Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 21, 1920, Page 6, Image 6

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THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, JUNE 21, 1920.
The Omaha Bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
THE BKK PUBLISHING COMPANY,
NELSON B. UPDIKE, Publisher.
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Ata.K-iiti-U I'TtM. of whlca Tti. Bee Is number. Is m
cluaneir tnmlrd 1.1 the um for publication of ll nan dlepalrbas
sndilrd to It or not ottairwlM rrrditr.1 In this ppr, and aleo UM
local npui imbUaluMfftertin All rahle of publlcaUoD at ui special
dtapatclies are aiau reaened.
BEE TELEPHONES
Prlfale Branch Iichanse. Ask for Uia Tl. IrWI
Daiiartmeut or rimn Wanted. 7e 1 VAU
For Night Call Altar 10 P. M.i
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OFFICES OP THE BEE
Main Office: 17th and r'amam
Council Bluffi 13 Scott BL Soma Sid 1311 N St.
Out-ol-Town Official
New York 18 Fifth Ave. I Waihlmton 1111 0 Bt
Ohicajo S'.escr Illdf. I Parle France MO Kua St. Honor
The Bee's Platform
1. New Union Passenger Station.
2. A Pip Line from ths) Wyoming Oil
Fields to Omaha.
3. Continued improrement of the Ne
braska Highways, including the para
ment of Main Thoroughfares leading
into Omaha with a Brick Surface.
4. A short, low-rate Waterway from the
Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean.
5. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with
City Manager form of Government.
THE HARDING CHARACTERISTICS.
The country will get no political jazz from
Warren G. Harding, no sensational stuff, no
spoofing or excitements. It will get, 1 owever,
a lot of plain common sense, prudent and well
considered utterances, sound logic and American
wisdom. After he has made his first speech a
lot of touts who are now ballyhooing for the
opposition are going to curl up and blow away.
Make no mistake. That "bushel of brains"
in his big, level head is going to count heavily
in the campaign. There will be no attempts to
gather hurrahs and cheers from excited crowds,
no spectacular dancing around on the stump.
On the contrary, his utterances will be dignified
and void of all attempts at oratorical display;
but they will carry conviction and power that
will smash through the democratic defenses like
a 15-inch shell through a wooden target. They
will give a country weary of superthis and super
that the feeling that Harding's the man they
long have sought, and mourned because they
found him not.
Those who wish to get a correct idea of the
pull this man has on the good will of those who
hear him talk or read what he says will do well
to dig up the speech he made in Columbus be
fore the presidential primary, in which he paid
his respects to his friends and talked plainly to
his enemies. It was full of the Harding char
acter and sound sense. As the campaign pro
gresses the people in the homes of the country
will be more and more convinced that Harding
is the man needed in the White House. His
appeal will be to the common people, who cast
nine-tenths of the votes, and it will be irre
sistible. '
Financing the Campaign.
It takes much money to finance a national
campaign. The printing, the mailing, the rent
ing of halls for speakers, the music, the travel
ing expenses of stumpers, the "overhead" of
committees, the advertising and other, legitimate
and proper expenses all require cash and lots
'of it. ,
The people do not like big contributions to
party funds from very rich men. They fear it
may give them undue influence in' government.
Very well. What shall be done about it? The
resourceful Will H. Hays has the answer. He
says let the people themselves finance the cam
paign. But how? By dollar contributions col
lected in a party drive; with a limit of $1,000
from any single contributor. 1
Good. Let it be started. There ought to be
a million, or two million, republicans if neces
sary, not only willing, but glad to put up a
dollar each to have a safe American i in the
White House for four years. Thus the people
' will be pleased, and also the millionaires, who,
stratoge as it may seem to those who fear their
influence, are never keen to subscribe the enor
mous sums which the popular imagination and
the cartoonists accuse them of pouring into
party treasuries. Indeed, they used to say they
had to fry them to get their fat.
But, seriously, Mr. Hays has made a wise
suggestion. He seldom makes any other kind,
and we hope it will be carried out in every pre
cinct in the country.
Inheritance Laws.
The illegitimate son of a North Dakota
farmer inherits $200,000. The legitimate rela
tives of the dead man get nothing from his
estate. With no knowledge of the conditions
surrounding this particular case, the fact is
likely to shock society, and cause discussion of
inheritance laws generally.
Nobody, we take it, would have the unfortu
nate issue of a man's adultery cut off utterly
from sharing what he leaves at death. The bas
tard is not, and should not be, responsible for
the sins of his parents. Those who stray from
lawful paths should be held to reasonable re
sponsibility for the results of their illegal con
duct. Just how far inheritance laws should go in
cases of this kind is not yet fully determined
except in North Dakota, where they seem to go
the limit.
Convention Stories.
Every large convention has its humorous in
cidents. The big one at Chicago was no excep
tion. Two of them have "sifted through" the
correspondence of a Boston writer. He says
the galleries were for Hoover, but not the dele
gates, one of whom toasted him at a dinner
with these words:
From Greenland's icy mountains,
From India's coral strand,
He's lived in every country,
Except his native land. -The
Massachusetts delegation was polled for
vice president and one of the deelgation, seeing
35 votes cast for Lenroot, asked the very quiet
Murray Crane if it could be considered settled.
The astute Crane said: v'Yesi but wait a min
ute; there may be other nominations." But the
delegate left the hall for his hotel and tele
graphed Governor Coolidge his regrets. Then
in rushed a friend and cried: "Isn't it great?"
"What?" asked the delegate. "Coolidge's nomi
nation," was the reply. "Great Scott ! was the
response, "haven't I done it?" '
One of the signs of the times is the boom
ing of the subscription list of the Marion (O.)
An Unusual Literary Production.
The cymbals crash,
And the dancers, walk
With long silk stockings
And arms of chalk,
Butterfly skirts,
And white breasts bare,
And shadows of dead men
Watching 'em there.
With these lines Alfred Noyes opens a page
of striking poetry and illustration in the current
Saturday Evening Post, under the title, "A Vic
tory Dance." We have seen nothing so caustic,
so searching, so freighted with bitter condem
nation of our short memory for those who fell
to save our civilization. Take this verse, for
instance:
Shadows of dead men
Stand by the wall,
Watching the fun
Of the Victory Ball.
1 They do not reproach,
Because they know,
If they're forgotten,
It's better so.
Nothing so gripping in its presentation of
sensuous folly and wicked delight in the pleas
ures of the flesh, has come from the pen of any
writer in these times save Kipling, as the thirty
words which follow:
Fat, wet bodies
Go waddling by.
Girded with satin,
Though God knows why;
Gripped by satyrs
In white and black,
With a fat wet hand
On a fat wet back.
One might almost say the entire nine verses
of this remarkable production were written to
jazz music. It is all the more effective because,
composed with the jingle ordinarily used for
frivolous and humorous stuff. There is a picture
and a thought that clings in every verse.
See, there is one child
Fresh from school,
Learning the ropes
As the old hands rulq.
God, how that dead boy
Gapes and grins ,
As the tom-toms bang
And the shirnmy begins!
The portion of the poem which comments
on events following victory are quite as stirring
as those we have quoted. All in all, we think the
page in the Post devoted to Noyes's "Victory
Dance" and Blumenthal's merciless illustrations
of it will be cut out and saved for many a collection.
No revolution in the past 150 years has suc
ceeded without Masonic support. Sinn Feiners
who smashed the North Donegal Masonic Hall
were not close students of history. -Brooklyn
Eagfe t
The Masonic fraternity is a stable and con
servative body usually composed of high grade
citizens. Treason to an existing government
is not lightly regarded by it, tut it calls no man
to account for his political opinions and tolerates
no political discussions in its meetings, accord
ing to its openly avowed principles.
Southern delegates violently opposed the
adoption by the Federation of Labor that
colored men should be placed on the same basis
as whites in the unions. The action was soundly
American.
"All republicans look alike to me," said Sen
ator Harding in Washington the other day.
There will be no intolerance in the Harding administration.
Franklin P. Adams brings joy to ' the cam
paign poets who have been worrying over
rhymes-for Harding by saying off-hand, just
like this:
One who knows the trick of barding
Worries not regarding
Harding.
He will be elected is the sentiment of the
country as a whole on Harding's future.
PASSING FAME.
There was weeping and wailing
-. And gnashing of teeth,
' And wearing of mourning,
And hanging of wreath,
When the old supreme court
Got its fighting togs on
And put the eternal
Quietus on John.
They swung a haymaker
And put him to sleep,
And drove him to the graveyard,
And buried him deep.
The champ of all champs, for
The truth should be said,
Defeated all comers;
And now he is dead.
Ashes to ashes and
Dust to dust.
If the reformers don't get us,
The profiteers must.
Our problems are many,
Our troubles a lot.
We've no time to mourn.
John is gone and forgot.
N. Y. Evening Mail.
Always Centering on Self.
In the jam of the last hours of the session of
congress President Wilson lost an opportunity
to forget himself and his own aggrandizement
and remember the needs of the people. Two
republican measures were waiting for his signa
ture the bonus bill and the water-power bill.
The budget bill he sent back because of a slight
defect he thought would lessen his own personal
power. The water-power bill he did not reach,
although he considered and signed more than
one hundred measures and official papers,
seventy-three of them being bills and resolu
tions, on the last day of the session.
The water-power bill opening up the rivers
of the country to industries and for irrigation
purposes has been hanging fire in congress for
ten years. It was fully expected that this ex
tremely necessary piece of legislation would re
ceive the president's signature. But it seems
the president feared it might stand as too em
phatic a monument to the achievement of a
republican congress. Des Moines Capital.
Down By the River Nile.
Usually on June 15 the inundation of the
Nile commences, the greatest height being at
the autumnal equinox, after which the waters
subside until the following April. The great
advantages which Egypt derives from the an
nual rise of the river and saving of the country
from barrenness, has caused the Nile to be
known by the inhabitants as the most holly
river, they believing hat it draws, its source
from paradise.
In former days it had its appointed priests,
festivals and sacrifice's, and if its rising were
delayed by a single day they took the most
beautiful maiden they could find and dressing
her richly, drowned her in the waters as a
victim to turn away the god's anger and merit
his favors. The caliphs abolished this cruel
sacrifice, substituting one less barbarous; they
threw into the river a letter in which it was
commanded that the waters rise if it were the
will of God. (
It has been stated that the quality of the
Nile water is such that it is highly extolled
for drinking purposes and no matter how long
kept it does not become impure. Chicago
Journal. -
A Line 0' Type or Two
Haw to th List, let the sulei (all her t .
A DAY WITH LORD DID-MORE.
"Mr. Hearst Is the home brew; no other hope."
The Trlb.
At his usual hour Lord Dld-Mrcie rose
Renewed completely by repose
His pleasant duty to rehearse
Of oiling up the universe.
Casting a glance aloft, he saw s
That, yielding to a natural law,
The sun obediently moved
Precisely as he had approved.
If mundane things would only run
As regularly as the Sun!
But Earth's affairs, less nicely planned.
Require Lord Did-More'a guiding hand.
This day, outside Lord Dld More's door,
There waited patiently a score
Of diplomats from far and near
Who sought his sympathetic ear.
Each brought to him, that he might scan,
The latest governmental plan.
And begged of him,A word or two
Approving what It hoped to do. ;
Lord Did-More nodded, emiled or frowned,
Some word of praise or censure found,
Withheld or added his "O. K.,"
And sent the ministers away.
These harmonized and sent away,
Lord Did-More finished up his day
By focusing his cosmic brain
On our political campaign.
And night and morning, thro the land,
The public prints at his command v
Proclaimed, in type that fairly burst,
The doughty deeds of Did-More Hearst.
A FRIEND explains that Mr. Patten is tired
of the human race for a number of reasons, one
of which is that garbage-wagon drivers get ten
dollars a day. He should join our Order of the
Turning Worm and bury his garbage in the
garden.
"WHELP OF SIN" IS THE QUOTATION.
Sir: Will you brush the dust from your
"Course of Time," and see if perchance Pollok
had any premonition of Nicholas Murray Butler
when he wrote, "Slander, the foulest whelp of
Hell," or words to that effect? S. T.
OTHER batds had more pertinent premo
nition of Nicholas Murray Butler, the world's
greatest beans-spiller.
Blah, Blah, Blasoo!
Sir: Many of we Ibanezistas are troubled,
senor, by your apparent disparagement of The
Four Flushers of the Aposiopesis.
It is the erti of red meat In Htrchoor, senor.
And this V. Jazzco is there at spilling the Blood
of the 'Arena into his red-letter pages. Not very
often, true; but there is no clause in the league
of nations coverlet against skipping, senor; while
six live paragraphs in a modern novel strikes
after all a fair average, even if it rings no cam
panile. Nor sneer at San Bias on the ground that
all he has is the hot stuff, senor
Blah, Blah, Blasco,
Have V, the tobascoT
for reference to Sonnica will soon show that
even In this respect the author haa been over
rated. For he slings pash with a mean fork, al,
senor, though only to bury it under bales of sen
tentious hay.
I, me, have not read his Woman Triumphant
I look at the title, senor, and I no like the Idea.
I. RIQ LSAYSO.
"WEEDS should be cut twice during the
summer, Mayor Burkhardt said, just before go
ing to seed." Lima Gazette.
So long, old beanl
WHY THE EDITOR LEFT TOWN.
From the Rochester, Minn., Bulletin.
Miss Isabel Jones returned yesterday from
Chicago where 6he visited her son Dick and
attended the Republican convention. Miss
Jones also visited at the National Kindergar
ten College which she formerly attended.
Of This and That.
Sir: Did you ever see a well fitting summer
suit?
The G. O. P. battle hymn: "Song of Marion's
Man."
Gone are the days of the ten cent paper
novels they now cost two berries.
If Debs is elected Prexy, his cabinet will be
composed of Sub-D But oh, I'm ashamed of
myself!
Heaven will bless the person who makes the
modern woman's ear-covering hairdressing ex
tend a bit further. Q. A. R.
IT was cool yesterday; but, take it from a
Madison street movie, it was "20 degrees colder
inside." '
WE SHOULD SUE MORLEY.
Sir: Speaking of "The Four Horsemen" and
things, a well known critic in the Atlantic
Monthly said that "Parnassus on Wheels," by
Christopher Morley, was destined to equal the
reputation of "Travels with a Donkey," by R. I
S. I bit and bought. What recourse have I?
W. S. P.
THE president of our Savants' Club wonders
why no attention has been paid to the postman
who delivered Elwell's mail on the morning of
the murder. "An enemy," said he, "could easily
get a job in the Postoffice Department, especially
at present wages, and contrive to get himself
shifted about until he finally reached the beat
which included Elwell's house."
WHAT'S THE MATTER? WHAT'S THE
MATTER? WHAT'S THE 'MATTER?
Rupert Hughes, in The Cosmopolitan.
"O Lord, let me smash him once! I've got
to beat him to -death. I've got to! O Lord,
let me! Just once!"
May We Not Hope So?
Sir: The Maine Central railroad has In its
employ Messrs. Snow and Raynee, probably
lured away from the weather bureau. This is all
right so far as it goes, but what really intrigues
me is the fact that H. Bellefeuille Is secretary
of the Havana Central railroad. Is this a case
of luck, liquor and capacity? And do you think
he can hold it his Job, I mean? H. R.
HARDING on his porch is a symbol of the
lives of the American people, observes the Trib.
If it were a sleeping porch.
WHEREAS WE ARE HOPING THEY
WILL SUCCEED.
Sir: I note your suggestion regarding the
usefulness of earmuffs In San Francisco. After
looking at the inhabitants of your section of the
country, I hope that our real estate men will be
unsuccessful In making sales during the conven
tion. A SAN FRANCISCAN.
WE would take it as a favor if readers who
"dare us" to print this, that, and t'other would
inclqse something worth the audacity.
Preferably in a Swimming Hole.
Sir: The Papervllle M. E. church has
erected a sign at the edge of the quarry which
serves as our swimmin' hole. Sign reads,
"Where will you spend eternity?" SWIMMER.
"SHE carried a basket of sweetheart roses
and forget-me-nits." Evanston News-Index.
Really, my dear, they ought not to slang a
wedding story.
HOW BLINDING THE DESERT IS!
Sir: Discovered In Peoria, 111., the new
fangled Shriner who wears a green celluloid
eyeshade with his fez. w. S.
THIS much can be said for the proposed
third party; it has a good . platform. "Pro
Bunko Publico." .
AFTER EFFECTS.
From the Atwood Herald.
Frank Burk has changed the name of his
Jack, to Home Brew. He says it is the only
thing.around here that has a kick left in it.
MR. BUTLER, seemingly, put his foot in
his mouth and short-circuited himself. B. L. T.
Herbert Hoover is no wooer of Miss Democ
racy, and his approval of the republican plat
form as "constructive and progressive" has
killed the last vestige of the democracy's love
for him.
Governor Coolidge rents one side of a double
house to live in, and pays $32 a month for it.
Of such stuff are America's favorite public men
made.
How to Keep Well
By Dr. W. A. EVANS
Sanations ronccrnlnf hygiene, sanl
on and prerentlon of dleease, enh
mlttcd to Dr. Kvans by reader of The
lice, will bo answered pereo pally, ab
ject to proper limitation, where a
tamped, addressed envelope I en
closed. Dr. Evans will nut make
diagnosis or prescribe) for Individual
dlerami. Address letters In care of
The 11 ee.
Copyright. 1110, by Dr. W. A. Evans.
AS TO NEW BV1LDLNGS.
Being a regular reader of your
column, J. F. W. writes: i
"I wish to call your attention to
your statement that you do not
know of any peril from fresht wet
walls of a new building. There is
a distinct peril and that is from
dampnessV This is based on the fact
that lime end plaster as applied is
mostly calcium and magnesium hy
droxide and in the first six weeks
after the plaster is applied a very
rapid exchange of the C02 from the
air and the H20 of the limo takes
place, the calcium carbonattnit.
. "You may have noticed that win
ter builders always have charcoal
or coke salamanders burning in new j
buildings. These are not for the
purpose of warming but for the gen
eration of C02 gas, the building al
ways being shut tight at night, A I
pew building in fall, spring or win-t
ter always should have an abun-1
dance of heat and in the summer all j
windbws should be kept open as
much as possible.
"Most builders figure that the
ccst for coal of the first six months
of any new building will run any
where from 10 per cent to 25 per
cent more than when ths' plaster,
lime, laths and lumber have been
completely dried out. The exchange
between the plaster and the air of
COZ will be ilnlshed at the end of
about six months. In a reoent open
ing of a new bank branch in New
York the building had a full head of
steam on for four weeks to dry it
out completely before the mployes
were allowed into the building."
In reply most of your statements
are correct though you do not make
your case. Freshly plastered walls
are wet. It is customary to dry them
out by heat and airing. Wet walls
are inimical to wall paper and cal
sominlng. They may cause harm to
books, curtains, clothes and other
objects.
The statement that freshly plas
tered walls give off carbonic acid
gas may be true. I do not know that
builders agree with you that coke
salamanders are not for warming
purposes.
Suppose we assume your two main
statements, namely that freshly
plastered walls are wet and give off
carbonic acia gas, to De true, ine
question is what proof have we that
these two qualities imperil health?
I know of very little proof that wet
walla harm health.
It has been proved that the In
halations of air fairly rich in car
Ionic acid does no harm. A man
can stand without harm air far
richer in carbonic acid than that
found in a freshly plastered wall. In
ventilation standards a high percent
age of carbonic acid causes the ven
tilation to be condemned when the
gan is due to human expirations, not
because the gas is harmful but be
cause Its presence in high propor
tions indicates pollution by humans.
The air In houses is generally too
dry. Added moisture from ihe walls
is not likely to do harm.. There la
some proof that blastomyces organ
isms have been found growing on
wet dirty walls and have caused hu
man blastomycosis. But about there
the -proof against freshly plastered
walls ends.
Sleeping Sickness.
A. S. writes: "Have had the sleep
ing sickness this winter.
"1. Is this apt to leturn?
2. How long should party stay
away from business?
"3. Do any ailments follow this
sickness?"
REPLY.
1 and 3. No."
2. Be guided altogether by how
you feel. Whether easily fatigued,
do you have headaches and back
aches? 'If work does not cause
symptoms of fatigue you can resume
with safety.
Epilepsy.
J. K. N. writes: "Can a woman,
herself not an epileptic, but having
a brother who is, bear normal chil
dren?" REPLY.
Yes.
Reductlo Ad Absurdum.
Miss L. H. L. writes: "I am 18
years old, and much too stout for
my height. I have been told that
Epsom salt baths are good for re
ducing. Will you please advise
whether this is true and how these
baths are taken?"
REPLY.
It is not true.
JfteJQude's
m
Nebraskans Looked After.
Springfield, Neb., June H To
the Editor of The Bee: An expres
sion of appreciation of the Nebraska
delegates to the republican national
convention should be made. Their
work on the convention floor and
elsewhere was truly representative
of the people of Nebraska.
However, the care and attention
given to every true Nebraskan who
applied for admission as guests or
appointees, at the Nebraska head
quarters, was highly appreciated
and distinctly noticeable With
thousands of people seeking admis
sions to the Coliseum, the Nebraskfi
headquarters by some keen fore
sight saw to it that visiting Ne
braskans were taken care of when
It came to admissions. Bob Smith
certainly saw to It that no Nebras
kan went away dissatisfied. Yours
truly.
R. B. HARBERG.
A New Richmond.
Omaha, June 16. To the Editor
of The Bee: From the time of the
advent of "The Kansas-Nebraska
ISM" to date, Nebraska adds some
wcrth-while feature to affairs of
state. The Howell resolution is the
straight road that leads to curtailing
the "Solid South's" political power.
It is a new straw to break the camel's
back of negro disfranchisement.
Straight and "Lily White" republi
canism. When this resolution K
acted upon in spirit and letter the
southern statesmen and politicians
will soon realize the fact that all
men and women must vote if they
wish to retain the representation
they now have in convention and
congress.
NAT F. CARD.
2512 North Twenty-fifth St
up with what comfort the modern
view has to offer to thosn of us
who, while keenly enamored of life,
yet unwillingly have reached the
moth ball period?
Of shall I look to tho Bible for it?
ONE WHO ENJOYS YOl'K KDI-
TORIALS.
POPULAR SCIENCE.
A triangular birdcage has
patented that ran be placed
corner of a room to shield Its
pants from drafts.
ecu-
Airplane engines havtf been
adapted for driving motorists an. I
pumping machinery.
The business of Vuking photo
graphic enlargements has been .sim
plified by the conafructlon of a ver
tical enlarging car iera which is sus
pended overhead and projects it
light down yf n a sensitized sheet
which is pin at 1 on a table under it.
The arrangement ana manipulation
of the paouT Is much more conveni
ently done. i this position.
A newPimhrella is assembled In
such a rurnner that any broken part
may beLremoved and replaced by a
new oret without the assistance of an
umbreufi maker.
Jr
w
J
Men's Sport With Balls.
Omaha, June 17. To tho Editor
of The Bee: Your short article in
The Bee of June 14 abou the part
the ball has played In man's life, has
given me many a quiet smile.
"May I not" ask you to follow It
BUSINESS IS GOOD THANK YOU"
LV.Nichows Oil Company
Breakfast
tastes a lot better,
is easier to prepare,
and makes more smiles
when you serve
Post
Toasties
Tliese superior cornflakes
have a flavor, substance and
satisfaction far beyond the
usual.
In ordering from the grocer,
specif Post Toasties
That will insure receiving
the best corn flakes made.
Made by Postum Cereal Ca,Inc., Battle Creek.Mich.
Good Food It
an Essential
of Health.
Wheat Has Long
Been Recognized as
a Great Food and
Easily Digested
Gooch's
Best
Macaroni
Is Made From One of
the Most Nutritious
Varieties of Wheat.
Sold by Good Grocers
r
Jg5 pal's Tf(a)(g)l
"AMERICA'S BEST ROOFING"
LAID RIGHT OVER THE OLD SHINGLES
COMES
IN
ROLLS
LOOKS
LIKE
TILE
LASTING
7 1 151
COSTS LESS
, THAN A
SHINGLED ROOF
STOPS
ALL
LEAKS
ECONOMICAL
R AINPROOF- SUNPROOF -WINDPROOF
Easily and Quickly Laid Over the Old Roof, Making
Double Thickness Not Necessary to Tear
Off Your Old Shingles.
PERMANENT AND ATTRACTIVE TILE DESIGN
x Natural Green or Red Slate.
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SUNDERLAND BROTHERS CO.
Omaha, Nebraska
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Artcraft has a positive guaranty
if applied according to the simple
Entire Third Floor
specification printed on each 1 oil. O 17th and Harney Sts.