Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 6, 1920)
T TKS BESs OMAHA, SATUKDAYr MARCH ' e,-tlftgO.T r The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING)-EVENING SUNDAY TH1 BEX PUBLISH IN 0 COMPANY, PKOPBHTOS KELSON B. UPDIKE. FEES ID EXT MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS fW Ammttt Pnm af wklch Tka Ho la a awmhar. la a. mailt at to asa for aubUoattaa of til Ma diapalebas aasw as n m ass caanrtss areatad asUahsa1 karata. la this hmt. u4 also Ail mats at pubUaulaa ef out BEE TELEPHONES j 'rnranaa Aik far th T" 1 1 AAA Vwnnml or Farucular Pawop Wantaa, V 1CI AWV - Far Nlht and Sunday Sarvka Calli Ml tori al Dopartaaat . Trior ISMl SUcuUyea, IMMnmmt . - . . . Tjlr 1A0.1L ' monatas tnUa't ' Tjlar IMS!. OFFICES OF THE BEE Hwn Omca. Bat BuilOlnfc 17th ml f arnaav Branca Offices: Amm 41 It Norta Mta Park Mil Laarsnaorth Bonm SU4 Mtlltarr -. South Bids Mil K 81 CraaeU Bloffi is Boott W. I Waluut lit Korth aOtk Out-af-Tewn Of flea i Ktw Tort OfrUsa 1M Pirth In I Washlaftoa ' isn Q St ChlcMO 8Maf BIW I Lin cola 1380 H St. JANUARY CIRCULATION I Daily 65,351 Sunday 63,976 Aran circulation for tna month aubacrlbad and iwora to tf aV B, Batw. Circulation atanacor. Svbacribora laavlnf tba city shcwld hava Tha Baa maiUd SC sham. Address changed aa ltaa aa raqulrad. You hould know that Only six other large cities in the ' United .States have more hours of , sunshine annually than Omaha. Shantung it far from a "closed incident." No dearth of candidates is noted. That is en crop that never fails. . 'Mitch" Palmer is threatened with impeach ment This wilt give his boom a real boost. , The hold-over blizzard has about spent its, Strength, but it surely did shrink the coal piles. It did not take long to mark up shoes when . hides were advancing, but the reverse is dif " ferent. i 'Farmer organizations of the f'eal Sort" ob ject to being classed with the "reds" on any point This is hopeful. A Chicago judge upholds the right of a wife to ; rifle the pockets of a tight-wad husband. Thus does woman's sphere expand. .The deputy prohibition commissioner thinks $23 a quart is a sign that the dry law is wotk ing. It would so strike most of us. Large groups of shop employes are being laid off by the Southern railroad, to reduce expenditures." The change is coming. v.- Upwards of 5,000 Armenians were massacred by the Turks last month, and yet there is hesi tancy about disciplining the murderers. .One of the numerous divorcees is to be a British film star. The recent family history of this grouj would make a pretty fair play. 'Filipinos to the' number of 10,350,640 have been counted, by the census man. And they arc; all happier and wiser because Uncle Sam did hisjduty by them. Marriage on $125 a month is not only pos sible, but it generally practiced. Such couples may and do live happily, and frequently rise to mupli higher things. A Warsaw committee is studying the Ameri can! form of government as a preliminary step to framing a constitution for the new state They can hardly find a beter model. ; Lower prices are predicted by New York bankers, because of need to market home prod ucts that can not be sold abroad. This was outlined by The Bee some weeks ago. If 10,000 people were killed by automobiles last year, it is a sign that safety first was d s regarded more frequently than we thought. One certain way to remedy this will be to in duce drivers to be careful. ' ' The Union Pacific is wasting no time in getting ready for the work ahead of it. An order for 100 new locomotives o be delivered this) spring, is a fairly good sign of what the Overland expects to Mo. . " Chicago has lifted the limit of height of buildings and now will permit structures 260 feet high. Growth in the "Loup", district' de mands expansion, and the only way it can be ha4 is to go "straight up. V . , Suffragists threaten to hold the republican party responsible for defeat in event West Vir ginia declines to ratify the amendment. What about a number of democratic legislatures that v hart turned down the proposition? .,. , j . . - "; Twenty-five thousand dollars a year for the federal grain corporation directors may seem pretty big, but when it is distributed to include the' two years they served without compensa- - tion, it does not seem much ' for the service given. . v. - ...... - ThroughWith the Old Stand It is .something for good American citizen ship to be proud of that 21 states have joined with the federal government in asking the United States supreme court to dismiss the original suit brought by Rhode Island for a test of the validity of the Eighteenth amendment of the constitution. Until the amendment was ratified by three fourths of the states through their legislatures the United States government was a partner in and a profiteer from the traffic in intoxicants. It was a most harmful traffic harmful in politics, in public health, in public morals, in economics, in human efficiency and in the social order. It was a final awakening to the seriousness of these several kinds of harm that brought the biz industrial, business and professional inter- BSCS OI ine country xo iruwu upuu me use ui ur hidcants. . The action of these interests was sed on sound ousiness principles ana on me Kates of common sense and common aecency. f did not have to prove war me xramc in .use of intoxicants was a bad thing for the ry. It proved itself so beyond all question not- s ... st of these 21 states were "dry" by tnetr tion before the federal amendment De operative. They can keep themselves so Vwish, whatever the United States su Ipnrt decides as to the Rhode Island case Iher involving the validity of the prohi endment, but they prefer that the na ihich they are parts shall not reinstate partner in a business that is self-con- its record. Minneapolis inounc. NON-PARTISANS IN NEBRASKA. The open attempt of the Non-Partisan league to capture the republican organization in Ne braska is more amazing than . annoying. As an exhibition of political effrontery it has no parallel in the state's history, and shows one of the weaknesses of our primary law. How ever, it is not likety the law will be so admin istered that a self-advertised political body, bent on destroying all other parties and labeling it self "non-partisan," will be permitted to file candidates, for either of the other parties. If the Non-Partisan league has a right to exist as separate political entity, it is because it adheres to principles that are at variance with those offthe established organizations. If its platform declarations, its propaganda profes sions, and the assertions of its leaders are to be relied on as evidence of their intentions, the Non-Partisan league is wholly opposed to the republican, the democratic, the prohibition and other political parties, save the socialist, with which it his so much in common that careful analysis does not serve to greatly differentiate them. The republican party is well organized and thoroughly established on clearly recognized and defined principles. Its candidates pledge ad herence to these and its supporters are drawn from those citizens who believe, in and accept the dogma of the party. Adherents of the Townley creed find no comfort in the republican gospel. Why, then, should they impudently, un dertake to appropriate its organization? In its recent effort to capture the constitu tional convention, the Non-Partisan league was overwhelmingly defeated. Its candidates, where known, were almost altogether snowed under. In some districts the majority' against them was so great as to make the league's pretensions appear ridiculous. This failure" has, perhaps, discouraged it from fighting in the open. Re publicans should be on guard to see that leaguers do not slip in through pretense of affil iation with the true party of progress and free government. ' . The Waning of Wilson. An eastern paper dates the Waning of Wilson's prestige in this country from his declaration that the covenant of the League of Nations must be accepted without the slightest change. v It might be attributed to his conduct further back. For instance, his notice to the military committees of the house and senate shortly after the declaration of the existence of a state of war early in 1917, that no American soldiers would be sent abroad that year. That con templated truancy to our duty overseas was shocking to all loyal citizens who knew the dire need for our immediate participation in the war. Fortunately the commission of Allied leaders arrived in New York within ten day of the presidential announcement of a policy of delay, and GeneVal Joffre, at the corner of Forty-second street and Fifth avenue, made an appeal for instant help that flashed over the .land like a streak of lightning, and left the people burning for action." Mr. Wilson could not resist the public demand, and by July sol diers began to embark for the front. From that moment the German leaders knew they would ultimately lose the war. The history of the great struggle after that time shows that if Mr. Wilson's policy of truism had continued until 1918, as he intended it should, the Allies would have been compelled to sue for peace. Or the waning might be dated from the president's statement in his Boston speech on the eve of his second trip to Paris, that America had entered the war to save the nations of the world for certain ideals of his own, which at that time were taking concrete form which has since been repudiated by the American senate, acting in harmony with our national traditioi.s and independence. The people could not make the preferred idealism of that speech harmonize with the recorded fact that in his message to congress the president had stated in so many words Jhat we were forced into the war fcoleJy by the aggressions of the imperial German gov ernment on our 'property and our citizens. Perhaps the waning of Wilson's prestige at home actually began with our entry into the war, when the people for thefirst time realized that they had been hoodwinked by a false1 cam paign cry into re-electing as president a false prophet who had bitterly opposed all prepara tion for the terrible war which confronted them. However that may be, the. election of 1918 was convincing proof that Mr. Wilson had lost the confidence, of his country, and was on the wane. Yeast as a Health Builder. Yeast, the common dry compressed yeast on sale in every grocery store, has been found to have hitherto unsuspected qualities as a tonic and health builder, as well as curative proper ties for constipation and other bodily ills. Scientific tests undertaken at Jefferson Medi cal (college in Philadelphia, at the Philadelphia General Hospital, and at the Roosevelt Hospital in New York, have demonstrated the value of yeast in cases of impoverished vitality, consti pation, ulcer, gastro-intestinal catarrh, and in sightly skin eruptions all stubborn maladies. One-half a cake of compressed yeast, eaten dry or dissolved in water or fruit juice and swallowed before meals, is said to turn the trick and bring gratifying results in a few days. , Yeast is a vegetable product a form of plant life, naturally nutritive and harmless. It is equally efficient in its common form or when "killed" by pouring boiling water over it the latter treatment stopping .any gas formations from it in stomach or bowels. The medical authority under whom the tests of yeast's medi cinal qualities referred to above were made says that in many of the cases under his ob servation the yeast treatment "caused an im provement in the general physical condition of the patient quite unassociated with the particu lar disease in question." . ' We are wondering wjietber it might not also bring relief from that "all gone" feeling which attacks a man after his "private stock" has been exhausted or raided by highjackers. We have no professional opinion as to that, but a run down man ought to rise after eating a cake of yeast. .' ":' v 1 U . Eleven million school children having writ ten essays on the subject of army service, Sec retary Baker ought to be well informed as to the opinion of the coming generation on the point Maybe you have noted that as fast as can didates for the place of delegates to the Chi cago convention file in Nebraska they ' declare themselves in favor of Pershing? It is a good sign. !". Old Time Horsemen Mounted Nags From "Upping Blocks' From the Christian Science Monitor, In the old days before coaches came into general use along the great roads men fared by the united efforts of themselves and their sturdy nags along the length and breadth of the land. The hardy horsemen, inured to all kinds of weather, bumped manfully in the saddle, and thought no hardship of the necessity. Long after coaches ran regularly, the robust country gen tlemen continued to ride long distances qn horse back, scorning to .be as they thought "effemi nate;" and for many a year the farmers con tinued not only in the saddle, but they took their sweethearts and wives with them, riding on a pillion behind. Indeed, there was the time when ladies, who did not possess Carriages, and who could not themselves manage a horse, rode pil lion behind a servant A survival of that custom is to be seen today in the waistbelt worn by grooms. It is a relic of the days when the lady occupied the pillion and laid hold of her man servant's waistbelt ' It must be that many of those staid travelers of olden time were not as agile as the modern riders, who mount their horses by simply thrusting the left foot into the stirrup and fling ing the right leg over the saddle. Those portly riders of . ancient times de manded a chair or stool placed as a mounting aid in front of the house; and along the road side mounting stones, or upping-blocks, werV scattered iSO that should the rider, by some ac cident, bl forced to dismount, he could regain his seat In the saddle. Many of these' stones yet stand in the British Isles. Along the Great North road there remain several upping-blocks, notably one at the thirty-fourth milestone from London; another is found at Wamsford Bridge with the date 1708 cut in it; the oldest one stands on the grassy highway between Banby and Northampton, bearing the inscription "Thomas Hight (or Right) 1659." But the most remarkable, for its size, of these old relics is the great standing stone at Jackaments , Bottom, four and one-half miles south of Cirencester, where the ancient Fosse Way branches off to the left, leaving that broad and well traveled high road, the road "to Tet bury. From this point to Bath, the Fosse Way is in long stretches entirely deserted, and has been for over one hundred years. None seek to go that way, save the hardy explorer in sum mer time, eager to trace the route of that tm memorially ancient track, and then the effort demands some determination, for the grass grows knee high and here and there thickets have overgrown what was once a road. ' In the hollow called "Jackaments Bottom" stands an old, substantially built stone farm house. It was once an inn. It stood there, strategically, so to say, at the parting of two roads, to advantage in securing the custom of travelers along both. Very rough aid battered in the old stone outside this1 sometime hostelry, and it is cut out of coarse grained stuff, so that it is diffi cult to read the inscription on it. The inscrip tion is mostly in the old Gothic type of letter ing; it is also in Latin, the words of the farmer respecting it, "No one can read it" are under standable, if not quite correct. Some of us can. It is "Adsu placere, Gratia E. B., 1766." which I take to mean "Be pleased to mount. By grace (or favor) of E. B." No record survives to tell us who was this person who so quaintly pro vided for the travelers of 154 years ago, but it seems likely that he was one of the Biddulph family, who owned land in this neighborhood. ' The stone stands over four feet high, with five steps, far taller than necessary for mount ing a horse. It was, in fact, intended for the use of passengers climbing to the roof of a coach. ' Where Bolshevism Broke Down Bolshevism, for the moment, at least, seems politically established in Russia, but industrially and economically it has not made? the slightest progress and is as far today from being a going concern as it was in the beginning. It is a structure without a foundation. Bolshevism's failure in this respect is the more pronounced because Russia offered the fairest field for its experiment that could have been devised. ' It contains within its own bor ders everything a state needs to be self-sustaining, and is dependent upon the outside world for nothing. If bplshevism were a sound doctrine Russia ought to be the most prosperous country in the world. It has every form of natural wealth that America enjoys and an even greater domain.' But what is its condition? Its cities are starving. Its industry is paralyzed. It is frantically trying to make peace with, the world so it can import necessi ties in which its own soil abounds. The gran ary of Europe, St has no bread to eat. With an inexhaustible timber supply, it has no rail road ties. Rich in iron mines, it has no mate rial to make locomotives with, no shops, to build them in, no skilled labor. Setting up to teach the world political economy and soci ology, it stands :n line for free soup. These are not war conditions. Russia is unravaged. Bolshevism has had everything to work with that an empire so vast could sup ply. It divided the land according to its own doctrine, and the land is as productive as ever it was. Corn will grow when planted. It turned the industries over to soviet rule, and the same workmen are engaged in them as before. Cap italism took nothing with it when it was, ban ished nothing tangible. Yet Russia today is a vast poorhouse. Its land does not produce,, its railroads do . not transport, its factories are closed and bankrupt, its population loafs. Louis Narquet, a French writer, has tfiven some figures ,on industrial production in a re cent article in the Revue Bleue. The Poutiloff factory turned out five locomotives in (five months as against 38 under the pre-bolshevist regime. Twenty men used to make a locomo tive. It now takes 158. The cost used to be 48,000 rubles; it is now 800.000. Other indus tries tell the same story. Bolshevism doesn't work, and, contrary to some fond expectations, bolshevism hasn't found any way of living with out working. Bolshevism, whose political elo quence was all-conquering while capitalism's stock of groceries held out, has not since been able to talk hunger out of the Russian stomach or idleness out of the Russian head. Bolshevism is well aware of the failure. It has armies, but without an "industrial organiza tion behind them they cannot make a campaign. Aggression has been abandoned for this reason, and its only hope is peace, and with that at tained its enemies will have to feed it. It wants to resume trade with capitalism, that is with England and America, so it can import at a high price the things Russia is capable of pro ducing at home at a lower price. That is bol shevism on its economic side a complete fail ure, a recognized failure, even at the Smolny In stitute. Kansas City Star. f I i oi:av The Day We Celebrate Frank W. Corliss, Waterloo Creamery com pany, bbrn 1842. . Dr. Charles W. Pollard,' physician, born 1891. Charles Pergler, the first commissioner" and ambassador to the United States of the new Czecho-Slovak republic, born in Bohemia 38 years ago. Ring W. Lardner, who enjoys wide popu larity as a humorous writer, born at Nifes, Mich., 35 years ago. Thirty Years Ago In Omaha. Miss Grace Chambers was married to Mr. John E. Wilbur. ( Fire in the building at the corner of Six teenth and Capitol avenue caused a loss - of about $8,000. Dr. Duryea delivered the first of his series of psychological lectures at the First Congre gational church. The subject of the lecture was "Reasoning." - Mrs. W. M. Low nan altd daughter of Hast ings were the guests of Mrs. F. M. Richardson. . -,. a i r 1 Mrs. De Larme's Statement. Omaha. March '4. To tht Editor of The Bee: In justice to myself and the organization I represented, I feel that I must protest against trav Ins; been so misquoted by. a repre sentative of your paper Tuesday morning; when the women of six or ganizations In Omaha presented to the city council their petition re garding; commercialized dances on Sunday. What I said was: "Because Oma ha is a large city, the largest In the state, is not a valid reason for hav ing a wide-open city on Sunday. Many cities with much greater pop ulation do not allow commercialized Sunday amusements. It is a matter of law and order and good morals and not the size of the city or per sonal opinion." Residence in much larger cities where Sunday dances, theaters, moving picture shows, etc., are not permitted, has shown me that such communities are much freer from robberies, holdups, riots, burglaries, crime and immorality generally. 1 did not make the statement at tributed to me in The Bee. (MRS. A. A.) JETHEL, C.,De LARME. Against lYesh Air. Omaha,-March 4. To the Editor of The Bee: The fresh air (lends are getting in their work early this year, ror already tney open loug rows of windows on the street cars and do not pay any attention to the rules of health or to the wants of other passengers on the cars. I have always been told that It is In. jurious to sit in draughts of cold air, but the fresh air fiends on the street cars open up the windows on both sides of the car, no difference how much cold air Is blowing at the tinre. ' a There should be some regulation by the city authorities or by the street railway company of tho num ber of windows that should be open in the cars, if the young fresh air Mends have no regard for the rights of other passengers on the cars. A conductor told me last night that some of the fresh air fiends did not have any more sense than, to open the windows on his car even such a cold and blustery night as last night was. Such people ought to be compelled to ride in open cars the year round. I came near telling a young woman the other day that she ought to nde on top of the cars If she is so hot when he gets on the street cars. I made one fellow shut the window quickly one evening recently when he opened the window by his side when there was a gale fr6m the east. I think the health officers ought to look after the regulation of the win dow opening in the street cars, f;ir the health and life as well, of many people is endangered by the sense less fresh air fiends. These same people who open up the cars while cold weather is with us will have furs on next summer, when ther mometers will be 100 in the shads. It shows that a lot' of, people are in need of being taught some common, every day, horse sense. FRANK A. AGNF.W. (Note: A city health regulation requires that the street cars be well ventilated, and that at least one window be kept open in all but the most severe weather or duriua: vio lent storms.) Would Miss the- Calm. A British statesman or politician or philosopher or something says feminism will steer the world straight Into chaos. Jt would be re grettable if anything should run the world on its present 1 sane, orderly course. Kansas City Star. V Wouldn't Be Any Platforms. Another good way to encourage brief political platforms is to require the fulfillment of their promises as a condition of salary 'drawing. In dianapolis News. DOT PUZZLE. 31 e 2b rvT f 33.- :: v 5 . 7 6 a& XJt . a - S7 s 12. II '4- 3 13 . V 21 V 44 1 What Shall I Be? Answered fcr Girl 1 The Milliner. BY ELIZABETH MATHER. " Wrhy can't I get enough girls for my shop when millinery is distinctly a woman's business?" the milliner complains. Is it that girls don't realize that millinery is one of the fine arts and that a knowledge of it is invaluable in the home as well as the shop? Many girls with artistic ability that are scrambling to beat a man at his own job could find the joy of real creative work in a millinery shop. The present demand for, workers in this trade has made it much easier for a girl to start Every store of any size pays its beginners a salary What has Noodle drawn? IVraw from one to two, and o on to tho end, i for SINOL a clear skin and good hair Fora skin that is excessively oily, and has coarse, clogged pores, or one that is disfigured by an ajinoying eruption, there is nothing betterthan RESINOL. Bathe first with RESINOL SOAP then apply RESINOL OINTMENT and you can be reasonably sure of a speedy and remarkable improvement Reilnol Soap wed niguUrlT fur Ike hampoo tends to keep tne hair lustroue and the acalp free Irona dandruff. Where there ia already a aenoua tccumulattnn tt dandruff, part the hair end nib Resinol Ointment well into the acalp aome tune teiore ahampoolnc. At mil dmttuti. What Shall I Be? Answered ftr Boy The Draftsman. BT R. B. ALEXANDER. "What's a draftsman, Dad?" "You thinking of being one?" "Oh, sort of.'' "Well, a good many engineers go through the drafting room and many big executives in manufac- 1 y now; the big department stores pay a girl $10 a week for learning the trade. The rest is "up to her." If she has a natural gift for design plus training in a store or school, her opportunities are numberless and range from the regular "trim mers" in stores to the head designer in a department store. Even if she wants to be a sales woman or buyer in millinery the shop-room experience is invaluable. The girl who has made hats has a better idea of what lines are be coming to her customer.. Schools of designs usually place their students in shops. But there is an advantage' in handling a wide range of hats, such as a wholesale house or department store offers which cannot be found in any school. The girl who can combine strong IF THIS BE PENITENCE1 Men, wrapped 'In iiollnecs, have spoken loud Of coming .punishment for all my nine, And of a placo nf pndleffn hantohment, Of namelem horrora pest linaKlnlntr. , Perhaps these things are so; but If they are, ily conscience does not serve me as It . should. . Tholr lurid terrors In a dim To Be Hnve not the force to move me here and now. , Fear, terror, cowardice! what thongs are thcae To scourge the lords of earth into her dust' t I am a man of will, of upturned face, And as I will, I do, nor shirk the end. But what uneasiness la this, which haunts My heart in hours of pleasure and of peace 7 I think of men from whom I hava with held A helping or forbearing hand: I hear Distorted truths I uttered toward their ruin; I fwl the cold and lylner silences In which' I cloaked myself against their trust. .... Words I have left unsaid, which could have saved. Cry now for uttPrance alas, so late! And laU I see myself for what 1 am. God. save me from that self, more cruel than Hell! Reveal what yet I may become, and fan These first, faint flames of pity to a fira Of service for Thy Truth and Thy world. And II this mood be penitence, my God, Btd It endure, that ao it may avail Maria I Egllnton In New York Times. A Pleasant Outlook. Questionnaires may make the political proceedings this summer sound more like an investigation han a campaign. Washington Star. taring plants come up by that route. a - . "A big engineer I once knew said 'drafting is the universal language by which the designer conveys in structions to the workman.' It is the method by which the men who make the plans for a piece of work lay out all the details of that work and then pass on to the men on the job instructions down to the small est detatil as to how it is to be car ried out. "Every big plant has a corps of draftsmen. Many of these men merely carry out plans or trace drafts prepared by . other persons. You want to get into the designing end. There you will work out new sets of plans for the making of ma chines or the building of various sorts of structures. i "For this position, you may have your chance at an executive job in the office or in the field. You may work up to a position as chief de signer, chief of the office, or per haps chief engineer. "Be sure before you plan to be come a draftsman that you have the natural qualifications for it You must be careful and neat. You must initiative and business ability with skill in design should open a shop of her own, either in a town where she has friends or in the good buy ing districts of a city. You would be astonished to hear of the humble beginnings of many exclusive Fifth Avenue shops. v The successful milliner is natural ly an artist in design as well as a good business woman. In addition, she is neat, well dressed, courteous, and frank with her customers, and wide awake to all new ideas in trade magazines and other shops. have a natural knack for drawing ac curately and clearly. Then you should have an interest in some sort of engineering. "It will mean a long, hard grind of school. I can afford to send you to a technical school. You ought to go about four years. Of course, you could get a job as a draftsman with less schooling than that Some fellows have to take their training In a night school or a trade school. They make just about as good draftsmen as you would. Bat their opportunities for advancement are not so great unless they show ex ceptional ability. "Where could I hear more about it?" "You can start with most any book on elementary mechanical drawing. Then study book on projections or descriptive geometry. These studies form the basis of your training." . . (Monday learn about your friend the Mole.) (Learn how to "Make an Outline," Monday.) I FOR RENT ' TYPEWRITERS All, Make ; Special rates to students. CEflTRAL TYPEWRITER EXCIUMGE 0.4121. 1905 Faraam St suvremB tests Place your ideal, -piano beside - wven loth are ten vear old. Compare torve, and action, arte resonance. . A grill te needless. T?uT j OasonEf Hamlin, will prove itself tne world's ? ' fmest uiano'-'bar none Y si - ' y t Ms crs n snoar you vcrAys an other Dependable PIANOS at a Lesser Cost are the Kranich & Bach, Vose & Sons, Sohmer, Brambach, Kimball, Bush Lane, Cable Nelson and Hospe Pianos. Player Pianos Apollo ' Reproducer, 1 Gul bransen and Hospe Players. ; Every Instrument is plainly marked at the Cash Price. Same Price on Payments. 1513 Douglas SUm THE ART. AND MUSIC STORE ) X 10 Get What You Pay For MARK ' "BUSINESS IS GOOD THANK YOU Get a gallon of gasolene for every gallon you pay for. i Men tire and so may fail to give a full pump stroke.' ' i The electric pump never tires and cannot cheat. Patronize our electric pumps. - Two good gasolenes: Crystal Blitzen (Export Test) . . 2itc Vulcan (Dry Test) 26c 'L. V. NICHOLAS OIL CO. President Locomotive and AutoOilt ' , Keystone J "The Best Oils We Know" Our Electric Pumps Insure Accuracy Your Protection and Ours. n SO i 6 O 6