Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 05, 1909, EDITORIAL, Page 3, Image 11

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THE 0fAITA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTErBETl 3, 1900.
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LATIN QUARTER OF TODAY
Joy in the Cafe Still nd Dreamt in
the Garret
SUMMER SCENES IN GAY BOHEMIA
Quarter's View of Mfe Mrr Tr
Hopes and "offerings of
A merles n A Preliminary
. View of Matisse.
r
PARIS. Bept. 4 Men may come and
men my go whtch they do continually.
anJ In consequence the Latin Quarter go
on forever.
There are no end of people, both m Paris
and without, who will sny that the scene
of Du Maurler's "Trilby" and of Murger'
"Vlo de Boheme" Is changed beyond reeog
n It Ion. Tet the prodlcal ion returning to
the Quarter will hear the same old stories
and a few new ones. He will see the same
girls flitting In and out of the cafes and
tudlos, or If not the same their daugh
ters. He may lament that the Latin Quar
ter as such has passed away, but he will
know If he Is truthful that the change Is
probably In himself alone.
Seat yourself at a corner table under
the chestnut trees of the Cafe d'Harcourt.
, which still preserves Its position on the
. edge of Bohemia. It Is a place now where
people go to eat, not merely to look and
seek for adventure, because the food Is as
good as any In the Quarter, but Just the
same that does not prevent the gourmets
and their friends from recognizing the fact
that besides themselves there Is a fair per
centage of guests who go there for the
same reasons that they have always gone
from habit, because fortune has smiled,
because here are to be found the prettiest
girls and the most tuneful music, or for
half a hundred other causes.
R a peris Disagree.
Two residents of Paris, members of
your party, take opposite sides of the ques
tion whether or not the Quarter has essen
tially changed, and In the Intervals when
your attention Is not distracted by the
( Inrmatograph of life you listen and learn.
"For Instance, there," and the English
man points to the figure flitting by of a
KuK.Man girl, who looks scornfully at the
table under the trees, at the scarlet coated
orchestra, at everybody and everything.
"Sho used to dine here every night, not
always with the same vis a vis, but al
ways with the same appetite. Now she
apparently scorns the place because It baa
fallen from Its former estate of belonging
to the students and. their feminine com
panions." The American la differently Informed,
and says: "She can't come here any mora.
She Is a well known anarchist, belongs to
several societies, and one night she threw
a bomb In a cafe down the street."
"Threw a bomb!" gasps an American
woman, looking as If she wanted to re
turn to the safer side of the Betne.
t A Frenchman In the party explains:
"The Paris officials are still very crude
In their methods. It Is so easy for them
to understand. If they would, that If a
poor girl Has a bomb she must throw It.
What else can she do with It? It Isn't the
kind of thing that you can take home with
you, now, Is It? We will be mare civilised
sorr.e day, I hope and recognize these subtle
excuses."
Who (peaks the English.
To prove his contention still further
that the quarter looks at life In a half
humorous, half cynical way, essentially its
own the American repeats a story heard
that day or a smaller caie near tty wnicn
bears the sign "Id on pnrle Anglais," and
when you ask for the person who speaks
English, you are Informed by the French
speaking proprietor, "It Is our patrons who
apeak English." -The English member of
the party contends that the story la neither
young nor old, which is as fatal for a
story as for a woman. "There Is another
verslnn of It serosa the Seine, where a
fashionable modiste to whom flock a large
clientele of American women, has In her
showroom, 'Here we speak French,' " he
says. '
The American tries again. Tou have
heard of the American student arrested be
cause he stopped one of the gendarmes who
bear on their sleeves , the announcement
that they speak German, English and
Frrnrh, and disbelieving, asked seriously,
'Is this the Boulevard Montparnasse or
Thursday?' In good Anglo Saxon and was
punched for his sorry Jest."
Thrn you learn that the Englishman's
vexation Is rrally due to the fact that the
Quarter Ih no longer a locality where the
TALKS ON TEETH
By
DR. E. R. L MURPHY
The Value of
1 Beautiful
Teeth
The value of teeth good teeth,
white, dazzling teeth ia not to be
measured in dollars and cents.
Beautiful teeth are the biggest and
best assets that men and women can
possess, for they not only attract at
tention, but they beautify a face that
might otherwise he hopelessly plain
, without such help.
Then, too. beautiful teeth keep the
' body in good repair, for It follows that
, beautiful teeth must he good teeth and
that they will be perfect aids to the
; proper mastication of the food.
All of this you will admit, but what
of the man or woman who has loBt
teeth through pyorrhea or poor den
' tlstry and Is wearing a partial plate or
a disfiguring bridge? Why, the Alveo
lar Method for them. We supply tooth
less people with beautiful, white das
zllng teeth that look and act like they
grew in the Jaws.
There is no surgery, no operation,
nothing painful about the work from
start to finish, and when the teeth are
in, they are In for keeps.
If you wear a partial plate and are
tired or it, there Is immediate eman
cipauon ior you, provided you nave two
or more teeth left in either Jaw. With
these to work from, we supply all that
. are missing.
If you are near enough to our office
to rail, let us make an examination of
your mouth free of any charge or ob
ligation.
a V Those who ran not rail should send
T 'at once for nur free book, which ex
plains the Alveolar Method a valu
able work on tha very Important sub
ject of the teeth and their car. Send
today for your copy.
V
DR. E. R. L MURPHY
512 N. Y. L DIdg.
ruffle and the frill allure with their old
time fascination.
"When I first came," be announces in a
grieved tone, 'the girls wore those train
ing bits of lace and muslin and when you
turned a corner there was slwsys a little
snowstorm of lingerie coming your way,
but the shesth skirt dines and the girl."
can't snd don't hold up their dresses an'l
there are no more ruffles, no more frills.
I think the Quarter has gone to the dogs."
Tale of the Automobile.
The American In answer points out
three Murger typs to fho life. They are
a rolllrklnc trio and he knows an amus
ing story about them. The quarter Is stt'i
laughing about It.
"It seems," he says, "that last winter
they manajred to exchange three portraits
for an automobile, the owner preferring the
canvases depicting his wife and two daugh
ters to the machine. It was a second
hand machine, but then the pictures were
not specially good either, so the artists
congratulated themselves on having the
best of the bargain.
"But artistic to the core, they forgot the
mere commercial detail that It Is necessary
to have a chauffeur and petrol to run
a machine of this description. They bad
no money, no credit and no more pictures
to sell, but at the special cafe where, like
most of the denizens of the quarter, they
received and wrote their letters, the stu
dents' club In a word, they broached the
subject to the proprietor. Would he allow
them to keep the auto at his door? He
fell on their shoulders with delight. Would
he allow It T Would It not on the contrary
give his cafe an air that others did not
possess to have an automobile there all the
timer
"So it remained, rain and shine, and oc
casionally when a friend would sell a pic
ture or get a remittance he would set up
petrol Instead of a drink, hire a chauffeur,
and then Joy reigned supreme. 'And yet
you say', groans the American, 'that there
is no quarter. Think what Murger would
have done with that story!"
The Englishman looks attentively at the
trio.
Mn rarer "Types to Order.
I'll wager that at the present moment
they draw regular dinners from the prti
prletor to come here and sit Look at
I heir rigs. Every popular cafe in the
quarter has a similar trio who sit near the
door sipping deml-brur.es nonchalantly or
In a conspicuous place In the Inner room
to be unconscious of the attention they ex
cite. Then comes along the party of Amer
ican tourists and one of the girls shout
'Look at that Murger to the life! There's
Rudolph! There's Muroel and dear old
Schaunard! It's cut. and dried. Latin
quarter, indeed! The first you know soma
enterprising restaurant in New York wlU
start a trio of that kind as one of its at-
tractions.' "
"But." persisted the American, "the
types existed before Murger wrote. He
didn't create them. He photographed them
and they exist today Just the same. If a
few of them are clever enough to get
money for their leisure hours, so much the
better or the worse but It does hot
change the contention that In spite of ad
vertising Innovations the Quarter's life is
practically the same "
. The question Is then asked of the 13-year
old resident as to what becomes of the
girls and . the students when there
Is no more money In the ginger Jar and no
outlook ahead. "The girls must sometimes
get wrinkles and avoirdupois, the students
face a time when even starvation becomes
monotonous," It Is suggested.
How the Girls Manage.
The resident point to a matronly figure
selling roses to aV'psrtX of 'diners.
"Yeare ago," he says, "that woman was
one of the most admired of the girls In the
Quarter. Her day Is over and she has
drifted Into this work and has probably a
competence besides. She likes It better
than being a concierge or any employment
that would take her awsy from the Quar
ter's life entirely. Most of these women
are thrifty; they have all the nice little
domestlo vtrtues, are neat and eoonomtcal
and have an eye on the future.
"And the artists. I saw one the other
day. He was fat and prosperous. He
makes some S00 francs a week. He loved
the life and stayed In It Just as long as he
could, long enough to prove that he had
no talent and long enough to acquire a
certain facility for technique. Thin man
paints pigs for a merry-go-round tompany.
Paris adores pigs, and he does them well.
Me is quite happy and Is married. He
speaks of himself still as an artist. You
will find others of his Ilk painting signs
and doing odd Jobs of that kind better
than ordinary workmen could do them.
owing to their training, and In consequence
making good money."
Then to make his contention stronger by
proof positive the American demands that
the party follow him away from the
brightly lighted cafe with Its air of pros
perity and artificial setting Into' the real
life of the working quarter. The path
leads by various other cafes, eaoh with Its
special crowd of diners. Joyous and con
tent. At one of these In an Inner room a
rich American Is sprinkling the floor with
sugar through a perforated sugar scoop
nd contending loudly that as he Is the
only one who Is spending real money there
he shall do as he pleases. Some one dubs
the picture "The Sands of Pleasure" In
compliment to the latest best seller of the
Latin quarter, and the march Is resumed.
You aee many venders of graceful
statuettes and many flower girls a few
pretty, all graceful. Htudenla swagger
from side to side of the road Blnglng, and
occasionally you note an automobile pass
ing, the chauffeur feminine wearing with
a smart air her linen coat and polished
leather cap.
You have pointed out the corner where
In the season the models congregate, espe
cially on Monday mornings, and after hold
ing up the students who pais to and from
their breakfast make the dally round of
the studios. They will perch In the courts
and In the streets, any pose from that of
Mercury to that of Father Tiber, and say
in whining tones, "I can stay like this for
days," tha attitude being one that no
human being could hold longer than three
minutes. Or, perhaps. It la, "You do not
know me, Monsieur? Not know me? I
have been in the Salon J 000 times. The
last time I was Jesus Christ."
At present the quarter is practically
dead so far as this part of Its life is con
cened. The students and artists are given
up to the vacation days or painting some
where In the open, and the professional
models are having hard times and are sup
plementing their work of the winter with
anything they can get to do, a great many
of them acting a guides to tha quarter
for curious voyagers.
Im a Rtaner's Stidlo.
The particular studio you have come to
visit Is reached through a dark and narrow
courtyard, and up some stairs you climb
guided only by the sound of footsteps In
front of you. The studio is off the Boule
vard Montparnasse on a by street Sud
denly the stairway comes into the open
and you climb another flight, with only a
aarrow rail to protect you from a tumble
Into the street. Then another Immersion
Into the shadows of the building, another
coming Into the light, always climbing,
climbing, climbing and you have arrived.
The studio, deep, high and desolate. Is
lighted by a meagre flame comlug from a
kerosene lamp over which la hung a pink
ish silk shade, which with Its torn garland
of roees an silken panel strike a sinister
OOCOCOOOCQOOOCOOOOOOOCOOOCOOCCCOCOCOOCOCOOOOOO
ill
The furniture you want Is IIF.KK In this CiKEAT SKITKMBEU HALF. OK Fl KMTl ltK. Anl your money li.is
buying; power from 2. to HO PHK CKXT above normal. Ol'll VAST OIUJA NI'.ATIOX, Ol'll INMMI Ti:i IU Y1NU
CAPACITY AMI Ol'It FOHTTNATK PLACING OK OUOFHS during Ihf fa tory'tt "no work" period, have enable!
us to OKKEIl VOf during this p-eat sale of furniture an array of MATCHLESS Fl'KNlTl'KH HAIttiAlNS. During the
past month carload after carload of furniture has arrived, and van load after van load has bten imloadod Into out
spacious ware rooms. For days and nights skilled workmen have boen busy arranging these goo:! for your Inspec
tion. The savings offered you are most substantial. 1MKVT. YOl' THINK YOl' 8IIOI Ll PROFIT HV THF.SK (JHKAT
SAVINGS? Let the PEOPLES STORE deliver your household goods tomorrow, or any day this week or month. Ol'H
MATCHLESS CREDIT SYSTEM the system of the preple IS AT YOFH SERVICE DIRIMJ THIS FN TIRE HALE.
Remember all goods advertised are on sale every day this, Week, and can be had at the price and ou the W-rms ad
vertised. WE TRUST THE PEOPLE.
SJ3.50
For
$20
this Massive
SIDEBOARD
Terms I 91 Cash, Balaao Bssy."
This massive SIDBBOAJLD Is of
a superior construction, and is
positively an uneqaled vslue. I
exactly a Illustrated and Is con
structed of selected materials and
Is highly finished In a quartered
oak effect. Has French bevel
plate mirror.
ml 'Mitt
III rJDjCaT
- - 1 !,. --MM ... ,,.,.,... ,,.
ii' ! i iiiiii im ii- - ti i i ir - - rii ' .. ..ii. fl
fjtip Cfl FOB THIS ELEGANT AND MASSIVE CHASE tW5iS"s 1
Ik I rleUU LEATHFB COICH. ACTUALLY WORTH IO. 1rfiiT ';?5k
4
Note the Mnsslve and Heavily Carved Frame. Note
the Maselve Upholstering. An Elegant, High Grade
Conch la Offered You at tha Price of the Commonplace.
Goods
Advertised on
Salt Every
Da This
Week
S16.50
For this Elegant and Massive Chase . """V "k? v nmatchabie value, rt
t?Arurn ' upholstered In genuine Chase leather that bears a pos-
Lt A f HLK COUCH ltlve guarantee. The frames are of senulna urt mm-mmA
Term 1.50 Cash) Balance "Basy." oax ana are rubbed and polished to a piano brilliancy.
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SEIPTEIVHIBEIR. SALE OIF IFUJIRMITILJIRE
A Double Sizs Furniture Sals of Vast Possibilities for Eonomicil House Wives -S23E32E!a r
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SQ.75 Fori Until Situ Wilut
v Kitchen Cabinet
Tsrmat 91 Cash, Balance 'ay."
Thewe beautiful XXTOBJUr OAI
KITS are finished In a handsome
satin walnut, the base Is large and
la fitted with two 60-pound flour or
meal bins, two large cutlery drawer
and a bread and meat boanl It I
complete with upper cabinet and la
actually worth 1 16.00.
SI3-75
"C3
For this Elegant
522.00
China Closet
Store
Closes
Monday
at Noon
Store
Closes
Monday
at Noon.
Term
1 Cash. Balaao "Easy."
It Is exactly like illustration and --
is positively tne granaesi vaiue
we ever offered in a high grade,-
COSUTA CX.OBBT. It la construc
ted of genuine quarter sawed oak
and Is highly polished. Hns bent
glass ends of double strength and
adjustable shelves, grooved for
plates.
"JUS SJJ I aU
Q9R.50 Secures a
3&Q Guaranteed
Steel Range
Iflia & TARN AM i
(The reoplee Tarnltuxe and Varpet Co,
OMAHA
Bat. 18S7.J
rerm i aa.80 Cash, Balance "Easy."
These BAJTOXS sre made of
selected steel of a special gauge
and are guaranteed In every re
spect They are positively the
best low priced steel BABTOB on
the market todey. Have six large
No. 8 lids, large 16-Inch oven and
an upper warming closet. They
are full aibestos lined and are
handsomely nickel trimmed.
UP'
At
raodels
Stores
Soil tho Famous
Rogers-Peet Clothes
For Men
Brandeis was the first to introduce
strictly high grade ready-to-wear cloth
ing into Omaha. We have always sold
the best ready-for-service clothes and
this year our stock is so large and so
complete that every careful dresser in
Omaha can be perfectly fitted in just
the suit that appeals to him the most
Roflcrs-Pcct Fall Suits $9 $QC Roflers-Peet 0'coats $9C nz
In the Correct Styles lor Fall LIT 00 F and Winter Styles UO TfcCtl
No other ready-mnde clothes compare with Rogcra-Pcet for refinement. They are essen
tially the clothes for men of good tasto who demand the best tailoring.
BRANDEIS STORES:
' "
j -alls FS. w,3ajr3a risj JFy, ffl r . .
note In the envlorment. There 1 a plat
form high up, before which curtains hang.
This Is the artist's berth, and into It he
swings by means of an Improvised trapeze.
There is an oil stove, many canvases,
Jars of brushes and daubed palettes, the
woodwork Is grimy and old, the curtains
torn, the atmosphere stuffy with the odors
of paints and oils. It would be a tomb
were It not that through the open window
comes the hum of Paris.
The tenent Is emaciated and his eyes
have an abnormal lustre. He lives on
some form of prepared food which he
cooks himself, and refuses the charity of
his friends no matter how cleverly dis
guised. He pretends that he had to adhere
to a diet, and the day before he has sent
away a dealer who hud discovered him be
cause noting the number of unsold can
vases and the poverty so cruelly evident
the dealer had dared to make htm offers
on that basis, on the basts of the value,
rather than on the work Itself.
He Kboots Himself.
For poor and proud and In 111 health the
artist knows himself and Is sura that some
day his canvases will bring good if not
phenomenal prices. They are wonderful
bits of i'aris, sure enough nocturne palntej
in the open at midnight, their shadows
teeming with mystery and suggestions;
Taris by day filled with Joy and sunlight,
an omnibus with its three horses abreast;
a bit of the Seine and a bookworm at the
old book stalls.
lie has sold two for f0 and says naively
that now that people have come to buy
he will find his seclusion Impossible. A
moment after he tells of Venice and of
London and New York, where be will soon
exhibit for the $00 is to him a fortune.
It Is so long since he has bad anything.
Tou look at .the hectlo flush, the bent
back, the eyes shining so unnaturally, and
you wonder; but at least you know now
that the Latin Quarter has Dot changed
entirely.
And even the Englishman is silenced,
and when the dangerous descent Is made
by the help of a single candle dip, the
party drift to the al Bulller, without
which no round of the Quarter la ever
complete. It Is the earn place, an orches
tra playing mad walties and women dan
cing madly thereto, sometimes raised aloft
in the arms of their escort. In the sum
mer gardens are little nooks of green,
where tired with the dance, a moment's
respite is taken; drinks, usually con-lnloil-
cating, are sipped, and the plash of the
fountain makes an accompaniment to the
chatter of the voice.
There is a sordid atmosphere to the place
and the women are not pretty. And if the
women are lacking in the charm you ex
pected, the Frenchmen are Impossible. You
ee him at his worst here, ogling, simper
ing, curling his ridiculous mustache, cry
ing hi "Bis," whe4 he want a dance re
peated. You are -quite ready to go when
the sound of the clock at 12 denotes the
unfailing rule of the Bal Bulller and of
several of the other hall In the Quarter
devoted ftq the dancing crowds. ,
lan't Leave Him Oat.
And you are told that you must not
write a story of the quarter, even a scrappy
little story, without mentioning Matisse,
the founder of the new school of art, who
already numbers 2,000 disciples in France,
some of whom you have had pointed out to
you In the cafes and on the boulevards,
wearing sandals and long hair, with
rapt expressions and sometimes without
hats. You have, of course, seen the pic
tures; to them Is the necessary prelim
inary to a visit to the quarter. And In
spite of the instructions you received to be
dlplomantlo and tactful and deceptive if
you wanted to know the worst, you forgot
your lesson and stated with American
frankness of the most uncompromising
sort that never In the most hectic mo
ments of a nightmare has your Imagina
tion, fed by Welsh rabbits and feminine
punch, dared to take such liberties wlih
your common sense. The exhibitor looked
pained, merely pained in a soft, gentle
manly way; confided that he felt that way
at first, but now he could not live without
a Matlssej at hi elbow.
This la one at random a woman' figure
outlined apparently with a stick of choco
late. The background la half of a violent
red, half of a mad crimson. The woman
is In a reclining pose, reclining on nothing
wearing nothing, her face expressing noth
ing. The Hps, eyes and nose are not drawn,
but smeared with chocolate masks, and the
eyes are known to be open becauae five
straight lines. Indicating eyebrow pre
sumably, etand erect. A bit of drably
paint ia said to be a scarf give the charm
ing picture Its name, "Nude Woman with
Scarf."
Once Matlase painted nice, pretty little
picture such a other paint, but ha could
not u them, beaua tbere. was Ioq much
competition, so one day he changed hi
method and since then he has bouvht a
place in the country and takes vacations
like prosperous artists.
WIVES RAID HUSBAND'S GAME
Something; Dolns la Issoeeat Looking
lee Cream Parlor, Where
Chips Rattled.
Thirteen repentant husbands were lined
up before Recorder Mara In Bsyonne, J.
Y., and fined Jl each the result of tha
first active move of the anti-gambling so
ciety which their wives organised several
weeks ago.
Mrs. Julius Hochsteln Is the president of
the society, which Is composed entirely of
women, and she said that poker had be
come so popular among tha husbands and
fathers of Hayonne that the women de
cided to club together and stamp it out.
So the league was formed and It did not
take much detective work to find out where
the men were going for their quiet little
games in the evening.
Mrs. Hochatein told Inspector Pat Kear
ney that If he would accompany her In
the evening to the back room of Ike
Snoll's Ice cream parlor and dcllcatenaen
shop In Avenue C she would guarantee to
show him a ring of Uayonne's most prom
inent cltixeus gambling their young Uvea
a way.
The Inspector, Mrs. Hochsteln an,d two
other women, members of the society, and
Detectives' Mullaney and Kogan went to
the place at 10.30, and Mullaney had to
break In the door of the back room with
an axe. Mrs. ilochstein was one of the
first of the party to enter and she aided
In rounding up the gamesters.
"There he goes I'll get him!" she cried,
as Abraham Coppersmith Jumped out of a
window, taking the sash with htm. Hhe
grabbed fur ills coat tails, but missed
them. "Catch him," she said to Inspector
Kearney. "I know his folks, and he ought
to be ashamed of himarlf."
Abraham was caught before ha had run
a block, with the sash around bis neck. He
was considerably cut and bruised. The de
tectives lent if ed in the morning that they
had found a poker game In full swing.
Snoll, the proprietor of the Ice cream
parlor, was held in $D00 ball. New York
Mail. ... .. -
Ml
I
so 1 a.w xASfj w --Jt ?JESie mm ja
Splendid Racing
Iriberatfs Band and
Grand Opera Slngera
Pain's Bailie in the Clouds-?
with, Airliip
AihlelicMeef- Carnival -BaseDall
OttC AM) ONE-MALT KATCS HOUND TRIP OMAU AII.0AX3
for information. Premium List. or Lhfry Dlanhavrite A
W.R .M ell or. Secy
LINCOLN. MEB.
Prize Winners for the Week
Ending Sept. 4, 1909
First Prize Ilnrry Finney, 2210 South 29th St., OmaHa.
Second Prize Mabel Jennette Miller, Fairmont, Neb.
Third Prize-Harriett Knutzen, 318 .West 30th St.,
Kearney, Neb.
Fourth Prize Anna Maher, 3024 Emmet St., Omaha,
Fifth Prize-Ethel Hathkey, 2409 Blondo St., Omaha.
Sixth Prize Helen Hester, Glenwood, Ia.
Seventh Prize Adaline Wykoff, 207 North 23d St.,
Omaha.
HONORABLE MENTION.
Naoma Turner, Fremont, Nob.
Myron Daly, Scott's Bluff. Neb.
Helen Hutton, 2723 Charles street, Omaha. 1
Donald MoFarland, Majestic Apartments, Omaha,
Edna Frances, Broken Bow, Neb.
Gwendolyn Webster, 623 West Twenty-fourth Btreat, Kearnsy, Neb.
Amelia Lyndberg, Fremont, Neb.
Gladys H. Muslrk, 4G43 Farnam street, Omaha, Neb.
Myrtle Jensen, 2009 Izard street, Omaha, Neb.
Cora Marquardt, 416 Madinon avenue, Norfolk, Neb.
Alice V. Weod, Bailey, Neb.
Iona May Davis, Harvard, Neb.
Marjorie E. Johnston, 116 North Twenty-fourth street, Omaha, Neb.
R. Floyd Shaddock, Oakdale, Neb.
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