they look close enough they will discover that the only thing in peril is their hope of recovering control of the govern ment at the 1923 election. Nebraska's Approaching Campaign. The esteemed Nebraska State Journal, luxuriating in the peace that pervades its sur roundings, complacently . announces that the coming campaign in Nebraska will be a placid one. It sees' no great outstanding issue over which men will get excited, no reason to stir the passions such as have disturbed us in the past. Only the desire to forward once more the cause of good government will draw voters to the polls, and these are urged to ponder deeply, consider carefully and act with discrimination in selecting the individuals who are to bless the state for at least two years. Nothing partisan should sway the calm judgment of any voter, to the end that once at least Nebraska will have men in office who have been chosen for their fitness and on their merits, and noi because of party labels. Amen I However, it will be a shame to awaken our contemporary until after the polls have been closed and the count commenced. Such a dream should not be disturbed. What, however, is to become of the prospectus now presented, that of having at least three full tickets in the field, each supported by an ardent group of energetic spell binders, who will work with fervid enthusiasm to achieve the old-time effect of arousing the public. No great issue, you say? If that be true, why did some good men and women find it neces sary to form a new party, in order that they may get a hearing for their cause? 'Or why is it that other parties are busy preparing for the pre liminary contest, which will be as warm in some regards as ever was watched, and which is but a curtain raiser to the main event? Nebraska might enjoy a placid year in politics, but it will not be this year of. grace. Maybe in 1923, when there is no election, the campaign will be tame enough, but the outlook this season is for a real lively spell of old-fashioned politics in Nebraska. From the Middle West to the Sea. It is not the farmers alone who will be bene fited by the development of inland waterways such as the St. Lawrence project Manufactur ing industry has pushed westward until nearly 40 per cent of the factory articles exported from America originate this side of Pittsburgh, east of the Rocky mountains and north of the Arkansas-Tennessee line. The producers of most other nations are much nearer ocean outlets, and consequently enjoy an advantage in world trade. Whereas the maximum rail haul in England is about 100 miles sad that of western Europe cot more. thin 500 miles, from Pittsburgh to tf coatt is 44$ mites, while the land barrier for next c( the midland, region i measured by th 1,000 miles. "Accelerated development and u of inland water ays now is the indispensable economic pulmotor for resuscitating our Inland export ers," Dr. Julius Klein, director of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, recently At dared before the Rivers and Harbors congress. The Importance of tin's to the farmers was pointed out when he said that approximately 25 per cent of our total wheat production, nearly $0 per cent of our rye and more than half our lard ind pork production is exported, with a land haul of at lent 1,000 miles. New York state is making good use of its barge canal. The government's Mississippi river barge tine is giving export rates 20 per cent un der the all-rail rates to the gulf. The coal and steel regions of Alabama are cheaply served by tnother government line down the Black War rior river. With the development of a new system of retards, something may yet be done to make the Missouri river navigable. And the Great Lakes waterway, which would open the harbors of Chicago and Duluth to ocean freight' ers, would be greatest of all. Let Nebraska Amuse Itself. Congratulations to the citizens of. Aurora, who have just voted to bar traveling street car rivals. The.e tawdry exhibitions sptread disease, vice and crintc along their trail, in addition to car- lying away money that might betttr be kept in the community for providing more, rational forms tf recreation. Nebraska towns will be wise if they set about supplying their own amusement program. How this will be done is up to each community. In recent elections some indorsed Sunday baseball while others banned it, and the problem of Sun day shows also has been answered in both ways. The question of weekday recreation is, however, the main one. Few localities have enough freaks to put on their own street carnival, that is true. Nature has not provided enough midget families, bearded women, living skeletons and snake charmers to supply each place. It is to be questioned, how ever, if a better time all around is not to be had by encouraging local musical and dramatic talent. A home grown pageant picturizing, to use a modern phrase, thcwotiders and beauties of the prairies, recalling the life of the pioneers and pointing the possibilities of the future will do more for any town than would an assemblage of cheap sideshows. People should learn to play. It is to be re gretted that the middle west has not developed its habits of recreation. The defeat in Fremont, of a public project for a swimming pool is re grettable from this standpoint, however praise worthy from the standpoint of avoiding a bond issue. Wholesome sport and honest entertainment, given a fair field, will outstrip the degrading diversions, for the taste of the middle west is fundamentally sound. Corn Eating In Europe. Of importance to the entire corn belt is the study of corn marketing possibilities in Europe that is being made by an American trade com missioner,, J. A. Le Gere. He finds that corn is used in many foreign lands, both in baking and brewing, but that in France and Belgium Argen tine corn is preferred to American. The claim is made abroad that the South American corn is smaller and better adapted for poultry feed, and that it is sweeter, besides containing less mois ture, enabling it better to stand transportation and storage. . ' Some cities and even some countries have regulations restricting uses of corn products, but wherever this is not the case bakers and brewers using corn flour or corn grits are successful. France used much corn flour during the war, but a year or so ago use of wheat substitutes ceased. The excessive use of substitutes in in vaded Belgium also has caused a reaction toward wheat. Some bakers, however, now are inter ested in the use of corn tlour, which is, given the same food value as wheat flour but costs only two-thirds as much. Corn meal sent there during the war was generally of the undegerminated kind which can not be kept long without spoiling. The investi gator urges that persistent advertising be used to push the use of corn meal made by the modern process which removes the germ and makes the product keep as well as wheat flour. Persistent educational , propaganda, supplemented by demonstrations, is recommended to remove prejudice and introduce the higher grades of corn products. ' The American government does well to seek to broaden the market for our corn growers. Pos sibly new varieties might be developed to meet the foreign demand and compete with Argentina. A duty also rests upon the manufacturers to maintain the quality of their export products. It is a fine- thing to have these facts, and more are needed. It's a little belated, but figures on the income tax returns for 1919 are now announced. The total net income reported exceeded that of the previous year by $3,934,000,000 and the number of returns increased 907,000. The proportion filing returns was 5.03 per cent. The per capita r.et income reported was $187.32, and the per capita tax $11.98. When the figures for 1921 are made public, which may be expected in two or three years, some interesting comparisons can be made. Why are governments' so slow? Let Her Flap Su(csu4 Course to Be Followed When Dealing With Young Person. For the first time since the beginning of the war, checks and warrants on the treasurer of the United States are being paid in gold without spe cial request. Now watch the man who com plained that he never saw any gold coins kick and ask for paper. t Learning to ride a bicycle at 60 is not re garded as a sign of insanity in California.' But they do a lot of odd things out there. If every patrolman would do what Sergeant Lickert did, the people would be glad to see them all made sergeants. Another Omahan has won distinction by rout ing footpads who assailed him. The practice should spread. Lloyd George may not be a wizard, but he surely has a knack of handling his opponents. Kansas City still is democratic, which ought to comfort Senator. Reed. (From the Milwaukee Sentinel.) Mr. Jf. Gordon Selfridse, the Loudon depart, ment atore proprietor, being intmogatrj fry a Chicago interviewer on the burning subject ol what to do about the 'flapper," nude a sensible leply which may be summed up in the three word "let her Hap," Elaborating on the theme, Mr. Srlfridite tul his inquirer that in London the lUpir i ie gardrd merely at a p.mg hae and U ti.t treating any such consternation a it evliilmed in this country. The populace of London, he .aid, doe not care particularly .whether t'ie (Upper bob i her hair or emulates the sex en SuthtiUnd aisteri of bleated memory. If ahe find hnrt kkicjt convuiicnt and k-rerMc, nouoJv te teelt especially concerned about it, and rolled Mock ing are considered, an intimate problem that each young woman mut solve wiih due regard to her own conscience and anatomical defect. Sensible words, indicating an attitude in I on don, v liith, unlike many London attitudes, might prifitably be emulated in thl country. The present phenomena of the Hipper are, at Mr. Selfridge putt it. a passing phae. Hut the flapper of today it only a IV.'J modrl of the flun per of every age. Short kkirts and bohled hair and jarz dancing and petting parties and all the other things about which we are working our selves into a ievcrUh condition will disappear, to be replaced by other things, perhaps even a re turn to the jane Austen school of adoleceut feminity. Civilization it not threatened by the idiosyncrasies of the flapper of 1922 any more than it was by the flapper of the mid-Victorian period. As a matter of fact, we have all been getting entirely too much excited about the flapper and permitting her to occupy a nentirely dispropor tionate space in the public eye. If we let her flap for awhile without interference undoubtedly the will be happier, for the microscopic scrutiny to which she is now subjected must pall on even the most ardent seeker for attention1. And adult humanity will be happier, too, for there is noth ing more wearisome than continued anu nraica argument about Something on which no amount of argument is going to have any effect. Not Such a Bad Senate How to Keep Well r PR. W, A. EVANS Quaaliaaa I f rmia ?!, aaaila m aa4 '. a. 14 Pr. t.aaa br fMdata at Ita 0a, kill a aaw4 inmll I la ptmpm iMBUaiwa. aara , a444 Nwlai M Ui,a. Pv, aaaa anil at awaa a'laaaaaia a aaatiba tar uUkmWJ AM' biirf i at 1a fmu it: j a merely oolitical one. to cibe at the senate. The editors ana tne pumic generally nave couaenmeu and ouerile. and nish-posh. and the like. There is excuse for the public believing so; the Amcr- : a( MnAfiinff it, nrcc t!ii wnrle of the legislative body is the worst of any in the world, perhaps not even excepting mc nicuieu ui not reporting at all. We have read in the Record the full debates on the four-power treaty, and we have found a good deal more than picturesque narAn icine 9tisi icnnrani nnvrrui nun. i uc ui.' ytl JUUOIIOIIIJ 'O v , bates have suffered from being headless, it u true; but they nave Dy no means ueen .1 k. . innil rloal nf hniiest thillkillE ......j : u urui, nf the United States dur nld mnnih unit ill nation is bv reason of it much nearer clarity on the nature of inter- national relations in general ana nmmu a eign relations in particular than ever before. That is not to say rue benaic is nuw ..... its mind. On the contrary, mese ucu- r? scrambling over the whole subject of the world i a.: . ..n anI in rrallf romOOUndlllE fact with possibility, hearsay with event, nave . . i: - A.,f.,,.,'An hi, rnnlnsinn proaucea a prouisiuus wunwui - r ,l. ,n,A n rlariiv. Wc were vague before; the League of Nations, proposal .. ,. ! Vx.., eAi.r,icrntv ana set us wuaiy generalising o.v..o,..., :. t A fu. ..Miiinni liavino- even a ine ncari i lvl . . . minimum of knowledge and experience on which a Tkr. Wnchintrtrm con- to base sucn gcncreuiiis. ,r : -' ti -.a. Unur far Sakhalin IS iron iprtnre set us up .. aww ------- -- . the mainland. America has more ,in her nnna by reason of the Washington coherence; u is . , it ( ;,ne hut fhev are items. a neuer-sKeucr mi w - - - not vaporous theories, and the ordering of them will come nexiviiiagw. The Crimes of Hoover ITkAr T-T,rf Iiqg hn in nnhlic life loilZ ..u , i,'e..rnr:cl whpn Via finds bou- cuiugii nut tj ..- ------ . ouets plentituiiy interspersed witn orraudu aim t. ... . -. t-lvi i ..m K. e, .t' other tetnai missiles, x-rouaoiy nc wuum ap prised and shocked if the brickbats were nor there. Not that this is ever likely to happen. Even Aristides had his enemies, for no other rca- At - .un. ,k.t. .nr, wparir nf hearinflT him son man uii invjr " ' V j . called "the just." Mr. Hoover may yet find that in seeing that the Belgians were iea nc m ,,.. himcir in the line of flieht of an over- jr i -.. - v ripe eggs hurled witn censorious wicm. A spirited auacK on noover is ichu'"u rr. . rL .k. rf a rattle raisers lexas, wncrc mc ihi"-' - ---- ---- association accused the one-time food controller of having "done more to bring aooui emuui.. ininrv to the cattle raising industry than any thing during the war." It all goes back to the "meatless days 01 sa- i , ... T!. IfnfA Tpvan'c rrn11(rtifin of wicu iiiciiiuij. -im. " these days is that Mr. Hoover, or his agents, harangued the American public to the effect that meat is of negligible nutritive value, that it pro vides nothine that can not be provided by other kinds of food. People believed this, which is hardly remarkable when one recalls tne per tUm mntl: dav nmnapanda. and they went in for more vegetables and less meat. That was all right so long as me wn iw but now the cattle men of Texas think it ought be forgotten. Less peanut Duuer aim mun it : 1,oii. mnltn Tiist now Mr. Hoover can redeem himself m their estimation i not made clear. He might get up an ami- ..kt. nrniincr that One OMne T roast is worth a bin full of rutabagas., but even then the brickbats from Texas might continue to flv. for when business is bad one must have snnieone outside the family to blame.-Spokane Spokesman-Review. , Is There Immortality? FitW there is immortality, or there is not. We know, at any rate, that this body and mind can be cast into hell. Yet if, by following after one we desire, one in either world, acting as. if immortality were true, we gain more and more abundant life, we can not lose by the proceed ing even if we are snuffed out at death. On the other hand, if there is a life beyond, we shall not arrive there in a state of separation from our friend, to remain in that state until our unbelief can be overcome; since we shall have discovered here that separation is not a spacial affair, that unbelief alone separates. If our experiment works we shall achieve in this world much of the value of our friend. ... If we sow sparingly we shall reap sparingly. If we give all we shall do more than regain our friend as he was on earth. The sense of com munion, companionship, guidance, inspiration will deepen at moments when wills are favorable, and he can speak to us as if he were with us in the flesh. And we shall develop faculties of hear ing and seeing into that larger environment which hitherto we. had not evolved. We shall no longer understand and think as a child, and speak as a child; the struggles, when we looked through a glass, darkly, will be resolved. We shall see face to face, and we shall know, even as also we are known. Winston Churchill in the April Yale Review. When a Pact's a Pact When is a pact a pact? When it has been analyzed, interpreted, reservationed. clarified and accepted by all of the parties to the agreement. Not one moment before. China Review, NEUROTIC BELCHERS. TfK'ra are I'liv.U una ir4h t mat wi.ire iun asiutHtiiiia will not fiinit ilia Im! for tha iiaru r niadirina. T"hr mv lhat .rtia will vl.it the d'Mlar Mier! limea tear fr a-oiiif over, rriariltraa of wneinar thvy ara uric r well, rhry milium at tun unttniiJlf. I mailn MUlipeit fr many rara In litii Moitia)a, It lniiiM-nnl al. il every day ituu I would fait 10 find toa mortem itta rnnitition Hhlili Ilia tvinnliintu Tixd Iinllrie4 on Ilia one licwi.l. anj on the nihrr, amii tuna, rtirnna palliuoy Him , he fou nil uit nioriein. (or wined there were no aynipinina. f all niBuna of I lie Imjy. I he aiuiiiKh In ttinkt iniietn4nble when It ronira to interpreting ia iui torn. The lti i iliry that Mix Mam hpIi van ffrl nriiher lieat mr rol.!. imin. ilimoinfm t. nor any oilier rii.iliil, Tltitt It f.ninot firl tieat or i-iM la e piiiiblinhril. Ttie theory a (tint Ilia pain, hartbtirn. no of fill im'kn. Iieavlneaa, dlfccomf'iri all of tlii afnantliine are felt In the lower end of llie eaiiNiia or in other atrui turea lit the iiiiiiH-ilinie vl- t-liiiiy. lr. I'. W. rlfrey, who baa a very llluniiimilnc ariii'le on the tii)it In the otoii Mediml and Kumtrl Juuriml. I In fuvor of rnntinulna In miruk of tlieao neniuiiliiii a In tha Mtutuai'h. even tliuufili they are really outaide of It. Mo there is mwaya a little air In the Moinach. Mot of thl Is air nwttllowed with food, nut what ever Its aource. It nerve am a aafety vnlve. It Ilea hs nn Mir bubble above the food level. If tho atomach he- cornea uncomfortably overdlstended. Kotno of till nlr bubble la eaaily brlrhed up, Inducing comfort. Difficult belching means ft diffi cult atnmach condition, which he chIIh valvular rundla. Tlie very pronounced belrhrm. ns h rule, are neurotics and tha belch Ins; la due to nervousness. They feel discomfort in tho stomach and this cause them to pump it out again. The vroccHB called noisy belching la an alternate sucking in and ex pulsion of air. lliccoutch, due to the stomach, starts as irregular contractions due to soma irritation; the muxcle con tractions involving the muscle of tho diaphragm. Almost none of tho rhs belched up by a person with ordinary stom ach symptoms is gas which has re sulted from fermentation. When the food in tho stomach Iihs been properly broken up by the muscles, and properly acidified by the Juice, the cuto into the intestine opens and a load is dumped into the duodenum. The gate then shuts). In tho duodenum or first part of the small intestine the acid food re ceived from the stomach Is made alkaline. As soon as this has been accomplished the alkalinity opens up the stomach Rate and a new batch of acid food is dumped out Ul U1U SlUlllH I'll. If this automatic rhythmical pro cess docs not work right, the main symptom is sourness or heartburn This sourness is not tho result of fermentation in tho stomach. In fact, fermentation in the stomach with the production of much gas and acid Is almost unknown except in pyloric stenosis, a disease due to permanent near closure of that emptying gate. Another stomach sensation Is one of weight or dragging. This is es pccially Jn evidence in frail, weak muscled, sagging people. Just Pack or the stomach lies a great nerve plexus called the solar plexus or abdominal brain. Much of the pain which is felt in the pit or the stomach is really in these nerves and is referred there from the spinal cord, in locomotor ataxia, the gall bladder, the appendix, the intestines, and the pelvic organ. The pain of pneumonia and pleurisy may be felt there. Other organs near the stomach, such as the esophagus, may reel pain. Itch writes: "My husband, who was bothered with an awful itch on the scalp for four years, tried every shampoo and consulted two doctors, but nothing seemed to help to re lieve the itching until we tried a sulphur ointment made as follows: To one tablespoon of sulphur add one teaspoonrul or unsalted lard and mix well together until it forms a paste. "Rub well into scalp and leave on for a day or two, then wash the hair well in several waters to re move sulphur. 'This will cure the itch entirely 'aii.1 da harm I bair- 'Ona appll.alioH of Una will rur any hum if i," I'mir ur l I hiu-m. Sire. A. II. wriien: "I. Will u laa M ma Know if pure r4 liver till ia good fr b4 roust? I tuu.lhmk it la fatienilU ' if t.-iiii,ia tf ft win l4a u Ukm UK PLY. I, ,n, Kin.l out the duat of Willi h Ilia iiott avmptuiit, sn4 I'lvnii wmif ty litai informa tion. f. No, Katiiit treat is not a fin,.t way to put on Ul, It is !" Itard tin l he aiuliiat li. K4iin an ounn or two of biead is bet tar t rf belter a ill mure (juanm. 1 lllia I Mi l I'UIIM). Mr. Huntington only pol l M 10 duo !r tiiiinoriutf n-a Ul.i Koy," i I' nc la rm a "Hlua Hoy ' liaa al i . I........ L. ...... Ml , iy r nun i u, a. t i ; aiiu will iot lii hi about liuii.uuueuu i until h Kcta rid nf il l.if. d , I Yourskin Is your armor Protect it with RESItJOL .Soolhinq And Hcline Irrdtlwili rasKsoatch. or cut -abreaklntheskinis &jis&stt the heAlin&at once Docs not smart orating Rt?slnol Soap tMswypreoumfL thtakinfcrthQ Res i not medication m AIVeKTIMKMKT. SULPHUR IS BEST TO CLEAR UP UGLY, BROKEN OUT SKIN Any breaking out or skin irritation on lace, neck or body is overcome ouickest by applying Mentho-Sul-phur, says a noted skin specialist. Because of its germ destroying prop erties, nothing has ever been fpimd to take the place of this sulphur preparation that instantly brings ease from the itching, burning and irritation. Mentho-Sulphur heals eczema right up, leaving the skin clear and smooth. It seldom fails to relieve the torment or disfigurement. - A little jar of Mentho-Sulphur may be obtained at any drug store. It is used like cold cream. pULBRANSEN PLAYER PIANO WationaltyfyicaL i Branded IniheBacX. , O " rrn i $70O 495 7 Tie Art and Music Store 1513-15 Doug Street When In Omaha nor WITH us Hotel Conant Hotel Sanford Hotel Henshaw Oar reputation of 20 years fair dealinc ia back of lhae kolala. Gwaata may atesi ol any aaa of Ikaaa wills Ike uraace of racaivlag fcoo al valya sad eourteous Iraataaent, Conant Hotel Company C Hotel Castle OMAHA 7 Omaha Ho wells Journal: Omaha papers bring the news that the municipal owned gas plant in that city paid a profit of $500,000 the past year. We hope that every fellow in the state who has been a "me too" to the pro moters of private monopoly will take note of the fact and do a little thinking. The cause of municipal ownership of public utilities goes marching on. Norfolk News: An Omaha judge ordered a speeder's automobile Im pounded for a month. A few penalties like that might take the enthusiasm out of some of our road law violators. Nebraska City Press: An' inspired reporter on an Omaha newspaper likened Mme. Matzenauer to Cleo patra. Later we read that the great singer wore a beautiful gown ac centuated with a marvellous string of pearls. If we remember our Egypt. Cleopatra wore nearls but little else. Fremont Tribune: One of the features of the new Technical Hieh school in Omaha is a $65,000 swim ming pool Nebraska City Press: The Rev. Mr. Attack of Omaha declares on the front page of The Bee that jazz music is ruining our youth and sup planting in their hearts the love for the real things of life. Mr. Attack, whose name indicates a forte for the business in which he is engaged, is eminently right, but the deuce of it is, so few parents belong to the Bed Slat party. Hastings Tribune: A swimming pool, that is to cost $65,000. will be one of the features of the new Technical High school in Omaha. Ahem! Omahans can find out what helps to cause their high taxes, with out going outside of their corporate limits. ADYEBTISE.MKNT. Are You Fat? Just Try This Thousands tt overfat people hava ba corns illm by (allowing tha advlca of doc tor! who recommend ilnrmola. Proscrip tion Tablets, trtoao harmleni little (at re ducers that simplify tha dose of the fa mous Mnrmola Prescription. K too (at. don't wait fro now to your druggist and (or one dollar, which Is the price the world over, procure a case or these tab lets. I( preferable you can aecura them direct br aendins price to the Marmola Co.. 4813 Woodward Ave., Detroit Mich. Thoy reduce steadily and easily without tiresome . eiercise or starvation diet and leave no unpleaaant effect. ADVEBTlSEaTKNT. BAD BREATH Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove It ' Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel, act gently on the bowels and . positively do the work. People afflicted with bad breath find quick relief through Dr. Ed wards' Olive Tablets. The pleasant, sugar-coated tablets are taken for bad breath by all who know them. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act gently but firmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating them to natural action, clearing the blood and gently purifying the entire system. They do that which dangerous calomel does without any of the bad after effects. All the benefits of nasty, sicken ing, griping cathartics are derived from Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets without eriplngr, pain or any dis agrees oie ertects. Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the formula after seventeen years of practice among patients afflicted witn oowei ana liver complaint, with ma auenaant Daa Breath. Olive Tablets are purely a vege tanie compound mixed with olive on; you win know them by their olive color. Take one or two every night for a week and note the effect. uc ana sua Radiant Block (Arkansas Semi-Anthracite Coal) - . Big supply on hand, bo we can deliver some of this good fuel to you promptly. Try some for these uncomfortable spring days and see its superiority. Price qIS) II nJJ on Four Yards to Serve You Updike Lumber & Coal Co. 4500 Dodge Street ft 1 Get-Rich-Quick Schemes The past few months have pret ty conclusively demonstrated the fallacy of get-rich-quick ideas, and proved again the advantages of plugging along and saving a little money weekly or monthly. A good savings bank account is worth much more today than many handsome stock certificates that promised immediate fortunes. ' If you have not a savings account, now would be a splendid time to visit our Savings Department and open a savings account.' i'M ADVEBT1SEMEM. MONTHS OF SUFFERING How a Baltimore Girl Re covered Her Health Baltimore, Maryland. "For sev eral months I suffered with severe backache and gen- Sutton Register: The objectors to the bare-foot dance to have been part of an Omaha school proerram probably say "bootlimbers" instead of bootleggers. to eral weakness. I could not. sleep comiortaDiy at night for pains in my back. I found your book at home one day and af ter reading it be gan at once to take Lydia . Pinkham'a Veg etable Com pound. I have had very good results and some of my girl friends are taking it now. You may use this letter to help other girls, as the letters in your book helped me." Rose Waidner, 8018 Roseland Place, Baltimore, Md. That is the thought so often ex- ress?d in letters recommending ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. These women know what they have suffered, they describe their symptoms and state how they were finally made well. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a medicine made from medicinal roots and herbs, and without drugs, to relieve the sickness women so often have, which is indicated by backache, weakifeelings, nervousness, and no ambition to get anything done or to go anywhere. It has helped many women., Why not try it? - -"a "al..". WW riTfCl'UW a - inn First National iBank of Omaha o: Two Good Gasolenes CRYSTAL BLITZEN (Export Test) 25c VULCAN (Dry Test) . . . 22c Both are straight run, and the last drop is as good as the first. Crystal Blitzen and Vulcan are powerful and have complete and uniform explo- sions. They are the best gasolenes we know. Good gasolenes not only give you more mileage per gallon,', but more miles per car. Nicholas Oil Corporation "Business Is Good, Thank You"