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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 16, 1914)
THE BKK: OMAHA. WEDNESDAY, DECEMI.1E11 15. 1914. Only two- THE. OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BT EDWARD ROSKWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER. EDITOR. The Bee Publishing Company. Proprietor. BEB BC1LDINO. FARNAM ASP ggVENTKENTH. F.ntered at Omih postofftce a second-class matter. TERMS Or BUBSCBtPTION. By carrier By mail par month. per year. Kali end undT... H 0 ally without tfunday....' 4 0 I?venlng and Sunday Krenlng without Sunday Ko. 00 Sunday Be only w v.": 1 U Pend notlr of charge of addre or complaint of Irregularity in delivery to Omaha Be. Circulation Department. RKMtTTANCI. k 'r ft nritu or r-ostal order. .mr - rlvl In navmant of am all count. Personal check. eept 01 Omaha and eastern chage. not accepted. orncia, Oniha-Th Be Building , . South Omaha ail N street. Council Bluffs 14 North Mala afreet. I.lncoln-K Little Building. rhlrsro-em H'W Hulidlnr Nw York Room V Fifth averni. Pt I,oiila-M8 New Bank of Commerce. Washington 7 Pourtecnth Bt.. N. W. CORRESPONDENCE!. AdAres oommoBlratloea relating to mwi and acH torlal matter to Omaha be. Editorial Dpajt-BBoa. NOVEMBER CIRCtXATIOK. 52,531 State of Nebraska. County of Douglas, e " Dwlght Williams, circulation inanasar of Tha Be Publishing company, being duly aworn, say that tha avfgs daily circulation for tlia month of No vember, 114. waa S1.5J1. DWlAlIT W1UAMS, Circulation Manager. Suhactih-nd In mjr presence and amors to before an, tbla Tth day of TVmhr, 1 1 4. mm. idw fcoBEHT HUNTER, I otary PubMo. sahaxrlben Ifwrtng the dry tfrrt1jr should have The It mailed to them. Ad dree will be cheunged aa ofte m requf-sU'd. Below tero weather teets'the heating plant ail right. The nock exchange Is Main open without cataclysm. It you want to make a bit tth the shop 'girls, ihop early. In another week It will be too late to do your ChrlBtBiM ebopplng early.- Old. Santa Claua la ona of tha treat powera never caught la as etate of unpreparedneea. I ' Those' who want to dance may aa well get a credit mark for U by dancing for charity. t The capture and recapture of Belgrade prom- isei to bte the battledore and ahuttlecock fame of the war. 'If our coming legislature doea nothing else, let it put the dope business out of Business in Nebraska. rh. nniv war in aoDreciate a man at his A " wm - , true worth la to know him and then you may depreciate him. Yes, but think of the physical culture that goea along with shoveling In tha coal and shovel ing off the anow . Now that it developa that Ambrose Blerce ha been with Villa's army all along, its ferocity la eaaler to understand. Oil Man Winter Just has not the heart to hold the mercury long below nero on this grand Old Nebraaka Orange Belt. - In the Interval, Mayor Jim" doea not seem to be laying much of a wager on the senator's patronage compromise bluff. . Colorado ta excited over what Is Bald to be a big gold Btrlke. Different in character, let ua hope, from the big coal striae. The Saengerfeit and Omaha. The success attending the Northwestern Saengerfest when it waa last held In Omaha makes certain an equal measure of success for the Saengerfest when held here next year. Neither war nor business depression can drown out munlr, or the love of music, and with the enthusiastic support of the local German so cities, and the co-operation of other elements in the community, the meeting will be certain to attract a large attendance and score a big hit, and there ran be no question whatever about Omaha doing Ita part. Regardless of the location of the Saengerfest, The Bee has a suggestion to make right here, to be acted upon only in case a favorable contin gency arises. It will be remembered that the saving factor of our Trans-Mlsslsslppi exposition, after a period of' hard sledding in the face of the distractions of the war with Spain, was found In the great celebration of the conclusion 'of .he conflict participated in by President MoKinley and a galaxy of public and military man. It is at least possible, not probable, mat the Saengerfest may have a chance to convert the occasion of lta next meeting into a grand musical peace Jubilee, for few people .believe thla war can be ended without glory, enough in it for all sides and should aueh an opportunity be utilized, it would make It an event larger and more memorable than the most hopetol anti cipation. ' America's Definitive Minion. v.. While one excited German newspaperdo- dares the United States disqualified by partisan ship to act as mediator between the warring nations, it is gratifying that other representa tive European papers take the opposite view. commending our nation as the one pre-eminently fitted for this great task should the time for it come. The United States must, of course, main tain Its none too simple position of strict, neutral ity, having dona which it will stand Ken aa now before the world the one great power- to whom the Issue may be referred for adjustment if direct settlement proves impossible. That such an Impression aa tbla tfllla tha minda of combatants on both sides,-show's that we, as well as they, haveieen true to our colors. And when it comes down tblhe "test," perhaps the duty of America to refrain from taking part Is far mora difficult than It would be did our population have a single ancestry Instead of all ancestries In admixture. The United States ntnst not, will -not,. permit anything ' now to swerve It from the course marked out. Our part In thla. transforming tragedy l8 clear and plain it Is to be a definitive Dart, that of the unbiased. observer and possible peacemaker. 1 ' ' i c , Sample Ballots and Ions' Ballots. 1 Any re-form la .the alectlon lawa should Include a provision that no aumple ballot or other Imitations of tha official ballot should b-a allowed 'to be printed or narfl or found in the poaaeaalon of any person ex cept tha ballot In tha hands of tha regular election of ficials. Such a provlilon would be the irreeat puri fication of the primary that could b adopted. In tha laat primary In Kansas City some precinct votea, rang ing from 1M to 280 In a precinct were cast for a Hat Of twenty-five namea out of XXt candidate. Much unanimity doea not exlet anywhere ! in tha world From a apaecn by Conaraaaman Borland on tha floor of the heuse. Tha cure for any abuse arising from the sam ple ballot. It seems to ua,' la the short ballot. That goes straight to tha root of the evil. whereas destroying the aample ballot while con tinuing the occasion of itthe excessively long official ballot to remain would simply make a bad matter worse. The real abuse Is committed when It la made poaalble for 118 names' to ap pear, on an official ballot, or more than 200, aa waa the case at our last Omaha election, where, with all, the outcry against the outrageously long ballot, no complaint whatever waa 'directed against the sample ballot If we retain tha alx, seven or ten-foot of ficial ballot, how la the) average voter to de termine, after entering the booth, for whom, he wishes to vote except by first reviewing a aam ple ballot T It. la thla long ballot that makes Complaint Is wade of Incompetent nurses' lh r,h ample-ballot necessary. If -the latter has tha war hospitals. That's whera tha American trained nurse would fill the bill. No Nebraska namea In that long list of con sular promotions. What's tha use, then, of hav- lag a Nebraska secretary of state? j jigurea in any abuse at the polls which la easily poaalble there ought to be a dosen waya of handling that 'without abolishing the sample ballot. Adopt the short ballot and all the sample ballot troubles will take care of themselves. "There is something to- Italy's neutrality," observes an -exchange. 8o It seems. Judging from that highly mobilised army along; tha border. With all doe deference to tha varloua orders of the iron cross, the Red Cross Is rendering tha largest measure of practical philanthropy on the battlefield. ' "A distressing feature of the fighting in Po land la the fact that blood kindred are .pitted against each other," says a dispatch. But that is true of most war. It waa notably true of our own war of the rebellion. . It Is very natural that the Nebraska teachers should voto each year to hold their annual con vention In Omaha In factlt waa almost a fore gone conclusion frora.tlvlng them the right to rnooaetne meeting place for themaelvea. ., Tha grading of Ptraun straat haa roroad a change In the plan for tha court bouae retaining wall. County Commlaalouera Corlla. OKeefe and Knight are g.,. ng t to vi.lt dlffereot elites In connection with tha ourt house equipment, and will go over tha pro- ' "-" muimc Meyers at Detroit. -fvun iiocnsiraaaer. manager ' or i-h. u,..i..t Balka Collndr-company at. bus 8wu Eighth street. !haa alao taken the acency tor the Standard RaJoon MlM Ana. Snyder, soprano alnger In BC Mary'a Avoe.ua eharcb, waa called to Illinois by iaickneaa In C. F. Goodman has gun to Cleveland -oa husi- ana John II Donahue, tha well known cattleman, hee rcmriKsa iu ni uman . b-eadquarters aftee alioit trttk fa A .... mi ' ' ine city councu has received the formal oTfer from Owwt W. Amtt and J. A. ,VaeOld fur the Hoard of Trad of DVM for lot 1. Ulo 1),' bain tbe ,w-uUiweat corner of tijxtenth and I'inam. belonging to the city. ; '. - j There la aignllkanc In tb offer of a tward tor ine return to f ,.l. Noble a lurat market of a Itwt n t.i .U. A. ., . - ' . - - - . i . i ........ . Printing for the SUte or by the State. . .Another proposition that is to be put up to our lawmakers, according to ita advance agents, Is the establishment of a state prtntery, from which all official publications are to be turned out. Other atatea do their own printing we are told, ao- why not Nebraska, and pencila are sharpened to figure out the possible profit or saving. Not being In the Job printing business. The Bee may auggest without any self-interest, that this la a purely business proposition, a. question of dollars and cents. Other states do a lot of things that we do not do, and Nebraska does some things which other atatea do not do. Some atatea have even elected their puhllc. printer by popular vote and, paid him by fees, making tha office the jrrandest grafting Job on the list. while others have conducted a atate printing de partment under competent direction on a strictly business basis with satisfactory results. It all get baek to the volume of work to be done, and the experience and efficiency of those deputed to do It, and experience and efficiency are not to be had without a complete divorce ment from politics. Our notion Is that the first thing In order Is to try out a s'ate civil service plan In existing departments of atate activity, and see how It pana before taking on something else aa complicated aa a print shop, especially; when It can be readily taken on any time that condltlona warrant. The Chicago man who shuffled oft prema turely, leaving a note expressing a laat wish to have neither friends nor flowers at his funeral la but a counterpart of th men whose lives are being sacrificed on the battlefield of Europe. Without giving utterance to such desire the fallen aoldler too often baa neither friends nor flowers t hta funeral. k ,. L If 'the. different focal charity, organisations are not receiving the usual aggregate of con trlbutions, it must be because there are more of them, and more new calls' producing a greater division. Never before were the people of this community more sympathetically d'sposed to ward distress, or more willing to help relieve it to the extent of their abilities. False Ideas About Women A On... Btady. In the current number of th Woman's Home Com- l panmn Misa Ida V. Tarhell. the moot oiaTin(,iiini of women writer, undfrtakea to ilhow the falKlty of certain Ideas en the woman qiKtli which are apreid throughout the country by platform . apeakcrs. H?r tatpmenta are baaed on a atudy of the laat national census, ao far aa that pondnroua document' relates to marriage, divorce, motherhood and. wage-working. Concerning; the charge that "lee" than half the 4u,mo. V women of the country marry," Mlaa Tarbell aaya: "If w consider tha eex aa a whole, regardleaa of age. this U true. W have In the United States. now 44.C.S.DS9 'female.' Including all from 1 year and under to 100 years and over. Fifty-two and aevpn-toritha per cent of the babes, maldii and women are single, that la. literally lesa than half of the eex are married But drop out those not jret of marriageable age, and you have a different story. There will, of course, be a difference of opinion about what la a marrlagfeanle age; but lot ua call It 19 or over. If we settle on that, we must drop at once from our estimate something over Jn.Ono.OOO of the aex. It puts a different com plexion at once on the marriage percentage. As a fact, 70 per cent of thoee who are IS years or more old marry; and If you raise, the ace to 20, WH4 per rant marry; to K, 88.T per cent marry, - "But, grant the figure to be correct It la hard. even for an orator, to defy a census snd still the platform cries that 'women don't marry as they ono did.' Th truth la they marry mora freely than they did In 1900 or In 190. There has beep a gain of nearly per cent In the number of. marriages of women over IS In the last twenty years; and per cent, when deal Ins; with nearly 90,000.000, ia a considerable number. Facta Ahoat Divorce. "There has been an increase in divorce. In the SO.000.000 married women whom th cenau takers of 1S10 reported, they found lKS,06o who had been di vorced. Considering tt. difficulties of married lire. tha number doea not appall. It rather give on a greater respect for human beings to aee that thy can handle uch a complicated relation with such :t malt percentage of (llnaatcr. There is no other human relation that can ahow anything Ilka ao large a sta tistical proof of success. The number of divorces found in 1910 Is greater, proportionately, than the cenrus takers unearthed In 1S00, still larger than they found In 1880. In each of thee ten-year perioda there has been' an Increase of on-a-tenth of 1 per cent. It Is doubtful If thla loss be due to lose of faith In mar riage. A proportion of it la du to a higher Ideal of marriage, an unwillingness to se th relation pros tituted by a dissolute, cruel or unfaithful partner. "A perocntair la due, too, to th greater careleaa ne with which marriage are mad under our changing eoolal practice. , We have removed large' y from boys and gin tha protective social devices by which wa one guided their relatione and choices. They go and com freely, and, as might be expected, marry with less sense of tha aerlousness of their undertaking." ' Ikewlag of Motherhood. Regarding motherhood Miss Tarbell make thla Knowing: "It I pretty difficult, even with th best of censusea before ua, to find out jut what has hap. pened in the last 100 year to the population of th United etate. It has suffered serious vicissitudes. uch-sa tha civil war. making; It Impossible for twenty years at least to find out what was happening In u large section of th country. It has had a continual but uneven stream of Immigration pourina Into it. That it lias Increased is true. 'But it Is th Immi grant, the Including of the Indian, the fecundity ,-f the negro and the "lower races" which ha caused th Inorease. The true American Is, not Increasing. Thus the platform. But th thirteenth census ' speake bet ter of the trite American. According to it our' native whit population. , those whose! parents were both born in this country, not oniy is Keeping up ine nfitn rate but In the last, decade has increased It by over 1 per cent. He makea av better showing than alno 1170. "Let ua not be deceived. . The' human heart doe not change. . It demanda Ua mate, always has, alwaya Will; and the mated will find a corner to themselves where they can sit by their own fir and rear their own brood. ' "Their corner may be a flat and not a cottage, their fir, may be a gas log and not a bundle of sticks, their dinner may com In from the corner In cans and. be heated and not cooked, th wife may vote and the husband may gtv himself a score liberties an earlier generation would have frowned on, but what has all that to do with the foundations of lifer la the "Workshop. Mlas Tarbell quotes a platform speaker who claims that tha family la doomed to destruction, owing to th fart that women are dtasatlsfled and are going Into Industry. Thla speaker says that there are ae - era! million young girl in our factories and shops Mlas Tarbell answers this claim with th following statement of facts: "As a matter of fact, far from then being avral million young girls In Industries, there are just about eight millions (8,076,77!) girls and woman of all area. from 10 to 100. employed a part or all of the time In the land, In money-earning work of all kinds teach ing, dressmaking, clerking, business, domestic science. Only about one-fifth of the eight millions are in 'shops and factories,' and. moreover, probably not ovr half of thla one-fifth can be called 'young girls,' that Is, are under 21 year of ace. There ar aomn thlng ilk 111,000 women employed In making sutta, coats, cloaks and overalls In this country; M,000 or one-half of them, ar over tl years of age. There -ar 61,090 women In our shoe factories, and 41,000 of thetn are over H years of ace. There .are something; ever 148,000 In cotton mills, and T7.000 of them ar over a year old. There are around KO.eoo saleswomen in th country, and ltt.000 are over tV People anS Events Luck, tha fickle goddess, aft : playa soma cruel eapere, II. C. Mccrcskey or Tale., Okl., laid down and died th other day just as an oil well on hta farm began spouting oil at clouda J A ft Iu! undertaker prevented a funeral at the hour set because none of th mourners could produce kh cash to pay a $30 coffin bllL Th deceased had 185 In hla pockets at death, but th administrator beat th undertaker to it 'Th mayor of New York org policemen to freely us their night sticks on srunmen and gangster, who activities neadleaaly stimulate th cemtery business. As a ventilating measure th remedy car ries the endorsement of police doctors. ' At th rate decorations are . being pa ad, around among army oommaadere at th front aora method of chest expanelon will be required to make room tor the trophies. Perhaps th Roman custom of hanalng a few on th back will b popularised. , Again, out of San Francisco ooims th solemn as surance that fleecing tourists will not to tolerated during tha big show. Hotel keepers have formed a vllllanc commltte to protect tend affect against Im position. That aettlee It. Grab, your trip and go. Twice Told Tales Ut Steele Tkrat, ,y Attorney Thomas C Brlnamad doesn't object to a ejeod story, even if It's on htm." II tails this on: x "Th other day an old Vole-red man cam saunter ing p to m hi my yard, where there waa a big pile of rubbish. 'Morning. John.' I said. " 'sloraln', stars Tom, don't you want that rub bish hauled awayr "WhafU you taker I asked. "Dollah a load. a I think ItH take j' about two loads' , Til give you 75 cent a load.' I told him. " 'Tou remember me, do you, Mara XomV ' 'Why sura, John.' r. " TVell. you rantember when I was up fur ahootln' craps, and you pleaded m guilty in polio court r ' 'Bur.' I said. "'An you charged m l..aa' I -never said a docjaon word!' vjohn hauled th rubbish at It a load, and he made three loads of It" Cleveland New rus w-r II rJl. The Coloratura sra Voire. OMAHA. Iec. IS.-To the Edltcr of The IW.-Ai the dictionaries and encyclo pedias seem a hit chary in defining thia voice and few understand what la meant by It a description, a little graphic to be sure, may make It clearer. It appllea more peclflcally to th soprano voice In Ita ability to Imitate the quality, timbre, color, tint or char acter of mualral tones, and mora par ticularly to the wind Instruments of the orchestra. The tone of the saxophone Is said to be made up of those overtones or harmonics or upper partial that give It a sound more closely allied to the human vole than any other musical Instrument In the case of the female soprano voice, In the higher registers, the flute Is the instrument par excellence to which she would so color her tones aa to Im itate it a far more beautiful instru ment and belonging to the same order as that of the voice or the wind Instru ments. As the different primary colors of the rainbow, when mixed, make different shades, or a we say other colors, so also In tone when the different harmonica or overtones are mixed In certain pro portions we get characteristic musical tones and hence the characteristic musi cal instruments. .The soprano who can sing aa the trained artist or prima donna doe in these aria and trills In a higher class of musical art. by ao coloring her voice as to do It artistically. Is said to have a coloratura Voice. When the San Carlos opera .company, under the auspices of the Bhrlners, were here recently a good demonstration of this waa given. In th opera of Lucia, In the "mad" ecene In act three, with all its difficult arias and trllla, the prima donna. Ed. via-na Vaccarl. the soprano. Is seen to make her way to that end of the stage directly over the flute player in the or chestra and there the two are seen In what at times would seem In active recitative or musical talk er aa the French would aay In aria parlante. and at times It ia difficult to tell which is vole and which la flute. So well haa the alnger under control th form of her mouth and her nasal chambera that enable her on occasions by reaoaancn to so color her tones by the overtones aa to grain the high distinc tion of being coloratura soprano, a merit not given to all. GEORGE P. WILKINSON. lavok the lrr oa th De.erter. OMAHA. Dc. 16,-To the Editor of Th Bee: I'm not a spug. but some of the present day features of Christmas pan handling, if the term may be permuted, crate just a little on my sense of pro priety. No matter which way on turns, the request-In some Instances, almost the demand, for contributions meet the wayfarer. Chrlatma chimneys, kettles, boxes, all sorts of devices, are presented, and , even at the theater a beautiful chorister Is engaged In singing coin from the pockets of th patrons for Christmas uses. It makes one wonder If the spirit -of giving hasn't swung from plain spug. eery to Incipient Insanity. And then, in the columns of The Be is seen a request for aid for a woman who has thre children; she keeps room. rs, and draws a mothers' pension of lis per month, her rent being- SIS. Alone wun mis is the statement that th. foth- who has deserted this farrf ly. Is paying ror me tuiuon of the oldest airl at a business college. When Omaha supports a nlrh achnnl of commerce, where all Is free of ex pense to the student, why should It be necessary for the child of a mother who Is drawing a pension from tho rr.uni to hav tuition Paid at a buslneaa cnllemf And, If tha father of this family Is able to contribute to that extent why should he not be required to go further and help support tha family he deserted. It seems to me that her Is a cas for the applica tion of on of our sadly nenlected In wi th one that deals with deserters of wife and family. OLD FOOT, A llelpfal laatitatloa. OMAHA. Dec IS. To the Editor of Th Bee: Will you kindly give place for thla in your paper T There ia a charitable Institution In this city that .Is. not often heard of, or the work accomplished there Is not pro claimed on th housetops, but neverthe less it Is doing a great work for human ity. It Is th Salvation Army home for women at Twenty-fourth and Spalding Streeta. . It haa. cared for -hundreds of oung women and children In th past and tha good work Is still going on. Th nom Is worthy of help and assist. anoe financially, which I am sur would oe tnamcruiiy accepted. .; ,, I ..... . ONE .' INTERESTED. Editorial Snapshots Indianapolis New: -And when th dele gates from the warring powers attend the biennial congress of the . American Peace society, they will,, of course, have th courtesy to leave off 'their spurs. New York -.World:. .The gentleman 'In Chicago who clalma to hav Invented In destructible steel ought not to wast any time on the wheat and corn .speculator and beef and pork packers of that town. He can make himself the most popular man m Europe If he has any desire 'to travel. - - . '. 1 Philadelphia Bulletin: .England ia re ported tit. have beeh' buying machinery and Betting up plants for the manufac ture of her own war uppUa,'and when tha war is over the plant will be turned Into th production of th commodities of peace. The I'nlted States should take tha hint and preiajur to b aelf-depaodent and eelf-eupportine- PitUburc Dispatch: Japan explains that It was all a mistake about handtne Klao Chow back to China. That waa, only If Oermany gave It up when demanded, but sine Japan had to fight for it that altr th altuatlon. If It had not been this It would hav .bean soaaethiag alae. Cnci Sam remains th only power that gives up anything he gets. Pittsburgh Dispatch: Th anthracite coal tax give an inteceattng example of th way taxes oa corporation can b collected from th people. Thia tax of tSa cents a ton was levied nearly two years ago. Th companies, to keep them selves whole, promptly collected M cents from th consumers. Then they paid nothing to'th state, but started a auit. claiming the tax' to be unconstitutional. If they lose thr suit they will get 300 per cent oa th. tax. If they win it, they will get it all. JOLLIES FROM JUDGE. When did he come to the turnlnk point of his lifer' "When he began to roll in the wealth that wa left him." business Man How Is the niiMinhlng bun-nps thne days? Krtltor Very anod. except for the powder magazines. 'What klnl of rlgar do you wish to give your husband, madam Havana or domestic?" "Oh domestic, by all means. I m giv ing them to him to encourae-e him to spend hi evenings st home, you know." The Christmas roose was Inclined to be fr.retioue as it frorred the food so gener ously given, "i presume," It remarked. "that during the battle for the Yuletlile dinner they will attack both my right and left wing." Mrs. Wood But. perhaps your husband realty understand you bettor than you think. Mrs. Ooode N'oiwnM, my dear. Just let mo chow you the Christmas present he gave me. Stiffrarette (to antl. who snnnorts her husband) I can't see why you are not a tuffrasctto. AntiTher. this Is whv: It's h:icl enotia'i sit. t ri f-n-mi-n to support man. and I I don't csre to have to rote lor mm, too, . and hrtve that extra burd-n. J u-ige. ' "Well. Hastus." said the colonel. 'I . ! nnlerisnd vour club has declined to ad-1 mlt Jull is to memhrstilp." "Pat a fee knhnei.- iriurnro hi old darky "Ah dtmno what He objection to Julius was. but when dry com t" vote, dry d.me. whltebnlled him. "What sre you hoys making such a racket down there for"" "Why, we're two big nations gon to war." "Hut what sre you both pummellnc poor lilt:e Kredd'e f"r" "h, he's a neutral so he cant fight." Washington Star. JudireOfricer. what's the matter'wlth the prisoner tell her to stop that cry-ng she's been at It fifteen minutes. (More sobs Officer-Please, sir, I'm a'thlnklng he want to le balled out Nebraska Aw- j swan. Post How do you get your Christmas tree o loaded down? Parker It's Jone by the grafting process. IJfe. 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SM i . la Bess. 10a 25c N Are You Interested in a High Grade Enclosed Car or Body Only "We carry the largest stock of high grade enclosed cars west of Chicago; also a number of used limousine, se- ' dan, coupe and convertible bodies. Cadillac Company of Omaha Geo. F. Reim, Pres. 2056 Farnam Street. Douglas 4225. JS IT ELECTRICAL.. 'Aa Xmae Gift for Svery Kambar of lh amUy We. invite you to look over our large stock of all kinds of suoTaiOAL ninco Birrzcxa, uoxtzsto nxTumEe, mao nro xjascra, xauta nu ovTrjTg abto stotxltes. THE ELECTRIC SHOP TOUI SX.SCTSXO CO. 1S10 JTABBTAJa TBBT. rXOTI TTUB 1414 "W Ar as Hear to Toa as Tew Fhon." !i Water Power Development ! T-i'a t arrauaa. w j ni. 1 lars la ci eh err rock aVKJ-omTa. t la- fwiassi ' Knowletlra 1 waa ion riaa ea SinU-Unc. Steam Power Stations EXSOTBXO TUV anon a. COsTBITXp. TATioara. WHY! r U. fir iLim tW T F aaewleaae ieclrioeU sari f an a nli a n I si j 1 Fhw la tt buildar la aftT ' r SI IISS lV a aas-sW- m. taaaa Xu. 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