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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1920)
THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, JULY 1. 1920. The Oma.ha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. " NELSON B. UrDIKE. Publisher. ". MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A jlaanrtafed Preae, of which The Pn It mwibrr. Is u ehuimlr eoutltd to the um for mNlcaUon of til dlapaiches crodilad to It or not nihfnme crnlitM In this paper, ml also tha lorar am publMird herein. All rtihu of publication of our special dlarstchs art alao reamed. V- ... . r BEE TELEPHONES Print flranrk fachanta. Aik for the Tarlata. 1 fWi Department or Psrenn Wanted 1 Jier stVTU Tar Night Call Attn 10 P. M.t Editorial Department ........... Trior 1W0I. Circulation IXpartmant .......... Tylor 100IL 4dTrtlainf Department Tjlor 10ML OFFICES OF THE BEE Main Office: 17th and Famam Council BluTfi U Bontt St. I Souih Bide WIS N St Out-of-Town Olficoat New Tort SM fifth Are. I Waibtnmnn 1111 O 8t. Chicago Btxer Bldt. ! Paris Franca 410 Bue St. Bonora The Bee's Platform 1. New Union Passenger Station. 2. A Pipe Line from the Wyoming Oil Fields to Omaha. 3. Continued improvement of the Ne. braska Highway, including the pave ment of Main Thoroughfares leading into Omaha with a Brick Surface. 4. A short, low-rate Waterway from the Corn Belt to the Atlantio Ocean. B. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. , LAKES-TO-OCEAN WATERWAY. Interest is growing in the project to estab lish a deep water way' between the Great Lakes and the Atlantic ocean by way of the St. Law rence river. This is not a rival to the project of the Lake Michigan-Mississippi canal, but, if related at all, the two would supplement one another and make possible a far greater use of the inland waters of the United States. The collector of the port at Chicago notes that in the last two months more than 4,000,000 bushels of grain have been shipped from Chicago to European ports by way of the Canadian canals. In 1919 35,000,000 bushels were sent the same way. This is but a small percentage of the total traffic, however, practically all of which will be handled in this route if the project is carried out. At present the boats engaged in the traffic are small, limited in size by the existing canals. To understand what is involved, it must be kept in mind that the drop from Lake Superior to sea level is a trifle over 600 feet, and that lake borne traffic must be let down by means of locks. The first of the series, at St. Mary's, is capable now of handling ocean traffic, the new lock on the United Statis side having length, width and depth to accommodate freight car riers of large size. The Wetland locks, how ever, restrict boats to 14 feet draft and 255 length, while the locks on the St. Lawrence above Montreal are but a trifle larger. When the new Welland lock's are complete, the largest lake carriers will be able to make their way to the foot of Lake Ontario, where the" cargo will be transhipped for carriage to Montreal. If the lock and slack water plans for the St. Lawrence are carried out, this second handling will be obviated, and the ships loaded at Chicago, Duluth, or Port William will steam on to the Atlantic without interruption of voy age; Storage elevators in existence at the lake ports will be available, and the problem of car ing for the grain in winter months is thus solved in advance. The advantages to flow from this great proj ect are obvious. Anything that shortens the dis tance to market serves to reduce the cost of transportation, and water-borne freight is al ways cheaper than shipment by rail. Whatever lessens the cost of transportation increases the price to be paid the producer, all other things being equal, for the price on the farm is only that of the market less the cost of carriage. Nebraska has better than a million tons of wheat alone for export each year, and the saving that will come to the farmers of this state alone on this single item through ability to reach the world market by water will be enough to more than pay their contribution to the cost that is to be borne by the United States in carrying out the plan. People of the middle west cheerfully aided in the construction of the Panama canal, the bene fit for which is confined entirely to world traffic and to the coast cities, inland communities being specifically excluded by decisions of the Inter state Commerce commission arid the courts in fixing freight rates. The St. Lawrence improve ment will be of direct service to the farmers of the; great interior empire of the United States, the richest agricultural domain in the world, and fortthat reason ought to have the enthusiastic snpport of every one interested in the develop ment of the region. Hoke Smith "Out of Bounds." As the administration steam roller went over Wnr Wnkr Smith at the convention it bumped a little when it passed his latest offending against the!White House. One of the last things Sen ator Smith did before congress adjourned was to introduce in the senate a resolution to amend the constitution of the United States so as to iir; h rident to a sinele term of office, to. make forever ineligible to re-election one who once has held the office, it is not neces sary to go Into any consideration of the merits of this. What is to the point is that it is an un pleasant reminder of the platform pledge adopted a- I altimore, when the party was eager to get int' power and particularly wished to slam both Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft. Mr. -Wilson was selected on that platform, which specifically endorsed the one-term principle, but he .immediately followed his inauguration by lay ing pipes for a second term. When that was granted ne iookcq comiucuuy iu momus precedent and securing a third commission from thejrpeople. This has been denied him, though through no abnegation on his part, and he is now! engaged in a probably successful attempt to put over his son-in-law. Not being permitted to succeed himself, he selects his successor, while Hoke Smith hits directly at him by offer im bis amendment. No wonder the Georgian Has; lost standing at the head of Pennsylvania avenue! f J Indictments Well Placed. A special federal grand jury at Philadelphia has returned true bills against eight men who are accused of complicity in the escape of Grover Cleveland Bergdohl, convicted slacker. This move oh the part of outraged justice indi cates an awakened conscience. Righteousness requires that all who participated in the plot whereby the notorious offender secured his lib erty should be made to pay a severe penalty. A more flagrant case has never disgraced the army, Mr intuited the courts of the nation, No one familiar with army practice can be convinced that without connivance by those in authority a prisoner held as Bergdohl was can get away as easily as he did. The major in command of the barracks at Governor's Island and two sergeants are recommended for court-martial. It is just a little interesting that one of the men censured for gross carelessness in connection with the case is Samuel T. Ansell, who as an officer in the judge advocate general's department took Violent issue with Maj. Gen. Crowder, head of the department, and the secretary of war in re gard to court-martial practices. The event would seem to justify the attitude of the judge advocate general, which was upheld by the secretary, and which resulted in the dismissal of Col. Ansell from the department and his resignation from the army, Is Mr. Bryan Sincere? In days gone by no one has questioned the devotion of Mr. Bryan to any cause he has espoused; that is to say, none save his opponents in his own party. These have never hestitated to charge him with being a trimmer, given to expediency, and capable of sharp practice if not downright deception. Usually the world has been inclined to take him at his word, so when he came out against the president's stand in favor of the league of nations without reserva tions it was accepted that he meant what he said, and that he would follow his own lead to the end. At San Francisco it has been made plain to him that he cannot win a respectable following for his views, that only those who went there in a frame of mind to take issue with the president are ready to go along with any criticism of the executive's course, and these are in a hopeless minority. Therefore, Mr. Bryan, seeing the "un instructed" delegates flocking to the band wagon, puts the soft pedal on the league of nations, but comes forward with a proposal that the consti tution of the United States be so amended as to make ratification of a treaty depend on a majority only. This may mark a modification of his general attitude. A further sign of his changing mind or, is it merely another facet of nis many-sided mind? is found in his article in the July Review of Re views, written in anticipation of the convention, in which he sets down: If the republicans are willing to drag this great world question into a political campaign, in the hope of making political capital out of it, the democrats can appeal with confidence to that patriotic spirit which will applaud our party if it refuses to share responsibility for any postponement of relief which the league of nations can bring. Not a word of comment on the attitude of the president, who would inot accept the advice of a majority of the senate, in which 27 demo crats joined. If the league of nations is made a party issue it will be because Woodrow VriIson so willed it, and the evidence is accumulating to support the conclusion that William Jennings Bryan will be found active in his commendation of whatever the convention does, preserving his party "regularity," but making a rather sorry figure when it comes to consistency in the ad vocacy of a great principle on which he has laid much stress. The "Can" Brigade. Here is an organization that will bear watch ing. It is a group of boys," organized in one of the local Sunday schools, whose motto is "Can." Whatever it sets out to do it proposes to ac complish. We have no knowledge of its pro gram, but we do commend its motto. The basis of all human achievement is in that word. Hu manity has moved forward along a line of hard and continuous struggle, just because there have been members of the "can" club in all ages, men and -women whose indomitable courage did not flinch when confronted by obstacles that seemed insuperable. Pushing against opposi tion, overcoming difficulties, handicaps of va rious sorts, builds up character, develops the moral as well as the physical fiber of the indi vidual, and rounds out the life in the only way by which fullness of expression may be ob tained. The "Can" club is an institution that ought to thrive, and its surviving members will have something to look back on with pride when they have come to the heights of useful citi zenship. Creel the Polisher. One of the most eminently fitting things the democratic moguls have done is to employ George Creel to "polish" the platform. He is a past master at that sort of work. It curiously happens that' his efforts will be given to the country almost exactly three years since he af forded the Fourth of July "thrill" with a lovely bit of fiction concerning the passage of the first American expedition convoy through the U-boat rone. This was denied by Admiral Sims, and Creel lamely explained he had wanted to do something to arouse the nation. He succeeded. Later he was called before the bar of congress and forced to apologize for similar exploits. He was denounced on the floor of the senate by democrats as well as republicans, but he went cheerfully along his way. dispensing his peculiar brand of thrilling make-believe with the backing of the president of the United States. As a polisher he is splendidly equipped, and the plat form ought (o glisten, as Robert G. Ingersoll once said of the party's record, "like a. rotting mackerel in the moonlight," when Creel gets through with it. Omaha has always boasted of its wide streets, but they do not seem to be wide enough for all the traffic at times. Drivers could help a lot by watching more carefully. The weather man says it was only a summer shower, and the old salt would say it was "a capful of wind," but it certainly did go some. It's our own gas plant after tonight, and in the future we will kick ourselves when the service is not up to the mark. A Line 0 Type or Two Hew to the Ilea, let the u!aa fall wftars that aiaj. A WOMAN said to George Creel that she didn't like Mr. Wilson because of his face; whereat Mr. Creel said, "I told her I didn't see why she didn't judge them by their feet, as it's much easier to tell that way." How? We are curious to know. If somebody gave George a plaster cast of Abe Lincoln's feet could he re construct the entire animal? SUPERFLUOUS INFORMATION. (From the Neenah News.) A Ford car, the name of whose driver was not learned, ran over a dog yesterday morning on Commercial street. The animal was not killed. BRYAN protested against crucifying man kind upon a cross of gold, but he has no ob jection to crucifying mankind upon a bone-dry plank. "Way Back When." Sir: May I qualify as a reader with a memory? I particularly remember the "Brick Beautiful." The suggestion was to take an or dinary brick, and after drilling jrwo holes of proper size in it, to have gold ink wells made to fit them. And then I remember the Idea of tak ing a length of ordinary stovepipe and punching holes in it In a beautiful design; this, with a candle Inside, made a lovely hanging lamp. M. W. T. THERE APPEARS TO BE GLORY ENOUGH FOR ALL. ' "We heartily congratulate the Democratic party on its splendid leadership in the submis sion and ratification of the prohibition amend ment to the federal constitution." Bryan's plank. "The Volstead act, vetoed by a Democratic president and passed over his veto by a repub lican congress, is an extreme exercise of the powers granted by the eighteenth amendment." Burleson.- PROF. RYPINS of the U. of M. tells the world that the Republican convention was "the greatest political farce ever presented." The Prof's chair is not given, but obviously it is not political history. Cinema Word-Hemorrhages. Sir: Movie drama, titled "Sex." Meaty vam pire, having displayed her charms and ensnared several married males, only to have them return to their respective jouses , thus leaving her without occupation, jWfnps into the long-suffering sea. Final title.after we see her body battering the rocks: "The standards of morality demand that the naked soul of sex be stripped of its falsehoods, whieh can only be atoned by tears." Deroblng the nude, as it were. D. P. How to Keep Well By Dr. W. A. EVANS Questions ronccrnlnf hrnleno, asnl tatloa and prevention of dlseaae, sub mltted to Dr. Evans by readers of The Rre, will be answered personally, sub ject to proper limitation, where a stamped, addresaed envelope Is en closed. Or, Kvnn wlU not make illanola or, prescribe for Individual dlseanes. Address letters In cars of The Bee. Copyrlfht, 1120, by Dr. W. A. Evans. So the platform is to be "slightly moist." Well, only a little bit is all the wets want; they'll take the reest in time. Kansas is busy harvesting its wheat crop. Nebraska comes next, and a real busy time is promised here. One democratic woman objects to Palmer because he wears spats. He has other handi caps, as well. Long grass is reported in the short grass country. Not a bad year for the yearlings. -. "Pussyfoot" Johnson will find Omaha has improved materially in the last thirty years. It'i our gn plant today. MUCH IMPROVED. , (From the Litchfield Unlon) Clarence Wood, the workman who fell at the Gem Theater yesterday, is reported to he doing nicely today at St. Francis hospital. He is suffering from a broken leg, broken knee cap and fractured skull and a broken nose. THE sins of today, according to an Evanston divine, are hatred, adultery, divorce laws, pro fanity, and the spirit of revenge. The Lord is more tolerant- than He was in the days of Sodom and Gomorrah. GARDEN CHIT-CHAT. Many people are peevish About the price of potatoes, But not I. After I have hoed five hundred hills, In baked soil, , Under a bt-oilingisun. And killed six hundred devilish bugs, Or maybe seven hundred and fifty, I feel that the potatoes 1 raise . Are worth about A dollar apiece. So I give mygrocer a terrible shock By smiling when he mentions the price, And paying it without a murmur. I hear other people saying , That the wearing of furs is Unethical. I used to feel that way Myself. But after I have replanted three times The rows of Golden Bantam From whieh I hope to harvest an early crop, I think of a molesMn coat With unalloyed pleasure. It would use up so many moles. Yes, indeed, A garden is , Quite educational! IRIS. CHILD HEALTH SCHOOL. During ten weeks of this summer the University of Chicago will run a child health school. The pupils will be children between 9 and 11 years outage who are underweight and anxious to Improve physically as well as mentally. Among the alms as listed by the university we find: "They will have interesting les sens on how to beepme hea'thy and, what is the more surprising, this aim leads all the rest. "They will learn how to choose their food wisely. They will have a good noon lunch each day and will have the fun of helping cook it "They will have a medical exami nation by av prominent children's doctor. "They will have exercises to cor rect round shoulders and flabby muscles. "They will have games and hand work and walks with a picnic or two, no doubt. They will have a healthful, pleasant summer, and will no longer be underweight children, we hope, fhen the summer is over." Notffing is said about learning out of books, but it will be squeezed Ir. somewhere. At that there are those willing to bet that the pupils of this school will learn as much bcok" learning and get as much training of Judgment, decision, pow ers of observation, ability of expres sion, cultivation of memory, and training In social qualities as pupils get in the same period of ordinary schooling. The course lasts ten weeks. I Judge the parents are to be appealed to because the notice says the moth ers are to accompany their children when they matriculate. This school differs from the ordi nary school in that health comes first. The principal objectives are training in health habits, physical development, examination for physi cal defects, and proper eating. For the well-to-do for rears there heve been vacation camp schools, whe-re boys and girls are langht to swim, to take care of themselves In the woods, to develop muscles and co-ordination by work and play in thi out-of-doors. While these camp schools look out for the health of the students as regards protecting them against contagion and caring for them when sick, I know of none which makes the teaching of health habits its principal aim. This University of Chicago school Is free except for lunch money. If It works, boards of education will see in it more lessons which they can apply than they find in the camp outing schools. Rabbit's Foot Just as Good. O. L. C. writes: "What strength should sassafras tea be made for thinning the blood of an adult? Should it be taken daily? Is too much .harmful? .Would it be in jurious for one to take 1t who is inclined to"be an 'anemic'?" REPLY. First, the blood cannot be thinned. Sassafras tea will not thin the blood or have any effect of any sort on anything. In olden times it was powerful good at fooling folks, but it has lost its charm. If you will drink half a gallon of water within one hour you will thin your blood. But nature, who is the wise old doc, wilP thicken it up again in about two hcurs, whereupon the usual good health will be restored. "YEARS ago I fractured a hone in my neck while diving," relates Pussyfoot Johnson.v The explanation is plausible. Perhaps Bryan fell out of a tree or something. THE HEIGHT OF OBSERVATION. (From the Watseka Republican.) Frank Burnham got so well acquainted with the doctors at the sanitarium where he was being treated recently, that they recog nized him whether he was walking towards or from them. My Castle In Spain." Sir: John G. Saxe might add a stanza today": I've a large sideboard loaded with bottles of glass, Of cunning, artistic design: Gin, whisky, ale, rum (1920 a has). And may a flagon of wine; Tour favorite tipple you'll find here, I know; I've bountiful stock "in my Spanish Chateau." DEL. IN Iowa the tongue chiefly spoken is die schonste iengevitch. Thus the Globe Manufac turing Co. of Perry advertises, "We Wash the Earth Quicker Yet." . WHY SOME PARENTS SEND THEIR BOYS TO YALE. ' (From the Kankakee News.) Robert Dunlap, who has been attending Harvard, arrived home Tuesday to spend the summer with his mother. THE Hon. Carter Harrison has become an idealist in his old age. He. talks about human izing the Volstead act. The Observing Reporter. (From the Riverside News.) Miss Dorothy Anne Badger was' the guest of Miss Alice Wiles this week. Miss Doro thy is developing; wonderfully and Is a charming girl. ANY male sufficiently squat and unhandsome can qualify for membership in the Luklikel Club by wearing a sportshirt. A MILITANT MAID. (From the WInnett, Mont, Times.) Miss Carrie Gunn of Fargo, N. D., spent several days here this week visiting with her friend, Miss Etta Nlchol. COX attempted to carry water on one shoul der and beer on the other, and somebody jogged him. And, Possibly, Skin You. (From the Port Clinton, O., News-Democrat.) When at Catawba Island stop at Cang-' ney's Cottage Inn. They can eat you, sleep you, drink you, or crearti you. "DARK Horses Champ Impatiently." Head line. . 'Specially Champ. QUALIFISD. (From the Rock Island Argus.) Miss Flossie Legg, Watertown state hos pital of East Moline, passed the examination for registered nurse. Goiter Starting. A. S. H. writes: "My little girl, 9 years old, has a goiter starting. Is there any treatment I could give her, or what would you advise?" REPLY. Have your phypiclan give her about five grains of iodide of soda daily for two weeks each spring. r -Piatt I , 7 1 ... ocx seem to be auite. ia devotee of the. Tvr cvT-r i- piano" said a friend to a gifled musiciaax. ' As Ckopin's sat lime masic is superior to ragtime" ne replied, "some matcKless MR. M'ADOO'S attitude is that of the Irish man: "If I won't take it, make me take it." B. L. T. The Motor Age. The man who kept a private conveyance in the preautomobile period was a man apart from the merely ordinarily well to gg, immeas urably removed from the poor, if he lived in a city where street cars provided necessary transportation and a private conveyance was a luxury. The man who lived in a village, where no distance was great, and who kept a conveyance was a village magnate. Nowa days the problem in cities and towns is how to park the automobiles and leave room for moving traffic. Seven and a half million auto mobiles in 'use in population of 100,000,000 constitute incontrovertible proof that this is the country in' which, the poor man has an oppor tunity. Improving his opportunity he has soon an autoifobile, Louisville .Courier-Journal. tit- i excels every other piano. You speak of the 'soul i I -put into nv? music. It is impossible for me to play expressively or feelingly on any other piano. Truly it is , as others claim the worlds finest piano, bar none " There Are Five Others You Can " Bank Upon Sohmcr, Kranich & Bach, Brambach, Kimball, Vose & Sons thei Reproducing Piano Cash or Terms Same Price do u 1513 Douglas Street The Art and Music Store Nuts for Mr. Butler. Oma!i, June 26. To the Editor of The Bee: I would like to tell Mr. Butler trjere are two sides to every thing, even to a plum pudding. In stead of his making a grrat pow. wow. about the poor tenants (which has a savoring of politics), tell us nmrh ahiised landlords how we can build on our vacant lots, to bring j some relief to the great shortage of houses, which will be greater next year. Mr. Butler could help some by asking the governor to call a special session of the legislature to help reduce the great Increase in taxes by reducing the commissioners' snlary to $1,000 a year, cut "ie lum berman's bill in two and reduce the wages one-third of the bricklayers, plasterers, plumbers, painters, labor ers and' janitors. Then in six months there would be houses for rent all over the city without any increase in rents. If the landlords saw there was no chance of their being sent to JaU- Landlords have not made more than 2 per cent the last six years. Now they are hav ing a chance to make 6 per cent. There is this great noise. A painter last month wanted 14 months' rent to give two coats to one of my jobs. If Mr. Butler had got married, built him a house and become one of the abused landlords, he would not be trying to be lionized by a few rent ers who have had their salaries raised from 50 to 80 per cent and their rents 3 per cent. VOTED FOR BUTLER. TONIGHT ' "Pussyfoot" Johnson Noted Detective, Ex-Indian Agent, Fighter and News paper Man. AUDITORIUM Thursday, July 1, 8 P. M. Subject: "What I Can See Through My Glass Eye" FREE! FREE! , FREE! Mr. Bryan's Only Available. If Mr. Bryan continues his process of elimination, he should have the field pretty well narrowed down to himself by the time the San Fran cisco convention opens. Sioux Falls Press. It's a Big Job. Notwithstanding Mr. Marshall's telegram to Governor Coolk1j-re, be ing vice president of the United States is a big and honorable job, since life is uncertain. Minneapolis Journal. t Phone Douglas 2793 We Wnt sajsip Mr Offlc&i OMAHA PRINTING COMPANY Omaha's wrwws umt fifl ifl IMuviu umua FARMM Commercial Printers -Lithographers Steel Die Embossow LOOSE UAF DEVICES I I a. I I I I I I I I I I I I 111 I I I I I - Beautiful Pianos : I FOR RENT 1 Expert Tuning, 1 2 Repairing, I I Refinishing jj I I and Moving ? Phone Douglas 1623 for . Estimates. - : Schmoller & Mueller l I PIANO CO. 1 e 114-16-18 South 15th Street. " : i I III I l I I I I I l I l ill I I I i i American State Bank Capital $200,000.00 18th and Farnam Sts., Founded on Security Built for Service A word about Savings WHY This department has in creased $100,000.00 in a short time. 4Cn compound quarter ly interest added to your ac count. Deposits made on or before the 10th day of any month considered as having been made on the first day. A good place to put idle funds waiting for investment, or funds accumulating for in vestment at a higher rate. Subject to withdrawal witho-at notice. Deposits in this -tiank protected by thj Depositors' Guaranty Fund of the State of Nebraska. D. W. GEISELMAN, President. D. C. GEISELMAN, Cashier.. H. M. KROGH, Ass't. Cashier. (MiraiiMeTj TdDMirnstt Fares FROM OMAHA I J50 to Denver, Colorado Springs, Pueblo 4Ht Pmmm and return. $ O 50 to Estes Rocky Mountain National y U Park and return. $i Q00' West Yellowstone (Yellowstone fg: O "" National Park) and return. Four and one half days motor trip in park with accomodation.- at hotels $54.00, at camp $45.00, additional. Side trip to Estes Rocky Mountain National Park for $10 additional $rqj00fo Portland, Tacoma, Seattle and Q 3 return, with 200 miles along the Scenic Columbia River. Side trips to Yellowstone and Rocky Mountain National Parks may be arranged for small additional expense. 00 to California andreturn. Coins via Omaha. " ' Ogden, Great Salt Lake, along the famous Forty-Niners trail to San Francisco, returning direct through OgdfD or via Los Angeles and Salt Lake City 00 Circuit Tour of the West. Portland, thence rail or steamer to San Francisco, thence returning direct through Ogden or via Los Angeles and Salt Lake City. Or route may be reversed. War Tax Extra. These fares are effective daily June 1st to September 30th good returning until October 31st, 1920. Stop over privileges at all points enroute. Send for booklets and full travel information cOTcerning the innumerable attractions along the lines of the Union Pacific System STANDARD ROAD OF THE WEST rnnr,lMatJ TIeVet Office. 1416 Oodgs Streat, Omaha. Nsbr. Union Paaaenger Station 10th & Marcr Sw A. K. Carts. Qty Passescer At sat l : Ji . . . i ' It is our desire to giv6 everyone the BE&T in banking service. To build a good will that will in years to come stand apart from the rest, as. an insti tution that breathes, lives and is at heart the very spirit of the people. Such is our thought when you bring your business and banking problems to us, Naalinal Sank The Bank With An INTEREST in T0U 1503 Farnam Street ' 7 THE MOJrnCEXT OF THE BASTILLE In I'arls. stands as a re minder te all that the hanol of tyrannr. cruelty ana autocracy shull not role. U ass