Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 8, 1916, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MONDAY, E: OMAHA, MAY 8 1916. ht reason THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Bee Publishing Company, Proprietor. BEE BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. fintered at Omaha postoffice as second TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. lass matter, By c:u—rn;l By mail per mont! per year. Dally and Sunday. . . be . veee 46,00 Daily without Sunday . o . A Liveniug and Sunday . . . 6.00 Evening without Sunday 4.00 Sunday Bee only........... vees 4,00 | Dally and Bunday Bee, three y n advance, $10.00, . Send notlee of change of address or irregularity in | delivery to Omaha Bee, Clrculation Department, { REMITTANCE, ! 'Memit by draft, express or postsl order, Only two- (eut stamps received in payment of amall accounts, | Personal checks, except on Omaha and eastorn ex- | change. not_accépied. ! OFFICES. Lincoln—626 Little Bulldin, Chlcago—518 Peoples Gas Bullding. New York—Room 1108, 286 Fifth avenue, Bt Louis—503 New Bank of Commerce, Washington 5 Fourteenth street, CORRESPONDENCE, Address communications relating to news and edi- lorial matter to Omaha Bee, Fditorial Department, 57,808 Daily—Sunday 52,223 i it Willlama, cireulation manager of The Bee company, being duly sworn, says that th iroulation for the month of Aprfl, 1916, w A ! iw%‘ and §2,228 Bunday, pis fsm'r AWILTAME, Cirevtation Manager, iy r'i“' o’n J:; mxm and sworn Lo before me i ROBERT HUNTER, Notary Publie, Subseribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee malled to them, Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. N . [_ SUll Mr. Weatherman ought not to try to us the whole summer season all at once, S——— ‘The lesson of what happened In Dublin will be lost in Belfast when home rule comes ii —— For reasons that are quite obvious the pres- for convention tickets for 8t Louls is not a8 acute as for Chicago, i | bankers no doubt appreciate the bint for frequent vacations for em- . The comptroiler does not charge for it. ——— Sesing that Omabe and Douglas county are smaclowsly permitted to help elect the ticket, deny the privilege of a voice In the nomi- ? i Wmif_ st i %i ——— head of the Boston health school says ger of getting germs from kissing is all H £e } i | ! ‘m Thus does experience wallop theory put of the ring, { — Buill, the Bcott-Obregon treaty affords no as- | #urance of peace from the Carranza stock of bandite should the de factos lose favor. As ¢ #0 In Mexico the winners of today may Lo the outlaws of tomorrow, g Preparedness patriots down east insinuate the redblooded west considers its blood too 1o wpill, In which respect they are no economical than the east, where spilling alr is the preferred occupation, —— Warring nationsg are now pushing ahead the of the clocks, Twenty-one months ago turned back the hands of time. The later will not alter the reddened record of istory. — 3 As a speed promoter necessity upholds its tation, The latest proof Is seen in the de- pment of American dyestuff {industry oreed by the exigencles of war., In less than lwo years the output of various dye products eased from 26,000 tons to 135,000 tons, A professor whose hobby s statistics re- that the average man at 50 years of age “eaten 16,000 pounds of meat, 17,000 inds of vegetables and drank 7,000 gallons of liguid.” The reckoning hints at one cause flu the steady patronage of hillside rest cures, { ———— ‘ “Omaha boasts that 1,000,000,000 passen- pass through the city every year,” says the i Free Press, ‘‘but does Omaha mean by 1 ,fi" that watching the tralng go by is its chief | amusement?” Hardly, but it has considerable advantage over shunting visitors through a eave. i An eastern organization promoting guleter observance of the Sabbath, urges abandonment of golfing and automobiling on Sunday as a means to that end, The nolsy character of hoth recreations might be remedied by more subdued 1 (lothes on the green and ditebing the auto horn (!flf a day, Otherwise Joy may be unconfined s of New York patriotism hardly jus- 1ily the label, A motion to decorate city alder- men with plug hats at the eity's expense, for the preparedness parade, brought forth objection which proved fatal. Muniecipal dignity humbled With commonplace headgear on a great ocea won mocks professions of sacrifice for the com Hon good. Thirty Years Ago This Day in Omaha m— o piled Prem Bes Pllag = Mrs. Wibah Steddard and Mre Ve roluraed after an Fostiante) & farnie, share b ik M A ) 4 A Buehner of hey fetuwie bome. Werk on the Fiflosmih and Varnam ;\VIM) AROUt i1y couple nprising ’n‘lsv-m ol ihe oy RUrIny A lomigintod & seies i which (hey AR The phaige Mesdames e 8 Viniesl Wk ab the Midge alsseis w el b L AT e dhne 1o B Mg Auguets Daugias WA Batariey et ke howme W § dnughie Mea WIS Uniiferaia streel, with five Nathan & tAnt has Arvived home and his wite White i isiting her s M Cunabn, and will provs ake | Mtk Mg sretia has aathered W Lig ot wiond 1o ¥ bt g o Beated Aoy g s g = - - Adams | The Moral Obligation, The attorney general of Michigan has said that under its presidential preference primary law the four | delegates-at-large #ult of the primary while the district delegn.en are bound by the results in their districts. U'nder this ruling Henry Ford would get eighteen of the state's delegates and Willlam Alden Smith twelve. Ford won in the state hy a majority of 5,18 and carried seven districts to five for Smith.~Springfield Republican. In this respect the Nebraska presidential preference primary law is exactly the same as that of Michigan and, by the same ruling, Henry Ford, although ‘“‘nosed out’” by Cummins in the state, is entitled to the votes of the two dele- gates from this congressional district in which he leads, with Hughes second and Cummins only third, The rule of the republican national convention makes the district the unit for dis- triet delegates and the state the unit for dele- gates-at-large, so that if the delegate {s morally bound by the preferential vote the obligation is to his own constituency. If he wants tc respect the preference vote, the wishes of his district cannot be overridden by the preference of voters in other districts of the state for someone else, any more than by the preference of the voters of some other state, The two delegates from thig Becond Nebraska district, therefore, rightly belong in the Ford column until they are ready to vote for thelr own real cholce. For them to start with Cummins instead of Ford would be as much a repudiation of their “moral obligation’” as It would be for the delegates-at- large to start with Ford Instead of Cummins, Another Centennia] Anniversary, The American Bible soclety yesterday cele- brated fits centennial anniversary by spec observation in most of the churches, and with pretentious demonstrations in Washington, Philadelphia and New York. From a very humble, almost insignificant start in 1816 the work of this organization has grown, until it in one of the most extensive publishing houses in the world, and by far the largest that deals only with a single work, It has translated the Bible, or portions of It, Into practically every known language, diaiect or idiom, and has cir- culated the sacred volume in every accessible quarter of the globe, No other publisher pushes his business with the unremitting zeal that has been characteristic of the American Bible society, Its importance s admitted, be- cause it has been a factor In the advance of clvilization, and it would be a bold man who would undertake to say to what extent the world 18 made Yetter by the work of this society, which has placed the Book of Books w'thin the reach of all, It iy only three centuries since a king of England g to his people a version of the Bible that all might read, and thus im- mortalized his name. But his work had been far less fruitful were it not for 4he American Bible roclety, now entering on the second cen- tury of its great work, Itg founders will not be 8o readily recalled by the popular mind as is King James, but their work has been the more productive, hecause they have made his of service to mankind everywhere, New Army Bill Held Up, The antieipated disagreoment between the confereées over the new army bill has occurred. The house declines to recede from its position on the federal volunteer force, holding out for the Natfonal Guard as it is now organizéd, And back of all this will be found the miserable politics that has prevented the formation of an efficient military force, either state or national, despite the money that has been lavished 6n the establishment, 8o long as service s voluntary, it doesn’t much matter to the young man who goes into the ranks from consclentious motives, or through the spirit of adventure, whether he is under state or natiopal control, if he is as- sured of falr treatment. Nor does it greatly concern the studious, earnest men who make up the personnel of the line officers, whether their commissions are signed by the governor of the state, or the president of the United States. But it does matter to the politicians, who have for years hampered the service by their Interference. At this moment, hard- working and efficient officers of the Guard feel that they have been injured by the opera- tion of the political machinations that compli- cate the question of national defense. What the thoughtful students of the problem desire is the merging of the forty-éight little state armies into one organization of uniform quality and merit. 1f this can be accomplished with- out destroying the distinctive attachment of each little army to its home state, all well and £00d; It can not be accomplished so long as the military forces of the United States are the playthings of politiclans, ————e Political Cane Raising. The Industry of cane raising in Louisiana is not limited to cultivated fields. It reaches into receptive political soll with results hardly jus tifying 1 energy expended A of the crop raised in the latter way last year was specimen exhibited before the United States supreme court rvecently, in the form of a law requiring the American Sugar Refining company to pay as mueh for Louisiana sugarcane as it pays for | ke raw material in any market in this country The huge refining pluny of the company at New | Orleans was declared a public utility and made | am le to law as & monopoly should the eom n discriminate against Louisiana cane The providing for pany | priee of confisen the law went to the limit | tion by forced sale should remain idle for any cause for one year pro Fourteenth | refinery high court nounced the law & | The In & ubanimous opinton violation of the | srap heap sent It 1o the | amenduent and The outeome goes to show that politicians are not rellable leads at agrieultural uplint e e e afien Husk "l vebtaska presidential primary turos 1 be nearsr 16,000 than \ et A o 15,42 How wany thousaid wrote the name i without making it Jnt. for lagk of the cross-mark or olher Wis paken san only be gusssed at. Bueh & showing writien on, howerer, has never been \ d . ther B T — " " " } ALK Prising and inoe siatent. Nusoriing & Jenr ur more of leaal aversation Bardly wine AR arganiaation Battioahips and artillery the sole { righlevisnoss whieh regards L implementy e morally bound by the general | Washington Topics Bagar O. Snyder, The Bee's Bpecial Correspondent. [ HAVE talked to fifty men from widely different sections of the country in the last week and have found that the sentiment expressed in the Litrary Digest, as to Mr. Justice Hughes, that he has A preponderating hold upon the people of the Tnited Sates, Is entirely correct. The East, which for a time seemed to be rather cold toward the associate Justice, in rapidly warming toward him, notwithstand- Ing the recent announcement made by friends of ex- Benator Root of New York that headquarters in Chi- cago would be opened in the very near future and that the Washington end of the Root campaign for president would be looked after by the junior senator trom New York, James W, Wadsworth, jr There |s undeniably a very pronounfed, n very healthy and a very steady drift to Charles E. Hughas and there will have to be some mighty strong macing to’ prevent his momination if the convention s as- sured of the Justice’'s acceplance of the tender at Chi. cago next month. At heart the Virginia delegates are for Hughes and the Maryland delegation will be for Hughes, too, although in both instances the dele gates go uninstructed, but not In a quarter of a cen- tury, certainly not in my time as a correspondent covering national conventions will there assermble in the city of Chicago a more representative body of American citizens as the republicans are sending as their delegates to perform the very serious business of naming & man who will be the next president of the United States Becretary Tedfield of the Departmene of Com- merce has lssued a general appeal to the housewives to save thelr old rags and old paper In order to eur- tall as far as possible the shortage of paper which 18 becoming a very serious problem. This destruction of old rags and old papers is only one of the many items in which the American people ure wastefully extravagant ot long ago | heard A clgnarette smoker ask an acquaintance to save the tin foll in which cigarettey are wrapped and was ad- vised that perfoddenlly a ecnll would be made upon him for much foll as he might save, “What do you do with §t?” 1 asked and he told me that the tin foll gathered in the oity of Washington was shipped to Baltimore every month where it is sold for the benefit of the tuberculosls hospital and those little strips taken from eigarettes, chewing gum, candies and tobacoo, bring in a pufficient fund to support two beds in that hospital, This aroused my curiosity and after an investigation I found that tin foll such as described above brings about 2 cents n pound, on the average. The tin foll wrapping of an ordinary pack- nge of clgarettes woighy thirty grains and as thers aro 7,000 graine to the pound 24 packages are required to produce 2 cents, The substitution of bronze for gold in plcture frames bas had a decided offect upon the perquisites of the men employed in the frame making industry in this city. Up to two years ago, according to the proprietor of one of the foremost art stores, it was the custom In all picture frame shops to carefully #ave all the sweeping from the rooms in which gold leat was lald upon frames, These sweepings were sont periodically to Philadelphia, where they were refined and the returns amounted to as much as 33000 a year, which were divided among the employes as extra com« pensation, But gold leaf is out of date In frame-mak- ing now, the bronze and other finishing having superceded the precious metal in this respect. Still the sign painter uses gold leaf very largely and they, too, conserve thelr sweepings for the benefit of their employes, and every three months there is a “‘cleans up” day when the returns from the refinement of these sweepings are recelved and distributed among the sign painters, A conservative estimate indicates that the receipts from this source run from $75,000 1o $100,000 each clean-up day for each sign shop in Wash- ington. When the new mint was established In Denver the wash basing In the gold room were all drained into large vats or tanks in the basement of the hullding, There is a cortain amount of abrasion connected with b handling of virgin gold which resulta in the at- traction of fine particles of the metal to the hands of the workers. When they wash their hands thess particles are carried Into the vats referred to. The washings are allowed to settle, then the water Iy drawn off and the sediment Is dried and refined. The retining Invariably results In the recovery of suf- fiolent of the metal to make up any shortage existing between the original weight of the bullion and the welght of the coin produced, But not only are the washings refined, but all aprons and cloths are periodi- cally burned and the ashes refined with like results, Some years ngo the superintendent of a big pack- ing plant In Omaha discovergd that the creek running from the packing house into the Missour! river had been dammed up by some enterprising indi- vidual who waa found to be busily engaged In skim- ming the top of the water above the dam each morn. ing. An investigation quietly carried on revealed the fact that this enterprising citizen was skimming the fats which floated on the top of the water each morn- ing and it was eventually dlscovered that by this process he was cleaning up something like 330,000 a year. The superintendent thereupon decided that this waste might be saved to his company and he therefore installed great vats in the basement of the buildings into which all the washings from the floor wern drained and by this means the fats were saved to a very large extent and what had theretofore run into the sewers and thence into the Missouri river was skimmed and a large amount of money was saved to the company. But in spite of all that could be done the “gentleman of the dam’ continued to maintain nis plant and at Iast accounts he was still “cleaning up" $10,000 or $12,000 a year, and no doubt there is half as much more that escapes even his vigilance In Chicago seversl years ago another big packing house found that it had in its glue works an enormous amount of waste product, which was the drainage | trom the glue which was dried into sheets, and it be- came necessary to discover some means by which | this wasts could be utilized, and, therefore, the super | intendent of the plant tried running It over onto | sheets of thick manila paper which was subsequently sorinkied with sand and the r the sand dried the xlue which wo absorbant qualities o 10 not solidity and The Pees efer: Help that CLEVELAND, the Editor of The Bee: As you were kind enough to furnish our committee with in- tormation helpful to our public hall cam- paign, I thought you would be interested to know the results of our efforts to pass a bond issue of $2,500,000 for a veland auditorium, The vote carried by an overwheiming majority and within a few days we will begin the erection of a public hall on a desirable site in our group plan. Let me thank you again for the infor mation you furnished the committee WILLIAM GANSON ROSE, Chairman. Tearing Up Paved Streets. OMAHA, May 6.~To the Editor of The Bee: When Twenty-fourth street was paved in old South Omaha it was the pride of the whole eity, for it was one of the best paved streets in this part of the country; but it had not more than become settled when the process of tear- ing It up began and it has been kept up more or less ever since, and now the climax. has come when it is being torn up from one end to the other by a public service corporation, It is about time we had some city en- gineers who would be up to date and devise some means to prevent the tearing up of streets as fast as they are paved, for It in o well known fact that they ave never relald as well as they were laid in the first place In some cities no pavement is permitted to be torn up after At is lald, and it is about time something was done in that line in Omaha. The talk of a “City Beautiful” will not avall much as long as the streets are constantly disfigured by bumps and holes made by those who tear up the pave- ments and fall to relay them as good as they were laid in the first place. 1 have heard a great many regrets ex- pressed by people in the last week over the mess the people who are tearing up sand paper became one of the by-products of this packing house. later, as the sund paper market grew, there was A demand for emery paper, and, therefore, emery dust was purchased and emery paper added to the product of the concern Later sales | aments reported that there was a demand for a higher abrasive and the conclusion was reached that garnet | paper might be marketable. A quant v grade | garnets were, therefore. purohased, and garuet paper thoreatior was added o the products of the vompany | MUt the ownera“of the warnet mines Jumped thelr prices 10 aUch & degree that the Chicako concern de rvepeiredlotagptiin gt Sy g | somewhers in New England and pirchased it | for the company which he represented ) I gkt g0 on 1o the snath " olling of the means wh . ha sdupted for (he saving of waste. and then . roquest of ¥ ary Hodfy ! wives au8 and thel PAROTa, s (hat we ma a4 sar the ory of the pedilier whe a A e a4 passad throuah the alierwars and t adwars aing g Wis BONE CARY TREN ARy benes Al o "y saime old Slory In the same ald wa The Voles of Hasluess A4 . « e, May wirts ey disady anis \e Siten wo de 1N the whish of | Ploeivh ! . et AR wards ahe sl ‘our fine Twenty-fourth street pavement are making of it Some provision should be made by our oty engineers to make our pavements permanent in a real sense The streets of Omaha that are paved are torn up from the beginning to the end of each and every year. In the city of Parls, France, T have been told that those who wish to lay underground pipe: and wires have to go under the street and are never allowed to tear up a pave- ment when once lald, and If we ever ex- pect to have a city beautiful some pro- vislon will have to be made by the city engineers to prevent the tearing up of pavements when they are once laid 1 am not an engineer nor the son of one, but it seems to me that thers ought to be wise men among the engineers of the ecity that can devise a means of eav- ing the paved streets from the bumps and holes that can be seen on every paved streot in the elty. FRANK A, AGNEW —— Ask Him Yourself, OMAHA, May 6.~To the Bditor of The Bes: 1 notice Judge Sears’ attempt to side-step his “shoot in the air’ speech Ly referring to your quotation as a “pretended resumo of some of my re- marks,” but he does not say he did not #say “shoot in the air”” Why does he not #tato what he did say or say what he nt to say when he used those words? It he does not think them improper, what would he eall it if someone else had pub- lely advieed naturalized ecitizens to “shoot in the air” If they were sent to the front against their former country. men? OLD BOLDIER. Never Sald Anything Bad. COLUMBUS, Neb, May 6-~To the Editor of The Bee: On the editorial pige of The Dally Bée of this day I find ihe following paragraph: Bwallowing all the bad things he sald #about him, Edgar Howard is out pledgin his support tc Neville. Of course, | “Edgar’’ can favor the man he denounced #o flercely as a guppnt of the liquor in- torests, he must be willing 1o accept the other fellow's support for his own can- didacy for leutenant governor. Politics make strange bed-fellows! It Is true that T am supporting the can didacy of Kieth Neville, the democratic nominee for governor, but it is not true that Bdgar Howard has ever written, spoken or printed any word of criticiem of Mr, Neville. During the late primary eampaign I did all possible to secure the nomination of Hon. Charles W. Bryan, but in all that campaign I did not utter on unkind or uncomplimentary word or writing with reference to Mr, Neville All the way, and on il occasions, I spoke of him as a high-type Nebrasia gentleman, and so I regard him now, 8o certain 1 am of the fact that T have neither spoken nor written a denunciatory word about Kieth Neville that 1 now challenge The Bee to reproduce any such words, with my pledge that If such ean te produced 1 will instantly offer ap-logy to The Bee for calling attention to tf apparent infraction of the rule in news paper offices forbidding misreprosenta tion. Moth as man, and as & candidate for & political office, my only capital is My name Amonk men. A great news paper, like The Hee, should not employ Jts vast power to despoil me of my prop orty EDGAR HOWARD, Vital Importance of Reet Sumar, TOPEKA, Kan, May &~To the Editor of The Bee: During the closing days of April, 60,000,000 worth of raw sugar (Cuban cane) was concentrated in New York, heid ip there by order of the seaboard refi walling for the “free sugar’ act t Into effect. The senate I house con forees were deadlocked and hey did not agres bofore May | this sugar would athed and the tefiners ha pay anug little 1 e to the ¥ T™he Incident reveals the ¢ N refiners " t ade. It ha o & . try auppon . ) aumers ih ‘s d . . " Hritain has practies " ' \ "W \ ave & endency |8 snowurage & promate the arawih of sugar afe & vanat debate N Wer day. Senaier Mardwick . ™ . * A e "ing . ( M aha vias . e democrat o tariff; then eleven of the factories into bankruptey. But if Senator all the more imperative States continue to protect our U industry. We should not abandon it be Hardwick is right, it is that t cause Senator Hardwick d of the Loulsiana industr England blockaded France in 1508-4-6 and sugar went to $2 a pound in the latter country Thereupon Napoleon originated the beet spgar industry which, up to that time had been only an experiment. Suppose the United States should become em brofled in war and had to depend solely | upon the refiners; where would the price | PHIL EASTMAN. But Do They! OMAHA, May 6.~To the Editor of The Bee: While it seems unlikely that any body of sane men would injure so valu- able an asset as the household cat, there 15, in the proposed city ordinance licens ing cats, now afoot a movement to that end, and it s in hope of attracting at-| tention to the folly of such a law that those lines are written | of sugar go? The taxing of cats would mean their | to almost extermination, ple would stand the tax, for but few peo and the out- come would be the legal destruction of | h the cats, | In the great number of poor homes | where cats are harbored principally for | the amusement of the children the tax | would be resented as unjust, nor would | it be paid, with the result that, having been deprived of their pets, their homes | would woon be Infested with mice, thus cauning much lows to those the least able to endure it and, as well, robbing child- hood of its best playmate. Ordinarily, | it not always, the only freedom from mios it through cats. The cat has its #00d trafts as well as its faults, and to| enjoy the henefits of the one we must | endure the other. There i, of course, much objegtion to the night noise of the cat, from which we all suffer at times, and, while it {s very annoying, it 1s no greater a rest robber than the disturb ances of the erowing cock, the discordant robin, the whistling paper boy or the nolsy lee and milkmen, and as an active | nulsance is much more preferable than the practice of g music student, yet no one would ask for the extermination of these pests, Much edn be sald against, as well as for, the cat, hut for the moment let us consider only the lssue at present in the publie's mind, viz: the cat as a de- ptroyer of birds, But, do they? The writer s extremely fond of hoth birds and cats and has ever been a careful student of them. During a half century of observation he has not seen an in- stance of a cat destroying a bird, al- though many times having seen it at- tempted without success. Nor Has he found among the large number inter- roguted on the subject a single person but whose experience was similar to his, all of which leads him to the conclusfon | that, while cats may destroy birds, the oceurrence 18 too rare to deserve atten- | tion, The oft-repeated statement that many | of the desirable birde avold a locality Infested with cats is also unsupported by the facts in my own cane, for our home | nelghborhood with its bountiful supply | of folines has always had a large num- | bor of bird nestings of many kinds and a superabundance of the cheery, but filthy, sparrows with thelr penchant for r‘l()lfi‘ Be- #ing the rainepouts with thelr nests, | cauwe @ few people have an unrational e — and that the its enemies Let w that | is practically all jcularly the Audubon so- led to pull the chests unfortunately, super- just can't stand extermination, thefr cats’ friends fa hope cisty, will not be for the sreon nut few who nervo a oat,” in this truly unwise crusade against pne of the most valuable domess tio animals we have. Confer with the ity commissionérs and acquaint them with the gravity of the situation. Proe against any taxation of cats, We need them to keep us free of mice. A. HBATHEN, ) MR R st GRINS AND GROANS. uf see that Mr. Wallaby Flubdub is the house guest of his father, ~That soems AN UNNECessAry l‘XDrf"flan. What expression?” “House guest.’ “Oh, 1 don't know. Sometimes I used to be the guest of my father in the Woods whed, '—Loujsville Courler-Journal, Head of Firm—How long do you want be away on your wedding trip? Hawkins (timidly)~Well, sir—er—-what would you say? Head of Flrm~How do 1 know? I seen the bride~Kansas City DEAR MR, KABIBBLE, b0 WOMEN LIE ABOUY YHEIR HUSBANDS’ SALARY ? o YES, TWICE — ONCE TD HER. FRIENDS WHEN SHE'S ENGAGED, AND ONCE: T THE JUDGE WHEN SHE'S TRYING To GE ALIMONY e Mise Gabble—I think you were present wh'-uh she remarked that I hed a big mout Miss Kute—Yes, and 1 took oocasion to wet her right, 4 Miss G,~That was very nios of you, Miss K.—I told her your mouth wasn't really so big, it only seemed so hecause “)'_wu kept it open so constantly~Boston ranscript anoostors was n signer of n of Independence,' the haughty lady, “"One of mr the Declarating “Indeed,”” replied | “Well, an ancestor of mine was one of the men who helped draw up the paper and who told the others whers to sign thelr names.” —V/ashington Star, 1s this lund rich?’ usked the promws pective purchaser rautiotisly, “It certainly ought to be,'’ have replt gentloman-farmer, "I put a d monev I had into it."~Indlanupolis New I'LL TRY! Mgar A, Guest.In Detrolt Froo Praaw, When difficultios line his way, ‘ 1 like to hear o fellow way; Ul try! Confronted by n task that's new, Perhaps o dang minslon, {00, Whereln success may be in doubt, 1 1ike to ses bim think it ou Bum up his changes and rep! I eyl Thero's something in the hoy man Who rules hlmullq I\I['mn, this plan; p r Too many say: "I can't’ befors They've ever looked s problem o'er; Hewponsibility they shirk, And soem to fear unusual work, This the """“‘r of do or di n tryl Would there wers more young men todny When duty calls to them, who'd way 'l try On mortals, and that more were hold; Bold In thelr willingness (o face The tasks that are not oommonplnes, To answer doubl with this replyi I otry! O e A A A s A A Resinol the easy way to ‘heal sick skins Resinol Ointment, with Resinol Soap, usually stops itching imstantly, Unless the trouble is due to sume serious internal disorder, it quickly and easily heals most cases of ec- zema, rash, or similar tormenting skin or scalp eruption, even when other treatments have given little relief. Physicians have prescribed Resinol for over twenty years. Resinol Ointment, with the help. of Resinol Soap, clears away pimples and dandruff. Sold by all drugglsts, For trial size free, write to Dept. 11.R, Resic vol, Baltimore, Md, German Shyle Bouble Beer “In a Class by Iteelt™ Brewed and Bottled by Jetter Brewing Co., Ltd. OMAHA , NEB Family Teads Bupplisd by Wi, Jetter 4508 N Street Fhone Douglas a0, Persistence is the cardinal vir- tue in advertising: no matter how good advertising may be in other respects, it must be run frequently be ly to rea and constant- lly successful. ¥

Other pages from this issue: