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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 2, 1920)
THE BEE: OMAHA. MONDAY, AUGUST 1920. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING ) EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. NELSON B. UPDIKE, Publisher. MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Th Aancistea Prat, ol whlen The Bet M a member, If n ciuMt.I, enutled It tin w for publication of ill ns dlipstehe emitted to It or not otherwise eredlteU la Oili paper, sod tin lb loral nm published herein. All right of publication of our pcial dispatches r aleoVeierved. BEE TELEPHONES Print. Branch Eschtme. Ask for tb Tr1 IfWlfl Department or Peim Wanted. 1 yler WV For Nifht Calls After 10 P. M.: MltorUI Deprtment - ---------- Trier 10001 Mrculstlim Department -.. Tjlw 100SL Adtattiilni CXpartmeiit ............. Tjler Will OFFICES OF THE BEE ' Main Offset: 17th and Faraaa Council Bluff is ttt Ht. I soiiin Hint HIS !t St Out-of-Town Office: New Tori 5S riftb An I W.nhmnon 1311 O 8t Chicago Steew Blrtu I Pari France 420 But St. Honor The Bee's Platform 1. New Union Passenger Station. 2. Continued improvement of the Ne braska Highway, including the pave ment of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha with a Brick Surface. 3. A short, low-rate Waterway from the Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. I. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. AN ACCURATE SUMMING-UP. We have only to look about us to note the seriousness of the problem. Our mines are full of coal, sufficient to serve all the needs of unnumbered generations yet we are threatened with a coal famine and prices prohibitive to the poor. We have had dinned into our cars the urgent necessity of increased production, and have heard labor scolded for strikes that dimin ished production and so were hostile to the public interest. Yet we witness the strange spectacle of greaft mills producing the neces sities of life closing dowfi themselves going on strike before production has well begun to speed up. ' We have seen the farmers losing money on a falling market in their task of raising live stock to feed the country, while at the same time the prices charged the consumers for meat have continued to advance. We hear of the danger of grain crops left to rot because of lack of transportation to move them, and we hear, at the samp time, of j great railroad systems laying off thousands, of men from work. With the railroads hopelessly inadequate to meet the transportation needs of the country we find not only indifference but opposition to the development of waterway transporta tion. We hear rumblings of a threatened strike in the steel industry, and note signs of similar disturbances in other lines. All these distressing symptoms come at a time of great prosperity and well being. Busi ness is earning good rctunis, wages are high, agriculture on the w hole' is enterprising and remunerative, and the general standard of liv ing is better than it ever was before. Basical ly, we have every right to believe, our national condition is1 sound. But there are adjustments and readjustments it is imperative to make. There are injustices to cure, inadequacies to meet, reforms and iniDrovements that must be brought about. World-Herald. A more complete and damning indictment of the democratic party could riot be drafted. The logical outcome of its incompetency, its meddling end vacillating policies, is thus ex hibited by one of jts leading champions, ac companied by the naive request that the party be entrusted fcr another four years with further power to muddle up things. ' , To be sure, the World-Herald tries to make it'appear that the republican congress is respon sible for all these unsavory messes. It over looks the fact that two years I ago a republican senator proposed that steps bs taken to prepare the way to readjustment, and that the sugges lion was turned down by a democratic senate, which trusted in the all-wisdom of Woodrow Wilson and would have, none other. ! The truth is that the democrats left the country as unpre pared for peace as it was for var. ' The republican platform contains definite and specific promises of relief for the country. Sena tor Harding and Governor Coolidge are meu of vision and of experience, and the incoming administration unfler their guidance will be one of prudent progress and established prosperity, devoid of unwise and dangerous experimentation. Governor Cox stands pledged to "redeem" every one of Woodrow Wilson's promises: does that indicate any improvement in administration methods under his guidance? Ihe contrast be tween the two parties is as clear as the bill drawn by the World-Herald, and the public's choice ought to be easily made. Yes; that does make a difference a big differ ence. Really, after ten years it is almost con clusive, isn't it? v , Again the Garbage Situation. Interposition of a court order against the garbage dump near DeBolt brings the question squarely back to the city commissioners. How. much longer is the city of Omaha io be left de pendent on private enterprise fcr removal and disposal of hou.l.cid oiTjJ and refuse? Longer than a generation ago the question of public handling of this matter was brought forward, but it has been temporizingly dealt with by one regime after another. 1 Plan after plan for letting the work of collecting garbage to private contractors has been tried, and none has been found satisfactory. Inconveniences, delay, danger to health, and all the evils at tendant to the inadequate substitutes for real service have been endured by the citizens. Not patiently, for the public has complained in season and out of season. The records of the courts are littered with suits brought for one reason or another, but all growing out of the garbage question and its incompetent, inefficient han dling by the city. Only one proper way is known. The work must be taken on by the city itself, under direc tion of the Health department. This will cost money, but it will be money well spent, if in the end the homes are kept clean and the com munity is relieved of the menace and inconven iences of the systems that have been tried. v Omaha is venturing deeply on municipal ownership of public utilities. No part of public housekeeping is more important than that which looks after the health and well being of the citizens. Water and light and heat are all es sential, and good subjects for public ownership, but neither is more important than the removal of the offal and refuse that must be taken care of. The contract system for collecting gart- has been anything but satisfactory, while the cost of removing ashes and similar substances is privately paid, and amounts in 'the long run to all the city would need for a fund to take over the whole job and do it right. Thirty-five thous and homes in Omaha each pay at least 10 cents per week throughout the year to have this work attended to, and for that sum the city could care for it all, antt the householders would know that the work is done. While we are building new jails, establishing public bath houses, and venturing in other di rections, why not take on this important feature of municipal housekeeping? A Princeton Story. Thadd Ellis of Racine, O., tells a story in the New York Tribune that carries certain em barrassing implications as to the moral condi tions at Princeton a quarter of a century ago. He writes: - Tripping up Dr. Shinier on his "I's" and "me's" bring back to mind the story Dr. Mc Cosh, then the venerable president of Prince ton, told in the '90s in a lecture to the students of Ohio Wesleyan. He said his Presbyterian conscience got to bothering him one night and he got up to strall around the university grounds to gain back his sleepy mood. Spy ing a light in a window of a dormitory at this hour 2 a. m. he became curious to know what was keeping one of his students up so late. On gaining the door he was about to rap when he caught the click of chips and several low-pitched voices. Giving a vigorous knock which resulted in a sudden confusion of sounds within, a voice tremblingly said, "Who's there?" "It's me, Dr. McCosh," the president replied. "You're a Mar," shot back the voice. "If you were Dr. -M,cCosh you'd have said 'It is II'" "I folded up my tent and silently stole away," said the good doctor, "for I considered the honored name of Prince ton for scholarship of vastly more importance than the breaking up of a friendly game of poker.".. - i Fancy the tut-tuttings and stern reprisals had this incident occurred a little later in the university's history But the story carries all the ear-marks of truth, for undoubtedly poker was the favorite indoor sport at Princeton in the "90s. Also ever since. v Unusual Fervor. A handsome young woman in Brooklyn has had her husband arrested and he is now under observation . as to his sanity because, as his wife complains, "he was killing me iwith kisses and love." She counted 300 kisses Monday "and the good Lord only knows how many on Sun day." ( . '' The magistrate, after the fashion of many judicial officers, did not withhold comment on the unusualvcasei "Most women complain be cause their husbands do not kiss them enough," he remarked. v . The husband is an overseas veteran who was gassed and wounded in France. Before passing judgment in his case the record should include the fact thai the pair Rave been married ten years and have a daughter eight years old. 'Helen in Politics. The name Helen comes from Greek pagan mythology, which plays up the Homeric Character of that name as a creature of surpass ing beauty. Her character, however, was not altogether lovely, and when a too ardent suf fragist down east boasted of queens who ruled for years, and said "Look at Helen of Troy!" mischievous writers took a look, much to the suffragist's embarrassrAent. One quoted the "Comic History of Greece," as follows: The lovely Helen left her lord, Her baggage checked for Troy; Her hat blew off, but she went on To figure in the lexicon With others that annoy. N King Menelaus started out Straightway, upon her track; Quoth he, "Although with faithless art The cruel Paris has her heart; ' . Why, I will have her back." , ! But this division, Venus fair, iet not the King exact; v For, so the chroniclers aver, The lovely Helen wanted her Anatomy intact. V Others were not so gentle, but , pryed into Helen's scandalous desertion of her husband for Paris, himself a runaway husband, and oth erwise held her up to obloquy, recalling the famous Trojan War of ten years caused by her seduction by the pulcr.ritudinotfs Paris, a most elegant figure in mythology. ' Anyhow, the lady down east will never again mix her queens with naughty wives; and in cidentally a lot of parents with little daughters named Helen are wondering just why they didn't look up the original before the christening. For Helen of Troy is the original of all the Helens, too beautiful to be goqd, the daughter of Zeus himself, and brought up in highly im moral circles. , , Sir Thomas a Good Sport. Sir Thomas Lipton is a true sport. It is declared he had the cup in his clutch one day last week when it was so windy the Resolute could not sail. Sir Thomas's i boat had crossed the ocean and was good for all weathers, but the Resolute was not; and the British sports man, knowing the fact, yielded his right to de mand a race that day. Much criticism of the dainty kind of seaman ship and the gentle weather necessary for the Resolute was uttered by the eastern papers. The public also grew tired of watching alleged yacht races sailed at five miles an hour. There was never a bit of dust on the track during the entire series of races. ' Nips a Wee Bit High in Canada. Canadian li.quor imports jumped from $1,860, 000 in 1919 to $9,152,000 for the year ending in March, 1920. Whisky has advanced front $2.50 and $4 a bottle to $5 and $8. The same stuff sells for three times as much when safely smug gled into the United States. Along the borders of Quebec and New Brunswick the smuggling is giving the authorities a lot of trouble. They have not as yet made much headway in sup pressing" the illegal traffic. To stop it entirely would require an officer about every ten yards from the Atlantic to the Pacific oceans. Another peak of high prices has been passed, but this does not tell us anything about how high the next one will be. . Suggestion to auto drivers: Start the month and the week right by observing safety first The democratic women of Nebraska are near ly as happy and harmonious as are Jhe men. Nebraska or Iowa will soon have to accept a mandate for "Feud Island. One thing the experts all agree on is that crops are coming fine. The old front porchs would win in election these days. Hold onto your Liberty bonds! Line to Form. King Christian of Denmark hurt his leg yes terday while mounting a horse. The stirrup strap broke, the inference being that it was as Shakespear implied, rotten. New York Tribune. A Line 0' Type or Two Kw t thi LI, let tk talis fall wtrara Hiijr bio. IF you let Will Hays tell it and there seems no polite way to prevent him we are in the throes of a crusade, rather than a campaign. With a little, more juvenility it might become another Children's Crusade. POLITICAL economists may shut them selves in their studies and discourse of insuffi cient production and other national ailments; but if they will put on their hats and take a walk downtown they will see with half an eye that the chief trouble with this country is over production of so called human beings. The Mordant Edgcrtonlnn. Sir: About thirty citizens of Janesvillc'urove over to our camp Sunday, and I said, "How many In your party?" And a Janesvilllan said, "There must be thirty or forty; I ain't counted 'em." And a man from Edgerton butted in and said, "If there's that many, wouldn't it be easier to drive back to Janesville and count what's left?" Jealous 'bunch. J. U. H. ALL the nominees are pretty well agreed upon what the foreign policy of this nation should be. It may be summarized in a line: "Hang your clothes on a hickory limb, but don't go near the water." LET'S ifUN THIS AGAIN AND SEE WHETH ER WE CAN GET IT STRAIGHT. Sir: Might it not be well to announce that there seems small danger this year of an epi demic of dementia PRO-COX? PEDAGOGUE. YES, yes; we noted that Mr. Bone is the director of publicity for Harding. The head of the committee" if one may approach the ob vious without making, a foot-fault. ' O, DEATH, WHERE IS THY STING-ALING-A-LING! (From the Lake Linden, Mich., Times.) The poplars have been taken out of Mount Calvary cemetery, and their removal improves appearances very materially ,and makes this burial place much more invit ing. ( ACCORDING to our . favorite German writer, Gen. Ludendorff, Freedom will shriek if Poland falls. Freedom's nerves are not what they were. Correspondence From Japan. . Sir: Like Alma, like Souse Bend yea, like New York Tokyo has the society scramble, too. Old Dick Andrews says that in the Ameri can colony there.-are as many strata as stripes on a painted tin cat. First, the humble mis sionary (maintaining1 , less than six servants) seeking "not personal aggrandizement but the skidding souls of s. c. benighted heathen; the well-fed importer, living and letting live; the hai-kara (high collar) diplomatic crowd with their teas and top hats and as an exclamation point the rollickers prone to cocktails and giddy Grand hotel dinners. And they mix just; like cream and cucumbers. Travel with the inter mediate sets, you never want to go home; attach yourself to the first or last, and you never have the price to go. So des'ka! SIB. " WHEN Harry Vardon relates that he putted from the edge of the green, and "thanks to the fates of golf" the ball fell into the cup, he means that he made a damned good putt and is whollv aware cf the fact. NOT until this week did we read Mr. Drinkwater's play, "Abraham Lincoln." We found it much better, even, than we expected. It is an excellent mind tonic, particularly in these hectic months. . ' Lines Written on the Most Dreadful Fire That Broke Out in Chicago In America. (Relayed to Frank Morris by his London agent.) You slmpathlsing Christians I pray you listen unto me, While I relate the dreadful state of thousands in America. The fearful fire that has broke out it leaves us all In grief and pain, For the loss of our dear Irish friends alas will never see their home again. Onlliie 7 of October, we'll remember It now & for evermore, The dreadful Are that broke out which caused thousands to deplore, The raging flames with pains & screams for which we'll weep nijrht and day, ' Most dreadful was their sufferings in Chicago in America. It was a shocking sight to see these victims young & old, In frightful flames & torturous pains enough to make your blood run cold. Mothers, sons & dauters in thousands they aloud did cry. For mercy & forgiveness unto the Lord that rules on high. When they were leaving Ireland & parting the home' they loved so dear, Little did their relations think that this sad news, they were doomed to. hear. Their nelbours, friends & parents who often time for them did pray, They are now consumed in fire in Chicago all In America. Those who escaped this dreadful doom they claim our pity too, ' To see them running from the fire shouting alas what shall we do. V The mothers with their children it was heart rending for them to hear, The screams of them were terrifying, the hard j est heart would shed a tear. As they suffered this most awful death we hope their souls in heaven may dwell, The pains & torture they went through I'm -sure no mortal tongue can. tell. Their loving friends In Ireland will weep for i them for many days, With broken hearts lamenting their loss by fire in America. f THE author of the foregoing was Mr. Jere miah Cronan, and his lines were printed on a handbill which was published in Dublin. A shining contribution to imaginative literature. THE picture that lingers in our mind is Old Cal Coolidge getting up from the milking stool, washing up at the corner of the woodshed, and putting on a suit of store clothes to go down to Northampton to make his acceptance speech. Jeffersonian simplicity? Pooh! Jejferson was an Oriental potentate in comparison. The Commercial Muse. (From the Williamsburg Journal-Tribune.) Roses are red, Violets are blue. , Insure your car With Palmer Pugh. A tornado came and raised the dickens. Killed Si's hogs, cattle and chickens. Struck his house and blew away his shed, Si was safe and this is what he said: . "I don't care how much It blew, , I hot my Insurance of Elmer Pugh." CAPT. ADAMS handled the Resolute in the usual competent Adams fashion. The family seems to have retained the trick of getting the better of the mother country. - THE committee which notified Mr. Coolidge was" headed by Mr. RorabackAof Connecticut We shall hear nic e f,rt;ii litrrV before the cam paign ends. How to Keep Well Br DR. W. A. EVANS Questions concerning hygiene. Mutila tion and prevention of dia, sub mitted to Dr. Evan by readere of Th Be, will be anwered personally, sub ject to proper limitation, where a tamped, addressed envelope is en closed. Dr. Evans will not make diagnosis or prescribe for individual disease. Address letters in care of The Bee. 'Copyright, 1920, by Dr. W'. A. Evans. TRAIN FOR MOUNTAIN - CLIMBING. A man died suddenly in Colorado while climbing at an altitude of more than 10.000 feet. His home was in the middle west at a place where the altitude above sea level was less than 500 feet. He followed sedentary in door occupation. Outside of walking around his place of business he prob ably did not walk a mile a day. His work called for no muscular effort beyond that required to hold the up right posture and to drive a pen. He played no game requiring muscular exertion. For years he had not run or jumpeid or in any way exerted himself violently. When he got a vacation the call of the wild came. His mind re verted to the days of boyhood when he climed hills in hunting berries and ruts. . He went to Colorado. When there he went into the moun tains as everyplalnsman does or wants to do. When up in the moun tains as every plainsman does or hhn. He went to It with sofno of the pep of his boyhood days. What happened there is no way of knowing, since no autopsy was held, but in all probability something hap pened to his heart muscles. At any rate vital machinery stopped and his life ended. Mountain climbing is all right if done by the right people at the right time or after the right preparation. The heart muscle is about of a kind with tho other muscles. The mart who taket, no exercise be?omes flab by in all-his muscles. His joints stif fens, his wind is poor and his endur ance is below par. He can climb mountains in time, provided he will prepare himself for it. This means daily muscle stunts commencing with small tasks and gradually adding to them. If he wants to start before leiving on his vacation there is no better way than climbing stairs up and down. Then when he gets away let him graduate his tasks by his wind and ability to withstand fa tigue I often think of a special trainload of professional men who traveled from Boston to Los Angeles by way of Grand Canyon. They were fat and soft when they left home. On top of this for four days they had had no exercise, except to walk to and from the diner three times a day. They reached, the canyon in the early morning, ale a good break fast, and then almost to a man struck off down the trail. The local people were busy until late at night hauling out exhausted men. Though they did not have sense enough to keep from starting they had sense enough to stop when a rapid pulse wned. i . Recently I saw a soft muscled fat; man eat a heavy lunch at a moun tain resort. Immediately thereafter he tried to climb to a lookout itta- tion. Fortunately he noted his rapid pulse and stopped to rest and then slowly returned to his hotel. Pep is an rignt if. you nave tne goods. Probably Overnorvous. T. L. writes: "1. What is the nieuning of the word hyperthyroid ism? 2. At times I get such an an noying feeling as if my heart were knocking hard. Can this be a heart affection? . 3. Can that be the cause of heavy feeling at tho top and back of my head? 4. I also get spells that make my hands and feet pow evkss. I can hear, but have not the power to speak. This lasts about fivo to 10 minutes." REPLY. 1. Too much thyroid. The word moans almost the same as does the word goiter. 2. This could be due to goiter, hyperthyroidism or nerves. 3-4. These symptoms suggest that you are neurasthenic. People with weights and bands of the head gen erally are neurasthenic. ' Lamb Not Vengeful. M. E. L. writes: "I have a very ouick sharp pain shoot through my big too joint. I have eaten lamb constantly. Now I read that lamb makes uric acid. The bone has en larged somewhat. Also have a very slight snap when I bend a certain finger. The Joint has very 'slightly enlarged. I am 69 years old and my general health is good. The toe joint is very tender. "1. Can you tell me what food or medicine, or both, will help? "2. What can I do for my Joint to harden it so I can wear my usual shoe?" REPLY. 1. You appear to be having gout. Lamb is as apt to promote gout as any other meat, but not more so. Eat potatoes and other vegetables freely, but no meat. 2. Use any salve or liniment you wish. Better Be Examined. A. C. T. write: "1. Are varicose veins dangerous when one has had them since he was a youngster? 2. Is there any special treatment? 3. Does working from 12 to 14 hours a day on my feet affect them? Would you prescribe office work or com plete rest? 4. The varicose veins are located on my chest, arms, legs. They are specially prominent on my left leg. 5. They never have both ered me, but worry me a little. 6. Are they hereditary?" REPLY". Varicose veins in a dependent part of the body, such as a-leg, result from working long hours in the up right position. They are generally benefited and often cured by wear ing elastic stockings. Varicose veins on the chest and arms is a rare con dition. It is present when there Is an obstruction located within the chest. If you are certain you have varicose veins of your chest and arms I suggest that you have an examination by X-rays arid otherwise to discover where the obstruction is. His Bean Was. New and'gooa Spoonerisms are rare, but here is one recently re ported from Yale. A gentleman en tered the dean's office, and. being a bit flustered, he inquired: "Is the bean dizzy?" Boston Transcript. FROM HERE AND THERE. Coal tirices in Berlin are 1.200 per cent higher than before the war. Great Britain has some 10,000 troops still stationed In France as guard to "dumps" of war material. An English medical scientist rec ommends a visit to a museum as an excellent remedy for scholars' brain-fag. Ireland's greatest bog is the Bog of Alien, which has an area of about 240,000 acres and extends Into four counties. Diamonds have increased 160 per cent in value, and emeralds 300 per cent during the last few years, while rubies have decreased. In Japan tea is practically a re ligion. There are special ceremonies In connection with It, and special buildings in which it is drunk. Turkey's population will, by the peace treaty, be reduced from 30, 000.000 to about 6.000.000. and her ntivy must consist only of a few revenuo cutters. Under English law a marriage winy bo declared void if both parties give false names, but it will not be declared void if only one party gives his name falsely. Down to the middle of the Vic torian era it was considered quite tho proper thing in England for a wan to exchange kisses with his fair partner at the end of a dance. About three tons of cotton are used in the production of cloth for every ton of wool. At the lowest estimate the shops of the world sell 11,000 tons weight of cotton goods every day of the week. In spite of the increase in the use of fountain pens, there is still an immense consumption of old-fash-' ioned steel pens. Every day of the year, according to estimates, about four tons of best steel are used in the pen factories, and each ton makes a million and a half pens. The average man probably sleeps In a hundred beds or so during a long lifetime. A veteran commercial traveler whose. home is in New Y'ork can afford to smile at this record, for he says: "I calculate that I have slept in at least 8,000 beds during my 40-odd years on the road, and have slept well in them all." LINES TO A LAUGH. "This candidate hopes to get In tout h Kith the plain people." "He's going about It in the right vay, oo." "How so?" "Vile stored his llrnounlne and t earwr wlgnlng in a flivver." Birmingham Agr Herald. The Youth (dramatically) Refuse me. xtortense, and there will be one lese ul lo in the world tomorrow. The Girl If by that you mesn you are folng to kill yourself, go ahead. But if you mean you will marry someone else I suppose I'll have to accept you. Houston Tost. "The play doesn't give me a fstr? chance." "No play can. There Is only on ve hlcle that will give an actor ot your abll lty a really fair chance." A "What la that?" ' T "A monologue." Louisville Courier Journal. . THE WORLD WAITS. All the saucy breeies since the day begun Have been coaxing coaxing "Catch ua It you can!" All the madcap wavelets champ upon the bay. Calling calllnr calling "Come ' with us to play I" All the wayward cloudlets send across the blue, Dimpling fleetly fleetly "Wa would shadow you!" All the world la reaching, like child, tiptoe, For some one to love it Can wa help but goT Clara Rhlpman, in tha Toronto Mall and Empire. When Folks Quit Coffee because of cost to ? health or purse, they naturally drink Instant Postum There's a Reason August 1, 1920 Get Vour Savings Account Started at the American State Bank The only difference between checking accounts and Sav ings, the book is presented to withdraw. 4 compound quarterly in terest added to your account. Subject to withdrawal with out notice. Deposits made on or before the 10th day of any month considered as having been made on the first day. Founded on Security Built for Service American State Bank Capital $200,000.00 . 18th and Farnam Streets Deposits in this bank protect ed by the Depositors' Guaran tee Fund of the State of Nebraska. D. W. Ceiaelman, President D. C. Ceiaelman, Cashier H. M. Krogh, Asst. Cashier for Highest "Possible Quality at Lowest Possible Price After smoking your first Spur, you might say "just right," "immense" or "great" means the same thing. Means: "There was room at the top for a cigarette that can refresh a tired and much tried taste. And Spur's that cigarette. In the new Spur blend you find : . The richness of the full bodied Oriental leaf tempered by the mildness and fragrance of Burley and other choice home-grown tobaccos. It's a i happy blend that brings out to the full that good tobacco taste. And what's more! Satiny imported paper, crimped, not pasted makes an easier-drawing, slower-burning cigarette. A mighty neat "brown and silver" package, with triple wrapping, keeps Spurs fresh and fragrant. Just smoke a Spur and see. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. """" TF your dealer cannot supply yon, send us 1 ' X 82.00. and we shall be nleased to send vou. by prepaid pWcel post, a carton of 200 Spur Cigarettes (10 packages). Address: lit FIFTH AVENUE, MW TOBX C1IT 0 f$pM Cigarettes