Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 25, 1915, Page 6

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! R RIRTY TNIR TPIEY E IIT 5 S TE 0 0 5 555 PO PG 5 A A 500 e i o o 5 BRI 5 s e en e 1na o b o i RS S AN 0 WO B THE OMAHA BEF: FRDAY THE OM FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR The Bee Publishing Company, Proprietor, BER BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Entered at Omahs postoffice as second-class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. By carrier By mall per month. per year. ly and Sunday........ 6e. $6.00 fly without Sunday Ho. w40 ening and Sunday 40c 6.00 ing_without Sunday. ;o . :‘: Bend notice oal'rhnn[o address or complaints of ‘mfllhnly in delivery to Omaha Bee, Circulation rtment. REMITTANCE. Remit by draft, express or postal order. Only two- osnt stamps recelved In payment small ao- counts. Personal rhw. except on Omaha and eastern exchange, not accepted. OFFICES. ha~The Bep Building. uth Omaha- N street Younell Bluffs—14 North Main street. }:.inooll—- Littte Building. h Hearat Bullding New York—Room 1106, 2% Fifth avenua . Loule- New Bank of Commerce. 'ashington—7% Fourteenth 8t., N. W. CORRESPONDENCH, 1 communications relating to news and w"l-;lm to Omaha Bee, &Iwfiu Depart: MAY OINCULATION, 53,345 st of Nebraska, County of Douglas > it Willlams, circulation manage: F ot The Bes Pul ¥, being duly sworn, says that the ‘l‘. for the mo’nlh of y' 1915, wus DWIG] WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager. Bubscrited in my presence and sworn to before 3 L 2 18, o Borpecd %B%R'l“.“;fl'NTER. Notary Publie. Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee malled to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. Jume 25 S —————— Thought for the Duy Selected by Mrs. J. W. Conley 1 hold it truth, with him who singe To one clear harp in divers tones, That men may rise on stepping-stones Of their dead selves to higher things. ~Alfred Tennyson. _ Now for a spell of good ola-luhl.onod Ne- bragka corn weathe . For the moment Colonel House pushes Col- onel Bryan out of the spotlight. | Was it & man or a woman who sprang these Dolly-Varden fashions in footwear? It's a long way from the Carpathians to the Urals, but the Russians are headed that way. £ Sunshine rifts the gloom in Dixie, Cla ocourt. Santa 1s beyond the jurisdiction of the supreme — Nothing imaginable could match a fleld day for lawyers except a field day for the lawyers’ clients. S——— After the Chitago street car strike, let no one pretend a la'r dispute can't be settied by _arbitration. + SEE——— ] : Possibly the Teutonic drive s designed to rhow the czar’s forces the desirability of seeing Russia first. S———— Yesterday it was Russianized Lwow. Today It is Teutonized Lemberg. Spelling reform did not get very far in Gallcia. S——— It may be necessary, in the interest of do- ‘mestic peace, for Omaha chivalry to do the {Lochinvar act for Miss Benson, Se—— Our former secretary of state and our United States senatqr are altke in at least one thing— each has a 'British-born son-in-law enthusias- tically battling against the Germans. — Ir the merger law had only kept all the In- cumbent officers of annexed cities connected up with the payroll, the zeal to “protect” the sure- ‘tles on their bonds would not be half so Intense. SSpme———— Collier's has an entertaining and instructive article on Los Angeles as “a city built by adver- tising.” That's just it—the live-wire city that makes intelligent use of publicity gets more of . it, and it's the same with the live-wire business man. ;i re— The air of astonishment hitched to the as- .sertion that one:half the income of rallroads is ‘paid out in wages would be more impressive were it exceptional. The fact is so common out- side railroad circles as not to be considered worthy of an oratorical outbur: Progressive reform gets a setback from the supreme courf, which annuls the Wisconsin law " prohibiting the making up of an upper berth in & sleeping car until it is engaged. Tt is as- tonishing how an august tribunal can knock a law designed to eliminate sleeping car knocking, SEp—— The high school commencement filled Boyd's ©pera house with friends pleased with an entertain- ment made up of flowers, music, orations and recitu- ! tions. The graduates, whose names have been al- ready given, rocelved their diplomas from J. J. Points, | president of the school board. A bevy of little girls, Bdith Schwartz, Mavel Brown, Alice Andreesen, Grace Allen, May Mount, Beulah Sharp, served as flower _carriers, Commentement exercises of St. Catherine's acad Among those coniributing to the program were Misscs Burkhouser, Etta Creighton, Grace Willlams, Wasserman, Lulu McShane, Minnie Riley, Mary Riley, Tessle O'Connor, Mary Durs, and Fannle McGavock. White of the Chicago division of rallway mall service is inspecting the local office. Mamie Hargrove of Mount of Mra, R E Allen, Jacksonville, Fla., who la successor to Rabbl Harfield Temple isracl, is i the city. Patrick's church James P. English was Margaret Dalton by Rev. the groom. of the democratic com- 18 here cnferring with the bosses of the metropolia AHA DAILY BEE H The products of each section are necessary to Is the Tariff Issue “Time Worn?" Our democratic friends glibly reter to “the | time worn issue of the tariff,’” as if that matter had been disposed of finally through legislation forced through congress by their caucus whip. Contrary to this comfortable belief on the part of the unterrified, it is quite likely they will find the tariff the liveliest issue presented to the American people in many years It affects not only the present, but the future, of the country's Industry and commerce, and as such must ever be of deepest concern to all the people of the country, The policy of protection, that built up the in- dustries and made possible the great growth of commerce of the United States, and that prom- ires their further extemsion, cannot become “time worn,” nor will it lose its vitality, because of temporary misdirection. Nor is It a sectional issue, as some of the wise men would have us helleve, for the reason that the interdependence of the several sections of the country ig too firmly established to be shaken by mere theorles. the life of the other, and with the exchange of articles comes a community of interest above the mere buying and selling. These facts gre axiomatic, and are coming to be better understood, in spite of attempts to bolster the idea that one part of the country can, or does, thrive at the expense of another. Hvery effort made by democrats at ““tariff reform’ has been a failure, and the Underwood tariff is no exception. The tarift will certainly be an Issue in the coming presidential campaign, and a re- turn to republican policies already assured. is well o ———— e Somewhat Severe on the Jitneys. The jitney regulation ordinance passed by the council seems to us somewhat severe. The Bee has already put itself on record in favor of regulation in the interest of the publie, and more particularly of safety, but nct to regulate them out of business if they can be made r sonably safe without so doing. The regulation should provide for an adequate indemnity bond and for inspection against physical decrepitude, and against uncleanliness; it should require definite routes, or at least definite destinations; it should test the fitmess of the drivers and debar incompetents; it should exact a license fee, but not an exceseive one. Lincoln's ordinance has snuffed out the Jitney. Des Molnes has just passed a measure, originally proposed by the Trade and Labor as- sembly of that city, answering most of the re- quirements, the license fee ranging from $10 to $36, according to seating capacity. The Des | Moines -council, mistakenly, we belleve, reduced | the bond from $5,000 to $2,000, although the operators there are sald to be objecting even to this. In Philadelphia the jitneys have been making a popular demonstration against any regulation whatever, The lesson 40 be drawn from our own and other cities’ experience is simply this: That the municipal authorities must make the publie interest paramount to the demands both of the Jitneys and of other rapid transit carrlers. Future of British Industry. Some very Interesting economic well as political points are arising in connection with the Buropean war. What effect will the opera- tlons of the “munitions” bill have on the fac- tories of Great Britain after the war is ended? The present operation of the law is to practically complete the “natfonalization™ of all the great industries whose output will be of service to the country in connection with the equipment and maintenance of the army.in the field. . Workers in these factories are virtually under enlistment for the war, while owners are to be restricted in the matter of profits, to the end that the public will have the greatest possible benefit from tke activity of the mills, Other regulations Mave been adopted that give the absolute comtrol of manufacturing of the United Kingdom into the hands of Lioyd George, who now becomes even a more potent factor in the war than Kitchener, who merely organized the army. With this control of the factories, Lloyd George is charged with the great responsibility of providing the arms and munitions to be used by the most prodigal dis- pensers of destruction the world has known in all its history. No man in England ever held greater power. 2 v Bnglish trade was depressed before the war came, especially the iron and steel industry, which had languished for several vears. The revival that has followed on the demands of the army for greater supplies has occasioned prob- lems that have only partly been solved. The commandeering of the factories is the final effort at solution. But this brings a question still more vital. When the war is over, will the factories be restored to their owne: Or, will they remain under control of the governmenta It “socialization” of production is good for war, may it not also be found good for peace? —— Health Boards and Public Health. One or the doctors now in session at San Francisco indulges In some little extravagance in making claims for the work of the boards of health of the Ameriean communities, but a modicum of exaggeration is perhaps warranted by the immedse service the public has received | from this agency. The properly organized heaith board stands as a sentinel between the public and disease. Epidemics have all but vanished from this country because of the en- | ergy and persistence of the medical profession in forwarding the cause of sanitation and better livi The ready co-operation of the people, throigh submission to restrictions and regula- | tions, has aided much in his achievement, but | to the doctor first of all belongs the credit for the improvement wrought. Further conquests of disease are to be made, and the doctor is lendidly devoted to the quest of health . for everybody. A correspondent prints in‘ the New York Times letters from friends in England, Holland and Italy, each condemning the United States for remaining weutral. While Uncle Sam aims to please his distant relatives, his first duty is to his own family. —_— Voluntary obedience to health rules pre- scribed by the doctors is & hard task, even with the promise of sixty-five years of life. In most cases compulsion is necessary. | All but 33000 will o to Mre The World-Wide Myvie Roy L. MoCardell in Collier, HE ublquitous moving-picture snow, fist endured then pitled, and then embraced, \lights the hearts and aches the eyves of all naths and all races around the world The “movies” give as well as take, 76 they showing the savage tribes of remote landshe things we do, and, in turn, repeat to our eyes wht primal man is doing in his primal habitat. Thye s no | village s0 small in civilized countries but tht it, at | least occasionally, sees the moving plctures. here is | no kraal In African wilds or wigwam settléjent in any other wilderness but that has seen the noving. pleture man display his magic. For the Kyds on the steppes of Sioerla and the tree dwellers of Borneo alike the miracle of life-motion photography M4 been materialized. The untutored savage not onll secs the “movies,” but, bless you! he mcts in thell In fact, the wild men of Borneo took to acting h the “movies” more readily than an enlightened\irish peasantry. \ l ? are | | O \ The number of moving-picture exhibitions ll\x.nll around the earth would be impoasible to conjecyre They have them in the Danish settlements within\ne Arctie circle. Doubtless the sign in front of he “Bijou Dream Moving-Pleture Igloo” In TUpernt reads: “The Night i 8ix Months Long—Enjoy it & | Seeing the Smashing Sensational Film-Feature Bud cess, ‘Lemon-Eared 8al, the Scout's Bride!' in 8ixt) Sensational Resls—all Punch and Passion!" In New York City alone thee are over 1,300 mov- Ing-picture theaters; 300 of these are large, beautl- ful and up-to-date theaters. Sixty of them were originally designed for legitimate stage production. Seventeen were regular Broadway theaters, In which the foremost stage stars have appeared and the greatest” dramatic successes of our generation have been enacted Within the last three or four months six more leading Broadway theaters have gone over to the “‘movies,” making more than twenty first-class theaters now showing motion photography between Fourteenth street and Columbus Circle. ‘This condition of affairs is not pertinent to New York alone. From Budapest to Kansas City the same conditions obtain. ‘The ‘‘movies” are marching on and are taking over the strongholds of the drams There Is no finer theater in Paris than the “Gau- mont,” bullt originally for great theatrical spectacles, but now devoted to the silent drama. Planned and bullt expressly and solely to show moving pictures, the Strand theater in New York City s more commodious and costly than any other amuse- ment edifice In the metropolis, with the possible excep- tion of the Hippodrome—wh also, moving pietures may be seen on Sunday nights. Likewise in Berlin, in London, in every great city, and In every town of any size anywhere, finer, larger. and more costly theaters have been and are being bullt expressly for moving p'ctures than could have been concelved or financed for dramatic purposes. And yet how short a time ago the moving pictura was considered a ap pastime for individuals easily amused with photographic pantomime, horseplay, and melodramatically depicted shiling shockers! It was the creditable production of “‘Quo Vadis ago, followed last year by D’Annum graphic masterplece, ‘Cabiria,”” and this year by ““The Birth of a Natlon,” that advanced the moving ple. tures to the position they hold today. o great and wonderful has been the growth of the moving-plcture business that it had been sald: “Any. thing Is good enough for the ‘movies.’” Ola stock actors and directors and men ocalled from the me- chanical departments of the moving-ploture companies took up the task of writing for the moving-picture camera. Old plays, long played out, and old melo- dramas, long laughed at, were ground over for the film by the hundreds. in fact, until very recently the writing of photo- plays all over the world was in the hands of under- paid Incompetents, called to the work by the demand for plotures ny kind of pictures. Here, then, was evolved that |mportant functionary of cinematography ~the director. Some of these men, notably David Griftith, Thomas Ince, Mack Sennett, Frank Powall, Lloxd arleton, Howell Hi I, Colin Campbell, George Baker, Fdwin Porter, and others, developed into masters of visualization The so-called “‘technique of the photoplay’ means nothing but abbreviations and jargon. The men of developed imagination, whose names are foremost in fiction writing, are now called upon to supply the moving-picture screen with stories for reel life from real life, or a convincing counterfeit presentment of the same. They do it by simply deseribing the chare the plot, and the action. Yet great as has development’ of the moving-picture art in America, it has been greater in Italy. As France led all the world in the development of the automobile, so Italy, with its notable productions in cinematography, such as “Quo Vadis*" and “Cabiria,” has led all the world in spectacular moving-picture artistry. In Germany, too, there was a development of the art that was puttng. American producers on their mettle. The world war in Europe, however, put an end to this dangerous rivalry. It also caused a cessa- tion In the making of great moving-picture produc- tions In Ital But, as | said, the “movies” give and tak: d take all over the world. If italy surpassed us in splendid and spectacular moviing-picture produe. tions, America has led the world In wholesome, “heart-interest”” dramas and jovial, inoffensive screen comedies. Tn the matter of drama, nothing taken abroad could vie in popularity with American western “In. dlan and Cowboy" pioture dramas. These were ap- preciated and called for not only In enlightened Hurope, but in darkest Africa and the mystic orient as well. John Bunny and Flora Finch were laughed at and with in every th the sun. The roug nd- tumble “slarstick’”’ Keystone comedies caused sides to shake under the fur coverings of Kamchatka herds- as they cauted the dre hirts of the Parisian nd London Johunles to crumple from the cachinnations of thelr wearers, The world war, which has wrought such havoc in lives and fortunes, has not left the motion-picture in- dustry of America unscathed. 1t was an axiom of the motion-picture producers of the United States that this country pald the expenses, but Europe pald the profits. The war has almost wholly stopped the exportation of American films to the coumtries at conflict, with the exception of England, and here the demand has been cut in half. It was only the great, costly and artistic forelgn moving-picture productions that had | any sale of any importance in the United States. Tha continental idea of humor and of the love relation hardiy appeals to American tastes and prejudices. On the other hand, as has been stated, moving-picture dramas and comedies had a universal appeal There is no doubt that the moving pletures had their quickest development In America from the be. sinning, as they will ultimately have thelr highes:. Like the telephone, the electric light, and the phono. graph, the moving picture is a Yankee notion and an American invention, People and Events Jitneys are taking 35000 & day from the traction magnates of Philadelphia. Thelr screams may be heard from Germantown to Camden. A Ohicago couple has been married by the new “rationalistic” service. The ususl promises were madg, but time alone will tell whether they have greater sticking power. President Wilson now holds & card as a member of the International Bricklayers' and Plasterers’ and may officlate at cormerstone layings with the airs of a professional. An inventory of the estate of the late Mre. Frank Leslie shows a total valuation of nearly §1,500,000, Carrie Chapman Catt for the woman suffrage cause. A Kansas court affirms the unalienable right of & wife (o snore without endangering the foundation of the matrimonial union. In other words, snoring is not reasonable grounds for divorce JUNE the American | Jffig& o?ee&fi | veling Incognito. June 24.—To the Editor w0 well TILDE The Ber Few shops known that they need no signs over the and the individuals are few whose ot are door prominence make them known, and others may reflect their being in the garb, bear- When In & strange multitude, how welcome is a fra- tcrnal saymbol on a lapel, a characteristic ing or other characteristics. garb or other guide; loneliness avaunts, | and we are among friends. Even at home, though well known, yet other strange ships may be sailing those waters and are seeking friends. The ftirs. ave- | nue of approach is language: ‘‘Parievous | Francais?’ “Habla vd. Espanol?’ ‘Par- | “Sprechen sie Deutsche?' | ‘Cu vi parolas Iate Italano?® Do you speak English?" Esperante? | The world has become a cosmopolitan | sea, and ships from ali realms sail across | our paths, hence we need to fly the flag, or flags, of the languages we can use. How much more fraternal than to travel incognito, slinking along as plates? | Many have two or more languages, even | though it be only the rudiments, which | \Juat add that many more millfons ‘o his | \oterlg of friends, and besides, even the | ni-linguists may after some liti'e ap- | Mcation add the International lantuage A\ thus at least be a dual-lguist, and | PAsibly a multi-linguist. An effective ngnenclature would be to have small megl plates one inch by one-elghth wide, with the name of the language perforated in 1y own type, each plate having two slots\equidistant from the ends at the basedo receive the extending arms from the of the plate below; these are to be hoed in the alota of the plate '.nove, and tlus plate after plate may be at- tached and the top plate having a pin to attachiAt the bottom some symbols may be attMhed to the slots adaptable to the wearer) thus balancing the entire em- blem. . The ole design could be made neat and attgictive, yet not conspicuous, cither in metal| words perforated or raieed, or | finlshed \ enamel, each system being so seeking to myster—for an additional lan- gtage I8 puling another window into vour room a\d adding new worlds to your realm. | POLY GLOT. The Lury of the Teacher. OMAHA, Jund 24.—To the Editor of | The Bee: Since have been supprdysed you herewith have them—provided ydi wish to do the above | parties the justicd of using them. Good teachers tnnot be retained at low wages unless \hey are assured that the terure of thir positions will be reasonable secure, pe witness this list of teachers leaving dmaha to take places elcewhere: innis, }%h School_of Com- &he real facts seem to E. K. merce, $1.200: Hibbing Minn, $1,75). Lioyd Be School of Com- blishing company, J. L. Brawford, Hijh School of Com- merce, $1,300; Trfikn, 1,800 Mi Wable we'dy High School of Commerce, $800; Burlinyton, $1,000. Miss Alice Hoskin, \High BSchool of ;‘o‘nx)'mrrce, $1,200; [ow{ State college, 1,600, N. C. Wood, High Scllo‘:cfig Commerce, 1,30, Springfield, (1., .80, L. 'C._Rusmisel, High ichool of Com- merce, $2700; Rowe Publifing company. $4,600. L. E. Giiford, High Sflt:ol of Com merce, $1,500; bought St. Jaseph Busines college. It 1 understood that wveral others have negotlations under way which will enable them to do ag well. YEDAGOG, Another for Peace and Flohibition. OMAMA, June M.~To the| Editor of The Bee: I just want to erfbrse every word written by W. H. H. Richardson In this merning’'s Bee, and 1 fuly hope peace and mational prohibitior for the United States wil] come out oflthe pres ent war in Europe. Then fthe great sacrifice of humart lives will Yot have been in vain. Then, and not unil then, will life be worth living in i great country of ours J. G. BLESING. nteered Nomination June 23.—To the Please let me put my contribution in rhyme. All hail O man of mystery! All hyl O gifted seer! We had it here but yestereve—thaf in- strument of fear. Today the vast old firmament is dark as ebon night. With, Pluvius, ihe teartul, exnibiting his migh But why, O weatherwise one, why hifis | _ your light so lonk? Why let us groge in darkness the weany years along? To peer Intn the fyture—a gift quite 4 your own | To pry the iid off secretly, to bare th{ KTeat unknown Are |h":fl of nighty import. A startied world is lined | To note the slizhtest movemant of yous | _ all-compelling mind. | We sumetimes honor with a shaft, some- tmes the hall of fame Is the national medium—it there In- scribes the name. To this, because most fitting (don't « me with a “seocp), { 1 nom r prophet, Walt Johnson | of 3 Loup. MICHABL O'CONNOR. Nebxfa.ska Editors ¥, is the editor of the X Re- View, a mew paper launched at Fister | last week a | @ | | thing else, my son 1 CHEERY CHAFF. Patience—So she's learning to dance, is she? Patrice—Yes Where Why, on her feet, of course.—Yonkers | Btatesman, Willle—Paw, what is man? Paw—A man who votes the same ticket as you and who agrees with you in every- ‘incinnati Enquirer. a fair-minded brother doing Penman—What's your oW Wright—Oh, he's a space writer. Penman—Space writer? Wright—Yes, he's writing up astronomy. ~Yonkers Stat Plaintift (in New York Court the Other Day)—He promised that our married life would be Lawyer. it? Plaintiff limpse of heaven I ever got was when he soaked me and I saw stars.—Boston Transcript My boy Josh knows all about culture,” said Farmer Corntossel “Then he's a great help.’ ““He might be, if he didn't take up all the time of the hired help instructin’ em."— Washington Star agri- Higging is a self-made man, is he net? “He claims to be: but | do not be- lieve those bad manners of his could ever have been acquired; he must have been born so.'—Woman's Home Com panion. Stude (trving to pick her up)—The fel- lows bet me a dollar I didn't dare s to you. You don’t mind, do you? Beautiful Girl-Not at all. "Run along now and get vour dollar.—Cornell Widow. “Young Dippy left Miss Maymie's house very hurriedly the other evening.' “Yes, 1 noticed he made a_hasty move to when she mentioned that her ! g + had told her he had some kinc f,':”': R bt "on " toot. '~ Baitimore Americar Jumpin' fingo, but Juggins fs mad What about “The rallroad company has found that trunk of his he lost Mad about it? Sure!” The trunk was only worth $, 0. Browning's Magazine. | “1 jove you" he sald. “let us be | sweethearts : You admire beauty Yes: my only books are woman's looks. p I think.” said the girl, “that we had better not become engaged I fear t ‘w( ou could not be contented with a i< ?IYNY\ of one volume. Loulsville Courfer- Journal ————— Willlam Wordsworth With little here to do or see Of things that in the great world be. | And yet with something of a grace 16 7 O R Y A little Cyclops, with one eve e | Staring to threaten and defy Peak fgweet flower! for by that name at last | and Juggine was suing the company for Hweet Daisy! Oft T talk to thee For thou art worthy unassuming mmonplace with that homely face, Thou Of nature, Which love makes for thee! Oft on the dapple turf at ease i it and play with similes, Loose types of things through all degrees, Thoughts of thy ralsing And many & fond and idle name i give to thee, for praise or blame As is_the humor of the game, While I am gazing That thought comes next—and instantly The freak is over, The shape will vanish, and behold! A silver shield with boss of gold That spreads itself, some fairy bold In fight to cover! 1 see thee glittering from afar— And then thou art a pretty star, Not quite so fair as many are In heaven above thee! Yet Itke a star, with glittering crest, Self-poised in air thou seem'st to resti— May peace come never to his nest Who shall reprove thee! When all my reveries are past i call thee, and to that cleave fast Sweet silent creature! That breath’est with me in sun and air, Do thou, as thou art wont, repair My heart with gladness, and a share Of thy meek nature! NO ALUM IN ROYAL BAKING POWDER evenly and "draw" breath. Mel A. Schmeid, editor of the i.kota | City Engle, moved his plant into its new | home last week. Cunningham & Wolf, publishers the Nemaha County Republican, have in- | #talled a double magazine linotype. | | The Bridgeport News-Blade, J M. | Lynch, editor and proprietor, begun the | sixteenth year of its existence last week The O'Neill Frontler rounded out fts thirty-fifth year last week. Its possent rroprietor, D. H. Cronin, has been at the belm a little more than tweaty-four years. Bditor H. T. Ring of the Hooper Sentl. nel was married to Miss Blizabeth Schu- maker of Fort Calhoun on June 15. The Eride was a former teadher in the Hooper scheols. Mr. and Mrs. Ring will ve at heme at Hooper after July 1 H. H. Humphreys, who has been a | member of the high school facully at | | Paru, nas succeeded M. B. Russesi as | editor of the Seward County Trihung. | Mr. Russell will resume his former lne of special newspaper work. His first job will be on an lllustrated booster cdition of the Pierce County Leader Little Tom's The “other” part of a cigar q Wben you've said "filler" and "wrapper" you've named only two parts of a cigar. q But it takes that other work" to make your q Careful hand-workmanship in the Tom oore is one of the reasons why they always come back for Moore. "Tom Moork CIGAR 10¢ Lrrree Torr 5¢ Moore—every inch of him —"skilful hand- lom Moore bum with your slightest

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