THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY; MAY 10, 1920 The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, NELSON B. UPDIKE, Pablishtr. , MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The. Aawotkud Prat, ot wblcta Tt B mrmotr, la -r!mll aoUUtd to tha un for publication of all am dlipuetaet crwUtwt lo it or not othwwlw eredltad la Uill ppr, ud alto tin IomI newt publlititd hwein. All ttifcu of pubilciUoo of out wtcUl 1iptchn r lo rewmd. " BEE TELEPHONES ' Print Branch Kxehum. AtM for tn T.l 1 AAA Departoant or Partloulw rcraoa Wtatcd. IjlCT iUUU For Night and Sunday Sanrlca Call: Mltorlil Department ............. Trier 1000L Clroulatloa Dwvtmait Tlr 100HL AdnrtltUia Department .......... TjIk 100SL OFFICES OF THE BEE Bom OOca: 17tb and ramaa. ' Branca Offlo: Asm ' 1110 Naru? ittn I South Bid 53 H H Bt. I'onncU Blaffi 15 Scott St. I Walnut 111 North 40th Park MIS LMtinwonh I Out-oi-Town Officii S'tw Turk Offle M riftb Am. Wtn.lnjwo 1311 0 St. Calcato Stent BldrFarii Franca U Bui St., Honor The Bee's Platform , 1. Nw Union Passenger Station. 2. A Pip Lin from the Wyoming Oil Fialda to Omaha, 3. Continued improyement of tbo Ne braska Highways, including the pav ment of Main Thoroughfares leading into Omaha with a Brick Surface, . 4. A short, low-rate Waterway from the m Cora Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. 5. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of GoTemment. THE FARMER GETTING WISE. The farmer is the only man whose food sup ply is safe and sure. "He grows' it himself," while the rest of us get it as we catch fish with silver bait. While we have been enjoying the comforts, conveniences, amusements and social pleasures of the cities, and taking ad vantage of its many money-making' opportuni ties, the farmer has been watching us. He has seen the great industrial organizations boosting wages and decreasing working hours, while pro testing against the increased cost of farm prod ucts and demanding greater efforts from the farmer. As the New York Evening Mail re marks : , ' The farmer is too sensible of the require ments of his work to demand an eight-hour day. He is willing to work ten hours, and even twelve hours, in cases of necessity. But he feels the injustice of being expected to labor such long hours at burdensome work the most burdensome in the world to swell the earnings and add to the comforts and the luxuries ot the city workers. No city worker can justly blame the farmer for that feeling, nor need the city dweller be surprised nor indignant over another fact called to public attention by the same paper when it says; Smarting under that sense of injustice, 17 per cent of our agricultural workers, as shown by the government survey, have abandoned the country since last year and have come to the cities to get their share of the shorter hours, the easier work and the pleasanter way .of living. That ominous decrease in the number of food producers is likely to continue rather than cease, unless farm life is made more alluring and profitable tq those who now live it, and suffi-' ciently attractive to draw recruits from the cities in large numbers. The farmer might grow more content 'with his lot, less inclined to move to town, if he got his fair share of the profits on what he pro duces, but he almost despairs of that when he sees the potatoes he sold in the fall for $2 a bushel selling in the spring .for $8 or $10 to the profit of storage men and speculators. . The farm problem is beginning to press hard on i the future of the cities. Food means more than steel or wool or even cotton, now 40 cents, a pound and aiming ajt 60. f the president had been one-tenth "as much concerned over the profits of northern farmers during the past four years as he has been over those of the southern cotton and cane planters, we would have no farm problem to face now. - t Presidential Primaries Indecisive. . The primaries to select delegates .to the Chicago convention are nearly over. Pennsyl vania and Vermont republicans will vote May ' 18th, Oregon on the 21st, and West Virginia on the 25th. Fourteen other states have held direct primaries, and no candidate has won enough delegates to dominate the convention. Perhaps it is just as well so. The primaries have not expressed in any. definite way the will of the- party at large, because the party as a whole did not attend them. In Ohio, for in stance, where a favorite son met and won in a contest, we know a county in which the pri mary was described as a "farce" because of lack of attendance. Yet that county is rock-ribbed , in its republicanism. The contest the state over was described as bitter in its intensity. But the people, were not aroused. In all Maryland only 23,959 votes were cast, with more than '50,000 republican votes in . Baltimore alone, and a population of 800,000 outside that city. The conclusion is irresistible that the direct primary system has failed of its purpose. It is, perhaps, and will continue to be, an expression of factional feeling, but voters who rally to fac tional contests are not the ones who .decide national elections. Action by the four states yet to vote is not expected to add dominating impressiveness to the showing of any candidate, and we are left to exactly the same sort of convention delibera tions under which Lincoln, Grant, Hayes, Gar field, Blaine and McKinley were nominated. We had great presidents. under the old system, so we need not s be disturbed now because the direct' primaries have failed to reveal the will of the party. Why the Bonus is Opposed. Late news from Washington indicates that the bill for a bonus to the soldiers may be set over until after election next fall. In the hope of putting the matter out of 'politics, the con gressmen are making all the more certain that it will become an issue in the campaign. Sen timent in favor of the measure is increasing daily, and the principal opposition to it comes from big concerns on whom will fall the burden of the tax that must be raised to pay it. It is natural that a reduction in taxes should be sought. The problem has another angle, though. Reports from the great corporations of the country show a steadily mounting ratio of prof its, growing out of not only the war, but of the conditions that followed. The war produced a very large crop of millionaires, each of whom owes a large portion of his newly acquired wealth to the boys who made up the A. E. F. It is true that the tax will add to burdens already borhe, but if it be contrasted with what might have happened if it had not been for those boys, the impost will-f fern feather light. Moreover, it is high time Americans were break- ; in away from ticir. chawcttfjitic attitude of neglect and indifference towards the soldiers, and giving them something molt substantial than three cheers. The sum required is insignificant when set alongside the service. The obligation on the nation and on the state as well is as imperative as any ,it ever discharged. Congress will not go far astray if it heeds the plain call, and gives the soldiers that to which they are entitled. Du Ponts and the Dye Industry. Avoiding in all ways any reference" to the possible effect the letter from the Du Pont pub licity manager may have, either on the can didacy of General Wood, or on the status, of the due industry bill before the United States sen ate, there remains much to be said.. One of the points brought out by Senator Moses is the fear of the New England textile manufacturers that they are to be shut off from a supply of "su perior dyes." This means German dyes. At the time the German kaiser precipitated the world war, the dye making industry was controlled by the Germans."1 Their chemists had brought it almost to perfection. , Through patient skill they were enabled to arrange the particles of hydrogen, oxygen and carbon in such multifarious combinations as produced rare and delicate shadings, ranging through a schedule of differentiated colors that not only challenged admiration, but baffled understanding. The mind is incapa"ble almost of conceiving the marvelous hues that ravished the senses be cause of the industry of these monarchs of re search. And Germany dominated the , textile trade of the world because the dyes were produced in her vats. When the Deutschland docked at Baltimore after her record-making trip in 1916, she brought a cargo of precious dyestuffs, which was generally spurned by American deal-, ers, because of the" sentiment against the Hun already developed, and the desire to foster the home dye industry, then showing signs, of re vival. ' " ' ' Announcement has been made that American chemists can and do produce a colqr card equal to the German. Whether this is exactly true is not so important as that,home manufacturers are endeavoring to supply a home demand. It is conceivable that wearers of cotton, silks and other fabrics may a little longer sustain the in convenience of inadequate dyes until the need can be competently met from home. If wc are to submit to a monopoly, it is far preferable that it be an American institution. The war awak ened' us to certain shameful conditions in re gard to essential industries for which correction has been effectively sought, and it is only stupid to talk of return to the point we were forced to abandon in order to help ourselves. An Unlawful Killing. ' ' 1 A Christian Scientist was found guilty of manslaughter in a New Jersey court last week because his daughter died of diphtheria after he had deprived her of medical treatment and per mitted her to have only iChristian Science min istrations. -a On the witness stand the accused father de clared his absolute faith in Christian Science, and asserted that it would cure consumption, cancer, fevers and other diseases. It did not, however, cure the diphtheria that killed ' his daughter. The case excited extraordinary attention. Forty-five Christian Science churches in New Jersey offered to finance the defense, which was based on the theory that a man has a right to control 'and decide what treatment his family shall have for illness, according to his educa tion or religious belief. But the jury took the position that no relative who denies a sick mem ber. of his family medical relief, and substitutes, for it a belief, religious or otherwise, whicn practices suggestive therapeutics for cases which require medicines or surgical attention, can be held blameless if death follows. The convicted man's counsel announced that an appeal would be taken. It should be taken ' to the highest court and a rule established as to what authority shall control the treatment of disease, the recognized and legally authorized and educated medical profession, or the teach ings of a religious sect which invades the juris diction of the medical profession and receives fees for undertaking the'cure of disease by wholly mental processes. '. One of the Construction Problems. ' While the housing situation has received chief attention because of its mor,e acute aspects, there is another problem of construction that is pressing very persistently for solution. r That is the building of railroad equipment. The de mand for new locomotives and cars is the thing that the managers of transportation have to face. Even before the war the shortage of freight cars was pronounced, and the lessened output while the war was on has left-the rail roads without many thousands of cars that are vitally necessary to their business. The public feels this shortage directly, for the interruption in freight traffic is not wholly due to switch men's or other labor strikes. Until a sufficient supply of rolling stock is available, the move ment of raw materials to market and the return of manufactured goods to consumers will be interfered with. Whether the managers are doing their utmost to remedy the situation is beside the question. Jf the transportation in dustry is to be brought up to a state of serv ice, this one phase of its. activity must speedily be solved. . Ships That Didn't Pass in Court. A thin, trembling old woman was arraigned in court at Atlantic' City Wednesday last for stealing milk from a doorstep. I was starving, the culprit said. "What is your riame?" asked the court. "Elizabeth Weinberg," replied the derelict. Thereupon the judge asked a number of ap-! parently irrelevant questions. Then he said: You're discharged, and if you'll come to my law office after court you will' receive a check for $5,000. I have been hunting for Elizabeth Weinburg for , many months to make this payment and close an estate. You art the woman. i Sonora rebels have organized a new depart ment of mails. Burleson may learn something from them if he watches closely. One speeder is as dangerous as "another, something the motorcycle cop occasionally for Price pyramids are not like that built by Cheops, but are very annoying. You can't get rich doing nothing, even in America. ' Hoover, is right op the sugar, pxpbjem. A Line 0' Type or Two Hiw to th LIm, let lh lalpi fall w)lri thj nay. IT-would be possible to compile a long list of things in which the w. k. middle class is not sympathetically interested; and near the top would be the information conveyed by the per sons who parade around towrt with placards on their chests announcing that this or that res taurant, shop, or other concern is "unfair." Ordeals and Raw Deals. N Sir: Apropos of Fanny Hurst and her trial marriage, Friend Wife deposes that ours also Is a trial marriage a trial for both of us. Chalk up one for her. L. C. P. ""AN interesting sight was witnessed by a great many Dubuquers late Sunday night, when there was a total eclipse of the moon at 8:40 o'clock." Dubuque Times-Journal.' That is late for Dubuque. . "'THE first stages of the bclip'se were not so noticeable because the daylight saving made sunset an hour later by the clock!' New York Evening Post. i " Can you beat it! AND the New York Sun reported that "the beginning of the phenomena' was hidden by mists." Shade of Charles A. Dana! AN' EVEN DEADLIER. SPECIES. From the Ida Grove, la., Record-Era. Dr. E. S. Parker has been examining many wounded soldiers, returning home recently. One of those being 'examined last Thursday had a compound depressed fracture of the, skull. The doctor placed his finger in the' healed depression and while doing so asked the man numerous questions. Finally he asked: Are you married?" "No, sir," was the reply, "I was kicked there by a mule." APROPOS of the- New Yorker .who for swallowing two tacks in a bowl of soup was rewarded with a jury verdict of $25,000, it is the quaint and curious notion of a Wilmette reader that he should be obliged to pay an income tax on the sum. IT PROBABLY WOULD GIVE AN EXPERT NO TROUBLE WHATEVER. "" Sir: Apropos of your remarks concerning an absolutely unreadable code, I contend that if a message be written In the international phonetic symbols and then coded by some position method It will be only readable to one knowing the key to the arrangement, what? ATHOS. It is the business of the expert to find the key to the arrangement. And, as a general rule, the ' more intricate and apparently baffling the cipher, the easier it is for him to unravel it. Business Before Pleasure. From the Charlotte la., Record.l. ,. Clifford Bufzloff came home last week with the intention of having his tonsils and ade noids removed, but not being able to make an ' appointment with his physician, he decided to wait until after he attends the May festival at Mount Vernon. In the meantime he has been assisting the carpenters at the IloefCt building. Signs of Spring. From the Wauseca Journal-Radical. Dear Sir: Inclosed find check for $1.20 for ad. We are well in Minneapolis. As I rook out of my window I see Laymons Cemetery with Its hundreds of departed loved ones, and It makes me think of my Brother Gib, he died Dec. 19th at Shulburg, Wis. My wife and I were down to see the poor boy. J wouldn't' have known him, he weighed about forty pounds. But such is life. We, have passed through a hard and ex pensive winter, as I look out of my back window I see a pile of ashes (also gone but not forgot' ten), that used to be $220 worth of good coal, it -will aoon be hauled to its last resting place, ashes to ashes dust to dust such is life. Well the sun is coming out and spring is here, it has been raining all morning, 'the grass is green and the birds are singing, and as I say the sun is corn in out so I will dwell on more pleasant things. Business seems to be good in the city. From out ward appearance the three leading businesses are Robbery, Showes, & Millinery. Robbery comes first with no cash invested and large re turns for a few minutes work. Millinery next with email investment and large returns. Women started to wear straw hats in Dec. $1 hats for $20 v& $2 for $40, etc. Shows come next they are all ways crowded and hundreds waiting. Well I will close, I will be down and see you all the first week in May. Yours Resp. , T. W. Glines. "SAYS Tree Idea Will Spread Far Former Mayor Thinks Eau Claire Idea Will Reach to Rice Lake." Eau Claire Leader. Gosh! that's some spread 1 SONG. Now all the buds are wxen, And soon will come to bloom ("tier hair was long and flaxen, Like sunljght in the room). i . . . ' Now balmy winds are dancing, A song in every tree . . (I wonder was the glancing v Of her bright eyes for me). , LAURA BLACKBURN. "THE Y. W. C. A. is a mecca for growing boys, with its swimming pools and its inviting gymnasium." Gary Tribune. Isn't this a bit strong, even for Gary? . A SUCCESSFUL SEARCH. .From the Nebraska City News. James Welch, jr., came home from Jack sonville, 111., a few days since, where he was ; for his health, and he brought home with him a light case of small pox. "DEMORALIZATION of Navy 'Is Com plete," headlines the Zanesville Times-Recorder. Naturally the proof-reader let it ride. . Two Is Company, Three a Quartette. From the Jackson County, Minn., Pilot.l Mrs. Parker, Miss Sathe and Mrs. Ashley . sang a quartette, "Welcome, Pretty Prim rose." THERE'S A LONG WAITING LIST. Sir: Whatever the result, no one can deny the presidency of the Bum Farm, Greenville, N. Y. Susie Hunt Beer." New Hiram Johnson Sports Club. "SHADY Hill Wholesome Table York World. What do you gather, Watson? O MELLIFLUOUS MONICKER! From the Big Rapids Pioneer. Miss Nia Bumb is home from Detroit for e summer. MR. BYRAN believes that "the unrest of to day is due more to profiteering than to any other one cause." Spell it "propheteerine" and we'll agree. B. L. T. Cfte VELVET Bu Irtfiur "Brooks "Baker 1 F. S. KNAPP. The men who juggle freight are an uncon scientious lot. They handle fragile merchandise with haste unduly hot. The foreman cries, "Speed up! speed up! This ship is due to sail. This smart accommodation train has passengers and mail! We cannot stop forever at this sta tion small and cheap. This job is not your lodging house, so do not go to sleep." And thus they work with speed which is sur prising and intense, with grand and gallant un concern of possible expense. They put the millinery on the bottom of the pile and lay the hardware high on top in swift and artless style. They may exhibit . some respect for rubber, sponge or ham, but eggs and fqreign crockery they tumble, slide and slam. Protecting gentle merchandise from jostle, bump and slap, such is the helpful enterprise of Mr. F. S. Knapp. He manufactures boxes which defy the skill and art of husky guys whose enter prise is knocking them apart; and you agree that he who aids your shipments to arrive is very logically due to prosper and to thrive. He used to deal in boxes for your finish and fnr mini thnep rni nf familiar anr! fnnprial design, wherein we get more flawless satisfact xtion out ot me than conies lrom all our contact with this world of stress-and -strife. He i a bum , philosopher who critically knocks the pleasant implications of that flossy final box. Is'cxt Subject; - Leo Rosenthal, V How to Keep Well By Dr. W. A. EVANS v RENTS THAT CHILDREN PAY. Just now the people think most of me ills from which children suffer are the result of malnutrition. Near ly every city now has its nutrition classes and there is a national nu trition clinic, association. Without unduly undervaluing these claims, J. Lawson Dick of London shies a castor into the ring, He claims that most of the ills of children are due to bad housing. He has written a srhall book on de fective housing and the growth of children In which he argues that living in insanitary 'houses causes children to have rickets and this causes them to stop growing or to grow crooked. He says: "The essential factor In terfering with the normal growth of the child is defective housing. A child that has been born healthy begins to develop defects when about six months of age. During the period two to six years the child stays rather closely in 'the house and around home and he gets pro gressively worse. 1 "In his earlier years at school he Is backward mentally and physically below par. As he gets a little older the hours in a schoolroom, which is more sanitary than his home, and his hours of pray on the street be gin to overcome the bad effects of his poor hpme, he improves phys ically and he picks up in his school work amazingly." The signs of rickets by which he judges are several. The teeth of children who have had rickets are of poor quality. The enamel is honeycombed, imperfect and fre quently ridged. The teeth which are most often affected are' the central and later ihcisors and the first mo lars or jaw teeth. Decay is early and rapid. Sometimes the teeth seem .to cave down. The ribs are beaded. Many are chicken-breasted. In some the breast bone is sunken. The chestis apt to become lopsided. -The upper part of one chest flattens a little and the lower part of the other chest bulges; one shoulder goes up and a slight curvature of the spine develops. In babies the head is large, the soft spots large, the skin is thin, and blue veins show on the forehead and temples. In older children the head appears to be rather massive. It bulges on the side over the ears. Tonsils, adenoids and glands are oft en enlarged. Many of the children are anemic and suffer from persist ing colds. Physicians have expended a lot of energy in studying rickets. They were disposed to attribute it to bad feeding for awhile. In New York City the health department gives away cod liver oil to the children of certain sections because they think rickets can be prevented in that-way. Of course, this practice is based on the thought, that poor nutrition is a considerable factor in the dis ease. Howevr, the more recent opinions are to the effect that bad housing, bad ventilation, lack of sun light and air, and unclennly sur roundings are mora important than cod liver oil. Many authorities hold with Dick that poor housing is the most im portant factor in rickets, jlf they can prove that rickets is a wide spread disease producing great arid lasting harm they make out a good case against bad housing and slums. Says Dick in summarizing: It is self-evident that the remedy is not to . build sanitaria but to demolish slums. OX About Plays Aa Movies. Omaha, May 7. To the Editor of The Bee: Would It not be well for those who are responsible for calling oil "The Vicar of Wakefield," which was to have been played by the stu dents of Central High under the di rection of a very able artist, Mr. Ragerson, to criticize Home of the picture plays which nir. ;iy of these "children" are in the habit of at tending. Every broadminded follower of the classics will have to admit that the dramas, as projected on the screen, in 4this age, can put the top hat on any of the older plays for vulgarity, and seems unfit for the younger generation. ' The writer knows of Mf. Roger son's work across the seas and wants to say that this is the first instance which has come to my knowledge where objections have been received to any of his productions classics of olden times not twentieth cen tury rot. Evil to him who evil thinks. "R. E. L." ' Advice to Two Mothers. Mrs. I. H. W. writes: "1. . My sister has a baby boy three weens old, who cries with the colic at times. She does not seem to be able to cor rect this. She nurses him every three hours during the day and twice at night. He nurses from five to fifteen minutes at a time. He is breast fed. Can you advise her? "2. My baby is 19 months old and has only seven teeth. She does not have any trouble when she does cut a tooth, so do you consider this any- About Omaha Water Power, Omaha, May 8. To the Editor of The Bee: You were kind to publish my letter regarding "Water Itower In Nebraska." I then discussed the water possibilities of the Platte-and the Loup. . In this letter I will give the many readers of The Bee' my unbiased opinion of the Elkhorn and Niobraxa. , The Elkhorn from Norfolk to Fremont has several places where a waterpower could be developed. At no place with the exception of one could a power be developed that would yield much above -50 horse power. This amount of power would be sufficient to furnish light and power to the town only where it is located. The place- Mother Na ture has favored where power could be established that would de velop to my estimation in the neigh borhood of BOO horsepower Is some where above West Point. If this river would be tapped In the right place, and let down about four miles, it would be a power plant that could be considered a good one. But it would be of considerable expense,1 and I would hardly dare to estimate it. I believe at this point of the river, the sand, which is strong in the Elkhorn, could bo overcome. I think some day the moneyed men of that towa will wake up and see the opportunity. N I saw in The Bee of about 10 days ago a letter from a Mr. Hale, who stated that the Niobrara river could be tapped every five miles, and enough power generated to furnish power and light for the state of Ne braska and part of South Dakota thrown in. . Can this river be tapped every five miles? i think not. Any experienced water power man knows that no river can be tapped at as short a distance as that, to gain any power worth while. A four-mile water race on this river would make a water had, of from 16 to 18 feet, developing say at the highest 600 horsopower. Now construct a dam a mile below this head, back the water up to the wheel pit of the first tap, and what would be the result? A dead power with no discharge of the water in the first pit. This river could be tapped for a hundred miles not more than 10 times successfully, and we will gave each tap an average of 500 horsepower. This is making Lit very high. Now we would have 5,000 horsepower on tnis river. This talk, develop the waterpower of the state and turn every wheel, light every home and heat every residence in the state, is nothing but theory. For instance: Does the average person know that it takes from three to five horsepower to heat a 6- to 10-room residence in the winter? This cry, "Develop the Water In the State," is mostly .used by poli ticians who are seeking office, who 1 could not give the first principle of tapping the smallest creek in the state. ' I am for water power, but want to stay within the lines of reason. If the people of this state should ever listen to the advocates of "Let the State Develop the Water Powers," we would have on hand another Hog Island, $75,000,000 spent and no ship floating. Yes, millions would be spent and no wheel would turn. At most no more than one-tenth of the people of the state would have any benefit from the undertaking, if very water power should ba de veloped. Now let me add there ar few good water powers in the stato which are developed today and are furnishing excellent power, but tho maintenance of these cost the own ers considerable money and worry. One power I know of in the state is at Cedar Rapids. This fa the most perfect power,' according to my opinion, as It Is almost natural. Again, let me atate I am writing this letter from an unbiased opinion, Juki to give the many readers of Tho Bet. an opinion of what it would mean to lend our ears to men who know nothing or very little of developing water power. JOHN X. HANSELAER. M A H IC "BUSINESS IS GOOD THANK YOU' LV Nicholas Oil Company thing to be anxious about? She Is rather small, and, although not thin, she Is not plump either. She is exceedingly active and healthy. I cannot induce her to eat much. She drinks about a "pint of milk a day, but will not take other food except a few spoenfuls of cereal and a very little vegetable, etc., and I have to force her to take orange juice. I give her condensed milk, as it is im possible to get sanitary cow's milk here. The question: What can I do to make her gain in weight or had I better 'leave well enough alone'?" REPLY. 1. As a rule colicky babies are being overfed. Either the milk is too rich or the baby gets too much of it. This baby does not seem to be getting too much. Let the moth er try cutting down the food slight ly, say one less feeding at night.' Leave tha.baby at the breast a sligHt ly shorter time. However, do not wean her or materially change the present program. Give water and the various aromatic teas. Trotting her on the mother's shoulders helps somewhat in giving relief. ' 2. Train the girl to eat, a more varied diet. She needs bread, milk puddings, soups, vegetables, meat bones. Let her play in the open air, encourage her to eat. You need not worry. KB Printing Se'rvice Joe B. Redfleld Is a complete, direct by mail advertising service survey, planning, copy writing, illustrating, printing and mailing. But it is not necessary that you use the complete service in order to avail your self of the superb printing facilities of the K-B plant. K-B Printing Company Redfleld Milliken, Owners Douglas at Tenth Tyler 364 OMAHA -:.'fc;v:v:-: f Harvey Millikem L dllU dVUIUS 111 ll'TV from oldjslimlos?! utf,zz&zzr&r i iiiiULni arm vm COSTS LESS THAN A SHINGLED ROOF Red A UIIU roon p AMERICA'S BEST RED AND GREEN ROOFING Has a Natural Slate Surface and a Permanent Attractive Tile Design The Fastest Selling Roofing on the Market LASTING ' WEATHER-PROOF ECONOMICAL Just the Thing for That Old Roof Reduces Your Insurance Rating Art Craft Roofing is keeping the carpenters busy. Have your carpenter measure your roof and give you cost of laying. We will give you an estimate of cost of t Art Craft Roof. Call and see us. Artcrafthas a positive guar anty if applied according to the simple specification printed on each roll. Come in and Examine it Sunderland Brothers Co. Entire Third Floor 1 7 th&Harney. Omaha, Neb II V IT f