Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 14, 1913, PART THREE, Page 6-C, Image 34

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liLb UMAtlA ftLiNDAl Biib: DtiLtiMBiuK 14, lUJd.
TRAINIKG HAND AND HEAD
Defects in Present System of Public
School Education.
TRADE SCHOOLS A NECESSITY
Mlaie West Wortullr Backward In
. ProTldtna Pacllltlts for rmc
tlcal Life Work of
Children,
Addressing the convention of the Stato
Teachers' association, when In session
last month, President J3. Holovtchlner of
the Omaha Board of Education spoke In
part aa follows:
"America Is one of the countries where
compulsory education Is a fixed law, and
there Is no going back on It, never. It
anything, we are going- further In the
matter and are prolonging and widening
the compulsion, fixing the minimum of
school attendance at a higher age.
"But how Is our law enforced? Do we
lire up to tho tetter of tho law as the
framers Intended us to doT let us an
alysa and see.
"We havo in the United States about
2r.,W.KO children of school ago. Of this
number SO.OQO.OOO. or fO per cont, are en
rolled In the public and prlvaUj schools.
Of these only H.OM.000, or 68 per cent,
are In dally attendance. In other words,
Jl.OOO.000 children, or it per cent; art
either Incapacitated from attending
schools or neglectfully miming In the
streets, Instead of attending classes.
These figures are not fictitious, but of
ficial. They are given out by tho United
States commissioner of education. j
"In Germany leas than 3 per cent of
the total number of children are not In
schools, and .01 per cent are Illegally
kept away from school. In England and
AVaJes, conditions are as deplorable as
In the United Btate. Out of M.000.000,
J ,100,080. or 15 per cent, are attending
neither day nor night schools. The re
ports from Canada show no better con
dltlons. The compulsory education law
Is net rigidly enforced.
"But the expenditure of the vast
amount of money for educational pur
poses Is constantly going on, no matter
whether we have the full quota of chil
dren la schools or not The United States
In JM9 spent JW3.000.06O for education of
chlMrcn In our elementary schools.
la the Money Waste T
"New let us see what wo achieve for
the vaat fortune spent by the taxpayers
for the education of tho children In the
seoowtary schools or high schools. From
statistics, we gather that Jn America no
more than 70 per cent aro entering our
secondary or high schools. About 80 per
cent are lost, strayed and not found after
graduating from tho grades. Now why
do we lose so many children from our
terimary schools? Ib it the fault of our
educational system, or are there other
causes responsible for the deplorable
slate of affalrs7
"I think that after studying the condi
tion -we must admit that both the educa
tional system and other-Influences ' are
responsible for (he conditions prevailing.
"But economic- conditions in the country
are such that It ! not the lack of pro
fessionals from which we aro suffering,
but we are short of hands to conduct our
Industrlee which ara growing enormously.
There is a famine of skilled mechanics
of every variety, aad tho few that wo
hare are not proficient enough to com
pt Willi the foreign skilled mechanic.
The development of our Industries, thee
creating of high grade productive enter
prises, demand Intelligent workers In
large numbers, and where are we to oW
tain them? The growing Interest, ana the
Inereasing Hterature on vocational train
ing, Indicates a new attitude in the train
In of our youth.
Oae-Thlril Untrained.
Tho 70 per cent of our children who
graduate from our publto schools, and are
entering the academic high school are
well provided for future demands. But
how about the 30 per cent who do not
continue their education, and are tost to
the community because they are either
not fit for academic work,- or hare no de
sire or means to continue the academie
education for which the high nchool Is
Preparing them? It Is evident that we
must provide some vehicle by which to
give them the kind of Instruction they
most require and which will meet the
eeonotHlc"cT5ndltloha W8"tnUt devise a
plan whereby the work in the elementary
sohools shall be to train the hand ss welt
as the mind. In order to meet this re
quirement, manual training was Installed.
But Is It a complete success? Does It
remedy conditions? Do we have a better
attendance? Do more children attend
school on fewer drop out? I am sorry
to say the results are not such as to
brag about I nver was enthused with
the manual training course as It Is taught
In our graded schools. I was always of
the Impression that the results hardly
Justified tho expenditures.
"We first found manual training In
stalled In our high school and from there
It sort of drifted Into the grade schools.
In the high school, manual training was
introduced as a by-play, sort of a di
version from the drudgery of the classi
cal or Intellectual studies, 'or aa a stim
ulus In the Intellectual efforts of the
boy and girl, without regard to the In
dustrial end of It, and In) such status
It is doomed to failure. As Superintend
ent Maxwell of New York says: The
attempt to neparato manual training
from Industrial training would prove n,
dismal failure.'
"Through manual training we ore able
to discover those who have any aptitude
for mechanical pursuits, and separato
them from those who are Inclined to
other vocations. Two different and dis
tinct types of schools and schooling aro
needed. The academlo where general ed
ucation Is given with the ultimate view
of preparing the boy or girl for profer-
sloriat career, and the Industrial, techni
cal, mechanical, trade school, or call It
what you may, for the purpose or giving
tho boy a training that will fit him to
enter life with something to make him
a bread-winner, a productive and self
supporting cltlsen aa soon as he leaves
school.
Mnual training, which waa intro
duced In our schools a decade and a half
ago, had this ultimate training In view,
but like any other Innovation It had to
bo experimented with, and go througn
the process of evolution by stages until
the scheme has gradually perfected and
developed Itself Into a system which
stands out prominently In our educa
tional world today In the form of vo
cational schools.
The evolutionary stages haa y no
means easy or smooth sailing; even to
day the minds and views of educators
are by no means unanimous aa to tho
ultimate plans of Industrial training.
Nerdfal Helps.
"Which academlo courses should be of
fered the boys, how to divide tho
nerlods. what methods to apply, the
length of the school day, all these things
should' be left to the educators, or su
perintendent cf Instruction In each local
ity. We will bump up against the same
obstacle as wo do In the grade school,
although not to such an extent, and that
Is- truanco or dropping out before tho
completion of tho course. Laws will have
to be provided to pronimi snops irum
taking In boys before they are through
with school, or labor unions should re
fuse the boy admission to the ranks ot
the union, unless ho has a certificate ot
his completion in tho vocational school.
"Some fear Is expressed that technical
or trade schools will In a measure lead
to tho absndontng of the academlo work.
I think there Is absolutely no occasion
for alarm. In thp first place, academlo
work should never be excluded. On tho
contrary, It 'should be Insisted upon, only
la a different way. These schools should
net be looked upon as a refuge, or as an
asylum for mentally deficient. Brains
are aa necessary for trade work aa for
professionals, and ladustrlal students
should be cultured as welt as students In
academlo high schools. As President El
liot said: 'If a man practice black
smithing studiously, or agriculture
thoughtfully, he Is getting oulture.'
"DoMbt has also been expressed as to
securing pupils for these' schools. I think
Now going on
Christmas Fair
of the Churches
in th court of th
BEE BUILDING
"Mere beautiful and larger than ever before"
is tho expression of all who have seen tho bazaar in
progress. Tho hoantifully and tastefully decorated
Court is thronged daily with visitors who aro finding
many pleasing bargains in fancy goods, linenB, hand
made wearing apparel and other usoful and ornamental
Christmas offerings, whilo tho homo cooking and tho
candies aro boyond description.
Have you seen it?
Just think, 28 churches are interested in this an
nual event. Tho ladies need your help and encourage
ment and you can find relief from tho cares of further
Christmas shopping in the many suggestions to bo
found here.
Nw and complete stocks every two days.
Tke churches selling Monday and Tuesday:
XXBXSEHOS nunBin .
&Uteran Jar. Clare BnUls. 28 Sa Taylor vr am
(sttoWWU VressyUriam. . . JCrs. Matthsw Xtlltr. 4143 Qrant. .W.6013 ,
6eas Otaa ot Social SsKUauutUca V. Bacaaaaa. 1330 So. 34ta. .JE. 30
6e4at Park Cfeafregatlonal. .Mrs, Thompson, 3311 Auts Ave. . W. 3131
All are welcome
that all such doubt will be dispelled by
Investigating the number of technical
schools now In existence and the growing
demand for them all over this country
and the world at large. On my recent
visit to the east for the purpose of In
vestigating the technical high schools. 1
was astounded to find the number ot
technical sohools In operation, and the
additional number In the course of con
struction. In Chicago they are adding
two gigantic technical high schools to the
number already established. The same
condition I found In Buffalo, Detroit and
Cleveland. In the latter city, Industrial
education Is at Its senlth. No city in the
United States Is doing as much for In
dustrial education as Cleveland, and tho
demand Is growing to such an extent
there, that the new West Technical High
school, which Is only two years old, finds
Itself Inadequate to accommodate the ap
plicants. fllarna of the Times.
Take our own little Industrial school
here In Omaha, which Is only an ex
periment We fitted up a school with
two rooms for about twenty deficient
boys. Forty normal boys have nlrnutv
applied, and next year I venture to say
-TO will, knock at Uie door of our little
Industrial school house, and this little
school Is not a high school cither. It is
Intended for boys up to and including the
eighth grade. I predict that If Omaha
should establish n. torhnl
today, we would have 1,000 pupils In It
at the end of Its first year. Our academic
High school and the High School of Com-
merce tono up about iO per cent of all
tho children who graduate from thn 1a.
mentary schools. Sixty per cent are lost
to us and a good mnnv of the Co nr renf
would flock to a technical high school, It
we had one. They havo no desire to
enter the academic high school, do not
relish our commercial courses, and would
undoubtedly take to trades, If tho oppor
tunlty were offered them In a public
technical high school.
'Technical high schools are needed In
this country and are needed badly. Ger
many. Which runkn tilvhor than e nv
other country In the world for Its schools,
universities, academies, etc., Is also lead
ing wun its industrial schools. It Is'
abundantly supplied with thetn. and lis
mechanics nm rmimlAA , t. n .1
for their skill, culture and Intelligence
in Sweden, industrial or technical edu
cation Is likewise a prominent feature.
and Its mochanlcs rank among tho high
est In tho old world. No wonder that the
foreign mechanic Is riven rrfnrni In
this country before the American.
i think wo In Nebraska are a good
many years behind In this branch of
education for our bnvs nnit irlrl. Cnm.
paring Omaha and Nebraska with other
ciuos ana states in the union, we find
that tho east and tho extreme west aro
full of technical schools, with hardly a
City of any IraDortnncn th rinnn nni mv.
at least one technical high nchool.- But
the middle west, and especially Nebrnska,
Is painfully neglectful In this branch of
epucauon.
Modtil Teelinlrnl Sellout.
"The Cleveiond Technical High school
In my Judgment Is tho model of any
technical schools I have seen. The pre
dominant Idea Is to train boys for tho
Industrial end of it, and girls to make
them good housewives, Intelligent mothors
and usoful women. The courso In the
Clevelnnd Tcohntcal High school for girls
Is elaborate. Tho girls aro taught house
keeping, to sweep, clean and make beds.
Laundries ot the modern type are estab
lished where the girls are taught to wash
scientifically, Beforo she Is put to the
washtub, she must take one-halt year In
chemistry, so as not to ruin the clothes,
as It Is done In our steam laundries.
Cooking Is also taught scientifically. Sew
ing, dressmaking, millinery- work, etc.,
are the chief subjects ot the training.
The buy pupils are specialized In pattern
making, cabinet making, forging, foun
dry, machine shop, drafting, machine de
sign, architectural drawing, structural
drawing, electrical construction, chemis
try, printing, designing, applied art, au
tomobile repairing and agriculture.
"Now, I am no educator; I make no
pretense to being one; In fact, I am a
physician by profession, but knowing the
value ot education In tho struggle for
life, I am vitally Interested In tho ad
vancement of education In this country.
I would like to tee this land ot ours
lead the world Mi education, aa It does
In other matters, and If In the capacity
of a member ot the Board of Education
I nan do my little part to help It
along, my mission will havo been ful
filled. "It Is up to us as members ot the
Board of Education to Insist that modern
and up-to-date methods be applied In
our schools, to give our young genera
tion alt the opportunities and chances of
making good, honorable. Intelligent and
self-supporting cltlsens. No expense
should be spared to make our schools
and educational Institutions models to
which the world would point as exam
plea. Our schools today are of the high
est type, so acknowledged by foreign
educators, who are visiting our shores
from time to time. But we must not rest
content because our schools are on a
high plane. There Is room for Im
provement We are behind and far out.
distanced In vocational education In our
publla schools. This kind ot education
lis holding the center ot the stage Just
I now all over' the world.
"Wo In Nebraska must get In the
game or wo will be outdistanced, out
played and left behind. Can we afford
It? Can we let the procession go by?
I Nebraska boasts of being one of the
states where Illiteracy Is at the lowes
ebb, having less Illiterates than any stats
in the union. Can we afford to lag In
Industrial education? It Is up to us as
members ot the Board of Education to
meet this problem in all seriousness and
! sincerity and remedy what Is today the
; most deficient feature of our educational
j system. The young generation Is de
I msndlng It of us and we must give heed
i to that demand. We must establish
I technical schools in Nebraska and keep
aoreast or tne times."
desert alive with serpents, ghosts and
hideous monsters and swayed by Intoler
able heat and thirst Every people pick
ing out their own hell the type ot
place that seemed to them the most un
pleasant, and It was but natural that
the Egyptian hell should have been a
desert thirsty, hot and snake-strewn.
The Hindus also preached a monster
filled hell paved with glowing coals as
beset with pits of bubbling, boiling oIL
A 'bed of fire and food consisting of mol
ten metal were side features of this.
In Assyria It was believed the souls of
sinners lived on dry dust In a black cav
ern and sometimes flitted back to earth
as vampires.
The Chinese believed there were no less
than six hells of varying horrors. On the
red-hot floor of one of these crawled
deadly scorpions. The Greeks and Bomans
told of a dark, gloomy place far under
the earth, where sinners performed var
ious wearisome feats, such as baling
out the sea with a sieve or forever
rolling a huge rock up hill, etc
Old Omar Khayyam waa apparently al
most tho only man of ancient days to
voice so modern a theory as "My soul
returned to me and answered, 'I myself
am heaven and belli' "
The Scandinavians feared an Icebound,
pitch black region where wolves ravened
and serpents stung. The ancient Hebrew
writers declared hell was m.000,000 times
as large as this earth surely a commo
dious and roomy dwelling place for a
whole worldful of sinners, and arranged
with the expectation of a large popula
tion.
The early English bcllved in a hell al
ternately horribly hot and bitter cold and
this before Chicago's climate was known.
The Moslems, through tho Koran, are
told of a hell full of "flameless smoke
and smokeless flame," whose Inmates
shall bo dragged Into hell by their fore
locks and their feet and there shall bo
cut out for them garments of fire."
These are but a few of the more vivid
and lurid conceptions of a place ot tor
ment for evildoers. With huch horrors
over before them, It is a wonder all the
world's Inhabitants were not scared into
goodness centuries ago. New Tork
World.
With the Home Builders
Trust Company
Has Many Eelations
The trust company and Its relations is
a subject concerning which a book could
bo written. It is surprising, howovor,
that there are no toxtbooks devoted to
this subject. A trust company Is a body
corporate, personifying alt that Is ideal
in man-of confidence. Integrity, Justice,
honesty and reliability. Primarily its ro
tation Is 4o tho confidence ot man; and,
secondarily to execute the commissions
confided in It, for a reasonable profit.
Trust companies aro the creatures of
modern statutes. Thoy supply a want that
has oxisted from the early ages. Since
tho time that man first began to ac
cumulate property desire to create trusts
or to handle his property through tho
agenay of another, ho" has been de
pendent upon his friends, until tho trust
company was created by law. In the olden
days It a man desired to placo bin prop
erty In trust for another or to bequeath
his property for tho benefit of some per
son and not preserve the original Invest
ment Intact, or otherwise- handle his prop
erty by means ot a trustee, it became
necessary for him to select some friend
or relation In whom he placed sufficient
confidence. Frequently this confidence
waa misplaced; the friend was not al
ways worthy of trust then, too, the
friend' dies, thereby vacating the trust
and requiring the appointment ot a suc
cessor through other means. In other In
stances the friend would misapply the
fund,- appropriating them to his own, use,
and otherwise betray his trust; and the
property having been wasted, the pur
poses of tho trust Imposed upon him
would fall, and the friend not being
financially responsible, tho property thus
entrusted to htm might never be recov
ered. In a sense the trust company Is an In
corporated friend, stripped, as nearly and
carefully as rigid law can, of the possi
bility ot tho betrayal of the trust or tho
loss of the property entrusted to It Thus
It Is that the state of Nebraska, through
the wisdom ot Its lawmakers, has safe
guarded the Interest of the man who
places his confidence In a trust company,
not alone by doublo reliability upon the
stock owned by the stockholders In such
a company, but by frequent audita of the
company's condition by the state auditor;
and, too, by defining by law, specifically
and plainly, the powtrs, duties and obit
gutlons to this class of corporations.
TIMELY REAL ESTATE GOSSIP
Horn Clears $10,000 in Two and
One-Half Years.
ON OLD PAT FORD PROPERTY
Many Investors In Omaha Have
Bendy Money, lint All Are' on
the I.nokont for Soft
Snaps.
I OMAHA. NEBRASKA. K
I
MELTING POT OR ICE HOUSE
Ouerr Ideas Reirardlnir Tempernturo
of Place ot Future Pun-Ishment.
Many tribes or nations since the world
began havo had no religious idea at all
of a heaven. But there Is, perhaps, a
well-defined, not to say lurid, notion of
hell.
And these ideas of hell ot hades, ot
sheoL'of the place of punishment are as
aried aa the names It goes by.
Apart from the theory ot a burning pit
if brimstone full ot Tomltlng, screaming
souls, who must burn forever, there
have been dozens of others.
Oddly enough, people who live In south
ern countries have always Inclined to a
belief In a red-hot hell, while among the
Eskimos and other Arctic races the no
on ot hell Is a place of utter and un
"ellsved cold, where persons who have
lth difficulty fought off cold throughout
heir mortal Uvea must endure horrible,
cy chills throughout all eternity.
In ancient Egypt hell was painted u a
GIVING THE LAWYERS A RUN
Pittsburgh Churches Asked to Disci
pline Members Who Take
Liquor Cases,
Bev. George W. Shelton, chairman of
the Union committee on temperance ot
the Protestant churches ot the Pitts
burgh district, sent letters to Ihe minis
ters of 415 churches asking them to have
the church law on the subject of liquor
selling enforced against lawyers. The
letters was read from the pulpits of tho
great majority ot these' churches Sun
day morning.
lawyers, who represent saloon keepers
In their applications for licenses and who
are members ot churches may be de
prived of their membership. It Is pro
posed that the church law shall be en
forced, and at least half a dozen promi
nent members ot the bar are likely to
be "churched'1 unless they consent to
retrain from this kind of practice. It la
proposed to deal gently with them at
first, and It they wish to avoid the
notoriety ot a ohurch trial, all they will
have to do will be to give their word
to keep out of license court.
It was not generally known until the
present religious upheaval Inaugurated
Just how far tho church law goes In Its
outlawry of the liquor business. Accord
ing to the discipline of the Presbyterian
church any member who signs en appli
cation for license, gives a bond for a
liquor dealer, owns stock In a .brewery
or distillery, or as attorney represents
a liquor dealer In securing a license.
may be disciplined. A case haa recently
been decided by the general assembly,
the highest authority ot the Presbyterian
church. In which a member appealed
agaust his church session tor not doing
lis duty in this respect and waa sus
tained, and the Presbytery having Juris
diction of the matter Instructed to have
It attended to. Pittsburgh Dispatch.
Serious Iace rations
and wounds are healed, without dangar
ot blood poisoning, by Buckltn's Arnica
Salve, the healing wonder. Only 25c For
sale by your druggist Advertisement
The safety of Investment In real estate
In Omaha's business districts is nowhere
perhaps better Illustrated than In the i
case of Nathan Horn, who two and aj
half years ngo bought ot Harry Wolf the I
old Pat Ford property at Tenth and ,
Davenport streets for $16,000. When Wolf i
appeared for luncheon at the meeting of
the Real Estate exchange that day and
told ot the deal the members accused
him of being a sinner for selling property i
so high to his own personal friend.
i "Where do you expect to go when you
d'.e?" they nrked him. "Hov can you do '
Uose things to your own friends?" I
Horn had confidence in Omaha prop
erty and ho held tight That was Just
two and one-half years ago. In the ;
meantime property has Increased In value. .
Hie wholesale district has beep filling up
more and more. Tho produce commission
houses became crowded for rcom. Then
came tho day when Horn turned the
property well.
The Jerpe Commission company needed
ground for a new location. In casting
about It found this property and wanted
It It had tho money and was willing to
pay the prlco. It did not take long. And
when the deal was closed Horn had
cleared $8,000 on the sale, to say nothing
of the $2,000 he had received In rent In
something over two years.
Investor Out far Hnnps,
"Everybody Is looking for a snap In
real estato Just now," said a real estate
dealer. 'Thcro Is scarcely a snap to be
had In the city. X find any amount ot
buyers who have from $1,000 to $18,000 of
ready money to Invest, but they still aro
hard to make a deal with because they
are looking for snaps. They find plenty
of property that Is worth tho money, but
they hold back, for they are looking for
something that Is worth a great deal
more than Is nsked for It They are all
looking for something that will clear
thorn a few thousand In a year or two."
This In the complaint of a great many
real estato men at the present time. They
hold that money Jiaa been mado so readily
in Omaha real estato In tho last fow
years and In fact for a considerable time,
that many buyers aro In the field, but
that they are more and more beginning to
look for a sure snap, ono about which
there cannot bo tho shallow of a doubt
The fact that a few of the bolder spirits
in the past years have made large sums
of money by plunging In and taking a
chance lias fired the Imaginations of a
lot of other would-bo speculators who
havo not quite tho kidney of a real
plunger, and consequently would like to
liavn someono sell them a place ana give
a guaranteo of sudden Increase with tho
deed.
nnon Jt Carmlchael announce that
Mnntelalr. the new addition which they
aro gottlng ready for the market be
tween Cuming and Hamilton ana iwn-ty-nlnth
and Thirty-third streets, Is now
iinveioned sufficiently so that an Intel
ligent Idea can be formed ot what It
will look like when entirely iinisnea.
Over 200,000 yards of earth have been
moved, transforming the old Crelghton
farm Into a beautiful addition.
Tho work being done on this addition
is along the lines approved by the Clvlo
Improvement league, which Is that all
property and streets bo put to grade
when platted so that purchasers will be
assured when buying that no changes
ot grade will bo mado later, resulting In
damage to their property.
Reasonable restrictions as to cost ot
houses, etc, will bo placed on the entire
addition, thus assuring all purchasers of
a high class neighborhood. At the same
time there Is to be a wide range or
prices for the lots, so that those with
limited means also will be eligible.
Cement walks are to be laid In nil
streets, A part of these are now In. A
comnleto system of city water and sewer
Is now being Installed throughout the
entire tract Every lot will have sewer,
water and cement walks without future
special taxes to the buyer.
This la one of the first close-In addi
tions to be platted In the last twenty
years. It Joins Bemls park on the east
It Is a twelve-minute ride from Sixteenth
and Farnant streets and la served by two
car lines-
Persistent Advertramg Is the Road to
Business Success.
Minneapolis Heat
Regulator
Saves Fuel
Keeps '
Temperature
Right
Day and Night
60-Day Trial
Let Me Tell You
More About It
B.E.ATHERTON
2300 Laird St. Phone AVeb. 4800.
Regulation Specialist.
E. J. Davis i
SAFE MOVER
Heavy Haul ins
1212 Farnam
PHOKK OUQLA 3S3
Capital, $200,000.00
Surplus, $215,000.00
A FEW of the advantages of appointing ths .
Company:
IT CONFINES itself solely to Trustee and In
vestment business.
ITS MANAGEMENT enjoys the combined
knowledge of able, experienced and responsible
men. '
IT GARIMES out the directions and wishes of
, a testator judiciously, impartially and faithfully.
IT IS CONSERVATIVE and actB with greater
caution than an individual.
IT NEVER DIES.
IT GIVES equal attention to small and large
estales. .
ITS PROGRESS, since its establishment, 27
years ago, is evidence of Its success.
I SAFE INVESTMENTS a
HMUMTl LOO" I MWI
flDEHTv
STORGlVN CO
JLLDOUGUSI
XT7
SBLA l-TJSBBS
A Sensible and Economical
tk way ot Heducing the High
r finsl nf I Ivlnnr
Storo your goods with The
Fidelity during the winter
months and go live with one of your rolatives or a near friend.
You will save fuel bills; you will save considerable on the house
rent and on your grocery bills. The cost of storing will be very
small. Tills plan is being used by thousands of people in tho
oast and by many people in Omaha this winter. "Why don't you
try itT Also moving, packing, shipping.
Just Telophono Doug. 1516
Fidelity Storage & Van Co., jISLIu.
1.1 1
interest
Will Double
Your Money
In Just
10 Years
Pravitin: Ti Imtt Ytsr Misty is tki 77 Guimltti
Prefirrid Skirts of
HOME BUILDERS
Heme BaiWeri k SAFE, SURE, CERTAIN WE DO NOT SPECULATE.
We do ne ttHildiag oh our bwh access t. We bay bo vacant property.
We are HOME BUILDERS ami are able to Guaraatee and Pay 7 per cent
ob the idling price ef oar preferred shares, at $1:08 each. Investigate.
American Security Co., Fiscal Agents for
HOME BUILDERS, Inc.
Douglas and 17th Sts.
GET O TJR PLAN BOOK BEFORE YOU B U1LD
Moving-- Packin;
Storage
P STORAGE GO.
Our ...
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114 ShU 111k Strut rktst 4113
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