V. tectfe 7-TSgliche Omaya Trtbüne-Dienstag, den 2. September IM r v s r 1 "ff J I f ' i 1 s o The Dernocratic Trend of Bie Business. BY DAVip GIBSON Evfrjnthlng' donc for the be reht 01 humanity is profitable btisines, good busincss, and big business. I have watched the radical niovcmcnt for a pood many ycars; within the last decade I have been in a position thathas civcn ms coou perspccuve, ex tcrior and intcrior, on b! busi ncss; and I have come dennite ly to the concluson that derno- cracy is not coming from the source of radical pectation, It is convinK from Up down, rather; than tue-other way around. It is comine as a matter of leadership from the private "of fices rather than from the mass of worker or people generally. And when 1 say democracy I (In not mean what the average Socialist or anarchist wants it to mean. I do not tncan Belf-enYploy ment. Society iu its babits and cu stomsbai become o complex, togetlier with the business sy 'tein by which its waitts are sup plied, that it is oow impossible for one man of any dass to cmploy hiiii'self independently of another man. ,Thc busincss System is red procal. always has been and al ways will le. The System involves so many Kinds of ability, traininp, and femperaments that an interde pchdence of employment has trrown up. !Above all. dem'ocracy involves fsiciency, and efsicieney in volves erder and System.'- And spe;iMnpr' of the larjrc ajjgrepsations of Capital which wc call biv'busincss, with all its ßhortcomines, I know of no other Institution of society in which the elements of orderand System are any roorC predomi naht. I know of no less order and System, no more inefsicienUy conducted businesa than these witb no concentration of capi tal. the farmin iudiistry. for instance, and the business ot rentinff houses to the averauö city dwellcrs, and both of which are tijl in snvall nuits and un der individuaJ owje.rsbi,?,-? And these two busiuesses are paid a larger percentage of pro sit on th individuaJ transactiou than any of tliose aergregations of Capital whieb we call biß busi ness, . ,' ', And bear in mind that o callcd big business doc not make its dividends from sarge indhidual prosits on eacb saJc, but rather from a large aggre pation of sroall prefits ön many ealcs. A large manufaetnrer can, for instance. make rtwney producing scvcrat hundred thoiisatrti ho vcls, and at a few cents' prosit ich. while a country hardware Tierchant who only seil a few hovcls a vedr must make a Kllia nrri rn enrh in nrder v 'i j ' V - 'is liv i Tb!s is no defense of the al fleged meat trust, whieb can be nvKKtionteil aiid investicated : (öut if the now individuaJ cattle iVaiscr of th coiyitry were or- ' Jganizcd into a pigantic irust, - fund were making- tJie same per " ' flL-cntage of prosit as a trust that ' fjthcy are now recciving as in "!sdividuals ,why, the public would U Vise up in their füll migbt pgainst them, - ' s a In considering a democracy 1 Vtm of the opinion that too many iTrof tis have been feeling about it, lljfjratttcr than thinking about it. , iVf Too many of s are trying to ''jöbring it about as an altruistic , ;tpropösal rather than as a selfish jproposal. l Bear in mind that selfishness ' 1 ibas a place in dernocratic term- 7 T ' 1 t , t . m tiM.tal KH JinOlUJf, ll'USl V1 ui iians tsvvu jconfusmg it with greed. And altrtnsm has no place in modern Civilisation. V' Altruism was all right at a Intime in the world s bistory fjwhen tHcre was not enough to f'jgo around, and when it was rjneccssary to an efficiency, a democracy, that the man wno j.uhsd should give p to the nfan 1 jVho did not have. rt Today, in the ae of steam, 'jthere s enough to go around. ff i The application of steam and 'i?tne aoiiliy iv in&myuidic energy .. ,. i : t -t.. d-iinrougn mecnaintai, eiecincai, f',fian4 chemical agencies bavesolr 2"',ed all Problems of production, ' Distribution of goods is now nrcblfm of bie business, THe dernocratic .trend of big business is in raising the living iiitandards of Society, and in or er to distribute more good 5. j A Person in peverty has no j Ipurcbafing power. Ile.ia not a (The Public;, unit" to distribute oods. He will be prospered for seif ish t rcasons, ratlter than . ab trustic ones. And this . tendency . will be found more and more witb the increase in the machinery o1 production. There is but one solution to the probiern of distributiun, and that is by increasinj; the fand ards of livinjr and the purchas n power of more units of so ciety, and by educational ad vertisinj? even to the relief ot Community economical barriers through the exercise of politicaf influence. This will be done for the same reasdn that workinjf con ditions in the averace plant have been impröved, because itpays. oreed is grast, gettmti some- tbinff for nothing, and it wil! sinally have no place in produc tion or distribution, the trend is against it; for it affects th market prosperity, or the genera power to purchase. Thcre are two ways at arriv ing at a conclusion: one is lliink mg abotit it, to arrive at it from a selfish point of view : t!ie otho is feeling about it. to arrive a it from the emotional, altruistic viewpoint. Whifc the rcsults may be the same. yet as 1 said in the beginning we have been feeling about our Problems rather tliau thinking about them; and the in chvKiual3 who really do tlie world', work chatige their nimd.- and act more quickly and con tinuously in their selfish interes than from any altruistic or feel tng m'oüves. Kignt anJ trutn ana ,ust,ce are not richt, for their own sake but because they pay in pleasure and proht These mcasures are efficient. - deinocratic. To iliustrate Iiow it is possiblc or any of us to come to the same concltision by opposit Processes thinking or feeline, Eclfishncss or altruism: I have a friend, a poet. who is vegctarian, because hc does not uenevc in Kiinne animais. i am a vögetanan, because I beiieve that by not eatini? meat I will have betcr . beaKhlivc ionger, work more fficiently and eam more. ' -. y. ine po arnves ai ins con clusion by feeling, .iltruisin'; arrive at the same conclusion bv thinking, sctfislmess, and the re- Sults are tlc same. Mr. II. 0. Norvel!. of Clevc land, at the ficad pf a Corporation that controis the icc deüverv System of everal Central West cities, coueeived the idca of plac. ing ice stations at .convcm'cnt points over all residentiaj sec tion of tlieso citie, about bkc gasoline filJing' stations, now common evcrvwbcrc. A little boy with a toy wagon or a man with an automobile can get ice at one of these stations about fiffy per cenr. rheaper than the same amount dcüvcrcd to a household refrigerator. A lady remarked on noficiug one of these stations: "WJut humane things this is. a sine thmg for the poorr Mr. Norvell did , not bave in njina ine poor in conceiviug these serve-elf stations, aUhoueh most of them are in tbe poorcr distncts: b did bave in mind the sale of more ice, and whelbcr- Ins motives were aelish or altru istic the resulti are the same. , Every efficient tbing is hu mane. . It used to take eight or ten men six or seven bour to re load an old typ of opeo keartb furnace in a steeJ müL, and all the whilo they were exsosel to a cruel heat. A few vears aeo the .Wellmsfl- Seaver-Morgan Company, Cleve land, brougbt out a dice by wbieb two tnen could reload an open keartn furnace in twenty minutes, witbout beang exposed to any heat at all. Now this concern that brougbt out this deviee did not consider its humanitarian aspect at all, they invented it to save time. lab'or, money, but the humani tarian results were the same. Kowhere in all üterature !s poverty any more dramatically treated, with, any wore feeling, than in the writings of Henry George. He arrires at the con clusion ikat the remedy sr it all is in a tax on tbe stte v&Jue of land only. ' j I know personally many Mmu fachirers, in many part of the cour.try, enough to prore the tendency, that in .seeking a mean of relieving themselres from their tax bnrdens freeing natural resourets from th, eri! of ipeculation. and increa-wng the pchatiag poer-of tb'tjr j markets, they have come desinite ly to th conclusion that the remedy is in a tax on the site value of land only. I have even read intimation of this irt Tbe Wall Street Journal, and witbout a word on the ubject of poverty. it took about 108 years to change the argument in favor oi probijjition from that ,of pure rnorals, feeling, to that of good econptnics.thinkiDg. satety iirst movement was siarted and carried out by the railroads of this country as an economic measure. not az a buinanitarian One. The railroads f this country bavecjrculated mülions of pieces of Pterature on "Courtesy" to their employcs,"--not courtesv f?r merey courtesy 's sake, but because if paid.1 Tlie banks of this country itarted the savings movement not in any altruistic motives, but to get money out of stoves. bttrehti drawers, stockings, ar.d fiuit cans, and' into their ir.stiiu tbns as denosif, but it has bad the ssect of promoting tl.rik:, prosperity, and happiness. Tlirough the allianee of the mechanic and the business man the 'averagc of us can assord a watch that only a king could have carried a Century ago. t Through the allianee of tbe Printer, photographer. and busi ncss Inau there is innre posses fion anJ appreciation of the painter's art tharr ex er bet'ore in history. Again through tbe allianee of tbe mechanic and business man there is tnusic in a!mot every home, truly not II of ik good m'usic, but tbere is mil more appreciation of real musical art than ever before. And all these inventions and sales promotions rt-cre with tbe prime idca of profit on the part of the inventors and Promoters. All of thee have been made possibl in the age of steam. Our older moral and econom Post-War By A. G. Keller Thcre are those who expect too much from a crisis and talk of a new dispensation or a Pew tvorld-order ; and there are others who are witbout vision or who jdase their eyes.to the signs of the timei and clamor lor tm?t- ness as usual." It is folly to ex pect too much: the chenncal ele ments of the earth and the lavVs of physica! naturc, the mind of man and the character o human naturc, are not to be altered by that which, though it look 5 to the awe-stneken participator like convulsion, is, in the infinite per- bpective of things, no more than a flurrv. It is the same old world, even after the Grcat War. And yet it is not altogether the same, either. Things are never the same after such a stirnng o what are, to our slight fathom ings, the depths. However loud tbe cry for life-as-usual, life has not been as usual not tlicrt, dur ing the war, and not now, after the war. -Tndced, it scems tjuite safe to assert that one phase o tbe life of this nation, not to say of human society in general, has passed and another phase begun. T- . 1 . . ' ueuveen nas lain a-iransmon period, as indefinäbie as that which separates youth and man hood. The nation haz sensed this change and it is recognized in the much talk about reconstruc tion. It is as if a great firc bad wiped out pari of a city and pro- vided a chance for wider streets and better architecture. , Or it !s as if rigid forms bad been broken down and dissolved into wet plaster, capable of being re shaped, if it can be kept stirred up until we can decide into what new forms to cast it. The idea of reconstruction has been per- vasive. . There are few ociat form that have not been sub- iected to questioning crutiny economic relations, gaxtmmtiit, rebgion, even the constitution oi the family. Bat it is the educa tional System, perhaps, that has come in for the most thorough goißg cri leistn and prospective overhauliag. This is natural enougfc if education is to be con- cefved of as an induetion of a new generation into its respon sibfe plac in the general social ordei of the nation. ,The crisis past, we naturaüy pnze tnat which saved us. But what did save us? There has been a test as by fire, and cer ta! sort of knowledge seem to bav come out of it resplendent. Why should w, not feel that the next generation rr.Tsst concentrate mors attentivelf upon that whieb preserved tha nation and, indeed, ctvüization it5elf? The Etud.'es cf .th future, aecording to or, cltÄr-mirdd usaticna'ist, are to be tbe phnhaJ icitacei with ical writers did not take this force into consideration, because it did not exist in their se. Some of our modern moral and economical vvriters have not taken it ausficiently injo con sideration; they are still think ing in man and animal power units. while the business world is acting in steam power imitj. . And most of our eccinomical and moral fjrogfess ha been dnce we have found tlie fact that it payl.' , ' Utforms do not coine at or.ee, because we do not tbink in Mindantentalst. ConditionS improve by deriva tives, because we thmte in de rivatives. We at till out In the twigs and branches in nur thoughts on the social System; we are not down as yet to th trunks and roots,l)ave not got to fundamentals. Thcn, perhaps, it is well that it is so. Perhaps this is nature's program. Maybe this is the natural order of reforms. that they -should corne qiiietly. gently, like the cliangiiig srasnns. winter into spring, spring into üummer, and siiminer into tutumn. Man will one day he master of bis circumstances. hii nceds. and even every desire, sn long as Ins desires do not Conflict witb the need of another. Columbus Austin Howshcr. to whom I am deepk indebted for some of these observatimts, w!o hns caused ine to look at ni.mv flerrients from a new oint of view, find of wboni the busincss world is destined to henr more. says that the Golden Rnlc can he expressed in terms of selfi.h ncss: "Be selfish, but ra not denv the selfisbness of others." TIus rule is for the perfect re- ciprocation of business. supply- ,ng cne anoti'f-rs wants. and it i? for a heiter Order nnd System i d thetnie demorraev of which tbe dreamers cf old h.ive c'renmed. Education. (The Review). ineir appucations, especiaity in engineering; tbe modern lan guages; bistoryj and, perhaps auove all tue social scienceS, ,0n the face of it the chcinist seenis to have emerged from the late ordeal with the greatest ac Claim; but he closcly followed by the physicist, the fceologist, and all those specialists whosj bnowlcdge has niade possible the Vetter care oi the wounded, the sick, and the. undcr-nourislicd In this "war of the laboratories' the physical scietitists have hao their chance to make a derrioti- stratian, and they have seized it. AIjso, the mono-lingual American has derived from bis European contacts the realization that it i? well to know another language and he has come to be enlieh: ened, particularly, as to the Util ity, present and prospective, c) the other great tongue of the Americas. The world has com pressed and drawn together dur- ng the recent struggle, and language-barriers to free com rnunication, forrn'erly pretty much ignored by us as distant and theoretical, are now seen to be nearer than was though t. and practical. We are more nearly in tue Situation ot the maller European nations at whose cotn mand of foreig-n tongues we have marveled in the cast we have lost our traditional Position ot Isolation and self-stifficiency. and are Crowded together closer upon our fellow nations. It is not that we propose to practice the vindicated arts ot war in priparatiort, for other wars. ,Those of us vho feared the inoculation of our nation with frjilitarism have feit an ever deepening content duriner the post-srmtice period. for if the last half year has shown any. thing it has shown the nimble recession of the American people from an enforced Status of mili- tancy. Chemistry dos not pos sess its nndotibted eminence as an indispensable t the art of war; it is cherisbed 'iecause of its promise, more sharclv revealed during the exigencies of war, as unoamental tor the arts of peace. I-or through all the a?es the arts of war have thus trans- lormed themhelves tnto, or at icat have contribuled copiously, to the ar'.s of peace, The daims of hisiory and the social sciences are a little less obvious than thos of the physi cal eciences and the modern languages. It was not alone by our know!edge of chemical for Txhs, beneßcent era, or the !aws of hygiene that we were aved. Th faith that engen dered morale rested its case upon the repeated verdicts of history and a cersfcective cf ihn un- diverted coure cf social evolu- tion. This is Impücitly fecog nized in the publishers' lists and in the records of Itbraries There seemi to be i feeling that we had bettet know ihe past life of on r fellow nation a little more inthnately than we knew that of Oermany, and that it is well to tinderstnnd, in general, fiow this recent cataelysm camc to be. Tbe past has been brougbt nearer to the present m some wnat tue same way as the na tions , have been tbrowri into closer proximiiy; barriers of tirne as well as of space have become Subject to attntiön. nherc is a practical side to all this. The war has revealed to uj that there were many economic, political, and social phenomena under our eyes which we did not apprehend or iimlcrstand, but which ought to have been scen and appraised ; as a consrqucncc of the war still other vital qnestions of the same order challengc tis; and now we want tbe next generation to be better prepared . to grasp , and deal with ll'cm not in view of war again, but under conditions of prospective peace, and with a view tu an rinlunng peace. It is doubtfu! whether anv stiidics can aspirc to much promi nente unless they are seen to have a practical hearing on the art of living. The race has al ways been obligcd to cultivate Utilities, as a condition of exist eure. Tbc populär studies of any nation bave always been those that issued in Utilities, or were thougbt so to issue. But if :ny one is listing cyidcnccs of design in the univcrsc, hc should notc tnat studies wlnch are plainly pursued in view of their pBKtical product always carry wrth them unforescen influenecs of a less Material order., They both stimulate and satisfy intel lectual curiosity, and every one of them' leads at Icngth to an insight into the nature of things that fath.crs scnlinicnts of.wonder and awe in the presence of power of liiiiitlcss force acting in orderly fashion under all-per-vading law. Thus thcre are-no pnrely practical studies at all; and even if th curricula of the future are to he limilcd to the Subjects of science, lauguagc, and history, provided these are really studied, thcre need be rio misgiv- SHALL GERMAN NO! CRIES It is difficult, remarks Mr. Frank Harris in Pearson's Maga zine, for ä thoughUul or edu- cated nun to beiieve that such miestiort needs to be s asked. lt is tantarnount to asking, Sball I cut off rnv nose to spite ,ny face? Mr. Harris goes on to sav: In England when thing? were at their worst, about Christrnas, 1917, and the whole country was on snort rations anu in imiumnn dancer of starvation, the eines tion was rtrised, it is true; but was scttled immcdiately in the only common sense way. To have it seriously debated here in America would bc comic were it not a sign of tragio and un-American stupidity. To the thinking man every language is another window with a new view of this miraculoüs world, and to shut ohe is sinvply to prefer darkness to light and Vision. Yet in Mount vernon. we liear, the qüestion is botly de bated: a Mr. Raynaud wants German banned from our schools, and he is supported by a Mr. Mitchell, who would like to taf and feather any teacher of German; in fact, "the lowest depths of hell are too good for them," he says. I would not have noticed this Nonsense were it not that tbe Rstvcpoft Maeazine for December publishes a Hymn of Hate by 5ne Kenneth Dufüeld, which, it declares, has had ' wide circula :ion." Here is one verse of it: Die beste Arznei. Der berühmte amerikanisch.: Phi losoph Orison Swett Morden schreib! in einem Aufsatz über den frohen Sinn: Ein Freund von mir erzählt oft und gern, wie in feiner iHr.d. heit der alte Hauborzt zur -Familie kam: er ncr ja lebendig, lustig und energisch, ein so sormigez Lachein aa an seinen ugen. Lag man nch einfach schände, krank zu sein. .Die Luft im Hause wurde in dem Äugen, blick anders, wenn cr inS Zimmer rat. Sein herzliches Lachen schallte durch das Zimmer, er rieb sich see envergnugt sie Hanoe vor dem ttzminfeuer, und feine dlosze Llmve senheit half uns mehr als alle seine Pille und Salocn. In, der arokk Gedaiife, das; er wn komm?, nach dem wir yj, il:"i scstf,?- hatten, 'cer- tr.ib sch? lüi nrnfle, waö un ing as to irreparable splrltual loss. There are said to be certain btudies which yield the im materiat satisfactions, but do not yield, of do not any longer yield, actual Services in the art of liv ing: Greek, for example, or stronomy. This is disputablc, of course: if the happiest man is, as some one once defined hiro, the man with the greatest nuni ber . of interesting thoughts, thcn, since ns one can very well contend that happiness is not practical, studies like Greek can not be stripped of all Utility for the art of living. For certain endowed and fortunate souls these less practical studies will always be the most practical. But for the average citizen they can not be so. II e can not work up into the empyrean be- catise Ins life is irrevocably con cerned with the immediacies There is no convulsion of society that could conceivably arouse m bim a taste for the remoter btudies. In general, ' and more spccihcallv, he gets what can be presented in the pubhc schools, including, if he is better-to-do, the high schoob He has always seen the values of the three R's. He has never scen the value of the studies, especially as. they have been pursued, that educa tional reformers and pedagogists (who are not clear in their minds, though enthusiastic with the vision of half-knowledge, and wordy to the hypnötizintf of school boards) have succeeded in foisting upon the schools. But now a crisis has' revealed ä popu lär interest in certain Subjects disciplines more advanced than the clementary ones, yet with a character sufficiently practical to be practicahle. It is the accept ance . and developm'ent of this lead. vouchsafed ,by the auto matic out-working of things. that is indicated as a policy of educa tional reconstruction. The list of Subjects used as a tex in the foregoing mar not be exhatistive, but is typical.- The bint is un- mistakable to any lntelhgence not prepossessed: it is time to drop out the educational fads and fancies and to develöp those studies interest in which has been evohed bv the revclations or the recent crisis. " - BE BANNED? FRANK HARRIS. "l will not take a German's word He'll break it if he can; . There is no love in a German heart Or faith in a German man." Such verses would make EI bert Hubbard turn in bis grave; he would have known that oui batreds hurt ourselvcs. The sooner we RCt rid of them, tbe better for us; the longer we cherish and nurse them, the more we must sulier. , And that is true even when the object ot our dislike is in itsclf bad. But it would be quite easy to prove that every language lives by the virtue in it, and German is among the tliree or four best languages in the world. As an instrument of abstract and ac curate th ought it has, indeed, been called "the best" by Gar lyle, and its lyric poetry, in the hands of Goethe and Heine, is second only to the best Engh'slt poetry. ' , 10 ban German from our schools would be to make our selves ridiculous throughout. the world: it would be cited against us . all over Europe, like our lynchings and- shootings and third-degrec torturings. We can not afford. as a nation, to make such a blunder. Like other blunders, it would be worse than cnme. : ; The old Latin proverb that it is well to learn lrom our ene mies, teaches a higher wisdom; in banning the German language we should be going below pagan- ism at its commonest; the mere proposal 5.11s me with shame. fehlte." Einer der bekanntesten und erfokgreichsten Aerzte in Boston verschreibt überhaupt fast niä)t mehr. Sein frohes Gesicht und fein heitere? Gemüt scheinen schon allein alle Schmerzen zu vertreiben. In seiner Gegenwart wir!' Verzweiflung zuHoffnunz. Entmutig'ng zu Ver trauen und froher Zuversicht, so daz die Kankcn eine ganz deutlicke Kraf tigunF empfinden und überzeugt sind, daß cZ besser wird und eben dadurch wird eZ besser. .Weltlohn. Die Welt spielt dielen übel mit. Für die sie Lorbeer sollte suchten. Und mancher, der für and'te stritt. Mnsz leid für sich selber fechten. Hell allezeit offen die Obren, Halt allzeit geschlsjsen den Mund, To wird dir der anderen Torlirir. Tenanden, die deine uicht kund. Whiskey Vier we!,, Jtomi'lfl ftcfifpte und Jnünitllonk. um im Hnus iHUt Wbisk,'. wirkliche und a,wl,Ik Sein brriillkllkr.. einkchllch Hkr ilkllim ud Ol'kralion von Heliii'TkllINkN, ttu samniriiflrslrllk von Lriilen. dl? Iiaiikr Im ?riu sowie o(ilÖaflonnffctiill tiitia .nwrnt. Kirf llrtif Si'nrfrt. feilte Crtntmillfri'f tu Poldr )fltliisrtf frlniifil hlt Verlenftiing von Sicwri len, Handelt Witrfl. ffa Wesen, wele he THrTniif .rcir Cirür r'fWM? ferfitetrf Ileirt Nn (fennreft vor. RttfleMIcft fl'ir k,k, Cchect, Monev Criet, ac ode, Warten. Baltimor? ormnlct Compuiiy Valllkk, Md., drudc kk,ne Srrm kl Sie UfriHKtnriir WuroriDO epflitii. eiitlA iiiillet.stiir nliult, K gröhi, uiiirbflliiueli in kkaii'u, ttt 09 IU !adr Otlen tue Va iteni: mim nWlt eot idiruUft fei ln con (tronttcbcn stwr.fbfUMi ttt wia atni. cet tftrtnenielUf. t'ebft n fttfrm. Wil elfffm ftfillom ttnekalwalln. vom ?iiii"ndbnmneii In nelAtrfifT "nt Wien frfmOIi Wett, aandl mt,u H den PattkNker, m fiirolnln. (ntjfiimnltmu un andettr, lnltltnoitetlfn ftrunfoetteit im iHel6inroii ti sich Weil. Man schttld in skunll, rIlmt A eiRHrRtl Karond ttHua EELIABLE DETECTIVE BUREAU SU tnoifwnH Pfittannf Nlldln, 15. unk Hornel, er Cmo6-, 9!f6r. Ta?kled: Xougto 20.'.Ä . Elf bkschiisii-e nur 6ttI(if(Iä (SlrtfeiituroiijIRttt I. R. MS Nacht'Televdnn! Coliar l&S ta. Townlk, flaiiUZtlciien: ffoifai 8319 lttatttttnerte Nnzeiaen! verlangt! . Mehrere 'ZkifnngStrager verlangt für bie Tägliche Omaha Tribüne. Man iele Phoniere Tyler ZiO und fra ge nach Herrn Elsener. Sctlangt Weiblich. Eins Haushältcrm, im mittleren Wer. auf der Farm; mub deutsch sprechen können. Zwei in Familie Anfragen sind zu richten an die Omah.i Tribüne, Box L.- tf Zu derkaufe. Ente5 Säger tan künstlichen HaarzLpfm i(hair switchcs) zn der kaufen, T?tlcf Hair ParlorZ, 202. Baird Bld. Margaret Gunston, Eigentl). 1s Farm zn verkaufen. ' Ciaentlimer wünscht feine ZZarm von über BQO Acker, 3 Meilen Md. mest von Odcll, Nclir., zu verkaufen. chulhaus auf dem Lande. Gute und grofze Gebäude.; flicszcndes Wasst'r.-H. O. Bemann Odcll. Mraska. 9-3019 Kost nd Logis. Geräucherte Störe, und ander,? 5'fcho, stets frZsch,, Henri," (ZZersk. !!117. Missouri Avennk. 0 .10 TaS preiswürdigfle Essen vci Prtrr Nnmp.. Deutsche Küche, ltiw Dodge Strake, 2. Stock. tf Möbliertes Zinimer mit separa tem Eingang, mit oder ohne Kost. ?aks Street. 1. Stock. C. 'laumann. tf Liberty Bonds. Wenn Sie einen Liberty Bond zu derkaufcn haben, sehen Sie uitö. Wir bezahlen bar für alle Ausgaben. Wir kaufen auch Tellzahlunas mJitrmfltt Zimmer 300 M'Cague Block Nordwcst Ecke 13. und Dodge Str. L'3.10 Aulomobil Bedarfs-Artikel. Kaufön Sie Ihren Auto Bedarf, wie Reifen, Tubes, Batterien, Oel, usw. von uns. Alles hat eine Garan tie. W. A Anfo Snpply Co., 204 Farnam St. William F. Weber, EigentS. 9-6.19 Bücher. , AnLwahl: Ohne Leljrer Englisch. -Wörterbücher. Äricssteller, Geietz büchcr, Gedichte, Kochbucher. Dol. met .er, Liederbuch, Svrachmeister, Bcmerbungsbriefe. Amerikanische? Bürgerrecht Gesetzbuch, Geschäfts brieffte5er. Elektrizität, Doktorbnch, Amerikanisier Geflügelzüchter, Gar. tcnbuch. GraLbau, Milchwirtschaft, Bäckerrkzeiiibücher, Ingenieur. Ma. schzntit?nbuch, Deutsch.Amerikanischk; Kalenser. Schreibt für Eratispro snektc. Fharles Kallmetzer Pilblifhina Co.. L07 Eaft iü. Str.. New Iork. N- f). Glück bringende Tranringe bei Brc- degaardö. Z md DougkaS Str. Mobel-Nkparatur. Omaha jvurniture Nevair Workk: LZttZ farnam St. Telephone Har ney 1""2. Adolph ffaraus. BesiLer. Monumente und Marksteine. Gr'tksriiTrte omnnente u. Mark. steine A. Bratke & Co.. 431 Süd n Strake. Tel. Smith 2370. tf Advokaten. ' ? H. Mischet, deutscher Rechtanwalf und Notar. Krundakte eprütt. 8'mmer 1418 First National Bank Butlding. Aekrrikchk, lZebreichte elektrikche SHofor Tel. Douglas 2019. Le Cica S ßroa, 115 Cüd 13. Str,'