The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, July 04, 1924, Page 6, Image 6

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    The Omaha Bee
MORNIN G—E V E nTn G—S UNDAY
THE BEE PUBLISHING CO. Publisher
N. B UPDIKE, President
BALLARD DUNN. JOY M HACKLER.
Editor In Chief Business Msnsrer
MEMBER OF THE" ASSOCIATED PRESS ’
The Associated Press, of whirh The Bee is ■ member,
Is exclusive!/ entitled to the uss lor republication of all
nows dispat.-hea credited to it or not otherwise eredited
in thia paper, and also the local news published herein.
All rifhts of repuhlicatinn of our special dispatches sre
also reserved.
The Omshs Fee Is a member of the Audit Burrau of
Circulations, the reeoenired sethorily on circulation audits,
and The Omaha Bee's circulation ts refulsrly audited by
their organizations- _
Entered as second-class matter May 28, 1908,
at Omaha postoffice under act of March 8. 1879.
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k__---—— -—
Omaha Wk > jho^bst is at its Best
FOURTH OF JULY.
This is the Fourth of July, the nation's birth
day.
What does it mean to you? Did you step a little
lighter? Hold your head a little higher? Look
with pride at the flag of your country? keel just
a little more important as you walked along the
treet? Or has the day lost its significance for you,
anti become just another mark on the calendar?
If the latter is true, you need shaking up. Your
moral tone is low. Were your physical condition
r.i bad, you would be under the care of a doctor.
We do not ask that you euddck-.ly develop the con
dition of a jingo, a braggart, or make an infernal
nuisance of yourself by shouting for the old flag,
or anything of that sort. You are only requested
to pay a decent tribute to your citizenship by ac
knowledging with becoming cratitude that you have
the privilege of living under the one great govern
ment “of the people, by the people, for the people,”
that has endured and will endure as long as the
people are true to themselves. And the first sign
of weakening of fiber that sustains that govern
ment is indifference to the Fourth of July.
* * *
We do not celebrate the Fourth of July as once
it was observed. It would be well if we did. Such
observance would offend none but those to whom
the very existence of this government is an offense.
We have in our land a few misguided mortals who
look upon our system as a failure. They can not
or will not see what it has done for humanity
throughout the 148 years that have passed since
the old Liberty Bell rang out its message, literally
speaking in response to its motto, “Proclaim Liberty
throughout the land, unto all the inhabitant there
of.” Such jaundiced souls would be unhappy wher
ever they might exist on earth. Healthy minded
people feel sorry for them.
On the old fashioned Fourth of July a great
deal of flapdoodle was uttered, hut it was of a stim
ulating variety. The speeches made were inspired
by a patriotic desire to uplift the hearts and minds
of men to higher and better things, to a fuller enn
c'-ption of the blessings and a more complete realiza
tion of the responsibilities of American citizenship.
What if they did
"lon«e
Stranprr tonsil*4? that hft'f* not Thro !n awr
Sucll boastings ns the Gentiles up**
And lr«s»r breeds without iiif 1- w '*
* ?.n we not still pray
For frantic boast and foolish wml,
Thy mercy or Thy people. Lord.'*
* * *
On that day was brought forth a government,
r> Lincoln said, ‘‘dedicated to the proposition that
all men are created equal.” For almost a rentory
end a half, through war, through adversity and
prosperity, that thought has kept alive this nation,
‘‘conceived in 'liberty." Once each year for 14»
ye*rs, Americans have paused to celebrate in some
fitting fashion the anniversary of the signing of
that great Declaration of Independence which sets
cut that governments “derive their just powers from
♦he consent of the governed."
That is the life, the very heart of heart? of the
f ourth of July. From the consent of the soverned
■< r.ot an idle phr.i'e. not a mockery of man's hope?.
\M«rri is great, because its government has ex
'■'cistd its just power? only in response to 'he wilt
of a free people.
Is it not fitting, ‘her. the' that peorlc today cele
brate itself, its ?trerigth, its authority, its service
to ?he human rncc, and it? own hope for the future?
Not boastfully, r't with undue pomp, bu: with the
dignity of i's might, and 'he humility of its pcv.'ci
under God?
Old Glory is not ri painted rag. The Fourth of
duly is not an empty holiday. Together they are the
symbol and the meaning of the greatest event In
human history since that sad day on Calvary. And.
as the sun of Easter morning shone on thp open.
• mpty tomb, betokening the emancipation of thp
human aoul from the bondage of denth, ao the sun
of July 4th denotes the emancipation of the human
soul from the t.hralldom of despotism.
Be glad today, then, and rejoince 'hat you are
* citizen of the United States. And if you are not.
rejoice that the Declaration of Independence was
signed, and that the United States exists, for its
message is to all the world.
THE WORLD IS GROWING SMALLER.
The airplane, the railroad, the telephone ami the
radio have so contracted the limits of the world
that today Omaha and New York, or Now York and
London, visit much like our mothers of thp old days
visited over the hack fence. The automobile has
made neighbors of those who were ton miles away
only yesterday.
All this ha* resulted in added joys to those
who spend their vacation* in automobiling or travpl
to some far-off resort. It gives an added zest to life
to pull into some tourist camp in the pvening and
have some friend or acquaintance give the joyful
hail:
“Hello there, old top! Where from and whither
bound?’*
It may have been an acquaintance made 1,000
mflea away last summer, or the summer befora. It
bt » Iriajjd made tjunng a. invention in • 41a
tant city a few years ago, or an acquaintance met
on the train while traveling back from California.
No matter, the joya of the (lay are added to, and the
evening passes more quickly and pleasantly.
Today our neighbors are not merely those who live
juRt across the street, or just around the corner or
in the next block. Our neighbors are scattered from
Vancouver to Tampa, from Brownville to Bangor.
Yes, sir; the world is growing smaller, and be
cause we are becoming neighbors and friends, the
world ia growing better. It is growing better, despite
the plaints of the pessimists and the doleful dol
drums of the professional reformers.
FLIGHT OF THE AIR MAIL.
One swallow, we are told, does not make a
summer. One flight across the continent came
mighty near establishing a great social service. It
was the experimental flight, made months ago, when
the air mail pilots carried on both ways between
New York and San Francisco. Based on the knowl
edge then gained, the regular scheduled flights of
the continuous service are now in force.
A letter mailed in New York one morning is de
livered in Omaha the next, and in San Francisco on
the second evening. Grown indifferent in the
presence of many marvels, the world does not pause
long to heed the flight of the air mail. It is a dif
ferent society from that which greeted the Mont
golfier experiments with a balloon made buoyant
by heated air. Or the the throngs that lined the
banks of the Hudson to watch Robert Fulton's
“folly” churn its way against the current. Or those
who wagged their heads with grave forebodings
when Jimmie Stephenson’s “Lion" snorted down the
track at the incredible speed of 12 miles per hour.
Ninety miles an hour is the running time for the air
mail,
A new von Zeppelin is again talking of the 67
hour flight between Berlin and New York. This
was proposed before the war turned the Zeppelin
from the service of commerce to the work of de
struction. It can be made use of in peace. The
Shenandoah has solved a great many of the prob
lems, and other dirigibles have shown much of the
way to be fairly easy. Transoceanic flight need not
be regarded as a vision.
Man is moving from point to point very rapidly
nowadays. Stage coaches look well in pictures, and
(mack of romance and adventure, but the automo
bile. the airplane, and electric locomotive have ush
ered in a new era. We must adjust ourselves.
THE JEWEL CONSISTENCY.
About the only consistent thing about Mr. Bryan
is his inconsistency. Those who can remember hi*
genesis as a politician will contrast hi* present po
sition on prohibition with his pronouncements
against sumptuary legislation when he wm a candi
date for congress the first time. They will also con
trast his championship of equal suffrage with his re
fusal to sign a petition for it a few years ago when
he was a potential candidate for a third presidential
nomination.
But Mr. Bryan’s consistent inconsistency was
never better shown than in his fight upon John W.
Davis and his championship of W. G. McAdoo. Hr
opposes Davis because of the Davis connection with
Standard Oil and the Morgan interests, and cham
pions McAdoo in spite of his connection with Do
heny, the Morse coal case and the Big Four of the
moving picture industry. He overlook* the fact that
Davis has appeared as the lefcal counsel of many of
the organizations for which Mr. Bryan professes
love and loyalty, surh as the striking West Virginia
miners and the American Federation of Labor. So
far as known McAdoo never attracted any particular
attention as a lawyer until after he had resigned
from the cabinet, and then his legal knowledge was
less sought after than his personal influence with
treasury subordinates of his own appointment.
The spectacle of Mr. Bryan hurling jermiads at
D«vis with one hand and with the other hand ad
justing a halo to the head of McAdoo is one that
might incline angels to weep. It certainly does fur
nish further evidence that- his consistency is con
fined wholly to his inconsistency.
Mr. Bryan's opposition to Mr. Davis because the
latter has appeared as attorney for Standard Oil
and J. P. Morgan reminds us that. Mr. Bryan once
appeared in court ns the legal representative of the
Missouri Pacific railroad.
II. L. Mencken docs no* like the present form
of nationsl conventions. The Cleveland meeting
was too cold, the New York meeting too hot. A
happy highbrow medium seems to he the nerd.
Japan blew off quite a hit of steam to denote
the coming of July 1, and prabahly lowered the
pressure under the danger point. The immigration
law went into effect just, the same.
Nebraska delegates at Ne.w York may he scatter
ing just now, hut, you watrh them land in the hand
wagon when it comes along.
Talk about tragedy a want ad a»ks information
I concerning a lost pillow rase which contained three
hats and a man’s wig.
j
Baltimore was all set to have the second section ,
of the convention transferred there, but New York j
cooled off in time.
.So far *s history records no great grandfather
lin- ever been elected president of this republic.
Consistency is a jewel never yet seen scintillat
I ing on the heaving bosom of W. J. B.
The favorite song of the Nebraska farmers right
■ now is “In This Wheat By and By.’’
- —— -.. —
Delegates must be impatient when they will not
listen to Mr. Bryan.
J -\
Homespun Verse
—By Omaha’s Own Po*t—
Robert Worthington Davie
V__ ■ -/
TRUE KINGLINESS.
I'm filled with lore of anverelgnv and aolona giant and
wl**\
My thought* are growing weary with the aatellltee
of Tima.
The gin.*-* of y third monument* l* blinding fo my ayaa.
I'm Main t hing for ;i gllmpae of that which prurient «
mould* auhllma.
Within tha modest cot I peer at avertible vlow
A tired llttla woman, smiling aweetlv aa aha *lng*
And gently rock a n baby ** devoted mothera do.
While leaving for a moment other pretalng household
thing*.
A down tha lane romath carrying hi* luncheon pall—
One who t* more familiar with the hummer than the
tome,
Whoaa day* at* glarilv given that *ach morrow will gvail
Tha f&ithfulne** of thoea who make hi* humble hotiae
a home.
Thl* I* to m* true kinghnea* he jeweled and divine;
Thla la to me symbolical of prngre** day by day,
And whan the lamp* around thl* h*arth at night lima
brightly ahlne.
Their mallow rave Illuminate the dark, dark. Far- |
owgy, j
e
f Stuck Between Floors and Can’t Move Up or Down 1
i
f——---'I
“From State and Nation”
—Editorials from Other Newspapers—
____—-'
Fruitful Middlew eat.
josi'h Jl»rx»r»h*linrr in MrNsufht'a,
If I were young. If I could begin
again and select the place of liegin
ntng, the middlewest would l*a my
choice. I'd write in the language of
the people, a language rich with local
Idiom, and absolutely provincial; a
prose, 1 hope, as sweet with the
scent of dried hay a» it »»"
brilliant with early wheat and bit
ter with death.
One form of existence may well he
no more interesting or lmportatd
than another: but life Itself, Io\e and
birth and the getting of food and
dying, ha* a magic which the so
phistication of life and habit misses
And when such essential being Is
actually set in the snll of Its susten
ance, a part of the round of the *e«
son. when If is all one from the seed
Ing to stored barns, woven and Inter
woven, then its beauty if supreme.
Talk Sense.
Prom the Milwaukee SMiMttrl.
The country la In for il* quadren
nial upheaval. For the next few
months the air will resound with the
echoes of campaign oratory. The
spellbinder will he busy and eln
quence of one qualify or another will
fill the national ear.
There are evident algo" that the
people have grown weary of politir.il
buncombe. Despite the earnest ef
forts of opposition leader* to db
credit the republican convention, the
business-like atmosphere and the se
lection of candidates who are known
definitely to stand for stralghtfor
wnrd dealing hat' made a strong
popular appeal which It will bs d.ffi
cult to effac e.
But to sustain that Impreaslon
campaign oratory should be of the
same stamp. Thera should Ice an
elimination of the yarns promise of
a millennium. There should he no
telling this group or that group that
It I* pos-lblo to give Them prosperity
by government flat or that they can
be hoisted to affluence at the expense
of some other part of the population.
There ate clear, clean rut Issues
•o be discussed. Mr. Coolidge Is
known to stand decisively and cour
ageously for common sense govern
ment. His associate. General Hawes,
has put himself emphatically on rec
ord as purposing to discuss these Is
sues honestly and to draw from the
facts the common sense conclusions
which they warrant "
It l» along those tinea that the ap
proaching campaign will ha waged
by the intelligent campaign orator.
Vnd the platfuiin worker who seeka
to participate In the exercises of the
next few months should have that
fact Impressed on him.
“No Wage Culling, Now.”
Krccm che Brooklyn Kegie
It 1“ not Samuel Gompers. but Wil
liam ,M. Wood, president of the Abler
lean Woolen Company, who makes
this statement:
"N'n true American, at this time.
,would wish to see any reduction In
the general purchasing consumption
power of this country. We do not
think this 1s the proper time to con
elder a reduction In wages.”
To this extent and degree the Ideas
of the textile magnate and of the
labor magnate may be said to run
along parallel lines Only Mr. Hood
seems by Implication to hint that
there may be a “proper time' for
wage reduotion. whlrh Mr. Gompers
would emphatically d»nv. Also the
captain of Industry adds, not with
nu* significance
"The outlook for business nuts!
steadily Iroprnva as ths political sit
nation for a business administration
advances,”
And In the letter proposition he Is
far mors likely to have the approval
and applause of his fellow textile
magnate, William M Butler of New
Bedford, than that of Mr. Qompera
We can only wonder If the working
people of the f:tc lories will be shie
ld Interpret for tliemeelves t lie .
crele meaning of a business admin
laimtloii" as Mr. Hood understands
it. _
Too Kind Hearted.
Foreman no slow moving workman!
-'Ere. now, you’re too kind 'earted
for this Joti afraid of 'itting a nail
'aid for fc:ir of urtlng It! larndon
Mull.
Th’ real test o' th' woman in
politic* i* Roin' t' come when th’
newspaper artist* bcRin’ t’ carica
ture her. One Rood thinR a con
gressman can’t live on hi* salary.
<<'npyrt|ht, 112 4 )
NET AVERAGE
PAID CIRCULATION
for Muy, 1924, of
THE OMAHA BEE
Daily. 73,980
Sunday.,. . . 76,373
Dfiti nnt Inrliid# raturna, l#ft
nvm, MtnpUl nr papai a tpnilrd in
printing and Inc ludra nn aprrial
ag|a« nr liar r initiation nf any kind
V. A. BRIDGE, Cir. Mir.
iubsrrlbad and sworn to haforo ms
this Sth day si Juna, 1924
W. H. QUIVEY,
(■sal) Notary Public
V'W'tom.I i
Powder With Cuticura
Talcum After Bathing
After a hath with Cvitlcttra Soap and
* »rm water Cuticura Talcum duated
oter the aim la soothing, cooling
and refreshing. If the ailn la rough
or Irritated, anoint with Cuticura
Ointment to aootht and haal.
5a2r£r
»>«•■ a«.a, di.MMtaueaaa. t»'o—*.
WT Ter mm »«» >ha»laa itlei.
/
Letters From
Our Readers
All letters must be signed, but name
will lie withheld ilium request, t i.m
munleattiiHs of 10« sordi and less
will be given preference.
V._J
Worker*' View of Convention.
Omaha—To ihe Editor of The
Omaha Her: I happened to meet with
a gang of workmen at the lunch
hour. I presume they were Seventh
Day Adventists, but they denied it.
and aald they could not Tiave any
religion because th* y worked seven
days every week, and some t me*
eight or ten
They were not discussing the N'ew
York convention. In plain English,
they were cussing it, and for no sc
and oratory the said New York c*m*
venflon had nothing on them, even
If it was the Hahhath day
The most pugnacious one was verv
emphatic that the platform commit
tee were not mechanics or builders at
all. They were just a few spare men
from the 1'nited State* Wrecking
company. The amen*'' hanllv died
out before he was called down with
"What can you expectT They had
to have enough lumber to make it
broad and tore down the O'. O. 1*.
platform to get It. Nearly all they
had themselves was dead stuff, and
dhl not work In good, and the plank
(that was new was sawed out of a
green tree, warped and twisted, and
the longer they worked the worse It
got, until It rolled up like a hoop
snake and tumhted right out on to
the floor of the convention, and scared
them Into hysterics."
Then they had an old fashioned
"wake" over the dead Issue of the
league of na'lons. and how could they
stand It without taking off their
shoes and thev r|aim they didn't
And the gentleman from the south
got his for trying to put m his grand
idads plank that kil'ed the Know
nothing party, for if It d:d It must
have kicked hack for th" democratic
party had to wait until their grand
children got the vole before thev were
able to elect another president,
i Th* republicans were solemnly
warned If thev sawed off the cle
phant's tall with l.a Eollette sitting on
It they were committing suicide. Hut
When in Omaha
Hotel Conant
250 Rooms—250 llaths— Rates $2 to $5
Stop that
Eczema/
AMAZING results have been
produced by S. S. S. in casea
of eczema, pimples, blackhead*
*nd other skin eruptions. If you
have been troubled with eczema,
and you have
used skin ap
plications
without num
ber, make a
test yourself,
on yourself
with a bottle
of S. S. S , one
of the most powerful blood cleans
er* known. S. S. S. makes the
blood rich and pure, and when
your blood is freed of impuri
ties your »tubborn ecrema. rash,
tetter, skin eruptions, pimples,
blackheads, blotches and acne are
bound to disappear. There are no
unproven theories about S S. S :
the scientific results of each of it*
purely vegetable medicinal ingre
dients are admitted by authorise*.
^ 8. t* »• all g.-rd
* drug (lor** In two aiaa* Tha
dls larger ain la mora aronomical.
H&C C C ^"Worlds Bert
jflgy w). J. Jt 7<Iu<k1 Mr-slidne
SUNNY SIDE UP
cJaJte Qomfoct. not foroet
9/ui/ sunrisej
Jl IA FOURTH.
The crackers won’t sound gA loud to tna
As they did In a past July;
And rockets won’t soar so bright snd free
As they did In" the Fourths gone bv.
The noise and the smoke and milling great
Mill frazzle mV nerves to wrerk.
But Dannie and Jack must celebrate.
And I'm gonna to help ’em. by heck!
I hate the crackers that hang and roar,
Torpedoes that snap and ling:
The rockets and candles that brightly soar,
The chasers that buzz and sing
But Dannie and Jack must celebrate.
And hoping to save them burn I
I'll have to ban'ah my dread snd hate
To «how 'em Just how, by durn!
Oh. gee. I’m dreading the whole dec's fuss
And shudder to play It through!
I But Dannie and Jack make such a fuss
There's only one thing to do.
I'll light their crackers with smoking punk,
pretending I'm quite blase.
But Dannie and Jack well know that's bunk—
I I'll enjoy it as much as they.
Merely because we fear that a very large portion of the
vmerlcan public will overlook the fact, we order the piesaes
-topped while we Insert in this department a little reminder
tu the effect that July 4 was the date on which a number of
bewigged, thoughtful and patriotic gentlemen adopted the
Declaration of Independence, therefore bringing about the birth
of the United States of America. It wouldn't hurt a bit to
keep this fact in mind doting at least a small portion of the
da y.
Nebraska I.iinerkk.
There was a girl In Kenesaw
M’ho wed a shiek with much edaw
K'er one month sped
The newly wed
Came home to live upon her paw.
| "How long is that session going to last?" inquired an Irate
Omaha father shortly after the clock had rhlmed the hour of
midnight.
"It is hard to tell, father," replied his daughter in accents
sweet. "It is deadlocked now."
The chances are that If eome clearvoiced man should
stand up before a huge crowd today and start to reading the
Declaration of Independence, three.fourths of the crowd would
listen about a minute, then mutter. Ain't that the bunk," end
hasten off to where the orchestra is rendering the jazzv jazz.
WILD M. MAUPIN.
.. ■ -*J
the ghost of the Know-nothing party
stampeded the democrats into a riot
unparalleled in a national convention.
And the silvery words of the great
Commoner Is all that stopped the
party from committing hari kari.
Just as I adjourned myself, one
fellow drawled: "No ghost can't split
the democrats. Them kluxers has
some hoss sense, and self respect, and
would not get insulted by t,he kick
of a jackass ’ O. H. HENRY.
Coal Figures.
Of the 1.335,000.000 metric tuns of
coal produced in the principal coun
tries of the world in 1923. the share
of the United States was nearly 5*1.
000,000 tons. Great Britain supplies
29.1.000,000 tons World production in
1922 was 1.223.000.000 tons and 1,132.
000,000 tons In 1921. The percentage
of the United States of the total was
43>4 in 1923, 354 In 1922. and 40*4 in
1921.—Automotive Industries.
Center Shots
A vanity case may seem absurd
to the male but the girl* mu*t hare
some way to carry their bathing
suits.—New Haven Register.
As a public enterprise Muscle
Phoals should, at least, afford a nice
reserve for lame ducks.—Jersey City
Journal.
The two Chicago boys who thought
murder a thrilling adventure are fel
ting the thrills now.—Dallas Ness
France i* now menaced by the
Ameri -an potato bug America should
send over some Pans green.—Tacoma
News Tribune.
AA'e wonder at the moderation of
Will Hays. He could dean up by
running Doug Fairbanks for tha
presidency and Charlie Chaplin for
vice - Columbia Record.
MMKKThKMKNT. \nVEETIMtMR>T.
MRS. WOODWARD GIVES
FACTS TO THE PUBLIC
Omaha Lady Says 4 Bot
tles of Tanlac Brought
Relief.
"Tallin* .s Ihe beet medicine I ever
heard of, end I know something along
this line, too, for I was reared in a
doctor s family and studied nursing
for a while," recently declared Mrs.
June Woodward, 521 South 25th Ave.,
Omaha, Neh.
"I have never felt better In my life
than 1 do since taking Tanlac, and 1
just can't praise it enough. Tet, a
few weeks ago 1 never felt so worn
out and bad. I hadn t a bit of strength
and energy, and would be a* worn
out in the mormngs *a et the finish
of the day.
' 1 have row finlahed four bottle* of
Tanlac and feel wonderful. I est
everything, have gained seven pounds
and think Tanlac i* bo fine that 1
want everybody who it complatniag
to try it. The change in my condi
tion is so radical and complete as to
aetonleh nte. People In need of a
good medicine end tonic will find
Tanlac Ideal from every standpoint.
Tanlac is for sale by all good drug
gists. Accept no substitute. Over 4t>
million bottles sold.
Tanlac Vegetable Pills for constipa
tion. Made and recommended by tha
manufacturers of TANLAC.
For a home, warmer in winter, cooler
in summer, more comfortable all year,
more valuable to sell, build with
Celotex. Phone for details and price.
Updike Lumber and Coal Co.
I WHAT SCHOOL OR COLLEGE? ,
The School and College Bureau of The Omaha i
Bee will help you in the selection of a school, col- |
lege or university. Information about the best insti- I
tutions of any classification will be furnished upon |
your filling out the blank below:
— Acrfiuntmcy —Girls' Bnarding School
Advertising School —Girl*' School
— An School —Journalism
- Bonking snd Hnsnr# — Kinder garton Training
- .Boys* Prep School —Lon Schoc.
—Sch"®.‘ , . . -Mrdicino
lliismri. Administration
Buain»*a College (Co-edu« atl«>nal) “ Military Academy
Lor Girl* and Women --Muaic
— Buaine** Col'ego — Normal School
- Catholic School* for Bora - Nuraea* School
Catholic School* for Girl* —-Pharmacy
Collrf« for Voung Women — Phv*rc*' Fduration School
College or Untv«t any —Retail Manafemot
Dentistry - School o» Commeic*
Elocution, Oratory and Dramatic -Sale* Manager
Ai | —Comptometer School
location preferred .••••••••••• o ...» ..o ••••••*••«•••• • •
Prnlnlanl .Catholic ..
Nnmo . • ....
Addrrii.*.... ...
Enclose 2c Stamp and Mail to
School and College Bureau
THE OMAHA REE
Omaha, Neb.
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