Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 17, 1916)
12 THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY. JUNE 17, 1916. THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSCWATER. VICTOR R08E WATER, EDITOR. The Bm Publishing Company, Proprietor. BKB BUILDING. FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Entered at Omaha postofflo aa aacond-claas mattr. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. By carrier By mall par month par year. Dally and Sunday 660 ....4.00 Sally without bunday ..46o . 4.U0 Evening and Sunday eOo 4.00 Evening without aunday 26c 4.00 Sunday Bee only 20c J. 00 Dally and Sunday Bee, three yeara In advance, 110.00. Send notice of chance of addreae or Irregularity In delivery to Omaha Bee. Circulation Department REMITTANCE. Remit by draft, express or poatal order. Only two cent tamp received In payment of email account. Personal check, except on Omaha and eaetern ax change, not accepted. OFFICES. . Omaha-The Bee Building. South Omaha 2318 N street . Council Bluff 14 North Main treet Lincoln 628 Little Building. Chicago ill Peoples Gas Building. J.'ew York Room 1100. 286 Fifth avenue. ft. Louis 503 New Bank of Commerce. ! Washington 735 Fourteenth atreet. N. W CORRESPONDENCE. Address communications relating to news and edi torial matter to Omaha Bee, Editorial Department MAX CIRCULATION. 57,852 Daily Sunday 52,748 Dvight WUHams, einalatlea aasagef el The Bee Pealisaias sompaoy, balsa, duly sworn, says that the average dreaJatlea f the month of May, 101. was 47.M1 dally end M.I4S Sunday. DW1QHT WILLIAMS. CiraulatisS Manager. Sakeeribed la say presence end sworn to before see this M day of Jobs. 114. BOBBBT HUNTER. Notary Psbue. Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should hare the Bee mailed to them. Ad dress will be changed aa often as requested. Convention newt will now make , way for other front page topics. . The campaign speed of Mr. Hnghea it a sur prise aa painful to the political enemy as was his nomination. In the interval, Omaha's need for a new Union depot must not be permitted to lapse into innoc uous desuetude. : Now perhaps the senator will relent and per mit Brother-in-law "Tommy" Allen's nomination to be confirmed. ... If la evident from the output at St Louis that the Wilson administration sorely needa defense sad a host of defenders. ' Fairbanks and Marshall, rival aspirants for the vice presidency, physically represent the long and the short of Indiana politics. . How about the re pavement of that stretch of Farnam street for which the contract was. let over s yew ago? Time to get busy. Some day an enterprising broker will grab opportunity by the collar, deliver hla product direct to the consumer and tap s gold mine. Judging by hla numerous references to old time friends it is evident that Mr. Bryan and the brewers wilt not poll tandem or abreast thia year. . v ? 1 A tracer should likewise be sent out to dis cover wbst happened to Art Mullen's boom for the chairmanship of the democratic national committee. ; The rush to the republican big tent foreshad ows s vote for the ticket so large that demo crats might aa well prepare the motion to make it unanimous: ""'": Odds of 6 to S and 8 to 6 on Hughes winning are the earliest betting straws on the political currents of New York.' Shrewd sports hitch their rolls to s star. , And all Bryan did at the St Louis convention was to make s harmless speech which must be disappointing both to his political friends and his political enemies. 'Who says we are not making progress? It used to be a fight every year for the retail store clerks to get 5 o'clock closing during the summer months and now it cornea as a matter of course. : If Mr. Bryan insists on going into the procla mation busineas the man who prepared those cinching advertisements used in the Nebraska primary campaign over the name of "H. E. Gooch" should be requisitioned again to tell the answer. - John M. Parker, nominated for vice president on the but! moose ticket, ia a man of much ability and personal charm, but his residence in Louisi ana makes bim valueless aa a political asset It is our guess that Mr. Parker will be for Hughes and Fairbanks before the finish. Did you notice that complaint in our Letter Box about basement kitchens in certain Omaha hotels and restaurants which make the work of the culinary artists almost unbearable? While we are trying to improve conditions in shops and factories, these "food foundries" should not be overlooked. Thirty Years Ago This Day in Omaha See File. Democratic Claims and Performances. As the campaign progresses opportunity will offer for discussion of the democratic platform in detail. For the moment a tittle attention to some of its specific claims of achievement con trasted with actual performances will suffice. In the preamble to the document is found this sen tence: "We challenge comparison of our record, our keeping of pledges and our constructive leg islation with those of any party at any time." To begin with, the Baltimore platform pledged its candidate to a single term; this promise has been kept by renominating Woodrow Wilson and Thomas R. Marshall. In the same platform was a specific pledge to reduce the cost of living. Look over your house bold bills and see how this promise has been kept Other pledgee equally definite were similarly treated, and finally the plank that devoted the party most sacredly to the redemption of each of its promises was ignored entirely. The democratic record on achievement is just as welt, or rather just as poorly, supported. The tariff waa revised, but the principal effect of this revision was to produce a depression of business in 1913-14 such as moved the president to threaten to execute summarily whoever might be guilty of undertaking to start a panic The present con gress has amended that tariff law by restoring the duty on sugar, the principal necessity of life placed on the free list The boasted banking law is but a modifica tion of that drafted by Senator Aldt'ch, amended that the administration might claim credit for it The utility1 of the federal trade commission, for which so much is claimed, remains to be es tablished. Up to the present It haa been chiefly useful in pointing out how the anti-trust laws may be evaded.' Congress has "lifted human labor from the category of commodities," but the clause presumed to have accomplished that was inserted In the Clayton law by Senator Cummins, sup ported by republican votes, and otherwise would have been defeated. Sufficient revenue has not been raised, the platform to the contrary notwithstanding, for where the republicans left a aurplus of more than $85,000,000 in the treasury, the democrata reduced this to a deficit of more than $65,000,000 in less than eighteen months, and even with the most extraordinary of tax levies are only just now able to collect enough of income to meet the ordinary outgo. Other platform claims of the party are as shallow as these. The promises for the future are not so definitely worded as those made at Baltimore, but might have been, for the demo crats wilt not be called on soon sgain to make good on any pledges. Bryan's Defense Hot Happy. Mr. Bryan, being called before the St. Louis convention to defend the administration, and in cidentally himself, was not especially happy in his utterances. Particularly Is this true of his dealings with the Mexican muddle. Here Mr. Bryan was forced to set up a straw man and give over his energy to buffeting the dummy. No talk of annexation was ever heard on this side of the Mexican border from any responsible source, therefore failure to intervene in behalf of good order and for the protection of Americans on the score that such sction meant annexation is Idle. What the people wanted was and is peace along the boundary, and protection for Americans In Mexico and the United States. This Mr. Bryan did not provide. On the contrary, he pigeon holed reports and petitions, declined to listen to appeals, and carried on intrigues with the "pa triots" while they were in their full, course of murder and rapine. He even dispatched a letter congratulating Pancho Villa on his accomplish ments. The official course of thia government in the Mexican mess is bad enough, and ita record of secret meddling Is s positive disgrace. It will take more than the honeyed eloquence of the late secretary of state to explain away this chapter of the Wilson career. Silver Slipping Baok. The price of sitver bullion, which created a little flurry of interest a few weeks ago by an apparently sensational rise, seems to have ended its flight, and is now slipping back down the scale it so hurriedly mounted. Nothing unusual is noted in this; a suddenly increased request for the metal, incident to the unusual amount being coined by countries engaged in the war, en hanced the price. Now that the immediate urg ency of the need Is satisfied, the price is slowly receding. Only the restoration of silver to a place In the monetary systems of the world will have the effect of permanently fixing its value anywhere near the "sacred ratio" of 16 to 1 with gold. Even with the greatly enlarged stocks of gold on hand, the proportional value of silver is leas than it waa in 1893, when the United Statea finally demonetised the white metaL This be cause production of silver, contrary to general belief, has enormously increased. While many silver mines in the United States were shut down because of the fall in values, the general output of the metal haa risen from 153,000,000 ounces in 1892 to 223.000,000 in 1913, snd is estimated at above 200,000,000 ounces for 1915. Improved pro cesses of metallurgy bave lessened the cost aa well as increased the output and silver has been s source of considerable profit to the miner, even when sold at below 50 cents an ounce. Herman Kountie, J. A. Field snd Contractor Johnson are having plana drawn up for a row of seven brick stores to be erected on St Mary's avenue, between Eighteenth and Nineteenth. The first floor will be used for stores and the second and third for flats. Architect Voss is now at work on the plans. Rev. W. Boyle, the young clergyman who has been called to this city to assume charge of the new Catholic parish to be established in the southwest part ot the city, has arrived in the city, Articles of incorooration of the Park RiM. Ing association were filed with the eounty clerk. The stock is placed st $100,000 and the stock holders are Sidnev Smith. Thomas W R.H 1 E. Wycoff, John McDonald, T. W. Blackburn. Gottlieb Elsasser and Will W. McBride. . E. P. Sloan of the firm of Sloan, Johnson & Co., has gone to Peoria on a business trip. Mrs. R. M. Davis and two daughters are spend ing their vacation with Mrs. F. M. Phillips. , Commissioner O'Keefe is busy on Mercer avenue attending to bridge work. Professor Gillesoie of the State Tnat irntls... Im the Deaf and Dumb was presented with a beauti ful ebony cane with gold mountings by the teach ers and pupils of the school. The presentation speecn was maae ny ex-senator Saunders. As to a New Idea How They Do lore Each Other. - Nebraska democrats sre certainly a loving lot and they tike to exhibit this affection on all occasions. St Louis got a fine example of the harmony that prevailed in the fold when the Bryanltes and the antia deadlocked over commit tee selections. Now ws have further proof of the concord among the brethren In the little mix. up between the Mullenitea snd the Dahlmanltes. The place doesn't matter much to these enthusi astic followers of s great cause, the symbol of which is pie, nor does the time. All they aak la to get close enough together, and they go st It The public doesn't care who got the tickets, Joe Butler or Arthur Mullen, nor will it make much difference If neither Mullen nor Newbranch go to the platform convention. Omaha would like to see the few democrats it has do their fighting st home, snd not take up the time of great na tional gatherings, and hold the world in waiting while they iron out their petty differences. Observers at the democratic convention noted the highly prosperous appearance of delegates and party boosters. Swell fronts were conspic uous, raiment fresh and. fashionable, and a gen eral air of high living and liberal spending pre sented a marked contrast to the lean and hungry aspect at Baltimore. The two pictures ranged aide by side constitute an admirable tribute to the efficiency of the great American pie counter. Collier's Weekly IT IS difficult to be patient when a man who is accepted as a scholar and historian lapses into such inexact assertions as trie president did when he said in one of his so-called "landmark" speeches that "the republican party hasn't had a new idea for thirty years." If we are to talk in such broad generalities as this at all, if would be much nearer the truth to say that the democratic party had not had a new idea for thirty years. The one new idea it has had was financial heresy, and that idea was promulgated by the man whom Mr. Wilson appointed as chief of his cabinet Maybe resistance to public dishonesty is not a "new idea" in Mr. Wilson's sense, but the re publican party's successful resistance to Mr. Bryan's free silver plank in 1896 was probably the most important moral achievement of recent civilization. Tiimino' tn other new ideas which have come into nolitical discussion during: the last forty yeara, some of which have been crystallized into statutes, what ones have been contributed by the democratic party? What states have been most advanced in the prevention of child labor, in compensation to injured workmen, in all kinds of protection to labor? Republican states or democratic states? The one vivid fact that tells the whole story in detail is that there are just five states in the Union which do not yet have compulsory education laws, which have not yet come to the belief that an education is a thing which society owes to the Individual. These five states are southern democratic states. Their po sition is typical of the democratic party. The direct primaries indeed, all the movements toward greater and more effective participation of the oeonle in rjublie affairs have come from re- Cublicans. The idea of conservation was invented y republicans and given its first impetus by a republican president and a republican congress. The state regulation of railroads and other public utilitiea came from republican sources and haa made practically all its progress so far in re- fublican states through republican legislatures, resident Wilson alluded to the new currency measure as a democratic idea. This would be pardonable In a slamwhanging political orator, but is not pardonable in a historian. The Ald- rich-Vreeland act under which this country suc cessfully defended itself against the emergency of war, was passed by a republican congress; moreover, tne present Dinning ana currency act, which happened to be passed by a democratic congress, was really invented and perfected by the republicans who preceded it The truth is the geographical center of grav ity of the democratic party is somewhere in the dense fastnesses of the Ozark mountains. Demo cratic solidarity is greatest where illiteracy is most common, where public education is least regarded, and where all the attributes of modern civilization, material and spiritual, exist in the smallest degree. The causes of this, it must be said in fairness, are partly historical, partly due to economic crimes that go back for many generations. Whiskers: In Hoc Signo St, 1Mb Olebe Soasseret A GROWTH of hair on the face has always been held to be a sign of superior strength, for the reason, no doubt that it distinguishes the stronger sex. Nobody ever haa hinted that a man incapable of hair-growth on hia face would be a man fit to trust Tn an emergency of any kind. tie might hide sucn evidence of his masculinity with the aid of razor, but if offering himself for the discharge of any important trust he had best to give a guarantee of manly qualification by letting nature apeak in his face, with such modi fications ss his taste may suggest The republic an party, at least, has almost uniformly selected, for its presidential candidates, men willing to offer their country this pledge. Whiskers, if we include mustaches in the meaning of that generic word, have waved in every republican administration but one. The party began running to whiskers before it got into the White House. Its first candidate, Fre mont, was a bewhiskered soldier. Its second candidate and first president Lincoln, could not bave won the hearts of the Illinois pioneers with a smooth face. Nearly 10,000 more Illinoisans preferred him before the smooth-shaven Douglas in the senatorial race in 1858. Andrew Johnson, who succeeded Lincoln in the presidency, but not by republican choice for that office, made an interregnum in a whiskered history, but after him came flowing tides of hair on the face. Grant's whiskers were famous, but less luxuriant than thne tf Javk- .nmi.n f, Lint mA ,k. .U.-L- ers of Hayes were overshadowed by those of Gar field. But for luxuriance, wavingness and mobil ity of expression, the whiskers of Arthur trans cended all others. True to its traditions, the party numiuaicu uic wmaacrca Djainc 10 succeed Ar thur and even his defeat, the first party defeat in nearlv a generation, did not shake republican faith in facial integuments, a faith that was justi fied when, four yeara later, it nominated and elected Harrison. Ita only smooth-faced candidate in aixtv vears has been McKinley. In renominating him it nominated the muatached Roosevelt for second place, and, after electing Roosevelt to first place, it nominated Taft with a well-thatched upper lio. Tk:. - i . . - . 1 3 -- ,1 una uuc iu luno in tne nomi nation of Hughes. The party is playing to the line of ita old and long run of luck, with men whose faces carried pledges. The whiskers of Hughes rank with the best in the long republican presidential line. And this time the republican whisker is not called to face a democratic one, but a candidate whose face la as void of vegeta tion as me mountains 01 tne moon, in hoc signo vincea. People and Events The spirit of preparedness manifests Itself In unlooked-for directions. A baby in a King family at Pittsburgh was born with eight teeth, four in the upper and lower jaws snd Samsonian locks of raven black hair. - New Jersey lost $250,000 of state revenue from corporations by the operation of the reform laws known as Wilson's ' seven sisters." Many cor porations shifted headquarters to more friendly states and left the Jersey state treasury to do the worrying. According to the transfer tax appraisal filed in the New York surrogate court the late James R. Keene, financier and horseman, left an estate worth $1,062,539. Amona: the souvenira sched uled as valueless sre loan notes of politicians and aown -ana-out race tracx sports. ' A breezv banker from California. C. F. Liner. ley, gives Atlantic City a novel touch of financial high life. Instead of the usual loner roll of the banking profession, Langley carries a package of nis own oanx oina in Diana:, and attaches his sig nature to one or more as hia necesaitiea renuire. Much of his pleasure is derived from "manufac turing" his money on the spot, to the amazement ot tne resort gawp ers. The record of the sutomobite ss a life-taker is now varied by a definite instance of life-saving. A woman at Hackensack, N. J who was in dan- 5er of being strangled by a walnut ahe had ewal owed, was rushed toward a hospital in an auto mobile. The bumping of the machine in crossing railroad dislodged the walnut and her life was saved. The make of the car was forgotten in the joy of its achievement . Old St lohn Street church In the rinwnrnwn section of New York, said to be one of the cradles of Methodism in the United States, is about to disappear to make way for s skyscraper. Orig inally the site was occupied by Wesley Chapel, built in 1768 by Philip Embury, an Irishman who in 1760 organized the first Methodist church so ciety on the western continent The present cnurcn waa uuui in joti, tne intra on tne site. Would Limit Number of Notartaa. CmU. Neb., Jatw 16. To tba Edittw f The Be: May I take jut fw line- to call attention to an exiiting itw, that, while it wai probably all right when It waa made, hai come to be little more than a farce. I refer to the law covering appoint ment of notaries public. The reoniremenU of toil law are men that almost anyone poaaawinc the ability to writ hit own name can obtain a commie ion a notary public. The liabilities he assumes are sueh that any of the rerular bonding companies are willing to assume the risk on his bond of 12.000 for a period f .1 . fnr less than 15. The cost of obtaining auco a commission is so small that no office having any notarial worn at all can afford to be without a notary. There are eleven people working in one building which I have In mind, six of whom have notarial commissions. This proportion Is not uncommon in the banks and law or real estate offices In this state. And to such as these do many of our people entrust the preparation of papers for real estate con veyances. Investment of funds, etc., simply because the average notary does not charge for bis services. Is it any wonder, may I aak. that not more than one real estate title out of ten I believe I could safely say a hundred is without errors or discrepan cies caused by failure of the notaries to do their duty. The value of our real estate is daily in creasing and examiners of titles are dally becoming more and more strict in examina tion of titles and quite frequently require certain action to be taken, costing heavily In time and money, which would have been avoided had the notary not, failed In his duty. It seems to me that It is time for the appointment of notaries to be restricted to a certain number in each community accord ing to its population, and to those who are able to pass an examination showing a thor ough knowledge of their duties. The liabil ities he assumes should be speeineially set out In the law as well as the fees he would be entitled to collect for the work, and he should be required to give sufficient bond to assure his careful attention to any work brought to him. I believe that such a law, carefully framed, and enforced, would eliminate a very large percentage of the troubles we now have with real estate titles. A READER. A City Hall Idea. Omaha, June t. To the Editor of The Bee: I was standing tn front of the city ball yesterday wondering when the welcome arch would fall over, when I had a thought. believe this is a valuable idea, so Z thought I would let you have the benefit of this bright cerebration, It is advertised that the efty commissioners are going to spend $85,000 to remodel the city hail. I have a better plan which I trust the com missioners will carefully consider before they let loose of this big wad of the tax payers' hard-earned money. (I am a tax payer and eltlnn.) My plan would be to put tn a little more money and rebuilt the first and second floors of the city hall so as to be rentable for commercial purposes and. If necessary, pat some of the city of fices in the court house. This annual rental from the two lower flfoors of the municipal building would be quite a sum and more than pay back the Investment. The details of this would have to be worked out, but It can be done. Will the commissioners look Into thisT If they have the public weal at heart they will look my plan over first. I bave thought of this until I am quite convinced of the feasibility of my scheme. What do you think of my idea, Mr. Editor E. L. B. From a Disgusted Democrat. Plain visw. Neb.. June 10. To the Editor of The Beet Allow me to congratulate Charles W coster of Silver Creek for his com munication ef June 14. 1 assure Mr. Wooster that he Is not the only democrat compelled to vote for Hughes this next fall, for there are thousands of others feeling the same way who have the same opinion of Prof. Wilson's ability as a stateman and dinlomat as Mr. Wooster has, only there are but a few no nave the oourage or ability to eraresa themselves openly. Mr. Wooster brands Prof. Wilson "an educated fool." This, of course, is a common expression, but I hold that education. If It Is the right kind of an education win take the foolishness out of a man, so I doubt that Prof. Wilson Is an educated fooL I have often remarked "that Wilson has been digging his political orave aa well for himself as for the democratic party, so the convention in St, Louis is merely a preparation for the bia funeral in November. X voted the democratic ticket lor the first time In 1878 and have eon. tinned to vote democratic ever since, but those undemocratic, unAmerlcan, unatates manltke, unreasonable acts during the pres ent democratic administration are enough to knock any old decent democrat dear out of tne box. The real democratic orinetnlefl am good and sound, but the democrats, aa a role, neglect to elect men possessing ability enough to carry out these rood and sound principles. H. STEINKRAU8. HERE AND THERE. A locomotive going at express speed Is said to give 1,06 puffs a mile. A mirror has been mounted on the portrait photographer's camera so that the patron may see what the resulting picture will look like. The women of the Philippine Islands make some of the finest lace In the world from a strong silk-like fiber obtained from pineapple leaves. Gold Is being mined at a depth of more than 6,000 feet In South Africa, and It is believed that the shafts can be sunk 1.000 feet more. An electric fan has bee invented tn which the vanes are covered with gause, which enters a tank of water at each revolution and helps to cool the breeses the fan creates. Horses imported Into Argentina are taught to avoid a poisonous weed that the native animals shun naturally, by forcing them to inhale smoke from burning piles of the DOMESTIC PLEASANTRIES. Pendleton eounty, Kentucky, famous for Its honey, seems to have some reason to be proud, data showing that several beekeepers there gathered 10,0 Ob pounds each and one 15,000 pounds, Havre Is one of the foremost ports of tturope for the fan portative of American cot ton, and the handling of this staple has long constituted the principal source of the busi ness prosperity of the community. Probably the largest gas well ever struck In Oklahoma waa brought In recently at Fox pool, south of Gushing, a gusher which now spouts approximately 100,000,000 cubic feet a day, enough for a city of 100,000 people. E. H. Greeley of Ellsworth, Me., first drove over the road from Columbia Falls to Ellsworth, a distance of forty-four miles. May 1ft, 1841, when he was 10 years old, this year, on the same date, Mr. Greeley, at the age of 84, made the same drive. The trip took six hours and Mr. Greeley did it without a stop. HPS ON HOME TOPICS. Brooklyn Eaglei "Knowledge comet, but wisdom lingers" If you don't believe it analyse carefully one of the college grad uating essays that are floating about on -these sweet June breeses. Boston Transcript Before this campaign la aver "Alfalfa Bill Murray, the Okla homa baaoo, wont be the only democrat to regret the drafting of a supreme court judge for a presidential nominee, Pittsburgh Dispatch t A student of the eurleua thinks Wood is the logical man be cause all the presidents since Arthur have run alphabetically Arthur, Cleveland, Har rison, McKinley, Roosevelt, Taft, Wilson. But what's the matter with 'UgheaT Philadelphia Ledger t Why should those Americans who live la England expect to escape the war taxes imposed on English men They ehoae their plaoc of residence presumably for their own advantage. K they now flod it disadvantageous, they have the privilege at leturalnt to their native land. To eat ene'e cake and have It to aa agreeable but highly difficult feat w T see one lady missing from this war who has figured prominently in warfare." "Who la that 7 "Mtnle Ball." "Well, therein Shrap Nell.- Louisville Courier -Journal. .a"Rmftmop' mjr on-" said the father, that polltenesa coats nothing." ..!9h' 1 oon,t returned his hopeful. Did you ever try putting Very respectfully yours' at the end of a telegram." Ladlea' Heme Journal. UCT AllSHTl IMHl? SLEEP, Aftl HlKBAMD CAUEDW AUSttESS Biff AWBB VB WSNTASISSP "DM m twar that Jl. was allied white trrav.llnr In K.nluokj?" "No. Row was b. kilted f "In a feud." "And I always told him not to rid. In tnoas cnoas cars." Ctevsland Plain Osalsr. Mra Kwdoor Tour maid Is a J.wl. Ton must oonsldw ksr worth hr wslsht la sold. Mrs. RomsbodT Ooldl Why. I would not toad, her for her wslsht Is beefsteak. Jruck. .'Xht '"'ow rot Ms nrv. with html" "What's the matter now?" "Ha aetuftllv mtiA , - . w 4ii (. mm a couple of saltans of sseolln. until next u j . ueu-ou rreo rrese. "I told that Inveterate losstn. Mra dabby, that I saw youna- Hlihfly taklnc lunch with a married woman In the fashionable res taoranL" "And was he?" "Sure. It was his mother." Bsltlmors American. 'r. I mn. Inr.ntinn tn nffAr .All. MiniT an olive branch?" 'Tn not sure," replied Senator Sorshum "We'll try out the olive branch proposition; but we'll fix the thing so It can b. turned Into an ai handle." Washlnston Bear. Head of Busineas What position do yon desire tn our establishment, air? College Graduate Oh, something Ilk. con fidential advls'.r or general manager. Head of Buitness Good! Tou may hav. both Jobs. I IU make you aa office boy. Dallas News. "miSEVElUIICE. Philadelphia Inquirer. JL swallow In the spring Came to our granary, and 'neath the oaves Essayed to make a nest, and there did bring Wet earth and straw and leaves. Day after day shs tolled With patient art, but or. her work was crowned. Some sad mishap the tiny fabrlo spoiled. And dashed It to ths ground. She found In ruin wrought. But, not cast down, forth from ths place shs flew, And with her mate fresh earth and grasses brought And built her nest anew. Bnt scarcely had she placed Th. last soft feather on Its ample floor. When wicked hand, or chance, again laid wast. And wrought the ruin o'er. But still her heart shs kept. And tolled again and last night, hearing calls, I looked and lot thro, swallows slept Within the earth-made walls. What truth Is here, O man I Hath hops heen smitten In Its early dawaf Hav. clouds o'ercaot thy purpose, trust or plan? Hav. faith, and struggle onl Blizzard Refrigerators Practical - Economical - Convenient Complete Line of Styles and Sizes. On account of our location, out of the High Rent Dis trict, low operating expense and enormous purchasing power, we save you 10 to SO per cent on every purchase and, as usual, YOU MAKE YOUR OWN TERMS. Bliizard Refrigera- 4'7 r; A tor, like cut T I OU Acme metal 2-quart Freezer, clean, dur able and easy operat- lflte. 49c A Safe Place to Trade Our Guarantee Protects You, pa B- Enamel lined, mineral wool filled Refrigerator, with one door instead of two, d 7 as cot shows P1 Oar Porch Furnitur Oapajrt meat is filled with splendid ml aes in Chairs, Rock.rs. Sett and Swings for Porch or Lawn, at prices sure to please you. fsaraasggasaaoganssasamn. a,-. I Large family site, wool nued Keini mineral larerator with r. raovaDie - lood racks, like eat : $19.75 Get the habit of coming to th Central. You can always find it here. You Make Your Own Terms. Pi Hare Us Fig ore Your Furniture BUI. JUUUUUU P E Red Crown ,slaifan3 mean service at". I M sMe-aaflSiBm 3 tutWN rf -. GASOUNE A avumsvao on cokpamy PPHaWWm Mill it Wmm