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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR RONEWATER,#IQDITOR. The R;«‘;hfil-’mnu Company, Proprietor. FEE BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Entered at Omaha postoffice as second-class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. By carrier By maifl afly and Sunday ily without Sun: r month. per year. horedre w gl Bvening and Sunday “oc Evening _without Sund e in Ba e oF “chabge of ubdress of complaina of tice of change o S ularity in delivery to Omana Bee, Circulation Department. REMITTANCE. Remit by draft, express or postal order. Only two- ent of small ac- ed in pa S N B Omaha and eastern counts. Person: ecks, except on exchange, not accepted. OFFICES. Omaha~The Bee Buflding. South Omaha—318 N street. Council Bluffs—14 North Main street. Lincoin—% Little Buflain Chicago—! ears u . Hoom 1106, ‘36 Hirth avenue. Bt Louls-508 New Bank of Commerce. Washington—7%5 Fou 8 w. rems N ting to news and edi communicatlo ating 5 S matier to Omana Bee, Editorial Department. MARCH SUNDAY CIRCULATION, 46,287 State of Nebraska, County of Douglas, #s.: Dwight Wiillams, efrculation manager, says that the ayerage Sunday circulation for the month of March, 1815, was 46,287 DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Ma T, Subscribed in my presence and sworn to fore me, this 2d day of April, 1915, 1 ROBERT HUNTER, Notary Public. Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee mailed to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. April 38 _ Rpyht Vor e Sy Selected by M. Hugheo The pleasantest things in the world are pleas- ant thoughts, and the great art of life és to have as mny of them as possible.—Bres. Some differential between kisses at $50,000 a piece and kisses at 10 cents a bushel. Tree planting not only helps the “City Beau- provement. tiful,” but also comes within the rule of “Safety first.” Despite attempted persuasion, those Italians seem still to prefer ‘the bleachers to the serim- mage line. Spring plowing and planting in Europe are proceeding energetically under the direction of General Shrapnel. The pulsing vigor of spring air carries suffi- clent purifying power to render innocuous the caloric of campaigners. | Hail the first of June brides—South Omaha, Dundee and Florence. Where does Benson come In-—best man or bridesmaid? i S——— ‘The next time a subpoena to appear in court 18 to be served on him, the eolonel will probably ‘run to meet the sheriff at the gate. of the kicking. Sm— ‘Charley Murphy of Tammauy hall has been -accused of all the sins in the political calendar, _ 'but no one can impeach the wisdom which re- ‘strained him from fooling with a Iibel suit buzs- saw., Se—— fal According to the colonel, big financiers hand out big campaign contributions just the same’ ‘as ithey drop money in the church box. Then ‘the churches might do better by putting their ‘collections in the hands of experienced politi- .elans. f — - In the matter of public utility service rates At 18 not & question of the general result, but of the effect on the individual's personal 'bills. ‘The wise rate-maker, therefore, looks to the ldittle fellow who is numerous gs compared with There was a time when man kpew not a blessed thing about cookery. Why should he persist in doing things his forebears eschewed? Nature has wisely made provision of edible roots, follage and fruits, but perverse man in- sists on turning aside from the natural life snd pursuing with fatuous devotion to his own de- application of heat in the prepara- This brave soul in Chicago, £ /| 'being high types of efficlent organization. | will be granted, but does efficlency entirely con- In the Wake of War, While the race has made progress in many | ways since first we have records with which to | compare achievement, in one particular progress | is notable for its absence. No Improvement is shown in the art of war. The mechanics of de- struction have advanced, and man’s ingenuity is now able to accomplish slaughter and devasta- tion in a few hours that once took weeks or months to produce, but the net result is the same. The cry for food from stricken Poland, where millions are starving; for medicine and nursing from pest-ridden Serbia, and now from the devastated portions of East Pruss proves that war is in this respect just the same as it was in the beginning, when savage tribe swooped down on savage tribe, and annihilation followed. Armies leave only wreckage behind them. As the one exception it may be noted that in recent years the armed forces of the United States have several times set foot on alien soll, and each time it has been to work actual im- Cuba, the Philippines, Central America, China, and in some little degree Me«- ico, have been improved because of the tempor- ary presence there of our soldiers. In these cases the United States has given the world a splendid example of what a properly disciplined army can do in the way of construction and bet- terment. Our soldlers do not march in millions, and we are told they lack in the “efficiency’” of the European armies. This may be true, but no trail ever left by the army of the United States is remembered because of the women and chil- dren who starved after the soldiers had marched on. It will take more than the philosophy of Nietsche to justify the nations of Burope for their present debauch when the futuré® sits in THE OMAHA SUNDAY Jjudgment. The “Third Degre The limit of application of “third degree” methods has been reached in Arizona, where officers of the law killed one and fatally injured another prisoner, from whom they were zenl- ously striving to extort a confession. This prac- tice of foreing a prisoner to confess, although an old one, is opposed to the humane theory of the law, and is not warranted by any of the re- quirements of justice. On the contrary, the law contemplates that an aceused prisoner will have every opportunity to establish his innocence. It is not part of the duty of the policeman to ex- tort involuntary confessions from persons under arrest. Arrest is not always conclusive evidenes of guilt, and impartial investigation quite as often establishes innocenece. Our police officers should be trained in ‘the theory that they aro ministers of justice, and not of vengeance, and that their true duty is to see that the facts are established rather than that proof be offered to support them in making an arrest. Confessions secured by brutal methods may serve as apparent Justification for arresting the accused, but the ends of justice do not require such service. S —— ‘Efficiency and Freedom. n “¥e canna be baith gran' an’ comfortable,” commented one of Barrie's Scotehmen, referring zlfi companion’s Sunday raiment. And now ‘dent, tells us we cannot be both efffclent ‘We must, according to Mr, Marshall, “Tom" Marshall, our voluble vice presi- make our cholce as between efficiency .and Much depends on what Mr, Marshall consid- ors efficlency. In his spesch he referred to the, German government and the Mormon church as' This sist of mechinesltke automatism fn all the func- itions of life? If so, the American will never ‘be' | etficient, but he will ibe free. On ‘the other hand, if productive ability is to be taken as a test for efficlency, then the American hag long ago set a mark so far out in front that the other peoples of the world, with all their patient at- tention to detall of organization, have not yet ‘been able to approach it. For many years it has been a wource of national pride, supported by ‘exact figures, that the American workman is unexcelled in his production. Not only 1s this true of the workmen, but in | and more important ways has the Amer- dean vindicated his claim to effiglency. In art, all that goes to for man's wolfare, the American intellect with a brilliancy that does not dim when alongside that.of any other nation or age. ‘The American has given the world the steam. ‘boat, the telegraph, the telophone, the typeset- machine, the aeroplane, @ host of other ‘things of such commgn service that folks no Even the machin- ery of war is more destructive, : chinery for the wholesale taking of human life, The better way of living is also an American no- tion, and is being slowly worked out. No occasion exists for WOrry over our out- put; we'll continue to produce enough to live on, and will remain free and happy, even if we do not attain to the rarefied height of absolute “efficlency.” — + In the Matter of Spelling. An 11-year-old Japanese girl won honors in spelling in competition in a Washington school. Nothing so very wonderful about th » exeept that it calls attention to a fact that might otherwise have remained unnoticed. Spelling s still taught in the public schools, but apparently to very little purpose. ‘One letter coming into The Bee office from a Nebraska college, con- tatulng fewer than 100 words, had in it six misspelled words of common usage, and one proper name spelled wrong. Another, with fewer than forty words, announcing the election of a superintendent of schools in a Nebraska town, and written by the superintendent himself, had in it four misspelled words. Is it because spell- uupuwmuhthomamm days. or is it because people G0 not know how to spell? In some ways the old-fashioned schoolmaster was superior to the modern. He 4id not teach much, but he dig teach well, —— To lend the deft touch of interest to the Greater Omaba Union, South -Omaha will pre- sept with its compliments $343,000 in twenty- year refunding bonds bearing & per cent. Their mm-mmlldnudm'm assist in emphasizing the date of the union. BE HE Nebraska editors' meeting here in Omaha last | week not only marked progress of the State Press | assocliation, but emphasized most of all the sub- | stantial progress which the newspapers in Nebraska \ have made along with the development of the state's | population and resources. I have participated in numer | ous editorial conventions and excursions from time to time for many years, and no one with that experignce could help noting the general improvement in Appear- ance, behavior and manifest purpose. Time wae when | an editor's meeting was nothing but a Junket and a free entertalnment, but now the entertainment fea- tures are subordinated to the business in hand, which 18 an interchange of ideas and discussion for the bet- terment of the newspaper profession. The press assoclation is a big trade organization Just as are the other trade organizations maintained by business men to promote the interests which all have in common. The co-operation of forces like this for higher standards among themselves and for the upbullding of the state cannot fall to produce tan- gible results. For a state organization, the Nebraska Press asso- clation owes a debt that should be some day lquidated in something more marketable than grantude. It owes this debt to the secretary and treasurer, C. C. Johns, by virtue of whose efforts a balance sheet could be produced showing not ome cent of financial obliga- tion to anybody. Think of & man running a secretary’s office for any kind of a state-wide proposition, paying postage, traveling oxpenses, typewriting and minor items for a year, and keeping the total down to §52.16. No wonder the new constitution making the job pay a salary of §10, equal to $2 a week, went through with- out opposition, Speaking of old-time Nebraska newspaper men, sug- gested by the contest for the honor of having been longest and continuously connected with the publica- tion or editorship of a paper, recalls my first exploit with the editorfal buneh now just twenty-five years back. This was an excursion party, organized by the Burlington road and sent out as its guests over the line through northwest Nebraska, just opened, as far as Newcastle, Wyo. We had a special train, and our Pullmane, which we occupled even when we halted &t stop-over points. 1 think there were thirty oriforty of us, although I have been unable to locate in my files any roster of the names. 1 remember that the Lincoln Journal was represented by H. D. Hatha- way, and the long-defunct Call of that eity by John M. Cotton, and that Lou Wessel and Fred Bensinger were along for the Lincoln Courfer. It is my impres- slon that W, Morton S8mith was there for the Omaha Republican, and Seth Mobley and John A. MacMurphy | ~the others I do not now recollect. An editorial excursion to the sand hills and sod houses was something exceptional in those days, and we were royally greeted and entertained. We had banquets at Hemingford and Crawford, and In the coal mines at Newcastle we dined with coal miners' tin tableware and rude cutlery, but not with coal miners' fare. o head and front of the reception committee at Neweastle was the mayor of the eity,| then a diffident, slender young man, but in these days known as Congressman Frank W. Mondell of Wyom- ing. We left our train at Buffalo Gap and drove In coaches and wagons fourteen miles across country to Hot Springs, not yet reacned by the Burlington, stop- ping over night there, and returning to our train the next day by the same cushionless megns of transpor- tation. This was in June, 189, and the hot sun blisters on hands and faces. most of a week, which burned | H ‘with the other guests in the theater party invited t6 witness the performance of “Sari” at the ‘Brandeis, and I watched him to note what impressions such & show could make upon a man who could only hear the lines and the music, but could not see the performers. ‘Much of “Sari,”’ us everyone Who saw ‘it knows, depends on the spectacle presented by tho customary bevy of beauty in abbreviated costumes, and the gestures and grimaces and elever ddneing. 1 could see how Mr. Bdgecombe was drinking In the songs and choruses, and how ‘the humor of the jokes and retorts was deploted on his face. I have no doubt lowed the play-story and enjoyed ‘it thoroughly & whole. I shut my eyes to try to put myselt in for a few moments, but the pith and sub- of the entertainment disappeared with ‘ex- from view. I do not belleve I could make a editing a journal without belng able ‘to and other papers and to see for myself ngs that I wanted to describe or disouss. Twice Told Tales Lament of Book Publisher. “Thomas Nelson Page, since he married a rich wife, hasn't written & line. Kipling practically stopped writing as soon as he accumulated & fortune. Sir James M. Harrie, once his plays made him wealthy, ceased grinding out anything except & one-act trifle per annum. It's the same thing with Hall Caine, too." The speaker was Bryant Cullen, the English eritic, editor and publishers’' reader. He resumed: “Lack of cash—want—is the oi at cause of progress. The world moves—because, most likely, it can't pay the rent.”—The Bookman. The Highlander's Resource. The order had been given to the woldiers at the front that they must not harm any animal unless it attacked them. One day a Cameron Highlander saw @ sheep near him and he bayoneted it. Unfortunately, just then an officer appeared. The soldier without hesitation stabbed the sheep again, crying, “Ye divil, ye'd bite me, would ye!™ r The officer passed on and the sheep soon after became a dinner.—Boston The first base ball game of the season was erippled in attendance by the heavy rain of the night before, only about ™0 coming out to see the Omahas win & walkaway over the Clevelands of 13 to 6. The family of Colonel and Mrs. R. H. Wilbur have the sympathy of friends over the death of their old- est ‘daughter, Hattle B. Wilbur, which took place at their residence, 631 Pleasant street, last evening. A hansom cab line for Omaha is the latest metropolitan innovation by “Jim" Stephenson, the well known Nvery man. His new equipment, consist- and §1 per hour for shopping or visiting. J. ¥. Paulson and Elijah Allen are the committee appointed by the Douglas County Agricultural society to prepare the premium list in co-operation with the Omaha Fuair and Exposition assoclation for the next exhibit. The Woman's Christian union is carrying the war into Africa in reality. APRIL 25, 1015. Baltimore American: “The Battls | fiymn of the Republic” was chosen by Eillly. Sunday to end the service at which he denounced Unitarlans. Julia Ward | Howe, the author of the hymn, was a Unitarian §t. Louls Globe-Democrat: An English SECULAR SHOTS AT PULPIT. | religlous paper insists that God willed the &reat war. It must share the views of the old colored preacher that we ate in | the hands of “an all wise and unserupu- lous Providence.’ Houston Post: A Tennessee minister says “hell is full of ehic dresses, low- necked gowns, silk hoslery and such things.” It may be true, but we do mot #ee why a minister should advertise hell that way. Why doesn't he say it w full of kitchen aprons, gingham frocks and ealico sunbonnets? Springfield Republican: The election of Dr. Parkhurst by the New York presby- tery as one of the eight commissioners to the Presbyterian general assembly, which will meet, at Rochester next month, emphasizes the presbytery’'s dismissal of cbarges against him for ‘“‘unbecuming conduct In opposing absolute probibition in Califorhia. Dr. Parkhurst §s not op- posed to temperance, but doubts the wis- dom of trying reform on too big a roale at first, TABLOIDS OF SCIENCE. ‘The telephone voice travels at the rate of 66,000 miles per second. The wind pressure on wires strung on poles is estimated at halt of that on flat plates of equal area. An ant can carry a grain of corn ten times the weight of its own body, while & horse and & man can carry a burden only about equal to their own welght. It has been estimated by a Berlin seien- tist that the commercial value of electri- city In a flash of lightning lasting one- thousandth of a second is 29 cents. The weeping willows, so-called (sclenti- fic name 8. babylonica), fs a native of China, from which eountry it has been taken over most of the clvilized world. Star photography 4s one of the most tedious operations kmown. In some cases the exposure of the plate must last for for meveral hours. During all this time both the plate and telescops must be moved so that the image of the star will be stationary on the plate. Prof. Rollin D. Sallsbury of the Uni- Versity of Chicago, says a continuous process of contractions is going on in- #lde the earth, and will continue until all the chemicals within it have been transformed into their densest compounds millions of years hence. Barthquakes are a result of the contracting process. QUAINT BITS OF LIFE. The land at the head of Wall street, on which Trinity church and cemetery stand comprises a plot 391 feet long by ‘277 ‘teet ‘broad, valued at $17,000,000, ! The women of Sweden often work as farm laborers. In some instances the /husbands serenely ‘smoke and lounge around, while they contentedly view movements of the industrious wives. ‘George D. Shearer of San 'Refael, ts _exhibiting samples ‘of truit from pear ‘trees planted in 1817 padres who established In that year ! mission San Rafacl Archangel. | z ling, ready to light, for twenty years, | ‘without ever being touched off, was sold among other effects of Mrs. Sallie Will- son of Dover, Del. It was a parlor heater and had not been wsed since the death 6f her husband. Angus McKay of Russell Creek, Wash., has been a justice of the peace at that place for ten years, yet he presided over his first case only recently, and that came as the result of a change of venue. In the town of Mohler the first lawsuit tried there in elght years was held re- cently, and that also on a change of venue. A remarkabie fact regarding the name of ‘God is that it s spelled with four letters in most of the languages 0:;:“: lged ples. In Latin it is Deus; Greek, m;mm, Adonol, which has but four letters In.that language; Syrian, Adad; Ardblan, Alla; Persia, Syra; Tar- ‘tarfan, Tdga; Bsyptian, Aumn or Zeut; Bast ‘Indlan, Esgi or Zenl; Japanese, Zaln; Turkish, Addl; Scandinavian, Odin; Croatian, Doga; Dalmatian, Rost; Tyrrhenian, Eher; Btrurian, Chur; Mar- garian, Oese; German, Gott; French, Dieu; Spanish, Dios; Peruvian, Lian. AROUND THE CITIES. Chicago proposes to drape its husky “1 will” girl with & municipal flag. Cleveland has added swimming teachers @t $%00 per annum to ‘its educational tacilities. Salt Lake City is about to market $300,000 in bonds, the proceeds to be used in water plant extensions. " St. Louls devoted two weeks to its clean-up campalgn and claims to have pulled off a first class job. Los Angeles school authorities, spurred by state law, requires allen school teach- ers to marry Americans or quit the job. A Judge in Portland, Ore., is convinced that & whipping post actively worked is the proper treatment for confirmed crooks. Philadelphia s putting out feelers for the next republican national conventiom. These conventions come high, but the Quaker City has the price. Jitney owners in Keokuk, Ia., are bum- Ing up was in opposition to regulations re- quiring bonds. They fear the bond provi- slon will put them out of business. The re-enactment of direct taxation in New York state will increase taxation in New York City to 2.15 per cent. Rentals are expected to rise in proportion. 8t. Joe Is about to submit & bond issue of 660,000 for school betterments, and $35,000 for a public Mbrary. Two-thirds vote is required to carry the bonds. Sloux City's coplous rock pile and the exercise it suggests materially dimin- ished the vocal activities and the member of I. W, W, agitators in that section. Nearly 1,00 jitney cut loose in Phila- @elphia last Sunday and did a “standing ¥oom only” business. On week days the number is around 0. Street car people admit an average loss of $2.000 a day. The Deseret National bank of Salt Lake City is considering plens for a twenty-four-story bank and office build- ing, to be ereoted on the comer of Main and First South streets. Estimated cost, €1,000,000. If the plan goes through Salt Lake City will have the tallest skyscraper between Chicago and the Pacific coast. People and Events Agaln is man vindieating his opposi- tion to giddy innovations. The bpw on his hat has come around to the sideline. The ruling of a Chicago judge that & man doesn’'t have to pay for the drinks he gets in a loon on Sunday is con- aidered worth at least ome round of four fingers and as many kicks as the dis- tance to the door will permit. A Cleveland woman requests that a lawsuit which she filed thirteen yéars @go be brought to a speedy trial. The un- Tcasonable request of the plaintiff must be prompted by a desire to beat the premised new depot to the finish, Dr. A. J. Rongy of New York, one of the first expoments of the “twilight sleep,” has been rudely awakened by a suil for damages for allenating the af- feetions of a common<law wife The amount involved is sufficlent to keep the doctor on the jump for some days Tammany Hall as an institution is go- ing to bulld mew quarters away uptown in. the vieinity of Central park. The famous wigwam on Fourteenth street has outlived its usefulness and needs the fumigation of destruction. No doubt a change of air will be beneficial, but that does not insure a change in the tiger's Btripes. The -mayor-elect of Chicago is in dan- ‘Ser of shadowing & brilliant career at the ottset. He is quoted as saying that MHis @holee for women ‘appointments will ‘be mothers. Motherhood as a qualification would .put out of the running as fine a buneh of campalgners as ever struck the plke In Cook county and lay up a store ©of revenge that will last to the next elec- If Willlam Hale Thompson is as wise as he looks he will shave his hair. ——— CYNICAL MUSINGS. Singing odr own praises seldom gets us an ‘encore. The man who lacks principle can’t hope to attract much Interest. No man realizes how poor his Juag- ment is till he bets on it. About the ‘hardest work ‘in the world s to get along without any. Bome people are so quarrelsome that even ‘their own statements comflict. Lots of men are slaves to money, but then the world is full of emancipators. When trouble calls we are more apt to be at home than when fortune knocks. The man who buys his popularity gen- erally pays more than the market price. A man’s success may depend on the ‘way he is raised, ‘especially in a poker same. The man whose conversation is heavy should be careful about dropping a re- mark. A fellow has to ‘be something of a sprinter to keep pace with his good in- tentions. /| And look and think and think and look DOMESTIC PLEASANTRIES. Will's wife is such a trifling sort of woman. Ehe never puts anything through.’ “Oh, ves, she does. She puts her hand through Will's pockets all night.”—Bal timore American Patrice—Is there anvthing as bad as being all dressed up and nowhere to go! Penelope—Yes; fixing for company and having nobody call.—Judge. some “Aren't you ever depressed by dim vague sense of oppression, the shadow of some coming disaster”™’ “Yes. 1 feel that way every summer Before my wife comes back from the #hore. " —Life. ‘“‘How can you be engaged to a man ® years old? He has, however given you some magnificent presents. ““That's the point. A first love is ro- mantie, but a last love is very lavish.” —Loulsville Courler-Journal “You summer? e | “No. What's the use? You can go to any large American city and eat all the forelgn food and hear all the foreign languages you may happen to care about.”—~Washington Star. are not going to Europe next ” “What are you boys doing?" askea the ma, "Felling llea: the one who tells the bqwn gets the stick of candy. What? Why, when I was vour age 1 growled the man. fere wl)? i “:(1” ister; you win," b 's ¢ ly, m i em&:a' the _ youngsters —Philadelphia Ledger. THE FOREST. God's le is the forest, silent, true; s tll’rm the arching heavens, gray or uea: ch rock and tree an altar in the air; h_leaf a sermon and each flower a prayer. Here feathered choristers their praises thelr benedictions \ B and rain bring; nd here the human woul i often stirred ly unseen forces of an unseen world. It comes to all of us, the low and high, 8Hll none can tell from whence it comes, or why. A little newsboy once, to aught unknown Exeepting clty streets brick and stone, ud I;l‘ck ‘Was taken from the city man And carried to the country made, And in his simple. childlike way ex- pressed What our minds, more mature, had only guessed. He stood with hat in band, and gazed around, : From the cloud-flecked sky to the mossy \ ground; The look of ounning faded from his face, And left a look of wonder In its place. “Bay, boys, it's & queer feelin' 1 have got, 1 just want to stand in this one spot, again,” He whispered low, &8 though afraid, and then, The trees, the leaves, the grass, with reverent hi He touched, but still he @id not under- stand. “It is not here,” he sald, “It's in the alr; It seems to come to me from every- Where, And touch me here,” and with a sudden start, He laid his hand upon his beating heart With swift glance in the branches over- head, “Say, it's Mke a church,” was all he said. DAVID. Omaha. entire Truck ‘Tire neglect. It will settle for question. under these conditions: Mark that—no no replacement. Never Such Never before has such a war- rant been given on any class of tire. If widely accepted, it ‘means with us a million-doliar stake. It is given without reser- vation agalnst any tire in the field. It covers accidents as well as wear. —_— Numerous makers claim to build tires as good as the Good- year 8-V, Let us stop arguing in print and in person. Let us compare them on opposite wheels. We have done that already, under every condition. Over 5,000 S.V tires were tested out on trucks before we made this offer. We know to a certainty the results you'll get, barring accidents. We have worked for eight years on this Truck Tire prob- lem. We built 29 types before Avery Co., 1007 Omaha [r———— Truck Tires Free Unless the 1915 S-v Outvwears Any Other Here is an offer which Truck users cannot afford to For three months— April, ing warrapt goes with every S-V Truck rebate, no mileage stm tire that fails gy guarantee in writing when you buy Distributors H. Pelton, 2205 Farnam St. ! Omaha Branch, 2549-51 Farnam St Neb. you, without any risk, the May and June—:this amas- is free. Get this the tiges. a Warrant wrriving at this one. We bulilt 74 models of this S-V type be- fore we attained this perfec- tion. We give you in it, as com- pared with others, 20 per cent more avallable tread rubber, ‘The shape ends bulging, break- ing or excessive grind. The compound minimises friction. The tire can't creep, as we press it on at 2 minlmum of 50,000 pounds. It can’t sepa- rate, for the tread, the back- ing and the rim are welded into lasting union. Goto a Goodyear Distributor or ask our local branch where you can get this warrant on the latest 8.V tire, Accept it while the offer lasts. |2368) The Tire Ao Comeer Akrea, Makars of Goodyear Automobile Tires We Make — T T e T Leavenworth St.