Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 18, 1916, Page 22

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.0 ' THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Bee Publishing Company, Proprietor. BEE BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Entered 4t Omaha postoffice as second-class matter. In the Parks Today. Nature invites man to come out of doors. It is the gladdest time of all the year, when creation is shown in its fairest and most alluring aspect, and animate and inanimate things unite in an oratorio whose swelling tones are visible rather than audible. Golden sunlight, the soft green of TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. woods and fields, the flowers, the birds, the skies, ki By carrier By mafl | with the shimmering islands of fleecy clouds, and yfl | even the sudden dash of rain, combine in an irre- :g | sistible appeal to come forth into the open and % .00 | enjoy the works of the Creator, It is good to . 5‘:’{,“’;,.%“?&" ¢ n .‘mjg get abroad in the early summer, when spring has Bem.( notice of change of address or irregularity in | done her best, and gives promise of the glorious B:Ily and Sunday.... ily without Sunday ning and Si Evening without [ ey 1o Omsha Bee; Tlrculation Depariment. fruitage, to be made perfect by the fervor of sum- Remit by draft, uflx:“m‘ order. Only two- | mer heat. City dwellers have little enough of op- cent stamps received in payment of small accounts. Personal ';hfl:kl. uenm“on Omaha and eastern ex- change, not accepted. OFFICES, Omaha—The Bes Buildin, 8. South Omah: street. Councfl Bluffs—14 North Main street. glr;coln—& 1mn Building. Pullai New m—&oom &%t&u‘umo. St lfimb—fl New Bank of Commerce. ‘Washington—725 Fourteenth street, N. W. CORRESPONDENCE, Address communications relating to news and edi- i torla® maty "' “ocne Bee, Fe'larial Depertment R s ol o il MAY CIRCULATION, 57.852 Daily—Sunday 52,748 Dwight Willlams, circulation manages of The Bee average cireulstion ::v. the month of May, 1916, wes The Bee and its editor would be unapprecia- M8, Manager. tive if.we were not sensible to the many con- swors to before me | gratulations and kind words we have been re- BUNTER ¢ ceiving for the leading part played in focusing Hovey Tashe. the demand for Hughes for president and helping to bring about his nomination as the republican standard bearer. We agree that it is a feather in our cap of which we should be, and are, proud and we are glad to have the credit accorded by sincere friends. 20 At the same time let no one imagine that the “editor of The Bee is fooled by the acclaim com- ing from the camp of the political enemy. When democratic papers try to make out that The Bee man is to be “the whole thing” in Nebraska when Hughes is elected, they are simply trying to work upon prejudice and factionalism in the hope of e — creating antagonism within the republican fold Qur periodic admonition to auto drivers: Slow | that may inure to the benefit of the démocrat of- up and be more careful if you want to avoid ac- | fice chasers. cidents, The editor of The Bee has been in this Hughes S 1 movement from the outset for the sole purpose The democrats deserve credit for building up | of re-uniting the party behind the one man of tform large enough for the republican ma- | pre-eminent ,presidefitial 'qualifications sure to y to sit on, 5 command the support of all republican elements. — We are enlisted in this fight to the finish and it " Unless some new freak dance is quickly per- | is not a question of being in front or behind or petrated, the social seagon will soon be threatened | of possible reward, but of being in the place where we can render the most effective service A to the party and to the country in conjunction How about that hideous electric sign welcome | with all who are willing to work with us to the ttch! How much longer is it to mar the beauty | same end. o ©of Omaha's inchoate civic center? i — ince continuance of the war again compels our European tourists to “see America firat” it is barely possible it may become & habit. ———— - The biggest output of Omaha's most useful industry is always the annual crop of boys and girls graduated from our public and private portunity to enjoy natuse in this wonderful mood. Their daily round of rising and working and going to bed is broken/by the Sabbath, however, when some few hours mdy be given over to recreation and contemplation. For these the parks offer the better place to spend this day of rest. Omaha is fairly well supplied with beautiful bits of wood- land and green sward, and these have been well prepared for the enjoyment of the toilers, who will find there some of the things that are missed in the routine of work. Go out to one of the parks today, even if the trip doesn’t give you time to read this, 5 Greeks Bearing Gifts. | this 30 day of Junme, 1916. BOBERT Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have the Bes mailed to them. Ad- dress ‘will be changed as often as requested. o e b——l b T RS Old Glory heads every procession of Ameri- cans. . Pretty near time for congress to begin talking about adjournment. ) S —— fiebuulu is not yet the mother of vicé presi- dents, but it has shown a willingness to qualify. War Budgets, Now and Hereafter. Making war loans in presence of actual conflict, when patriotism spurs the citizen to a loosening of the purse strings, is accompanied by the fact that the financiers of the country involved must look ahead to the time when the war is ended, and the debt must be paid. It may be taken for granged that each of the European belligerents has the beginning given this factor of the general problem ite full weight. This involves not alone the meeting of the extraordinary,ex- jpenditures of the war, 'but the invention of new . _ | methods' for turning revenue into the general strained efforts of the sen- coffers, and to continue the process after peace A pnelmely Loty ?‘“fi Bim; Me, Brysn :u :mc again .dnd gloe ord‘e'rly I;fe of the people ve no pity in his soul if he hearken | has been resumed. Long after the warriors have 1y pityiin o o g ended their share of the great problem, and the . diplomats have concluded the treaties on which Dr. Henry sets the pace in withdrawing as the | new world relations are to be established, the progressive party nominee .for United States | financiers will be worrying over the heritage of nator and pledging his‘support to the republican | debt the war is sure to leave. national and state tickets. He puts it up to the Budgets now being presented are of dourse er progressive party nominees to follow suit. | predicated on the most optimistic of views, con- e servatively stated, to be sure, but taking the best The democratic convention band closed its | possible light in which to view the future. Thus, ire with “It's a Long Way to Tipperary.” | Reginald McKennd, who succeeded Lloyd-George fitting finish, carrying the pathetic tonal quali- | as the British wizard on whom rests the obliga- _ ties of the long and dreary road to the frosts of | tion to produce the money when it is needed, lovember. : bases his calculations on a total war debt of seventeen billions of dollars by the end \is undergoing a | sets of four billions, represénted by loans to of the wilderness | allies and to the colonies, This leaves him a Have been wel- This method of which the annual interest charge will be $650,- 000,000, equal almost to the entire ordinary ex- penditure of the United Kingdom during its last 'stock tanks to | ordinary expenses of the government. Some of Great Britain's sources of revenue will disappear with the war, such as the $430,- 000,000 now collected annually as the govern- n;len!'o share of profits on war business. Against these may be set off, to support hope, the in- vith “the miracle of laughter.” Bosh! Political | creased productivity of the shops of !h'le, kingdom, party animals, from the elephant to the donkey, | which may reasonabl X i chibit the faculty on certain occasions in a way | after the v’nr, with o:lyh:h: r?::e‘:;’it;oofc t;inr::il::; “bring down the house. a market for the output. This will quite likely B S—————— put the British empire on a protective tariff basis, Justice Huhes did not seek the presidential | in order to preserve the home market and pro- tion but the convention drafted him. As | duce the revenue the government needs. Ger- 1an who guided the forces demanding Hughes | many is facing a similar problem and is as cer- a successful outcome, Frank H. Hitchcock | tainly making similar preparations, The French not seek the campaign management but the | showed in 1870 and subsequently a capacity for irty has a right to draft him, recuperation that astonished the world. Ameri- y : = can business men and financiers are just now Y more deeply interested in the business aspect of ; Th jny ears 0 peace than in any ‘political settlement that may 9 gy be reached in Europe. This Day in Oma . bl i More Marvels of Soience. == Complied From Beo Flics. Further wonders of wireless telephoning evi- H. Johnson & Co. of Princeton, IiL, have | dently await merely perfection of the transmitting ,":r‘ m”fie:fi'f S.:d oot :"2;:" and receiving instruments. Among the latest 3 S it il relabrated th; successful e:'tperimcnu chronicled is one by which Mm D.M“ their wedding at their communlcltl?n was set up this last week be- s \l‘:(mm‘:w .?.“_ Many h.at tween a station hondlhe Jersey coast and a pas- g event were presen senger steamer heading for Boston and ki set of the latest American | yntil it was mofe than sixty miles dinn:tl?t ‘I.: 1%:‘ Lg‘&?h‘&"’”“]“fl addition to an exchange of conversation the peo- ; by by J. L. ple on lhigbmtd were regaled with a phonograph concert, playing records of “The Star Spangled h‘"t:'lmmu:‘;npo P‘.‘:‘i?: Banner” and “The Marseillaise” and psir:ihr 4 B pieces rendered by a full orchestra whose music wife ‘have ed from | was 8o loud that the crowd standing on the deck fim&:fi. tica l’nd outside the wireless room heard it and greeted P visiting for fl':: ai;s with cheers. The significant marvel is ! r % that the music in this instance was first converted g:‘c"::.g: ,&'fifz into a phonographic record and the recorded B s sound transferred telephonically by wireless to s ‘mmfim C?arl:, b.[g;:w(“::l:.: io.'l'in tby the receiving instrument ol - | without v: n in tones. SR ) Let nq one imagine that the marvels of science ‘ah w:fleucfl:: are exhausted or that human control over nature's ) cor ; has made more than a beginnin, '?‘W er career. forces d g ¥ ik A ruminating philosopher observes that the yman family is blessed above all living creatures Vasors, Resannn By Victor Bosewater. _ S ALTHOUGH neither a delegate nor member of any party committee, easily the central figure of the Chicago convention was Frank H, Hitchcock, He occupied the position of director- general of the Hughes forces not by any com- mission from the candidate for whom he was working, not by any formal selection of any or- ganization, but merely because all of us who were urging the nomination of Hughes naturally recognized Hitchcock's leadership and spontan- eously accepted him as the Hughes manager. It was indeed a rather delicate situation in which he found himself placed, for it made him at once the target of the publicity agents of the favorite sons’ booms, who, in their newspaper stones,flhad him one day “repudiated” and the next day un- authorized” and the next day “self-constituted, to which his only reply was the same unperturbed smile and renewed reiteration that he never claimed to have authority from anyone except from those republicans who believed with him, that the nomination of Hughes would furnish the ticket a standard-bearer of typical American- ism and the safest agsurance of a reunited party, which alone would be capable of successfully com- bating the democrats. There was no Hughes headquarters, except Hitchcock’s personal rooms on the top floor of the Congress hotel; no Hughes banners; no Hughes literature; no Hughes badges even until the opening day of the convention—only Hughes delegates and an irresistible undercurrent among the delegates committed to other candidates to cast their votes for Hughes as soon as released from their complimentary obligations. This lead- erless force was co-ordinated by Hitchcock and so marshalled that the nomination of Hughes soon became inevitable, regardless of the opposi- tion of the so-called “Old Guard,” and regardless of the Roosevelt champions, working together or separately, with or without the help of hired scenery shifters and noisemakers in the gal- leries. It is no wonder, then, that the conclusion of the convention was the signal for an onrush to the Hitchcock apartment in the hotel to con- gratulate him on his achievement, not matched except by the crowd sweeping down on Mr. Hughes in Washington to tender him felicitations. A lot of stories are going around purporting to explain how Hitchcock got his "Hughes hunch” and set about to lay the foundations for the structure of Hughes sentiment that afterward controlled the convention. I believe I am as much on the inside as anyone and am in a position to give the straight of it. Having enjoyed intimate relations with Mr. Hitchcock dating back to the 1908 campaign, in which I served as one of his lieutenants, both before and after the convention, 1 have kept more or less in touch with him. Mr. Hitchcock attended the meeting of the national committee in Washington last December, as I did, merely to renew old acquaintances and geét a survey of the presidental outlook, as nearly as ossible, first hand. When I talked to him I told Eim 1 had indicated my preference for Hughes and felt sure the Hughes sentiment was pre- ponderant throughout the middle 'west and ready to be crystallized if only' the justice would refrain from interfering. Hitchcock was inclined to take the same view of it, but wanted to fortify himself with further information, 5 “There is only one thing which I would like to do and which would tempt me back into poli- tics,” he told me, “and that is to bring about a reunion of the republican elements that split four years ago, and thus open the way to restore the ascendancy of the republican party.” I saw him again in New York, a week later, and we went over the situation in more careful detail. - Tt must be remembered that Hughes had at that time already withdrawn his name from our Nebraska primary ballot, and it was a ques- tion whether any opening could be foun b{ which a lar expression could be secured. had noticed a suggestion by Albert Shaw in his comment on the withdrawal in his “Review of Reviews,” that Nebraska republicans ‘who really wanted to record their preference for Hughes could do so by writing in the name, and taking this hint, I, thus early, outlined the plan that was later carried out to make our primary furnish the necessary measure of the Hughes strength with the rank and file. I understook to enlist the co-operation of the republican newspapers of Nebraska to this end, and their prompt response in unexpected numbers had more to do with the final nomination of Hughes than anyone may sup- pose. In the meantime, Mr, Hitchcock, of course, was not relying on any one method of feeling the party pulse, but cr\lt out his lines to every state in the union and was soon convinced that the demand generally was for Hughes, and that no other republican mentioned could command the same cordial support of both wings of the party. The real obstacle all the time was the fear that Justice Hughel might take himself out of the list of possibilities in advance by a positive refusal of the prospective nomination. [ knol whereof I speak when I.say that the Hughes boosters had no assurance whatever on this score, except that the junlce_ seemed careful not to say he would under no circumstances run, and the conviction, irowlng as time passed, that this meant that he would accept if the nomination came to him without strings and without compli- cative conditions. I must confess that I had several scares, one in particlar when President Nicholas Murray Butler was here in Omaha bringing with him from New York an “inside” report that a pronouncement from Justice Hughes was immediately imminent. This was only two ‘or three weeks before our Nebraska primary, and when I explained to Dr. Butler what havoc such a statement would play with our “write in” plan, the only encouragement he gave me ‘was, “Well, perhaps he'll delay it until after your pri- mary is held” When no such pronouncement came from Justice Hughes, and when the Oregon Enmary was held with his name -on the ballot, y court order, and an overwhelming popular preferential vote over two competitors personally appealing for votes, I felt fully reassured. This, however, I can repeat without fear of contradi- tion, that up to the actual nominating ballot none of us w!!o had carried on the campaign to that point, without the candidate’s authority, consent or co-operation, had any word from \‘;im as to what he would do when officially informed that he had been chosen for party leader, Speaking of Frank H. Hitchcock, let me relate an incident of the 1908 campaign illustrating his alterness of mind and diplomacy of action. Mr, Bryan, as the democratic presidential nominee of that year, came over to Chicago to brganize his committee, and Chairman Hitchcock, Secretary Hayward and myself called on him to pay our respects and interchange the compliments of the campaign. Concluding a pleasant interview, Mr. Bryan accompanied us to the door. "I"apgrecinte this visit very much, Mr. Hitch- cock,” said he, “and I wish you success in all of your undertakings but one.” uick as a flash came Mr. Hitchcock's reply: “Mr. Bryan, I wish you the same.” One on the Parson Parson Lewis, who was not averse to an oc- casional toddy, hired an Irishman to clean out his cellar one morning. Pat started in to work with a will, and found, among the other rubbish, a number of empty bottles. Pat carefully examined each bottle by holding it to the light. The minister, looking down to see how Pat was getting along with the work, saw him look- ing through the bottles, and called out: “They are all dead ones, Pat.” “Indade, now,\are they, Sur? replied the Irishman. “Well, there’s wan good thing about it—they all had th' minister wid 'em when they wuz dyin'l"—New York Times THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JUNE 18, 1916 PEOPLE AND EVENTS. An Italian sport in New York, having as he thought grasped the intricacies of poker hands, questioned the power of his oppon- ent's. four aces and shot him across the pot. Thus do the late-comers keep alive the arguments long discarded by native professors of the science. The historic argument between the cat and the parrot isn’t to be mentioned in the same chapter-with the scap of a dog and a monkey at Atlantic City. The owner of the dog tried to separate the combatants with a hammer, but the monk grabbed the hammer and finished the dog. Russians and Austrians may battle to the grave, if they wish, but strict neutrality and wholehearted peace will be observed by Damon L. Orlowsky, publisher of a Russian newspaper in Chicago, and Miss Lucina Wagner, a native of Francis ef’s land. The Russo-Austrian alliance was completed by marriage. A Jersey tourist long used to the soft side of haymows, struck the town of Bruns- | wick for a night's lodging, and got it on | | the third floor bench. feathers and jumped with his indignation | But he insisted on from the window to the ground. The leap brought him to the soft side of a hospital cot, and some prospects of an undertaker's | pillow, Up around the Yankton Indian agency the Indians are manipulating the auto clutch with as much and abandon as the white folks. It is said that since the gov- ernment gave them deeds to their farms, a huge crop of mortgages have been sown, and auto dealers reaping &, landoffice business. So far speed goes the pale- face is lost in Poor Lo's dust. When the former gladiator, John L. Sulli- van, recently visited Sagamore Hill, the ex- president urged the ex-champion to remain over night. The retired pugilist begged to “I'm afraid to stay, colonel,” snore so loud evel in the house awake.” “Th all right, John,” replied the colonel. “If you can snore any louder than I do you are entitled to the palm,” The result of the contest escaped the score- board. A statuesque dame who is suing for di- vorce in Philadelphia. wants $6,000 a month alimony and $10,000 counsel fees. Nothing leas will supply her gowns and maintain her station in life, besides providing for the wants of two young sons. Evidently she put out the high figure as a feeler for a liberal compromise, tightwad. “Why," with his money that I.heard to hit him over the head to get some of it.” Some Philadelphians are not as slow as they pretend. SECULAR SHOTS AT PULPIT. Washington Post: The Wisconsin pastor who believes the country is in need of a good blood-letting must have got tangled up with & wild array of weasel words. Cleveland Plain Dealer: S8ays a New York clergyman: “Dishonest churches are curs- ing the country by keeping the ministers on starvation wages.” Maybe that's what's the matter with Rev. Bouck White. It should be looked into. Brooklyn Eagle: “The Church of God,” an Indiana sect, will henceforth let its women dress in colors and its men wear necktles, If there are hideous chromatic combinations at first, springing out of inex- perience, the world will bear and forbeay. Art and modernism have to be trained for team work. New York World: The Congregationalist minister at Glastonbury, Conn., who was forced to sbandon his pulpit and go to work in & machine shop because he could not support his wife and six children on a salary of $600 is. a man of common sense. There is & minimum wage that church peo- vle should recognize as & matter of decency. Springfield Republican: It has been left for the committee on social service of the council of the Episcopal church of the dio- cese of southern Virginia to report condi- tions in the jails, which they assert to be barbarous. Among the alleged conditions is the frequent confining together of white and colored prisoners of both sexes. All this, sccording to /the Richmond Times- Dispateh, is asalsted by the fact that it is to the monetary advantage of the jailer to have his jail full all the time. Evidently the church has started something that sadly needed to be started. BRIEF BITS OF SCIENCE. About 100 species of opsters have been classified by scientists Swedish chemists have found s way to remove from coal tar the finely divided car- bon which it holds in suspension. According . to a French electriclan the temperature ‘of the carbon filament in an incandescent lamp approsches 2,000 degrees. Nicotine is found in only one plant be- sides tobacco—a large shrub known to bot- anists as Duboisia hopwoodil, which is native to the interior of Australia, ® Soundings have disclosed fifty-seven ocean ‘“deeps” where the depth is more than 18,000 feet. Thirty-two of these are in the Pacific, eighteen in the Atlantic and five in the Indian ocean. There {s & flashing beacon on Richardson rock, a wave-swept spot west of the Santa Barbara {slands, California, which, without attention, will flash its warnings every three seconds for seven months, or over 6,000,000 flashes, before it requires recharging with gas. A bath without water is said to be one of the latest novelties. A thick robe is en- twined with wires, and when put on a cur- rent of electricity is passed through the wires. The wearer of the robe soon finds his body getting warmer, until in a little while he perspires freely. An _interesting' result of a well being drilled at Charleston, 8. C., to a depth of 2,000 feet below sea level, was the finding of oyster shells and other maritime organisms even down to the very bottom of the well. All of them excepting those found within seventy<five or eighty feet of the surface, belonged to a species which lived during the past ages, and is now extinet. AROUND THE CITIES. Philadelphia's clean-up week cost the tax- payers $12,000 in disposing of 90,000 yards of refuse. Sioux City is talking up a municipal museum. A joint committee from the Com- mercial club, the city council and the library board is considering ways and means. Figuring on the basis of 5,040 new names in the city directory, St. Louis claims & pop- ulation of 755,741, The calculation was made before the democratic crowds blew in. The hardest slam to Gotham’s dignity comes from the city's bureau of pure foods. It says out loud that the restaurants of Coney Island are cleaner than those of Manhattan. Poor Old New York! The Board of Health of New York says that “homogenized ice cream” may law- fully be sold in the city, adding the useful postscript that homogenized ice cream Is made of powdered skim milk and water. s City's street commissioner has crusade to stop the parking of on the streets. He wants an ordinance passed prohibiting the practice of holding up the city for free garage space. Kansas City is now at liberty to enforce an ordlu;oe levying a mill tax against the street railway company for every pay pas- senger carried. The question has been be- fore the courts for twelve years and Was recently settled by the court of last resort in favor of the city. +. The biggest blast ever felt in Salt Lake City shattered the floor of a nearby quarry, the other day. Five hundred kegs of pow- der were exploded, per schedule, in a shaft sixty-five feet dGeep, and blocks of granite from twenty to 100 feet through were blown into the air. The movie men were there and caught thé flight of rock and the thrills. Three wide-varying valuations have been placed on the property of the Cincinnati Traction company. The city's expert fixed" the value at §11,080,28¢, the state utilities commission, $24,833,947, and the company, $36,837,044. These estimates afford ample room for argument on the issue which must be determined before ¢he city undertakes to revise the company’s franchise heroes galore. stufr?” producer. "My scenarios are written by @ |that the distinction belongs ‘to you." 10-Year-old boy."—Louisville Courier-Jour- “Well, we can both keep plugging along nal those lines without doing each other any Chinese, 1w to mueh for killing purposes until the Christian nations took hold of it."—Boston | Transcript. when you cook? Julia—Horribly! willing to eat what DOMESTIC msmm' when he sald he was obliged to go to @ % tuneral 2 v You have some thrilling scenarlos.” Yo “Seem to have Indlans, grizzly bears and Where do you get the ) But it was almost as bad as a tuneral, ,The home team suffered a humili- ating defeat.”—Washington Star. “Flubdub, I consider you the greatest liv- Ing_American.” “I used my gumption,” explained the film “But, Wombat, I have always maintained harm."'—Chicago Post. “Let's see, gunpowder was invented by the — e He—Do you really belleve that all stolen s0; but it never really amounted | goods must be restored? 8he—Of course, 1 do. He—Then, since my cohscience is troubling me, will you let me return’you the kiss I stole lest night?—Baltimore American. “I beli Bromide—I suppose you were at the wed- I'm almost | ding yesterday? z ol myself.—Life. | Father of tHe Bride—Hoavens! yes, | sically, mentally, spirituously and tell you the truth | clally!—Life = m——— Loulse—Don't you get awfully hungry | metimes Phy- finan- Did your office" b Excursion v'!fares East lllinois Central R. R. , Reduced Rate Round-Trip Summer Tourist tickets on sale daily. Short limit, long limit, Jiberal stopovers. A SOLID STEEL electric lighted trains. . Direct Routes. New York City, standard routes. Other routes Boston, Mass., standard route Other routes Atlantic City .. Montreal ..... Water trip . Detroit Buffalo, standard route: Other routes ... Portland, Me. Saratoga Springs, N. Y. 2 s miieialy ¥ Attractive variahle route tours to New York and Boston at slightly higher fares. " Let us assist in planning trip atfording visit at principal cities and summer resorts in the east. Variable route tickets on sale daily, commencing May 16. Tickets via direct routes on sale dally, commencing June,1—60-day limit. Information and attractive literature freely furnished. ' S. NORTH District Passenger Agent, / 407.8. 16th St., Omaha, Neb. Phone Douglas 264. TIME IS RELENTLESS YOU WILL SURELY DIE. TODAY IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY TOMORROW YOU MAY BE UNINSURABLE. THE WOodmen Of the WOrld WILL FINISH PAYING FOR THE HOME AND KEEP THE CHILDREN !N SCHOOL. RING DOUGLAS 1117, NO CHARGE FOR EXPLANATION.« J. T. YATES, Secretary. W. A. FRASER, President. OODYEAR Cord Tires were once considered the special prerogative of the larger and costlier cars. But now a tremendous demand has sprung up among owners of cars of every size, and almost every class. For these motorists also are keen for the, longer gas mileage, the power-saving and the freedom from stone-bruise which are assured by Goodyear Cord Tires. And they do not let a slightly higher price stand in the way of getting such advantages and economies. ! omm«»mc:«hflu: ! are made strong, Shirdy by ‘thess unique advantages: Jars and jolts are combatted by great oversize and the suppleness of Goodyear Cord construction. They are easy to put on and take off because they do not rust fast to the rim. Blow-outs are lessened by our No-Rim-Cut feature. Punctures and ekidding are reduced by our double- thick, All-Weather Tread. Loose Treads are diminished by our Wrapped Tread Process, Blowing off the rim s pre- , Yented by our Braided Piano ‘Wire Base. GoonfYEAR CORD TIRES ¢ Goodysar Tires, Hoavy Tourist Tubes and “'Tire Saver” Acoessories to from Goodysar Service Station Dealers everywhere.

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