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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 3, 1920)
i- THE BEE : OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH S, 1920. X V The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY BEB PUBLISHING! COMPANY. PROPRIETOR NELSON B. UPDIKE, PRESIDENT MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS he iMmnil Preaa. of vtLtoh Tbe Baa li a mmbte. la Gamuts eMltleS to (be aae for publication f U am dlnxtche kaelee at M or eot otiMrttM credited I thla rape, wd elao fa) leea! aeee ulMd tarmn. All rifbta of pubtlcatioa of our yw lawiw are mu BEB TELEPHONES i A for a T..ln- llHin r rwunlu Pwe Waeua. J ll 1VW Far Nltat and Sunday- Service Calli ItaMOal ..... War 1000L I -atettoa Dauwnl . . Trier 100HL Daparlnani Trier 10C8L OFFICES OF THE BEE on Ofnoa, Bet Building; 17ta ud Fanum. DflUM! 411 Norta Mth I Park MIS Lea mi worth ill Mintm in I B..uih m n m. It Hoott BL Walnut Sl North 40tb Out-of-Tova Of fleet i York Office DM Fifth At Wiahlnttoa I'll O at. Buret jsidc I uaoou viw n a. 2 -V JANUARY CIRCULATION i Daily 65,351 Sunday 63,976 Arena etrenUtloe for ua month rubeerlbed ud twora to br ft & Beaaa, Circulation Manager. SaaWrihera leavlat the city ahould have The Bee mailed ta them. Addreea changed ee often aa required. You should know that In the agricultural portion of Ne braska the soil is from 300 to 500 feet deep. Omaha's Auto Show certainly hit the mark. Another thine; that is spreading is the Pershing boom. One place where no "Americanization" work it needed is among: the ex-service men. One thing the country could get along with out is a lot of freak laws now being proposed. t ' Activity on, behalf of the pipe line . from .Wyoming to Omaha should not lack for local support v That Dodge street gulch is growing at a rate that may yet add to Omaha a bit ofmountain scenery. A delegation of Italian bankers has just iesehed New York. No need to explain why they came. The "baby savers" are back on the job again, aaa1 when the Visiting Nurses set about a work male it thorough. Washington is gathering data relative to re ttat mardera- of Americans by Mexicans. It teH tuin quite a volume. i-. Hary la a grand old name" all -right, a fMr answering to It having put up a record of 3t Bad batter production that leads the world. - Doctors la session in Chicago are of the -paSioa that Insanity may be cared. Admitted, (tit thefB is no hope for a darned fool at any CaMh ' . tSayor Smith is hittufg the right key in nrg kf Immediate appropriation for, the summer I fcardeM'service, This can not be looked after Hoe) wan, ' Tfca American Legion will not drop its fight uhrarsal training. If any set of men are in poaltlea to appreciate the necessity of that if Ib 6 Legfonairet. " ' Tin home-coming of the , box car is the Of tM railroad manager just now. uu- cambling the rolling stock is the biggest fea tara of the whole job. . r; (. v- Little will be gained by passing the buck on the paving contract. The main point is whether or not the pledge made when the bonds were voted is to be carried out. Local laundries are adding to the perplexity of the white eollar wearer by whooping prices 25 per cent This is tough on "Mitch" Palmer, who told us the h. c of 1. had been licked. ; Uncle Sam is about ready to launch the big gest .dreadnaught ever built, to be followed by half a dozen still bigger. We are for peace and disarmament but nobody is going to catch us najpping again very soon-, The head of the American Legion says the men are not anxious for a bonus as they are for practical help in getringfstarted on new land. The problem is not an easypne to approach, but it should be, settled so that faith will be kept with the soldier. Lenine's Blood Guilt When Assemblyman Cuvillier at the Albany hearing interrupted the examination of Morris Hillquit to say that Lenine and Trotzky cor rupted the Russian army, then made a separate peace with Germany which released 1,000,000 German soldiers for service on the western 1 front, and that this compelled Americans to pour out blood like water to stop the Germans, Mr. Hillquit made this elegant retort: "Your sentiments are good, but your history is rotten." Mr. Hillquit s own brand of history is not anly rotten, tut putrid. He knows Lenine was transported to Russia by the Germans and fur nished money to get Russia .out of the war. Lenine has never denied the facts has justified the receipt of German funds. Ludeqdorff-in his book openly speaks of the Germans bringing back Lenine and of suoDortinsr him. Lenine's only defense is that he merely did what he k wooia nave aone wunout inducement, tnus oi- fering the apology that comes from our crooked politicians, when they campaign for a candidate and coincidentally go on his pay roll The Russian army was corrupted. The kill ing of officers was encouraged. The war was denounced as "imperialistic." The proletarians f Serbia, Belgium, Poland, France, Italy, Rou nania and other nations were abandoned to German bayonets. There was a betrayal.beyond tnything known in history, and Lenine engi Beeted it Then Lenine made his separate peace Hth Germany. - At his door is responsibility for ihe death of 1,000,000 non-Russians, including Bractically all of our boys. Hillquit may bea Skillful casuist but the crosses in France suffi ciently refute him. " At to many items concerning the Bolshe vists, there is basis for differences of opinion, bnt - the chief things are incontrovertible are proved by Bolshevists testimony. The Bol-. shevik power, duringihe critical period, was the' ally, of Germany, but now is a tyranny more KTCSsNhan that or the czar. It rests on military force and never has permitted a free election. Hillquit says that he favors government resting on consent, .and nt the same time that he ad mires Lenine. The two things are absolutely in compatible. New York Tribune. Ombbu Brow . , PICKING THE PARAMOUNTS. Fossible candidates for president and .those who aspire to dictate or influence the course of the great nominating conventions as well, are just now parading issues they insist are the big things before the people. In almost every case, these self-made paramount are the ones on which the projector finds he can put the great est emphasis from the standpoint of his own candidacy. They are, therefore, subject to some discount because of that, and perhaps may fall short when the acid test of application comes. Mr. Bryan insists that prohibition is to be the great overshadowing issue. Senator John- son is equally positive that the League of Na tions is to receive greatest attention, while Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler holds to the view that finances will be of the highest importance. None can question that these will be foremost among the many things that are to be presented to the voters. It is probable, though, that Dr. Butler has a slight advantage, in the fact that prohibition already is accomplished, and that th. League of Nations may also be disposed of in such a way as to relegate it to the position of secondary moment, but the matter of taxa tion will be before the country for a good many years to come. The tariff in a considerable measure has been removed from politics by the establishment of the commission to handle it m detail. It may be accepted, thouglr, that the republicans will not abandon the principle of protection because of this. Legislation looking to the adoption of the budget plan is progressingand may be. come effective before the 1921 tax is levied. Such a law will only serve to add emphasis to the issue of Dr. Butlejr . This is no year for a still hunt. Party plat forms must beclear and unmistakable in their declarations. The election should turn on the future, and the policy that holds the most for the American people for the days that are to come is the one to which the voters will give support A courageous stand on vital issues, with compromise on none, is what is expected. The Money Situation. One of "the points of concern in connection with the return of the railroads to their owners has to do with the question of financing. It is imperative that a considerable sum of capi tal, needed for betterments and extensions, must be secured, and some of it almost immediately. This makes the money market a matter of vital importance. Wafl Street reports a rather tight situation. Credit is limited, and the likelihood of any easing up is contingent on certain fac tors the operation of which is not expected to produce a better market right away." r Chief of the causes for the apparent strin gency is the need of money to pay federal taxes, which must be met within the next ten days. At least two billion dollars will be withdrawn from private and placed to public account before the 15th of the present month. This is putting a noticeable strain on the banks, and stands in the -way of any extensive borrowing by the railroads. On the other hand, a factor which has been kept from view in that foreign holders have been sending their railroad securities, es pecially bonds, to New York, and bond sales men report that they have been readily taken up by home purchasers. This is proof of the public faith in . American railroads, and prob ably trieans that when the new issues, either stocks or bonds are offered, they will meet a response more encouraging than surface indi cations seem to warrant. Federal reserve operations still are in the direction of deflation. No harsh move has been noted, nor any sign of unreasonable restriction. Speculation is checked, but the legitimate re quirements of business will be readily cared for.' In Nebraska on Monday more -than $60,- 000,000 of farm mortgage or sale transactions were' taken care of without causing a ripple. The great movement was accomplished easily enough because the banks of the state are well provided with money, and the parties to the transactions were amply able to carry them on. The whole situation is as healthy and as bright for the future as might be asked. The Wilsonian Policy. .The New York Sun states the mental atti tude of Mr. Wilson toward the world in ore compact paragraph, which follows: The president, indeed, was never in truer Wilson form than when he threatened to kick the League x of Nations into kingdom come because the proposed settlement of the Adriatic question was not to his liking. His disregard of the practicable, his pursuit of the unattainable, were never more complete. His insistence that a mutual understanding among several nations must always mean acceptance of his views was never more-unqualified; his intolerance of a majority dissent from those views never more absolute. It is not. majority rule which Mr. Wilson seeks in the League of Nations, nor any agree ment on European problems between England, France or Italy, but the absolute domination of his own will in every dispute which may arise. No such drive for despotic power over the na tions of the earth has been recorded since the days of the Little Corsican. The independence of nations, the rights of peoples, the will of majorities all fundamental American principles would be swept aside to make room for the intolerant dictatorship of himself, if Mr. Wilson could have his way. There is no escape from that conclusion by any important student of his utterances. All Things Possible Under the Sun. It is never quite safe to accept unreservedly the conclusions of scientists, popularly regarded as exact truth. A writer in an exchange recalls amusing mistakes of leading scientists during the past 200 years which might almost have reconciled Bob Ingersoll to the alleged mis takes of Moses. t The Royal Society of England would net permit Franklin's paper on electric conductors even filing room with its papers, regarding it as a ridiculous vagary. Sir Humphrey Davy declared the lighting of London with gas im possible. Lardner said steamships could not cross the Atlantic Young's undulatory theory of light was condemned by scientific writers. When Arago wished to discuss the electric tele graph before the French Academy of Sciences, .his request was received with laughter. A year after Prof. Bell" had demonstrated the transmission of the sound of the human voice by electricity, London scientists solemnly "e solved it to be a fake, Herbert Spencer said air could never be navigated by a machine heavier than air. j, ) ,, , " ' . What we don't know, scientists included, js vastly more than what we do know. The only safe attitude is the open, mind that confesses arl things to be possible, butv demands demonstra tion before expressing belief ' ' " ! A Call to High Americanism From the Minneapolis Tribune. The letter of the Catholic archbishops and bishops of the United States bearing the signa ture of Cardinal James Gibbons, which was read Sunday in the Catholic churches of the country, is not merely a rallying cry to the members of that denomination to 'carry on." It is a trumpet call to all good Americans to march under the banner of loyalty to country, to live pure livtfs. to serve justice, to show good will and charity toward one another, to obey the laws, to respect constituted authority and to put away class feeling as unseemly, unnecessary and unprofit able. - There is need today for such appeals as this to the good sense, the moral instincts and all the better impulses of the people of this coun try. This letter has it that 'America is passing through the gravest crisis in its history." Pos sibly there may be some dissent from the use of the superlative "gravest" in this connection, but serious thinking citizens of thrsountry of every class and creed and political leaning agree that the crisis is, indeed, a grave one. Catholic and Protestant alike believe that "American in stitutions are the hope tf humanity," and they believe further that the salvation of American institutions depends upon the will and purpose of the American people to abide by the exam ple and teaching of Jesus Christ. , Indeed, they agree that there is no other way for mankind out of its present troubles and into the light of a truly new day save the way marked out by the Nazarene Exemplar. v . It is true, as this letter says, that the issues are more moral than economic; that "the solu tion must come from the soul of -each individ ual through the exercise of Christian charity and justice, which must govern all dealings of class with class, and man with man." It is true that class conflict is a hindrance to progress; that capital and labor are interde pendent, each having fundamental rights that the other is bound to respect; that America is in danger of immolating its great opportunity at a shrine of selfish interests; that religious training and education, are needed by the masses to safeguard them against "educated in telligence devoid of moral principle;" that the sanctity. of home, the family and the marriage relation is td be maintained and cherished; that charity, the distinctive badge of the Christian, implving sympatny, helpfulness, compassion and good will, lays its precepts on all men to be as brothers. and that the first step in banishing evils and injustices "is to insist that the ri'ghts of. the community shall prevail, that law and order shall be preserved, and that . the public shall not be made to suffer while contention goes on from one mistake to another." Labor has a right to a living wage, plus provision for the future. Capital has its right to "a fair day's work for a fair day's pay." The public has rights' at least coequal with these. To obtain all these rights and preserve them is the big business of the hour. Toward this business each individual has obligations that he cannot put off and call himself truly Christian or truly American. Man's Discontent When a man is poor his ambition is to be come rich. . Whan he becomes rich he longs to be richer. When, in the comparatively rare cases, a man feels that he is now rich enough, he wants power and reaches out eagerly for that. Wnen he attains much power his appetite for more is still insatiate and. even if he be comes the most powerful man of his genera tion, he is still tortured hy ambition; his pas sion is to go down into "history as the greatest man of his times and, so strange and contra dictory and blind is human nature, he will do small. things to win that elusive end. No man except the brother to the ox is ever contented and, therefore, no man, . with that one excep tion, is ever happy for very long at a time. No matter how successful a man with any stuff in him may be, the lure of S'ill greater successes still beckons him" on, tOtlie disturbance of his peace of mind and the . disquiet of his soul. In other words, the pursuit of happiness is vain, so far as ever catching the quarry is con cerned. We have observed the rich and the powerful wrth careful attention' as opportunity has offered and always have found them, if our judgment is not at fault, less contented and less happy than the average run of men. This" is doubtless because their capacity for attain ment is large rather than other men's and their corresponding capacity for disappointment over wha: is denied them is proportionately still greater. Ohio State Journal. Che VELVET TJ A M Ik M I T-v T3t) Jxbm "Brooks "Baker HARRY S. BYRNES. We wish to state.it softly as a thing we're shamed to shout: the straiphtness of the human race is subject to some doubt. Psychologists who write for us their thick and heavy books assert many citizens potentially are crooks;4hat we who trust each other should be posted in advance upon the fact that many men are wait ing for their chance. Their chance to juggle funds of trust by methods punk and rank; their chance to' come down town at night and monkey with the bank; their chance to take the taxes which the public pays in pain, and bet them on a sorrel horse for purely private gain for when did public servants, these alert and sporty chaps, augment the city treasury with poker games and craps? And so the careful element laboriously learns to trv to guard its interests thrnucri Mr. Harry Byrnes. We make a bet with him that our officials won't abscond and take along the bank account of which we are so fond; that gentlemen to whom we trust an invoice to col lect will treat our cash with certain outward tokens of respect. He boasts that he has written all the bonds of size and weight which guarantee to probity omciais ot tne state. Administrators, officers, receivers and trustees are warranted tempta tion-proof through Harry's modest fees. There is a worthy proverb sayint; that what can't be cured should quickly be reliably, sufficiently insured. Next subject: H. A. JacolSberger. I TODAV1 The Day We Celebrate. v Dr. Hayes Gsantner, dentist, born 1877. Alexander Graham Bell, perfector of the telephone, born at Edinburgh, Scotland, 73 years ago. . William M. Calder, United States senator from New York, born in Brooklyn 51 years ago. Duke of Manchester, who married Miss Helena Zimmerman of Cincinnati, born in Lou don 43 years ago. Rt. Rev. Thomas F. Lillis, Catholic bishop of Kansas pty, born at Lexington, Mo., 5S years ago. ' , J, John M. Ward, for many years prominent in base ball as player, manager and owner of clubs, born at Bellefonte, Pa 60 years ago. Thirty Years Ago in Omaha. Between 3,000 and 4,000 people witnessed the production of "II Trovatore"' at the Coliseum by the famous Abbey-Grau Opera company. Mile. Nordica appeared at' Leonora. Mme. Adelina Patti and her grand opera company arrived at 8:30 in the morning on a apical train of 12 cars, Patti herself traveling in a private palace car bearing her name. ' Adelina Patti visited the editorial, press and stereotyping rooms of The Omaha Bee and pro nounced the Bee building the finest devoted to journalism that, she had ever seen. A fire in the dry house in the Union Pacific yards at the foot of California street caused a loss of $5,00" . . , Woodcraft DOT for Outdoor Bqys and Girls 21 Don't Shootl BT ADELIA BELLE BEARD. One summer, there was a small boy at our camp whose chief treas ure was a slingshooter. He was not expert in its use and though hu scattered pebbles here and there no on heeded him, for no harm was done until, one day, he took aim at a bird in a tree and hit it The bird dropped. The boy gasped 20 9 id with amazement, then horror, and finally, when, he found that the bird .was really dead, he was overcome with grief and st;t up the wail, "I didn't mean to kill itl I didn't mean to kill it!" No, he certainly did notJntend to do that, but he was thoughtless and, seeing the bird, used it for a target He was only 8 years old, but how What does Draw from one end. 1 A? : living creature is a big responsibility. When you carry your airgun oi rifle into the woods, do not shoot at anything unless it may be a target simply because, you vi&ryt to try your skill. Do not shoot unless you have a good reason for shooting. The useless killing of one bird may have far-reaching, harmful et'-' fects. But the greatest harm will come to you; for to kill merely for the sake of killing, cultivates a hard ness and cruelty that will spoil the finest character. Really big hunters, those perhaps whom you admire most, never ki'l without the best of reasons. Don't shoot is the biggest lesson of the wilderness. (Did you known the All-Round Girl was courteous? Mollie Price Cook tells why tomorrow.) many much older boys would have resisted the impulse to shoot in th same thoughtless fashion? When a boy or girl learns to use firearms, or even a home-made af fair that can kill, he or she should also learn when not to shoot. That is of far greater importance than good marksmanship. It .is a tine thing, especially for the outdoor boys and girls, to know how to handle a pistol or rifle; it is sometimes a very necessary tiring, but no one should take up the prac tice thoughtlessly. To have the power of life or death over any Pay for the Executioner. Omaha, Feb. 28. To the Editor of The Bee: Who pays for the ex ecution of criminals at the state pen itentiary? Ia the warden obliged to do it, or pay some one to do it for him? Please print the nicknames of th? various states and their inhabitants? A CONSTANT READER. Answer The law requires that the warden carry out the sentence of death, but provides that he may em ploy a substituco to do the actual work. The cost Is borne by the First f.fcv. . nave iiu iuiiveiuc;iiL iit of the popular or "nicknames" of states, xney are numerous and vary widely, some being applied in pride and some in derision. The most common are: Maine, the Pine Tree state; Vermont Green Mountain; Massachusetts;' Bay; Connecticut, Nutmeg; New York, Empire; Pemi sylvania, - Keystone; Virginia, Old Dominion; Nort.i Carolina, Tarheel; Georgia, Cracker; Texas, Lone Star; Ohio, Buckeyes: Indiana, Hoosiers; Illinois, Suckers; Missouri, Pukes (Missourians have changed this to "Show Me;1); Michigan, Wolverine; Wisconsin, Badgef; Minnerota, Gopher; Iowa, Hawkeye; Kansas. Jayhawker; Nebraska, Antelope; Colorado, Centennial; California. Bear (also Golden); Oregon, Web foot. A great many fanciful titles have bfcen added to this list, but none are in general use. T Alpliin 4 .." Bread Weights in Omaha. Omaha, March 1. To the Editor of The Bee: The other day I bought a loaf of bread that was marked on the package over 21 ounces. I had the grocer weigh it and it weighed only 17 1-2 ounces. The baker who baked this loaf informed me that he baked 16,000 loaves a day. He was therefore short 56,000 ounces or 3,500 pounds a day. At 10 cents a pound this would amount to $350 per day. I took this loaf to the city weight inspector. He verified the weight on the same day the loaf was bought, which was the saml day it was delivered by the baker. No pros ecution was made.. It was contended by the inspector that we have no standardr weight loaf to go by. ' In the city of Chicago they have an ordinance making the standard loaj IS ounces, and that loaves may be baked in one-half, three-quarter, two, three, four, five and sIx.-pound sizes and in no other way, and that each loaf shall have a label on it stating the weight It also states that this ordinance shall not apply to stale bread providing the seller sells it as such. ' Now. why would it not be a good idea to have such an ordinance in Omaha? Competition would then be restricted to quality and price and not to short weights. Let the baker charge what he will for the loaf, but the customer will know what weight he is getting. I find that some bakers sell 24 ounces of bread lor 15 cents. ' ED A. SMITH. Takes Much Courage. Climbing Into a dentist's chair is to many people what going over the top was to a soldier. Toledo Blade. Important Qualflcation. Speaking of phrases, Lloyd George says "we must fight anarchy with abundance." But not words. Pitts 'buih Dispatch. TRADE "BUSINSOD THANK YOU' ammmmtmmmm'i.m mm w a mm i .Mi . LV Nicholas oil Company PUZZLE. Young Citizens tare Adventures 2k 25 The Constitution. By R. S. ALEXANDER. "Are you thinking of making a new constitution, sonny?'.' asked the professor as he came up to where the little Indian boy was looking at a bit of sculpture chisel ed in the wall. N "No, sir, I don't know what a constitution is." "Well, you know laws are rules 26 2-3 30 31 31 16 15 -H 17. 3 f ''.-Jeff jf for men to live by. You might say without stretching it that constitu tions are rules for governments to live by. ' "A constitution usually does three things: In the first place, it lays down the foundation or framework of the government. If you can think of the state as a body, you would not be far wrong in calling the con stitution the skeleton. It sets up the legislature and the executive and prescribes the powers of each. "In the second place, it defines the powers of the government it has set up. It says what the gov ernment can and can not do. There Agnes see? to two, and so on to the are certain things which do not wish the government do and there are certain things which they wish to sure that it can and will do. bo they put these things into the con stitution. Our federal constitution lays down those powers that belong to the national governnient, those that belong to the state govern ments, and those which neither can exercise. A law passed by the legis ASPIRIN-ItsUses Introduced by "Bayer" in the Year 1900 The nams "Bayer" identifies the true, world-famous Aspirin pre scribed by physicians for nineteen years. The name "Bayer" means genuine Aspirin proved safe by millions of people. In each unbroken package of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" you are told how to safely take this genuine Aspirin for Colds, Head ache, Toothache, Earache, Neural, gia, Lumbago, Rheumatism, Neu ritis and Pain generally. Always say "Bayer" when buy ing Aspirin. Then look for the safety "Bayer Cross" on the pack age and on the tablets.. Handy tin boxes of twelve tab lets cost but a few cents. Drug gists also sell larger packages. ... . . .... i .: .( J II mec marit si Birer Mimiraciaic uinjsiiiuinu ...... WvWWWWWWfWwHW ii a- ! i uri-rr ""if ri l ifH iftfi m JJ"ui "l i J" WHEN milady chooses her motor car and milady's vote usually decides we ask hep to "make it unanimous." .Will she not accept our invitation to call at the address below on her next shopping day? a. We want to demonstrate the luxury and the beauty and the safety of the Apperson Eifcht. Just sink into the soft cushions; note the wonderful ease of control; see with what a li&ht touch on the wheel the Apperson hu&s the road without weaving or sideswayinfc. Wa Recommend APP e a ) EfOHTl ' (WITH ElOHTYj LessPaws Apperson-Nebraska Omaha, Nebr. lature which is contrary to the con stitution or exceeds the power given the government by the constitution is not a law at all.- It can not be enforced." "Whp says whether a law is con trary to the constitution or not?" "The court decides that You see the constitution is a form of law. It is the fundamental law and thus superior to ordinary laws. Hence it is the duty of the courts to say what the constitution means as well as the ordinary laws. . "In the third place, a constitution usually contains some laws which thepeople are especially anxious to have and which they are afraid the legislature might repeal if they were only ordinary laws. "How are constitutions made? "They are made by conventions, the members of which ape elected by the people." (Tomorrow Dr. Angell will tell boys how to do the Round-off.) SklSt . . Olve.keautirul tone of a nne violin is per" manent - in fact, it" tecomes more beautiml as years come and cjo. Lhere is belt one piano in tke world that ftas tki turaderkti tea tore of j very fine violin "-the matchless Its "tension resonator1 (exclusive Because pat ented)malces its tone supreme, not only at first but as long as ie in strumentHtselr endures the people ever to other be very ffzqiest priced .. . 'Highest praised Other Dependable PIANOS at a Lesser Cost are the Kranich & Bach, Vose & Sons, Sohmer, Brambach, Kimball, Bush Lane, Cable Nelson and Hbspe Pianos. Player Pianos Apollo Reproducer, Gul bransen and Hospe Players. Every Instrument is plain ly marked at the Cash Price Same Price on Pay ments. .;' 1513 Douglas Street THE ART AND MUSIC STORE t t l s Q. N Motor Co. -r