Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 25, 1915, Page 14

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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. ‘The Bee Pu;mhlng ‘Company, Proprietor. BER BUILDING, FARNAM AND EEVENTEE Entered at Omaha postoffice as second-cl TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTIO tered By carrier By mafl per month. per year, Dally and SUNBAY......oooneeeeirnreeen B0uiiiiiiiie Iy ‘Without Sunday e % ing and Sunday........ e 8o Evening without Sunday.. e i } Bunday Ree only..... Mo, 200 Send notice of change of address or complaints ol irregularity in delivery to Omaha Bee, Cireulation Department. REMITTANCE. Remit by draft, express o~ postai order. Only two- stage stamps recelved in payment of small ae- :?.3;":’ Personal checks, except on Omaha and eastern exchange, not accepted. 'fiFF‘I('FR Omaha—The Bee Building. South Omaha—218 N street Council Bluffs—14 North Main street. Lincoln—26 Little Bufldin, Chicago—801 Hearst Building New York—Room 1105, 286 Fifth avenue. 8t. Louis—88 New Bank of Commerce. Washington—7% Fourteenth St., N. CORRESPONDENCHE, Aress communications relating to news and edi- lAcnrill matter to Omaha Bee, itorial Department. JUN SUNDAY CLROULATION. 46,724 State of Nebraska, County of Douglas, ss: ight Willlams, circulation manager, says that the average Sunday circulation for the month of June, 1915, W, T4, DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Ciroulation Manager. Subscribed in my Ppresence and sworn to before me, this 24 day of July, 19 A ROSERT HUNTBR, Notary Public. Sutm-:b;u leaving the city temporarily should bave The Bee mailed to them, Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. July 28 Thought for the Day [l “7he mind ia its own palace, and in iteelf [ Can make a heaven of hell, a heill of heaven. - Milton. It’s been a late season for all the crops, but more particularly for the political plum crop, The Saengerfest is voted a pronounced suec- cess without a dissenting voice. Zum Wieder- 'kommen! CEp— Like all compromises after the fact, it satis- (fies nobody, though everybody pretends to be ‘tickled to death. — Despite the prayers of the devout in Russia, the allied Teutons are making the fur fly on both sides and the middle. ——— Chicago is being exploited as a summer re- sort city. But so far It has had no advantages 'to offer superior to Omaha. —— Yes, but 1sn't there any more ple in the cup- (board for the other Nebraska democrats just as deserving, if not more long-waiting? S———— o The devflopment of American submarines i \with a radiug of 6,000 miles disposes ; In b J;Wuflm me"pmymmulu |Grover Clevelund, but he manages to make his meaning just as unmistakable. Sp—— That was hair-trigger action on filling those lcity hall vacancies following the transfer of the big boss from the city hall to the federal build- Aug. Looks as if someone had an inside tip. S——— . John Wanamaker's suggestion of buying ‘back Belglum will strike real estate men ag a risky speculation, A title based on squatter ‘Boverelgnty is not an attractive investment. . . — Autolsts are agaln admonished that the law _requires them to come to a full stop where street ‘cars are loading and unloading passengers, and Mot to start agaln until the car starts. Safety ‘first! ' ——— One element of every city's credit on the bond market consists of the amount of securi- | i H £ ; I ! support the public schools, i out for school purposes was Tt is falr to assume that the greater The Note to Germany. The third American note to Germany on the subject of saféty at sea for neutral travelers is firm and friendly, and sets out the position of our government with' unmistakable directness. Germany has hitherto evaded the main Amer- ican contention, setting up in justification of its submarine campaign the exigencies of the war. This is squarely met by the president with this statement Tt a belligerent cannot retaliate against an enemy without injuring the 1ives of neutrals as well as thelr property, humanity, as well as justice and a due regamd for the dignity of neutral powers, should dictate that the practice be discontinued. If persisted in, it will under such circumstances consti- tute an unpardonuble offense against the wover- elgnty of the meutral nation affécted It is the principle of freedom of the seas, a fundamental and not an adaptable law, that sup- ports our contention. | modern methods of warfare could not have been | considered when the existing conventions were entered into; a proper regard for the rights of neutrals and of humanity demands that these n.ethods be so adopted that noncombatants will not suffer. Whatever retaliatory steps may be taken against an enemy must have due regard for the safety of those not directly involved in the war. That submarine warfare can be so carried on has been demcnstrated by experience since our original protest on the sinking of the Lusitania. Demand that Germany disavow fts torpedoing or make compensation is firmly re- newed, and the concluding sentence of the note contains a warning that is not likely to go un- heeded. A more explicit statement of the American position could hardly have been made. That cur people will support the president in his attitude s not to be questioned. Music and the Multitude. The crowds that filled the Auditorium dur- ing the presentation of the Saengerfest pro- grams form something of a sufficlent answer to the oft-repeated charge that Americans are lack- ing in appreciation of the finer things of life. Music is really popular in th's community, ag it s in our country. Our people have the same yearning for the.truly artistic as have those of countries older and, therefore, more completely developed in matters of taste, for the impulse to music fs universal and not national. Music has been known in all times and among all Taces. The difference is only in degree. Amer- fca has made some notable contributions to* the wealth of music in the world, and in point of apprectation has shown by its shower of golden dollars that it de%s not lag behind In recogni- tion of musical genius. And this comes from the multitude rather than from the few. Our artistic ideas may not be thoroughly crystallized, but our ideals have not suffered through this cause. The success of the Seengerfest is a tribute to the popularity of music in Omaha as well as In America. ———— The Changing of the Face. Bveryone knows that the face of every per- son {s constantly changing, and that these changes deplet not only physical development, but also mental and moral metamorphosis. The innocent look of the child bécomes lined over anew repeatedly as it grows older. The face is a palimpsest—a parchment receiving succes- sive writings, one upon the other, reflecting the character as it s molded beneath the surface. This thought I presented in a most graphic manner in a dialogue “dramatic sketch” in the current {ssue of Scribner's magazine. A famous Italian painter, executing his masterplece of “The Last Supper” for the Milan cathedral, lacks just two figures for which he is seeking subjects. “The two faces which I cannot paint,” a8 he explains, “‘because, search as I may, I can- not find two faces so contrasted that the one shall convey to us the aspect of the divine, the other of the vile. The one a mirror, as it were, of heaven, the other the glass of hell itself. Ten years have I spent in this fruitless quest.” But before leaving the cathedral after this outburst be discovers a subject in one of the choir boys, a'young man eking out his earnin; a worker in bronze and gold by singing in the choir in order to contribute to the support of his wid- owed mother. . Ten years lator discloses'the painter seeking the one still missing face, and as a last resort applying to the governor of the convict prison in Naples for a view of the most hardened crim- indls under death sentonce, one of whom proves to be the long-sought model. The artist works fast at his sketches during the night to beat the bangman due in the morning, only to learn as he s making the final strokes that he had painted the same figure twice for the two fig- ures. To the suggestion that he can now finish the masterplece, he cries out: “Never now! It God can finish the. pictures He begins, my pleture shall be left forever unfinished."” The postic llcense of the tale does mot de- tract from the force of its lesson. The chang- ing of the face—what different stories it can tell. But if the face divine ean be transformed into the look of hell, who will deny that the re- verse process is also possible? Good and bad traits, worthy and wicked impulses, struggle constantly for the mastery in the inner man. There is no good reason why the plcture cannot become more angelic with each new painting of it, The changing of the face, or rather the direction,of the change, must be as much within the coutrol of its owner as is the musterpiece within the control of the artist, — Nebraske Again to the Fore. You can't keep Nebraska down, In arts of War or peace, in politics, agriculture, commerce or industry, in any of the things that go to make up what is good in our complex ctvilization, Nobraska will be found at the front. The latest triumph {s just announced from the Navy de- partment to the effect that for the next year the battleship Nebraska, buflt on the western coast, will earry on its forward fumnel a big letter “E" to denote its supremacy in battleship engi- neering efficlency. Seventeen battleships wore in the test, which extended over a year, and the Nebrasks is so far ahead of the others as to be ovt of sight. Kansas is far behind and the rest are mowhere. This news will make glad all hearts from the Missouri to the Colorado- Wyoming border, and every Nebraska heart will beat a lttle stronger because it is so. If you want to find Nebraska's position, look at the bead of the procession. It does not matter that | THE OMAHA SUNDAY BPE: JULY o Vewors, amd Sntirunians By VIOTOR ROSENWATER. HE HORROR of the excursion steamer tragedy over in Chicago is, of course, not comparable n loss of life to what have come to be every-day | oocurrences in war-stricken Burope, but the nearness brings it home to us with much greater force. What | & sudden fatality means to the friends and families of the victim is keenly realized in that small circle, but & wholesale drowning like this multiplies the calamity a thousand-fold. We have had disasters in Omaha, o affecting Omaha people, but nothing on this stupen- dous scale. Our tornado two years ago, in number | of people killed, yet totaling less than 150, was the | worst of these experiences. The Logan wreck, which | concluded the plenic of the Union Pacific shopmen | and their familios almost twenty years ago, in a way | closely resembled this latest mishap except that it | came at the close of a gala d | | | beginning, and the number of casualties was relatively small { happened to hive been over in Chicago at the time of the picnic, returning on & train that brought me into Omaha upon that awful Sunday Norning. The first word of the wreck broke on us with the newspapers picked up at Council Bluffs, but the full Import of the affair came only when we emerged from the cars at the station on this side of the river. The heartrending scene must have been indelibly lin- pressed upon the mind o every one who witnessed it for the statlon was crowded with a frenzied mob. Hundreds of disheveled men, women and children had epent a slespless night there vainly waliting for the re- turn of their 1oved ones, and grasping at every scrap of news that flitered in from Logan. Most depressing of all, at the side of the platform was drawn up the wagons from every undertaking establishment in Omaha, and mattresses and cots had been set up wait- ing for the arrival of the Injured. I questioned a few people whom I knew, but they were too dazed to talk understandably. Trainmen said that the speclal would soon be in, and T waited around a little while, soon discovering that the same hopeful information had been doled out to the weary waiters every few minutes through the long night, and that it was the suspenss of momentary expectation, constantly dlsap pointed, from which they were suffering, as much as from their grief and anguish. 1 have no doubt that the same sad experiences have now just been repeated fn Chicago by the same quick spread of a funeral pall over a sceme of joyous gayety. Apropos of the coming “Billy" Sunday engagement, T have a synopsis of the report of the finances of the B. Fay Mills revival meetings that were held here in 188, promoted by the combined protestant churches of Omaha. For that enterprise, which was then re- #arded as a colossal undertaking, the total amount of money recelved and disbursed by the treasurer, H, A. Doud, was 8328111, of which $2,001.7 came from the Pro rata contributions of the church organizations, and the remainder from individual donations, a street rail- way bonus, sale of books, and rebate on hall rent. The advertising committee spent nearly $400, most of which went for billboards, signs, posters €hd cards, and none of it for newspaper advertising. The hall rent took $1,000, and the musio committee spent $276, oft which only 3135 was paid to musiclans. The accounts of the treasurer were audited by a committee consist. ing of Willlam Fleming, J. H. McCulloch and Warren @witsler. As there was no item covering compensation for the evangelist and his helpers, the presumption is that they were taken care of through a thank offer. ing from the converts and others Interested in the meetings. Let no one hereafter question the veracity of the Bally newspaper in anything it says appertalning to the weather. ' Here is a scrupulously consclentious parish paper which calls itself ““Church and Home" chronicling Iast Sunday's hailstorm with the statement that “many of the stones as large around as base balls,” and vouchsafing the addition informa- tlon that “our sexton reported that his boys caught quite a number of small fish on the grass near their home, evidently sucked up by the storm from some nearby lake.” Do you get that? 11t may be pertinent to nofe that the slapght of Colonel Roosevelt upoh the son, 1 Didn't Raise My Boy to Be a Soldier,” ramities back to the somg written by Captain Jack Crawford, the poet scout, one-time traveling correspondent for The Bee, and now doing chautauqua entertalnment work in the east, en- titled “My Mother Raised Her Boy to Be @ Soldfer.” Captain Jack not long ago sent me & copy of his words and music, together with a newspaper * Interview valiantly defending his sentiment against that ex. pressed by the author of the answer, which it had elicited from the suffrage camp under the caption as already stated, “I Didn't Raise My Boy to Be a Soldier.” Captain Jack's song tells how his ‘mothey sent both his father and himself to battle for the Stara and Stripes during the war of the rebellion, in which the father was first wounded and then lost his lite. Twice Told Tales Always Safety hm. ‘ “You say that you want some name engraved on this ring ™" sald the jeweler to the beshful young man. ‘Yea; I want the words ‘George to his dearest Alice’ engraved on the inside of the ring.* “Is the young lady your sister? "Nox.mhmmlhflvtowhmtmw ““Well, if 1 were you I would not have ‘George to his dearest Alice' engraved on the ring. If AMoe changes her mind you can't use the ring again.” ““What would you suggest?' “I would suggest the words, ‘George to his first and only love’ You sca, with that inscription you can use the ring half a dosen times I have had exper- ence in such matters myself."—New York Journal. Oalm Resignation, Referonce having been mads to & beautiful restgna- tion, Congressman Joseph J. Russell recalled an ap- propriate story. Duflu-dln‘nuurtymthm‘ man said, the toplo turned to the comnubial state, Among the guests was a bachelor person. “Speaking of o remarked the oventually bachelor, “It seems that the longer & man 18 mar red—" ‘‘The happler he 18, tmpulsively broke tn & spster party with a hopeful glance at the other, “T waa golng to say," resumed the bachelor dis- regardingly, “that the longer a man is married, the less he seems to mind it."'—Philadelphia Telegraph went up against the Union the moore of the locel team in the then beat them out by adding an- twelfth inning. Was attained today by Messrs. Wag-. Savege and Seunders for 100 head of prime welghing an average of 560 pounds and hundred on the Omaha market. Eclipse Chemical Fire extinguisher very severe oll barrel fire opposite otel, the fire being put out with one. fourth of a charge in forty:five secondes. Mra. John M. Thurston, 308 Farnam, wants to em. ploy & first-class cook and laundress. No. 2, is selling on the local market and corn, No. 2, at 33 cents, Bedford & Souer, 213 South Fourteenth street, are edvertising twenty town lots In South Omaha, “a beautiful tewn, elegantly located,” where “several dwellings have been bullt and twenty or thirty are mow bullding.” hnhunom 2 Mrs. A, Calderwood, 1616 California, wants to dis- Pose of & good plano cheap instead of at its | | SECULAR SHOTS AT PULPIT. New York Mail: The preacher who | says that home rule for cities would | mean the downfall of the authority of the state, can't prove his claim by quot- | ing church history. Churches like to run their own affalrs, and citles, like | churches, are composed of human beings. Houston Post: A Baptist minister In Pennsylvania told his congregation, com- posed almost entirely of women, that he believed he would have to stock the bap- tistry with fish in order to get their husbands to come to church. It seems that the vice nigh universal Brooklyn Eagle: Unique, so far as we know, is the joint appeal of Roman Cath- olica and Protestants In Buffalo against | sectarian spirit in American politics. It may seem to some minds an echo of the last gubernatorial struggle in this state, but really the conditions producing it have appeared in local politics, and a desire to make municipal government better is the chief motive of the clerical and lay signers, who number fifty Cath- olics and fifty Protestants. The Cath- olic administrator of the diocese, one state regent, the president of the m- Commnerce and three Protestant ministers are on the list. New York World: The Rev. Dr, Aked, who now objects very seriously to the manufacture and sale by Americans of | munitions of war, is the same Rev. Dr. Aked who only a few years ago, on as- suming citizenship in the United States, remarked that the atmosphere of the old world was too oppressive for him. Per- haps it may not be amiss to remind the gentleman that one reason why the air of the western hemisphere is invigorating to most people is to be found in the fact that its inhabitants forego none of their own rights and do not very often at- tempt to deprive other people of theirs. of Sunday fishing is well ber of TABLOIDS OF SCIENCE. A newly-invented eleotrical device meas- ures off the ten-millionth part of a second with accuracy. Nitrate ‘of sodium crystals as clear as the best glass have been made by a Parislan sclentist. Among the dog-day convenlences is a tumbler with twin compartments, one for fce and the other for liquid refreshments, To prevent a kettle from rusting always keep an oyster shell in it. The oyster shell should be taken out occasionally and ‘brushed, Inspection of the old walls of the pal- ace of the Louvre disclosed that rein- forced concrete was known and used in Parls In the sixteenth century. It has been estimated that nearly 300,- 000,000 feet, or more than 55,000 miles, of film are used up yearly to satisfy the world's demand for moving pictures. To analyse the unburned gases given off by industrial plants a French scien- tist has invented electrical apparatus which makes the tests and records the results automatically. Aluminum shapes to fit all parts of the human body, plerced with channels for hot or cold water circulation, have been inventéd by a Viennese surgeon for use as surgical compresses. The icing of refrigerating cars will ba dispensed with by the Invention of a new system by which the warm air is pumped out of the cars and replaced with cold The scheme has just been patented. The United States geological survey is studying the lavas of Hawahan volcanos. The work is particularly pertinent be- cause all the {slands of that group have been bullt up gradually by volcanis dis- charges of lava, from a beginning deep down in the sea. ERRORS OF HISTORY. Willlam Tell was & myth. ‘, Corfolanus never allowed his mother to intercede for Rome. Blondel, the harper, did not discover the prison In which Richard I was con- fined. The duke of Wellington never uttered the famous words, “Up, guards, and at them!" Alfred never allowed the cakes to burn, or ventured into the Danish camp dis- guised as & minstrel. Falr Rosamond was not poisoned by Queen Bleanor, but daled in the odor of ganctity in the convent of Godstow. Charles Kingsley gave up his chair of modern history at Oxford because he sald he considered history “largely a lle.” Charles IX did not fire upon the Hugue- nots with an arquebus from the window of the Louvre during the massacre of St. Bartholomew, Chemists have proven that vinegar will not dissolve pearls nor cleave rocks, in Bpite of the fabled exploits of Cleopatra and Hannibal. The siege of Troy is largely a myth, even according to Homer's own account. Helen must have been 0 years old when Paris fell in love with he The number of Xerxes' army has been @rossly exaggerated, and it was mot stopped at Thermopylae by 300 Spartans, but by 7,00, or even, as some authors compute, 12,000, The Abbe Edgeworth frankly acknowl- edged to Lord Holland that he had never made the famous invocation to Louis XVT on the scaffold: “Som of Bt. Louls, ascend to heaven.”—New York World. AROUND THE CITIES. Pittsburgh {s bullding a city hall for which $1,600,000 in bonds was voted in 1910. The state census gives Boston a popu- lation of 735,823, a gain of 30823 in five years. Chicago authorities are gathering in various mechanical gambling devices in- stalled in stores near school bulldings, Jitney drivers in Philadelphia celebrated the grant of a decree of injunction against a regulation ordinance by issulng -cent tickets good for six rides. Los Angoles boasts of a new achool equipped with a olub room for fathers, & laundry and sanitary kitchen for moth- ers and a hyglenic nursery for bables. Wheeling, W. Va., where stogles and plug abound, Las & hotel with a cigar stand where this sign is displayed: *If you spit on the floor at home, spit on the floor here. We want you to feel at home.” Guests read and grin and ex. pectorate elsewhere. At attempt of a Salt Lake City con- tractor to force the sale of property de- linquent on one instaliment of public im- provement taxes is blocked h( the state People and Events ] Smoky eity’'s millionaires are getting wary Fittsburgh sends out a story that ‘ one of its wealthy elders rebuked a beau tiful woman for trying to filrt with him. ‘ Miss Frances Whitney, aged 62, of St Louls, keeps twenty cats in her home. | | ¥riends think she fa oft in the upper story and seek to have her purr mental condition inquired into. The Matteawan cocktail is the very lat- est New York stimulant. The nature of the prescription is not stated on the label, but three doses are sufficent to carry | the bearer to his destination. War promises to bring some grist to the lazy man's mill. Out of the periscope of the trenches and the submarines a | New Yorker has produced a pocket device which enables the rubberneck to view the scenery on all sides without the exertion of turning around. Word s passed down the line to the alumni of the Kansas university, with the emphasis of finality, that the state s not going to foot the bills for the gay and toothsome dinners of the alumni. With the word goes rejected bills for $847.60. The heartlessness of statehouse job- holders once more plows frritating fur- Tows on polished highbrows. The census of the Empire state is ex- pected to show a population of about ten and a quarter millions of people, or one-tenth of the country’s total. Where- fore the New York World fires this salute: “One section of the effete east Is muitiplying in men®*and resources at a rate that would make newer communities explode with self-satisfaction. Two Germans who were partners in the restaurant business In Chicago fell out and separated in anger. The retiring partner started three new feeding shops, one of them next door to the original restaurant. The owner of the old shop got wore all over, but he didn't scream. He took the public into his confidence by means of placards on his windows, the principal one belng a cartoon entitled: “A German submarine at work in Amer- fca,” with these explanatory remarks: “The American moral code of business principles precludes a former partner from opening up opposition within a rea- sonable radius. Here this unnaturalized German renegade has viclated all moral codes, and It 1s up to the public to relegate him into a concentration camp.” WHITTLED TO A POINT. A lazy man makes much ado about nothing. Men, like pins, are no good if they lose their heads. Any man who knows it all must be an awful bore to himself. Opportunity never troubles a man if there is nothing in him. It is asserted that the electric chair is a sure antidote for old age. During courtship an ounce of flattery is equal to a pound of caramels. Yet hlockheads are not the kind that produce the burning thoughts, If a man's credit isn’t good he can easily cut down his expenses. At the age of thirty a man begins to unlearn what he doesn't know. Those who suffer in silence usually have a lot to say about it later. ‘What would be the result if we all fol- lowed the advice we give to others? Women do not like new wrinkles any more than they do old omes. The early bird that monkeys with the early bee is apt to get stung. ‘The man who says he is glad he is mar- ried {s either an optimist or a lar. But it is better to quarrel over trifies than over something of real importance. Poverty is sald to be a sure cure for dyspepsia, ' but the cure may be worse than the disease.~Chicago News, DIAMONDS - CREDIT IS EERE-—No matter where ou will meet old friends and make new well dressed and as prosperous as do. «dd to your appearance as a beautiful genuine ly money, you can open VACATION TIME Vacation, will want to can wear will bay f" {nwi.\l" -mln“ ts thly afte y 1a ounts mon a fl: ing our great “Aunual Sui save mon-g. We are and all other lines of ‘Why not avall yoursel lewelry while on your & part of your Vacation We are showing an exceptionally large and fine as- sortment of La Valllerss, in exclu- sive new designs. ¥ 1189 — T $65 ol Diamonds at 1134—La Valltere. | 689—TLadies’ Rin: solid gold, bllck | 14k solid gold Lo enamel, 1 fine dia- tis “Perfection d, 1 real pearl. mountin n ch " § | prilliant vess wmond, at. $1.50 & Month, | Di Hamon pe et o o 85 & Month, | MUSINGS OF A CYNIC. The only man who is always sure of a Job is the bill collector. A level-headed man j& merely one who alwaye agrees with us No man can force luck by worrying over the fact that he hasn't any. Even the second-story man has no ob- Jeotion to getting In on the ground floor. A man, like a fish, can generally avold being caught by keeping his mouth shut. Perhaps the most lled about thing in all the world is the ple mother used to make. Tmitation Is the sincerest form of flat- tery, but it doesn't go in the patent office. Bome people never seem to realize the difference between their own way and the only way. There is plenty of room at the top, but that doesn’t Influence a man to be & steeple climber. Many a fellow loses his heart and says nothing who would put up an awful roar If he should lose his money.—New York Times. DOMESTIC PLEASANTRIES. \ “Here's a news item says the United States is to turn out a submarine which can travel 5500 miles and cross the ocean on, one supply of fuel. It is the G-3.” whid,call & submarine like that the Gee Baltimore American. “(‘EM you keep a secret?’ “Yea' “But will you?" “'Oh, that's different, I don’'t knew."- Detrolt Free Preas. -~ T always encourage my husband to ex- Plain public questions to me, said the cheery woman. “You have gneat respect for his opin- ‘don't try to ui nderstand less I understand them the fun he B.u- explaining them to me.” ~Washington tar. KABIBBLE pre— - ; \ P % Bing—Borely is going to take up rail- B nice girls have told him * Bang-—So m to e tracks that T don’t wonder at ft. \ ~Town Topice. Heiten—Do you _think severe religious training really prevents a person from wrong-dong? Skelter—Well, it doesn't prevent it, but it certainly detracts the pleasure one gets from sinning.—Life. ' PEACE! ) Heary W. Longfellow. Waru':-ul the power that fflls the world th terror, Were n.uf‘.;ho wealth bestowed on leol?::p:.d—n the human mind from 'rh:nw-nnonnlofl.l-nfl- and forts, mmanvd.! ety nation should 1ift again 10 Fand Ceruinst & ‘Drotier on 1ts Tore- Woudd wedr for evermore the ourse of ¢ Caln. Dm'_ the dark mmmmv 'l'h.m sounds grow fainter and on 3 And ke . , with solemn swest vibra- ns, I hear once more the voloe of Christ say, “Peacel | Peace! and no longer from its brazen The blast o; war's great organ shakes But, beautiful as f the immortals 1 The holy melodies Of fove arie. { WATCHES how ur TSIt y n&ml g e mocount with us an 18 over. o.Gtving is the time t: Su{o e e to 1) k! nes, e T astonish yo ng uoon‘m Elgin or Waltham Watch 389—Cases are double stock wold 0. led, 2 ed. warranted for 25 -69“#3.- . $12 | polis or engraved. tham movement. Gu |accurate. Price. . g !l-_-_“ s Open hfl( T8 P, Call or write for our beautiful 'o‘ |9Ffi"" run frequently tal . Phone Douglas 144 ::d - our salesman wil 3 THE OLD RELIABLE, ORIGINAL DIAMOND AND WATCH CREDIT HOUSE Persistence is the cardinal vir- tue in advertising; no matter how good advertising may be in other respects, it must be ly to be really succcessful. T 9180, contalning OY" and constant-

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