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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1920)
V J THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1920. The Omaha Bee DAILY ( M ORNING ) EVENING- SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, ' NELSON B. UPDIKE, Publisher. , MEMBERS Of THE ASSOCIATED PRESS fha AMMltlad Fran, of which Tea B k t awbv, If rluairalr anuUtd Is Um um for publication of oil Mm dlipalchaa radllad MUM otheraua eraoliMd la tills twptr, and (lag toa local w, puhUahad harain. AU rtfbia of puMlcoUon e out ipadal llavatohai art alio marral BEE TELEPHONES Print Rraoeb Kichuta. Aak fat to "tI 1 fWl Dapanmanl or Paraoa Wan tad. 1 J ler IUW For Nlfht Cell After 10 P. M.t JWtortil Danrtmaat Trior V)Ml nirulatloa iWnmnit ... Trior adrarttilnt Dapartmant ... ....... Xjlar 1009L OFFICES OF THE BEE .... , '" 0lcS Ittb and ToAtm . CouaoU Bluftl 18 Scot I flu I South Blda hit R It. Out-af-Tewa Offlcoat N Tort lift Fifth Ata. 1 Wanhlntton ml O St. Chicafo SlatK BIdf. I Farli Franco m Bat St. Bonoro The Bee'a Platform 1. New Union Passenger Station. 2. A Pip Line from the Wyoming Oil Field to Omaha. 3. Continued improvement of the No braska Highway, including the pave ment of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha with a Brick Surface. A 4. A abort, low-rate Waterway from the Cera Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. 5. Horn Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. COMING FALL OF INTOLERANCE. N . The United States is now in its eighth, and, we trust, last year of presidential intolerance., Our trust teems to be well founded, for every where evidences accumulate that the people are heartily tired of an administration intolerant of honest opinion, prejudiced by narrow partisan ship, obstinate in its rejection of the will of the people as expressed at the polls, impatient at the well meant suggestions of its friends, in solent in its repudiation of established Ameri can political ideals and malevolent in "its vindictive efforts to crush every influence which runs contrary tojts purposes. "The intolerance of Jhe administration has not been limited to hostility toward republican principles and republican individuals. It has ex tended to democratic principles and democratic individuals as well. It has existed and func tioned against all men and all organizations, re gardless of their party affiliations, who presumed to suggest, advise, think or believe, except in harmony with the wishes of the presi dent. That is the record of Woodrow Wilson and his autocratic pretensethat in him alone properly resides all wisdom, air statesmanship, all righteousness 'and all legitimate authority. Better democrats than the president have suffered from his arrogance and malice. The great party now dragging at the chariot-wheels of his official power is suffering from it, and knows not how tp escape from the debasing thralldom txcept by way of a smashing repub lican victory. By way of this gate alone can true representative government be restored. The democrats dislike the idea, but many thou sands of Hem, all over the country, will pass through it under the kindly shadow of the ballot box next November. The July Tpilen. Loud is the summer's busy song. The smallest breeze can find a tongue, While insects of each tiny size ' . Grow teasing with their melodies. Till noon burns with its blistering breath Around, and day lies still as death. . . ' CLARE on July. The month of intense heats is upon us a hard month on all who must work amid crowds of human beings Severe tests are put upon talesmen and saleswomen in busy stores, or. trainmen and street car employes, on those who serve the public in restaurants and hotel dining rooms. Tlot weather , cannot be dodged by them. They work in much discomfort and those they serve are also-uncomfortable. Ienee irri tibility and bad humor develop. It ! is hard enough to keep sweet and cheerful when con stantly dealing with the human race under the belt of conditions. In July the difficulty is in tensified. " '. It is a time to dodge pies and cakes and tweet things, rich meats and heavy foods, and confine the diet as largely as possible to vege tables, fruits, and wholesome acds, which cool the blood and lighten the burden of high jtem peratures. God pity the overwkrked when "the tummer looks outs from her brazen tower through, the flashing bars of July." They need ind deserve the consideration and sympathy of. all who come in contact with them. I A cheerful greeting, a kindly smile, fromjthose more for tunate in strength or circurnstances, is as little ts thoughtful people can give tfiem to cheer them on their rough roa. Do it. needed. Their failure to come through is at tributed to public .weariness and apathy Where "drives" are concerned. Private purses that freely gaped while the war was on are no longer so easily persuaded to open. It may be, too, that the big denominational budgets under con sideration at the same time had something to do with the difficulties encountered by the inter church workers. Whatever the cause, the great idea has faljen because the money to support it could not be raised. It leaves a lesson, though, that is not to W ignored. In the future more and more of the tinormous wealth created in America is to be given employment in advancing the spiritual and intellectual life of the country. Religion and education are coming forward as paramounts, and will not be denied. I About the Public Treasury. A platform written by one democratic secre tary of ithe treasury and designed to fit the can didacy of another map well' be looked to for sophistry intended to obfuscate the public mind as to the financial administration of the country under control of the gentlemen who are thus using the party's formal declaration to exculpate themselves. The document promulgated at San Francisco does this to a nicety. A great deal of explanation will be required, however, before the American people will be ready to accept as accurate the judgment of these ex-secretaries of the treasury on their nwn stewardship. To begin with, people are not likely to forget thai during Mr. Wilson's first term in office the actually daily deficit of the treasury was a miM lion dollars; that is, the government, even under the mismanagement of the democratic party, with its false notions of economy, was running that much behind actual expenses. The inter vention of the war diverted attention from the rocks onto which the Wilson crew were allow ing the treasury to drift. At that, the secretary already was borrowing ni anticipation of col lections to pay bills. ' , The platform denounces the republican con gress1 for not revising the revenue law, ignoring the faet that the last democratic congress pur posely made a levyfor two years to forestall any action of the republicans, and that Mr. Wil son plainly stated to the ways and means com mittee that he would veto any attempt to amend t(ie existing law. So much for the "pleas" made by the president and the secretary -of the treas ury to congress for revision of the law. As to 'post-wa' extravagance, the following from the New York Times might well be read by the framers of the democratic platform. The republicans' may or may not have made a reduction in . the estimates larger than the democrats would have made if they had been in power with benefit of the lapse of time and alteration of conditions which the republicans enjoyed, but the fact is that the money saved js not in the tre.asury. - Com paring the claim of three billions of econ omy , of the treasury statement of the 1 facts, it appears that the net balance is about a billion, $95,147,161, below last year, and that the treasury is poorer accordingly. . If the republicans had appropriated more liberally, there might have been larger bank deposits to the credit of the treasury and smaller deficiencies carried over for future settlement At present the treasury's surplus -or deficit depends upon the nearness or re moteness of the last issue of certificates of indebtedness in default of tax receipts. Iif- come and outgo balance approximately be cause the treasury is still borrowing for itf deficit. " When the' government is actually , .. spending more than is appropriated, there is a demonstration of unsatisfied demands not consistent with sound finance and not suited t immoderate boasting, however creditable the records of both congress and the administration may have been. Not until the floating debt has been paid of funded 'will the treasury accounts be stabilized in anything like normal conditions,,. There is no reproach in the treasury's unpaid bills. They are a moderate overhang of such enor i mous expenses, and serve a useful purpose in promoting caution- on the part' of both the spenders and the taxlayers. I A Seasonable Suggestion. ' Somewhere recently we read the statement that the blood of people who do not exercise does not flow twiftly enough to throw off the poisons which are generated in the body. As consequence the blood of inactive persons loses a portion of its efficiency aYyl health, de clines. ' Be that as it may, it fits in nicely with an undeniable fact, which is that fresh vegetables are blood purifiers. We have "Vegetables in abundance during the season when exercise it 'naturally avoided; and in the winter when they are not at hand we have to jump. about to Keep warm, thanks to-a , benevolent nature which attempts to lead us right. , - With every act, mental or physical, bodily cells are destroyed which must be eliminated from the system, "and the blood does the job provided we keep it moving by vigorous mus cular action. Dawdling- along is not sufficient. Real effort is necessac, we are told. v' ' Period of Substitute Drinks. Thousands of men all over the country are trying to satisfy their. craving for alcohol by imbibing abominable substitutes for the tipples from which they were divorced a year ago. Many still have their old favorites, now jeal ously guarded as the stock decreases, and no longeextended to friends who failed to provide agamst the inevitable. Innumerable concoc tions fortified with the potent raisin or the ac tive yeast cake are being swallowed to the accompaniment of wry grimaces as throat and palate rebel, by those who cannot yet face total abstinence. ' But; the ranks of those who have "ceased to search and squander money forontraband drlnkt increase morlth by month. What are they drinking? Water? Not yet. They linger over the near beer that smells, foams and looks like the keg product of old. or call for the hot test of ginger ale, with experiments in many other directions. Some have learned that good buttermilk is cqmforting. to 'stomachs long whipped into action by distilled or fermented beverages, but now robbed of them. It is, un questionably, the best innocuous substitute in the list, excelling all the carbonated biting drinks spoiled by sweetening and having' only lemonade as a rivafT It will not be long now before allbut a very small minority will learn that a man may be content and healthy and happy with a cup kof hot coffee or a, cur of cool water. Then they will be backyto normal and freedof a habit that never did they any real good. ' . Collipse of the "Inter-Church" Movement The failure of the interchurch movement, . heralded last winter with such skill of publicity as Seldom Vm been equalled, came last week, not altogether unexpectedly, but adisappoint meat to its promoters. Only one reason is as-v signed, the fact that thepublic did not respond to the call for funds. It was -a stupendous project Its promoters had in view, the wider spread of Christianity throughout tRe world, the improve ment of conditions in civilized as well as unciv ilized countries, and a general forward step by all the churches. The first section of the pro gram asked for $366,000,000, but the headquar ters irrNew York, on Tuesdafy last, X reported that mere ''pledges" for ,$156,000,000 had been received, considerably less than half the amount expected. '' - . Persons not actively associated with churchy work were expected to fjjrniso th. -money A Line (V Type or Two Now to thi Um, Itt ttit tulpt fall wkort Mtty nay. KING AL-KOH'L. King Al Koh l came to be From a still In Araby, From, a Jar, from the wine, Fuming- like the Jinn divine. That Solomon hia wal and sign Damned to endless prUorjment Fishers broke by accident. Swirling out from the Jar King Al-Koh'l traveled far; Brought to bower, brought to bar . 1 Sights of Araby the blest ' ( Mirth and madness rage and r,est. Now "the years have gone round King Al-Koh'l shall be bound! v On his bottles, on his tuns , Stronger seajs than Solomon's. The gin is in the Jsr to stay For many a year, for many a day, k Till some far fisher shall again Enlarge him from his aqueous pen. PAX. 6lJR luncheon club and probably yours has an ear of corn which, is served several times daily, and always politely returned to the kitch en. It has also a property clam, which is used to flavor the bouillon. THE best way to reduce the price of pota toes is to serve hominy in their place. It is, besides, an agreeable change. And that re minds us, what has become of the o. f. grocer who, after filling the kerosene can, stuck a po tato on- the spout? s' RETRIBUTION NEVER HAD A BETTER CHANCE. " (From the Clarion, la., Monitor.) The aneak thief who stole the quilts from Mrs. George Telford may be sorry he took the widow's bedding, as they were off the death bed and had not yet been dis infected. THE late" W. S. Gilbert, relates Horace Hutchinson, w.is beiug shown over Westminster Hall. An American friend, who was of the nartv. asked what wood the roof was made of. ."Some say English chestnut," said the guide, but don t believe that at tne time tins was built th,ere were enough old chestnuts in Eng land to provide the material." "Probably not," remarked Gilbert, "as 's Memoirs had not been published then." . And What Became of Thompson? (From the Galesburg Republican-Register.) Two of our young citizen, Skelly Brown and Herschel Thompson, were together the other day, and, like all boy, were in a cheerful mood, when Herschel bantered young Brown to punch him, and, of course, he co-uld not forego the .opportunity, and made one pass and lodged some place on Thompson's anatomy, and the result was that the bone on the baiclcof Brown' hand was hroken back of the first and second fin-, ger. The force was so great that the knuckle ' bones of the third and fourth fingers were driven out so as to dislocate them. Saw Brown- this Thursday afternoon and he said his hand was getting along nicely. THE Exponent, of Hagerstown, Ind., prints the verses beginning "Under the greenwood tree, Who loves to lie with me" and credits them to Beatrice Northcoot, aged 10, of Hagerstowiv This is the ;high water mark in Hoosier poetry. WHAT rs your notion of the most humili ating death? A riend thinks that to be run over by a Case & Martin pre wagonwould be the holy limit. 1 . NOCTURNE. Do you' remember when upon the Nile N We followed Egypt's barge, in our small boat? Just now, as then, the roses near your throat Nodded: Just now. as then. I saw you smile. Your eye were on the queen, but mine the while Saw only you, swathedf in the selfsame note Of color worn tonight That time remote, And all its glory, mile on gorgeou mile, Seems come again to exercise Hs might. Who doubts but tlrat our love in wondrous old? True love is everlasting, full of power, It vital roots run deep into the mold '' Of centuries-; in every age, its flower, Newborn, remembering back, communes with light. C. G. B. How-to Keep Well '-; By Dr, W. A. EVANS Quoationa ronrarninf hritlMir, aanl tation and prerrntlon of diaoe. ouli mlttod to Dr. Erana by rdra of The Be, will bo anoworrd peraonalljr, tub Jrc to proper limitation, where atmpd, addrraar-d onrrlope la rn rlflxd. Dr. Kvana will nor itiak dlafnoala or proorriba for Individual dlaeaaoa. Addrrtt letter In care ef The Ba. . - Copyright. 1H0, by TJr. W A. Evtno. COOKS now jump their jobs at- midnight, At least we have knowledge of two cases. It is cooler then, and. the ride to the station is pleasanter. t -v s AS THINGS' GO, PROBABLY- Sir: A firm at Calexico, Cal is "Thing & Thing." Ever Aince I saw their sign I have won- J i : . 1 . . W n . l .u.Mn . . . U nnw. uerov il Limy luiaiuu iiici e ai 111c saiiiq tunc, or if one Thing brought on another. " S. M. G. THE Academy choir has been enriched by the admission of Carroll Sweet of Grand Rapids, while Mr. Mendin Tackett of White star, Ky., has undertaken to do odd jobs around the place. . - , DEMOCRACY. , ' (Further Letters of John Butler Teats.) The supreme (in of democracy, that its the modern Vdemocraey, ie that it encourages the eommonVnan. In Athens there was no common man, since ther'e was no reason lorvhls exist ence. For their public affairs were small and of little account- In Rome public affairs en- oroachedy on everything and people talked of nothing elte; henee Roman orators. In Athens f like great iters Death and Life and Eternity shone in the firmament, and it was of these people talked and only literature and art mattered. . Is a man of genius possible In America, Is ne possible anywhere under ' a rich and busy democracy? Ia a man of genius possible where everyone is a politician or a social reformer or a philanthropist or a lecturer? in a scientifi cally-drained 'country there are not rivulets, no tumbling streams and no cascades, only straight canals and reservoir and well-contrived ponds in wnicn gaa tamp can aamire inemseives. , Big Little Lessons. A little lesson in honesty, or economy, or kindness, or service, in the home, if impressed on parent or child, is more valuable than any gift which gratifies the appedte or the vanity. Too many parents, too many childrejj, measure values in terms of money alone. It is a mistake. The biggest and best things in life can be learned only by love, by service, by integrity, by self-sacfifice, or some other moral rule; and they must be taught in the home. . . y l The swimming hole is- the most popular place of assemblage" right now and Omaha needs more of them. " J John Bull gets a little consolation now auoS then. This time it is the open golf champion hip. , . , " All America Up In a Balloon. v "Neve"f in her hlstoryNhas America attained such splendid heights as we reached under the leadership of this immortal American," cried a North Carolina democratic congressman in eulo gizing President Wilson the other day. History will' record that we really were up in the air pretty high under; Mr. Wilson and nfight have Stayed there if we had not run out of gas. Na tic9l Republican. - J-- - PERHAPS some of the visiting Elks recall their parade in South Bend a few years Ago, in the rear of which was an advertising Wagon with the sign, Mothers, protect your daugh ters." A WINCHESTER theater tells its part of the world that "No peanut eating will be al lowed in the Lyric during July and August." Why the closed season? , Variant of the Valve Handle Wheeze.' ' ."' (From the Ossian, la,, Bee.) Railway mail service ia not only bad, but it's rotten. Last Friday a package was mailed at Milwaukee, directed to this of fice, nd it has not arrive yet The Post, office department is not to be blamed; the railroad companies are not to blame; the express companies can't be helH account able. . It's the cussed, lousy, lazy high salaried, short-Hour employe to whom this laxity should be .charged..- 5 P. S. The package in question- arrived this mornirlg, but our criticism is not with drawn. IN a splendid burst of candor the People's Store in Lennox, S, D., proclaims: "WjS don'tl claim tnat other people are cheats and'ars, we aont juage anyooay eise Dy ourselves. y A SEATTLE hairdresser show-windows: "Complete transformations made ,hcre." In cluding words. AND POOR IF HE DOES. , Sir: Sign In Denver florist's window: 1,Ifs K a poor lover that doesn t send flowers. Roses - an M , m . t 0 yvi uulli J.'. XX. ,3. IF Sir Oliver Lotlge, is till interested in the subject he might like to know about Ikenberry tHe Undertaker, of Panora, la. THE vice president of the Bankdf Ashland, Mont., is Vest Shy, but he does not wear both belt and suspenders. "CHARLES L. FISH, piano tuner. Colfax I 4907." Omaha "Bee. - nai a tuna i x IN a bi-partisan government it makes little difference which party wins an election. Rota tion in inefficiency is desirable, and all a third party succeeds in doing is preventing rotation. . ' ' - ' ... J , B. L. Tv Hit Handy Pocket. LaFollette ha$ had his gall sac removed, and now he will hav rm place to keep his corffic Uons.wBaltimor Sun. - t WEATHER, TEMPERATURES, ' WORK. Leonard Hill, a great English physiologist, recently wrote an in teresting book on ventilation.. He is recognized as a world authority on the subject. If ther4 la. any need for backing on Hill as an authorfty this ie supplied by the medical research committee ot the national health in surance, whfch issues the Hill book as ofte of its special reports. In this book there is a lot of ad vice as to activity during hot weath er. He says: "By screening off the sun and supplying a. suitably wind, work in temperate climates on most days of the year can bo done with coolness and ease. By means of fan man can escape from under the curse in the sweat of thyiface shalt thou eat bread.' It will pay the employer so to regulate the cool ing power as to prevent sweating, but not to uncomfortably coot the heavy worker. He will in this way bring abot the greatest efficiency, increase output, without increasing fatigue. The essentldal of his plan is to provide working places with plenty of electrically driven fans. In kj far as pssible the men are to be protected against radiant heat, such as that from the sun and 'rom fires. Overcrowding is not to be permit ted. - In some- cases it will 'pay tochiIl the workroom by some form of re frigeration. Wo are cooling the aters and restaurants bt-cause those who play demand it. Some hospi tals for babies are cooled as a means of saving babies', lives. Soon some employers will plan to increase out put by cpoling the air. Many who cannot' refrigerate can make -the workroom comfortable by he in stallation of fans. To prevent minor shop accidents Vernon has shown that the temper atures must be kept above 65 de grees, and below 70 degrees. When ever' the air temperature of the shop fell below the first figure or went above the-second a rise in the accident rate was noted. The best temperature f ir various trades is reported on by Hill. The tailor is comfortable in stiil air at 59degrees. If the tempera ture rises to 81 degrees he must sit in a steady , breeze flowing one mile an hour, or the quantity and quality Of his work will fall off. Carpenters, metal workers, and painters work best at the freezing temperature. If the temperature is 72 degrees they must have a breeze of one mire on houY, and if 8 degrees nine miles an hour, for efficiency. The stone mason must have a breeze of one mile an hour if the temperature is 50 degrees, two mes if 69 degrees, and nine miles if 78 degrees. Milk Good For Tired Nervet. F. E.' K, writes: (1) "I am 64 years old, have taught school for more than 40 years, and am, there fore, a victim of worn serves, some what neurotic, somewhat anaemic. I am taking one-quarter or one-half of a yeast cake daily and feel the better for it. Would you advise a larger quantity of yeast? (2) "Shall I take the yeast for a limited time or will it be advisable for me to take It for the remainder of my life." REPLY. 1. Yes,1 unless the larger dose causes diarrhoea. You , should drink two or three glasses of milk a day. one of these at bedtime. Do you remgmber the fine testimonials for a certain patent food medicine widely advertised a few years ago how it cured "nerves,-" etc.? Well, the "food medicine" was essentir.lly milk. 2. Not necessary to take yeastfor the remainder of your life. Bcwure Moonshiner's I.ure. ' G- W. writes: "For the bonefit of myselt and the publio in general: In regard to the moonshine whisky which is being served over ;many saloon bars, despite the federal agents' activities in making raids, is tjfere any" danger of extermination by its use; providing it is made of pure foodstuffs and nothing else? , (2) "When whisky is ma6 of yeast, sugar and water and stilled properly and then bottled, doe not prove poisiitious that day or the next, is there any danger of it turn ing to poison at any time? (8)' "If so, how. can one distin guish the good whisky from the bad?" , REPLY. .1. The supposition is that uncured whisky is more harmful than the ripened article. In the battle of ex termination man is due to win. 2. Such whisky would not be liable to turn to poison. 3. The only way to distinguish good whisky from bad is by taste and smel,l. If you mean to make whisky, don't do it. Uncle Sam is certain to get yoo in time. Mrs. T. R. L. writes: "I am greatly interested in your article on myxodoema. 'In what form eas5 I obtain thyroid and in what quan tity should it be taken, etc?" REPLY. It 1 usually taken in tablet or capsule form. The dose should be fixed by examination of the rate of metabolism. If this is not possible, the best substitute is to try differ ent sized doses and to settle upon the dose Which does good and which does not cause rapid pulse, irritable heart, nervousness, or l9s of flesh. These svhiDtoms indicate that the rdose is excessive. - Backrto-the-Farra reader. Another trouble with some of these back-to-the-farm' movements is that they are led by men who re main in the rear. Dallas News. r No Pickbigs In Armenia. The British have also declined to take a mandate for Armenia. They prefer the portions they have picked out. Pittsburgh Dispatch. v ODDS AND ENDS. Its inventor has patented a deviee to enable a carpenter to carry all hia tools suspended from his shoul ders. Rev. G. W. TayTor. a "Baptist min. lster of Hiawatha, Kan., say that of 227 couples he has married only two have sought divorce. For end of wire fences an Ohioan has patented a metal post so held in a frame that it cai be turned with a wrench to tighten the wire. The first American Chamber of Commerce to establish a departi.tent of meteorology and publish a7 weather calendar is the one at Los Angelca x Four, locomotives of a more pow erful type than any heretofore con structed in Japan have been built in the shop of the government rail ways. , Eight-year-old Joseph . Wallis of. Walkes-Barre, Pa., . fell out of a cherry tree and broke a leg, but his two older brothers carried him . to school every day, so that he would not spoil his perfect attendance rec ord, for which he received a gold medal when school closed for the summer. The Austrian monopoly on salt ruined all the salt industries for a period of 148 years. There are no data up to the time of the partition ing of Poland, but it can tiafely be said that the salt mines f Galicia, supplied about 100.000 ton1 of salt yearly. Wieliectka about 24,000 tor, and Bochnia 17.000 tons. There were no other salt mine tn Poland in the year 1772. ' y The Rhine is navigable for aU, least two month of the year, for over 600 miles, or a far urtream as Basle, Switzerland. Exojpt for ' occasional winter floods and very rare ice Jam it 1 open throughout the year as far up as Mannheim. TRADE BUSINESS S GOOD THANK YOU' LV. Nicholas Oil Company American State Bank Capital $200,000.00 18th and. Farnam Streets " . - Founded on Security Built on Service JULYl, 1920 Start your Savings Accounts with us now. This Department has increased $150,000.00 In a very short time. Many of our customers say : 4 compound quarterly interest added to the account- Funds on demand without notice : To be able to make deposit the first ten daysof month without loss of interest for the month are conveniences they desire. For idle funds waiting for investment at a higher rate, this Department will pay you well while you are investigating. 1 - YOU ARE INVITED ' Deposits in this bank are protected by the'Depositors Guar anty Fund of the State of Nebraska. D. W. Geiselman, President D. C. Geiselman, Cashier H. M. Krogh, Asst. Cashier : i on for Highest Possible SfydBy afjtywest Tossible Tric SPURS are jumping:over jack'jabbits -running the sarne way. In the pop ularity race, Spurs could even carry a handicap and yet be first under the wire. And no wonder That, good tobacco taste and fragrance that satiny, imported paper, crimped, not pasted that smart brown and silver package, 'threefold, to keep Spurs always fresh they show you something!' . The world loves a winner. The grand stand is crowded. Hear "em cheer ! Spurs are galloping home. Are you on? Liggett tf Myers Tobacco Co. If your dealer cannot supply you, send us $2.00, and weshall be pleased to send you, by prepaid parcel post, a carton of 200 Spur Ggarettes (10 packages). Address i , f 3li FIFTH AVENUB ' kiw york crnr