12 THE BEE; OMAHA'. SATURDAY, ' APRIL 24, 1920. 1 The Omaha Bee frAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THB BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, PSOPMSTO KELSON Bh UPDIKE. PRESIDENT, -MEMBERS or THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ... Awwlid Tnm. a wblek Tb Bm u mater. If - ; ' BEE TELEPHONES ' JX?i rB fertun a for 111 T 1 AAA DIuubbi of Paruculu Ftnw WMted. 1 fltt 1600 Far Night and Suadar -vica Call: ' fJSSJlJLTS"!"' ." " - - - it- t. L1RIU4IMI1 ItaputlMlt Trlw JOOfTj atrtiinf Sowrunmt - . - . v - . i . Tjltr 108L OFFICES OF THE BEE v Bob Offlc.: nth and rtnua. Bruck OOcw: - I'ounoll Bluffl It acott Bt. I Wtlnut Tuk Mil UiTKworu L " v Out-f-TowM Office: -' X" Tatk 'it" . I w.minttoB mi o at C aicMo 8m BUU. I Pm Franc M m at.. Honor tilt x st. lit Kortk Mk elettions.' What a shameful thing their care lessness .shout civic duties is -when compared with the treat love poor Mike Dragich had for thit country, his United States! The Bee's Platform 1. Ntw Union Passenger Station.1 2. A Pip Lin from the Wyoming Oil Field to Omaha. 3. Continued improrement of tha Na braika Highway, including tha pave ment of Main Thoroughfares leading into Omaha with a Brick Surface. v 4. A short, low-rate Waterway from the Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. THE FEAR THAT ABIDES. "No one will fear a president," Mr. Wilson .jonce said, "except those whom he can make fear the elections." Ctfir democratic-friends are -in the chilling shadow of that fear. As the Metropolitan Magazine says, "at every demo--! cratic" lovefeast these days-sits the ghost of "Woodrow Wilson." Verily so. - But some dare even' while they fear. Mr. Bryan, for instance. ' He has not hesitated to -ruse the knife upon both the quick and the dead -'for postmortem or vivisectional explorations "-'into the political purposes of his party's leaders not in accord Vith his conceptions of policy and "-righteousness. He did it in the Nebraska pri- - maries with hearty abandon, and uncovered a rlot tf signs and omens for democratic sooth-"-.sayersV. Doubtless his promotion from a re 5; porter's table at the democratic national con vention to the full authority of a delegate-at-large has caused a "ghost dance" at the White '.House even as it has attracted the wrathful -.attention of he wet and Wilson wing of his :. party. His talent for mischief-making is un questioned, and with a brand" new commission of leadership from -the democrats of Nebraska, - won in a fight to the finish with the friends of I the president and the administration's policies, " there can belittle doubt in what direction his , distracting activities will be turned. ' ' i When ie came up from one ofhis winter - homes in the south to face foul political weather I there were those who sougkt to strip and lasb V.him into obscurity and impotence. But they ". opened their mouths in vain; they sowed their J'seed in vain; they used many political medicines , in vain. The thirsty reviled him, but he heeded ;-them not. The president's cohbrts sought his : undoing, ,but were repulsed. A handy politician is.W. J. B., and sly, .'devilish sly. He always that is, nearly always " has the handle of an issue in his grip that confounds his foes. What he will do at San ) Francisco is on the knees of the gods, but that he will' be doing something the thick and thin . followers of W. W. will despise is certain. Mike Way for Beans. The humble dry white bean sells for about three times what itrought before the war, but at that it is worth while. Some families never have learned the delights which linger in the gentle but, energetic and nourishing bean. It is to them a thing too common, too plebeian, too cheap maybe, to win a place on their mahegany dining tables, and they taboo it as a food fit only for a poor purse, and thereby unwittingly deny themselves what would be as costly a luxury as terrapin or dodo eggs if it were scarce instead of plentiful. To them it is on the same gastronomic scale as dried apple pie and other really luscious things a perverse urban popula tion has lost the art of preparing for the table. The date of the original bean is lost in the dim corridors of prehistoric times in Asia, al though most of its cultivated varieties are of American origin, and by the genius of accom plished home cooks have become prims favor ites in the diet of the discriminating few who know and seek the most delicious things to eat Consider bean soup. Not the thin, watery, salty fraud usually perpetrated in hotels and restaurants, but the real thing made by a mis tress of the wonderful properties of the whole some seed, who knows how to draw out, sub due, flavor and develop its richness into most palatable form. Such bean soup, common enough thirty years ago, is a splendid triumph of culinary art. It is rich and creamyT' In it nestle all the nutriment and vitality of the pulp, minus its skin, with certain additions worthy' the genius of a professional chef. One" of these ingredients we remember the delectatile flakes of the hard-boiled yellow of eggs that crowned with gold a food fit for kings. , , - Consider baked beans. They are bread and meat and -wine combined as fuel for achieve ment and strength. Rich with tender fat pork, garnished with -browned bacon here and there, slightly reminiscent of onion, they call up vis ions of glutton's heaven, so satisfying and al together welcome are they to the little red lane. In truth they who banish beans from their diet go through life ignorant of a most com forting and filling pleasure. If they do it through ignorance there is yet time for them to learn; if an unworthy prejudice controls" them, or if they neglect the bean because it js not stylish, their sins be on their "own defrauded, stomachs! .They deserve nothing but ridicule, and should never be admitted into the happy and contented Brotherhood of Bean Eaters. We dare say these things in defiance of the dictum of a mdclcrn medical specialist rho dc- j scribed beans some ten years ago as "cneap. poison6us and nasty." Perhaps they were, as served in his luxurious hotel; and. he might add com' bread and prunes to his list of cheap'and nasty foods. -There was a time when tomatoes also were held to be poisonous. Bft truth ulti mately shines through -crrcr. A Line O'Type or Two N Hw t tk Liu. tat tkt sstN fall Nr tkw mti. Accocwroro for tastes. "Maecenas, atavla edlte reglbua." Maecenaa! he'a my 'angel see? My one gilt-edged aecurity Maec, dear, one man finds vict'ry weL That crowns him as an athelete; Others again delight their souls By leading tickets at the polls; Still others, Maec, are simply nuts To get a corner, say, on Stutz. The man that plows his father's lands (Real cornfed hick with horny hands) No wealth could hire to jump his Job And sail the wild waves as a gob. Some men appropriate -on pay A good chunk from, the eight-hour day, To revel In some soda bar Or watch a fluffy nllum etar. Kach to his taste, but, Maec, for mine, , Thia poetry is bread and wine. Oh, what a glow of pride would tint me If Harriet Monroe would print me! If Mr. Louis Untermeyer ' . ' Pinned a blue ribbon on my lyre, ' O Zeus, O Bacchus, O my golly! Now wouldn't that be rather Jolly? PAN. lias Conviction of Caillaux. C , Another .interesting chapter of 'French his i tory has been advanced by the action of the 7 senate, sitting as a high court, in convicting "Joseph Caillaux of "commerce and corre- spondence with the enemy." A former premier ; of France, man of undoubted political ability .'."and influence, Caillaux has been something of ,'a storm center for many years. At 'the time of .".the 'Morrocan affair, when the action of Ger rjnany nearly precipitated the world war, Cail- ,-)aux was openly accused of favoring the kaiser's "views and of a willingness to betray France to -avoid war. His pacifist inclinations, at least so j'far as Germany was concerned, came out again in 1914, and it is fairly well established that he r '"was, in cjose communication with those who sought tff bring France to ask for a separate i' peace. v y The extent of the operations so carried on has been shown to be greater than at first'be Heved. Much that was brought outMm the trial of Bolo Taslia, who wa.s shot to death after ' being convicted, was not only substantiated but supplemented at the trial of Caillaux. One branch of the intrigue reached the United States, where its ramifications were such as to very t closely connect it with the propaganda carried x on by German agentSy Italy, too, as included in the plot, and its principals were energetic, capable men, whose activities provided consid erable trouble for the Allies. f Clemenceau exposed their machinations, " -arrested such of the principals as he could lay i..hands on, and succeeded in securing a sentence, of death of Bolo Pasha, an adventurer in politi - cal life, but a danger to France.' Caillaux was : saved from this by the abandonment cf the charge of treason against liim, perhaps an ex pedient exhibition of governmental clemency, . put is now in the presence of:banishrnent i Incidental to His case is the revival of the i trial of his former wife for the murder el the editor of Figaro whom she shot because of his .attacks on her husband while he was a member ,: of the, cabinet. The whole affair provides a V curiously1 interesting portion of the record of ; French politics, and its echo will be heard for ; many a year to come, just as Boulanger and 'Dreyfus stillj are remembered on election day :. over there. , SBBBSBSBmsanaSBfaaaaMSRakSiaBtasaBaM . ' s " - . His Dear United States. What a lesson for those who hold in light , esteem the privileges of American citizenship f lies in the suicide of the alien Austrian, Mike 'Dragich of Los Angeles, this week. He quar reled with a companion who told him he would be . deported. Mike struggled with the wioked " threat all night. The next morning he placed two American flags in the window of his room, kissed them and shot himself. When people in r the house rushed to him he was fondly whisper er ing, "My United Statesfmy United States," with his dying breathy He had learned to love tfie United States r passionately, so deeply that his belief that he ? would have to leave the country was worse ", than death to him. HV cherished the country and its flag. All honor to him! And there are -" men in this land of the free, born on its soil, educated in its schools, grown prosperous by its opportunities, who neglect the fundamental duty of their Jizcnship, that of participating in its Amundsen Off for the Pole. News that Captain Roald 'Amundsen reached a far-awav Siberian base from which he expects to make a dash for the North Pole must excite the imagination of any who has even casually followed the story of this quest. Pearv undoubtedly reached the pole, but he was unable to make any discoveries or ex tensive examination, beyond such observations a.s were essential fo establishing the fact tl.at ht stood on top of the earth, and planted the American flag on an ice hummock there. Stefansson has approached near enough to set tle the fact that the North Pole is open sea, of unknown depth, the short scunding line he pos sessed having been entirely "paid 'out without reaching bottom. vBeyond this, and some in definite knowledge as to the-set of the currents, little is knownof the absolute north end. . Amundsen is going out better equipped for the venture than Uiy of his predecessors. He is- prtovisioifcd for a four-year stay, and it is thought he will bring back much information that will be of service to science. Tt was he who, moving independently, anticipated, by a few short hours 'the triumph of the . gallant Robert Falcon Scott and his, devoted tfarty, who made their stand at the South Pole only little while after Amundsen and his companions had left the placo. The romance and the trage'dy of this adventure is beyond expression, espe cially when the lamentable end of Captain Scott and his company isconsidered. We may have to wait many months ' for definite reports from Amundsen's latest enter prise, but it may be accepted as settled that no progress the World makes in any way while he is gone will deter it from hearing with respect and concern the word he brings or sends,back. - Round Up the Delinquents. If the office of the internal revenue commis sioner has information to justify its belief that over 300,000 taxpayers have evaded taxes since the country went to war,' the remedy is in its hands. Delinquents should bepirVsued effect ively. It is possible that in some cases good reason may be found for the failure 6f the in dividual to comply with the law. Such may be dealt with according to the discretion of the commissioner. The man vajo has willfully shirked his responsibilities, and there are plenty of them, should be made to feel the might of the government. Appeals to the patriotism of such men are futile. They found themselves' suddenly in possession of greater wealth or in comes than they had ever thought to obtain. This turned, their heads, warped their judgment and in a suddenly aroused passion of greed, they have sought to retain all of that a' share of which the government has a, -just and in disputable claim. By their action they have put a heavfer burde on those who cheerfully met -the tremendous levies. Even justice requires that none of these tax shirkers be allowed to get away. The 4enim club may yet become a factor hi domestic life. It is a much better thing than "buy a' bale of cotton" for boosting that game. When a citizen can not peacefully transport a bottle of rainwater, it is nearly time some thing were being done to restore our libertf. Dodge county threatens to send a woman to the legislature. This idea may spread in time. v " "Muny ice plant opens May 1, of course, al lowing that winter is, over by that time. Mars overlodked a mighty fine opportunity to get an earful. , ' Here cofnes your air 71 ail look out below! YES, a pageant or a fancy dress ball to re duce the cost of living would, w e think, be un commonly effective. Think- of the fetching cos tumes that could be devised! THE IDEAL NEWSPAPER. ' . (From the Decatur, Neb., HeraldJ The Herald makes apologies this week for the .paper; we were so crowded for space, and therefore both news matter and advertising matter had to be' left out this week. NO one has a better right to criticise Article Tm than Hiram .Tnhnon. Hiram helned to give us Wilson, and Wilson gave us Article Ten. IT'S A GIFT. Sir: Arthur Train in S. E. P.: "Right o!" whistled Tutt. How do they g. t. w ? TEL""WITHAM. '" 'LOOKIT there!' sibilated Sis Callie." Sat. Eve. Post. How do they get that way? Rhapsodic Rustique. , (From the Leland Times.) I'nique in its simplicity, richly elegant ; Dut most of all sweetly appealing, was the marriage of Miss Tessie Mosey to Willis Danielsonat the Mosey home last Saturday evening. In the south living room a pic turesque bower of smilax was the fair , haven of the happy pair, who made the mo mentous trip to the altar absolutely unat tended. Tranquil and unspeakably . lovely the bride was, in white satin meteor, silver embroidered. A hand bouquet of fragrant white flowers played a most effective part in the faultless ensemble. .The single ring ceremony was the chosen pledge and was singularly beautiful. Easter lilies in dig nified profusion proclaimed the festive na- j ture of the day. breathing their incompar able fragrance in mute blessing upon the happy pair. -Following the ceremony a four c'ourse wedding dinner, triumph of gas trononus art, was served in the dining room. Pink and white roses held decorative sway. rendering the taWe worthy in beauty of its joyful responsibility. "ATTRIBUTES President's Troubles to Lack of Tack in Dealing with Proud Senators." Des-Moines Register. - t . Borah acts like a man who had sat on one. STVLES FOR MEN. Sir: Suggestions now. current for bringing down- the TI. C. I, by wearing overalls and eschewing collars appear to me to latk that How to Keep Well By Dr. W. A. EVANS i I TESTING SCHOOL CHILDREN From the standpoint of the happi ness of the child,, behavior and con duct are more important than men tal capacl'. A mentally incapable child generally gets along well with other childrtiw A child whose con duct is pecuIiatSdoes not get along with other children, is hard to teach and train and, in addition, may dis turb the entire .schoolroom. - From the standpoint of the teach er, .behavior is -the more important of the two. And yet beyond a su perficial rating on deportment the teacher gives no special thought to the behavior or conduct of the child. It would be worth her while to at tempt to analyze the conduct of each child in her room with a view to picking out the misfits. "v. Once they are understood, the rea son for their conduct analyzed, once they are properly classified a to type, she is on the way toward less ening her troubles. Some of the pe culiar children can be made to fit in, some can be handled by special treatment and some can be trans ferred to special rooms. First, the teaeher must observe the behavior of each pupil in the schoolroom and on, the playground. The fundamental question 'is-- Does the child fit in? If the answer is not then certain other questions can oe asKea ana answered. Subsidiary questions bearing on the main question are Does he en gage in competitions normally? Does he play the same games as the other boys of his oWn age? Is he companionable, friendly and fairly popular with other boys? ' As the result of observation the teacher will determine within one montn mat nine-tentns or tne mem bers of - the class clearly doit in. In temperament, emotions, be havior and' conduct they are easily above the doubtful line. Then let her score the remaining 10 per cent on a special score card. The unde sirable qualities can bo checked. The number of checks should range between one and four,.depend- etn on the degree of any bad qual ity. Let us say excitability is being marked.1.' One check would mean that the child was recognized as be ing mildly excitable; four checks as meaning that the quality was ex treme. A child With one or more bad qualities marked with four checks should come in for further study either by the teacher or by a trained psychologist. Perhaps, all such children can be divided among the following groups. The method of training the child out of its asocial or antisocial state, of making it fit in, will depend on the groupto which it belonss. Terman estimates that in any student body about 5 per cent of the pupils will, be abnormal enough; in tempera ment to make them difficult in the schoolroom. Terman suggests the following points for observation. The list might well be used by the teacher to check on: Disturbance of motor con trol, ovetmobility of facial muscles, twitchings, spasmodic movements of any kind, bad co-ordination, drop ping things, jerky handwriting, in ability to sit still, stuttering, bluster ing, rapid speech, nail biting, chew ing pencil, frequent requests to go tfut." irritability, bad tejnper, laughs lying or stealing, cruelty, finical hab its, eccentricity or queerness. dis turbed sleep, morbid fears, chronic uneasiness, child an outcast, indica tions of nervous exhaustion, associat ed physical defects. Good for Peristalsis. ' W. H. T. writes: "I regret to see your O. K. on gum chewing. All doctors do not agree with ou. "The Habit of gum chewing has become so widespread and Is indulged in so constantly even in public places that it would seem to be a menace to the nervous system. It is offensive to most persons of refinement. It de tracts from' the good looks of our women and girls. It would seem to overdevelop the muscles of tha face. Do consider esthetics as well as physiology." REPLY. You make me say much mare than I said1. When digestion is slow and the stomach feels full chewing gum gives relief. It does this by stimu lating peristalsis and in some meas. ure by promoting secretions. Poorly poised, nervous people chew gum just as they bite their finger nails. Gum chewing 13 an effect with a slight tendency to react as a cause. Esthetics and pulchritude belong in he beauty and behavior columns. Love Not Taxable. Rockefeller says that love Is a greater possession than riches at any rate it is not subject to. the fed eral income tax. Norfolk Virginian Pilot. - Mara and the spooka! Mapleton. Neb., April 8j.To the Editor of The Bee: Skylarking with Mara will be found rArt of a prob lem than Professor Todd probably foresee. Indeed, those wily agents In 'Tartarus' Will put into the wire less something nice to fit tha oc casion. (See 2 Pet, Ssiln the orig inal). Moreover, be it known that Holy Writ is sponsor for the thought that terra firm a is the only planet with intelligent creatures thereupon and will continue so to be until man's redemption Is complete 1,000 years hence. Meanwhile, earth's wiseacres will have plenty of chance to demonstrate their own kunwisdom, prior to hearkening to the voice from heaven the Bible. Since every question will finally re solve itself into a Biblical one, how wise to begin at once and examine the sacred document in it's purity aside from creedal bias. Therefore, we conclude, that the wizards of the air, will come in con tact with the demons in earth's at mosphere (tartarus), who will oblige Interplanetary investigators with some spurious razzle dazzle. These minions of liardom are pro ficient in sin-mongery for over 4.000 yeais. We prefer oyr information from the unequlvical ivord of , in spiratiorf. Like thewin-query of V,.. AAA oama f rrtm ' thlft Oracle tells ua that finite mind will 1 require eternity to fathon the origin, f , For "the aecre things belong jy God, hut the. things which are r4 vealed belong to us and our rhlN dren." Proper dignity and .propriety will invoke the Scripture on such a mighty theme. Since the Al mighty Is from everlasting to ever- . lasting and hia creation likewise In finite, it is the quintessence of folly in trv tn vah aiinh hciffhtS of SiOTV .without acknowledging the testi- mony of its autnor. we rememoer Voltaire, the,-noted innaei, provi dentially had "his old home turned into a Bfin society, by reason of the reaction of his Biblical arrows. While he and his colleagues boasted in- untrammeled freedom of thoughts, they wVought crimes in the French revolution which showed its aour frrtit. ' JOSEPH OREIO. , -- Reasonable Excuse. The Kansas Side baker who wai fined for selling hii loaves .un wrapped should have given the court the excuse offered by a Chicago baker last summer, who extenuated a similar charge by explaining that the wrappers got so dirty he was ashamed to sell them. Kansas City Staiv tion, extreme suggestabilityj easily led, excessive tiinidTty, misbehavior, sex perversions, perverted tastes, pickle eating, dirt eating, tiorose ness, suflenness, obstinacy, jver-af-fectlonateness, undue sensativeness to praise or blame, over-onscien-tiousness, Religiosity day dreaming. DrexeVs Slippers for Children delicate touch of the radical so dear to our na tional heart. Dispensing with collars, why not tor cries at slight cause, undue emo dispense with coats, vests, shirts, pantaloons and the other inane trappings in which the mod ern male enveils his more or less classic con tour? A short lavender nightie coming, say, to the knees, a wide pink silk sash, sandals, a clean shave and a green parasol would be dainty and comfortable attire for the hot weather. Legs can be shaved with a safety razor as welt as chins, so the hirsute need not hesitate. A pink silk pair of panties under ihe nightie tan be worn bv the prudish. Classically .yours. G. V. B. THE best bet for the presidential uomina tion.is McAdoo. "O they-don't take him they 11 have to take me." When You Get Tired of Overalls (From the Chicago Jeweler.) "My dear Mr, r' -, : If you ars con templating something suitable for summer weir. 1 we would suggest pearls. We are enclosing cuts which we feel sure will appeal fo you, all of which we can reproduce in the finest quality of imitation pearls, guaranteed 'proof against mois ture of any kiiul'and at prices so reasonable that they will no doubt fill a long felt want."-- "HARRY C. PHIBBS Will Discuss Wovlc of Joliet Advertisers." Jolict Herald-News. What do you mean ''Truth in Advertising?" OCR TALKY ADMINISTRATIpN. (From the Terre Haute StarS) George Berg, superintendent of hatcher ies for the Department of Conversation, is " traveling the lake -regions of Indiana. A GOOD argument against the theory that man is descended from the monkey is the aver age golfer. Now, -the monkey is nothing if not imitative, buta golfer can watch a professional Swing all day, without being able to imitaTe his motions. No swing could be more obvious than that of our canny friend, Joe MacMorran-; he merely hauls off and hits the ball, which is all that is necessary. Josephus weighs, when he is eating well, i04 pounds, yet he knocks the ball half a mile, or thereabouts. 1 v( Twin Beds of Yesteryear. (From the Diary of Samuel Pepys.) , " September 23d, 1695: We took horse, and got early to Baldwk-k, where there was a fair, and we put inr and eat a mouthful of porke, which they made us pay 14d for, which vexed me much. And so away to Stevenage, and staid till a shower ,was over, and so rode to Welling. We supped well, and had two bedf in the room, and so lay single. FOR watchdog of the Academy 'treasury, W. H. C. of Wisconsin nominates one of his ad vertisers, who asks that "Jno." be used as the flst name of his sig instead of John, to save space. , And want-ads five cents a line. THE position of fuel administrator for the Academy being vacant, we -are notifying Rus ling Wood of New York of his appointment. HOME BREWERS' CORNER. 1 '- Diddle, diddle, dumpling, my son John, Went to bed with his breeches oni One shoe oft and one shoe on ' For he brewed a brew in a demijohn. G. G. GEN. CHEN is said to be financing the bol shevist campaign in China. Chen must be Chinese for chin. ' Winged Words. Sir: My son, aged 20, is in his third year in a certain state university. lie writes me that he is still taking lessons in spelling; 'and adds, "I tell you, dad, it makes me soar." FATHER. IT is the opinion of a lady reader that the colored gentleman in Memphis who breathes boIes in a handkerchief has nix on her steam laundry. ' , SPEAKING OF BEST SELLERS AND BOOKS WORTH READING ' Sir: Young ladies from State Normal School going home for the week end, and discussing , lessons for the coming week. ' 1 "Is that book of Scott's- very big?" "About two hundred and fifty pages." y "All poetry?" ' 1' ' "No, half poetry and half reading." . ' . DE MERIDOR. THE choir of the First M. E. church of De catur includes Miss Dorothy Hoots. And not unpleasantly. HE GOT OFF EASY. j (From the Gary Tribune.) For sale, grocery ' and meat market. Cheap, as owner is going to retire. Ten years in the same place. RIPON, says the announcement of a' concert by the Ripon College Glee Club in Orchestra Hall next Monday evening, Ripon is "the birth place of the Republican party." WHO was the Moses that brought down the tablets! . B. L. T, DAINTY styles in dressy Patent Leather, Dull Calf and White Canvas are here in all the "new styles aud shapes pf toe. Light and cool, yet .made substantial enough to give the greatest amount of service. Bring the chil dren in Saturday, when' they are "out of school ; we give them special attention on thi.: day. Sizes 2 to 5. $2.50 Sizes 512 to 8 $3.25 Sizes 8U to 11 $1.00 Sizes Hi2 to 2 $5.00 Young ladies', sizes, 2' to 7, without straps ....$6.50 DREXEL SHOE CO. h 1419 Farnam St. FOR RENT TYPEWRITERS All Makes Special rates to students. CENTRAL TYPEWRITER . EXCHANGE D. 4121. 1905 Farnam St. 0 Is Your Reason for Not Owning a VIGTROLA One of Price? x Our Victrola purchase plan easy and economical is open to everyone! Almost everybody ii buying a Victrola by a series of monthly payments. You 4-ill find our quiet and strictly private demonstra tion ,booth? a 1leasant place to alk over V ict jr term. Victrola X (Cabinet Style) $125 Records (Your Choice) . r,.$ 15 Terms $lQper Month $140 Most Complete Stock of Victrolas and Victor Records in the City. RECORD BUYERS Have you been disappointed in getting yo ur favorite records? We use every means to keep our record stock rooms filled with all available records, and while itlhas hsen impossi ble to secure some of the records, we have convinced a great many of our customers that "if you can't get it at Hospe's there's no use Tying elsewhere." Here are some "old favorites" in stock rifcht now: OLD FAVORITES Hawaiian Selections I Violin Selections 74534 Alohoe Alma Gluck and Chorus 17701 Hawaiian Waltz, Medley . Hawaiian Guitars Kilema Waltz'. . .Hawaiian Guitars . ' Instrumental Selections 35196 Memories of Home. Love's Old Sweet Song "... Violin, Flute, Harp 35509 Poet and Peasant, Overture No. 1 Poet and Peasant, Overture No. 2 ' Orchestra 35397 Clayton, Grand March In Lilac Time Military Band 35068 Over the Waves Militaire Waltz Sousa's Band 64817 Beautiful Ohio. Kreisler 74051 Souvenir Elman 74583 On Wings of Song .Heifetz 74341 Meditation, from Thais Elman Vocal Selections f 631 When Irish Eyes are Smiling .............. John McCormack 74420 Carry-Me Back to Old Virginia.. Alma Gluck and Quartet 74465 Listen to the Mocking Bird Alma Gluck and Kellogg 8h08 Mighty Lak a Rose . ........... .F,arrar and Kreisler 89018 Home to Our Mountains (Trevator) -' '. Homer and Caruso 1513 Douglas Street Everythingm AH and Music The Victor Store BUY YOUR CAR MORE POWER - ' ' "1, "business is coop wank you" NICHOLAS GASOLENES BURN CLEAN A sluggish gasolene cannot vaporize fast enough , to produce full engine power. Much ot it goes out the exhaust and much' into the lubricating oil. i Our Straight run gasolenes will explode entirely in the cylinders-there is no waste and you get full power. ' - " Two good gasolenes:- BLITZEN (Export Test) . .... .30c , VULCAN (Dry Test) . . . .... . . 27c 1. V. NICHOLAS OIL CO. President .Locomotive and ', .-Auto Oils ' ' Keystone J ' . "The Best Oils We Know" Our, Electric Pumps Insure Accuracy Your Protection and Ours. L '