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e e o o St e 11 T e THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. E BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Eutered at Omaha postoffice as second-class matter. TERMS OF luaachr-nnn. 7 mopth. v.d; year. per mon 3 and Sunday R 44.% withoue Su ° without Sund Be. Y] Ly mn of “address n? omplainte of ml;: I; drel.lm-‘ to Omaha reulation REMITTANCE. Remit draft, express |n;dvf“;|. M‘.‘ "Ol" m: cent age m| elvy In small ‘counts aal eKLu"f except on a and eastern exchange, not accepted. OFFICES. Omaha~The Bee Bullding. South Omaha—2318 N street. Council Bluffs—14 North Main street. Lincoln—2 Little Building. Chi Hearst Bull m ew York—Room 1106, 28 Fifth avenue. New Bank of f‘nrnmtra. 1% Foul nth St., N, . i M}E”&h unNC«.' communications rela o news matter to Omaha Bee, &Ranu JULY SUNDAY OIROULATION. 47,003 Btate of Nebraska, County of Dougias, #s.: Dwight Willlams, circulation manager, says that the average Sunday circulation for the month of July, 1816, was 41,008, DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager. Subscr! in my e . nd sworn to before s , thi f A h, me. Ui 3 O oRERTT HUNTER, Notary Publie. BER' should have The Bee mailed to them, Ad- bu-wlllh.oh;nmnflunqu-ud. August 8 Thought for the Day Selected by Mary A. Fiteh The day returns and brings the petty rounds of irritating concerns and duties. Help us to play the man, help us to perform them with laughter and kind faces, let cheerfuiness abound with industry. Give us to go blithely on our busincas all this day, bring we to our resting beds weary and content and undishonored. And | grant us in the end the gift of sleep. — Robery Louis Stevenson, A torlal Mayor “‘Jim" made his reputation as & rope thrower. But he is some mule driver, too! The jitneys may not know just what kind of regulation they want, but they seem to know what they don't want, Sp— Did you see that? ‘‘Treating prohibited by law in Great Britain?” What a vindication for Nebraska's dead-letter no-treat law! m— . General Scott {8 on his way to Mexico. An- other General Scott went there once upon a ~ time to seitle things, and settled them, ‘John Lind thinks about it or would advise us (o do in the premises. i | i it £ H i frt : | i 1 is £ s : § £ it &l H } §EE +iF £k i 1 i £t i E £ ¢ 4 ! 5 § : ‘ | | £ f i s : E | £ i £ £ 53 | i i H gk isgl : THE | Improving the Missouri. Omaha is to be asked to join with Kansas | City and other Missouri river towns in opposing the recommendation of Lisutenant Colonel Deakyne, the United States engineer who recom- mends that the program for improvement of the Eig Muddy be abandoned. This recommenda- t:on, based on the fallure to develop sufficient traffic to warrant the expenditure, puts the | question squarely up to congress. Money was | wet aside In the last rivers and harbors bill for the work, which, if done at all, will, for the pres- ent at least, be under the direction of an engl- | neer now on record as opposed to the project. Missouri river navigation is not a new prob- lem; the stream is as susceptible of service now as it ever was, and the only point at issue Is the cost of developing traffic. If the river is to be used, a comprehensive program must be adopted, to be systematically carried out. This will in- clude not alone the clearing of the channel from | obstructions, the protection of the banks of the | siream in order that a permanent channel may i be preserved, but the furnishing of terminal ' facilities at the points to be served. The re- quirements are easily outlined, and the only question to be finally settied is whether water | 1a to be made available to supplement rail trans- ; portation. Carranza Ready to Comply. The earliest fruits of the All-American con- ference on Mexican matters is the manifestation of a desire on part of the striving champions, who have torn their country by factlonal fight- ing, to get In on the ground floor of the settle- l nent, This must be the case of Venustiano Carranza, who accompanies his brief of submis- slon with the delicate suggestion that he be recognized as the “first chief”” and the man to be given power in Mexico, Similar submission, with the same suggestions, will very likely be before the conferees early in the week. As outlined by the United States, the plans for pacifying Mexico comprise the recognition of all factions as factors in the settlement, which | | will date back to the abdication and fiight of | | Huerta. Nelther side is to be given final prefer- | ence, but an effort will be made to find a man for president who will represent what the revo- | lution stood for, but who has not been faction- | ally prominent since. This elimination of the ! present leaders should have the effect of mak- ing union the easier, and, as the settlement will h the actlve support of ali American powers, its authority ought to easily be established. Mexicans may have a real government again before the year is out, but it will take a long time to bring that country back to the state of development to which Diaz had brought it. The “Eugenic Woman.” One of the enthusiasts who has been spout- ing at a convention out on the Pacific coast has given us a word picture of the future woman, to be brought about through eugenics. She will be taller than the present woman, will be plump, but not fleshy, and will have a rich com- plexion in which the glow of health will shine with undiminished radiance. All right. But why walt for two or three generations before plucking this peach? Do it now, for she is with ug In abundance. Girls we have, “daughters of the gods, divinely tall, and most divinely fair,” and some of them are dark and some are blondes. And who is going to say what {s the right helght for a woman? It will be like the answer Lincoln gave when asked how long a man’s legs ought to be. One thing may be accepted as settled. The mother of the future will be lfke the mother of all ages, from the beginning of the race on down 1o the present. Her face will ghine with “‘that lght that never was on land or sea,” her arms will enfold her offspring with such warmth of love as nowhere else s found, and from her lap her babe will crow his delight in an empire be- yend the dreams of earth’s most ambitious | monarch, And, as years go by, and the fledg- lings leave the home nest, wherever they wan- der, mother's love will be there with them, and mother's heart will be sore because she cannot always simply kiss away the hurts of life. And, when at last mother closes her eyes and goes to her long rest, she will be mourned by sons and daughters bave known something of that infinite that has beld the race together, world end, a mother’s love. Eugenics may accomplish wonders in its way, but it will never alter mother. Accuracy and precise statement alike require the omission of the word “‘slaughter” from the roster of world war terms, It is Incorrect and misleading. In former wars in which open fighting prevalled as well as in the days of the | spear and the battleax, siaughter was an exact | descriptive term, Trench warfare, despite the the hand grenades, the rolling of bombs, asphyxiating gas and lquid fire, ren- | of soldlers comparatively safe. is the inference conveyed by an explosives, Hudson Maxim. ““The slaughter which marks this war,”” says Maxim in & New York Times interview, “is Mr, not more than one-tenth as great for the hours of actual battle in comparison with the number of men engaged as that of our civil war.” This s & strong statement considering the source. | Let us examine It in the light of available records. No one knows definitely how many men have been or are now eangaged in the present war. Fifteen million men s regarded a fair estimate, The total number of men of all services engaged | on both sides in the four years of our civil war | ‘was 3,225,000, or a little more than one-tifth of Burope’s estimate, The Red Cross computa- | tioh of losses during the first six months of the _present war shows 2,146,000 dead and 1,150,000 wounded. The former figures work out a death loss of 1,446 for every hour of the | cix months, exclusive of the wounded loss, ‘The loss of life from all causes, on both sides of the civil war, totals 483,765 men—aunion, 349,944; confederate, 133,821, This means an average loss of 13.8 per hour for every hour of the four years of war. It the civil war losses were compressed into a battle period of six ‘months, corresponding with Europe's period, the average per hour would be 191 men, or ol to every seven killed per hour tn the war. the word, Massacre more | 8150, I'll be back. | —almost Kentucky whisky, almost Russian ambassa- OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: A Rerens By VIOTOR ROSEWATER. O YOU remember “‘Coin” Harvey, the same who made himself so famous by his book “Coin's Pinancial Echool” when the free silver frenzy was at its helght—that he had thousands of | people actually belicving his “school” was a reality and that Lyman J. Gage, later secretary of th treasury; J. Plerpont Morgan, and all the other big guns, stood up beforc him and were quizzed by the schoolmaster in person? In his “Coin's Financial School” Harvey undertook to propose the remedy that Wwas to revive the world from its industrial depres alon, and cure all the economic ills to which mankind was subject. Wall, the same W. H. Harvey, now lving down in Arkansas, has gotten out a new book in the same schoolmaster style, which proposes a new remedy—in fact, he calls the book “The Rem- edy,” which s “to emancipate the race from evil conditions now existing in the world, and to provide an organization to carry the remedy into effect.” Harvey is always interesting, and his book is not bad reading. Although by no means so fascinatine as his free silver stuff, it is equally Indefinite and impractical. He starts out by asserting that lack of individual character is what 18 afling this discrepit old world, and illustrates it with a story about a business man giving his cashier twenty-five pleces of fractional sflver to be handed out to persons paying their bills in addition to the change properly due, only to find by the test that eight pocketed the money without looking at it, while nine men and two women knowingly kept it, and only six, being two women and four men, returned the excess. Not at all im probable, as it strikes me! But what is the remedy’ “My proposition,” declares Harvey, “is a system of education that will create proper character in the in. dividual, and a high character of citizenship, Charac- ter (furthermore) may be taught easily as reading writing or other similar branch S0 all you have to do Is to buy one of Harvey's books, fill in "Con- tribution Blank, Form A, with the amount of money you wish to give to the educational movement to pro- mote character teaching, payable when the sum of $260,000 at least has been subscribed for that purpose, and you will have done your share toward bringing about the regeneration of the universe. Harvey's mew book recalls his former heyday when he came to Omaha in the early spring of 1896 for a lecture on the free and unlimited coinage ot #llver, which packed the o:. Creighton theater to the doors. It was at this meeting that Harvey made some remark about the surreptitiousness of tha “Crime of 1873, the mccuracy of which my father, who was present, challenged on the spot. When the cross-questioning threatened to become uncomfortable, Schoolmaster Harvey waved his hand toward Wil llam Jennings Bry noticeable among the occu- pants of a box, with the remark that Mr. Bryan would doubtless be glad to accommodate Mr. Rose- water in a debate. The challenge was pressed upon Mr. Bryan, as Harvey's substitute, and the debate was duly held a few weeks later. It was a good de- bate, as all who heard it conceded, and the partisams | of each side Insisted that thelr respective champlons had the better of the argument. This was in May of 1896, and this money-question debate caused so much talkc throughout the land that many Invitations were received to repeat it at different places. One of theso invitations was accepted for a Chautauqua gathering at Independence, Mo., on the outskirts of Kansas City, it being convenient for the two orators to stop there on thelr way to the 8t. Louis convention, which both were attending in their capacity as newspaper men. It T am not mistaken, this was the last time Mpr. Bryan entered into public debate with anyone, as he was nominated for president before another month rolled around, and subsequently refused to recognize any challenges that did not come from an opposing presidential candidate, and none came from such per- sonages. My father was pald §75 for his part in the Kansas City debate, and I take It that the amount recelved by Mr. Bryan was the same. My father afterwards debated the same question with “Coin™ Harvey, himself, over at Urbana. Iil, where he suc- ceeded In driving in the material he haa originally wanted to launch st him at the Crelghton theater | meeting here. — Tt takes a reporter experienced in all sides of life to see the humor of a situation. Ome of our scribes— I won't give him away by name—wno has been spending his vacation with his folks in Peorla, whers he, himself, launched his journalistic career befora coming to us, sends me a picture postal, inscribed. ““This is a pretty town, but when I spend my other They make almost everything here dors and almost reporters.” Our former fellow townsman, Henry D. Estabrook occupies a large part of the current number of th National Magazine with an article made up from his address on ‘‘Truth—-Business and Political,”” which he delivered with telling oratorical effect at Chicago a few weeks ago before the Assoclated Advertising Clubs of the World. As a truth-teller Estabrook has no superior and few aquals—in fact his blunt telling of brutal truths undoubtedly had much to do with Omaha losing him &s a citizen and the local bm losing one of its most distinguished members when he moved away, largely because he had championed the losing side in & local political contest in which the truths he told were not palatable to those for whose edification they were uttered. The wide apread publicity Estabrook is receiving is supposed to e part of preliminaries engineered by his law partner. Ormsby MoHarg, to suggest him as a president'al possibility. If anybody can, McHarg can—at any rate it reflects credit where it is well bestowed and ra- less of the presidential race, Henry D. Estabrook of New York and Omaha would grace a cabinet portfolio or a forelgn embassy, and he wouldn't forget his boyhood friends, either. More than 3,000 persons were present for the Grant memorial exercises at the high schogl grounds which were carried out with due Impressiveness. The day was also observed at Fort Omaha by half | hour guns, and a national salute at sunset. Miss Mollle Fagan, who was hurt in & runaway, is convalescing rapidly. Frank Robbins has been appointed spectal police- man at the depot on account of the growing tramp nuisance, and increase of pickpockets swarming there. Prof. 8. 8. Gillsple is visiting his brother, Prof. J, A, Gilisple of the Deaf and Dumb institute. Rain and moonlight don't mix very will, Messrs, Sternsdorf and Cook were compelied to postpone their moonlight pienje, which was to bave been given n Hanscom park Colonel and Mrs, Guy V. Henry entertained those who participated in the rifle competition with a pleasant dancing party at their residence at Fort | Omaba Mre. Samuel Mcleod and Miss Susie Mcleod started on an extending tour west. Work has been suspended on the addition to the B. & M. headquarters bullding. the trouble being that the masons quit because they discovered that the con- tractor was putting in stone cut by convist labor. calied | SIGNPOSTS OF PROGRESS. At the first of the year, according to & government estimate, there were 108, 677,000 farm animals in the United States, & grin in a year of about 7,002,000, Because of competition of the jitney buses an electric line which operates in Vancouver and Victoria has reduced its , cents. Because of present rates of foreign ex- change a dollar in American gold is worth about 1015 cents in England, 113 cents rates to | in Germany and 1025 cents in France. Sixty years' supply of natural gas at the present rate of consumption has been wasiad in Okishoma In recent years, ac cording to government flgures. The sum spent for newspaper advertis- ing In the United States is $250,000,000. This is 40 per cent of all advertising and more than four timss as much as in the second lurgest medium. The ccunty of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, is not only willing, but is anxious, to pay its debts before they are due, and the commissioners are advertising for credit~ ors to come forth with $50,000 worth of outstanding bonds, due In 1918 Missouri's governor wishes to reverso the “show e slogan to one of “shofy you.” He plans to have a trainload of Missourl products, accorpanied by vari- ous silverstongued personages, lour the eastern ¢nd northern states by way of proof. On the metal plates of the United States steamship New Jersey, Henry Reuterdahl, the marine artist, has painted & nmfrk- able scene of a battleship in action. The plcturo is called tho most valuable in the world, as the structure on which it 18 laid cost many millions. e il QUAINT BITS OF LIFE. It was a Danville, Ind., total abstainer whose cow ate fermented corn and got drunk and scandalised the neighborhood. Headed by a big rooster a flock of hens in Pittsburgh marches every evening trom its yard to the rallroad station to meet the owner, J. L. Armstrong. The flock then escorts Armstrong to his home, the rooster leading all the way. John A. Enyder, a Harrisburg (Pa.) let- ter carrier, who is 00 years of age, has left for Los Angeles, Where he will marry Mary C. Stemler, formerly of this county. The pair were engaged when he was 18 The bride-to-be is now 6. A young daughter of Bronislaw Ko- walezyk of Easthampton was seized with a violent fit of coughing, which brought from her throat a stickpin she swallowed five years ago. In a similar coughing fit last fall the stone which had been set in this pin was recovered. Whenever N. Frank Randall of Ran- dolph, Mass., goes into a certain news store in town and leaves his horse near the curb the horse promptly comes up to the door and pokes his nose against the glass unt{l Randall comes out with some candy for the animal. A Chicago alderman played a good joke on his colleagues the other day by intro- ducing e resolution ‘“to prevent the use of patronage or the promise of it in in« fluencing the vote or action of any per- sons.”” After It had been promptly voted down, he explained that it was a section of the state law and he merely wanted to know whether the aldermen knew it. That a slap in the face brought on an attack of heart disease and caused the death of Michael Truehart, 51 years old, of 215 Bt. Ann's avenue, New York, was disclosed in Long Island City police court when Gregory Kelly of 732 East Ome Hundred and Thirty-S8eventh street was held in $3,000 bail on a ch of man~ staughter. The men, who were old friends, were on a ferryboat on their way to North Beach, Thursday night, when they differed over a trivial matter, Kelly slapped Truehart with the flat of his hand and the latter fell against the rail- ing and died. WOMEN'S ACTIVITIES. The chief of police of Bouthampton, England. is advertising for policewomen at a salary of from & to §9 a week. The Massachusetts Federation of Wom- en's Clubs has indorsed the suffrage movement. The antls waged war against the position. The vote stood 208 to 9. The Providence Journal calls attention to the fact that a man in Binghamton, Conn., has made twenty quilts thus fer in the year, and yet some people talk about women Invading the sphere of men. Another step in woman's progress was taken Wednesday, when the first woman Justices in the British empire were nomi- | nated in South Australia. One of them s Mrs. Price, widow of the state's first labor premier. Mayor Thompson of Chicago thinks that women know something about the city beautiful, and has appointed Mrs. James H. Channon member of a special parks commission. She has been inter- ested In the parks and playgrounds work | for several years. Dr. Marie SBchmidt is another woman on the same committee. Female workers on “‘tramways,’ the British name for street cars, were mnot very much in favor with the Amalga- | mated Association of Tramweay and Ve- hicle Workers at the annual conference in Edinburgh recently. Resolutions of protest against women workers were passed, and it was declared that, while the government may want women to take the place of men during the war, this organization disapproved’ of it. Atlanta, Ga., has been discussing the question of co-education, and recently the Board of Education decided by an indirect vote that the time has come for co-edu- cational high schools in that city., Mrs A. T. Wise said she was opposed to such a school, and, as principal of one of the schools, has had oppertunity to form an opinion. There are psychological and medical reasons, she said, that make it unwise for girls and boys of high school age to go to school togetber. TIPS ON HOME TOPICS, Indianapolis News: The bureau of en- graving and printing, which grinds out our curremcy for us, has cornered the supply of dyestuffs necessury in its busi- ness. But then, of course, the object of & corner is always to make money. Wall Street Journal: Assumption that when the expert nmavy board has been selected ‘‘we will presently be in a state | of defense such as no other nation has ever seen” matches the theory that a #rand jury indictment is equivalent to conviction. Springtield Republican: A circular is- sued by the “Raliroad Workers' Educa~ People and Events Major Jost of Kansas City s facing a possible impeachment, just because an auditing committee isn't satisfled with the way the pay rolls down there were made out The pushcart market is one of the great institutions of New York's East Side. It serves a real need for the poor and is to be given permanent quarters under the new Manhattan bridge. Boston FElks gave an enthusiastic reception to the new grand exalited ruler of the order, James R. Nicholson of | Springficld, on his return from Los An- geles, where he was elected to his high place. Judge Chatfield in the federal distriot court at Brooklyn cut the claims for attorneys’ fees in a receivership case from $126,720 to 830,525, saying the at- torneys had done littie effective work for the creditors. Gladys Ravenscroft, the young EngHsh woman who captured the woman's na- tional golf champlonship of the United States In 1913, has just announced her engagément to wed with Temple Do bell, a young English gentleman. George W. Shock of Philadelphia, % years old, and sixty-one years a teacher in the Philadelphia public schools, says: “Plenty of hard work keeps a man from getting rusty,” and advises the for exercise purposes. At the home of A. J. Stearns in Hart. land, Vt, is a large red rosebush which has been bearing roses for more than seventy years to his knowledge This year it had more than ninety full-blown and partly opened buds at the same time. Hudson Maxim, the inventor, and Mat- thew B. Sellers, editor of an earonaut- ical publication, have been selected by the Aerounautical Soclety of America to represent that organization on the navy advisory board, of which Thcemas A. Bdison is chairman. Joshua Conkling Reeves town, Pa. daughters, has devised a “kiss resonator,” whereby he hopes to keep track of the courting. In some parts of the country a speedometer would be more to the point, as the smack would be loud of Stoyes- AROUND THE CITIES Milan, Italy, has 600,000 people. Zaandam, Holland, is to have a sugar factory. Boys and girls in Vienna under the age of 14 have been ordered to serve as hos- pital orderlies. Fire which swept the village of Hogans- burg, N. Y., near Watertown, caused damage of $75,000. Forty-six cases of typhoid fever has been reported in the Bay Ridge section of brooklyn, N. Y. Branch, N. Y., is annoyed because por- cupines have taken to invading the vil- lage streets In numbers, The Paris police force is to be increased by the additicn of a corps of divers to work beneath the river Seine. Gag cookers on bire in Bristol, England, numbered 19,560 in 1902; 43,770 In 1910 and 51,620 In 1913, reports Consul Armstrong. When the ground is covered with snow in at least one city in Norway a track- senger car mounted on runners. Lynchburg, Va., has a name which ls not exactly suggestive In Itself of reform In penology. Yet it is the Lynchburg city farm board which since April has main- (ained & 40-acre farm for city prisoners where forty whites and forty negroes, under short-term sentences, are employed. axe or the hoe as the proper instrument father of three very popular enough without the ald of a resonator. | less trolley car hauls as a traller a pa:-i But the. shield of the great Republic, DIAMONDS - ON CREDIT ; GRINS AND GROANS. Another new hat Ye »uld really | save your money with the price of ever thing~ going up. | “But why? The lor 1 can buy with it ger 1 save it the les Passing Show Female Twin Soul-Pardon eled appearance; 1 have just the bath! Male dishev from my yme in Soul—Ah t then? Fema'e Twin Soul- Ye Male in Soul--Anoth abit in com- mon. How sweet!—Butfalo Express \the, Does your hu | “Never How do you know “He telis me that day older than 1 aid me and if he.doosn't don't think he would about matters. ‘—Houston P rtant “Why do you go ou wing with that man? He thinks ft's funny to rock the boat."” I've repifed the athleti girl. “I took a dislike to him the first time 1 saw him, and I'm just dying for an excuse to bit him over the head with an oar."—Washington Star. KABIBBLE | KABARET EiaAie) BIRICD RUFFD WILL NOW GIVE A SING, “ DN PLAY MARBLES WITH heard so, |_“on, nor solfloquized “‘there ain't any favorite Oh, no! If 1 bite my fingernails I get a rap over the knuckies, but {f the baby eats his whole foot they think it's cute.” —Ladies' Home Journal ohnny bitterly, in this famfily “His verses are simply blood gurdling | Yes, regular Edgar Allan Poetry." Harvard Lampoon. | _Cholly (to shopman)—1 say—aw—could you take that yellow tie with the pink spots out of the window? Hosfer—Yes, sir. Pleased to take any- (thing out of the window, sir. | Cholly—Thanks, aw'fly. The beastly thing bothers me every time I pass. Good mawning.—Christian Reglster. COLUMBIA'S EMBLEM. | Edna D. Proctor In “Songs of America.” | Blazon Columbia’s emblem, The bounteous, golden C Eons ago, of the great sun's glow And the joy of the earth, 't was born. | From Superior's shore to Chili, From the ocean of dawn to the west, With its banners of green and silken sheen Tt sprang at the sun's behest; And by dew and shower, from'its natal hour, With honey and wine 't was fed, Till on slope and plain the gods were fain To share the feast outspread; For the rarest boon to the land they loved Was the Corn so rich and fair, Nor star nor breeze o’er the farthest seas Could find its like elsewhere, |In_their hollest temples the Incas | _Offerea the heaven-sent Maize— | Grains wrought of gold, in a silver fold, For the sun’s enraptured gaze: And its harvest came to the wandering tribes As the gods' own And Montezuma's Was made of its sacred meal. Narrow their cherizhed fields; but ours Are broad as the continent'’s breast. And, lavish as leaves, the rustling sheaves Bring plenty and joy and rest; For they strew the plains and crowd the ft and seal, estal bread w ' ‘When the reapers meet at morn, THIl bilthe cheers ring and west’ winds sing A song for the garnered Corn. The rose may bloom for England, The lily for France unfold; Ireland mayv hondr the shamrock, Scotland her thistle bold; The glory of the West, Shall bear a stalg of the t The sun's supreme bequ: The arhutus and the goldenrox The heart of the North may cheer, And the mountain laurel for Maryland Its roval clusters rear, And jasmine and magnolia The crest of the South adorn: But the wide Republic's emblem 1s the bounteous, golden Corn! WATCHES selled Corn— ‘The most enjoyable and profitable way to spend your vacation is among your friends and in the comforts of your own home. With the money you would spend “goin a “Vacation Present” of a fine Diamond, and the ple: like N and CREDIT TERMS & 2 S Xg8--Scarf Pin, solid d, 1 pearl, braes . $0.50 ing and wearing a genuine Diamond is an all-the-year-round During_our Annual Mid-Summer or Va- cation-Time Sales is the time to bll¥ secure extra special values. EAS 'O ALL. It's the new fashionable way, ou could make yourself ure derived from own- somewher vacation, la Io-’\ 7 20— e ) 1134—L 9 8 2108—Bracelet can be detached, so watch | sol— seid’ “Llook ©an be worn as a pendant o . | enamel, 1 fine di Fine gold_filled, small popula; mond, 1 real g Jeweled Nickel movement, pendant set, either | 1p-inch ‘u.r Bt SueEe B S 918 2 A each link is detachable.......... $13.55 TERMS: $1.50 A MONTE. 888—Tie Clasp, solld gold, genuine diamoad. ipe- clal g B t | mounting, 14k Dlamead. $50 | solia wold . .\ 85 & Montn | 9165 & Weex. | Open Tl 8 P, Mo, 1086 —Cuft | Links, soll_wold, |704—S 011a Gold Roman finish, | Locket, space for two fine Dia- ,"hee Diamoad monds | in star set- 5‘0 A tng 1e Month | g% agonen urdays Tl 9:30. Datly - M. Bt Call or write for Catalog No, 903 one Doug. 1444 and salesman will call THE AL Persistence is the cardinal vir- tue in advertising; no matter how good advertising may be in other respects, it must be run frequently and constant- ly to be really succcessful. ATIONAL CREDIT JEWELERS MAIN flog'l. CITY NATIONAL BANK BLOCK. Opposite Burgess-Nash Oo. 80 1 uth 16th Y