Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 03, 1915, Page 6, Image 6

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    TIIE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1915.
THE OMAHA DAILY BEE
FOUNDED RY EDWARD ROSKWATER.
VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR.
The Dee Publishing Company. Proprietor.
BEE BUILDING. FAP.NAM AND FKVF.NTEKNTH.
Entered at Oinih poatofflce aa eeeond-class matter.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
By carrier By moll
per month. per r.
Pally and Sunday So 16 n
raily without Piinrtay....' 4 4 on
?venin anil Punday sir g no
Kventng without Sunday To 4.00
Sunday Bra only r j.on
8end notice of rhn of aridreee or complaints of
Irregularity in delivery to Omaha Be, Circulation
Department.
REMITTANCR.
Remit by draft, express or postal order. Ontv t wo
re tit stamps received In payment of ama'll ac
counts Personal checks, except on Omaha and eai.tern
exchange, not accepted.
OFFTCE8.
Omaha The Bee Building.
Fouih Omaha iBU N atreet.
Council Fluffs-14 North Main street.
Lincoln 2 Little- Bulldlnir.
CMracn arri Harst Hulrllng
New Tork Room linn, jx Fifth s venue.
Pt Louts-VB New Bank of Commerce.
Wsshlngton 73 Fourteenth St., N. W.
' CORRESPONDENCES.
Aodrees communications relating to new a and edl
tcrtal matter to Omaha Uee. Editorial Department.
" NflVKMHKK CIKOILATIOX.
53,716
State of Vehraska, County of Potiglna, a:
J.!;'f Williams, circulation manager of The Bee
J'ubllshing company, telng duly aworn, aaya that the
average circulation for the month of November, 11J,
was S3. 7I.
mVHUiT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager.
Uw,"rrJ!21 ,n n"r Presence and aworn to before
me. thia 2d day of December IklB.
ROBERT IIL'NTKR, Notary Public.
Subscribers leaving the city temporarily
. should hare The liee mailed to thorn. Ad
dreee will be changed aa often aa requested.
Decent
Thought for the Day
SUetd iy Minnit M. Niekmm
Uo far that UUlt eandh IA rotes hi$ bum;
Ho tHntt m giod detd in a naughty uorld.
Shaktitpetrt.
A year ago It was the Chrlstmae ahlp this
year It la the peace ahlp but the war atill goes
on.
Now la the time for the peace prophet to
cet busy again. One of them may guesa right
J some of these days.
J Take it from us, that when It cornea to re
j writing the laws of war on land' or aea, no one
nation la going to have the whole aay.
If Henry Ford does not win the next Nobel
peace prise the neutral world will have reason
to question Sweden's appreciation of boundless
teal.
According to Secretary McAdoo, Panama
canal will soon be a producer Inatead of a con
samer of money. It remains for Culebra to
ratify the secretary's optimism. .
Prudent wheat growers and grain dealera
will be careful not to ahlp to Canadian porta
when they can avoid the risk so easily by
patronising home railroads and elevators.
We protest that to require all the profes
sional farmers to tell exactly where they farm
and what they farm la an unreasonable and un
warranted use of the publicity searchlight.
The apectacle of a railroad hobbling on
financial crutches speeding up and beating stal
wart trunk linea to the business trough lends
irony and gayety to life In the transportation
world.
Viewing the results by and Urge, fifteen
months after the start, the outstanding achieve
ment of the war consists of 10,00,000 casual
ties, nearly equally divided between dead and
wounded. ' .
When Speaker Clark says be expects con
gress to be in session until the dog daya, be
must be trying to lay the foundation for the
revival of hta favorite song. "You'll Have to
( Stop Kicking My Dawg Aroun' ."
The aenator'a personal newspaper organ In-
j aists he ia urging hla embargo on munitions ex
ports not becauae of pro-Germanism, but out of
pure Americanism. That must explain why all
the pro-Germane are so strong for the proposi
tion. The democrats insist on a pot of money for
their campaign fund from the city favored with
the national convention location. If that la the
object, why not put It up at auction and knock
it don to the highest bidder without pretense
cr deception?
Wireless developments continue at an amax
ing rate. The fact that the station at Honolulu
caught waves of news sent out from Germany,
9,000 miles away, tndicatea that eventually the
wirelesa system will belt the world more effec
tively than the telegrap'a and ocean tablea.
iJtf.. WJ
Arrengemente have been made for the appearance
of the three (rcateat bllllardlsts, Srhaefer, Sloeaon anj
Yiynaux, in the opera house, when they will five aa
exhibition of cue and balls.
J. A. Munroe of Kansas City ia la Omaha. .
Omaha Is discuaalna the question of experimenting
villi electric lighting.
Mr. and Mra. Henry W. Tatea returned from their
ead pilsrtraage tward to reclaim the body of their
ao.i, who was drowned In Long laland Bound.
The plat of Parkalow Place, a new addition of West
Omaha, maa filed with the clerk.
Clarence Whlatler, the (rest wrestler. Is dead, te
the ereat grief of Omaha sporting men, who were
einung Ma admirers. Whlatler was formerly cmpluyej
here In the Colon Pacific ahopa.
The Weatera Union has at last agreed to eiltnd
lie line to the stock yards.
A vag at the police court had the audacity to
demand a Jury t-lal. and he got it with threo months
throan In. The Jury that brought in the verdict was
composed or W. J. Muuut, fc. VI cK 'lure. Morris Mor
jlaou and Jma II. Wlnpear.
fierldenta of near lisnacom park ar complaining to
the city council that there la toe much ahovtlng gulng
vu in the park tiunday luurninga.
mtmmt a rmftM su
The Government and Pacific Koads.
Prosecution In the federal courtg of a suit
to divorce the Central and Southern Pacific
lines renews Interest In the past attitude of the
government to this problem. When the Harri
man system was being "unscrambled," the Union
Pacific undertook to purchase the Central Pa
cific, but was prevented by Attorney General
McReynolds, who Insisted that It would be dan
gerous to have a continuous line under the same
management from Omaha to San Francisco. The
stupidity of that position was at that time
pointed out by The Bee and conditions then fore
casted have developed.
The present suit turns on a condition eatab
Hshed by the McReynolds ultimstum, which
merely continued the Southern Pacific control,
against which for years all the transcontinental
shippers have protested. The Central Pacific
as an Independent line haa no statua. It must
have a close working connection with an east
ern outlet. In order to serve the traffic it is de
signed to accommodate.
The perfect transcontinental system of rail
roads, well demonstrated by experience, waa
the old plan for an Overland route, which should
never have been deviated from. The govern
ment has effectually muddled the situation, has
not aided the rivals of the Union or Southern
Pacific, has given no relief to shippers, and It
remains yet to clear the track to the right so
lution. The Philippines.
The flash and clash between Secretary of
War Garrison and ex-Pfesldent Taft over the
Philippines have drawn attention to the un
happy and steadily deteriorating condition of
those Islands since the democrats started ex
perimenting with them, and the best claim by
the democratic mouthpiece is that, despite the
admitted loss in efficiency by the backward
step, the ground may be regained when the
policy of aelf-government la worked out. In a
word, the excuse Is made that the democrats,
having been committed to a wrong policy, prefer
to persist In It with such resulting demorallxa
tlon Vr there, rather than to acknowledge
their mistake and go back to the tried and
proved republican policy.
But 'the fact ia that the democratic treat
ment of the Philippines doe not conform even
with democratic platform professions. It will
be remembered that Colonel Bryan threw up
hla military commission and left his troopa in
Cuba to rush back to Washington and help force
ratification of the treaty of Paris, for the ex
press purpose of making "militarism" an issue
In his 1800 campaign. The democratic plat
form on that point, therefore, outlined the dem
ocratic policy (omitting denunciation of the re
publicans) by saying:
W favor an Immediate declaration of the na
tion's purpose to give the Filipinos, first, a stable
form of government; second, Indwpendence, and
third, protection from outside Interference.
The position of the republicans at that time
was stated in this reference to the people of our
newly acquired Insular possessions:
The largest measure of self-government con
sistent with our welfare and our duty shall n
secured to them by law.
The democrats reiterated their declaration
in 1904 and 10S, and again la 1913, when It
took on thla' language:
We favor an Immediate declaration of the ra
tion's purpoae to recognise the independence of the
Philippine Islands as soon as a atable government
ran bs estshllahed, such Independence to be guar
anteed by us until the neutralisation of the Islands
ran be secured by treaty with other powers.
But fifteen yeara, three of them under dem
ocratic rule, apparently, hag not sufficed to
produce a stable government which would war
rant the "Immediate" Independence of the Fil
ipinos which the democrats promised thera way
back in the year 1900. The democrats have
failed to carry out even the express terms of
their 1912 platform pledge, and all they have
accomplished so far, according to tbe consensus
of competent opinion, Is the undoing of a large
part of what the republican administrations had
accomplished and making It necessary to do It
over again with increased difficulty. It would
be far better for the Filipinos, as well aa for
the people of thla country, If the democrats
would recognise the fact that it la "a condition
and not a theory which confronts them" In
dealing with the Philippines.
. The Farmen and Their Congress.
The determination of the farmers to restrict
membership In their state congress to persona
engaged In or cloaely allied to farming ia on
right lines. Hitherto, the affalra of the con
gress have been considerably disturbed by the
Interjection of matters that have little or no
relation to the Industry of agriculture as such,
and expressions thus obtained have been uaed
to bolster up the political projects of pestifer
ous agitators. The farmers are deeply con
cerned in politics, and are not to be denied full
activity in the governmental affairs of the atate,
but their deliberations ought to be untrammeled,
and their conclusions reached without undue in
fluence from outsiders, whose interest ia not
alwgya that of the farmer. Good will certainly
come to the congress as a reault of the house
cleaning commenced in Omaba.
Politic! and the 8tate Univeriity.
Tbe capital correspondent of our local demo
cratic contemporary boasts of the services being
rendered by the democrats on tbe Board of Re
gents of the University of Nebraska, and praises
them aa big business men giving their time and
talent without reward to the institution. All
that be gayg of these men may be true, and will
not be .disputed, but what of the other mem
bers of the board, who are not democrats, but
who are also big business men and devoting
their best abilities Just as freely to and effec
tlvely to the university! Efforts to Involve the
University of Nebraska In partisan politics
ought to be rebuked at any time. The service
of the school essentially depends on Its Indepen
dence of and freedom from partisan Influence
however remotely exerted. The long list of able
men who have served as regenta without emolu
ment is the best possible evidence of the re
gard tbe people have for the university. The
present attempt to gain a little partisan credit
for the democrats at the expense of this great
educational institution, cheapens even that
party'a standing.
And now cornea tbe Intimation that house
hold furniture will cost ue more. Just another
unreasonable remlcder of tbe democratic plat
form promise to reduce the high coat of living.
i
Europe After the War
Aleaaade Woyes la etifcaar'e.
ANNOUNCINO In the German Reichstag at the
close of August, the third great German war
loan, the Imperial finance minister briefly re
viewed some aaMent facts. The dally coat to all the
powers Involved In the European war, he said, had
risen to tTJ.000,000; the monthly cost to more than
I2.onr,orx),onO; the yearly cost to something like ,26,000,.
ono.ono. The spoech containing those estimates wss
made before Bulgaria had entered the war and be
fore the Balkan campaign had begun; therefore, the
present outlay must be greater still. Germany alone,
the ministerial spee-h proceeded, was now spending In
a single month more by one-third than the total Coat
of her Franco-Pruaaian war.
To these rompariaona one may profitably add some
others of equal Interest, affecting Great Britain's hill
of costs. At Its present rate of war expenditure.
England paya out In six months mora than the United
States government spent for military and naval pur
poses In all the four years of the American civil war.
It Is commonly estimated that the war with France
In the Napoleonic period, from 1799 to 1SIJ Inclusive,
coat England In the ar (re sate S4.16O.O0O.OUO. But the
chancellor of the exchequer recently declared to Par
liament that England's expenditure during only the
twelve-month period ending next March will ha.e
amounted to $7,960,000,000; and the average dally rate
of outlay Is progressively Increasing.
These flgurea of the present waste of capital In
war are so large that to moat minds they are merely
bewildering. Some of the most experienced Interna
tional bankers ventured the positive prediction at the
beginning of this year, that the belligerent govern
ments would not be able to continue raising the neces
sary funds after 1915. This prediction, like so many
others made since the war began, will have to get Its
answer from the progress of eventa, and the answer
may not be what waa expected. But It should still
be poaslhle to ascertain exactly how the various bel
ligerent governments sre raising the money for this
prodigious expenditure; then to inquire what effect,
temporary or permanent, the process ia exerting on
their actual prraent financial situation, and from that
to obtain at least some Idea of the economic condi
tion In which the severs! belligerents wilt emerge from
this ruinous conflict.
It Is not always easy to determine whrt Imme
diate present effect, financial or economic, the strain
of war la exerting on a given belligerent stute. In
dustrial activity Is usually keyed up to a high pltcn
by the government's huge purchases of material.
Profits from many manufactures rise because of the
war requirements; wagea of labor Invariably rlae.
But what also happens Is the rapidly increasing
p'sralysls of normal business.
In countries like Francs or England It la the
export trade which moat plainly tells this part of the
story. The decrease in Great Britain's merchandise
exports, during the first seven months of 1915, of
$469,000,000, or 82i per cent, from the same months of
1014, and the simultaneous decrease In French exports
by $430,009,000, or 6 per cent, were certainly In great
part a result of the commandeering of capital for
war loans, thereby stopping Improvement and exten
sion of private business enterprises; of the enlistment
of skilled workmen In alt the fighting states for the
war, and of the turning of the machinery In almost
every kind of factory to the making of ammunition.
What has been the effect of the war on the legit
imate home consuming market is less eaay to deter
mine. But It la reasonable to suppose that the appeal
for every hundred marks of private German savings
to be Invested in the war loans and the tss of IT per
cent and upward on English Incomes, must enor
mously reduce the whole people's purchasing power.
Just now all this is sccepted as an inevitable Inci
dent of a war for the country's safety like the In
flated paper currencies of the continent and tha de
preciated foreign exchange on England. But what sort
of condition does It foreshadow when the war Is over '
The first and most unmistakable conclusion la
that , the people of what Is now belligerent Europe
will be poor. This muM be so In England, not only
because the furious activity In all trades contributing
to the wsr will have stopped completely, but becausu
the abnormally heavy taxes must continue. It must
be so In Germsny becauae the "war orders" will have
ceased, because the long embargo on foreign com
merce will have exerted Its. cumulative Influence, and
because the Imposition of much heavier taxes can
then no lonser be deferred. Very few people of ex
perience or judgment regsrd as anything but" a pre
text or a dreant the Imperial finance minister's Idea
of a wa'r Indemnity of ll.OX,000,000 or upward. Imposed
by a victorious Germany on her enemies. With those
enemies now In possession of Germany's colonies, with
England controlling .he sea, and with the whole world
outaide of Germany In agreement that reparation to
Belgium is the sins qua non of the final reckoning,
such a prediction falls not fsr short Of absurdity.
But If the wsr lsats snother year, tha annual in
terest alone, on the German war debt, and on that of
other belligerents beside, will be almost or quite as
large as the whole snr.ual public revenue from taxa
tion before the war. The formidable question then
arises, what the attitude of the people will be toward
so crushing a burden of taxation at a time when
political dissension has begun again, when appeal to
patriotism and national safety haa lost Its force
through return of peaes, and especially with nations
whose people have been deluded Into thinking that
the enemy would foot the entire bill.
There Is left another question of post-bellum con
ditions still more Important to our own material
Interests. That Is the question whether Europe Its
people impoverished by war, its manufacturers sud
denly deprived of demands for war material, and. In
Germany'! case. Its whole productive industry tn
touch again with a foreign market lost since the
war began will not Instantly pour Into the rich
United States so Immense a mass of manufactured
gooda. offered at very low prices fixed by the urgent
needs of the European producer, as to cut off our own
manufacturers front tha market. This picture seems
on its face convincing; the result would sppesr to
follow the logic of the situation. Our own government
has already begun tentatively te discuss measures
which might be necessary to avert or modify the dis
organising effect on American Industry.
Tet tha prospect, on examination. Is not altogether
se clear as might be imagined. Home of our own most
experienced manufacturing authorities hold today that
these circumstances Insure an export trade from the
United 6tates to Europe, sfter wsr Is ever, of ab
normally Urge proportions.
These are among the obscure, but not the lass
formidable, problems which svea paaoe will bring-.
Nobody oan answer them confidently. Predictions of
tha moat disquieting sort are made regarding all ef
them. Perhaps, however. It will be to some extent
reassuring If we keep In mind the fsr mere disquieting
predictions made a year and a half agw regarding the
Inevitable and Immediate economic results of the
war Itself, virtually none of which has been fulfilled.
Twice Told Tales
CktsiylsB Pe-salMlst,
Thla one has the merit of being true, aay hew:
The official peealmlat of a small western elty,
a gentleman who had wrestled with eareaie dyspepsia
fur leers, stood la front of the poeterfire as the
Itoen whtatlee sounded.
"Twelve o'clock, eh?' he said, half te himself
and half to aa acquaintance. "Well, I'm going home
to dinner. If dinner alnf ready I'm going to raise
trouble; sad If It Is ready I ain't going te eat a
bite." Saturday Bvealng- Poat
Milul latere
Blushing, she hid her faoe on her father's shoulder
"He loves me." she breathed.
"Waata to marry you. eh?" the eld mae grunted.
"Yea. papa."
"What la hla Incomer'
he started.
"I don't know," she murmured, "but the Coinci
dence ia vry strange."
"What colacideacer asked the father.
'Vlarenc-e." she answered, "asked the very same
question about your Income." Washlagtoe Star.
Inpatient with Wllaoa.
PUAINVIEW, Neb., pec. 1-To the
Editor of The Bee: According to all
paper reports. Mr. Wilson, our honorable
president, could not join Mr. Henry
Ford's peace propaganda. Why not?
Simply becauae he can't figure out any
peace proposition favorable to England
and Its allies.
Mr. Wilson, ss well ss his favorites, the
elites, ' Hue- that thty are heaten and
witness the struggle In desperation,
wltnout sny hopes to win. Mr. Wilson
sees his busom friend, John Bull, fall
with deep emotion, but has one ooneol
Uon. he sees his friend st home, the
ammunition factory owners, making mil
lions out of thla war. lie caree not for
the millions killed In Europe, nor for
the millions suffering In his own coun
try on account of this wsr, sll he cares
for Is to carry out hie own selfish plsns
and to help England to maintain Us
world pom er. He is not the same V llson
he used to be a year ago. when he or
dered a day for prayer, for the Ixrd
to end this war at once; now I think he
praya by himself for the continuance of
this war to the benefit of our ammuni
tion factories, aa well as for fcngland
to get ready and get on the winning side.
Old King Frederick the Great of Prus
sia used to say: "The Uord always goes
with the best army regardless of national
ity." Thla seems to be the case in this
present war. The alllea never were able
to check the central powers In their
offensive wsve; how can any eane man
expect them to put them out of t lelr
fortified positions If once In the defense.
Mr. v lisun ought to know this and come
to the conclusion that now Is the proper
time to have peace for humanity sake.
Furthermore, Mr. Wilson urges con
gress to spend $600,000,000 for his favorite
Idea, "preparedness." Whom Is he fear
ing? Is It Germany? The Oerman gov
ernment has shown that they will up
hold their friendship towards the United
fUates in spite of the Insults received from
our jingo president, for they are con
vinced of the fairness of the majority
of tha people of the Dmtrd otaixs ana
they know that his days as president
of the United States are counted. 1 hope
Mr. Wilson will be shown where he la
at by the next congress and without any
doubt the voters of the union will show
him where he belongs next fall.
AN OUU-TIMB DBMOCRAT.
Fraternity and Harmony.
OMAHA, Deo. t-To the Editor of The
Bee: Tour edition of November 29 gave
the Information that the Ancient Order of
United Workmen band had paraded the
downtown streets and that large banners
were displayed which showed the nature
of the parade to be a protest against the
recent action of the city commlsilnners
in deciding that only union bands would
be hired to plsy at the parks next sum
mer. The Musicians' union had supposed
that sll fraternal lodges were founded
on brotherhood embodied In the noble
purpose of the care of the alck, the
burial of the dead and the maintenance
of the dear ones left behind. This latest
Innovation of the Ancient Order of United
Workmen band gives the impression that
perhaps ths founder of the Ancient Order
of United Workmen forgot to Include the
TirAP
chagrin end
"Henry."
principle of the "open shop." It may b
possible, however, that the brother pro
moters of this band yielded to the tempta
tion to use the prestige of the order for
speculative purposes and that maybe this
recent parade protest against the hiring
of union labor is not on a moral plane
with the pronounced tenets of the order.
For the sake of enlightenment on th'a
point the Mueicians' union will be thank
ful if some officer or members of the
Ancient Order of United Workmen wtll
snswer the following query, vis: "Haw
csn the Ancient Order of United 'Work
men justify its position In maintaining
a band, giving said band the lodge name,
equipping them and then place them, un
der the caption of the lodge title, In com
petition with musicians who do not
happen to belong to the lodge, and In
-roteet agalnat the employment of or
ganised labor?"
' J. M. FINN,
Secretary Omaha Musicians' Union. .'
Loeatla last Tarfcer Dlaaer.
RED OAK, Ia'., Pee. J -To the Editor
of The Bee: I noticed a letter In your
Letter Box by "Jack Dunn" wishing to
know If that Thanksgiving dinner given
to llauser could not have found a better
resting place in some poor home. -
Perhaps he means by that, that he
would like te have had It Hauser ta
Just the same te me as anybody else. 1
He Is human. Perhaps ha shot Smith;
64
and again, perhapa he dW not. I don't J
know, and neither does Jack Dunn. . But
whether he did or not. he is Just as hu
man now as he was before, is he not? .
That 0 Inner could wot have found a
better resting place than It did- If Jack
Dunn thinks It could, let htm try the
same thing, under the same circum
stances. J. BUIAJVAN. .
etlaar fev teeheav
PRAGUE. Neb., Dee. 1-To the Editor
of The Omaha Bee: Joe'Steeher, the
world's champion heavyweight wrestler,
with his brother Anton, the middleweight
American champion, gave a wrestling
exhibition performance last Saturday je
fere a large and appreciative audience.
A good preliminary also had been staged.
Joe secured both, falls In 14 minutes and
U second and 1$ minutes and seconds,
respectively.
4 wish to state only a few facts about
this pride of Nebraska wonder athlete.
At the tender and unheard of age of SI
years he heldg a record unequalled In ths
annals of the world's wrestling history.
Then, too, Joe Is crowing and improving
and Is fully over 10 per cent better today
In tha ring than he was tha Fourth ef
July last, whsn he wrestled the cham
pionship from Cutler of Chicago. When
asked whe bis next opponent for a big
match was likely to be, Joe elmply
smiled and stated, with full respect for
all aspirants, "They all look alike to mei
I am ready to wrestle anyone le the
world. The first eome the first served."
Joe has thrown them all as fast as they
earns up; the bigger they are the harder
they fall.
Regarding the statements of Farmer
Burna. as published, they merely sound
as though somebody's axe. was mighty
dull. The " Farmer" etatee that Joe
w rest lee men out of condition. Even if
It were true t which all followers of the
game know It is not). It eartalaly would
pot be Joes fault. If the r"ermer"
really thinks ha eaa find a man to threw
Joe. he should not experience aay
trouble te get his $100,000 "proposed" bet
covered et once. Just let the people
know where the money Is. No trouble at
all. The "Parmer" his always Keen
treated squarely by the followers of tha
wrestling game, sad the public should
ramember that the "good book" seye
"Do unto others ss theti wouldat have
others -de unto you."
DR. M. J. UCllCKA.
LAUGHING OAS.
st her slender lord snd master, "you are
quite the style; your narrow, sloping
shoulders are the correct thing."
Then she added dreamily, "1 wonder.
Henry dear. If bow-k-gs will ever corns
In." Judge.
BRIGHTNESS OF LIFE.
"I certainly do pity any poor seam
stress." "Why a seamstress especially?"
"Because she's bound to see so much
of the seamy side of life." Baltimore
American.
"There's one consolation about being In
Jail, mum."
"What Is it, my poor man?"
"After I once go to bed nobody here
makes me get tip and go down to be aure
that the back door's locked." Detroit
Free Press.
3. M. Lewis, In Houston Post.
A thought that Is winged from frienl
to friend.
Doean't seem such a wonderful thlnff;
Tet he carriea the prayer for a Joy with
out end.
And it throbs with a big. friendly ring.
A mere word of cheer, in the shadow of
night.
When discouragement darkens the way.
Will Illumine our hearts with the glorious
light
Of a hopeful and sun-brlghtrned day.
When fsllure confronts us and darkens
our goais.
How we long for the clasp of a hand;
It la then that wo cry from the depths
of our souls.
For a friend who can Just understand.
A bright, cheery smile often gives us the
strength
That we lack In the vortex of strife.
For it lltrhtena our load aa we travel thn
length.
Of tbe care-laden path we call Life.
So we find, after all, that the things
we thought small
Tjoom eoloHsnl above all the host;
That the best of Gods gifts are the
friends we can call
To our side when we need them most.
T "t"A rtrri "r
3
KABARET
MD k-nRlBRI F
WHEN (S TWS RKrHYYl ME" lb
ASK A I&S FATHER R Him
eMW
RrSHr mo? heS w 3v in
rHO0k AND HASSONr? ETCKr
"My doctor told m he completely re
stored that matinee actor's digestion,
which waa all Imagination, by a little
sweetened wster.'
"Then the patient Is a sugar-cured
hsm." Washington Ptsr.
Insurance. Is that enough?"
she murmured, fondly gating
TO
Made from Cream of Tartar
Absolutely Pure
jjSjeaWSsaSetw limlmmmSt- I M
DISTINCTIVE
CHRISTMAS GIFTS
gifts which are out of
tu? ordinary-are always
to befiund ct
' PEACOCK'S
(If you do your Christmas
shopping itx Chicago, you
will, oj course. expect to
choosa some things at
Peacock's. But if you
cannot come .send for our
illustrated Shopping Guide
Sft will enable you to se
lect by mail the gifts you
want
CD.PEACOCK
JEWELERS
ESTABLISHED IS37
State CAdatrut Streets
CHICAGO
III 11
Persistence is the cardinal vir
tue in advertising; no matter
how good advertising may be
in other respects, it must be
run frequently and constant
ly to be really succcessful.
i
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fill;
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