t PIE BEE: OMAHA. FRIDAY. MAY 12. 1922. The Omaha Bee " W0BNING-.EVENING-8U.VDAT. 1HR rf fTJBI.ISHINf) COMPANY MUXM B. UUIkkL paUulwa M, aklWtK, beaaral tUwf CMBCft OF THC ASSOCIATED THUS TV. auw4 fMM. at 1U M U mm. a) a. Imm Bt'tM la ! a. Kntkuu W t a-Mu UaSM. M H M M MMM W I t ""4 V. iM fcaai art IOMUM4 Ail nU aj M w4 i.niw ft aua rami at Tka Rm M Ml a tw ! Mm IdiM, IM lv4 atflkM". Mi ria.ai.Jlal '. M TM ona 4 M,tlUV TVa tt clrctitatlo of Tka Omaha Bn ' lap April, 1922 Daily Average Sunday Average ... 70,505 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY a. earwta. cai Mtr ILMLR . HOOD, ClrUiM Mmiw to m4 materia Mlart bm tais aw ear ei ,MI' (Saal) W. H. QUIVCr, NaUry Paklla HI TKUPHONU Prlvaia Braca fuhaw- A lot tha Pvaarlinnt ar tVraoa W salad, for Nlaat Call After I P. M i E4ltml papvtaaat, AT laalia 111 or J04J. ATU.tl 1000 omcu Mala Olll ITth and rarnsat Cat Btulls II ait . " Hla . Silk L N'W York SS fill Ava. "Taaalaitoo llll O. U tBifaao 1T?S Staler Bid farts, rraaea tit Sua U Uoaora About Property Rights. One part if the Russian reply to the Euro pean power assembled at Genoa it directly aimed . at tin United State. It louche on the refusal of our government to recognfce the Soviets, and, according to dispatches, "strongly stigmatires the obstinacy of certain power in secluding Rus sia from international political and economic life, and refusing her equality of treatment with the only object, it is alleged, the financial satisfac tion of their damis." The sincerity of the Russian in making such reply may well be questioned. Surely, they do not forget they are addressing a world that is familiar -with their assertion of intention to overthrow all governments differing from their own in either theory or practice, a world that ha felt the effect'of their effort at carrying out their avowals. If bolshevism ha made little or no headway outside of Russia, it is not because Moscow did not energetically set about the task of bringing all the world into communism and ehaos. "Financial satisfaction of claims" is a condi tion that doe not meet the approval of the Soviets, because it runs squarely Counter to their policy. In Russia the proletariat seized all prop erty, and what was not destroyed or dissipated in the process was "nationalized." In theory, all property belongs to everybody under such conditions. Here is where the bolshevist idea breaks down. One of the dearest of all human rights is the right to own property. Russian peasants exerted this right, and still resolutely resist the effort of the soviet to nationalize the agricultural lands. Famine has come to the country because of this difference of opinion among the Russian classes. City workmen were willing enough to exercise commonalty in prop- ' crty, for they did not in most instances own evert their own tools. Peasants were willing to seize the great landed estates of the nobility, but after division eaeh persisted, in asserting his in dividual right in the strip allotted to him. ' What has made the most trouble is the Soviets dicf not discriminate between what was owned bjr Russians and what was owned by foreigners. All , property . looked alike, and was indis criminately seized. Foreign governments recog nize that Russian property may be disposed of as suits the people of that country, bub resolutely decline, to admit auch control over the property of others, , "'. Pleading for admission to circles of civiliza- . tion," the soviet come denying the greatest achievement of civilization, the right of the in dividual to the use and management of what by flint of industry and right of possession is his own. Until they change their attitude on this point, they1 will find themselves well restricted to operation inch as may be carried on in Rus sia with little or no help from the outside. This is neither capitalistic nor anti-socialistic; it is anti-communist, and the expression of the chief end of organized society, that of prptecting the individual in all his rights, vested and sacred. j Vote Catching Methods Fail. Americana do respect men who remain stead fast in their convictions. Politicians may face about with each switch in the breeze of popular enthusiasm, but by this weather vane policy they fose support more often than they win it. His tory records no demagogue who was not eventually found out and discredited. For the republican party in the coming elec tions there is one sure line of policy. It mnst not allow itself to be driven by democratic at tacks to stoop to mere vote catching methods. American public life needs men who will stick up for principle.' What the people look for in Washington as well as in' every outside commun ity is firmness. Laws must be passed as part of a clear and well drawn program instead of being pushed in the hope of beguiling support at the polls. Cam paign pledges and platforms should contain no. promises incapable of fulfillment. This is a progressive age, but the people can be depended upon, if the issue is made plain, to separate buncombe from real progress. It is not enough, however, to tell the truth the truth most be made to tell. The people of this day and age may be safely assumed to be too wise to be fooled by foggy oratory or illusory schemes. That party which shows the greatest devotion to frank, fair dealing may expect to. land at the top of the heap this fall. , Loaning Money to Liberia.- " Maybe it was unfortunate that President, Wilson, at time when the United States was act ing as Lady Bountiful to all the needy nations of the earth, agreed to loan the Republic of Liberia a stipulated sum. Also, from the stand point of a southern democrat, it is particularly unfortunate that Liberia is a negro republic. However, Liberia was of some service to the al lied cause during the war, incurring some: ex pense, risk and inconvenience, and it was felt at Washington then that recognition in form of a loan was fitting. 'Now the singularly interesting situation arises of the" democrats in congress ob jecting to carrying out a bargain made by Mr. Wilson. Praising him with inordinate laudation, the leaders of his party insist on ignoring his lhtka!!y hi in I ha in.unee of Liberia. There, lure it is tircr.tsry that the republican come lo the front and give the lttl African republic the he'p that was romi4 it. fulfilling Mr. Wil son plan in spite of soma gallant gemlcmeit who might nt I so dead set against making the loan if Liberia were other than it is. Tlie.e will not balk at extending relief to Russia or any other country, but they surely do hate to see any inonry going lo help a negro republic maintain its Integrity and carry on in drstiny, Labor Board and the Railroads. A decision by the railroad labor board In connection with the letting of repair work by the roads to contractors, contains a principle ihat is tiul to the existence of the board. In the recent ee, in which the Pennsylvania road t'cf lined to obey an order of the board,' it was held in substance that the board ha no power lo enforce it order. If of service at all, the board's decisions must be accepted voluntarily by either side. Under this the order against the Indiana Harbor Pelt line will be of service only so far a the company cares to recognize and abide by il. What is of real Importance in this connection i that llie wcaknos c the labor provision of the Etch-Cummin act is exposed. Without real authority, the board is of little genuine service. It finding are of value as far as disclosing con dition are concerned, but only a the dinputauts are inclined to accept them can the order of the board be given application. The principle of arbitration rest on the willingness of the par ties to the dispute lo accept decisions, and that willingness is strangely absent in the railroad wage situation today. Only the party that wins is willing to accept the outcome. Such a condition can not endure. A basis for a workable settlement ought to be found. Contracting railroad repair work is not a new thing. When If. G. Burt came to the Union Pacific as president one of his first acts was to abandon the foundry at the Omaha shops and contract with the Featherstonc people in Chi cago for castings. Car repair work also has been let out to contractors, with varying results. On the surface it would appear that the ques tion is one of managerial policy, and outside the control of the labor board, which can not pre scribe wage schedules for private concerns. This point will likely be determined by the courts, tut the lamentable end will probably be that another device to secure industrial peace; has tailed. ! Try Uncle Sam Once More. In all the world today there is one first-class power whose credit is unimpaired, and whose borrowing power is undiminished. That is the United -States of America. When the Treasury offered for sale savings certificates in small denominations, it was no't for the purpose of securing money that could not be had otherwise. On the contrary, it was the intent to offer to the holders of small sums of money an absolutely safe investment on such liberal terms that it would attract into service again the capital that is now hiding and idle. Four and one-half per cent interest, com pounded semi-annually, is more than any United States bond carries, and yet the savings cer tificate is a bond of the United States, as fully protected by ,the credit of the United States as any issue it has ver put out. Lacking no. ele ment of safety, and promising an unusual return on the money; this is the most attractive offer ever made to the small investor. In five years $80 becomes $100 under this plan. Money hidden in any secret place may be' safe enough, but it is not earning anything. Bring it' out, let Uncle Sam put it to work for you, and the idle dollar will grow so fast you will,;be amazed at the result. : ' , Many millions of dollars are being hoarded by careful thrifty savers who are' distrustful of banks, but they do have confidence in the gov ernment, for they hang onto its money The government is willing now to take care of that money for them, and allow them a handsome re turn for its use. The Bee recommends that all such savers take up with the postmaster the sub ject of the new postal savings certificates. One Love at a Time. - Science is so often upsetting to time-honored beliefs that it is with real pleasure Dr. David Forsyth is heard to confirm one of the most ancient of common impressions. Man's love, declares this famous British psycho-analyst,' is reduced in the ratio of the number of women loved. Real passion can not be felt for two at the same time. , - . . . Common sense holds , this to be true, but common sense has ceased to be given, entire credence in these days. Cases come up in the divorce courts and in fiction where men are de clared to be head over heels in love with more than one woman at a time.- This simply can pot be true, says this investigator. Any affection given to No. 2 means less for No, I. However," "a man can be half in love "with two women," he admits. "He can be one-sixth in love with six women and one-twelfth in love with twelve." No doubt , the same thing -is true where a woman is the party of the first part The human impulse is to want to be the only one beloved, and once more human instinct has been borne cui ' Thrilled by Jury Duty. "More young women should sit on juries for the wonderful experience," a California girl de clares after having served through two murder trials. There may be some accession of wisdom from attendance in court, but it is of a sort that most men feel that they can do without. Eagerness for experience is a characteristic of youth, leading it into many strange places. This spirit of insatiable curiosity frequently spells progress, especially when it applies itself to the study of men and matters. However, a good many persons try to believe that they are making a serious study of life when they are really only gratifying their emotional cravings. Abandonment of the gold standard and adop tion of a silver standard is being urged by Ger man economists. Anything might prove better than the present paper standard with its unsta ble values, but so far the plan has not been gen erally endorsed. Engineers and the Movies Technical Training Coming to th Aid of the Screen Industry, Prices are said to have dropped in Egypt, Peru, Italy and New Zealand. It is also heard from time to time . that they have fallen in America. ' ' Deflation is reported to have begun in Japan, which leads to the thought that America at least agfaamenUj not in all (ases, to be sure, but em- has the advantage of having started first. (From the Boston Trarwcipt.) ' 1 Men to whom mudi of the stucess of the nioiiuu picture is due are holding a convention in Uosioii, They are essential In the conduct of a j ereat industry which i a cmuunt subject of public di.ctiksion, yet the public seldom heart of Ihein. Only rarefy are they mentioned by re. porter. Tliey furnUh the fiction writers with little if any, material. Thry remain behind the scenes while the stars hl4 the center of the stage of publicity, with mausger and director making their occasional entrances. Kottont visitor are the engineer charged with the duty of perfecting ,the mechanical devices necessary lo the proper capturing of pose and expreiion wiiii mcir selling in siuiuo or on local on, anu latvr to their reproduction in I lie theater. This i the age of the rnniurrr. Few are the Industrie of importance which do not feel the necessity of h's permanent or occasional fcrvicrs It is, therefore, not surpri.ing 'that the motion picture industry lias it society ot Motion l ie lure lCnginerr. llow great is the opportunity for the exercise of technical skill in the produc tion of the moving picture is indicated by title taken at random from the list of paper in the program ol the Boston meeting. Ul the mil i'on who nislitlv sit in the movtnar picture Ihea tcrs of the United States few would recognize pii aspherical leu from a leu of any other kind but enjoyment of "the pictures may be height tned because the etiKiueer have considered "Some Uses of Aspherical Lenses in Motion l'ic ture Projection." So. alio, the annaratu de scribed as a "Constant Potential Generator for Motion Picture Projection may make the movie additionally attractive lo young person whose reading about them is confined to gossip concerning the marital state of world-advertised actors and the amount of the salaries they are reputed to draw. And the multitude must for the present take the word of the engineers that there will be more for the money when the movies are improved in some mysterious manner indicated by the title "New Applications for PrNmatuARings." The engineers of the moving picture industry are men who look beyond the screen and peer into the future. 1 hey have been told this week of the coming of the time when the movies may he projected by radio into the homes of the na lion. . For the present, however, it is to be noted that managers keep on investing millions of dol lars in new theaters, and tor that reason the moving picture engineers will earn the gratitude of the public as they improve the familiar means of taking and projecting the pictures. If they can co beyond that and introduce refinements and elaborations now unknown to the art, so much the better. What Mr. Burbank Doesn't Know Few men are held higher in the general es teem than is Luther Burbank, the wizard who has played with the mysteries of plant life and its development until all the world rings with his deserved renown. .But, like ,Mr. Edison, auite as conspicuous in another field of human achievement, Mr. Burbank "doesn't know it all." The nlant wizard s views and opinions out side the realm of his own activities are worth no more than another's, not worth so much as those of another whose study and grasp of social prob lems entitle him to speak with the authority of practical wisdom and experience. A few days ago Mr. Burbank had this to say about the culture of children: "I speJk of the boy or girl who has the privilege of being reared in the only place that is truly ht to bring up a child or plant the coun try or the small town the nearer to nature the better. In the case of children compelled to live in the city, the temptations are so great, the life so' artificial, that a child should be placed early in school as a safeguard. All animal life- is sen sitive, but of all living things the child is the most sensitive. The child literally absorbs en vironment." Very well, " Mr. Burbank is 73. He has visited cities. He has visited and lived in small towns. But while his eyes and under standing have been quick to see and aid in the evolution oif wonders in the plant world, there have been many other things which evidently he has not seen. No real student of body, mind. and morals, of the relations ot health and charac ter to existence, will agree wih him that the small town or the wildwood are best fitted for the physical and mental culture of children. The pinched, sordid, parochial atttiosphere of the average small town, with its insufficient sani tation, its narrow educational and social oppor tunities, can not compare in any respect with a modern progressive city in the matter of con servation and proper culture of child life. As for temptations, to which the learned plant king refers, they are not peculiar to cities, and in the cities, hanks to that wisdom which guides and guards the world, the sunshine of human hearts never is dimmed, nor the skies of love and hope o'ercast. " Purity, honor, love, industry, fidelity are quite as evident in the city as in. the small town and the green fields, the whispering wood lands and the blowing 'flowers are not far away, Mr. Burbank. Cincinnati Enquirer. Republicans and Senate The republican senatorial campaign commit tee this year 'is contemplating jio work in Flor ida, Mississippi, Texas or Virginia.1- It is con ceded that the situation in those states is at pres ent hopeless for the party. Only skeleton or ganizations exist, and time and money expended on them would be wasted. It is good politics to concentrate on territory where rewards are possible. vThis may prove to be a. thumping year.. There is music in the air. One need not accept every lurid tale in circula tion to arrive at the belief that between now and November a busy, if not a good, time will be had by all. . . How soon the lower south what .in politics is known as the solid south will be contestable for the republicans is a question. Why.it is not contestable now is well understood. - This does not mean that the republicans of the lower south should relax their efforts to strengthen themselves and clear a path to local power. . Their brethren of the border states have persisted;, and in Maryland, West Virginia, Ken tucky and Missouri they have now strong or ganizations, with victories to their credit. One of the Kentucky senators and one of the Missouri senators sit on the republican side of the cham ber, while both of the senators from Maryland and West Virginia do. ' The democrats will, of course, concentrate their efforts on territory that is debatable. As sured of the lower south, they will distribute their orators and their coin for campaign pur poses elsewhere. Washington Star. - , Shade-of Roosevelt, Attend! They say that the North Pole has skidded, that a gigantic condor has been shot in the Alps, whereas its proper habitat is the Andes, and that a glyptodon ha been discovered in Patagonia 2,000,000 years out of its appointed time. Nature is wonderful, all right, unless there are nature fakirs about. Chicago News. A Common Ground." - One reason why baseball talk is so, popular in putjlic places is because it is entirely safe. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. n . How to Keep Well Bp PR. W, A. IVANS QumtUa iHuniii hyta. aaaila. wa aa4 (vaaiimi ml 4i, auk iii4 la (Hr. fcaa y im4mi al Ik Sh, il ka .vm4 afaaatljr aukiact la r'aMa lianuiM, kwa a up4, 44tM4 .lata ia a l4. r, (. will ink 4aaia ar anwcfilwi Imf ia4iulul ''wm.. A4. WilM la ata al IM 8m, CtwrisMl l:t i SCHOOLROOM RIVALRY. . lr. Kdith l-AMiy, working in Mi lMipi, lt)vi,,.'J a tiifthuil of gt ting Ilia j.ii-Ml ilef-c ta of -hoo children iuirertrj n .hm.U whera It wii nut poiMi to employ sthnul nut'. r.iaiiiiaiiy. n., J)Un Wi(, , ( lrinir It bar Ida iititiit.nl rf tha w'iumii trui.irpii on tha child nM. Ina Mllamitm. m that he. In mm, would kcr after hi parrma until tha rt parativa wnik waa dona. In other wor.U, the laboring with tha purxnt which tha mhonl nuiae (.rdlimrlly dc, lr. Luwry has tfce pupil do. It la worked hi this way. Two I'lmrta are pouted on the wmII of tha schoolroom. Ono la the delect chart; the other la nutrition chart. Tha name of the pupils nra written on thran charta. Tho henlth records are hown by atara twitted opposite the mtma of tha child. Ona gold atar niesna nerfoi't. ac cording to tha atamliud aet. A red stir mean a a defect: a tdti atar ineana a defect Unit hua been cor rected; two until til nra In front of the nam meuna Unit a child tins a defect that cannot Im corrected. Tha Htnririnrd Hre low and eaallv attainable. The Ileum are: Kyea lat Vlalon normal or cor rected by elaxKca. (h) No evidence of dlaeuae or Inflammation. Kara (a) Hearing normal, (b) No evidence, of dlaeiine or luflnmniii-tinn. Noae .fa) No adenoid, (b) No other obstruction. Throat In) No dlxcuxrd or en larged lonalla. (b) No evidence of (llcenie or Inflammation. Mouth fa) No unfilled divide In teeth, lb) Teeth clt-itn, allowing evidence of dally enrc. (c) Gums henlthy. Pkln la) No eruption, lb) Benin clean. Frca from ecalea. (e) Scalp free from lice. Cheat fa) No evidence of d incase or Inflammation of lung, fb) Chest expHDttlon of at leant two tnrhcH. Vaccination Good senr or cer tificate of recent vaccination for snmllpox. Nutrition (a) Weight normal within 10 per cent, (h) Negative hookworm report, (c) Ne enlarged pleen ( malaria ). Height in taken at the beginning and again at the end of the school ear. Weight la taken monthly. rubllcly pouted tablea show tha average weight" and height for boys and for girls of different ages, and the expected ruins in each. The record in-each of these pr- tietilarls. a determined by the school inspector ond the tenchera, ts displayed on the wall in Right or the pqnlle. The theory Is: Every child with a red star will continue to plague his parents until a blue one re places It. 'mat a largo part or. llie pupils will try for a gold star, or at least will use their influence with their parents for that end. There in some advantage In being your own George. " To Avoid Hay Fever. K. S. write's: "Last August you wrote in your column that the hny fever treatment should start in April. "Will you Kindly let us Know now what we should do, as I am one of the sufferers?" REPLY. Have your pollen skin tests made now. Your physician can make these testa, using material to be had from manufacturers of such products. The pollen having been deter mined, begin vaccinating against It, as described in detail in medical journals. More Fruit Juice, Please. Mrs. J. C. writes: "My baby ts recovering - from pneumonia and , whooping cough, and he has rickets. He is 8 months old, but does not sit up alone. , - . "Will you ten me ir I am giving him the right treatment? I rub him every other day with cocoanut. oil; give him some vege tables ancl hydroleine emulsion; keep him out of doors from two to three hours a day.. He is a bottle-red baby. give mm rwo-miras nunc ana one- third woter with some oatmeal gruel.". . REPLY. Are you not a little too ambitious? Some healthy children cannot sit alorte at 8 months, even though they have escaped pneumonia and whoop ing cough. : ' Keep him in the sunlight as mucn as possible. Probably you can in crease his allowance of fruit Juice, tomato juice, potatoes and other vegetables; soups, cereals and breads. - A Fine Exercise, M.v.J. writes: "Is roirer skating injurious or beneficial to health? What, if -any, are the benefits de rived from roller skating?" REPLY. Beneficial. Out-of-doors skating is better. The kids have it right. ! Send for Booklet. Mrs. S. C. writes: ."Kindly send me at once all the available free literature on veneral diseases; also names of best books on the sub ject. Thank you." . , V . REPLY. " Send me a stamped, addressed en velope with a 4-cent' stamp for my booklet on the subject. The United States public neaitn service, Washington, D. C, has free literature.; The American Social Hygiene association, 370 Seventh avenue, New York City, will send you a list of books of which it ap- nroves. You can order oooKS on venereal disease and sex questions through the association. The association sens excellent booklets on many sex questions at W cents each. ADVEllTISEMENT Theories and Facts. Theories are liable to smash. Facts are made to smash 'era with. Columbia Missouri- STOP ITCHING ECZEMA enetrating. Antiseptic Zemo Will Help You - Never mind how often you have tried and failed, you can stop burn ing, itching Eczema quickly by ap plying Zemo lurnisned by any drug gist for 35c. Axtra large bottle, $1.00. Healing begins the moment Zemo is applied. In a short time sually every trace or Eczema, Tet ter, Pimples, Rash, Blackheads and similar skin diseases will be re moved. For clearing the skin and making It vigorously healthy, always use Zemo. the penetrating, antiseptic liquid. When others rail it is the one dependable treatment for skin troubles of all kinds. . , M4m ak la 4waa mmt aafctt I narIM. M N.WM II. I tlM auwHI hrtrf. aat , tarn Mi M ka uul.it ifcat lk mm Ik maiM nI Mlrt. W fmnnil ! wkllmllM. kal lhal th Milla ap I ktwaj Milk ka la a-ajiaa. Tka lt-a law at atiibM tf 4 kf aaa.a. aaaaVai la laa t - IfcM.t What Ho linga Fur. MLftourl Valley, U JUy J To ine r.itnor or Tha ns t'h, reeay, l'rsl Just what you have dna now! We don't rata about I ha I'nao, Wap. ir whoever ha waa thai blew off Ida ttightrap holder over you, but ra awful diMPtoint4 In tha wsy you cut tip. When oi and that bunch of awnrd iwiaiera wrra finlahing up on that last quart of champatti. didn't yu one think of ua over hcra In "tha land of tha fiea and tha home of tha brave," that would have siven tha prica of a quail of (.hampagna for a "whoon it" of good old 1'abat or IschllisT Wa don't blame you for setting away front thia land .now governed by hyter lawyers and nula. but you ousht to have been Juat a little mora careful. IV say, wa don't blame you for running away from Mr, I lays, but II this kaepa up ho will eatabltati a foraicn office to stop Jut auch capers as thla. MuyUe we can get a hole put In tha lth amendment aoma plaeo ao movie folka can get thWr nip without going ao far, far away. Now, wouldn't it be much nlit-r lo knock tho cork olf of a boitlo lubeled "Made In V. 8. A.'T You folks made your money In tha liond old l H. A., you know. Now. l'l'mry, you movie folks do not behave ynuraclvra at nil when you get awuy from home You know the people over there thought we Imd a !! bunch of aoldlers when wo sent them over. They did not claim to be the cream, you know, Ilka you folka. They were just ordi nary folka, tha kind that always take on the big Jobs. Now, you don't wuut the people of France to think Unit we Ki'nt them over to die for a bunch of "drunken. Idle revellera." do you? Kut that Is Just the de& they are getting. You know, France declared a holi day one time and chopped the heada olf of about 20.000 elect tlmt were behaving juat like you movlo folka. They remember this little event quite distinctly. Now, our French friend are getting the idea that we are about ready to do the samo thing. It Is a painful process, and things are not regular and orderly while f 0T0R, fish, golf, amp in the A woods-or along the motor trail or Mop in a bit city hotel: you're clot toaaiureorcivilirationw you plrta?. Cornel By motor, rail or boat k your local tirket auent about reduced summer ratct. Write for Information and literature. Ten Thousand Lakes of Minnesota Assn Ilk Eatt bih Street. St. Paul, Minn. H'f you vritt, indicate kind of information tliirtd: Genera (-Vexation.. Canoe Trip. Permanent Summer Horn Sit el JUintrW VS -HOTEL -A Sue modern told -HOTEL every room with batk (fee Hotel Red Book In every Pullman ear) enabllab your Mlnneaou touring beadquar tera bere lor mall, telenrama. laundry, ale Write lor booklet: addrraj ' Tka Saint Paul Hotel, Saint Paul, Mlaa. )hh- I tine lull event la i.aoinn,, ao you turn ual what you ar leaving In tha nunda f your h"a- Vuu luult iru.tf bn a little mora cartful. It I J"l awlit! r'aiiy kma just l'w 'u let, Mr. H 'H !' "" don i took UU HRuKKN HKAUTKU. Grocer Weara Em. Udii.liia, wa iiou.a, aiwova waarj rai'a. U dot our rKtr.-H4'a llaratd. I drink. MM m My it vPditruriuci Ptaae aaaa aaW la wa Ol, a SiMkat ea Jatare al SW koaa aariaf, .a r. ti- I3jii in Onufn 30thC-Ytml 3 Learn Why a "Lloyd" Baby Carriage Makes Baby Happy Saturday Union Outfitting Co. New Spring Modela at New Low prices, A "Lloyd " Carriaga Given Away. Thia dimntriion la b. ine, hel l by the t'nion Dm fitting t'o. Haturilay to acquaint muthrrs wi'h tha superior nJvantairi-a of the Uuby ferriage, woven on a loom, that l attracting SU.h widraprrad Intercat in news-pjir-er and mapiuinra. This tig llomcfurrtiahinir Inst), tution, which ia Omaha head. qunricrs for thia attructiva and comfortable Carrlug. will show the new sprinsj modd ot Jow prices and on ey terms. A Lloyd" Carrlngr ia to bu given away at end of exhibition. r.ce Want Ads, Produce Rttul's. OS IPIANO& U TUNED AND MkW REPAIRED All Work Guaranteed A. HOSPE CO. 1513 Douflaa. Tel. Doug. SSaa. e B2dk It was the first railroad to cross the Mississippi, making possible the earlq settlement of the west It will complete on October to, 1922, a span oj 70 qears, the allot ted age of man. . ' -: . It has qronm to a system of 8,122 miles. Its facilities nou? extend to practically eoeru commercial center in fourteen mid-uestern states, well named the "bread basket of . theworioV ; ' 1 It paid these fourteen states $8,042,736 in taxes.durinq 192L It employed 40,388 persons during the year. : ;"; It paid these employes $68,429,190. It disbursed to its pensioners 1 150,779 during the year. , '. i Its employes haoe a nationeiDide reputation for courtesy. It endeaoors to render efficient service. It earnestly solicits your patronage. It is a "home" industry intenoopen with eoery local actioity. . Its problems are your problems, and it needs your co-operation in soloing them. -. IJour future prosperity is Urqeli dependent on the main tenance and development of a successful transportation system. Just what you need a complete change. Scenic boulevards along the tops of moun tains 6000 feet above the orange groves. Missions like illustrated stories of old Spain. A touch of Old Mexico and the Orient Genial climate average summer temperature 69. Big Trees nearly 300 feet high, older than Rome. Wonderful beaches, gay with life and ' color. Yosemite the scenic climax. i On the way stop at Salt Lake City; hear the organ in ' the wonderful Mormon Tabernacle; float like a sea gull on the waters of Great Salt Lake. Take in Yellowstone National Park as you pass by. Union Pacific is the best way to go one system, one management right through. The LOS ANGELES LIMITED gives you tha fastest and moat " luxurious service to Southern California only 55 hours on tha road Leaves Omaha 9:40 a. m. The CONTINENTAL LIMITED, another good train, leaves Omaha 1:20 a. m. (Oo to bad 10:00 p. m. if you like.) FAXES GREATLY REDUCED StJTS Round trip only a little mora than tha far one way WRITS May is deciding month for summer vacations. Let FOR VRKB us tell you how reasonably you can make the trip, BOOKLETS and send illustrated booklets on California. Vor Information ask , Union Depot. Coniolidated Ticket Office, 141S Dodge St- Phone Douglas 1684 . A. K. Curtt, City Pass. Agent, U. P. System, ' . . 141S Dodgr St., Omaha, Phone Soughs 4000 i i