The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922, April 12, 1921, Image 6

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    4
THE NORTH PLATTE SEMI-WEHKLT TRIBUNE.
CENTER OF ITALY'S SOCIAL
EARTHQUAKE ZONE
Milan, clitef city of Uio Lomlmnly
I'leduiont region of Itnly, wlicro work
ers fcflzcd factories uevcrnl months
ago, nnd where mnch unrest Iiuh been
manifested since, has fninkly consid
ered Itself for long years the virtual
capital tho "capltnlo morale" of the
country.
In the recent Industrial troubles fac
tories are reported to havo been
seized by workmen In practically all
parts of Italy; but It was In Lonibanly
nud Piedmont, tho territorial division
Jylni; farthest north and farthest
northwest In the peninsula the seats
of the Important Italian metal Indus
tries that the seizures were most nu
merous. In those regions, In turn, the
movement was most pronounced In
nud about Turin, the principal city of
tho Piedmont, and the Detroit of Italy;
nud In Milan, metropolis of the north,
and Italy's Kail Itlver, Philadelphia
and Schenectady rollwl Into one.
Lomburcly ahd the Piedmont com
prise tho plains of the upper reaches
of the (;reat Po valley, tho Alpine foot
hills, ami tho southern and eastern
xlopes of a lart;e part of the Alps them
selves. Milan, on a fertile plain near
tho southern ends o somo of the most
Important of the Alpine passes, was a
town of considerable lmiortnnce even
In tho dim historic days of 222 II. C,
when It was captured by the Itomans.
It was then, ns It Is today, second
city In iK)lnt of population In Itnly. .
Mllnn early earned a irosltlon of lead
ership umonff surrounding cities, a
leadership, however, which did not go
unchallenged. Tho city has been de
stroyed many times, once by u league
of neighboring towns, nnd at otJier
times by alien conquerors. After each
destruction It has sprung up on a seem
ingly (Inner foundation to achieve
greuter popularity und n more far
reaching Influence.
Apart from any reputntlon Milan
may have gained as nn Index to In
dustrial unrest, It Is a lender among
Italian cities In other respects. In
deed, the Milanese Insist that their
city, their "capltalo morale," "is tho
vory heart and head of Italy's mod
ern Ilfo and activity "first In Indus
try, first In municipal progress, first
In political Imjwrtonce."
The Industrial plants of modern
Milan havo fairly burst the confines
of the old city nnd many are to bo
found In numerous populous suburbs
that have sprung up, espcclnlly since
3895. The population now numbers
close to three-quarters of a million.
It Is exceeded only slightly, If nt all,
by that of Naples, and Is considered
In excess of that of Home.
TIENTSIN, PANORAMA
CITY
Tientsin, In the northeastern edgo
of tho terrible Chlneso famine aren,
In which millions of peoplu are starv
ing io death, Is like a necklaco of
towns strung together.
To walk about Tientsin Is to trnvel.
An afternoon's stroll from the native
to tho Ilrltlsh, French, Italian, Russian
nnd other foreign quarters, gives tho
Bonsatlon of u magic tour through
Poking. London, Pnris, Home and
Potrogrud. And tho windmills among
tho salt mounds Just outside tho city
add a touch of Holland.
This panorama city has had a tem
pestuous history. There a group of
American and other foreign residents
Ilorhort 0. Hoover among them
defended themselves for a month
against the fanatic Soxcrs In 1000.
Blnco then tho nntlvo city has been
known as Cheng-ll, or "Town without
Walls," localise tho ancient bnrrlers
wore demolished during the siege. Of
tho BOO doughty foreigners more than
fifty wero killed and many others
wounded before military aid came.
Tientsin was the sccno of another
fatuous siege, that of tho Tulplng
robeU In 1853. Followers of Hung
Bin Tsunn, who had professed Chris
tianity and sot himself up In Nunklng
as tho "Heavenly King," marched to
ward Peking. Hut tho Wntcrloo of tho
"long haired rebols." so-called
tnoy could not plait their queues and
inua sigiiiry loyalty to tho Mnnclius
caroo at Tientsin.
TllO success of tho cnmimten mmlnnt
tho revolutionists was duo principally
to tlio gallant "Chlneso Gordon," Gen
Charlos Gcergo Gordon, and his" "Ever
Victorious Army."
Commanding tho native forco nt
Tientsin was tiong-ko-lln-sln, n Mongol
jfonerol. who later dlstlnimlshm! htm.
self less creditably. In 1800 he nought
to aerenu Tientsin against n foreign
expedition by erecting an Immense
muu rnmpurt outsmo tno city. Tien
tsln was captured and hold for twi
j'oars by tho British and French, and
tho crude defense 1b known In thn
forolgn qunrturs ns "Scng-ko-lln-sln's
rouy."
tho region niiout Tientsin was
known as Chl-chou under tho Hsln
dynuBty, whoso rulers, 4,000 years itgo
Already had court astronoinerx win
could predict eclipses. Later It was
callod Yrpchou, In tho Chou dynasty,
twirked by the western wars waged
by Mu-Wang against the "Dog liar
barlans," .thought to hnvo boon ances
tors of tho Huns. Tientsin dates
back at least to tho fourteenth cen-.
tury.
Tho salt Industry In tho neighbor
hood of Tientsin Is prodigious. Wind-,
mills nro used to pump salt wntcr Into
tlrb fields along the Hnlio river, whero
the widely known Chnng-lu snlt Is
mnde. IJeforo tho war nearly 20,000
tons were produced nnnunlly. Hut
Tientsin Is Important commercially In
ninny respects. It Is a rice mnrket,
nnd Siberia's tea formerly was
shipped through there. Kxports were
as varied as tho needs of the dozen
or so nntlons which had separate set
tlements along flvo miles of tho river
front, nnd lift Imports wero ns dlverso
as tho commodities those nntlons hnd
to exchange.
The Pelho nnd Hunho rivers con
verge at Tientsin. From the latter to
the Yangtsze-ICInng extends tho
Grand canal, that remarkable speci
men of ancient engineering, mentioned
by Confucius, which orglnnlly was
more than 1,000 miles long.
Tientsin hns more people than Uos-,
Ion. It Is the principal city of Chili
II, and Is 60 miles southeast of Peking
by mil.
ONE OF GERMANY'S LOST
TERRITORIES
The former German Sunionn Is
lands constitute one of the Important
groups of Pacific Islands thnt hnvo
fallen to the lot of Great llrltaln,
through New Zenland, us a result of
the World war.
The Snmonti group, called by form
er geographers "The Navigators
Islands," from the skill hi navigation
shown by its Inhabitants, consists of
four prlnclpnl bits of land lying In
tho South Pnclflc, nearly mldwny be
tween New Zealand and Hawaii.
The number of Islands In tho group
may, by counting the smaller, be in
creased to 11, or even 14, hut only
Suvil, Upolu, Tutulla, (owned by tho
United States) and the three usunlly
Included under tho general term
Manila, are Important.
All nro vcrdurc-clad and Inhabited,
and In appearance und shape resem
ble Immense green lints, tho Interior
representing tho crown being moun
tnlnous, wlille the brim or shore Is
covered with coconut palms, bread
fruit, banana and other tropical trees,
which furnish the nntlvo food. .
At somo prehistoric period tho
peaks of a submerged mountain chain
running northeast and Bouthwest havo
been lifted from tho depths of tho
ocean by tho upheaval of volcanoes
now long oxtlnct. Accumulations of
soil brought by heavy rains from tho
mountains meet tho ever-growing reef,
which prevents easy approach to tho
land except In those places where
fresh-water streams, forcing their wny
through, form openings In tho coral
barrier.
Iletwcen reef and shoro a lagoon,
vnrylng In width from 200 yards to
two or threo miles, provides a secure
highway for coast and lnter-lsland
trnlllc. Tho entire length of the group,
If Itosc Island ho Included, Is little
less than !t00 miles, nnd the gross area
of the Islands Is larger than the stnto
of llhode Island by 50 squnro miles.
The native Inhabitants of tho
Islands are of Polynesian stock nnd
nro clearly related to tho natives of
both Hawaii and New Zealand. For
practical purposes these natives may
bo divided Into four classes. At tho
head stand tho chiefs, who arc heredi
tary In the senso thnt they must be
long io certain families, but elective
In that they excrclso authority by
vlrtuo of titles conferred on them.
The Tulnfole, talklng-man, Is their
executive olllcor, who phrases their
thoughts In eloquent language, and Is
frequently tho central Hgxiro In tho
district und tho source of authority.
Ilclow him nnd above tho lowest class,
composed of what are known as tho
"common people," aro tho natlvo
teachers and catechlsta, who -wear
more clothes nnd do less fighting than
the rest of tho population.
Thero 1b nothing In tlio dress or"
bearing of a high chief which cnnbles
a foreigner to distinguish him, but he
Is Isolnted from the rest of tho people
by a system of rigid utlquetto. No one
may hold up an umbrella or do cer
tain kinds of work In his presence,
and a special vocabulary Is set apart
In which to nddress him. Tho com
mon names for food, an axe, n pig,
etc., nro tabooed In his presence. His
face, his anger nnd other attributes
nre described In nn entirely different
set of words from those used for
ordlnnry men.
The powors nnd duties of tho "talk
ing men" aro considerable. Thoy aro
men of much dignity of carriage, and,
as they stand leaning upon a staff
of ofllco with a "fue," or Hy-tlnp enst
over one shoulder, with which occa
sionally to emphasize their remarks,
they compare favorably In nppcuranco
with the orators of a nation more
civilized than themselves.
MARSHALL ISLANDS: NEW
JAPANESE TERRITORY
The Marshall Islands, ono of tho
Pnclllc archipelagoes formerly owned
by Germany, and over which Jnpnn
has been ' given a mnndnto by tho
League of Nations, practically form a
burrler between the Hawaiian Islands,
on tho enst, and Guam and tho Philip
pines to tho west.
Tho two chains of curiously shaped
atolls, or coral Islands consisting of
'low-lying coral reefs encircling la
goons, known us the Marshall group,
lie a llttlo south of the center nf nn
Imaginary lino connecting Hawaii,
uuam ami uio riniippiiws.
Guam, Samoa and Honolulu form u
triangle of trade routes, with Its sides
not penetrated by important steamship
lines. Within this Isolated Pacific trl
anglo nre tho Marshall Islands.
Ilefore'the war Sydney wns reached
by steamer, a voyage of more thnn
3,000 miles. The only other method of
egress was a steamer to Ponnpo
which connected with a French tine
to Slngnpore.
Llko two loosely strung chains of
Jewels, tho Islands stretch from north
west to southeast, each with Its la
goon setting encased by a strangely
shaped circlet of coral, some like tri
angles, harps and stirrups, and ono
outlining a bull's head with Its horns.
Straight haired, dark brown natives,
still preserving the religious slgnlfi
calico of tattoo und tnboo, are to bo
found. Once a sturdy, reliant, sea
faring people, for they wero tho best
mariners In the Pacific, the white
man's coming, ns in the case of lil
advent nmong the Eskimo nud tho
Indian, did not seem wholly beuellclnl.
In teaching them ways to live moro
easily civilization robbed them of thnt
boldness nnd adventure wnich made
them the hardiest of tho Mlcroncnsian
peoples. Many of the young died of
tuberculosis.
Skillful nud fearless navigators, tho
natives used bread-tree wood to mako
sailing ennoes In which they would
voynge for months. They devised
chnrts, made of sticks, showing tho
locations of islands nnd the directions
of prevailing winds.
Ancestor worship was their predomi
nant religious sentiment. With peti
tions nnd gifts they worshiped the
departed whose spirits wero' supposed
to return to earth In certain palm
trees which they set off In stone en
closures. Birds nnd fishes sometimes
embodied theso spirits, they believed,
and thus certain speu'es became rn
boo. Homes of the nntlves wero not pre
tentious. Floors wero raised abovo
tho ground to escape tho rats, and
thatched roofs covered tho combina
tion house and st6rage room.
The two Island groups are known as
the Itatak and Itullk chains. Their
cntlro nrea Is not moro thnn ICO
squnre miles; their native population
before the wnr was 10,000, with fewer
than 300 foreigners. The scat of Ger
man government wns on Jnlult and tho
most populous Island Is Majeru, with
but 1,000 persons.
Other explorers had touched at tho
Islands but they, with tho Gilbert
group, took tholr nnmcs from Cap
tains Marshall and Gilbert who ex
plored them In 1788. Tho Germans
annexed tho Islands In 18S0.
FORMER AUSTRIAN NAVAL
BASE NOW ITALIAN
STRONGHOLD.
Pola, formerly Important to Austria
as its naval base, now Is equally lim
portant to Italy, for a different rcai
son. A glnnco nt a map. of tho Adriatic
will show that the possession of Pola,
und tho recent acquisition of tho Island
of Chorso, by tho terms of tho Itupnllo
agreement, give Italy control of tho
water route to Flume.
Sltunted near the extremity of tho
Istrlnn peninsula, 85 miles by rail
southwest of Trieste, Pola's sole Im
portant activity before the wnr was
connected with the repairing, provi
sioning and harboring of the Austrian
naval forces. Tho town Is virtually
without Industrial establishments or
manufactures.
In 1000 tho population of Pola was
about what It had been eighteen cen
turies before under tho rule of Itoman
emperors. During tho succeeding ten
years, however, It grow from 45,000 to
70,000.
The practically land-locked harbor
Is divided, tho upper or northern half
being tho commercial roadstead, and
the lower half (below the chain brldgo
which connects Scogllo Ollvl, or OUvo
Island, with tho mainland) being tho
Porto Mllltnre, with tho extensive inn
rino arsenal on the southeastern shore.
Tho city Itself clusters around a
castle-crowned hill which was once tho
slte of The Ilothuh cnpltoi. Tho cas
tTo Is tt memento of the dnys of Vene
tian prowess.
Its settlement Is attributed to the Col
chlans who .pursued Jason nnd his
ai'gonnuts. Pola's splendid harbor be
came a llomnn possession In 178 IJ. C.
but Julius Cnesnr destroyed It for hnv
Ing espoused the cnuso of Porupey.
Some years later It was rebuilt by tho
Emperor Augustus nt tho Instnnce, no
cordlng to Pliny, of his beloved daugh
ter Julia.
Tho most Impresslvo ruin In Pola
Is tho vast amphltheator, erected at
the beginning of tho Christian era In
honor of tlio cmporors, Scptlmlus
Soverus nnd Caracalla, This Is be
lieved to bo tho only Roman amphi
theater whoso outer walls' havo with
stood the ravages of time and of man.
Tho Intorlor, howover, Is badly dis
mantled and tho foundation walls at
ono end, centuries ago, wero extensive
ly quoxrled by tho Venottnns who de
sired tho white Istrlnn Umcstono for
tho erection of their own palaces.
About the middle of tho 12th cen
tury Polu became a Venetian city. In
tho destructive wars, which resulted
from tho rivalry between Venice und
Genoa to control tho commerce of tho
world two centuries Inter, this port
across tho Adriatic from Its parent re
public suffered often nnd grievously.
It wns completely destroyed In 1870,
and for nearly four and n halt cen
turies It lay dormnnt. It passed to
Austria at tho end of tho Napoleonic
wars, however, and Its modem growth
dates from 1S48. when It wns selected
as an Austrian naval huso.
Pola lies almost duo cast of Venice,
a distance of 75 miles across thq
Adriatic.
LOSES HOPE OF
SIGNING PACT
French Ex-Promior Gives up
Idea that United States Will
Ratify Troaty of
Versailles. '
WILL TAKE VOTEON WAGE CUT
Fire Destroys Plant of American Pot
ash Company at Antlor.h, Ne
braska Millions Are Lost
In the Cold Wave.
Washington, D. C. The first au
thoritative evidence tlmt former Pre
mier Vivlanl has abandoned hope of
the United States ratifying the Ver
sallies pence treaty or entering tho
league of nations, has Just been mado
known by members of the French del
egation. It uppenrs thnt M. Vlvinnl, after
his consultations with President Hard
ing, Secretary of State Hughes, Sen
ator Lodge und other lenders, is con
vinced the Ilnrdlng udmlulstrntlon In
tends to re establish pence with Ger
many by menus of the Knox resolu
tion. The authority for this disclosure Is
none other than Stephane Liuizutinc,
editor of Lo Matin, who accompanied
M. Vlvinnl to this country. M. Lau
zanno himself had a conference with
President Harding.
There appeared In Lo Matin n cable
dispatch from M. Luuztinnc, containing
the following:
"The American sonnte will vote tho
Knox -resolution for u separate peace
with Germany."
fihicago Workmen to Vote On Cut.
Chlcngo, III. Plans nre under wny
for referendum by 00,000 building
trades workers of Chicago ou a reduc
ed wuge scale proposed by the con
tractors. Decision to submit the prop
osition to the men was reached by
union chiefs after the employers had
promised thnt contracts for projects
totulllng $100,000,000 would be let If
the wngo scale Is reduced. At present
the Industry Is nlinost nt n standstill
here. Tho balloting' will extend
through sovernl days. The proposed
reductions rnnge from 20 to tin per
cent. Skilled labor would drop from
$1.25 an hour to $1 and unskilled from
$1.00 to 70 cents. The cut, If ndopted,
would be effective on Mny 1.
Millions Lost in Cold Wave.
Mountain Grove, Mo. The dnmago
to the fruit crops In the Ozurk region
caused by the recent cold wave Is es
timated nt between - $10,000,000 and
$15,000,000, it was announced by horti
cultural experts, following the compila
tion of reports from the fruit districts
In Missouri nnd Arkansas. Apples,
peurs, peaches, apricots, cherries nnd
plums have been found to be n com
plete loss, while the damuge to straw
berries nnd grapes wus said to bo a
partial loss.
Fire Destroys Potash' Plant.
Alliance. Nell. Fire. Riinnnsml tn
have orlghmted from sparks from a
passing Burlington train, totally de
stroyed tho east phmt of the Amerlcnn
Potash company ut Antloch, about 15
miles east of hero Saturday, causing n
loss estimated at between $500,000 and
$700,000.
President Makes Appointments.
Washington, D. C Tho appointment
of Chnrles II. Burke of Pierre, S. D.,
a business mnn nnd former chairman
of the house Indian committee, is an
nounced by President Harding as com
missioner of IndluimfTnlrs. The pres
ident nlso appointed George H. Cnrter
of Iowa to, bo public printer, and
Thomas Robertson of Maryland, com
missioner of patents.
Soviets Seek Trade With U. S.
London. Despite the uncompromis
ing tone' of tho recent note of Secre
tary of State Hughes In reply to rep
resentations by Itussla for tho opening
of trade relations with tho United
States, tho principal objective of the
Russian soviet eoverument's forelirn
policy Is nnd will continue to ho tho
cstnmisiiment of relations with the
United States, according to Lcnoid
Krnssln, bolshevik representative.
Will Again Produce Passion Play.
Oberammcrgau, Bavaria. Tho vil
lage elders of Ohcrammerguu have
voted to ennct tho Passion play In
1022. Tho hist presentation was given
In i010. Tho peasants who portray
tlio sufferings und death of Jesus
Christ In fulfillment of a vow mado
.In 1G34 to present the Passion play
every ten years as an expression of
gratitude for having been spared from
plague, were unable to enact It In
1020, because of unsettled conditions
and tho havoc which the war wrought
among the performers and musicians
Germans Drinking Less Beer.
Washington, D. O. Beer drinking In
Germany has fallen off by more than
750,000,000 gallons a year, as compared
with pre-war consumption, Consul
General William Coffin at Berlin re
ported to the Department of Com
morco. Tho consumption dropped from
1,272,000,000 gallons In 1013 to 541,
000,000 In 1020, while wlno consump
tlon decreased from 70,000,000 to 52,-
000,000. Mr. ColHn added, howover,
that the population of Germany had
decreased by 4,500,000 In the same
period.
i LEGISLATIVE NEWS ;
Criminal charges wero filed In tho
house of representatives against Hop
resentative John O. Yclser, Jr., of
Omaha, charging hltu with Inning left
(he stnto while a member of the leg
islature nnd going to Council Bluffs,
where he wns married to Miss Gert
rude A. Sturm, dnutrhtcr of Senator
and Airs. A. F. Sturm of NehafwUa.
Yelser entered n ploa of not guilty,
but was sentenced to n lmiig and hnp
py niurrled life by tho chairman nud
presented with a handsome beaten sil
ver ten set, the gift of the house, nnd
released from custody nftcr solemnly
promising that It would nover happen
again.
Senate amendments to the state hall
Insurance hill were concurred In by
the lower house. Tho nmendmenta
provide that only 10 per cent of the
premiums must be paid Into the stnto
before November 1, when tho balance
will po Into the" stnto treasury.
Tho houso passed the bill making It
unlawful for nny porson, board or
commission to nppoint a person re
lated by blood or marriage to a clerk
ship where -the remuneration corao3
from public funds.
Congressman W. E. Andrews of
Hastings, on his way hack to Wash
ington for the special session of con
gress which begins April 11, stopped
In Lincoln long enough bo address a
Joint session of the legislature. , The
congressman declared that revision of
tho governmentnl revenue machinery,
except postal, nnd passage of an emer
gency tntlff to prevent Importation
of wheat from Canada, will be two of
the principal tasks before the specljl
session.
The house passed two bills that are
of particular Interest to dairy fann
ers. These are part of a program for
stamping out bovine tuberculosis In
tho stute. One requires tho owners of
all cows to hnvo them tested for tu
berculosis within n year, and mean
while the milk must ho pnstuerlzed.
The other requires the testing of
those brought Into the state.
A measure licensing film companies
operating in Nebrnsku, specifying how
far they can go In showing sex nnd
crime pictures and giving an unpaid
commission power to withdraw the li
cense nnd forco film companies to for
feit the licence lntemey, will he sub
mitted to tho sonnte Judlclnry commit
tee ns a substitute for the motion pic
ture censorship bill.
Itlcknrd of Webster hns a substi
tute bill for S. F. 240 which, If en
acted Into law, will give country pre
cincts and townships tho same right
cities und villages now have to say
where Sunday baseball shnll be played
within their limits. Senator Rlkard la
a farmer.
Tho new department blue sky law
carrying stringent provisions, giving
tho stnto bureau of securities almost
arbitrary control over new stock cor
porations from the moment of their
Inception, wns passed by the house by
a vote of 70 to 3. The bill wns violent
ly attacked by special lnterests"ln the
state.
The house committee of the whole
has recommended for passage a bill
providing thnt the lieutennnt governor
when acting ns chief executive shnll
receive the salary of tho governor and
thnt It shall bo taken from the gover
nor's salary fund.
n. V. Hoagland, sergennt-at-urms of
the state senate and n member of
thnt branch of the law-making body
In the sessions of 1013 and 1015, has
been appointed federal Jury commis
sioner by Judgo T.. C. Munger.
Having disposed of virtually all of
Its own Important measures, with only
n few exceptions, tho senate is seeing
Its way clear to adjourn about
April 15.
The state selliltu has killed Senate
File No. 218, a, hill creating a state
school medical Inspector in the state
superintendent's otllce.
The co-operative hanking bill passed
the house without n single Tote raised
la opposition.
The house of representntlves hns
declared In favor of nationalizing the
coal Industry.
Nebraska's rood building program
for 1021 calls for tho construction of
22 separato projects totaling approxi
mately 250 miles of state highway nt
on estimated cost of $2,000,000.
Tho houso-advanced for third read
ing the Wllllnms bill, providing for nn
unpaid commission to udopt n stuto
Hag, and also to get a now state seal,
upon which tho golden rod, tho state
llower, will figure prominently. It
shall he emblematic of tho history, ex
perience, sovorclgnty and dignity of
tho state.
A special appropriation bill has
been approved for passuge by tho
house, which takes care of department
nnd Institution needs from April 1 to
Juno 30 this year, In order to put the
stnte on tho now'IVcal year basis, be
ginning July 1.
The Osterman reparations bill, con
stituting the stnte railway commis
sion n court of reparations to ndjust
claims on excessive freight or express
rates on Intrastate shipments wus
pnssed by the house without a single
objection.
Lucky
Strike
cigarette
XemWoliaRnlfgrmilk
THE GREAT
Poultry and Hog Feed
100 PURENo Adulteration
Makes
Pig
Hogs
. !
Makes
Chicks
Chickens
Reduce White Diarrhoea and
Chohra Lottta
Increase Egg Production
ORDER NOW Don't Walt it Day
You Are Miming Something Good
PRICES REDUCED TO
Bbls., 500 lbs. 3c per lb.
Half bbls., 300 lbs 4tfc per lb.
Quarter bbls., 140 lbs 4Jf c per lb.
f. o. b. factor!
SPECIAL NOTICE
You may deduct one-half cent per pound from
above prices, for cash with order, during April
and May.
Consolidated Products Co.
Dept. 300
Lincoln, Nebr.
irFairy Sodas packed iniin
keep the dainty irethncwm.
FAIRY SODA
TfEN BISCUIT Co
uin luntmuviunAU i r-urwnA
Cuts Down Work j
of Preparing Meals
A returnable can of Fairy Soda Crackers
la a labor saver In the kitchen. These fine
crackers may bo uied In many ways always
ready for serving, without wasto and with
out preparation. tj
Fairy Soda Cracker crumbs are used
wherever bread crumbs can be used. Two
thirds of a cup of cracker crumb will re
place one cup of bread crumbs.
Ak our Grocer for I-TENfl FAinr SODAS
and Be Ufe you get the genuine. g
I How To Start
A Store Of Your Own
Large wholesale house will umish
i i i i
locauon ana snowyou now to start a
business that develops quick sales and
good profits right frorn the start.
A little money goes a long way in
this new kind of a store. For partic
ulars address
J. D. McGUFFIN
426 W. Randolph St. Chicago, Hi
EIGHT FINE FARMS
Datern Nebraska; Western Iowa; DgukIu
Counly. Nebraska: Pottowattamle, Taylor.
Adams, Fremont Counties, Iowa. Hundred
slity to alz hundred forty acres; hlght
grade, best neighborhood, highly produc
tive, flneat Improvement, close In. On mala
roads. Equipment If desired. Prices right.
Terms to suit. low Interest.
D. A. BAUM. Owntr. City Nat'l Bldg.. OMAHA
EIGHT FINE FARMS
Cuticura Soap
The Safety Razor
Shaving Soap
OotleoraSosp Kts without mog. Ersrywem tt.
TOIIACCO Aged two years. No trash. Nu
Tugs. Krom FAIIM to YOU. Smoking or
Chewing. Quality guaranteed. liaise ami
pald.-bkridg. FarmrMVynrKyV'DeVrA:
FRECKLES g5$!Si!S
t r br
MiWAr.-uV.ca5SIS
WoastedJ
W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 15-1921.'
4