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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1919)
THE BEE: OMAHA. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1919. The Omaha Bee DAILY ' (MORNING)-EVENING sundat , FOUNDSO BT BDWAJU) ftOSIWATXB TCT HI fUBUIHINO COM ANY. PBOPBIZTOB MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED TRESS .wastes r wBw.t u. - - --T,' -,Si. ttllUM tt UN DM Iw DUDliowran w ..,- Far Night aa Sunday aVsrvice Cslli uum mm UN UM TOT pumiwm vs ---- - ' Ir.V . r,tZ Vv1IlI In thll MMT. Ud all" tocel ari poblWirt btwto. Alt tulii. o( pobueatloa at our - iiikM am aLaa immi . .. BE TELEPHONES, beperuma at Particular Person Wanted, ajrsssi www ID 1000 1. Tilt 10WU Tiler 100IL. Adfertleuif Depeitswii offices of the bee mm Offlee. Building, 17ta sag raroaaa. lia luwj " CouncU Wefts Nn Tort City 15 Soott M. I Weton Otit-of-Town Offices! S8 nftn An. I Waablnitoa BIOS. I unooia M19 ItiTHl worth KU n Sinn 11 Wort Mte 1311 0 Btrest 1330 H Btrorl OCTOBER CIRCULATION! Dailv 66.315 Sunday 63,160 innm etreolaUoa for ths nontb subscribed . ud mora ta to g. flmi. ClrmilsUoa Mtmiw. SubecHWs levlI th. ell, ahoulel have th. "! (a them. Address chanted aa often aa required. You should know that Omaha is the seat of the' great .medical school and the hospital of the University of Nebraska. What The Bee Stands For: ' 1. Respect for the law and maintenance of order. 2. Speedy and certain punishment of crime through the regular operation of the courts, . ' 3. Pitiless publicity and. condemnation, of ' inefficiency, lawlessness and corup- - tion in office. 4. Frank " recognition and - commendation of honest and efficient public service, 1 Inculcation of Americanism as the true basil of godd citizenship. The president's treaty strategists in the sen ate are, not now so cocksure whether they want to "take it or leave it." ' Ohio Wows wet and dry between late elec tion returns.. How tantalizing to the man with a tendency to develop a thirst. - Louisiana sugar planters are framing for a retail price of 18 sents a pound. Their arithme tic evidently is confined to multiplication by two. If our Nebraska sqhol teacher guests like to come to Omaha as much "as they say they do when they are here, they will vote to come 'again.'. ' . , ' : , . . A Seattle preacher scores "the indecent dress of ome women in our churches." What he means is. "the -indecent undress" of some women.:-- " -i ' ' i - "i ' The Nonpartisan League, has not gotten very far out of Its shell in Nebraska in fact theri is some question whether anything is in- side the shell. Our grand jury makes a mistake when it permits itself to be 'manipulated by the dis credited police department in pursuit of per sons.1 grievances. 1 . - , Arkansas acquitted one negro tried in con nection with its recent race riot for which 58 were found, guilty. Wonder how they selected the one to be acquitted? And now the schools are blamed Jor the ( Omaha mob that burned the court house and lynched the negro, Any other alibis will also be gratefully welcomed by the police who fell down, on the job. - '" It is rare that a $5,000,000 bond issue fails to have an aftermath of graft charges and candal. Let a lee if the $5,000,000 just voted lor a program of new school buildings in Omaha can not be kept clear of taint. Governor-elect Edwards of New Jersey take hs success at the polls as indication that the people, of thaj state are unqualifiedly op poaed to prohibition. New Jersey is also Pres ident Wilton's state. A lot of folks would like e know whether the president reads the mes ne the laracway. "'''" The . triumphant re-election . of Governor Coolidge'of Massachusetts is hailed by Presi dent Wilson and democratic oracles generally tl a vindication of law and order. Had the democratic candidate won out, it would have been exploited by them as a great ground swell for1, the democratic party. , TheiWorld'Herald man gloats with demoni cal flee over the defeat of Edgar Howard fbr delegate to the . constitutional - convention. There' a reason,. Edgar had the unforgivable hardihood once to seek a nomination in a democratic primary against the senator-owner, of the W.-H. and made it mighty uncomforta ble for" the last mentioned gentlenian. , I Tyo Kinds of Workers j Americans as a whole - have always been cheerful and valiant in their vocations, what ever they may have happened to ,be Their state of mind in pursuing their various indus tries nave ( fteen nopeiui, maniy ana Kinaiy. They have not looked upon work as something in be berformed in a sullen, antagonistic spirit. To open a new continent has been arduous but also interesting. Courageous qualities have - been promoted and good humor cultivated as a healthful national trait That any material change will occur in these respects it not prob- . ' able. It is a false idea that labor is something that naturally breeds discontent and quarrel- ' some complications. The real equities of em- vi ployment are not hard to determine by those, mi Via lr. reasonable, who Innk unon work a5 a wholsotne necessity of existence and who enjoy it aa well as carry it on faithfully. As for op portunity all doors are open to Americans. If J U iCOb 13 (L 13 MIC fWVI UUJT 111 i this country who becomes the multimillionaire. ' It was once ommon fallacy that labor . saving machivet, would rob the worker of his job, and tbf' were often heated protests ' against it introduction. Where is there any lunriving trace of this mistaken notion? Our, larma.are productive, beyond example because V ii their decided advantage in machines that on ' i larre scale reolace manual drudsenr, Ameri- san inventors are always busy , and signally sucettsful. -'i- In this favored land what are called , labor wart art misconceptions, in fact at well ai tem per. St. Louis Globe-Democrat, OMAHA AND TIDE-WATER. Nothing affects value of products more than facility for marketing them. Cost of carriage to the consumer is almost inevitably taken from the . price' paid the producer. Nebraska's but put is of a quality that goes to no special mar ket, but is sold to the world, and in competition with producers everywhere. These truisms make Omaha's relation to the seaboard a mat ter of concern .to all the state. Already this city is well established as the primary market town for a wonderfully fecund region, from which an endless stream of wholesome food is poured into the maw of a hungry world. Any thing that will improve on the situation 4s of advantage to all If the plan for a great canal around Niagara Falls is feasiblel and can be put into service, Omaha and the territory served from here will benefit by reason oftthe presence of ocean going freight carriers at Chicago or Duluth. This project is no more attractive, though, than that which contemplates using the great water way from here to New Orleans. , These are both subject to being closed by weather, just at the time when the great grain movement to market is under way. 1 This physical difficulty does not condemn either, for it is conceivable that ample storage room could be provided here and the grain in transit be held to wait for open water, with a saving on the freight rate by rail shipment. The north and south railway project also de serves consideration in connection with, for tide-water at the gulf is still nearest the port of Omaha, and that is open all the year around. Apologies That Aggravate' Offense. German- leaders of the late war are indus triously writing, talking, explaining and expos tulating, each one trying to exculpate himself and shift the blame onto someone else. Von Ludendorff, Von Hindenburg, Von i Bethmann Hojlweg, Von Tirpiti the whole list of them, with and without "vons" are engaged in this ridiculous competition. Neither of them has added anything of real value to history, for each has been so completely devoted to saving his own face that the evasiveness of his ap proach to any salient point justifies generally rejection of his testimony. Not one of them has frankly faced the charge made by Prince Lichnowski in his book, that the war was de liberately willed by a coterie surrounding the throne, that it was planned and executed, and that Germans like himself, who were not in sympathy with the aims of the junkers, were kept in igonance of the steps by which the catastrophe was broughl about. The stupefy ing immorality of the whole process by which the scheme of contest was set in motion does not appear to have dawned on any of the apolo gists. Only the fact that they failed and neither is jwHling to accept Vs share of blame for not having, succeeded moves them now to speak. No amount of passing the buck will avail to relieve any of them of a full share in the de testation with which they will be recalled by an enlightened future. A Jury of Her Peers Prom the New York Times. ' It was an obviously unfair advantage which a Cleveland judge lately took of an eloping wife from Columbus. The lady had left her hus band, who is a restaurant keeper, and her three little children, all for the love of a window dresser. "You cannot understand, Judge I" she exclaimed. "Only a woman can understand some things in love." So Judge Sawickl decreed thai the case should be tried before a jury of women. ' Verbally, of course, the judge scored. But what the defendant had in mind, obviously, was her right to be tried before a jury of her peers. To accede to the spirit of her request, it would be necessary to assemble twelve good women and true who had themselves left a husband and, three children at the prompting of the pas sion which is sometimes called tender. Strict iustice requires that the deserted husbands hould be restaurant keepers or their equivalent, and the charmers all window dressers or some such persons. For the essence of the case is the romantic lure of art as opposed to hum drum domesticity, But Judge Sawickl was not content with his verbal triumph; the jury he appointed was composed of women "prominent in various activities in Cleveland." Thus the course of true love is likejy to be rougher than ever. .Club women, civic upliftersl What chance has romance before the stern, verdict of public duty and- patriotic virtue. ' . Lady , Astor of Virginia and London would have understood the- case perfectly. Having been accused of an ambition to stand for her husband's seat in Parliament, she sent the fol lowing telegram to the chairman of the con servative party; "I have neither been asked' to stand as a pussyfoot candidate nor have I the intension of doing so.' It seems to me that I detect the claws' of some, other sort of envious cat in this misleading suggestion." Our proudly American metaphor derived from feline loco motion has become current in London since the advent of a prohibitionist named Johnson; but it has clearly suffered a sea change. What a "pussyfoot candidate" may be is subject for amazed conjecture. But Lady Astor's opinion of the attitude of her sex toward her sex ad mits of no misunderstanding. Woman's inhu manity to woman has made countless thou sands poultice their cheeks and eyes. If a jury of eloping mothers is unavailable in staid and virtuous Cleveland, the. least Judge Sawicki can do. is to appoint a jury of problem playwrights, -who are sympathetically familiar with the romantic triangle in all possible trigonometric applications. ' They understand, not "some things'," but all things in such ro mances. Just at present Broadway is out of humor with their great works. A dozen juries of them could be collected any morning in a tour of the offices of local play brokers. . Warfare on the Rat , : One of the early European immigrants to America has come to where his extermination is demanded. The rat is not native to this country, although he haa lived among its plenty through four centuries. Always a nuisance, he is how recognized not only as a menace to health, but as a most expensive pest. Estimates as to the rjumber of rats, existing are mainly guess work, but a safe' basis for calculation is one, rat for each inhabitant Close study and comparison of experience warrants the state ment that it costs one-half cent a day to main tain a rat. This brings the expense of support ing the army of rodents up to $180,000,000 a year, a figure accepted as conservative by health authorities. Added to his destructive ability is his character as a spreader of disease. Frm whatever angle the rat is considered, he is un desirable. , t . That be may be exterminated is established. New Orleans, .San Francisco and other seaports where entry of the bubonic plague was threat ened by the rat carriers, intensive campaigns have practically ridded the community of the dangerous rodents. Farmers and others who have and do suffer from the depredations of these energetic and ferocious animals have car ried on detached warfare against them with more or less success, but the general effort to wipe them out has been lacking. Now it is proposed that all unite in an attempt to rid the land of the, pest. Several methods for killing 'them are sug gested. Most efficacious of these is trapping,, poisoning coming second. Rat-proof construc tion of buildings and food containers will con tribute by starving the rats. Use of cement or' other permanent construction instead of planks for passages or platforms will deprive the rat of breeding places. Comforts of home are to be denied him, and when all are engaged in hunt ing him down and killing him at every oppor tunity a chance 'exists that America will again be what it wps before the sixteenth sentury, a land without a rat. - Meeting an Industrial Crisis. -Great Britain has just emerged from a series of labor strikes, one of the miners and the other of the railroad employes exceeding any ever experienced here. The miners had in view forcing the government to "nationalize" the fuel industry, the railroad men looking to a similar end. Disturbances in othef lines were more or less closely articulated with these main issues, the situation over there being so thor oughly disorganized as on this side, with the added factor that the socialistic element is much stronger politically than here.' Leaders of the movement boldly proclaimed the "revo lution," and went confidently into the fight They bad not reckoned with the foresight and courage of David Lloyd George. Now it is admitted he had visioned the crisis long ago, and made arrangement accordingly. Food and fuel in large quantities were quietly stored away, the motor transportation of the army was prepared, and when the trap was sprung, the government was ready.' Instead of the revolution, the miners gave over their demands, the railroad men compromised, and England was saved from a winter of paralysis, starva tion and terror. Comparison connotes the dif ference between an able and energetic govern ment, and one that waits till the fat is in the fire and then rushes into court for a restrain ing order it does not intend to enforce. With England and France supporting Italy on Fiume, it looks as if Mr. Wilson's "chef doovre" at Paria were to go the way of hj four tta points, , . Ella Wheeler Wilcox v It took many years for Ella Wheeler Wil cox to outlive the imDression she made bv her first literary efforts as Ella Wheeler. Having gained the soubriquet of The Poetess of Pas sion" by her first bopk of verse, it clung; to her until long years of much higher and much bet ter verse gradually won for her the estimation of the people. Yet, it is probably true that many thousands of those who read her early volume of "Poems of Passion" and classified her in their minds at that time never saw enough of her after work to cause them to change their classification. Doubtless the vast majority of those who know the high literary quality and the splendid human value o( her later work never read a word of the volume which gave her the name which was a handi cap to her for so many years. They have judged her by her higher work, by her real life work, and have therefore judged her aright. If her later poems were to be given a name similar in style to the title of the first volume they should be called "Poems of the Heart." She had a philosophy of love, of work, of human understanding of cheer for the despon dent and suffering, of encouragement for the weak and of faith in a better day. which has been helpful to many thousands. Her own Hfe, also, was lived in harmony with what she wrote, her last work being with the soldiers in France. Though she gained fame with her poem beginning "Laugh and the world laughs with you," she wrote very little 'to cause laughter or hilarity. She was not a writer of humorous verse. She saw too clearly the suffering and the needof mankind to write for their mere amusement. Her moving purpose was to be helpful. While she will not be enshrined as America's greatest poet, she will be mourned by thousands as the one who helped the most when helD wa needed St T nnU Globe Democrat. ., . The Traitor Enemy . The reasoning of the supreme council is a little difficult to follow when it threatens to bloclade Germany for aggressions in the Bal tic provinces of Russia and at the same time asks Germany to co-operate in a blockade against the Russian bolsheviki. The nenre r.afw i o . M .ff..t r is not yet even officially a friend instead of an enemy, arm actually sne is as mucn an enemy as ever, being engaged at this moment in mili tary operations against an ally of the western powers and attempting to gain territorial con quests. If the German government should dis own ahd endeavor to scatter the troops opera mg against the Russians, the government would probably be'overturned, as the junkers behind the military movement are very influential and are secretly, if not openly, supported by a large part of the German population. There is nothing to be gained asking Ger man co-operating in blockading, the bolsheviki. The Germans are sa treacherous that they would be more apt to aid the enemy than the allies; and if they should, for .their own rea sons, assist in the blockade, they would speed ily mate it the basis for demands against the allies which the latter would find it hard to re sist, seeing that they had asked Germany's help. Washington Post. I I O I I A V" The Dav We fVVKr Maj. Gen. Clarence C. Williams, chief of ordnance of the United States army, born at Nacoochee Valley, Ga., 50 yearsago. Lawrence Y. Sherman, senior United Statea senator from Illinois, born in Miami county, Ohio, 61 years ago. Rene Viviani, French statesman and former premier, born in Algiers 58 ears ago. Rear Admiral William C. Wise U. S. N, retired, born at Lewisburg, Va., 77 years ago. Dr. Henry H. Apple, for 10 years president of Franklin and Marshall college, 'born at Mer eersburg, Pa., 50 vicars ago. ' Ethel Clayton, a popular star in motion pic tures, born at Champaign, 111., 29 years ago. Thirty Years Ago in Omaha. The Omaha Board of Trade sent advices to Pierre that they had formed arrangements and appointed a committee to work in conjunction with Pierre capitalists to secure railroad con nections between, the two cities. General Crook arrived from Fort Leaven worth a nd spent several hours in Omaha on his way to Chicago. Mrs. Richard C. Moore entertained the Bon Ami Whist club at her home. A. G. Borglum, son of Dr. Borglum, and a gifted young artist of California, exhibited two pictures at Rose Brothers' art store. The Globe Loan and Trust company was incorporated with a stock of $150,000, J. E. Riley & Co., who bad almost finished the paving of Vinton street, were ordered to commence on Farnam between Smith street and the Belt line.- The paving was to be of cedar blocks, . Ain't No Such Animal. Vice President Marshall is wrong: in predicting the awakening- and solidarity pf the American class. Nobody admits belonging to it. Louisville Courier Journal. DAILY CARTOONETTE, THE WEATHER 1550 Cool-THAT I THINK I'LL PUT ON MY WINTER FLfWNEUS EARLT THIS Up n A jfcrm i m ANDHEDID Qj dear skin is always a source of pride What joy and satisfaction comes from the knowledge that one possesses a healthy, radiant skin which will stand the test of the brightest lights. IfesinolSaap will help you obtain just such a com plexion. Composed of the purest in gredients, it cannot injure the most sensitive skin. Work its generous lather well into the pores, with the finger tips, and after rinsing carefully, finish with a dash of cold water, and note how much clearer your skin looks. RESINOL SHAVING STICK makes the daily shave a pleasure. Rettnol prodnctt at all dratsitta and daUert lo toilet foods. Propose Test for Laws. Central City, Neb., Nov. . To th Editor of The Bee: The constitu tional election being over I wish to submit a proposition to the elected member for their consideration, that I think will be approved by all law abiding and-well thinking peo ple, of the state of Nebraska, alnce it will save much litigation and un certainty In the enforcement of law that may be paaaed by future legis latures aa pell u be distinctly In the line of economy. I would suggest that the consti tutional convention make the con stitution to o read, that the legisla ture (whether on or two bodies Is Immaterial), meet every year. That one-half of th member be elected every two year to erv four year. That new legislation submitted and passed upon at any legislative ses sion, after its passage be submitted to the supreme court of the state or a commission selected by that body or th legislature or this constitu tional convention, to pass upon tn consmuiionaiHy ana mane piain the meaning of such law. That the supreme court com mission, or whatever you choose to eall it, be required to . pas upon all laws passed by a legislature during the Interim between the ses sion which passed the law and the next regular session, when It would come up again for final considera tion, and if approved it would be come one of the laws of our state. However, I would add an emergency provision so that a law could be put in force at once and remain In fore until it was rejected by the next session of thai legislature1, which would have final disposal of it If after one year' consideration the people would let a poor law be pffprtlve. bv default on their part they would have no one to J blame but themselves, i oeneve it would shorten our legislative ses sions by half and do much toward preventing duplicate and unneces sary legislation. The common peo ple, those who work for salaries as cleiks, laborers, mechanics and the like, who have not the education or ability to interpret the intricacies of the laws as now found on our stat ute books, should be given the most consideration in the forming of a state constitution, if any one is to be considered above another. Pick up one of our statutes and read the law as passed by our leg islature and then note the reading of the same law as changed by the courts and It is a different law alto gether, with sometimes numerous conflicting decisions, clothed in such technical language, that sometimes the most able lawyer cannot correct-, ly interpret it and make his inter pretation good in a court. For thl and many other reasons I believe a proposed law should lay over one year before It becomes law and should be investigated as to its con stitutionality and all uncertain or unintelligible language be elimin ated from it. CITIZEN. Thanks to The Bee. Omaha, Nov. 6. To the Editor of The Bee: In behalf of the Board of Education, I thank you most cor dially for the support you gave the school bond issue. I personally ap preciate the good service you have rendered in this capacity, and am not unmindful of the responsibility placed upon this office by the vote of the people. This splendid support means a bigger and a better city. J. H. BEVERIDGE, Superintendent of Education. Roosevelt's Idea of Business. Roosevelt always "meant busi ness." The comparative smallness of his estate, however, calls attention to the fact that his idea of business did not necessarily imply pecuniary accumulation.- Washington Star. WORK AMBITION ACHIEVEMENT WHAFBOYS-CAN-BE Worker in Merchant Marine. By R. 8. ALEXANDER. . 'Barney Wells liked to sail boats. Ffom the little harbor town near his home he had gone to sea in every kind of a' boat he could find there, from rowing boat to fishing smacks. But he wanted his chance at blue water sailing. So he shipped aboard an old tramp steamer. , At first Barney envied the boat swain and the quartermasters. While they were not licensed offi cers they were several steps above his position. About this time he an opportunity to become a fireman. But he envied the quartermasters more thai he did the assistant engi neer and he liked the deck better than below so he remained a seaman. As time went on and through hard ' Nurse. . x- ' Br ELIZABETH MATEER. Nursing is serious business. It is no work for a giddy school grl. Long, thorough training at home, in high school and in an, accredited nurse's training school is needed. In school pay especial attention to your physics, chemistry, Latin, bot any and domestic science. If you were to ask Miss Mary C. Wheeler, superintendent of the Illi nois Training School for Nurses, what natural qualifications you need for the work, she would give you this list; - onorp a. DOT PUZZLE. x Choarfulnaai leanllnaa Courtesy Economy Good Manners Industry Obedlenca Quietness Volca agreeable work and study he became a quar termaster he forgot his envy and developed another. He now looked upon the bridge and envied the captain. ' Shortly after he was made quar termaster he bought a book called "The Men on Deck." It was a man ual of seamanship. He studied it very carefully. Later he bought and mastered several other books re ferred to in "The Men on Deck." If he were preparing himself at the present time he could write to the United States Shipping board in Washington D. C, for further in formation and advice on the subject. But this board had not yet been formed when Barney was a quarter master. Barney next took a course in a nautical training school. He could have gone on as he was and perhaps sometime been made a licensed offi cer but he preferred to get theoreti cal training as well a sea ex perience. After he finished his course he took the examination for his license as an officer. Now as Barney walks the deck he is still envious of the captain, but his envy doesn't hurt so much, for he is now Mr. Wells-and is a brand newlv licensed third mate. (Next week, "Mechanical Engi neer.") , . Boys' and Girls' Newspaper Servlca. Copyright, 11. by J. H. Millar. SAID TO BE FUNNY. Teacher How many aexea ara theraT ' Llttla Boy Threa. i Teacher What ara they? Little Boy The male sex. the female ics. and the lnaects. London Ideaa. "Are yon an optimist t" i "I am. Aren't you?M 1 'yes. But Just the same I've rotten over my cheerful confidence that stocks are going to prosper and so up every time 1 play them." Washington Star. "Miss Plain isn't a loeiety girl, la she?" asked Mrs. Outotown. "Oh, my, no," replied Miss Gay. "in fact, she Is a very common person. She actually listens to the music when she goea to the opera." Knoxvllle Journal and Trlbunet Critic In P' Alette's paintings have you noticed the crudities? Layman I was more struck with the nudities. Cartoons Magazine. "Why. do people call it a merry-go-round?" . "I could never figure out. Most or the people en It look anlxlous and kind of scared." Kansas City Journal OROI P B. r Age suitable Health Alertness Honesty Courage Patience Discipline at home. Reasonableness . In school Reliability Education, 4 yr. Respect for othera high achodl Unselfishness GROT'? c. Aim of Purpose Reverence for blr(h; Faithfulness for death; for the Humanity t body Intelligence Sympathy Memory Wllllngneaa Observation There are four chief branches of nursing: (1) Private nursing ($40 week). A modern variation of. private nursing is house nursing, whefe the nurse calls for a short time each day, like the doctor. , (2) Hospital nursing ($75 month 31 W 8- . V ' elS , ,ifj 57 11 5t 55 55 bo ' 3d 49 5o 4a 7 d to ; V- ,5 .4o 33 4l 4 44 47 ,45 . e X. and up with maintenance). In time you may become a head nurse, su pervisor, superintendent of nurses; instructor or specialist in some line such as X-ray or anaesthetics. (3) Public health work ($75-$150 a month,) Cities, counties and the federal government employ visiting nurses; so also do many large in dustrial plants. Anti-tuberculosis work and infant welfare work are worthy fields. (4) Army and navy corps ($60 month abroad during war). ' There are 1,392 accredited nursing schools in the United States. Un der the auspices of the American Nurses' association Miss Inde Al- When you come to sixty-one ' You will see my uncle's - Draw from one to two and so on to th end.- baugh, 44 East Twenty-third street, Nr Vnrlf Citv! Mlil Mtff C Wheeler; 309 South Honore street,. director of the Red Cross Nursing Service, Washington, D. C, are now making a new survey of all these schools. Ask them for information so that you can investigate the one nearest your home, or the ones of (Next week, "Telephone Opera tor.") Bova and Girls' Newspaper Berrla' Copyright, 1819, by J. H. Millar. ODD AND INTERESTING- Except on the coast tthefe are n inns or hotels in Morocco. Coal was first mined in the United States at Mauch Chunk. Pa., in 1808. Stammering Is practically vn known among all uncivilized peo ples. . ... London ' has more than 1,00 V V. 11 lO 11 11 VA V J.wvw w ' - ship. Fish hooks have been made oa exactly the same design for ,001 years. ' The Bible chapters number .1,180, of which 939 are in the Old Testa- m QT-i f art A 9AA In t Vi a Vanr mc la in c vita, blc TMDE 1919 J 1918 , 1917 ' 19161 ipj O Q 1913 BUSINESS IS GOOD THANK Y0U Increase of sales in seven years. The steady growth of our '. business through war times and peace con firms the statement that The Best Oils We Know are sold by - the L. V. NICHOLAS OIL CO; Tyler 4040 President Locomotive Auto Oil, 10 Degrees Below Zero. "The Bet Oil We Know." -J