V HUNDREDS OF SHRINERS TO I CROSS SANDS "Shake With Jake," Is Slogan ; Adopted by 'Members of - Tangier Temple of This City. , 4 S s '"Shake with Jake" is the slogan ; v!-. which has been adopted by the , members of 'Tangier Temple, An rient Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, when they cross the . sands on their annual pilgrimage to . , ine imperial council session at in dianiDOlis. Tune. 10. 11 and 12. -"Jake" refers to Jacob Jacoby'of ' Indianapolis, the imperial potentate. 'A special train will leave Omaha on Sunday, June 8, bearing 300 members of Tangier Temple of Omaha, Sesostris Temple of Lincoln .v and Tehama Temple of Hastings. .,' The train will be made up here, and the special cars from Lincoln and Hastings will be attached. Will Visit Chicago. The Nebraska delegation of Shrin- 'MJ will visit in Chicago from 8 a. in. .-mMl midnight on Monday, June 1J, when they will be the guests of Me- dinah Temple. The train will be of ; Pullman equipment throughout, will be appropriately decorated and will ' have a commissary feature. The Arab Patrol and the Tangier urum ,orps win accompany ine pilgrimage, and will enter the con ::.' tests which will be held in Indian- apolis. The president of the patrol is Walter C. MacCue, and the cap--.t tain is Harry Rasmussen. Dr. Zoro " D.' Clark is president and major of . the drum corps. T I ' 1 1 . f" Search for -Camels. The countryside hereabouts is be ling searched for camels and goats which will be needed by the Omaha ' Shriners when they are crossing the burning sands. Nebraskans at- tending the imperial council session have engaged headquarters at the Claypool and Severin hotels in In dianapolis. A party of women will . make the pilgrimage from Omaha ". and other Nebraska towns. V' , It is expected that Tangier drum v corps will be heard and seen while s in : the Hoosier metropolis. They i, are practicing up like "Sam Hill" V for the occasion and they intend to - give the Indiana folks a demonstra , tion of real western pep. , . . y Temple Widely Known. " , Tangier Temple is one of the best -, established Masonic organizations " - it. ......... Tl ,a Lhahih . .- ... . coast to coast. The membership of 4 AAA i I., r f . .. . nMHAaH -'- the state, r . " The divan of Tangier Temple com prises the following personnel rT. L. f ,A Cnmhu. notentate: Earl R. Stiles. -thief rabban; Charles E. Black, as sistant rabban; John" R. Dysart, .high priest and tfrophet; Howard R. J.. flMtiMiftf nricnlal eMf,H. Arthur r. Trimble, first ceremonial master; J. .fi.- w IT ' Da. Jit t Af-mAn ( 1 naa . . i . nrii v. iiiiu lli luiuii t m ilia j -" ter; John W. cooper, captain ot v, guards; W. S. Wedge, outer guard; H, C Tym, marshal. ' i nr , 1 1 Umaha iypograpnical ' V Union 190 WiU Hold Memorial Services Omaha .Typographical union No. "190 wilK observe . Memorial Sunday y."thjs afternoon at 3:30 in the A. O. U. W. ; temple, Fourteenth and Dodge streets, with a special pro - gram." The services will be open to ' the public, Ninety members of. the organiza M -tion "have died since it was organ- wed. seven during the last year. Oft ; Hhe38 members in the military serv- ice of Jheir country two have given up' their lives to the cause. It is in honor these members that the I program is to be held. The 'Rev. T. J. Mackay will de ' .liver, the invocation. Addresses by "E. L. Platz, Samuel Hussey and T. . W. McCullough and a reading by C. J. Anderson are on the program. - In Loving Memoriam," the reading ' to he given by Mr. Anderson, is his own composition. Music will be furnished by the ' South SideChristian church choir. C Myrle Reeves will sing. . typographical union No. 190 was organized, over 35 years ago. There are-at present 335 members. C. J. Anderson, Fred Sullivan and Ray mond Sperry are members of the committee which planned the memo rial program. , Smith Sea Beauties Use .'if White Chalk Complexion Philadelphia. Paint and powder on the faces of "women the world over" were condemned by Rev. Dr. A. Pohlman at the Presbyterian ministerial conference in the Wither spoon building. Dr. Pohlman, who Vwas formerly an African missionary, .said; "In their desire to make their faces attractive by paint and powder , women are the same the world over. In Liberia they use white chalk on their , black faces. Here they use red and pink. What is the differ ence?" Mother's Letters Save ' the Life of Her Boy Emporia, Kan Mrs. O. S. Moore a has received a "package of blood stained letters she had written her son,. Charles Moore, with a letter from, him telling her that they were the, means of saving his life. He was fighting in the Champaigne last fall when a piece of shrapnel struck him in the breast. The letters in his .pocket broke .the force of the shell. He is now recovering in a New York hospital. Collecting "War Taxes" Latest in Crook Schemes Cleveland, O. It's here, boys. " The latest "patriotic" confidence game is collecting "wartaxes." M. F. Heldes is looking-for the -two smooth collectors who explained that his contribution to the national in- come under the "new revenue bill" ; would be exactly $10.20. Heldes paid and asked questions afterwards. Organized painters in Davenport, la., have won their fight against wage reductions and the contractors i have now signed an- agreement MM their demands. Official Elias J. "Shake with Jake," the slogan adopted by Murat Temple Shriners for the meeting of the imperial council in Indianapolis in June, is the general greeting that may be extended by everybody to the visitors who will come to the city, whether Shriners or not, as an expression of the genuine hos pitality of the Hoosier capital. But among Shriners it will have an added Arabic significance charac teristic of the order, being accompanied by a sign, word and grip. This Father and Son Happy in Their Humble Home Along the Missouri River Bank, a Real Close to Nature Spot, so Near and Ed Kazmirksi Has Livedo Up and Down the "Old Muddy" for 20. Years and Knows More About This Stream Than Any Other Omahan; Livelihood Gained Chiefly From Fishing. By EDWARD BLACK. Some men reside in costly dwell ings and others live in huble hous es. Ed Kazmirski abides with his father in a crude structure in the solitude of the trees, along the riv er bank, at the foot of Missouri avenue. They are happy in this close-to-nature spot which they call their home, sweet home. Few people hnd their way to this seauestered scene, where nature gives expression in wildest mood. The visitor leaves the street car at Thirteenth street and Missouri avenue and then walks eastward. down a flight of steep steps, across railroad tracks, and tnence he me anders along the bottomland until he comes - to the Kazmirski house at the river's edge. Toward the southeast a beautiful view of the river is to be had; north by east is a wooded isle, and northward the river stretches away in its sinuous course. Grew Up With River. Ed Kazmirski is 32 years old and has lived up and down the river for 20 years. He knows more about this old stream than any oth er Omahan, and he did not gain his knowledge from school books. He just grew up with the river, and he loves it because he knows it. The livelihood of this father and son is gamed cnieny lrom hsmng. Ed goes out in his boat and usually returns with a generous haul. He finds a ready sale for all he can catch. He gave this list of pisca torial species the river yields to him: Sturgeon, catfish of the va rieties known as channel, blue, sil ver and spoon-bill; 'perch, pickerel, wall-eyed pike, quillback, spike- Educational Designed to Private Schools Constitute System By FLOYD MACGRIFF. International News Service Staff Correspondent. Scene Inquiry roofh, British Coal commission, which is try ing to ascertain whether mines should be nationalized. Sir Leo Money, socialist mem 'ber of commission, cross-examining witness. r "Would you sell out the schools of this country to private own ers?" Harold Cox, witness; well known economist "Certainly. I think state education is a most mischievous thing." Sir Leo "Would you put the sewerage system under private enterprise?" - Cox "No. I would give you the sewers." (Uproarious laugh ter.) London, May 24. Should a prom inent American declare before a pub lic investigating body that he "re garded state education as a most mischievous thing" his remarks on anything else certainly would not carry much weight. In American colonial history Virginia plantation owners fought establishment of pub lic schools. But in England things are differ ent. There is no such thing as free public school education clear through to the university. After a British boy is 9 years old, or so. there is no "equality of opportunity" for attaining what would be regard ed in America as merely a good high school education. All good school ing of a child after the age of 9 is in private hands. Private schools,, all of them requiring fees and many of them boarding schools, not public schools as Americans know and cherish them, are preponderant in Britain's educational system. America's school system, often at tacked or criticized by persons who know nothing of school conditions prevailing in Europe, generally is re garded even by its critics as the na tion's chief democratizing force. That is exactlywhat the English school system isn t. The education al system here is designed to keep the people divided into classes. And Arab ' " f Jacoby (right), Imperial Potentate, Yet so Far From City's 'Maddening Crowd' jack, hickory shive, eel, gar and carp. Among his prize catches were a 64-pound sturgeon and a 56-pound cat. The son is fittting one of his boats with a small stationary en gine -and he intends to use this craft for his fishing excursions. He has designed the boat to enable him to go over the hidden sandbars without running aground. Keeps Track of Channel. "Keeping track of the channel of the Missouri is the hardest part of the business, for you never know where a new sandbar is going to be," he said. If he should, however, find him self beached on a submerged sand bar it would not necessitate being marooned until someone went to his recue. He is almost as adept at swimming as the fish he lures from the water's depths. He can swim across the river and back, again just as if it was part of the day's work. "Are you not afraid of the treach erous whirlpools of the river?" was asked. "If you just hold your arms out like this you can divide the whirl pool, and then there is no danger," he "replied, illustrating his words. Father Does Housework. John Kazmirski, the genial father of this child of the river, attends to the domestic duties of their re treat, where a woman's voice is never heard. He bakes the bread, cooks the meals and greets patrons who call for fish. He also- cares for a bed of pansies which lend a refin ing influence to the front of the house. Ed was asked if he would not. System of Divide People only the poorest chldren go to the fiee schools, known as board- schools,- because a public board has supervision over them. Because kindergartens give only a cursory elementary training or because dis ciplinary training is desired for a year or so, the lawyer, merchant or middle-class citizen may send his children for a brief time to a board school. The board schools have a poverty-stricken, woebegone appear ance, no lawns about them, buildings unpretentious, without any air of up lift about them, and are very small. While the board schools give in struction of a sort until a pupil is 14. even the poor boys who earn scholarships entitling them ,to go, fees paid, to a secondary school, quit the board schools atflie age of 12. Education for a middle class Eng lish boy to gain the equivalent of a good American high school train ing comes in three stages. The first is the board school. By the age of 9, if his parents can afford it, and by the age of 12 if he has remained in the board school to win a scholar ship, the pupil is placed in a second ary school, for which there is a tu toring fee of $15 to $20 a term, each school year having three terms. Thus if a parent had two children in a secondary school the fees alone would be $90 to $120 a year. In addition, he would be, taxed to help defray expenses of the board school to which he would not think of send ing his child after the age of 9 if he could prevent it The secondary school can take the pupil through six years of train ing. But generally, at the age of 14, the parent, if he wants his child to have the best training available, ar ranges to send him to a "public" school ' a misnomer, for it is no more public vthan "John D. Rocke feller's Pontico estate. The fees per term at a public school of average standing run $40 to $50 a term, while the more exclusive public schools charge anything from $100 a term, upward. The public school trains pupils from 14 years upward and L. T. Leacb (left), Potentate of word and grip has been obtained by Elias J. Jacoby, the imperial poten tate, from Arabian branches of the order, and hitherto they have not been used in North America. The word and grip have been communicated of ficially to L. T. Leach, the potentate of Murat. He in turn will exemplify them to the members of the reception committee for the imperial council meeting, and in thi& manner the visiting Shriners, on their arrival in the city,, will receive a true Moslem greeting. All the temples that will come r prefer to live in the city where he could be in the midst of varied ac tivities, have neighbors and, social' and recreational advantages. He de clared that he couM not be con tented or happy away from his river. He drags plenty of timbers and driftwood out of the stream, and thus the fuel problem is easily solved. There are no taxes to pay, and his sleep is undisturbed by noises that harrass the city dweller. Then why should be leave happi ness and plenty to go around the clock every day in the city? He wants to know. Has Saved Many Lives. During his long experience on the Great Britain Into Classes. to 21, although the average institu tion has finished off its pupils at 18. The public schools are the real criterion of social standing. Eton and Harrow are examples. These are for the "blue-blooded" folk. The training is similar to that given in scores of American academies or "prep" schools. By diligent study, a baker's son might win a scholarship in a sec ondary school entitling him to en ter, fees paid, some public school at the age of 16. But cases where in a joor man's son wins his way from a board school to the public school are rare. It is not the com mon thing. Thus,, the poor children get only an inferior education a tutoring which the fathers in the middle and upper classes frown upon as being too degrading . for their children. The middle clas:, children get as good schooling as their parents can pay for. If there is a large family and the income . is limited, educa tional advantage likewise are lim ited. "To. "well-heeled" families good opportunities, though being every thing but democratic, are available for their children. They can choose schools and tutors for their children j st as they select furniture. Co-education stops by the time boys and girls are 9, no matter to which class they belong. There is no mixing up of the population sons of -bankers, barons, bakers, me chanics or just plain laborers in the same school. From early life the boys and 8Tirls soon automatically fall into niches, as a general rule, provided through the schools, which in their turn are provided by the station, social and financial, the family has been accustomed to. Thjis a community does not regu late its schools or have just as good facilities as it may desire. Neither is there a chance for the poor man's son to have what the son of the man who is better off in world's goods caru afford to provide in the educational line. The private schools are operated on a basis of profit not education of the youth because he should be mstructed. Its a business proposi- JJion, pure and simple, for those - : Greeting for Shriners Murat Temple, Illustrating Imperial river between Omaha and Sioux City Ed Kazmerski has brought in 10 bodies of drowned persons and he has saved five persons from drown ing. And Ed has a paper which shows that he did his bit and his best as mechanic at Camp Funston. some men tind happiness in a cabin down by the river; others sometimes hunt for happiness in palatial places of residence. Ed and John Kazmirski believe that the road to happiness is the bottomland which leads to their riverside shelter. conducting the private schools. If a parent does not like the progress his son or daughter is making in a certain school, he simply picks out another. The same holds good of the "public" schools. The latter maintain, in many cases, a rigid social quaiincation basis tor en trance. At Eton or Harrow it will cost a father $2,000 a year for his son and he won't receive any better instruction than is available, free to all, at the high school at Wabash, Ind. In going about English towns and cities one is struck by the absence of large, well-located, adequately equipped common schools or high schools. The board schools gen erally are located in congested areas and very often are not much larger than cottage-like homes which surround them. Private schools very often are conducted in large residences which have been converted. One provision enforced by prac tically all secondary schools is that every master (teacher) must have a bachelor's degree. People with money start sending their children to boarding out schools at the age of 7, vir.iting their children twice monthly. Boston School Heads Fight Teachers' Union Boston, Mass. Accusing several masters of the Boston (public schools of an effort to block the work of teachers to form a union, the latter are preparing to carry the fight to a finish. It is charged that immediately after a meeting of the masters the latter got busy and started in to block the proposed proceedings. Meetings of the teachers were called hy some masters, while others talked to their teachers one at a time, according to the story told by the teachers. The masters, the leaders of the teachers claim, cau tioned the teachers to go slow in the matter "of forming a union and made it plain that they were hostile to the union. Gambler "Smith" Profits by Army Camouflage Elyria, O. "John Smith" had read of the tricks of camouflage em ployed in "no man's land" in Europe. When police raided a crap game in a local meat market they checked one shy on a count of the prisoners "Smith" had crawled into a dead gt , yH I Council Salutation, "Shake With Jake." to Indianapolis are to be notified of the plan and be urged thus to qualify themselves as soon after their arrival as possible. Though the word and grip are secret, pictures have been taken to illustrate the form of salutation. The five different stages are shown from left to right, as follows: No. 1 The approach. No. 2 The chal lenge. No. 3 Imperial potentate communicating the word. No. 4 Murat potentate giving response. No. 5 The official grip. Joined as Clarinetist, Now Leader of Reed L. Harrison of Grand Island, Conductor of Band of 355th, Com posed of Ne braskans. Reed L. Harrison of Grand Is land, Neb., who joined the 355th Infantry band in 1917 as clarinetist, is returning as its leader, according to word received from him by his brother, Frank A. Harrison, of Lin coln. Harrison has not only played his instrument in France, but has also taken part in several engagements in which American troops fought. In the fighting at the Argonne forest and on the St. Mihiel and Stenay fronts, the 355th Infantry band dropped their instruments to show the Huns that they could fight as well as play. They also acted as stretcher bearers in these drives. Mr. Harrison assumed charge of the band almost upon his arrival, in France. The original leader was detailed to other work so much of the time that nearly all the burden of directing "the band's work fell upon young Harrison. While on the Rhine with the army of occupation, Harrison, with the aid of the. other band members, helped stage a playlet, "The Colo nial Minstrels." Seventy perform ances were given. The band is a Nebraska organiza tion, composed entirely of Nebraska men. DeValera Spared by Prayer, Says Wife of Irish Patriot By a Special Correspondent. Greystones, Ireland. I spent a de lightful half hour in the dining room of a pleasant seaside villa in conver sation with a gifted intellectual Irish lady of deep convictions and enthusiasms. The home was that of the rebel chieftain, De Valera, now fleeing the law heaven knows where the lady was Mrs. De Valera. Half a mile below the wintry waves were breaking upon the gray rocks that give' this quiet sea side village its name, but the sun was glinting upon the Wicklow moun tains in the distance, and I knew there was sunshine in the house, for as I stood at the door awaiting the response to my ring, I heard a wo man singing and the cheerful prat tle of children at play. Could this, the Craig Liac, the Gray Rock, as De Valera has named it, be indeed the home of the fiery insurrectionist, once condemned as an outlaw, the prison-breaker, the fugitive? "I Am Mrs. De Valera." ' The singing ceased it was Mrs. De Valera's voice-1 had heard and the door opened. "I am Mrs. De Valera. Will you come in?" She spoke in clear, pleas ant tones, and her eyes, typically Irish, set in a face that was content and happy, crowned by thick coils of brown hair, asked in query ot my calls. In an-, other moment we were seated and she was conversing ani matedly. The news of her husband's escape had greatly pleased her. I only know what i see in the capers." she said, "and I am glad. Where he is at present I know no more than you do. But I am glad glad' he has escaped." She spoke the word escaped with emphasis, and I know what she meant.' Escaped was sweeter to her than "liberated. The De Valeras have only recently settled in Greystones, which is al most entirely a unionist village. "A 'olantation county, we call it." she said with a laugh. "Cromwellian, you know. Plenty of English here. Oh. no; very many English people I like immensely. Once I spent a time in Yorkshire, in Bradford. I preferred the moors. Irish Do Not Know. But she did not entirely under stand the English, and knew littie, as 1 hnd tne insn uu, ui-uie war privations we have endured the po tato queues, tne meat queues, the one ounce pai or uimcr ana ine Is. 8d worth of meat. Deeply inter ested she appeared to be in these things. . "I would like," she said, in an elo quent outburst against war, "to see the whole world rise in peace Phoenix-like, to something higher, loftier Infantry Band Harrison. than we have' ever known. "Do you know," said she. "I have ceased praying 'God bless Ireland,'" "And what is your prayer now?" I asked, in some wonderment. "Thy Kingdom come," she said. We talked of the woman's part in the Sinn Fein movement. "Many work as hard as the men," she said. "I, too, was very active once. Now my part lies in my home. I have several children." ' I could hear the prattle and laughter in an adjoining room. One came to the door. Mrs. De Valera rose and ushered the child away. She spoke to the little one in Irish. The Woman's Part Was she anxious, this laughing chieftainess? Did she lie awa're thinking and wandering of the perils ot her husband? It seemed so incon gruous to see her sitting in the sun light, the happy buoyancy of her heart reflected in her merry eyes. "Ah," she replied, "that is all in the woman's part. I have served my apprenticeship." I heard not one word of bitterness from her, not a note of indignation; there was no fiery outburst such as I had expected. She is a stranger here in Greystones, without friends. Unionists almost to a family, no body calls. I had expressed to a Sinn Feiner my surprise that De Valera should thus choose residence among the aliens. "Why," was the humorous re sponse, "that's just because of the Oirish in him, of course. Shure he wouldn't do phwat an Englishman would. Yes don't understand us at all. at all." I rose to leave this loijply lady, of the great ideal that she best serves her country who serves the home, and noticed fastened upon the very center of the drawing room door the figure of the Christ with these words: "I will bless the houses in which the image of my heart shall be exposed and honored." As we paused before this presence her demeanor became one of devo tion, and wishful as I am to get at the inner meaning of the Sinn Fein movement, I was emboldened to take the liberty of inquiring as to this. , "Is He," said I, "your husband's leader?" "I placed that there," she said quietly, and bowing her head. ,"lt is of the Devotion of the Sacred Heart, and I believe my husband has been spared as the result of our prayers for him." Bridegroom 70, Bride 71. Jerseyville, 111. Singing "It's Never Too Late to Be Married," Newton Tapp, aged 70 'years, and Mrs. Elizabeth Krisley, aged 71, were married here. They were sweethearts of childhood days, but fate intervened and both married an other. With their first partners in life gone they again met and th m--ister said fjie words, Reed L. MANY YANKS ATTEND PARIS TRADESCHOOL Educational Corps of Overseas Forces Under Brigadier General Rees Has 7,500 Instructors. Paris. April 22.-(Correspondenc of Associated Press.) Uncle San. is now a fully certified schoolmas ter with about 200.000 khaki-clad pupils. This is the result of the es tablishment of the educational corps of the United States army to provide training for vocations and academic instruction for young men in the army. The educational corps is under the direction of Brig. Gen. Robert I. Kecs, who militarized the Americar colleges last fall. Under him is ar executive commission of throe edu cators. Dr. Frank Snaulding, su perintendent of schools in Cleve land; Dr. John Erskins, professot of English at Columbia, and Dr. Kcnyon L. Butterfield. president ol the Massachusetts agricultural col lege. In all about 7,500 instructors, including a number of men of high standing in American education, are teaching the American soldier the way to progress. Everything from a, b, c to university subjects, and from stenography to engineering is included within the curriculum of this great and uniqAc college. The army schools were in full op eration by January, equipped with $1,500 worth of books specially or dered from America and provided in part by the American Library asso ciation. But there has been a short age of books and often one book. has had to serve for a whole class. Many Schools Established. Many hundreds of army schools have been established throughout France wherever there are enough American soldiers to warrant. Gen eral Pershing's order required a post school in every place where 500 or more men were stationed and as the schools had to be opened at once all sorts of queer places, from cafes to monasteries, were used as. schoolrooms, until regular quarters could be provided. The soldiers' are studying in barns, stable lofts, aero dromes, army barracks and in one case in a convent. Meantime the army is endeavoring to provide ade quate quarters and sufficient books for its '200,000 students. In cities like Coblenz, the city school build ings are used without interfering with the regular school life of the children. These post schools may be termed the primary schools of the army edu cational system, though this is inex act, as in many of these schools more advanced education is being given to officers and men who are unable fo leave their posts and at tend the divisional schools or the university. The men attend these post schools after their regular day's work. Then every division has a high school centrally located with better accommodations. Some 30,000 men are attending such high schools. Then comes the big army university at Beaume, which will accommodate many thousands of students. Besides there are about 8,000 officers and ' men attending French universities who have hospitably thrown open their doors to their American friends and 2,000 more are in English uni versities. These - universities stu dents are all men who have had at least the equivalent of two years in college. Available to Every Soldier. Obviously iew men can be de tached from their own units to at tend these universities, but the post school does not interfere with mili tary work, but is available to every soldier, and thus has an important place in the educational system. The breadth of the work in the post schools being done is astound ing. Men who cannot read or write are to be found studying in the same room with college students who are working for advanced de- grees. There is a chance for every body. The list of subjects taught would fill a book, but here are a few to illustrate: Algebra, calculus, geometry, trigonometry, economics, literature, trench, German, Italian, Spanish, agriculture, automobile re--pairing, baking, barbering, book keeping, arithmetic, business Eng lish, business forms, carpentry, cob bling, commercial law, cooking, horseshoeing, surveying, mechanical drawing, road construction, sales manship, stenography, typewriting, tailoring, telegraphy, and telephone repair. For illiterates schooling is com- ( pulsory, for the great bulk of the army it is elective. Find Tank Within Tank, With Liquor in Second Toledo, O. A tank within a tank. That is what the police of Toledo have found among the assets of a bootlegger who has beeen using his car to transport whisky from Ohio into dry Michigan. The one tank held gasoline and the other "licker." Police say the innovations to carry whisky from Ohio into Michigan are so many and diversified that it would make the ofd-time Kansas bootlegger "green with envy." - Uses Truck and Roadster to Move to Atlanta, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Joseph Fulk, mov ing from New Jersey to Atlanta, loaded all his furniture and fittinc of a five-room bungalow into hit four-ton motortruck, stocked a roadster with accessories and start ed overland. The truck is in North Carolina and will finish the trip when the roads dry up from the recent heavy rainfalls. The truck bears a large sign reading: "Headin' South for Atlanta." Tri mand Wait on Trade' Ad Brings Many Replies - Portland, Ore. The talent of milliners is reflected here today in the numerous applications for a po sition in answer to the following ad appearing in a local newspaper: "Wanted Young lady to trim and wait on trade in millinery store." ' The cotton trade in Great Br itaM dk - - nr ruin -