The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, February 24, 1924, CITY EDITION, Page 9-A, Image 9
•RACIAL BLOCS OPPOSE NEW IMMIGRATION BILL By MARK SULLIVAN. Washington, Feb. 23.—We are near the peak of the opposition to the new Immigration bill. The whole project of restricting Immigration further is under attack. The opposition has two objectives. Da# la to defeat the new measure or modify it greatly In the direction of letting In more aliens. The other is to bring about oufflclent delay to post pone the passage of the new' bill until after July 1. The existing law expires July 1. If the new measure has not been passed by that date, on* possible outcome would be no immigration restriction law whatever on the books, and we ehould have Instantly an uncontrolled flood of all the immigrants that may choose to come. That result, however, Is so improb able as to he negligible. AVhat will more likely happen, if the opponents of the new hill are successful Is that the present law will be hastily re enacted as an emergency measure for on# more year. That outcome would he satisfactory to the opponents of the new law. The present law lets in 357,103. The proposed new law would let in about half this number. The friends of more Immigration would be glad to maintain the larger figure for another year. Folowx Tax Rill. Tt would seem as if it should be pos sible to pass the new bill before June 30. The plan is to take it up as soon as the tax bill is out of the way. Aft er the bill ra taken up there will be fj^ror five days Sit debate and at j^l^mpted amendment on the floor of the house. Normally, the bill should come to a vote in the lower house about March 10. The judgment is that the bill will pass the lower house. After the bill has passed the lower house friends of change will concen trate on the senate. Whether live ef forts are successful will depend large ly on how strong is the spirit of de termination among the friends of the bill In that body. It would seem that there is ample time to consider find pass the hill In the senate during the more than three months It will be in fast body before June 30 arrives. Opposition I.ocal. Opposition to tlie new bill conies from localized sources. The opposi tion is practically confined to racial g^ojups and individuals who are spokesmen of racial groups already in the United States. The threat of some of these foreign colonies and their spokesmen to ex press their resentment at tlie polls has been made -equently, and vs ill have effect with some senators. The states which have the largest foreign coloniesi are Massachusetts, i onnecticut, Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Illi nois. The foreign colonies which re sent the new bill are chiefly Italians and Jews; the foreign colonies which consist of Swedes, Norwegians, Ger mans, British or Danes do not resent the new bill. The new bill docs not greatly reduce the number of immigrants who can come in from the United Kingdom, Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Ger many; but It does greatly reduce the ber who can come In from Italy, pa, Russia, and the Other couir tries of southeastern Europe. lews Novelist Quoted. One of the wisest persons now going about on the surface of the United States is Mr. Herbert Quick. 'Vande mark’s Folly” is fiction; hut It is a more readable and no less accurate narrative of the settlement of Iowa in the ’50s of the last century than any formal history could be. Mr. Quick wrote the otfcer day, a lecture which he read lo those aliens, already the beneficial iea of our hos pitality, who, on this matter -of im migration, have chosen to take the point of view, not of America, but of their European racial affiliations. Mr. Quick said: “The present pregrant in congress to change our immigration laws so a* to rurtail the coming to our shores of people from eastern and southern Europe who are ready to load the in coming ships ... is really momentous And H is a test cf the Americanism of the immigrants who have already lome to us from those sources. "A protest has already been heard from Italians, Hebrews and some other races who are domesticated with us. New Quota No Help. • More Italians in this country are not necessary to the welfare of Ital ians already there; more Jews will not make it any better for our Jewish population; more Poles and other Slavs will do our present Slavs no 'v,, good. I he races of northern and west Europe we have among us in large numbers. Those of them among us have mingled with the population and will Americanize the new comers. They are of the races which we know how to digest. Hence the wisdom ot going hack to the census of 1K00 for our basis of letting in immigrants. "Not ail of our Hebrews, Italians and Slavs are joining in this ‘race pride* movement to let down the floodgate*. These are the ones who have become Americanised, no mat ter how brief their *ta.\ in America has been. Foreign ‘race pride' is’for eign, whether it proceed* from Mu rope. Asia or from men who live this side of the oceans; and the con siderationst wliich should control con gress should 1** the interest* of the I'nlted Stales, and the I'nlted Plate* onlv." There is another possible result of this fight that is being made by the representatives nf foreign groups. This was hinted at In the hearings in a colloquy between a member of the committee and one of the wit nesses. lands Marshall of New York, lie said, among other things: "We have room In this country for 10 times the population we have.** At another point in his argument, Mr. Mat shall expressed opposition to the whole idea of regulation by quo A- ■ Uncle Sam’s Liquor Map Reveals Nebraska Law-Abiding Community; Figures Show Sentiment of People Determines Enforcement Success ___ -- - - - — - - - _ — i nASHINGTON,' Feb. 23.—Na tional prohibition is entering on its fifth year. It was ex actly four years on January IS since prohibition became the law of the land. Ami what Is the situation today? What is the progress of enforcement? Ara the government agencies more successful than they were four years ago or one year ago? Is respect for the law increasing or diminishing throughout the entire land? Does the citizenry at large accept the verdict of the coroner that John Barleycorn was rpally dead, or was it a dummy that was interred on Jaftuary 16, 1920? Discarding the fanatics on either side wht» flood the country with daily doses of propaganda, a search has been mad- for some Incontrovertible facts relative to this greatest experi ment of the centuries. Map lleveals Facts. If yon want to get n mental picture of the United States In terms of liquor consumption visit the prohibition sec tion of the Department of Justice, where a force of statisticians under Mrs. Mabel Walker Willobrandt. as sistant attorney general, is engaged In keeping ilp to date an enforcement map of the United States similar to the map of the weather bureau. The difference is that the liquor map is based on the actual facts submitted by fourscore United States attorneys located in every section of the coun try, whereas the weather map Is somewhat of a forecast. Here are seme of the farts that a glance at Mrs. Willebrandt's map re veals: INo state is bone dry today, the • degree of prohibition enforcement ranging all the w ay from Ui per cent to as low as 5 per cent. 2 The heavily saturated area < marked In thick hlack is as deep ly painted on the map today ns it was a year ago. the only difference being that slight modifications of the color schema in one spot or section Is offset by a heavier touch to other sections. Cy Approximately 60 per rent of Osthe American people live in terri tory where the 18th amendment and the Volstead set are violated every day in the year 50 to 9s per cent Nebraska Obeys law. The order into which the country falls in the catalogue of prohibition enforcement is as follows: States In which the law is enforce ment 90 per cent or better: Idaho, lows, Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah and Wyoming. These banner states, Including three 95 per centers, Idaho, Kansas and Utah, have a population of 12,090,045, the 1924 estimate. Between 80 and 90 per rent enforce meat is found ill Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Maine, Nevada, Colorado, New Mexico and Ohio. The total population of tills second roll of honor group is 12,899,733. Between liO and 80 per cent dry: Indiana, Missouri, Texas. Virginia, West Virginia and Wisconsin. The population of this group is 18, 281,129. The 50 per cent group is: Washing ton, Oregon, Montana, North Dnkota, Kentucky, Michigan and Minnesota. These seven states have s popula tion of 12,653,796. They are the ones where the situation is 50-50. They are stales where the "dry" sentiment Is lather strong, but their strategic position, along the border and in specialty favored sections such as Ken tucky, enables the liquor drinking ele ment to render the national prohibi tion dictate 00 per cent Ineffective. Here Are Itlack Ones. Finally comes a procession of IS states deeply puintcd In black on the enforcement map. with > popula tion of 30.103,70S—more than half the American people—where, according to the Department of Justice, the Vol stead act is only 3 to 40 per cent en forced at tlie present moment. De parts of rf>( f-nt date from the I'nited Mtatrs attorneys do not call for any shifting or modification of the dr portment lifjuor chart, it was stated. These IS state* and their percentage of enforcement are: California. 15 per cent! Connecticut, 20 per cent: Delaware. 23 per cent; Florida, 23 per cent; Georgia, 10 per cent: Illinois, 35 per cent; Louisiana, 10 cent; Massachusetts, 40 jicr cent; Mississippi, 40 per cent: New Hampshire, 40 per cent: New Jersey, 20 per cent: New York, G per cent; Pennsylvania, 30 per cent; Rhode Is land, 25 per cent; North Carolina, 30 per cent: Mouth Carolina, 40 per cent; Vermont, 40 per cent, and Maryland, 40 per cent. These states. It will be seen at a glance, constitute a heavily ant urn ted band round the country. Tile list in cludes practically ail the seaboard areas ami takes In the most itnpor lant sections from an industrial and economic standpoint. These states In elude New Kngland, the home of Puri tanism, as well ns the key states of the Atlantic coast. And among them are southern slates like Georgia and the Carolinas, where many l«ms have their cradle. Law Means Nothing In New York. It should be stated that the per centages of enforcement given above reflect the deepest black in the indi vidual statea, but In almosLsii cases It takes in the entire area. According to the department of Justice. Mouth New York, Including New York city, takes first place in point of saturation with a to', per cent nonenforcement record, as compared with 80 per cent nonenforceimnt for upstate New York. These figures and percentages re fleet the situation accurately as it is today. Attaches of the Department of Justice hesitate to «u> that there is any noticeable improvement. They believe tha\ the reports of the attor neys reflect a greater number of con victions, but there Is no falling off in the number of violations that pile up from day to day on the dockets. Figures given by the prohibition unit of the treasury as to the amount of liquor withdrawn from bond and coming from elsewhere are worthless as an Index of the amount of liquor consumed. This much Is admitted by all Impartial obaervers and inves tigators here. The ccnsular reports from various countries and points whence llqigir flow* indicate that consignments via "rum row” ard as heavy as ever, the liquor treaty with tireat Britain and the agreement with the Canadian government notwith standing. Kip Flush Menac e. On* of the alarming features dis closed In the reports Is the i xirnt to which the younger element is leading the vanguard of the liquor law viola tors. The way in which boys and girls in their teens have become ad dicts of the ‘ hi|>'' flash shocks the federal authorities nnd it Is unques - tionably among this class that th# horde* of »mall bootl ggsrs find their rrey. Moonshinlng has not diminished, and the Department of Justice takes the position that it is practically im possible to copu with (he mnn who brews on ids own account for himself and his neighbors i.i th< outlying re gion*. Commissioner Hoy A. Ilajnes yi wasting much effort on this class, o ut if the Department of Justice had its way or was in n position to make suggestions these \\ rild l.e l<ft alone and the forces of the prohibition unit concentrated on the commercial boot legging in the wet areas. In the year 1927. is compared with lf-1.2, arrests nnu convictions materi ally increased. Thi.« might mean that there were more violetlone, just as it n.ay mean that theie » is a stronger drive to enforce the law. The gen eral belief is that the gi1 .tor number of arrests refloci* the former as truly as It does the l»tt»r assumption. There is no concrete evidence to war rant the assumption that the arrests and conviction*, the FSixure of stills and property his appreciably ex tended the dry area. Disturbing Figures. Here are some figure* that will »f ford an index of present day violation of the Volstead art and the 19th amendment: 1 There Wrr# CS.93 i arrests In the • fj- y ar 1131, m ■ pop*rod with 42.223 In 1922. Cy There were 34.0*7 unnvirtlon* in the federal courts for Illegal sale and possession of liquor in 1923, ns compared with 22.749 ill 1922. 3 In 1923 distilleries to the number • of 12.219 were setred, as com pared with 9.319 in 1922. 4 Distilling apparatus sei7cd and • confiscated In 1923 numbered 149.912, as computed with 102.‘97 in 1922. JT The value of property seised by Os prohibition agents in 1923 ag grepated 111 479.277, as compared with 15,9 72,09 1 in 1912. Hut federal convictions at the rat# of 115 a day and terms of Imprison ment imposed to a total amount of something llko 6.(00 or 7,000 years have not diminished the number of offenders, the amount of liquor avail able, the number of illicit stille in ■>pt ration or the amount of money that the United State* treasury must expend to carry on the government s enforcement program. There Is absolutely no justification for the oft-repeated assertion of Com missioner Haynes that the greater t.milter of orrests and convictions in dicate a drying up process. The real les is the extent to which booze is being peddled from day to day and the extent to which the commercial traffic in liquor is alive in places where arrests are Increasing. Take any state at random. Here is the record for Georgia: ini' l»:i 1**1 Arrests I 44* 1.1*4 5.133 H-i-r re: rt 1 .1,4*3 *«* l.l*-.J*l 5.114.MS Whisk) seised. IMS* *«.*** Ct.Stl Property ae-sed S41 5.4IS $3*C tM 1454,1*9 Whatever the record of arrests or pro|>erty sc icd in any section where the sentiment is "wet.'’ the facts are the same. The man on the street is aware that 1*007* is available and can hi had without difficulty. In some section* arrests and convictions hsve decreased rather than increased dur ing the last two year#. The lVpart nent of Justice pointed out recently that the -aturation in Klor.da is heavier than ever before, and that the r«*j uisite change should be made in the liquor map. There were only 3R3 federal arrest* !r 19 2:1. as compared with 56* In 1922. and the number of convictions In 1923 fell to 213, as compared with Sl>7 in the previous year. Any f.itr analysis can lead only to one conclusion, nanp lv, that where the senttmem is. off the whole, wet," the enforcement of th* Volstead act i« not making progress, hut where the eentiment is dry enforcement of the Volstead act 1* maktng prngiess ta*. He want* toMiave a commission appointed and let that commission make it* findings.'' Whereupon Chairman Johnson pointed out that Roosevelt appointed a commission in 1907 and it took 10 years to gst legislation. Another mem ber of the committee said: "Mr. Mar shall, I suppose I can say, without praising the committee, that if I have ever been acquainted with a body of men who have spent long, tedious time in trying to find out the facts, it has been this committee on immi gration." Sentiment for Suspension. There Is a good deal of sentiment, both in congress and throughout the country, for a complete or nearly complete suspension of Immigration. Many members of congress, especially from the south and west, are much irritated by the pressure which puts impediments in the way of enacting what they regard as reasonable Im migration restriction. They resent the efforts of those who want to keep the gates open. It is Just possible that if these efforts are kept up the re action of congress may express It self in a sudden determination to shut off all immigration for a period. As regards more commissions, more time, mors hearings, more facts, and all that sort of thing, it must be said that this is a specious plea. Immi gration commissions and immigration committees, both of the house and senate, have been at work collecting facia for nearly 15 years. There are scores of bound volumes of the hear ings sthey have held. It is impossible to conceive that any further delay and any more appointments of commis sions to investigate would really re sult In any larger intelligence on thf subject. Defectives Admitted. Some disturbing conditions were hinted at in these recent hearings. One member of the committee. Con gressman John C. Box, of Texas, read an official statement which said that last year 23,969 aliens were cer tified by the United States public health service as being "physically or mentally defective”—but that, in spite of this action 21.136 of the num ber were admitted and are now in the United State*. A* to how this happened, that more than nine-tenths of those cer tified were nevertheless admitted on appeal. Congressman Box stated it in the course of a question he asked of a representative of one of the so cieties that are clamoring against thr restriction* imposed by the new bill. Congressman Box said: ”1* it not true. sir. that that is after your society and members of congress and the senate and every body else have brought pressure to l-ear to get these people in, that their views are changed as to whether these aliens are defective or not?" , The witness claimed that these de fective aliens were properly admitted —that it was done legally, by' means of an appeal from the unfavorable certificate of the public health serv ice at nilis Island to a board of re view at Washington. Practice Opposed. To stop this practice, »o far a* members of congress engage in it. Congressman Raker proposed as a provision of the new bill a clause to t the effect that it shall be illegal and punishable by imprisonment for s member of congress to appear before a board in any effort to secure the admission of an immigrant rejected at Ellis Island. Members of congress would be glad enough to he prevented by law from doing this sort of thing. As a rule, they hate~ it. They cnly do it be cause it is pressed on thorn by rela tives of the defective aliens who hap pen to he their constituents. But even though members of con gress should be debarred from it, there will still remain the activities of what Congressman Box called the "racial blocs," the Immigrant aid so cieties, and wbat not. MM atcb ^ orn by Lfc. Denver, Feb. ;j.—An old coin silver watch weighing about half a pound, which was carried through the Civil war by Gen. Robert E. lyee. com mander-in chief of the confederate armv, came to light in Denver re cently. , The watch is of the old-time key winding type, with the hunting case embossed and the name "Robert E Lee" engraved on the works. • It is now ths property of Mi's. Gladys Roberts Massey, who lives near Fort Logan, on the outskirts of Denver. Mr*. Massey declared the watch was presented by Lee to a private in the confederate army (or some sot of bravery and came into the pcss'-s slop of her grandfather. William Rob erts. who lived near Macon. Ga. SCHOOL REFORM CHALLENGES LABOR GOVERNMENT A By H. 0. WKLIX .Author ef "The Outline of History." J<ondon. Feb. 2.1.—The labor gov ernment In Creat llrllnin starts with conservative discretion that should re assure even the most excitable In mates of Rothemere journalistic In stltutlons. For this yeur. at any rate, w# shall get little that we might not have had from a rather lefthanded liberal cabinet. Social revolution is In no hurry to arrive. The recognition of Russia is all to the good, the treatment of foreign politicians In office ax though they were statesmen, and the serious little visitx and talks are full of promise If you trent a politician ax a slates man sufficiently it lx possible lie will become one, 11 Im to he hoped the economies upon military things will have cour age. A democratic monarchy with a labor prime minister should weir plain < lot hex. Hriiicutional Policy. Hut these are minor matter*. The immediate text of the labor govern GRIPPE PREVENTION You know that grippe, influenza and other respiratory ailments are caused by germs taking hold of the weaken ed body, but do you realize how true is the old adage 44An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure”? scorn MULSION •> or RURE VITAMIN-RICH COD-LIVER OIL owes its power to prevent weakness by its ability to nourish and strengthen the system and keep resistance normal. Do not let grippe- weakness overtake you, take Scott’s Emulsion and keep strong and vital! •mM a Bawar. *loam*«l<l. N. l M- ill mcnt's quality will he itn treatment of national education. The British educational policy since I he war lias l.i i n mean. t'lilldrcn achieve the status of unemployed adults at 14. Secondary higher education la’a dis located muddle. 1 do not want to undervalue Brit ish education. Compared with other countries, the common citizen of Britain Is well educated, better In formed than the average American common citizen. But, compared with what is needed in a great modern stale he Is pltV fully undereducated. It Is Impossible for the labor government to realise Is ideal of a highly-organised com munity with the British population at the present level of education. To raise that level is s necessary condi tion to lire replacement of llie money . eramble by economic order. IVonpeet Bright. Kor tills reason, Trevelyan Is for me, the most hopeful of all the labor ministers. With his family tradition of high scholarship anil llhernl Itino ration, with h new ferment of mod em creative Ideals In 111" mind, w# may hope for a broad Ira lulling of l he problems of education. The first thing needed Is recogni tion that education must go on n( h-ait to lbs sge of id; that It must In i lurl» a gerrer rl knowledge of the history of th" world and mankind, roe elements of nolllhal and economic solstice, nuns knowledge of th* math ods and scope of biological and physl cal science, n reasonable acquaintance with, Mild tiie use of, at lea^t one for eign language. The raising of the leaving age to ]»• was promised Home years ago by Fisher, probably the feeblest states man who had ever been overruled by his political associates That promise was made when Britain had become h land fit for heroes under the «d<> quent gestures of l.Ioyd tieorgr. It Is for Travel’an now to mat" that promise a reality. F.xlenainit Downward Too. It should also he possible for poor patent* who cannot afford a nursery to send their children to the people *< bools at a quite tender age Children of tlm working class knock about homo with the mother too busy to give them sufficient educational attention; their only open air the street. N ile Hllempts at economy in British education hove meant grave tMtrngi i v dou in this respect. The schools have to he reopened to In fants, facilities for Infant teaching n stored and extended; the public Infant school must he n day nurariv ».f tin poor. These extensions of I be school ag<’ will require more teachers. Moivon r,1 they have to he better teachers ( When Brit tsli elements!' education whs organised In the 70s of 1 ho last century. F.nglislt women of the pus perous rlas -S would boropl* fmilth v 1th JeMlntirv at th*» idea of s house maid wear.rig a fringe or s cook going • nt In pretty clothe* on Sunday. That van the spirit of the time-. It warn intolerable to them that the poor ! mane "hmts" should he educated | person*. Nr pa rate 'reselling four*©*. Prospective teacher* of th© general public, therefore, were not *«*nt through universities and mule part • *f the general comity of educated men and women. They were put «*Ut in training colleges of their own. everything was done to ©stab Mf«h and maintain a sens** of social inferiority In their minds; they were intended to feel the superiority of the parson, the lordship of the manu facturer snd the squire. Never has a profession risen against such obstacle* and riUadv.m tngee h* the British elemental y teacher*. It Is for Trevelyan to com plete the expansion of these training colleges, to see that they get fnrllltle* necessary to Incorporate them com fdcUd.v In the university *\ t*m of the land 41 riding Next slip. Having secured «n adequate sup ply of soundly trained sod educ ated tea* tier*, with the whole youthful population going up to the age of 1ft at least to schools, it will U» possible for Trevelyan t• * gl\© hi* mind to the u»g* i»t pi oldetn of m oling tne m hoots The oi ganixer* of ©lenten tsry education in ilrlUin, 1»We the American fathei* seem to hive thought that a sch >ol w is m*t * school. But children under 13 re quilt different educational surround Imra than those between 1? and 1U. A junior school may well be a mixed village tcbool, an close to tile mother aa possible. The second .-chool need* to be larger, with a various staff; the children are al ready differentiating. Afier 13 there ninat la* 11 choir* of studies: one rhtld'a education la another child's poison. Hero la a very congenial task of reorganization for Trevelyan, lake iidward \ II, It may he hla dettinv to write Ills name upon Kngland with a trail of reconstructed schools Hut an educational system that ee t urea merely proper education for every British boy and ghl up to the age of 1* I* only the broad founds tlon of education. The Kngltsh pub lie arhools, which are not rrally pub lic, retain their hoya In a atate of athleticism two yeais 01 more after II ey should be In college. Modern HeorgaiiUation Needed. A miscellany of upper 1 Ui«» girls' schools, much Incommoded by uinlei graduates ruga, hid *d the whole tangle of the class conscious middle and upper dnss educational uistltu lions In thlteln would be enormously' benefited by a hold attempt at re organisation upon modern lines Preserve Traditions ll will not l>e necessary to stir ills veueialds tradition of ozford and < ambrldgs greatly gomswhgrs the ( us traditions of classical scholar slop and stylistic mathematics should Ix> preserved: there seem to bo th»ir npIKdnted refuges. Hut there ore provincial universities which are still miserably < ramped and poor. For all that, several Sre doing first class uni versity work. There exists now In London In spite of misdirection, a crest group of literary, nrtiatlc. scientific, lrgnl Institutions, which cry aloud to l>c aroupod ami correlated upon broad, congenial lines as an effective Intel lectual nucleus, of the empire, even perhspa of the English-speaking "■■■ "T " —" . . U»\ h KTIM Ml NT Sure Way to Get Rid of Blackheads U on* simple »afe •ml «ur« «ay th»t never fail* to get rid of blackhtnd*. th*t i* to diiiolv* them To do thi* got two ounce* *f catamite powder from »nr drug afore sprinkle .» littlr on • hot wot cloth- rub ov*r the blackhead* hrt*k1y w*»h the iv*rtt and >ou will be aurprt»cd how the hiackhoud* have d -appeared. HIM blockhead*, little blirkliMil*, t*o matter where they are. *im tl> di**i»lvc And disappear Blackhead* An* • »t Uture of du*t a Ax) dirt a A«t secretion* that (omi iu the pore* of the »V »n The calonite pi>* dor And the water dUmltt the hlACkhoAxl* »«» the V W*»h l-ght out. lCA' iAC th* pott* free And clean and in their natural condition world. It is to the loosely co-ordinat ed Institutions, within and without the present uncalled l Diversity* of liOnitun. that I h-'i>c Trevelyan will chiefly direct his attention ua the k|iex of the pyramid 1 hope to see arising, based on the existing prepara top school, on the refashioned pub lic school relieved of Its too mature renters, on (lie revised and strength ened free junior second schools, which should take the place of our existing elementary school*. iCoprrighi. i*N * HAIR BEAUTY ”M«k«* Hair Crow” I.umco is nutre than a hair tonic - it correct* any scalp disorders and restore-* youthful beauty to thin and fading hair Not sticky or greasy For sale by Sherman * McConnell or any drug store f • tahlltliotl 1**4 * • aucroaiftil tra*t*»#wf for R ip without morti*| to a painfui ii»il *’»»t »*al opr rat ton ’rraiwttnt ha* w<ora ta#nt?.fi\r p#aro of •. . r»a hahiad it, *''4 1 rlflim it to hr tha h#*t. 1 <io wot tn^rtt . — — — - 1 • afftna mi •• * cargo « Tim# ra outt.-t for ontioatr fiiM. 1<* 4a^« at rot hrra trith m* \ o dargat o‘ a« -« «P ia a l.nap'tal t ill or wi t« for partiru'a * Dr Fraah H hr«r, Ka *0? North Jttih 5t Omaha. Nah Dnaritoaa 1 ah# a t h or IMfc atraat ,ar going worth a-d nt off at * h and < uming ftta Th >rd ira doaa# aauih.