Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 05, 1916, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1916.
Brief City News
"TowaseMls for Sportlnt Oaods.- ,
Hava Raot rrint II New Baaaoa Praaa
LlKktlnc Flitmss Bursss-Orandan Co.
Half Karat TtHIM IMamoiuU H Baholm.
Rasp Tour Monr Ann valuables In the
American Bate Depaalt Vaulta, 111 uta
17th 81.. Bee Bldl. Boisa rant ll.lo tot
I montha. Open Irom a. na. 10 p. m
"TnHaT'a Marie Prwrram." classl'
(led section today. It appears in Tha
Bee exclusively. Find out what the
various moving picture theater oner.
Madero's Father
Is Pound Dead in
Bed in New York
New York, Sept. 4. Francisco
Madero, father of the late President
Madero of Mexico, was found dead in
bed here today from heart disease.
He was 6? years of age.
Mr. Madero fled to this city after
the assassination of his x two , spns,
Francisco, jr., then president of
Mexico, and Gustavo, who had been
financial agent for the revolutionists.
The family estates, said to have
been valued at ?6,WU,UUU, including
large holdings of land in northern
Mexico, were confiscated by the
Huerta government but three weeks
ago the Carranza government in
formed Mr. Madero that his property
would be restored to him. Julio Ma
a - ... ..... :. : i.;, ...
UCIUt a. BUN, n mv.LU 01-
ranging with the authorities there for
the transfer of the estates.
Mr. Madero was born in Coahuila.
He accumulated his fortune through
investments in farm lands and in
mining and banking. Mr. Madero's
widow was Mercedes Gonzales T re
vino, member of a prominent and
wealthy family of Monteray. They
were married forty-two years ago.
Thirteen children were born to them,'
eleven of whom are livings
, The body will be taken to Mexico
; for burial. ' ' ,
Japanese Demand ;
Eliminates China
In Inner Mongolia
Peking, China, Sept. 4. Baron
Gonsuake Hayashi, the Japanese min
ister to China, has presented to the
Chinese foreign office four demands
' for settlement of the clash between
Chinese and Japanese troops at
Cheng-Chiatun, eastern Mongolia,
seven Japanese were killed or
wounded. The Japanese demands
follow:
"First Dismissal of the Chinese
officers in command of the troops.
ic I TL. . I. J , r
octuiiu x lie wicnarawai 01
Chinese tronna from thf riictrirt in
. which the trouble arose.
: "Third Indemnification of the
families of the Japanese killed.
"Fourth The granting to Japanese
of police rights in inner Mongolia."
Chinese officials regard the de
mands as virtually an elimination of
- : : , i
-King Constantine ,
" Willphange Policy
v London, Sept. 4. A dispatch to the
y Times from Athens states that King
Constaintine has informed the entente
atiA ministers that a. a raanl, .( U.
; entry of Roumania in the war he is
disposed to reconsider the Greek
policy. ..' ' ' - . '
Suffragists to Take Up
Their National Policy
Atlantic City, N. J., Sept. 4. The
question whether the National
Woman's Suffrage association shall
limit itself to working for either na-
- tional of state legislation' or shall
continue its present policy of sup-
porting both state and national cam-
palgns is among the most important
of the subjects to be considered at
the convention of the association,
; which will open here Wednesday.
Many delegates and officers of the
organization are already here' and
every state in the union will be rep
resented by delegate and alternates
when the convention is called to
order. -
Candidate Hughes Obliged
To Forego All Luncheons
New York, Sept. 4. Charles E.
Hughes, republican candidate for the
presidency, will not attend formal
luncheons on campaign trips here
after, according to an announcement
at republican national headquarters
' here tonight. Affairs of that kind on
the candidate's western trip proved
too great a strain, it was said.
: Art Medicines Liquors?
A certain class of prejudiced and
jealous doctors call patent medicines
only alcoholic beverages. They will
tell you that such and such a medi
cine contains as much alcohol as a
glass of beer or a certain quantity
. of whiskey; but they do not mention
that the beer or whiskey is swallowed
at one draught, while only a small
quantity of the medicine is taken at
one dose. " At the same time they will
use alcohol quite as freely and many
in four or five times as great propor
tions in their own prescriptions.
Such standard remedies as Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable . Compound
use barely enough alcohol to preserve
. the root and herb extractives, too lit
tle to have injurious effects, and the
medicine can be had, if desired, in a
non-alcoholic form. Advertisement.
Culls From the Wire
(ientral Jaolnto Trevtno nyi that th
'ommandi of conitltuttonalltt under (ton-
era) Cavasoe and Colonel Zuaaki are x
pecttd at any moment to corns Into con
tact with the main body of Vllllataa now
moving north.
With an averare of lot 1-t foot, Lewis B.
D Oarmo of Chlcavo won th llvht tacklo
distance fly and established a new national
mark In tho feature event of the second
day's contests of the National Amateur Cast
Inw association tournament at Washington
park, Chicago. .
- Formation of the Wood row Wll'jon Ad
vertisers' league has been announced by
Vance M. McCormlck, chairman of the
democratic national committee. Charles H.
Ingcraoll of New Tork Is president, and on
the executive committee are W. L. Saunders,
a member of the naval consulting board;
K. T. Meredith of Des Moines, la.; L. I.
Wallace, Jr., and Homer J. Bulks)? of
t'hk-ago. and lwellewyn E. Pratt of New
York.
Breathing Beoomes Easier.
After a few doses of Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey,
Inflammation Is arrested, you rough
Ires and breath easier. Only 26t. Alt drug-trtiUs.-
Advertisement.
GRAFF MAKES TALK
TO THETEACHERS
Superintendent Urges Profes
sional Devotion in Meth
ods of Instruction.
TEXT BOOK AUTHOR TALES
"Professional devotion and co-oper-stion,"
was the keynote offered by
Superintendent Graff, addressing
1.000 teachers of Greater Omaha
schools, at a general meeting in the
auditorium of the Central High
school.
The teachers had returned from
their summer vacations and were all
dressed up in their best bib and
tucker for the occasion. It was the
most bewitching assemblage of peda
gogic pulchritude since the merger of
the two Omahas, according to the
statement of an attendant. The chat
ter of 1,000 teachers ceased instanter
when the superintendent raised his
right hand in token of silence.
Superintendent Graff, in his address
referred to. a movement tending to
standardize certain phases of educa
tion, particularly the determination of
results.
"The speedometer of my automo
bile may indicate the speed I am trav
eling, but it will not tell me where I
am going nor whither I should go,"
said Mr. Graff in his illustration of
the futility of applying any , exact
standard for school room efficiency.
He told the teachers that physical
equipment, text books and course of
study will neither make nor mar the
results of a teacher, but it is rather
the teachings of the teacher which
count in the final analysis '
Text Book Author Talks.
Prof. Howard R. Driggs of Salt
Lake City, teacher of English and
author of school text books, inter
ested and entertained the teachers
with a presentation of his ideas of the
importance of English in the schools.
"The great binding force among
teachers is the subject of English,
because every teacher is a teacher of
English," said the visitor. "The whole
problem of reading is to teach the
child to think while he reads. Read
ing is the open sesame to the great
world of thought.
"Eliminate your non-essentials and
connect everything you teach with
life.' Cut out and connect up. We
have gone from a pioneer diet of the
three R's to a Thanksgiving table of
plenty. The child is threatened with
mental dyspepsia.
"Our ears are tuned to recognize
certain sounds. The other day my
son stopped mc on the busiest corner
of Salt Lake City and told me he
heard a certain bird singing nearby.
In a moment he showed me the bird
upon a wire. Probably he was the
only one of a passing throng to rec
ognize the note of that bird. But if
I should have dropped a dime on the
sidewalk how many do you suppose
would have recognized the sound and
turned to observe what becatie of
the dime?" -, v
A teacher on the second row whis
kered to her companion, "I guess all
of us would recognize the sound of a
dime at thi time of the school year."
Introduce! New Principal.
Superintendent Graff introduced
Edward Huwaldt, new principal of
South High school, who made this
sage observation: "If more of us
grasped the child's viewpoint of life,
most of us would be teaching rather
than just keeping school." '
Assignments for . the new school
year were announced.; The schools
will be started Tuesday morning.
Westerlicher Kriegerbund
Will Meet Next in Omaha
' '(From a Staff Corrsspondent
Lincoln,. Sept. 4. (Special Tele
gram.) The 1917 session ot the
Westerlicher Kriegerhund will be
held in Omaha. At the election of of
ficers this evening, Ernest Koenig of
Omaha was elected president of the
society which covers organizations' in
Minnesota, Iowa, South Dakota, Kan
sas and Nebraska. The 1916 session
will-close tomorrow with the annual
parade.
pfficers elected were: President,
Ernest Koenig, Omaha; first vice
president, Albert Voss, Papillion; sec
ond vice president, August Geiseker,
Seward; financial secretary, John' E.
Hoist, Denison, la.; treasurer, Wil
liam Voss, Norfolk; trustees, Ru
dolph Block, Lincoln; John Clausson,
West Point, and Henry G. Loe, Grand
sland.
Three Thousand More
Guards Reach El Paso
El Paso. Tex., Sept. 4. Approxi
mately 3,000 National guardsmen ar
rived today, bringing the total num
ber of troops on station here to about
43,000. The Eighth Ohio infantry de
trained and went into camp with the
Fourth and Fifth regiments, complet
ing the organization of the Second
Ohio brigade under Brigadier General
John C. Speakes, of Columbus. The
Second and Third Kentucky intantry
regiments, the first of the Kentucky
contingent, also detrained today.
Gnlsta Oaaa to Cleveland.
Portland. Ore.. Sept. 4. Louis Gulslo, a
first basaman sold recently by Portland to
the Cleveland Americana, left tonight for
Cleveland. Ouleto previously had refusbsd
to report to the purchasing club unless a
bonus of 11,000 was paid him. .Today he
ssld he had ssreed to vo to Cleveland and
talk matters over.
Forty-Eight Thousand Shells
Have Brought Ruin to Verdun
Verdun, Sept. 3. (Via Paris. Sept.
4.) Under the escort of General D
commander of the citadel of Verdun
throughout the bombardment, the
correspondent of the Associated
Press today made a circuit of the en
tire town and surrounding fortifica
tion and heard the grim old hero sum
up just what had been done and how
the military balance "sheet stands,
after many months struggle.
The shelling goes steadily on,', and
48,000 shells have fallen . inside the
limits of Verdun during the battle.
The daily number of these si' ells was
seldom below 300, and one day 750
were counted. As the party stood
there, a French aeroplane was at
tacked by a German gun, shrapnel
bursting all around the aeroplane as
it turned from the German positions
and darted back to French cover.
The terrible extent of the destruc
tion was pointed out during the
course of the hour. The town it
self is utterly abandoned, not even
soldiers being permitted in the
streets. Such shops and houses as
escaped the shells are closed and
barricaded. The whole lines of
streets are crumbling ruins, with
only a jagged wall remaining. The
cathedral has two shell holes in the
roof, the main altar is a mass of
debris and the side altar is litered
with broken carvings, statutes and
fallen chandeliers.
The handsome military club has
one wing torn off and the whole es
tablishment is a general wreck. The
archbishop's residence has its famous
sculptured walls peppered with shell
holes and the adjoining college of
Marguerite has its delicate stone fili
gree reduced to almost powder. The
houses along the Meuse flanking the
principal bridge are literally wrecked.
The town hall received sixteen
shells; one corner of the building is
torn off and the clock tower is
smashed. The mayor's office now is
used as an emergency butcher shop.
FAVORS EIGHT-HOUR
DAY FORLABORERS
Rev. Mr. Cobbey of the First
Christian Church Preaches ,
Labor Day Sermon.
OOD ALWAYS A WORKER
"I believe that God joined the North
and South America by a narrow isth
mus as a challenge to man," asserted
Rev. Charles E. Cobbey in a Labor
day sermon at the First Christian
church Sunday.
"The narrow isthmus Between the
two oceans 'stood as an eternal ob
struction to commerce. Only by
great toil and labor could it be opened.
The United States accepted God's
challenge and the canal stands as
a monument to the dignity and glory
of labor."
God Himself is and always has been
a' worker.He is not the usual idea of
a king, sitting in imperial idleness on
a throne. God labored Six-periods to
create the heavens and the earth.
Christ said. 'My Father worketh ever
until now, and I work."
Work the Law of God.
"And it is the law of God that all
things work. Nature is busy every
where. The bees in this country
store up every year 540,000,000 pounds
of honey.
"God's ideal of work is that every
man shall have a job, that he shall
glory in that job, that he shall re
ceive plenty of rest and a living
wage. I believe in the eight-hour
day, in the six-day week and in lib
eral vacations every year.
"Work is the noblest thing in the
world. Without work we would all
be miserable. It is the highway to
joy and contentment. The man who
can work and won't work, robs him
self and the community and he should
be treated like any other robber.
. Labor in Worthy Cause Noble.
"Christ was a worker and I like
to think of him as a man with cal
loused hands. He worked in the car
penter shop. And his work, well done
there, was as pleasing to God as was
the sermon which He preached on
the mount. Let no man who works
with his brain - look down on him
who works with his hands. For all
labor in worthy cause is alike noble.
, "The cause of better conditions for
workers' has a staunch friend in the
church. Reforms cannot come per
manently through mere legislation.
Laws will curb, but cannot root out
selfishness and greed from the hu
man heart. The spirit of Christ com
ing into the hearts of men will raise
labor , to its rightful place. It has
been rising higher and higher in dig
nity through , the Christian era and is
now the highest that it has ever
been." , ,
Tekamah Farmer
. Is Struck by Auto
R. B, Doub, Tekamah farmer, is
at St. Joseph'! hospital suffering from
internal injuries, resulting from being
struck by the auto of John P. Stod
der, 4118 North Twenty-fifth.
, Stodder was arrested, but witnesses
said that the accident was unavoid
able, and be was released.
Thomas to Coswh. .
, Catchtr Ira Thorn, mmbr of the Ath
letic' old guard, ! to fortvk the bis ytrd.
httvlns nlf-ned to coarh the William col
lece paitimers. During hi big lajrue ca
reer Irn wa tn on tho money dortved from
Ave world' ohamplonnhlp Her Inn, He wax
with Detroit In 1S0S and with the Athletic
in ItiO, 1111, 111! and lti.
More Staamer Hunk.
Tendon, Bept. 4. Lloyd Hhlpplnv agency
today reported that the following British
steamship had been sunk; Duart, 3,1011
ton, unarmed; Strathailan. 4,404 tcne, un
armed; Kelvlnla, S.140 ton, unarmed, crew
and paengr aaved; Mascot te, ),o7 tons,
of Lelth.
UNION HEN HAVE
LABOR DAY PARADE
Annual Procession Represent
ing Unions is Headed by
Squad of Police.
CELEBRATE AT KRUQ PARK
Labor is having its day.
-Two thousand niembers of the va
rious crafts of organized labor parad
ed the streets of Omaha yesterday
in the annual Labor day parade.
Tom Reynolds, president of the
Central Labor I'uion, was marshal
of the day.
A squad of ten mounted police
headed the parade. Bai-ds were con-,
veniently interspersed to furnish
march music for the procession. Ban
ners in many colors bearing the
names of the respective organizations
were carried alott at the head of each
section.
The procession was eight blocks
long. By 9 o'clock the formations
started to take shape on Nineteenth,
between Farnam and Harney, be
tween Farnam. and Douglas, and up
Douglas to Twentieth, and down
Douglas to Eighteenth. It was 10
o'clock before word was given to
move ahead. The parade moved south
on Nineteenth street from Farnam
to Harney, then east on Harney to
Fourteenth, then west to Sixteenth,
and north on Sixteenth to Cuming,
where it disbanded.
Marchers Gaily Dressed.
There was abundant color and va
riety in the parade. Many of the sec
tions carried little red-and-white-and-blue
umbre'ras. American flags were
carried at the head of many divisions.
The Tri-City Carpenters' District
council marched in white liiTen suits
and white hats. The theatrical stage
employes and the bill posters came
out in freshly laundered pate blue
shirts, giving the whole division a
handsome uniformity of appearance.
The Motion Picture Machine opera
tors wore blue serge trousers and
white shirts and hats. Most of the
others marched in their street clothes,
wearing large silk badges bearing the
names of their respective unions.
At the disbanding point, most of
the marchers boarded cars for Kntg
park, where they celebrated Labor
day with speeches, , athletic events
and many other amusements. The
women hurried to the park with bas
ket lunches. The day being spent
in frolicking, racing, dancing and par
taking of all the refreshments the
basket ivnehes and tie various con
cession stands afford.
U. P. MAN MAKES
TRIP WITH HUGHES
General Passenger Agent Ba
singer Says Nominee Makes
Good Impression.
RESTS IN THE ROCKIES
General Passenger Agent Basiuger
of the Union Pacific has returned
from a short swing around the circle
with Charles E. Hughes, republican
nominee for the presidency. Mr. Bas
iuger met Mr. Hughes and party in
Salt Lake City, accompanied them to
Denver, up into the Rocky Mountain
National park, where they remained
a week, then down to Denver again
and thence to Kansas City.
Not being in the political game, Mr.
Basingcr is not predicting the out
come of the campaign, nor the effect
that the Hughes' tour has had upon
the voters of the west and central
west. However, Mr. Basinger said
that the republican nominee made an
excellent impression and was n
thusiastically received everywhere.
In the Rocky Mountain National
park, according to Mr, Basinger, Mr.
Hughes devoted most of his time to
resting, making short trips to the
mountain resorts and getting close to
nature.
On the road the Hughes party is
traveling in four cars, two of which
are occupied by Mr. Hughes and the
immediate members of his party, and
one by newspaper men. The fourth
car is a diner. There arc thirty-four
Seople in the party, one' of Hit mem
ers being Eugene Ackerman, form
erly an Omaha newspaper reporter,
but now a staff man tor the New
York Herald. '
, Hliatrgthe Are Wlaasrs,
Denver, Hept. s.Morrlsor, ana William
lhafroth, sons of I'ntteri atatea ftanalor
John Shafroth of Colorado, won tho slate
ttoubles lennte ehaniplonxhlp hero today, fle
featlna Han-ten lluahee and Tyaon Ulnos.
jr. The pcore waa -4, (.
-621
residents of Nebraska
registered at Hotel
Astor during the past
year,
Singh) Room, without ban,
- S2.0O to sj.oo
Double l3.ootoS4.ae)
Singts Rooms, with bath,
f)M to S6.00
Double . Soo te fro
Parlor, Bedroom and bask,
)(io. t I14.M . t
TIMES SQUARE
At Broadway, 44th to 4th Stts.su
ens esntat of New York's social anal
biuinass scuvitiej. In dost prozmuty as
all railway twminals.
iiiiiin!iaiiJiinHiHi!Si!5iamiiHJ
Nadine
Face Powder
I In Gram Bonn Only)
To Discard Freckles,'
Tan, Pimples, Wrinkles
Th uw of cretma contatBtnv antra I
Mubatano aomttlmtia oauai hair to trow.
Tou run no rttk ot acquiring auprf.itoiw
hatr when you uae ordinal? maraoltaed waa
Thwra Ik nottanir bnttar for dtscolorwi
kin, aa tha wat actually abaorba tha of
fanalvt cutlcUa Tha .attar la naturally ra
plaood by a clear, imooth, kaalthy com
platlnn. full Of Ufa and axproaaton. It'i th
analblf way to dlicard a f rack lad, tanned,
ovftr-rarl, blotchy or pimpled akin. Oat an
ouiK of morcotiiad wax at any dro !.'
and apply nightly Ilka cold cream, araain
In tha mornlnir with aoap and water. If
tahaa a weak or ao to oomplata tha trans
formation. ,
Tha lilnal wrtnhla wmoror la made by
dlaaolvlng an ounce of powdered aaxollte In
a half pint of wltrh hairl. Huh In tha fact
In in aolutlon brtnga almoit tnatantanaoua
ramiUi. Advartlaemant.
KmPi Thej
Complexion Beautiful
andvttvaty. Money back If not an-
tiraly pleated. Nadine la pure and harm
laaa, Adhafee until waehed off. Prevanta
unburn and return of dleooloratlona.
A million delighted uaara prove itt value,
Tlntai Plaah, Piok, Brunette, Whha.
By Tojler Caamfar or Mmit, 50
Narienal Telle Company, Parte, Tee.
tola by leading toilet ootuteie In Omaha,
TYPEWRITERS
FOR RENT
Eary Kind Prioas Vary Low
' Over fiva Hundred machine to
elect from. Rent applied on
purchase. ; , ,
Central Typewriter
Exchange, Inc.
IB0S Farnam St.
Phono Douflas 4121.
TO END CATARRHAL
DEAFNESS AND
HEAD NOISES
Persons suffering from catarrhal
deafness and head noises will be glad
to know that this distressing affliction
can be successfully treated at home by
an internal remedy that in many in
stances has effected a complete cure
after all else has failed. Sufferers
who could scarcely hear a watch tick
have had their hearing restored to
such an extent that the tick of a watch
was plainly audible seven or eight
inches away from either ear.
Therefore, if you know someone
who is troubled with head noises or
catarrh, or catarrhl deafness, cut out
this formula and hand to them, and
you will have been the means of sav
ing some poor sufferer perhaps from
total deafness. The prescription can
be prepared at home, and is made as
follows: , .
Secure from your druggist 1 02.
Parmint (Double Strength), about
75c worth. Take this home and add
to i( '4 pint of hot water and 4 oz.
of granulated sugar1; stir until dis
solved. Take one tablespoonful four
times a day.
The first dose should begin to re-1
lieve the distressing head noises, head
ache, dullness, cloudy thinking, etc., ;
while the hearing rapidly returns as
the system is invigorated by the tonic !
action of the treatment. Loss of smell
and mucous dropping in the back of
the throat are other symptoms that
show the presence of catarrhal poison
and which are often entirely overcome
by this efficacious treatment. Nearly
ninety per Cent of all ear trobles are
said to be directly caused by catarrh;
therefore, there must be many people
whose hearing can be restored by this
simple home treatment.
Every person who is troubled with
head noises, catarrhal deafness or ca
tarrh in any form should give this pre
scription a trial. Advertisement
O ' fit
The President, Arbitration,
And the Eight -Hour Day
During the long-drawn-out discussions at Washington between the President, the railway
managers and presidents, and the representatives of the railway Brotherhoods, discussion in
the Press and on the street centered about two points: Arbitration and the Eight-Hour Day.
The third and most important party in this great struggle, and the party that ultimately will have
to pay the cost, is the American public, and it will be interested in reading THE LITERARY DI-
- GEST for September 2d, and learning the exact state of public opinion of all shades upon this
question which so vitally concerns it. The article shows editorial opinion from all oyer the coun-
try. :. r : . . ' .
Ten Nations Battle in the Greatest Balkan Drive
A Compreheniive Deicription of the Great Counter-Movement Begun by the Allies to "Re-Conquer
Servia, Bring Bulgaria to Terms, Place the Allied Troop Across the Vienna-Constant!-'
nople Railroad, or Menace Hungary Along the Danube"
Helping the Filipinos to Self-
Government
The Democratic Child-Labor Law
An English Spy in Germany 1
Japan Invites Us to China '
Watch Your Weights and Measures
The Growing Weakness of Old Age
Non-Corrodible Metals
Percy Grainger, Musical "Viking"
German War-Medals
- ' : (Six Illustrations)
Rewriting Old Hymns
Can the Commission Settle the
i Mexican Difficulty?
Roumania is Worrying Germany
The Hyphen in Switzerland
The German 'Censor at Work .
Service From Imbeciles
Keep Clean, Campers
Life-Saving Machines
"Shoddy Prussianism" in England
New York's Catholic Week
Is the Lutheran Unfraternal? (
An Unusually Large Collection of Striking Photographic Illustrations,
Cartoons, and Maps.
A Diary of the World
In THE LITERARY DIGEST, you will find the
day-by-day developments of the world's thought
and action recorded more accurately and more
accessibly than anywhere else. Each week this
magazine of Information opens up for you a pan
oramic view of current events the news in a per-
spective which puts everything in its proper pro
portion. The truth is not clouded with the opin
ions of the "Digest's" editors. Every question is
considered from every view-point all the facts
are presented and all sides are explained with
quotations from the press of the whole world. The
constant reader of THE LITERARY DIGEST is a
well-informed man. If you haven't started yet
start today. Get your copy early the "Digest"
sells out quickly.
Most Modern and Sanitary Brewery in the West.
Family Trade Supplied by WM. JETTER, Distributor,
2502 N. St. Telephone Douglas 4231. South 863 or 868.
'Tit
Mark of
I Distinction to
I Be a Reader of I
The Literary
kv Digest V
September 2d Number --All News Dealers Today 10 Cents
- ' i ' f -
The
iterar
FUNK & WAGNALLS? COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary) NEW YORK