Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 4, 1922)
6 A THE BEE: OMAHA. SUNDAY, JUNE 4. 1922. v The Omaha Bee lfOBNIKG-EVENIXa SUNDAY. THI BH MJBUMUNO COM PANT iK NCLBON . UPDIKE, hlUaa ft, BIEWER. Ceaerai MrniN MCMBEft OF THE ASSOCIATED MEM tto t mill ttm. t vkUk TW Im u mmm. m et dMWJ aaoOa hU.miI mmanaatica tU m MUM M41U H H Mt WMTWIM wut tki hk, aa ale im taml am nuM tuM. All itkl t lawalmiii et Mr awi4l iania Mm mn il TW Owli fee IS a Mta at Ua A41l limi f On. taltast, IM f mMmiI Stllaafll, " anaalall SSdMS. M4 fM ae's ala-alailna to nsalarl, aval la kr imm smntnllaa, Tk at circulation of Tk Oaaha Bm for May, I 22 Daily Averaf 72.038 Sunday Average . . . 78,642 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY B. BREWER. Geaeral Muupr ELMER S. IIOOO, CirtaUltra Maaaier Svera to a subscribed balers aw Ibis M day af Jua. IMS. (SmI) W. H. QUIVEY. NUr PabUa BEE TELEPHONES Private Brtack tuhaat. A.k far taa rariaitat r Ptr.oa Waated. For AT Mali) Klfkt Calif After It P. M.I Editorial tlMM Dtpartmtnt. AT lanti 1021 ar 1111. low OrFICES Mala Offiea lTta and ranuua Ca, Bluffs Is Scott BL Soata 8lde Oil I. 141k M. Vim York ft fifth Ave, WuklDftoa-llllO.lt. Chleate 1TIS Itofar Bid. Pari. Praaaa Boa Bt Boaara Peace for a Weary World. Most of our troubles never happen, so ttso dread of he unknown is rarely justified. Just now the world is coming out from the clouds of strife and turmoil, and into a light where things take on their true form and no longer appear the grotesque exaggerated menaces as viewed through the mists of uncertainty that surrounded them a few months ago. Faster than is realized the progress of events has operated to jostle the surface at least of an upheaved society into some thing like natural relations, and people are lay ing aside their war-born apprehensions to again "pusue their favorite phantoms." Whether the new world is a better one, leading on to progress for humanity, and making for more stable if not for permanent peace, or whether it is merely a truce between the warring elements, preliminary to a renewal of the age old clash of ideas and ambitions, is not so im portant as is the fact that the pursuits of peace dominate those of war once more. Politics, in dustry, all the outlets for human energy are now directed to the accomplishment of what at the moment appears to be improvements. This is encouraging, for man only sets about to better the things that have served him wetf when lie can do so quietly and without fear of having to defend himself immediately. Civilization has come to a stage where it can postpone the mak ing of war better than any of its many occupa tions otherwise. " Philosophers and moralists agree that war as not been banished beyond all possibility. Evil still exists, and there are yet those who are unwilling to be guided by the decision of the majority. "Aggression grows from selfishness, and that attribute of man still delays its disap pearance. This unpleasant truth is more than offset by the greater one that men are more mu tually trustful, more inclined to patience and for bearance than ever, and that even in the busiest af moments have in mind their responsibility to others alongside their demands for themselves. Our national attitude is expressed in the re mark of President Harding with regard to the Soviets : "Whatever political , Conditions prevail in Russia, American humanity will continue to be American humanity.'? That is, we will give ef our means to aid those in need, and not cease because of the seeming ingratitude of those we Iry to assist. Such an example will not fail to Influence the world, and because" American genius Is for peace, the tranquility all long for eventually will come to prevail. Dangers of Exaggeration. This is a nervous age, Dr. Henry Van Dyke told a crowd of students in Princeton university rhap'el the other day. A period also of exag geration, he held. "There is too great a tendency on the part of some toward superstition," he said. "The reverse side of this false coin is the skepticism toward which the other part tends." The quiet moderation in all things that the ancient philosopher urged is indeed absent today. One sees that in congress where denunciation holds the floor. It is visible, too, in such efforts as that at the Genoa conference, where the hope was held out for a time of curing all the ills of the Avorld at one dose. People are nervously keyed up to expect great things, and when fail ure comes their superstitious belief that things will be easily set right is apt to turn to disbe lief in all men and all things. This is a time for faith faith in one' self and one's fellows, neither overconfidence nor doubt. The rewards of industry, thrift, thought and hon esty are as sure today as ever they were. Quack - remedies, social, economic or political, have not gained any new efficacy. ' Mankind is . more intelligent today than at any other age of the world. Its problems now are no harder than those surmounted by past generations, and should be more easily solved, if the matter is approached in the proper manner. Superstitious reverence of institutions may ham per settlement, just as may undue skepticism. The thing is for mankind to. adjust itself to its new environment coolly, reasonably and without prejudice or exaggeration. Take a Personal Inventory. - When by some turn of circumstance a mis guided career - ends in catastrophe thoughtful observers are apt to make a single comment: "What could he have been thinking of?", ; The answer need hardly be spoken; the vic tim of his own misdeed was not thinking of any thing. There is an old French taying, "In every thing one must consider the end." To do this one must look within himself, examining his ac tions or his thoughts and tracing them to their natural conclusions. . ' . A young college student recently was ap prehended on the charge of stealing automobiles in which to take girl friends riding. If he had indulged in a little wholesome self-examination he very probably never would have embarked on any such course. . . .. The prls who rode with him have been iden tified, and one of them has turned over the stu dent' fraternity pin to the police- A little in trospection on their part might have avoided their embarrassment Now, friendless and alone, the boy, if he has anything in him, will turn to inspecting himself and inquire if it was worth .Other young men might well take tn internal Invsntary of thcmielvei in advance ef calamity. The perils and discomforts of pretending to be something more than one realty it deserve con temptation. To spend money fatter than it eomti in, or to associate with young women who de mand cr expect excessive pleaturei it a fatal thing. There are girls who will not associate with a young man unlets he hat motor car and who expect expensive gilts from their admirers. Thry alio might do good to themselves and others if they would for one moment look within. Two Viewi of Lincoln. Omaha had the pleasure last week of teeing the John Drinkwater drama, founded on Abra ham Lincoln, enacted by a company of very competent players. We alto had the opportunity of contrasting Mr. Drinkwater't conception of the great president with that of Warren G. J lar ding, as expressed in hit fine addrett at the dedication of the Lincoln Memorial at, Wash ington last Tuesday. , In making companions care should be taken not to omit an understanding of the fundamental difference in viewpoint of the two men. The English poet looked upon Lincoln through the eyes of inspiration; the American president re gards him from the standpoint of a fellow citizen, well acquainted with formt and condition! of which the Englishman knows but little through experience. This is natural, and accounts in whole, perhaps, for the divergence; alto for the reluctance with which the people of America ap proach the Drinkwater portrayal of Lincoln. The poet hat idealized hit characterization of the man, clothing him with qualitiet he made no pretense to possessing while alive. It it not easy for one accustomed to the fixed and long estab lished reactions of social life that prevail in a country, like England, to realize the truth that a man tame from the lowly station of Lincoln't birth and boyhood, through vicissitudes of a life that barely missed being that of savages, to the high place he attained in the world, unless it was by some manifestation of a higher power direct ing his destiny. That thought is unescapabte while listening to the Drinkwater lines. Mr. Harding prefers to believe that . . . . like Washington, Lincoln waa a very natural human being, with the frailties mixed with the virtues of humanity. There are neither supermen nor demiRoda In the government of kingdoms, empires or repub Ilea. It will be better for our conception of government and Ha institutions If we wllf understand this fact. If Americans only will understand that fact, they will find their own faith in their own powers strengthened and democracy made the more worthy. Grateful as we must be to Mr. Drink water for his fine portraiture of a great mart, it is more comforting and encouraging to think that Abraham Lincoln was a man, and that he was the archetype of the common people, of whom he once said God must have loved them or He would not have made so many of them. From Slate and Nation An Unforgotten Hero. A big load has been lifted from the mind of one of America's heroes, Scrgt. Alvin York. The mortgage on his farm in the Valley of the Three Forks of the Wolf has been paid off. Between drouth and deflation he was for a time brought face to face with foreclosure. - The story of this Tennessee mountaineer has lately been told by Sam K. Cowan in a book called "Sergeant York and His People." In all biography it would be difficult to find a more picturesque or inspiring account of a man hold ing to his principles and standing by his people. The mountaineers of the Cumberland are said to be the purest Anglo-Saxons in America today. In their customs, speech and manner of life they are close to their ancestors, the American colon ists. Marooned in their mountain fastnesses, modernity has not found them. What overseas service with its contact with new ways and foreign people did for many country youths, it did for Alvin York. From hia father he gained physical bravery, from his mother, moral courage. . The one brought him back a hero, the other led him to refuse to capitalize the homage of the people and to refuse to go on the stage or lecture plat form. The war had awakened his ambition, but it was for his mountain race, not himself. "Back again at his home," writes Mr. Cowan, "he asked that the people give him no more gifts, but instead contribute the. money to a fund to build simple primary schools for the children of the mountains who had no schools." Out of his idea has sprung what is known as the York Foundation, backed by many influential people of the south. Sergeant York went out into (he wortd, but he did not forget his own. It is heartening to see that the nation also re members and that his mountain farm is free now from encumbrance. - - , . , " : Partners in Life. "A marriage license is not a permanent meal ticket and it is not a credit account at the dry good store," says the marrying parson of Mary land's gretna green. Neither, he advises, is a wife a housekeeper, but she is rather a partner in the business of life. These observations are worth heeding. Many marriages today are unsuccessful because duty and obligation are thrust on one party instead of being shared. ' Marriage should not be thought of as a way out of this or that unfavorable con dition, but of a way into the fuller opportunity of life. :v"'.. -v ' ' ' ,JV. The clinging vine type of woman is not pop- Malar, either in fiction or life. The domineering male holds his own in popular novels, but is far from successful when he comes in contact with a thoughtful, capable modern woman.: , . Matrimony has many commandments, and love has many strange ways of manifesting it self, but most important of alt is the idea of partnership. ' .- ; "-' j ; ; ; The underpinning of a great democratic cam paign is slowly dissolving beneath the sunlight of prosperity and the influence of demonstrated truth. Unless some unexpected mishap befalls the state, the brethren are in despair. Every time a good rain falls on the crops the size of the democratic vote is decreased. This ia one of the disadvantages of basing political campaign on calamity howling. Senator Norris will find considerable support for hit notion that the federal government thould complete and operate- the Muscle Shoals plant Soon it will again be. discovered that a di ploma can not be cashed at the bank of ex perience. , . , - Ak-Sar-Ben't race meet is a fair opener for a fine summer of real enjoyment, (, To What Haao Csea, Horatio!" ' tnm IM Ctaalaattl TlMM Sltr, t la atntancing Jloratlo Bottomley, editor af "John Hull." to aavan year Itnpriaunment, lit court was merely confirming the opinion of Mr. Uoltomley held by a large part Ot lha English publio fur many year. Mr. Uottomley held unique placa In Knglih politics. In a way. ha waa really a man ot the people, lie ltkod the race rounis. Nobody tn polltlie waa too formid able for him to attack, and a bloody -head, now and then, did not dstar htm. lie boasted of not being a gentleman, therefore any weapon ha happened to have at hand In a polities! right availed him. In parliamentary debates, where hla methods were more restricted than in jour nalism, no man so enjoyed hitting below the belt. And his admirers, being of tha mora Ignorant class, ha played upon their hatreds, enjoying both tha hate he expreNsed and Its reaction upon the half-baked Intellects that were hla following. But Mr. Bottomley made the mistake of com bining hit pleasure as an Irresponsible member of parliament and an even more Irresponsible Journalist with the busfnesa of Victory bond clubs. Evidently the victims who thought they were Investing In tha bonds ot the Hrltlsit gov ernment were Investing merely In Mr. Uottom lay, who, it transpired, was a highly speculative institution. There were millions in the "Hot tomley rlubs," where now there are but a few thousands. The passing of Horatio Bottomley from tha atage of English public life will reuse no regret In America. What Japan is to Hiram Johnson, America was to Horatio Jtottomley, The puses of "John Bull" were flecked with foam of hia wrath agalnat America, Now, happily, America has survived as the fitter of the two. Hurrah 'for Normalcy. "From tlx Huapknr Nb I Dfamnt. We are sure of getting back to normal con ditions fast now, thank the good Lord, and first thing we know we will have forgotten we ever did get In bad because of wars and graft and human selfishness. The best barometer ot pub lie business and finance la the amount of Invest ment being made, or not made, as the case may be, and Investments now are beginning to take on quite a boom. People who have had cold feet and were afraid to Invest, because of uncer tainty, unrest, and a vague feeling that It would be better to wait a while and see whether we ever did get out of the kinks or not, but now it la different. They are getting over their fear and Investments are being made as they have not been for some years. Hundreds of millions of dollars of money that haa been hiding out In tin cans, stocking legs and saving banks are now going into stocks and bonds, for new en terprises of all kinds, and the natural conse quences are that hundreds ot thousands of more men are being. put to work on such enterprises. Money is easy on the marketB and many splendid investments are being offered and taken. Probably never before in our history have so many millions been seeking good Investments as they are .right now, and all the money In vested in stocks and bonds goes Immediately into business enterprises and channels, gives more work and creates more wealth. - Idle dol lare are as bad as idle men they create noth ing. Some of these millions are also going Into foreign Investments, in the way of credits, and this in turn stimulates our foreign trade and makes' work for American Industries. And all these dollars, whether invested at home or abroad, contribute to the speedy return to nor malcy and good times for us all. How to Keep Well y DR. W. A. EVANS QumIIm CMMralae ar4M. sails Imw aad pesveallaa at dlMsM, .uk. mme la Dr. Ens. by neMra at TW tM. HI be aarend BrMaH subject to srspir UmIUIIm. wktr a sUsM'd. atMrMSMl MmlM Is ra. ckMM Dr. Evsa will s.l Bisks alafBMle ar arsMrih far iaaivisual eiMMM. Adareu letters la rt at Tke Km. Caprriehti I tit Blgb Cost of Politics. From th Wuh niton Foil Compared to some state primary election contests that have attracted national attention, the cost of the Gifford Pinchot campaign ior the gubernatorial nomination In Pennsylvania, $121, 705, does not seem excessive. However, it doubtless has surprised many persons to learn that Mr. Pinchot personally was put to an ex pense of $93,562 in waging his fight, while his wife's contribution of 129,500 brought the fam ily campaign account to a total of $123,662, It simply 8 hows the use of money in primary cam paigns is not necessarily limited to the perpetu ation of so-called reactionary control and the ad' vancement of candidates backed by despised po litical machines. Even the reformer appreciates the power, of the dollar when strongly fortified by Its kind, and without 'qualms adapts it to practical use In the furtherance of his ambition to, serve the pubic for the greater public weal. But the successfully conducted Pinchot fight against the republican state machine in Penn sylvania also offers further proof that the direct primary Is not a poor man's game. Mr. Pinchot won by a narrow margin, considering the total vote cast at the primary; had he not been a rich man able to contribute liberally of his wealth as well as hlB ardor for the cause and what he believes to be better state government, he could not in all probability have made his ideals pre vail. His opponent in the gubernatorial nomin ation race, Attorney General Alter, who had the "organization" backing, filed a campaign expense account amounting to the modest sum of $1, 131. SO. Had the latter had more money to con tribute In his behalf, or had Mr. Pinchot met his opponent on terms of financial equality well the result, as hinted, might have been different. Speeding Up Justice. From th. NtUon. Seventy-five per cent of the cases which now clog the supreme court In New York City are said to involve relatively small sums of money and no important points of law. They are most ly business disputes; Judge and jury are com pelled to listen to the testimony of rival experts and the wrangling of lawyers and then guess which side comes nearest to telling the truth. DisDUte after diSDute could be settled in a few hours by conference out of court with the aid 1 of an arbitrator who knows the conditions in the particular business in which the dispute arises. Proceeding on the basis of these facts the Arbitration society of America is setting up a tribunal of arbitration to which disputants may by common consent apply for disinterested and expert arbitration. An act of the New York legislature in 1920 legalized this sort of arbitration and gave the arbitrators the right to subpoena witnesses. The plans of the Arbitration society have beenVidely endorsed by judges and lawyers and business men. Twenty-four hours after publication of the scheme twelve applications had been made to the society. If it does nothing more, this un common application of common sense will great ly relieve the strain on the courts. We hope that It will also give impetus to other attempts to substitute social action through voluntary as sociations for a too great dependence on In dexible bureaucratic machinery. K&llroad-Graded Highways. ChsrlM Pien Burtoa In Htrper't Magazine. "Modern paved roads which are superseding macadam are built of concrete, or with brick Or bituminous surfacing on a concrete base. In the most expensive types the concrete is rein forced with steel. The tendency of state engi neering departments, moreover, is to build them much as the modern, railroads are built with low grades, few curves, and without grade cross ings. Indeed, there is a close analogy between railroad and highway developments. The rail road, in pioneer days, like the highway, followed the line of least resistance around or over hills instead of through them. Within the past twenty years, to secure greater economy of op eration, railroads have spent millions In cutting out curves and grades, which modern earth moving machinery has made possible. More and more will road building take the same course. In the reconstruction of the Miller Trunk highway leading from Duluth, Minn., into the Mesaba Iron Range, now being paved with con crete, 4,800 degrees of angle have been cut out In sixty miles. This is an extreme case, prac ticable only in an undeveloped country, but It illustrates the tendency." The Machine Wins. From Fsns Xife. Wayne Dinsmore, .ad of the Horse Associa tion of America,, firmly expresses the belief that power farming is a -costly delusion, and that horses are inevitably more profitable than trac tors. C. F. Clarkson, head of the Society of Auto motive Engineers, on the other hand, declares that the tractor of today makes possible better crops at less cost. And he approves the recent statement of a British engineer that "Just as the motor vehicle in driving the horse from the public roads, to will the motor tractor inevita bly usurp the place of the horse on the major ity of the arable farms of the world." Each 'man, of course, says what He might be expected to say. ' It is an endless debate be tween the man of horses and tho man of ma chines. The farmer Is the Judge between them. He loves horses, but when he wants to go some where he prefers the motor vehicle rather than theJuggy. So In the end, the logic lies with the marine, no matter wtiat the present argument may bt PREGNANCY'S DANGERS. However we measure It, health Is uejti'r. by long odds, than It waa a generation ago. Hut when we call the roll of the various groupa of peo ple reaping these gains two bodies full to answer "present." They are women In the last month of preg nancy and In the first month of motherhood, and babies leas than 4 weeks old. In liSO the Chicago Community trurt made a aurvey of facilities for prenatal rare In Chicago. What It found and Ita recommendntlons would apply In proportion to popu lation In any other city. The Met that Chicago, In common with other parte of Illinois, Is otit- Btae the hlrth registration area, add ed to the difficulties of the investi gation. In Chicago It la estimated 67,000 batilcs are horn each year. In 1920 S54 mothers died from conditions Incident to childbirth a rate of t.Z per 1. 000 births. The death rate of colored women from this group of causes was one and one-half timea that of white women. Of the 67.000 women confined In Chicago about 16.000 were cared for bv mldwlvea and about 19,600 by pnysinans. Of this last group about 6.000 had some prenatal care In the 28 phllan throplc stations, clinlrs. dispensaries and stations giving such care. A consulting staff to this survey laid down the following essentials for prenatal care, which every preg nant woman should have from her physician, midwife, nurse or some institution: 1. As soon as pregnancy Is sus pected every woman should place herself under competent care. - 2. She should pay a monthly visit to her doctor or to her clinic up to the seventh month, and then every two weeks. S. In the case of the clinic patient, the social service nurse should visit, the patient's home twice a month. 4. Examination of the prcgnantl woman should embrace: a. General physical. . b. Local. o. History of .previous diseases and operations. d. History of previous labors. e. Blood pressure. f. Urinalysis for sugar and albu min; complete urinalysis In certain cases. g. Telvis measurements, as com plete as possible. h. Wasserman. if possible. . 5. After delivery the child and mother should again visit the doctor or clinic for observation. The Chicago stations did not meas ure up to these standards very well. Of the 23 reporting only one marto urinalysis for 100 per cent of its patients. (The lowest only made such analysis for 4 per cent of its patients. The average number of urinalyses for each woman ranged from 1 at; one station to 4 at another. Few of the stations made v asser- mans. One made tnem tor i pec cent of its patients. The next high est had a record of 22 per cent. There is no record In the table of examinations for gonococci. Three of the stations took the blood pressure of all its women pa tients, one or more times. His Cure Is IJkcly. A. L. B. writes: "Eighteen months ago my husband went into a sanita rium with all the symptoms or ad vanced tuberculosis night sweats, chills, temperature 101 to 103 every afternoon, cough with expectoration, losi of weight to 100 pounds. "He has been home a year, leaving the sanitarium with every sign of im provement; and has been on the mend ever since. "Lives same as routine at the sani tarium and takes plenty of eggs and milk daily. "Now weighs 140 pounds; expec torates only slightly In morning and coughs only after exertion. Has normal temperature each day and feels fine. . . "1. Can his case -be arrested m time?" . "2. Can he be permanently cured .' REPLY. Speaking generally, the. answer Is 'Yes" to both questions. Bright's Disease Likely. L. S. writes: "What can be done for a woman who has diabetes, whose legs swell up. especially around the ankles, so that she can hardly walk? "She has become very thin this last year, which, I guess, is Caused by diabetes. She is a woman in her 50s." REPLY. I expect she has Bright's disease as well as diabetes. She should have her physician examine her for that. He may want to take salt out of her diet and give her some medicine. Contem poraryli (story Krsm th. Ntw Turk TIihm. Po people nowada read the ex cellent Itollln'e "Ancient History," a our great-grandfathera and great grandmother used to doT Did they read it aa a duty or aa a pleasure? IMd they find the old annala of "Pershee" and ,'.Med"" contempo rary, as Ilunedelto Croce tells us every "true history" tsf "If con temporary history," he says, "sprints straight from life, so does that his tory which Is raited non-contemporary, for It Is evident that only an Interest In the life of the present ran move one to Investigate past facts. Therefore, this past fact does not answer to a past Interest, but a present Interest, In so far aa It la uni fied with an Interest In the present life." Hpenklng un philosophically, that is, you are Intereated in what you are Intereated In; a.nd history becomee contemporary when it Is made living and vivid: Whether history be continuous, as Mr. Freeman held, or discontinuous, as Lord Acton seems to have held, we like to regard it as neither contempo rary nor non-ronteniporar'y, aa out of time. Ko Gibbon's Interminable procession of bis wigs looks, to some eyes, George Trevrlyan compares "The Decline and Kail" to a frlese. A prep at a Tompelan election post er, even a dip Into Kricd lander's "Manners and Customs of the Ro mans," gives one a more "contempo rary" or temporal feeling, in such a book aa "Mediaeval Contributions to Modern Civilization." lectures by experts of King's college of the Uni versity of London, the reader Is not infrequently struck by the anticipa tion of later thoughts by some medieval minds. Thus we are told, on Lord Acton's authority, that "the whig theory of the revolution may be found In the work of St. Thomas Aquinas." Marslglio of Padua, in the early 14th century, worked out the doctrines of "the sovereignty of the nation, representative govern govcrnment. the superiority of the legislature over the executive, and the liberty of conscience." The most slngulnr precursor of many modern theories and facts was a Norman lawyer, Pierre du Bols, author of a Latin pamphlet, "On the Recovery of the Holy Land." a piece of propaganda work for Philip the Fair of France. Besides church dls endowment and the supreme author ity of the secular state, he urged woman's enfranchisement and mixed education, -and: "International arbitration was to decrease the horrors of war, and educated women were to be sent to the Holy Land In order to marry and convert both the Saracens and the priests of the orthodox church, nnd also to become trained nurses and teachers. The whole spirit of the book is secular and modern. Bishop Slubbs was wont to de clare that everything was In it. in cluding the new woman." Of the Immense debt of the mod erns to medieval literature, art. re ligion, it would be "superfluous to speak." The economic "contribu tion" is curiously modern. An ideal- izer of the middle ages like William Morris found in them not only "folk craftmanship" as the right condition of' art, but the notion of fellowship and socialism. Mr. G. D. H. Cole and others get their greatly modified guild" socialism, or. as Mr. Harold Laskl calls it. "the plural state," from tho medieval guilds. The arts ana crafts movement, the revival of vil lage industries, regulation of, wages V ADVERTISEMENT. ', Fords Run 34 Miles On Gallon Gasoline Start Easy in Coldest Weather- Other Cars Show Proportionate Saving. A new carburetor which cuts down gasoline consumption of any motor and reduces gasoline bills from one-third to one-half is the proud achievement of the Air-Friction Carburetor Co., 1517 Madison St., Dayton, Ohio. This remarkable invention not only increases the power of motors from 30 to 60 per cent, but enables every one to run slow on high gear. It also makes it easy to start a Ford or any other car in thje coldest weather. You can use the very cheapest grade of gasoline or half gasoline and half kerosene" end still get more power and more mileage than you now get from the highest test gasoline. All Ford owners can get as high as 34 miles to a gallon of gasoline. So sure are the manufacturers of the immense "saving their new carburetor will make that they offer to send it on 30 days' trial to every car owner. As it can be put on or takon off in a few minutes by anyone all readers of this paper who want to try it should send their name, ad dress and make of car to the manu facturers at once. They also want local agents, to whom they offer exceptionally large profits. Write them today. An associations ar tlear: aTvl it: is dif??rrr1f ' rAp.sA. ko nart frorr-v piano to wKicK one Kas grown attacked by years of service. musicians criigKest artistic development inevitably cue urawiv i-u tiv hy the transcendent. matcHless " musical qualities wnicK nave establisnea its ccrtapproaicnabii supremacy wnonq au tne pianos ofTtke world. n ''aAesiprittdkighest praised. rS 1513 Douglas Street P. S.i See Oar New PUyer Piano Price $359 Eaiy Month! Payment and prices, laws against adulteration, agalimt monopoly, prufitaerlag, may be wln to be. If not an luhei itne from the middle , a aort of ra. torntltin. In new conditions., of me dieval Ktalutfn, Nome writer on art are sure thul there will never be an; ril great, genuine, modern ait until there ta ain an art of the people, as In the middle atea. Of th "com munity pint," ao much preached tn our time, the work of the unknown maater-masuna and maaona and stonecutter of the middle aaei, In comparable cathedrals and churches and city hulls and what not. la th monument. And thou ace uaed to '1 k. .n.4 (M-.V"! rt the 'can pur.tr y." ancient and modern pr neither ancient nor modern, mat on ... u Im 1 Km Mtiitill Iftl thla quotation from th formula ud lit the emancipation or Doooniso by Itobeit Mlt, Jilnliop of Here ford IM04-I). I an illustration: "Wlivreae from the beginning nature created all men freely or free, and afterward th law of na tion subjected aom of them to th ynk of servitude." Dot'trino uf the lwclaratlnn of In dependence, dm-trlne or theory if Hitman law. There U nothing nw or old under the sun. moon M Hnmn: Builders Shares I A Homni Builders Shares K to" 7 :. - ; r.ii li1 ' Preftrrid 8hrt paylnr" 7 frm date ef eureka sec need ky t 1 mortgtrei en new properties In Omaha built by Hem Builder for 4 romnared with taxed securities, thet (hire yield I v. halter thin . Kmi.annul dividend, without t Unfit Offlieuon. fi 1 fcav btn paid en then ihtrei tor many year. . Tax Free in Nebraska R IH Empt FreaiNermel laeeaw Taa Jjjj mm ULI ' aa aaalalata Haa !' Haa. I 1 U in mi I' - 711.. .T,'jri..i i ej tnl q ,v .J,9;;( American Security Company C A JL s Chilled and served at the dinner table, it is delicious, wholesome and refreshing. It Is Pasteuriz ed This means that it is heated to 140 degrees for , thirty minutes (in the case of Old Age and Expert Beverages), -which kills all possible bacteria. It is absolutely pure, rich in food value, and, except that it contains less than-4 ' of 1 per cent alcohol," it is like the rich old drink of days gone by. v. . . ; ' ... .' ... '''"'"v;';.;-;' ' Order it in catet ' or "in tKe wood." ' Phone 1 JA ckion 4231 or MA rket 0900 to place your order. ' We will deliver at your convenience. J For your health's 'sake- Ms A Ask for it at the Soda Fountain and Soft Drink Stands Jetter Beverage Company 35 Years in Omaha r 6002-16 South 30th Street 3 f. 7 eT.P IT' In Strange Potts and Foreign Lands ARE you preparing for a summer cruise this year? Do not leave to the last minute the preparations for the care of your affairs in your absence. Your will, for instance. Now is as good a time as any to see that it meets present con ditions. Review it carefully. And we suggest that you consider the appointment of this' Company as your executor and trustee, which can perhaps be arranged by a simple addition to your will. Our booklet, "Safeguarding Your Family' Future," is good reading at any time ead especially io if you are planning 'to travel. Call or tend for a copy. QmahaTrust Cog t.