THE BEE: OMAHA. TUESDAY JUNE 13. ,1922,. The Omaha Bee MORNING EVENING SUNDAY. TH BCI rVBURHINQ COM PANT NELSON I. UrDIKL PttMUlM , . , , . BftEWEX. CnMnJ Hihiw , himiu or the AuocuTto ruiss TW fmmut ttm. f M Tto IM I aaak. M I- itannif mmM KUmwtD mMkiMWM ml si mnf mmWiA i it f ar wwJiu M ikw pw. mm alt U IdmI am (.MM .. All rttkU trf NtwMMMMS f M MMiit AiawwkM v la mini ft Aatk Is Mfc at ft AaSN Mw On Ultaaik Um ti.imm uuKwtti aa Mumuuca atKttu. Ml Um few (UwiMloa M nasi my Mtflia W im wmmilw, , Tk lriiUtUa of Tka OmmK Em , far May, 1922 Daily Average .....72,038 ' Sunday Average ...78,642 ' THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY B. SKEWER. GotMral ftfasfr- ELMER I. ROOD, Clmlati Maiuiw vera to ulMcrilM4 iM.ere M this M da? mi JWM, ItU. !) W. H. QUIVEY. NeUry raUt EC TELEPHONES Nnli BraMk Eiekmno. Ak for th , Dasartiatitt or hmi Want. Fo ATlaati Nlaki Call After 1 P. M.i UltorUJ lnAA DPTtiit. AT ball tOlt or 141. logo OFTICES Mala Oftic IHk aa Paras - " Caw Bluff, II Srntt Bt. South Side 4111 . I4ta" St. Nnr Tork lit Flfta A.' WMhlntton 4!I Star Bid. Chicago 171 Sttf r Bldg. Pari, Prase 429 Ru St. Hoaate America's Transportation Crisis. . Crisis follows crisis in the transportation in dustry with such rapidity that it is apparent that no part of the railroad problem is definitely and permanently settled. This is not the usual Amer ican way, for muddling through, relying on the drift of time alone to answer pressing questions. has not been part of our public policy. " Success of the Interstate Commerce .commis sion in adjusting rates is' denied from many quarters. Radical critics, noting that while some roads are operating at a loss, others are netting handsome and perhaps excessive profits, have called for a return to unregulated competition. There are some business men who also favor this, the secretary of the treasury, Mr. Mellon, being among their number. An organization; of traveling salesmen is among the groups proposing a re turn of powers to state railway commissions and a limitation of iederal regulation. The Railroad Labor board is just as much under fire as the InterstSte'Xommerce commis sion. First ,'its -decrees- were flouted by the em-', ployers, and now, that it has issued orders jfor a reduction of wages its authority' is questioned by. the employes. In an industry So essential as trans portation, there should , be no paralyzing labor conflict, and yet a strike vote affecting something like 1,000,000 workers is now being taken. What reduction' in 'freight 'costs has been granted has met with small enthusiasm, and a cut in passenger fares is' still awaited. A survey of editorial opinion in Nebraska has revealed little rejoicing at the .lowered wage 'scale. In Iowa, the home of one of the 'authors of the Esch Cummins law, the republicans ' have nominated' a senatorial candidate who advocates the repeal of this entire measure. ';. ' ' " '..' '.' ' ... ' , No sjgn of the approach of order in this chaos J is to be seen.. ' Sentiment for government owner ship of the railroads quite possibly may be gain-' ing strength, and in the background lies the Plumb plan' for joint administration by the. government,, the stockholders and the workers under a- sort :of iuild socialism. Attemots to hasten the consolidation of strong and weal systems into 'about IS great groups unde,r the railroad act of 1920 have not been welcomed by the rail executives, although some great econo mists urge this as the ranee)?."? V'-V" So the situation -now standsjNeithef com promise nor force may be . depended upon to solve the many difficulties involved. Propaganda and mere partisan jockeying .for-Votes will not help. The need is for open minds and construc tive thinking. gNo suggestion , should, be ... con demned unheard. A-nation-wide conference of shippers, Jrait interests and consumers on the i : -r ...t x? t a '.1. .: i . r . - .... i... v. .uv. ...i..v.aaa . ivuuui ni byuivi vuv might serve to clarify the issues involved." to bt developed boys ever 8 years old vhould bt taught by men. These are 9,000 women teachers in Engllih schools for boys only. ' All this constitutes a tclfith slander, on the great army of American women who carry the torch of knowledge from the country school hous(to the city high schools and even the universities. Educational ability Is not a matter of sex. If it were, then it is extremely probable that girls would learn more easily from men and boys from those of the other sex. ' There is need, it' is true, for more character training in the American school system. This ia. a matter of educational policy, which still is con trolled by men. Many of the teachers are in their teens and without the full equipment for imparting knowledge to their pupits. . This, how ever, is due to the poor remuneration, which in the rural districts especially, does not enable an instructor to expand her ability. There are many reasons why people should think seriously about their schools, but there is no reason to question the ability of women teachers. ' ; ; More Steam in the Courts. Eleven days after a bank robbery at Decatur, Neb., the three men charged with the crime will be on trial before Judge Charles A. Gpss in Burt county district court. ,' ' That is fast time in the administration of jus tice, for this country. There is still opportunity for mWhs of delay by appeal to higher courts, but a good beginning has been made. The sig nificant thing is that the incident is worthy of remark, that, it is unusual. In England, where Chief Justice Taft is going to inspect cour( pro cedure, a criminal frequently is tried withiri a few days of the commission of a crime and it is not unusual that a murderer be executed within a few weeks. ' ': j ', . ' The United States takes pride in. the basic principle of its courts, and no man is considered guilty until positively proven so, with strong ac cent of the "proven." That has been the excuse for creating a maze of technicality which had a purpose at, one time, but which todayt.it chiefly valuable ip the opportunity given a clever lawyer to delay and obstruct justice. Judge Taft may find some "tricks of the trade" abroad which will hasten the. clearing of Anjerican court dock-' ets, bring speedier justice and cheapen its cost, ttt us hope so. ' ' '.' From State and Nation Power From the Corn Belt. " What may well become an epoch-maltirtg dis covery i announced in casual fashion by the. United States Department of Agriculture.' This is nothing less than that corn cobs can be turned into a number of highly useful products- by an inexpensive chemical process. .1. :. , .; . .,. The ipiddle west hopes to become- more ink timately "acquainted with this magic compound called "furfural " It is said ,that this, product of the cob has actually furnished power for driv ing an automobile. If its practibility is thor oughly proven, the farmers of Nebraska, nor mo - torists anywhere else in the nation, need wotry no longer over predictions of the failure of the oil. supply. The price of gasoline no more .will provide matter for denunciation. ; W Out of the cobs can also be obtained low priced substitutes for certain Icinds of hard rub ber and synthetic resin products, according Ito this revelation. But the public is modest in jt requests it does not ask for automobile tires from the corn fields and will be content with a. cheap substitute for gasoline. : . ' If this discovery had fallen into the hands of private interests, it is, "possible that not much' of the benefit would have been passed on to con turners.' One of the best features is that it is the property Of the public. . It has been said that the invention of the internal combustion "engine created "more than enougJh wealth tb pay the whole cost of the 'great war.;- This later inven tion,' if successful, will add immeasurably more to the world's wealth, turning waste into .what is one of the"prirne requisites of this mechanical - age, power. - '" : ' '.'-'" ' ' .., ".' Who'll Head the Federal Reserve?- "Opposition to'W. P. G.' Harding's reappoint ment as head of the. Federal. Reserve system is not unexpected. . Several powerful farm organizations have been gunning for him .'ever since . the" be ginning of the policy of deflation whicli hit agri culture so; hard,. Party lines fail to hold in this case. Governor Harding is a democrat, and was first appointed by President Wilson. His most active foe is a democrat front his home state, of Alabama; Senator Heflin." The farm bloc, which includes many republicans, has agreed to fight confirmation ; if the president sends Governor Harding' name; in for reappointment. Contrary to the general impression, the Fed eral Reserve system is not a governmental body. It is a bankers' bank,' controlled by. bankers, having been so established under the Wilson ad ministration. Through a recent provision in con gress oney member of the 'board is to be chosen to .represent the agricultural interests.' ' This is part of the movement to bring the Federal Re serve System into closer touch with the. farming : industry. "This arrangement for a "dirt farmer," however, does not. copipletely satisfy. te;Biliant iarm orgaijizaiions, ..,, - -.- 7 It would,, of course, be as miwise ta,elect the head of the banking system by popular vote as to decide by ballot who should be a general or an admiral. : Some discretion must be 'deft to. the president, for he is in closer- touch with thenar tional needs involved., Much the same sort of dispute is brewing in the affairs of thf Federal Land banksj where some advocates of. co-6ptfra- tive principles claim that these' are threatened by prospective changes in that federal; board. The duty of President Harding in both these cases is to weigh the evidence presented on each. side .and to act in such a way as neither upset any sound policy or to continue any mistakes. , Seamy Side Out: ' ; Jury service, like virtue, has its own reward thankless job though it be. "I wouldn't do it again for a million if I could help it, but I wouldn't take a million for the ex perience," say they who have been stuck; h the - vernacular used by the doughboy. . ? . ' Good and bad how closely they( are mixed in the human heart, the juryman learns. A box car theif sat in criminal court the other day. His wife ' and little girl sat near him ' through" the long trial. '1 ; Every few ; minutes the sunny-haired child would rush up to its father, clipb on his knee, cling to him; with her chubby armsf then" pillow', her, little, head, oft his breast.;'. -1 ' -.s:A v.i.' $ Criminal is he'? Or yet entirely bad, when a child can love him so? . !' A jury finds it hard business to believe he is even' with the most damaging testimony in evi dence. ;- ' ':, " , . ' "Good stage" business," says the cynic." ' " But is it?.' C'.-- . .- Does he not love his child as much as. the twelve of his peers do their little' ones? Or mayhap the -criminal, instinct in; him is "greater than the character of the love he feels and does not know how to truly show.-' c..r ': i Another youth wept; when-, the : judge pro nounced sentence on him; A' Woman in the court room his'"Woman sobbed' aloud."1 The court room was touched. While she pleaded for- her, lover, he took the chance when no one was look ing to slip out of the court room and fled. ', A rapid change in feeling sweeps' the court Verily, a juror has much to learn. .' . . ' . , Unfair to the Schoolma'ams. , . There are such things as vested interests, and they are not all incorporated, either. This is brought to mind by the opposition' of British schoolmasters to what is called the feminization ,of the school system. -Put in plain words, the men teachers there maintain that their sex should have an educational monopoly. ',"It is the man's privilege to train men for the nation,"! declared a speaker at a conference in Manchester. "Let wpman-lceep her privilege of training women." '.' America was held, up as a horrible example of a country where the schoolma'am has demor alized the youth. A university professor main tained that certain characteristics of Americans, which he defined as selfishness, lack of Co-operation and concentration on individual gain, are due to r their training by women. . It was Ttnanimouily decided 'that if manly virtues arc AsM-rkwa Trad foltcy. f - Turn Um S1h at BmIm. All the market of the world are t slight um to the United State a compared with our own domaatlo mark. Europe t far richer and batter developed than tha United Bute. Every European country U davotad to iu own lntru, and all of thnt look upon the United State as an easy mark. - Our beat aarvlc to tha world Ilea In maintain Ing our national Ufa and character, ona way ot doing thla la to rfue firmly to open the flood sat to frevh million of undaalrabla tmml-a-rarwa. Another way to do it la to refuaa to break down our Industrie and our home mar ket by opanlna trad door to flood of cheap foreign commodities, while In turn w are fore Ing down wage and daapolllng our farm in tha attempt to export lncralflg food aurpluae to pay for foreign good. We ahall not collaet the um that European govarnmant ow us by tha mere procew of opening th bar to foreign man. ufacrure. -Some of the most mtataken leader at tha present moment are not International banker In New York, or European agent seeking Amer ican capital. No leader could be mora none!, while at the same time mistaken, than oma of thoa In th middle weal who are continuing to pursue the lgnl fatuu of vanishing and tlluttive foreign market for weatern farm product. What our middle weatern atatea chiefly need ia a polity of Jhelr own. A generation or two ago they had much land and relatively few people. They Invited settler and opened up farm landa. -Their. local. market were small, and thay had, Im'menae quantities of corn, wheat,-beet, pork, and other thing, which they had to aell. They fought the railroad to a flniah and secured low freight rate on lotig haul. They brok down the established agriculture of New York. New England, Pennsylvania, and Virginia, and de moralized that of Ohio and Kentucky. They flooded Ireland and England ? with their food product and upaet the landlord ayatenv -i . Gradually they leearned that thl dependence on distant market waa not desirable a a per manent thing; They began to build up Indus trie in their own atatea and to consume more and more of, their farm product In local mar ket and on the short-haul theory. Thl per mitted them to diversity their agriculture and to produce more dairy product and a greater variety of crops. It 1 a very safe prediction that the United State will have no wheat at all to export within so short a period aa ten years. The western state will Import manufacturing populations, and create profitable local marketa for their food. 1 . The tariff makers at Washington are thor oughly sound in their intention to maintain at this. time the general preference for home de velopment. .. ' , . Internatkml Loans. , ' Froo th B4H Vrnclieo CtronleU. x ' About every nation In Europe wants to bor row money. Some can do so if they do not want too much, and want It too quick. Other can not borrow at all until they can give better se curity -than, they can offer now. A committee representing the great national banks ot laaue and groups of influential banker is now in ses sion in Parts, J. P. Morgan being the only Amer ican present. This meeting is expected to lead to a more formal official or semi- official gather ing later. Several plans have been submitted, but their nature 1 not disclosed. By an International loan ia not meant a loan to any government from the proceed of tax ation. Neither, is there meant a loan by banker out of their pockets. They have not the' money. What Is meant is a loan, which banker can buy or underwrite for Immediate resale to individual Investors. .. And .that ia a. question of security. It will-be, so far as money is got in this country, a gold -loan, and the leaders will want assur ance of getting gold back precisely on the due aaie. . xne countries .wnicn neea most help are those which, under present conditions, can not give such assurance. To enable them to do so will..' require new legislation, changes in fiscal practice1 and "in some case international agree ments. -. For example, Germany can not borrow a dollar unless the. bond are made a lien taking precedence of reparations. In every case there must .oe- assurance tnat tne money loaned be for productive or distributive capital investment. and not a dollar for the payment Of any other obligation. It is such things which make theprob- lem aimcuit ana win require in the end politi cal action. The banker meeting i to airree ud on wnat tne different countries will have to do it they desire to sell their bonqs to the invest ing public. ' ' . , v r Its about time for some keen-eyed observer to report whether any of the nations represented in the disarmament conference has moved to ful fill the agreements. That one concerning poison gas, for example . -''-' ,- " -- While some claim that the:, tariff will boost prices in America, along comes David .Friday, an economist of .considerable reputation, com plaining that it will cause a further falling in" prices. " , ' . What Council. Bluffs started to do to the bill boards was mild compared, to the intention of county authorities at Minneapolis to oust un sightly signs from the country highways. It is evident that thr man M.Kn natnril the: Pullman cars had nothing to do with race horses. Witness Ikey T Motor Cop. Non Suit, Bill Spivins and Old Coin, 4 Vv . . - , THE ALCOHOL SLAUOHTBR. A correspondent send m a'slate- ment relative to tha decrease In th death rat from alcoholism In New York City from 1911 to till Inclu iv. This show a decline In the number of death from thl causa from (IT In lit! to tl In 1110. and a r!e to 111 In lltl. 1 am not very much Impressed by thl table. Btatlatlca aa to th death from alcoholism are notoriously In accurate and undependable. The' deceaeed must -be mighty friend lea before any one would turn In a death certificate assigning alcoholism aa the cause of death. Especially I thla true now that pro curing alcohol for beverage- pur pose la an Illegal transaction oil on side or both. Are the death rate from cirrhosis of th liver, certain forms of pneu monia, certain kinds of accident are. these falling T What do the alienlsta aay about the prevalence of alrohollo Insanity T The answer to the question would be mora to the point. The real reason for writing m was to call attention to certain state ment made In my article printed March Iff, entitled "Health of For eign Born." . In that article I called attention to the high death rat of the Irish born and their children in America. My .correspondent suggested that thl waa due to th fact that many of the Irish were whisky drinkers. Senate document No. 145 on cauaes of death of cotton mill op erator In 10B, M0S and 1807 In dicated that the Irish drank- mora than did the average person In the vicinity, and that thl contributed to the development or consumption among them, saying: 'There I at leaat ground ror so nectlna- that Intemperance may ac count for soma jHrrtlon of the high mortality from tuberculosis among the I Hen male." Lest the Irian,, on tne one nana, andfthe friends of distilled bever- acea. on the other, feel that some body Is picking on them, the article on. "Healtn or tn f oreign uorn said that the Germans had more than their share of Brlght's disease, and suggested that less beer drinking would help them In those sphere of weaknes. The creat authority on Insanity, Bleuler, says alcoholism is On the Increase In Switzerland since the government relaxed the wartime re strict on and began allowing tne brewing of a stronger beer. He say that specialists in insanity should take the lead in the fight Killing of Bandit. i From th. Clmltad Newi, : ; ; The slaying -of two bandits of four that rob bed a bank in the small town of Metamora, Mlcltv is -excellent work. ' One of the others is wounded and in prison. The fourth surrendered before a bullet came his way. All of the loot or tne ramers, Detroit tnugs, it seems, was recovered. This, is not , Quite ud to the Cantor, record. where all four of the bandits in the gang were killed, on the spot, or 66 wounded that they have alnce died. , But the Michigan percentage of fatalities is higher than the one established at our own suburb of Bedford, where the Losteiner gang was broken up. , - , 1 . In' two fights with officers and citizens, with in a few weeks, six outlaws, professional robbers. have been killed, not more than 150 miles, bv air, from Cleveland. In other encounters crooks Have been shot and killed, in - the last few months, , one at a time, . in this section of tha country, and that picking off of the criminal goes. on all the while. , - : It beat the slow and uncertain work of th courts as a means of putting the fear of death into - dangerous lawbreakers. It is worth much to decent folk to have a gang of robber and killers wiped out as the job was done at Canton, or half -destroyed' as one has been dealt with in Aiicmgan. - . . . " ? , World and College. Seoita Stntiytaa In th Dial. ' ' "I wish reformers, Instead " of trying to make the college more useful and professional. irouid try to -make the -world more like the alleges. The things that the worm might find vorth doing for their own sake would perhaps lie nobler than those that appeal to the under i Taduate, though I am far from confident of 'hat; but in any case, means would no longer no porsuea as enas. Tne world would then tinmo witn wnat is called honor, which is al 'egiance to what one know one loves." i ' .Too Effeminate. From Um Toronto IbU and Empire. , . . . The usual advice not to sit over a fire, but to harden one's self in the open air, bears fruit when there is a cold snap. One of the advocates of the hardening meth- fid waa the coa.cn of n. bnv'a srhnnl Whn bivouacking with some boys in the depths of winter, ne noticed a Doy nad roiled a sribwball to make a pillow for himself. Immediately he kicked-it away. "No effeminacy, boy," he com- inanaea sterniy. - - v, Dangerous Precedent. 1'roai Cippw' Wtefclr. . ... . -,: v A 6-year-old Pennsylvania girl swallowed a campaign button of one of Pennsylvania's re- teated candidates for governor and he has been SsKed to defray the expense of an operation. This looks like a dangerous, precedent What if voters should take to suing candidates because tfiey had 'Swallowed some of their campaign dope? . . ; - How to Keep Well Sr DR. W, V IVANS Quo Mom to Or. Inn r avaaa la ktsUaa, aeaMatlaa rjr l la SMo, iu aa MailtoUaa, oW ! eV arovMllo at eUaaaoa. u kail 114 ill he amr4 wromaUy, eait to mmm Is wilaiaa. Dr. vtil sMba lit ie aor aroMrik lor kUjvwIual duaiiH. ArM Uttar k sar t Tk IW Ceerrighii lilt. gainst alcohol, declaring that those who favor the use of alcoholie bev erages In moderation must be pre pared for a return of all th misery whli-h goes with alcoholism. Dr. feter Haaaoe, In commenting on Hauler's antcl In th Practical Medlt-ln Series, say: "it la only fair to state that, con trary to what on might expect, th paychlatrlat of th (lerman apeak ing countries, led by Flore I ot Swit zerland and Kraspelln ot Germany, have been the mest active aupportara of th campaign against alcoholism." Kraepelln, Korel.and Bleuler are greqt name among th German speaking people. If their advice la listened to, there ahould be lower death ratea from som of the dis ease which sr commonly called degenerative. "." Hi tnruly Big Toe. If. E! C. writes: "What ran be done to straighten the great to on a boy -of 14? It look a If a bunion waa forming and th big to I drawn toward tha other toe almost at an angle of 45 degree. There la no pain or lamenea. W have used tincture, of Iodine. Will that alone cur it? 1. . '..REPLY. - It li'polble that wearing broad- toed shoe will do th trick. Som tore sell pads to go between th toe, straightening them. I. strongly suspect that when the condition develops In o young a child that th bonea of the foot are being pushed apart - by eamold bones or bony spur. If so, the might be removed by operation. -t;.What does the X-ray show? . , ' Listen,' O Victims! M. C. W. writes: "I read the pathetic 'Victim of Cold Feet.' Hav ing frequently suffered from that awful malady chilblains I give the benefit of my oure. r"I always wash my feet in cold water, and when I take a hot bath I let the cold water run on them. ."Then I take equal parts of chloroform and olive oil and rub In. f--vised this frequently during 'the winter, and 'if the weather is very cold I cut paper Insoles and put them in my shoes. ""My feet are naturally sensitive, .but with this attention I am com fortable and able to take long walks in any kind of weather." ":' ' Cancer Not Contagious. 'Mrs. F. F. writes: "Is cancer con tagious?" . REPLY. .No." i " -, . ITIm BV atfat II aMaata froetf ta Ha Ha1 at aara la ! aay aaU . l raoia laai WUn kl. ..... .u IU I r wrw w w ' . " -. w . ww www. a a ! InaMo fkai K mmm of IIm wrtlor aoaaailMar earh kl, aot a.mnartly t-r iatllralla, teal thai Iha alitor auf ia mmm a I aauaa. Dry Versus Wet Deiuoorata. ' Humboldt. Nb Jun 19 To th Editor of Th Be. Even though the liquor Usue. o called, realy la dead aa far a th forthcoming primary la concerned. It will b lutereatlng to wati-h Jut how much trouble '. A. High can tlr up In th democratic) ranka If he put across th petition for K. O. Shroyer of Humboldt for I'nlted State senator. Hhroyer la admittedly on of the driest of dry democrat. Although a recent paek Into the record of Senator Hitchcock's voting on vari ous Important 1aue at th laat ses sion of th aenat revealed entirely too many "absent" or "not voting," Mr. High indicate tha fear or in arid wing of the democratic party I that Mr. Hitchcock, If he should be returned to Wahbiton. would not, back appropriation (of law norv ment. , . Deduction from th part rcor6of Nebraska's allent aanatof t tb cap ital would almoat give ground for Air. 11 in laara. 11 mr. 1 1 1 a ntrani-a Into tha race for the flmu- 1 ratio nomiiiatlun will add sat 10 tha affair of th democrat already ekli.g fulon with th third party, power to him. VOTKH. When in Omaha Stop at Hotel Rome You Know It's Pure Nicholas Oils, whether light, medium, heavy or extra heavy, are BOTTLED. When poured into your motor you can see that they are clear, clean and of the right body. The next time you drive to a Nicholas Filling Station and order oil, take notice of its color and appearance. We guarantee its quality. Nicholas Oil Corporation "Business h Good, Thank You" Senators With Memories. from ttt Fittaburth Cferonlcle-T.l.friph. The senate of the United States of America omitted a session so that the pages could take In a circus' It is a wise statesman who remem bers that at one time he was a bov-who liked tun. A Small Return. From tha t oroato Mill ud Xmplra. i De Valera is the father ot twins a mere drop in the bucket when one consider what he ha done to reduce the - population of Ireland. " If You Lecture, Read Thi. ' " ' Fraat tk Una Counts BaoiM. A lecture should not be so long that the man In the middle of the audience regrets that he ia not conveniently on the edge. - Race not Always to the Swift. rroa th &m To TrlkUM. V Th speeder who fancies that not even Justice Can overtake him mult b convinced of hi error. . - .. . - - - . Here is the Reason: EVERY ;one of the BETSf ROSS ingredients grouped above is the finest that can be obtained. - They have been selected be cause every ingredient and the particular grade of every ingredi ent contributes something of value to the loaf, vj A single substitute introduced into this -quality ! group would have a deteriorating effect on the! food value of BETSY ROSS. . What opportunity there is to substitute especially when the use of a cheaper ingredient may mean increased profit or a lower prke. k :.y" ' - ' x This is the risk you run in buy ing ordinary bread. You are so seldom certain. ButwhenyousayBETSYROSS to your grocer, you have sealed our guarantee that quality prod ucts alone have been used in its baking. THE JAY BURNS BAKING CO. V 1