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et 6 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BY ED\\ARD ROSEWA LR » VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. —_—_ ) | The B“.—_______P“hhlhm‘ Company, Proprietor. - | Interstate Commerce commission TEENTH. | o relieve the city from the BEE BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEV. ud-class matter, Entered at Omaba p TERMS OF SUBBCRIPTION otfice us By carrier By mail por month per yea Dally and Sunday #5¢ i Daily Wwithout Xunday Abe Evening and Sundey.. 10¢ $bo vening without sunday Sunday Bee only.. Dally and Sunday Bee, (hrce years in advance, $10.00 Send notice of change of address or irregularity in delivery to Omaha Bee, Clrculation Depaitinent REMITTANCE, Remit by draft, express or postal order. Only twoe cent stamps received in payment of amall accounts. Personal checks, except on.Omaha and eastern ex- change, ot accepted % OFFIC Omaha~The Bee Bu'lding. Bouth Omalia—231% N street Council Bluffse—14 North Main street Lincoln—-5626 Little Building, Butlding. Fifth avenue, nk of Commarce 725 Fourteenth street, N. W. CORRESPONDENCE Address communications relating to news and edi- torfal matter to Omaha Bee, Fditorial Departinent APRIL CIRCULATION, 57,808 Daily—Sunday 52,223 Ihe bee Dwight Willimma. cliculation masnuger of Publishing company, being duly sworn, says ernge circulation tor the month of April s dally and 4 suniay. DWIGHT WILLIAME, Clrculation Manager, Bubscribed {n_my presence and sworn (o before me this & day of May, i, ROBERT HUNTLER, hmur, Publie. . Fubscribers leaving (he city mnp Iy should have The Bee mailed to them, Ad- dress will bu changec as often as requested, LA S AR 5 i A Mexlcan robbers rald and run « iza talks and talks, Bliver's steady Tise brighiens the prospect of lining the clouds with the teal thing. iway while Mobilizing the army of school children for war on the dandelion pest ought to do the brisiness, AE———— A real fortune awaits the genius who will contrive to extract motive power julce out of the dandelion, LEE——— The great and nly Sheriock Burng has touched Los Anteler for another $10,000. Easy money from easy warks, | As one bishop does nit equal the neces tles of sinful Des Moines, Omaba will cheer~ fully honor drafts on it unfalliffig fountain of righteousness, Sm— | of a huge ecargo of Bcotch whisky at New York renders useloss all sug gestions to shoot high hllll over Knicker- bocker heads, — Unheralded by stampede or bonus, ead mining in the Missouri sands secures a place arovg the iInfant industries of Om and Couneil Bluffs, Our ordinance licensing Jjitneys includes some rules and regulations in the interest o! safety which do not seem to be very well en- forced, Why not 5 E——— There are many vays of adveitising Ne braska, but the ... way of all 1s to L.~ those ‘we want to interest out here in person and let the 1 see with their own eyes. Militiamen In states bordering on Mexico with « chance for real service seem to have an advantags ove: thoss in interfor states, who have to be content ' ith play-maneuvers, E——— Denver has voted to abandon the eommn.is- sion plan of government and 80 back to the old fo. + of mayor and council, While Omaha ias ¢ the commission pl. . now for four ,vars, no « *s yet seriously propos:d a movement to reccind it ' The Western Passen, charzed with violating the »rti-trust law, the railroads have been going even stronger in the'r freight traffic combinations, It is nearly 1 to set limitc again to their uéd in bolh ¢irections, " Twenty-five hundred Boston pa.riots rocked Tremos* temple with oratory and reso'ved to ask President Wilson to break off diplomatic relations with Germany. Modern indignation fulled to rise to the historie pitch of tossing Ge u Into the bay ———— Nearly 14 per cont of the repubicans who voted In our recent Nebraska primary did not get their preference for president recorded, which means that they either falled to vote or wrote In & name in such a way that it was no! counted, Of the democrats, less than 10 cent falled o register a presidential preference. the difference in thels due pre per favor being » 1bly o the fact that they did not tackle the | wopinr qig not witfieult bl of "wiltingin Thirty Years Ago This Day in Omaha Muhl'o-lnvnu- The oM partnership which has b ' N Betwan Milon B Lindsay snd Robert W. Patrich has heen disseivel, Mr Landeay etiving on acceunt Whg faiture of bis heaith Mr. Paicik will conti Dusiness ot the ol off Panion g B Beanideis, of il e and . Mol Thisteauth strent, has bef Vork W reapds & ielegrs N iy, wha s deal ¢ s purehases af dey ot . . a8 ohe U O of e | - ¥ sivanged NS sew s e Bx Sing - Moape, 1he woll hnown o A7t deaier o CWmAr b B Woad of this A .0 anals e Itetenis of hia pew asibliesing Wmp whish b Bapat 1o inliwlocg wpon e of o vha ounty, b gt A AW ines (g Wiesd in free wvn e s e ol The & ne - WilE i Bmuwdois : | erimination practiced by Omaha and the Summer Rates. Word from Wasaington carrlers the that the appe2] of Omaha against the unjust dis the railroads in fix rates will be,futile. The is disinclined imposition that favors Kansas City directly as against all other Missouri river polnts. The protests of our Com- mercial club are jgnored, the attitude of | rat? ds being that Omaha must put up with r action {8 taken by the Western senger association, the passenger men s well warranted by expert- ence, for Omaha has always borne patiently in- | Justice inflicted by the rallroads that Have favored Kansas City to our immense harm. If the present instance were the first, surprise and indignation would be justified, but It is only the latest of a long series of similar outrages. | Until Omaha asserts itself more vigorously than | by merely filing protests, the condition will re | maln unchanged, ———— Speculating on a Contingency. A pecullar “wist of our Nebraska direct pri , In the make-up of the democratic dele- gatlon to 8t, Louls, opens up a large field for speculating on a possible contingency The democrats, be it remembered. had seven candi- dutes aspiring to four places as delegates-at- large, but by oversight or intent no one filed or the of alternate. To make sure against being completely lost all the candidates except one seem to have sought to “play safe” by having friends “write in"' their names for alternates with the result that two defeated delegates are elocted alternates and two more, elacted delegates, are also elecied alternates, although one of them s tied with a third can- didate beatea for delegate, It transpires there- for that Oldham, successful delegate on the anti- Dryan clate, s also the alternate for Thomas, clected on the Bryan slate. Can the same man he accredited as hoth a delegate and an alternate” If Thomas s absent, can Oldham vote twice, once for bimself and once for Thomu,, Had GUidham happened to have been chose: rl.ernate for himself, in which case his absence would leave both places vacant for the moment, whose [ ‘te would ha : to vote for him? As it heypens that the alternate for Odlham s Bryan tmeelf, it Oldham were absent, vould Bryan e* er for him as delegate though he could net nngwer for hi as alternate? Verily, the vagaries of the direct primary are almost inscrutable! ing summer passenger Pas mi Ition Safety in American Travel, Three hundred end twenty-flve American 1aflroads, with a mileage of 161,945 miles, went through the last year without a single fatality to a passenger by train accident. On 1] the raflroads of the country, with & mileage of over 250,000, 196 passengers were killed, Not 0 very many years ago it was popular to compare the Atnerican with the Zuropean rafl- roads as to safety of passengers, greatly to the disparagement of our domestic lin: This con- dition has been reversed, Latest avallable fig- ures for Europe place the total number of fatal accidents to passengers in one year at 700 for a mileage of 197,015, Adoption of safety devices, of better training for operatives, and the increase in vigilance over train movements has brought such diminution of casualty that serlous wrecks are far less numerous than we v~ accustomed to a little while ago. It may be that the danger of travel by rall will never be entirely elimir .ted, but progrers i. the right way s belng mad emmm——— Weakness of Our Defe A most impressive {llustration of the inade- quacy of our minlature army for the purpose of national defense is given by the maneuvers of the War department In its efforts to meet the Mexican situation. In order to protect our shortest international boundary line from out- rage by ruffians, it is found necessary to strip the Atlantic coast of the few artillerymen we have assembled there, as well as to call on the states for assistance. What would be the situa- tlon If the ragged, nondescript armies of Mex- ico were to attack us in force? While this exhibition of our unreadiness to meet a military situation is golng on, the senate, which under- took to at least open the way fo the formation of a military force that might be serviceable, sur- renders to the reactionary house, and conditions will remain as they are, Democratic indiffer- ence to the country's safety Is appalling. Prom- ises made in November that adequate defense would be provided are not to be kept even to the and the United States is to be left posed in this most eritical and delleately danger- ous time of world relations till a new adminis- awake to ita responsibilities and willlng them, put futo charge at Wash ear, ex- i n, L0 accop oan be | Ington | ———— | Another Great American Habit | The delegate to the suffrage conforence at | BL Paul. who drew attention to herself by ad | mitting she had le.t her ghureh because her Kree with her view on the question, has plenty of company. Her com panions in th matter are not all swffragists elther, nor are the afined to the feminine portion of our ple. The great Ameriean | habit of listening only to one side of the qu Uan i so ingraiaed that it s aecoplod generally the This conclusion on part of | HE news | | HE rise in the pr | the automobile-owne [ People and Events BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, The High Cost of Gasoline iverary Digest. nched fron for cheaper the price of gasoline has w an agonized er el Fither we must devise a ‘way to ge larger supply, thus bringing the price down, or we must find oUt how to use other fuels in the internal- combustion type of motors. The conclusion of a re cent discusalon of the subject, at a wectional meet ing of the Soclety of Automobile Engineers, abstracted in the automobile, was that more gasoline will be avallable by better exploitation of the oil-flelds, bu that, simultaneousiy, it is highly desirable that auti- mobile-engines xhould be developed and adapted to utilize n standard kerosene. “Kerosene-burning, the paper goes ou to say, “seems (o be the easlest way tc ecure a substantial drop in the price of automobile fuel.” Foljambe, entitled “The quotation and abstract are From an address by ¥ Automobile Fuel-Situation, made as follows ‘We are coming rapidly to the point where the low-grade fuels which are now stored or wasted, and In a few cares uned for fuel in stationary or similar power-plants, must be rendered adaptable to automo- biles. Two methods are self-evident to meet this situ- atlon; either the present means of vaporization must be so Improved as to be able to take care of the lower-grade fuels, or the fuels themselves must be cracked to form higher=grade volatiles, The conclusions he reaches aro that we find better methods of refining the crude in order to produce a larger supply of fuel from the existing supply of erude, that we must create competition In the marketing of fuel products, and, | that vaporizing instru ments must be developed which will he capable of using the hydrocarbons of lesser volatility.: ‘Regurding alcohol, Mr. Foljambe stated that it &lver no hope for immediate relief, The reason for this (s that even without governmental restrictions for economical use the present type of automobile- engine would have to be entirely reconstructed. Pres ent types of englnes can burn sleohol, but they do %0 very uneconumically, approximately 0 per cent more fuel being required per horse-power-hotir than were the engines deaigned for its use, This puts alcohol out of the present reckoning. “Regarding benzol, the author points out that, al- though it Is prevalent in Furope as a fuel, it can only be obtained in this country in limited quantities As long as the war continues, benzol 18 In as great demand as ganoline, and therefore offers no rellef, but i the future may well be considered as a possiblo part of the fuel-supply.’” Keronene, on the contrary, holds out a prospect of immediate relief. There has been a great over- production and the refined oll 1s stored In vast quanti« thes, To quote again: An a mmiter of fact, even while theoretically burning gasoline, according to Mr. Foljambe, carbure. tors have recently been provided to handle a mixture of gasoline and kerosene which on the Baume test in often as low as B4, and practically none of it over . Commercial kerosene contains # per cent of me. dium and 10 per cent of heavy kerosene, ““The paper states that the Rittman process will yield 20 per cent more gasoline than by any other known method, and also states that, although seven plants are in the United States, none of them fs pro ducing any appreciable quantity of gasoline, “Kerosene carburetors were next discussed by the author, who showed several types which have been must irthermore, heretofore marketed, and which Involved various means for breaking up the fuel at the Jet, com- pletly gasifying it by heat, or even in one case {gniting it before it entered the cylinder.” Another expert who discussed the problem, Prof, Charles B, Lucke of Columbia university, stated that while kerosene as a fuel is fundamentally differert from gasoline, and therefore requires fundamentally different means of vaporizing, the problem of mak- Ing a proper explosive mixture of kerosene and air is not & difficult one. Given a proper proportion in the mixture, with the correct heat-supply, and the ma- chine will run, through perhaps not with the highest efficlency. Regarding the practieal possibility of mak- & » light, vaporizable oll out of a heavy one by rackin or some similac process, like the one ri- cently announced by one of the government labora- torfes at Washington and described in these pages, Dr. W, F. Rittman, of the United States bureau of mines, who is the inventor of one of the new proces, stated that the ‘“‘cracking” of crude ol is a reality, and that it is actually keeping down the prices of gasoline, Bays the journal from which we have been quot- Ing: “He predicted that gasoline would continue to rise until the cracking process or the use of kerosens is able to catch up to the demand. The cracking of crude oll is a reality, Great numbers of Intelligent men ré now working on the problem, and therefore the n only be one result. * * * “Regarding the matter of competition, Dr. Rittman sald that the little fellow has been forced to put up the price simply because he could not afford to store the crude oll, and cohsequently had to pay for it on a rising scale. He predicted, furthermore, that the price mny go to 40 cents or only 3. Regarding the percentage of gasoline which today is made by the cracking process, he stated that it did not exceed 1§ per cent, and consequently was not enough to offsst the rising tendency. A graphlc description of the cracking was given by Dr. Rittman, who pictured the moles cule of crude, stating that the further down in the vaporization scale we go the larger become the moles cules. When there is no restraint on this larger moie« cule it breaks into smaller molecules of gas, but Ly applylng proper reatraining influ It can be broken into garoline instead. The reason he gives for opera ing hin process in the gaseous state Is that in this condition it is poasible to secure any variation of pres sure and temperature. There was a time when erule carrled the gasoline price, but today gasoline carries the price of crude. In the Rittman proces Hauid itself in the container proceas no heat is applied to the The liquid to be distilled. speaking particularly of petroleum, is contained fn th feedstank from which it s fed into the still, There It (s vaporised, and the vapor, not the liquid, 8 then dlstilled » temperature of %0 degrees C, and a pressure of 30 pounds per square inok | without protest. Professiug our devoticr o the | tonel of [ree spesch sonvially decline o | aten 10 the preacher who doesn’t extoll our individual Judgment, and foster our prejudioes By telling us wo are rigbt and the other fellow wrong This tendeney s deplerable, for 1t fenoien & narrowness that WoL e Nesping \ "y o ot gnides tor o " od & Nitle m | v he advien ¢ prove a h [} . | tast Ahat whish s good. " we w 4 aaln batk peed and permanes ! roRress P — The u of John Buslion | Haws. ¢ Liien hat W plores ‘ . ¢ N o . § ove M ) . ppert. ¥ " Y he dom it " hape . [ women Propose to hell the Al apare the ' Whould pusey prsny h wo oot show New Yo » A \ apped th ad « ™ | awen ars 4 . ) i bt “n , | A ' “ i . Tax Cats nx Well as Dogs. OMAHA, May 10.~To the Editor of The Bee: Some people shed tears hecause | there is a movement to tax cats. T think ; there i# mo excuse [or taxing cats t dox for while dogs will r e | property and are noisy at tinies, they are | not In it with gats in the destruction of | property. Cats not only kil lots of birds | but little chickens as well. Some one has sald that eats kill millions of little | chickens each year In the United States. The amount of good they do will not: near cover the damage done Some think it Is bad luck to take a cat along when they move and in that way there are a lot of tramp cats each year, and they are the ones that catch the most little chickens and birds. They ve no home and consequently get their living by killing birds and chickens, Tramp # should be killed the same as tramp s and | can see no good reason why cata ought not to be taxed as well as doge. People do not get rid of thelr dogs becatise they have to pay a tax on them and 1 do not think they will get rid of the good cats because a fight is made on the tramp cats, 1 am decidedly In fuvor of taxing cats and then have a shooting mutch on the tramp cats, for it will wave the lives of numberless birds and little hickenk each year | The the good for nothing squirrels that Kl birds and destroy nests ought to be killed in Bpring Lake park at leas FRANK A. AGNEW Appent of the Watchman, WASHINGTON, D. C., May 9.~To the Editor of The Bee: Federal Watchman's union No. 14,94 of the American Federa- tlon of Labor, hax passed the following resolution Whereans, Thore W 1o prospect of any relief for the underpaid government employes at the present (in without | whisky strenuous effort on opr part, as well us all other underpald goVernment employea, and as the cout of Hving In advanciug at an alarming rate, with a very gloomy prospect in view for the coming winter, which, it it continues, vill force n great many of us to ask for charity, although wo work all of our time for the richest and greatest government on earth, which approprintes and spends annually mil- lions of dollars on parks, monuments, ete., and increases high “salaries wtili higher, and virtually ignores the low- snlaried “employe, and, as the private corporations have advanced the pay of all ‘thelr employes throughout the coun- try on account of the Incressed cost of living, and, s It {8 necessary that we get o relief before the coming winter, th b | Resolved, That Federal Watchman's unlon No, 14,964, American Federation of Labor, request the American Federation of Labor and affillated organizations, the publle press and all fatr-minded and Jus- tice loving American citizens throughout the country to give us thelr support, so our familles may not suffer more. And, be it further Henolved, That we invite other organ jzations of government emploses to join us in this appeal J.H Moved to Versifylug. D, Secretary it has aith and caf rather SEARI s it said wago! motorist who didn’t want t¢ lend another a little gasoline, probably | The Scott's Bluff Republican, E. T.| Guzzam ily comes of distingu y /\ | Weatervelt editor, now appears twice eaci: | anccato | week Miss Cayenne—Distinguished, no doubt Jbut not as ancestors.—Judge F. L. Carroll, who formerly owned| - % | papers at 8t. Paul and Ashland, has pur- | l\’w you Ray AR inc ”‘"”'“I 9 en: an; believe In and a d the Schuyler Sun. struggiing hard to get my Income up e Adam Breede, editor of the Hastings ! the point where |l ::mll be per te Tribune, accompanied by Roy Churchill, |PAY & surtax - are on a hike from Hastings to Hot| First Spirit—How to you know thi Bprings, 8. D, a distance of about .m‘h»;mnl AR ERL i g : Second Spirit—My robe 'isn’t covere miles, They expect to average about | c0cOnC GBI T e thirty miles a day. | s The Minden Courier, Edwin and Lee DEAR MR, KABIBBLE, A. Richmond editors, has moved Into new ‘quarters in the Wimmer bullding, occupy- ing the room formerly used by the post- | ffice. A new Babcock cylinder press has been added to the equipment of the plant, | The Maskell Graphic and the Water- bury Times, two recent ventures in the | northeast part of the state, have sus- pended publication. They were started at the request of the business men of the's respective towns, but failed to get suf- flcent patronage to enable them to live, | Fditor Harold L. Dunn, of the Staple-| "Dad, whal ton Finterprise, 18 making a spirited fight | MALY ligiitag on the business methods of the super- | gwered pop visors of Logan county. He alleges that u]nu my he e f e count being wastsd| And then th the funds of the county are being wastsd [ And thon th through the careless and Inefficient man- ner in which the affairs of the county are heing conducted, Maud=Do a church speak Heatrix—Not will. We've o “Why are b Editorial Siftings hand, if the president had been so con- vineed of the absence of the hyphen a few months ago, things might have been a whole lot pleasanter, Fhiladelphia Ledger: *1 bhave not ex- pressed and do not intend to express my- nelt as for or against any man,” says Mr. Roosevelt. This herolc resolution does not, of course, preclude him from think- ing what he likes. Brooklyn Eagle: Remember wpeare but forget not Cervantes, Spaniard who gave us & working theory 1o explain all reformers, The tilt against o windmill is repeated every month or #0 in a matured but imitative world, Springfield Republican: A new political party for pacifists with Colonel Bryan as the nominee for president is among | the Washington rumors of coming | events. Its vote would not represent peace sentiment in this country. There are many peace lovers who are satistied that Colonel Bryan's activities have strongly influential—without his mu»n—}’,"flr Inwdy, la tion—in bringing the United btates to the | Gicin back to wrink of war, Ind Ah knows it b mu).r now he’ kain't fool Shake-, | 0 Kalh s, tat Dese mawin's Al knows des “Ah hopes dis A pot o Kreen A Nttle gob o | Oh, yes, Ah kn, I An’ oh, | De Tubbin’ | Hig soul seem been | When dat ole GREE! Neb., May 1 ) the Editor of The Bee: 1 notice in a recent isste of The Bee that a correspondent objects to the treatment accorded Bryan since his declsive defeat st the primary. But what i there surprising about it? Did not Bryan invite it when he Inslsted that the voters should support Br'er Charlle because he was “dry” and Jim Dahlman because he was “wel.” Consistency may be a’jewel, but, ap- parently, Willlam knows it not Still it grates harshly on the ear to hear one speak ill of any one. Stand back, let the funeral pas Let the party attend it enmasue And be sure that the bler Of the orator peer- Lees 18 drawn by the patient old ass MICHAEL O'CONNOR, A Temperance Academy. OGALLALA, Neb,, May 6.~To the Edi- tor of The Bee: When a boy back in New York sixty years ago, before the civil war, thers was bufit an academy in the little town In which T lived, which was In the beautiful Genesee valley, This town was In the finest pine and hard- wood timber country where, when & house or barn was hullt, the logas were hauled onto the ground and the timbers ware hewn and framed, after which there would be a “raising’ to put up the frame. At these gatherings there was always whisky, free to all, but at the ralsing of this academy it was given out cold that there would be no Wwhisky “What, no whisky at a raising; then there will be no ralsing,” some sald one would go.’ But there was a great tor such a large crowd had been seen at A raising The bottom sills were at least a foot and a half in diameter and the bents were very heavy. Everything was done by hand in those days as there was no machinery of any kind, not even block and tackle. As many men as could get under 1ifted the heavy bents while other men stood behind them with pikes ready to help as it went up. It was a large three-story bullding, the largest ralsing t had ever had, hut there was no on the Joh. However, there were barrels of cold lemonade standing around and littls giria to pass it out, and that old building has stood from that day 1o this, sixty years. You might say it rests upon the solid foundation of temperance. In the third story was the | Hapel that would seat people in | the town. What & beautiful lesson for | those old monabacks. old hard: | elln those little xirls, In pure surprise never hefore Al the those | white, passiog out sold lemonade to | | the multitude and ne whisky allowed Indlanapolls News: Doubtless a good deal of that $,582,992,00 of pork which congress has been asked to provide for its various members is not so much pork s bunk, That s, the members had not the slightest expectation that their bills would become laws—though they would gladly have accepted the graft if it had heen obtainable—and their introduction was merely for publicity purposes to please the folks at home and deceive e 'I'A'I‘E 16th C | are protected them into thinking that the man they had sent to Wa:hington was a great lit- tle statesman ar 1 industriously on the Job, SHOULD 1 MARRY A GIRL WHO SMOKES ? NO ~YOU'ld- BE BLAMED FOR TWICE AS MUCH ASHES ON ‘THE CARPET! of years.—Life. be blushing as they walk down the alslo?” i — (1 suppose’ replied Sutfron Long | glancing utlously about and lowerin, Pittsburgh Dispatch On the other | his voice, “that ny good many of lh‘m,.] blush to think how subdue the lords of creation afler they've wafely got them." —Judge A LITTLE GOD OF GREENS. Yo' needn' beet no big bass drum To adva'tise dat springtime's come: De Ole Man—he's ma sign, all right= Itin the [ Doan want a thing des ‘ceptin Won't feel o bad gwine down 'ma neck.” t'n “Idzzle, yo' wo plck some greens' it's such a things he Sweet Paradise hab got no scenes To beat his smile when he's % paid on Time Certificates All deposits in the ) antee Fund of the State of Nebraska 4 Commercial Aceounts Invited l-k\y Deposit Box 3 paid on Savings Accounts ——— have that sc ing Hiteh your —FRITZ KAUDER T Il g do they mean by peren from year to year," an at,” Interposed ma ere was 4 deep, portentous ville Courler-Journal ny of the people at your to you? yet, but I'm asure they only belonged for a covple rides generally expected to they are going to ianapolis News v his appetite! s ot no tan'e fo' meat, I him wif nuffin sweet ahs, cohn an' beans, eons— Greens! " Greens! Greens! when he stahts away whut he's gwine t' say: evein’, hon, to see s ‘twix’ yo, an’ me; grean, Ah spec’, ows des whut he mean joy 1o do wants me to! ‘'way off in a dream kittle stahts to steam. wiy, he des grin whah his face hegin. Greens! Greens! Greens! v got greens— Greens! Greens! Greens' — ANK ¢ (JMARA Harney Streets by the Depositors’ Guar- — $300 4 year and up Buy the Genuine backed by highest qua facturing equipment. The Service Does Not Show on the Sold at the Rest Stores brought to you by the visit of the SCHOOLING CAR, now in Omaha der UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT'S OFFE in southeastern Oklahoma This ia NOT a diawing or rush, where a p of spending time and money and perhaps ge choose your t and GET IT, RESIDE MENT NOT REQUIRRD awn tr L That Was & temperanes ture, Mute but aloguent, naver to be gotten, & s Influence -who Ay have extended de [ L | plece ¢ A CHANCE FOR A FORTUNE IN OIl f land awaits y THE HAND OF OFPORTUNITY YOU GRASP IT Visit the eas « Ry. tra sht offioe near Leave ro¢ of western deve 18 REACH WiLL K at 168t ald o pla Open from 9a.m. to ! p.m. Admission and Information Fr Persistence is the cardinal vir- tue in advertising: no matter how good advertising may be in other respects, it run frequently and constant- be really ly to Z/ZTTIIMINNNN Every Waterman's Ideal is the best product of specialized care and skill, materials and perfected manu- L. B. Waterman Company, New York, W, ¥, A Message from Uncle Sam uccee hty Surface. INDIAN LAND nonstrating the RING of Indian land 0rs0n taken a chance tting no land. You NCE and IMPROVE {ING OUT FOR ith o e snderful d must be ssful,