Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 22, 1920, EDITORIAL, Image 28

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- sttv out att A CTTVnAV Pt?W. ATTftTTST 11. 1920.
A-JTI xjii umsaw '
The Omasa Bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY.
NELSON B. UPDIKE. Publisher.
, i i i! .
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tfmel sen published herein all itfbu of nubticsuon ol out wad!
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OFFICES OF THE BEE
Vein Office: 17th end Ftrosm
1,1 Scott St. i South Sid 1311 H ft
Out-of-Town Office!
1S5 Fifth An. Whlniton 1311 O St
8te(er felda. I Parti Francs 430 Sue St. Honor
Council Bluffs
.Tew Tori
CJucljo
The Bee's Platform
1. Naw Union Passenger Station.
2. Continued improvement of tho No
braake Highways, including tho pare
ment of Main Thoroughfare loading
, into Omaha with a Brick Surfaeo.
3. A short, low-rato Waterway from tho
Corn Belt to tho Atlantic Ocean.
4. Homo Rule Charter for Omaha, with
City Manager form of Government.
AN OLD-FASHIONED SUNDAY.
. i It is a bright Sabbath morning in early au
' tumn In a, comfortable village homestead built
in 18S0, with full length porches in front and
rear. The time is along about 1882, A hot
breakfast is simmering on the big kitchen range.
According to its everjf-day custom, the family
has assembled in the big "sitting" room. Grand
pa has the family Bible on his knees." He reads
a few verses, and alUsink to their knees. His
morning family prayer, uttered with little varia
tion for forty ' years, is repeated. ' Uncle Tom
and Billy keep one or two jumps ahead of
Grandpa until it is finished. '
t After breakfast the Sunday school bell rings,
and all but Grandma; are off to the little brown
church in the vale. At the Sunday school are
found the intelligence,."virtue and, stability of
almost the entire village 200 or more men,
women and children in delightful association.
At the close of the school Uncle Tom and Billy
return home, where two great skillets full of
. brown fried chicken are sizzling. On the table
in the sitting room is a prodigious glass punch
bowl full of delicious rambo and seek-no-further
apples. On the mantel ire cigars and lamp
lighters. In the grate is a pleasant fire. And
there are books and magazines and newspapers
and comfortable easy rocking chairs.
After church comes dinner and such a din
ner! Fried chicken and gravy, snowy mashed
x potatoes, cold sliced tomatoes, late string beans,
hot biscuits, yellow butter, apple butter, plum
preserves, queen of pudding garnished with
grape jelly and raisins, swimming in rich cream,
white cake, pumpkin pie and,' finally, a bowl of
grapes and sugar pears. 1
After dinner Grandpa is off for a nap, Uncle
Tom for a ramble, and Billy to take his girl for
a buggy ride. along glorious country lanes and
over pine-clad hills. Happy hoursl As evening
approaches all are again at home. There awaits
them a heaping big dishpaWof hot, tender pop
corn fn the back oven. Soon supper is ready
hot coffee, cold chicken, buttered toast and
jelly, newly made pickles, and the never failing
cake and fruit.
Again the church bell rings. Billy goes to
take his girl to the services. Grandma adjusts
her spectacles to read her Bible, humming:
All in a dark and shady grove,
There cooed a lonely dove,
of some other quaint old-time hymn. Grandpa
and Aunt Mary are off to church, and Uncle
Tom, surrounded with newspapers, a cigar in
his mouth, takes his comfort before the fire.
' By 9 o'clock the family circle is again com
plete, and one by one its units retire. Another
Sunday is over.
All this before telephones, trolley cars, auto
mobiles or moving pictures were dreamed of.
Blessed Sundays they were bright spots in vil
lage life,"where reigned simple tastes, good will
and general content, along with abundant, inex
pensive and perfectly cooked food.
Blessed is the man who can look back to
such Sundays after his youth is spent!
Good and Evil in the World.
"Crime is not more rampant today than it
has been in preceding "generations. The cry of
the public-for sensational and scandalous news
has led to the publication of the vices of the
day, leaving unsung the virtues that unobtru
sively continue as they nave in the past."
This remark was made by James Cardinal
iibbons, ttys occasion being a recent sermon
addressed as much to the world as to the Cath
olic congregation which heard him. The great
churchman spoke out of the depth of wisdom
accumulated during a lifetime of service to the
race. The truth of his utterance is perhaps
unassailable; crirfie is dug out and exposed more
relentlessly today than ever, and maybe with
greater attention to detail, although the latter
phase may be open to question.
It is his second sentence that challenges
thought. Is the craving of the public for "spicy"
: reading more marked now than in former gen
erations? We doubt it. At no time in all the
world's istory has there been such profusion
of bookmaking, and yet how seldom is a vol
ume from the modern press excluded from the
shelves of the public library. What writer of
the present day wijl be remembered in years
to come for his approach to the "Decameron,"
or which has produced another "Rabelais?"
Some three or four seasons ago, the pornp-
graphic play was set before the public, pretend
ing to be propaganda for social purity; it fell of
its own weight The,moving picture producers
early discovered that salacious, or meretricious
films were not profitable; and other instances
of the sort might be mentioned.,
, If the virtues of humanity are left unsung,
it is merely because they are unobtrusive. Yet
the newspapers have much pleasure and give a
great deal more of space in each issue to chron
icling the good deeds that yet shine in a naughty
world. The real challenge, though, is to the
church itself, for its mission has been and is to
'minimize the. evil that exists, not by concealing
it, not by affecting not to see it, but by remov
, ing it.
We agree with the cardinal that there is no
more of crime now than in former days; we are
willing to go farther, and say that there is less,
and just because fhe churches of all demoni
nations have not let slip their cables nor les
sen ad their' efforts. However, unices the Kahal-
ists were entirely wrong, evil is the shadow of
good, and if the public prints give evidence of
the existence of the one it is also proof thatHhe
other is not wanting.
Transmitting the Faith.
The Bishop of Liverpool, at the Student Con.
ference of 1908, said: '
In apostolic days men advocated a Gospel
without the Cross. But St. Paul would have
none of it. In the fourth century Arius taught
a Christianity without a perfectly divine Sav
ior, and the church would not have it. In the
fifteenth century the Renaissance, intoxicated
by the discovery of Greek aijd Roman litera
ture, despised the "jargon of St. Paul," and
would have paganized Christianity, but the
Reformation brought northern Europe' back to
the Scriptures and to the Christ. Today rmn
are proclaiming a Gospel without the super
natural. They are asking us to be content
with a perfect human Christ; with a Bethle
hem where no miracle was wrought; with a
Calvary which saw sublime self-sacrifice, but
no atonement for sin; with a sepulcher from
which no angel's hand rolled away the stone.
But we must have none of it. We will hold
fast, we will transmit the faith once for all
delivered to the saints. We will hand down to
our children,.we will proclaim to all the tribes
of the earth, Christ Incarnate, Atoning, Risen,
Ascending, our Intercessor at God's right
hand, waiting to come again to judge the quick
and the dead.
How shall the Christian forces of civilization
hand down and proclaim the faith in a risen
Savior? Obviously theret is but one way the
circulation of the Gospel to all the peoples of
the earth, Jjy the printed. Testament and by word
of mouth. But when we consider the proportion
of our population who attend churches and Sun
day schools, and realize how enormous is the
majority of those who d not attend them, it is
at once apparent that they must be reached by
the printed page, if at all. But how may this be
accomplished?
There is an organization known as the Pocket
Testament League that in twelve years of work
in the United States is showing the way, and
supplementing most efficiently the home mis
sionary work of the churches. It is said that
millions are enrolled in this league, whfch has
distributed its pocket Testaments broadcast with
most inspiring results. The man with one of
th$se handy little books in his pocket or his
room is likely to be drawn to it, and through
it to the religious principles and satisfying faith
which glow in its pages.
During the war 150,000 soldierS and sailors
enlisted in the League, and 68,000 of them regis
tered their acceptance of Christ as their Savior.
The Minister of Shipping in Lloyd George's
Cabinet financed a leader in the work and sup
plied him with 65,000 Testaments while he
worked for two years among "British troops.
With crime coming principally from boys
and men who know nothing of Christ, with more
than half a million youth in Chicago" alone grow
ing up without religious instruction of any kind,
is it not time for friends of Christ and His im
maculate teachings to get bdsy? In Detroitf in
Los Angeles, in various cities, the distribution
of Testaments by this League has had. remark
able results in bringing people to the clean, hon
orable religious life, and is cordially endorsed by
both pulpit afMj press.
It is active now in Canada, England, Aus
tralia, Holland, Korea, Norway, South Africa
and the United States. We can think of no bet
ter act today than personal co-operatin with
the work of the Pocket Testament League.
A Rich Woman's Playthings. j
Last January a rich woman died. She was
the wife of William Rockefeller, a brother of
John D., and her estate was appraised last Mon
day at $3,312,680. She left it all to her husband,
and the public inventory of her possessions gives
us a glimpse of the things a very rich woman
with an independent income, kept about her, for
pleasure and comfort.
Stocks and bonds yielded the income which
supplied her with means to gratify her tastes,
and their value totaled $2,157,714. What we may
fairly call her playthings composed the remain
der of her estate, valued at $1,154,966, Of this
amount $880,712 was cash, the most convenient
and uniformly popular of all things to play with.
She obviously enjoyed keeping an abundant sup
ply of it subject to instant command. Her
jewelry was appraised at $267,739 of which
amount $159,000 was invested in pearls, of which
she must have been very fond. She had four
pearl necklaces worth from $32,000 to $45,000
each, and numbering fjpin 54 to 65 pearls in
each collar. Then there were collarettes,
lavallieres, brooches and bracelets of pearls and
diamonds one three-stone diamond bracelet
being assessed at $4,125.
Her furs and clothing totaled $6,302 and her
silverware $213. Perhaps in this inventory we
hae a fair average of the intimate personal
preferences of women of unlimited means, "whose
husbands provide for them fine homes, pictures,
statuary, motor cars and other household equip
ment. It is easily concluded that pearls out
rank all other jewelry for women of refined
tastes. But alas! fflany women of culture have
not funds to buy pearl necklaces, and must
worry along with diamonds alone.
The Dollar Not a Bigot
Having in mind, perhaps, the performances
of Ponzi, the Boston Transcript preaches an
excellent short discourse on the democracy 61
the dollar. It points out how the alien may
cbme to iour shores and accumulate riches, cit
ing, as illustrations, Etienne Girard, a French
man; A. T. Stewart, an Irishman; Albert Gal
latin, a Swiss, each of whom landed here poor,
if not exactly penniless, and died rich in wealth
and honors. . The Transcript's list might be in
definitely extended. Millions of energetic, indus
trious, thrifty, venturesome and courageous
souls have found in America literally the land
of promise, and out of opportunities here pre
sented have won the reward of comfort or
affluence. These have been accompanied, too,
by the .other sort, venturesome, but lacking in
the sturdier and more desirable virtues, who have
sought and spmetimes secured the "boon without
giving the return of service. Not all such have
come to us from abroad, for we have developed
enough of them on our owm account. Ponzi
is but a type, a Cortez or a Pizzaro born too
late, representative of the large element of
humanity who crave wealth, but scorn the hon
est effort needed to acquire it. They not only
seek to eat their cake and have it, too, but want
a cake of the quality of Prometheus" liver, which
grew at the eagle fed on it They, too, have
their reward, for the dollar is not a bigot; but
the enduring, substantial achievement of the
Girard or the Gallatin is unknown to the Ponzi,
whose brief hour of prominence is usually
quenched in a much longer period of enforced
sequestration. Hoaesty continues the best
mlia ' V , ' :
A Line 0 Type qr Two
Hew to Ih Lis, let ths suite fell wrier then osjr.
. "HOW," a Missouri man asks his favorite j
newspaper, "should corn on the cob be eaten?"
If he will take the trouble" to look through the ;
files of this column in 1901 or 02. we think he
will learn all there is to kriow about eating corn
from the cob. There were plain and fancy
methods, among the latter being the art of leav
ing your initials in relief.
Punctuntlon's Artless Aid.
Sir: From anEnfrltsh catalogue, these
cameos: Hogg (James) Kllmeny with ills. De
Lolme (J. L.) The Constitution of England
broken at Joints. Bowlker (Charles) The Art of
Angrling with bookplate of Rev. Charles Gape.
Groston (James) County Families of Lancashire
and . Cheshire uncut gilt top as new. Whimsi
calities of punctuation by the cataloguer, who re
serves all rights including vengeance upon the
Scandinavians. THE BOOKFELLOWS.
SPEAKING of the farm:r, as" Mr. Roosevelt
was the other Uv, a Kansas editor observes that
"the horny-handed son of toil" gets that way
from steering his motor car.
SUNSHINE AND ROSES AND YOU. '
I know of an old-fashioned garden.
Where pansies and hollyhocks grow,
With poppies as red as the sunset.
And lilies as white as the snow.
The roses bend over the pathway,
The roses climb over tho wall;
And you are the gardener, my darling,
The loveliest flower of them all.
The sunshine is bright in the garden,
And scented end soft is the air,
While,happiness blooms like the roses,
With never a shadow of care.
But should there come sorrow or showers,
And should there come tempest or tears,
The Joy of your presence, my darling,
. Would still fill "with sunshine my years.
As sweet as the rose at yourglrdle,
I woo you with tenderest art:
I'll win you and hold you, my darling,
The treasure and pride of my heart.
My vows shall be sweet as the south wind,
My kisses fall soft as the dew,
And I'll live and I'll love in our garden
With sunshine and roses and you.
IRIS.
DISILLUSIONMENT is the latest literary
wear. Aldous Huxley, at 25, hasn't a single illu
sion left. Then there is that other sophisticated in
fant, Mr. Fitzgerald. What is to become of him?
Like Heifetz, he has no future.
WONDER WHAT THIS OISEAU DID?
(From the Morris, Man., Herald.)
To the Editor: Kindly allow me to make
a public apology in your paper concerning
my conduct, in a game of ball between Emer
son and Morrja. I feel very sorry and
ashamed of myself for losing my hasty tam
per. I could not have been in my right mind
to do Just as I did, to allow such a provoca
tion to make me do as I did. It seems like
a bad dream to me and never will forget it.
In my 24 years of playing I never lost con
trol of myself before. I forgive the player '
who was the cause of my weakness, and
hold no ill will to any one. It will be
better for me to say no more. , ,
1 JIM D. McLEAN.
THE gentleman could not be more regretful
if he had tanked up and punched somebody at
the Lambs' Club.
ON THE OTHER HAND
1 (From the Kansas City Star.)
It Is a tribute both to the game of golf
and to those who play the fact that you
never read of two players getting Into a
brawl over the golf table and hitting each
other on the head with a golf cue. ',
"RAISE Cemetery to Higher Plane Meeting
Results in Demand for Increased Water Sup
ply." Fon du Lac "Reporter.
How about a little good society?
ROMANCE.
Today I rummaged in my mind
And found a little room.
Forgotten long and left behind ' ,
To silence and to gloom;
And there I found & dream of old '
All covered up ih dust,
A shining dream of purest gold
In which I once did trust.
I set my little room to Rights,
Let in the wind and sin,
And later trimmed the shrouded lights
And lit them every one;
And down I sate and read a tale
I had not read for years:'
Of knights and Jousts, and of the Grail,
Of shadowy woods and 'meres. ..-
And. lo! my little room became
A palace far away.
And I therein a soul aflame
In haunts of yesterday.
Encased in mail, with Galahad
1 I rode upon h quest
Forsooth, again I was a lad .
By old Romance possessed.-
LAURA J3LACKBURN.
DURING 1820 Keats published his best
poems and Shelley some of His greatest; Scott
published "The Monastery" and "The Abbott;"
Lamb made his appearance in the London Ma
gazine, and Hazitt issued his lectures on the
Elizabethan drama. We fear that 1920 is not
going to .match that record.
OUR BRIGHT CLASS.
Sir: Our professor of English called our at
tention to one of your Jokes. Of course she did
not have to call my attention to it. STELLA.
AMONG the advertised attractions of At
lanta is the United States Penitentiary, in which
"many more inmates can be accommodated." In
fact, the U. S. P. is the soul of accommodation.
The Diverse Paces of Time.
- Sir: Central Standard Time struggles inef
fectually with Daylight Saving Time; "an hour
before the sun," objected Benvolio. But as "the
finger of a clock runs the great circuit," so may
man's ingenuity overcome his inhumanity; neces
sity's daughter has adjusted for me the fashion
of these times, and why not for others? On my
stairway hangs a cuckoo clock rampant, and
minus its hour hand. Take such a clock on
your pilgrimages, since it accommodates its rec
ord both to Standard and Daylight Saving, and is
correct In either case. Neither Hipparchus nor
Ptolemy, in introducing or extending the Baby
lonian system of parasangs or. hours, ever de
signed such a confusion as now engulfs the trav
eler, as "time travels in diverse paces," and at
last the much abused cuckoo comes into his own.
, ALFRED BULL.
"WANTED Lady to sleep nights for com
pany. Phone 2099," Gary Tribune.
It will not be denied that some of them are
better compajtj1 aaleep tan awake.
HELP YOURSELF TO THE REST.,
(From the Wisconsin State Journal.)
(The person who took'dothing from the
line at 424 No. Lake St. was seen. Return
to front hall in 48 hours and no questions
asked. Front dor. is unlocked.
"ROSE NAGY: v. Steve Nagy; bill for di
vorce." x
The "G" is hard, as in gag.
"RUSSIA is sound at the core," said Elihu
Root what seems a long time ago. Detur
dignissimo. B. L. T.
His .Favorite Joke.
The Turk must cease being a Turk or get
out of Europe again. The Turk is hardened to
being driven, from Europe. Pittsburgh Dis
patch. flot as "Nutty" at That.
Go out to the state hospital, somtimes called
in insane asylum, and not a woman inmate will
be found wearing furs in hot weather. Toledo
Blade.
Right Downtown. i r
"Where do you live in the city close In?"
"Fairly so -30 minutes on foot, IS bymotoi
car, 25 by street car, and 45 by telephone."
Kansas City Star.
The Worm Will Turn.
Holding up the millions for the benefit of the
few is not a healthful sport for profiteers of
either canitaj or labor. Chicago Newly .
, ' . 1 i
NUBS
i v
How to Keep Well
Br DR. W. A. EVANS
Questions concerning hyfieno, sanita
tion and prevention of disease, sub
mitted ta Dr. Evans by reader of
Th Bos, will answered parsonslly,
subject to proper limitations, where
-a stamped, addressed envelop la en
closed. Dr. Evans will not malt
diagnosis or prescribe for individual
diseases. Address letters fat car of
Th Bee.
Copyright, 1920, by Dr. W. A. Evans.
ABOUT WORM MEDICINES.
While there are 'practically no
symptoms 'of worms and most of
the symptons which are supposed to
indicate worms, are unreliable and
misleading, probably the women of
the last generation were right when
they gave their children worm medi
cine about ohoe a year. At least,
they were not far from right when
they gave ordinary American worm
seed. None 'Of the new fangled, im
pcrted worm medicines are equal to
American worm seed, the seed which
grows so abundantly and so widely
in the United States.
Children play on the floor; they
or at least those not able to walk,
use their arms and hands as a means
of locomotion. Putting the hands
into the mouth is instinctive with
the young human animal and no
amount of admonition, or training
ever wholly overcomes the tendency.
Since intestinal worms are swal
lowed as eggs (or occasionally as
young worms) the wonder is that
any child escapes.
The cleaner the floors, the fewer
animals, such as cats, dogs and rats,
there are around, the fewer worms
children have. Many intestinal
worms cause anemia, some do harm
and even endanger life by crawling
into unustial cavities, and some do
harm only by their physical pres
ence. It has, been proved in recent
years that th'e ordinary round worm,
supposed to be the moet harmless
of all worms, penetrates the lungs
and occasionally causes pneumonia.
The eggs of this worm are swal
lowed, pass into the intestines, and
hatch as young worms. These pen
etrate the liver and go on to the
lungs. Tlwy get into the bronchial
tubes, crawl up into the throat, are
swallowed, and lodge in the intes
tines, where they grow to maturity.
It takes the swallowed worm less
than two and a half months to reach
maturity in the human intestine. In
10 days after the eggs are swallowed
the young worms are penetrating
the lungs. ;
Of the various worm medicines,
American worm seed is the best all
round remedy for"the various worms
which infect the human intestine;
fewer are unharmed by worm seed
than any other. For instance, san
tonin, which is used rather more
frequently than any other worm
medicine, is not poisonous to hook
worms and not very poisonous to
round worms. "
In order to rid the Intestines of
round worms ,nrith santonin, as Hall
shows in the American Journal of
Veterinary Medicine, it is necessary
to give it repeatedly. To give it and
keep on giving it will get rid of whip
worms and eventually of round
worms. It is chosen usually because
it i easy to take, does not upset
the stomach, and seldom poisons.
Hall 'tells us that Germany had a
monopoly of santonin before the
war. It is made in only one factory
and that is in Russian TOrkestan,
and for 15 months none has been
put out. But worm seed, a better,
if less pleasaint remedy, is here In
great abundance. ,
Literary Sanction.
Miss M. O. writes: 1. Will an eye
wash consisting of two grains borax
and one ounce camphor water bene
fit eyp that always feel tired, es
pecially after reading half an hour?
1 1 wear -glasses during the day, I
do office work.
-'"2. Is it harmful to rembve hair
from the 'armpits? If not, what is
th best way to remove it?
"3. I perspire tfntier the arms
very much. .Will you please give
me a remedy" , g.
REPLY. ,
1. This Is an old eye wash; one
suggested by Oliver Wendell Holmes
an informant writes me. It Is as
effective as any simple eye wash.
It is probable you need to have your
glasses changed. '
3. Twelty-frve per cent solution
of aluminum chloride dissolved in
distilled water. . Apply cautiously.
' Seems Overweight
G. O. writes:: "My friend's girl
is 12 years of age. She weighs' 110
pounds and is 4 feet 8 Inches in
height. . - x
"1. Would like to knowpeorrect
weight and height.
"2. Would like to know also what
she should do to'educe."
REPLY.
1. The freight of normal 12-year-old
girls varies between 52 andgfio
inches aid the weight between 68
and 94 pounds. Much depends on
the racial and family stock to which
the child belongs1. ,
2. Feed her less. Limit especial
ly candy, sweets, cereals, desserts,
bread and potatoes. ' "
About Feeding Biibies.
Mrs. B. H. W. writes: ."1. Do you
think modified cow's milk is; the
best substitute for mother's milk
when it agrees with the child?
"2. What do you x think of Im
perial Granum? Of pennos? Do
you favor Borden's prepared food?
Why?"
j REPLY.
1. Yes.' 2. All three are good.
When babies are fed on prepared
foods they should be given some
fruits orfruit Juices, vegetable, and
soups in addition.
, r THE .AUTOMOBILE.
T'luirl the world flowed under It; the hill
nil'low on billow of unbr.'iceqas green
'Heaved us, afthsst, to freah horizons, seen
One ranturoua instant, blind with flash
of rills
And sllvpr-riMns; storms, end dwy still
Cf drijpine; boulders, till the dim ravin
t'rewued us again In leafage, whose
serene '
Coverts Kew loud with our tumultuous
wills.
Then all of Nature's old amazement
seemed
Sudden to nsk us: "Is this also tnn? .
This plunging, volant, land-amphlMan
What Plato mused and - Paracetous
dreamed? "
Reply!" And piercing us with, ancient
scan,
The shrill, primeval hawk gazed dffwn
and screamed.
Percy MacKay.
installments
LV. Nicholas oil Company
J
i..- tsitt site nnn.
OF KNOWLEDGE.
the growth since then has been due
to shipyard expansion and a steady
influx of new manufacturing con-
A setting hen in JMttsfleld quit the
Job the day before the chickens were
expected to appc.r, but the woman
who owned the hen substituted a
hot-water bottle and at the ap
pointed time she got 14 chickens out
of 15 eggs.
The transpacific reports that in
London's new postmaster, Mr. C.
Sanderson, who has charge of the
largest postal area in the world, with
something like 35,000 workers under
him, began his career in the sorvico
as a postal clerk 40 years ago.
Frrim a city of 70.447 Inhabitants
in 1841, Belfast has Increased in size
until in 1919 its population was esti
mated at 413,000., In 1911 its popu-
TRY MARMON EASE OF RIDING
MAKE YOUR OWN TES1
Drive any other car 10 miles at good epecd
1 over a rough road.
Then repeat the trip in a Marraon 34.
It will be difficult for you, to believe that in
the Marmon you -have traversed the same
road or have driven as fast.
The name Marmon has always been associ
a.ted in the minds of automobile owners
with "easy riding."
And the reasons for Marmon easy riding are
to be found in the perfect co-ordination of
many factors: light weighty and balance;
superiority of frame construction ; improved
spring suspension ; correct distribution of
weight; minimum of unsprung weight.
In the Marmon 34, each of these important
factors is correctly proportioned with refer
ence to every other part
And the result is instantly apparent in the
surefootcdness with which the car holds the
road, in its freedom from vibration and
immunity to road shocks.
We shall appreciate an opportunity to give
you a demonstration ot wnat "iviarmon
easy riding" really means. .1
'Noroyke & Marmon CpMPANY, Indianapolis, Iniv
Established J851
MARMON" 34
s?i
2019-2025 Fartiam Street
i f
Wsf iwitscK, hailed - ty critics
S Y as one oPtKe- World's 1
dreatet pianists; uses d:lasiveiy
me. Tiason ScHarrJin. ueuTites:
Tarn convinced hat he fonal
gradations' at one's- cvmrnandZroni
a virile hrawra io a uniqaefy
delicate pianissimo, ever singing
and warm ho t only render the
,Aiason &JTamliT pianos 'incom"
varahle, hut also enhance the
scope or music asarart; "
. ' HlgKesfr priced .Highest praised
here are 12 other piano factories' output on our
floors, at prices down to $325. .Selling at our
ONE PRICE
Cash or payment plan.
Used pianos as low as $175. At $2.50 per week
M4i
; WrfantfSlusio
1513 DOUGLAS STREET.
The Art and Music Store.
and much of
a further endeavor to arouse in tho
farmers of the. Philippine Islands a
true appreciation of the possibilities
of agricultural niaohiisBfy. the Phil
ippine Department or Agriculture
and Natural resources plans to util
ize moving pictures to demonstrate)
the most approved niethods of cul
tiv.'iUon, prepuration bf seed, use of
fann machinory, harvesting and
storing cropH, and methods of pack
In? and handling where these proc
esses are involved.
Phone Douglas 1712
GIRLS! GIRLS!
Clear Your. Skin
Save Your Hair
' a
MCIITICIM
Make these fragrant super
creamy emollients your
every-day toilet prepara
tions and have a clear
sweet healthy .skin and
complexion, good hair and
soft white hands, with
little trouble and trifling
expense. Absolutely noth
ing better, purer, sweeter:
at any price.
rCuticura Toilet Trio
Constating of Coticura Soap to cleanse and
purify, Cutieura Ointment to tooth ami
often, and Curtain Talcum to powder and
perfama. promote and maintain akin parity,
skin comfort and akin heakh often when all
elM I semi to fail. ETerywbere 76c each.
Sam pes each free by mail. AtHtmr fallisaa
Labotaaatiaa, Dasrt. J, Maiden, Mass.
Wiaticara Soap ami withes sasa.
Money back without sjiMseeet
Sherman a McConnall Drue Ca.
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