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THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, MAY 24, 1920. The Omaha Bee . DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THE BKE PUBLISHING COMPANY, KELSON B. UPDIKE. Publiahtr. MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tha AiaoriAUd I'r ol which Th Km i. a mmiim la Ihul.eir MitHJed to tht um for imblltaUoa of all nw dlipatolua era dlttd to It or not otrnrwiat endltad In tbla paaar, and aim ttn inoai nfw, ruDiiNwo nmin. All rtibia of publleauaa ol out acacial " f BEE TELEPHONES Print Branek Biebanja. AU for Uia T"l 1 nu Dapamnanl or Particular Panon Wanted. iylCr iUW Far Nifht and Sunday Sanrica Call I IMitnrtt! Dapartnuit Tyt 10MI. ClroulaUno Dvpartmmt ' Trior 100t, Adrtrtlaiat Dapanm.nl .......... Tjlat 10ML OFFICES Or THE BEE Boom Offlot: 17th and Taroaab Branch offiOMt 4110 North ltu I Boutn Slda nil K ft. IS BooU St. I Walnut lit North 4Mb JBlB liTiwcrn i . Out-ol-lown Officaai Vtw Tori Offloa SU drib A?a. Waanlniton CiouncU Bluff! t Park ChloafO 1311 a m. Btofar Bids. Paru Pranoa ISO Bua St.. Honor. The Bee's Plqtform 1. NaW Union Paiaengar Station. 2. A Pip Line from tha Wyoming Oil Field to Omaha, t 3. . Continued improvement of the Ne braska Highway, including tha pare. ,' ment of Main Thoroughfare leading l.fn rim.k. with Rrirlr Snrfar n A short, low-rate Waterway from the Corn Belt to the( Atlantic Ocean. 5. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. GOOD NEWS-FROM ABROAD. The president of the Baldwin locomotive works, Samuel M. Vauclain, is home from Eu rope with a message. He urges the immediate Recall of all the United States commissioners who are "trying to show the people of Europe how to run their countries," under the advice of the Wilson administration. He Wants them all brought back home and put to work, and public sentiment is quite likely to concur with nis. Air. vauciain says: Call them back, call them all back. The people of Europe have had the good sense to put at the head of their affairs men as smart as anyone could wish for. I know that from close personal observation as a business men. They don't need the help of any office boys. Call them all back, I say, with the excep tion of the military commissioners, who have some business to be there. Get them' home quickly, and make them do tome real, useful work. We need everybody here to speed up production and bring down the cost of living. The people of Europe are smart enough to know that you can't get production without work. Consequently, they work. The foregoing remarks are presumably di rected toward Woodrow Wilson, whose med dling agents these commissioners are. Mr. Vau clain says they "simply overrun Europe" good democrats in fat jobs and he know cf nothing they are doing except sending borne reports that Europe is starving, which is not the truth. He continues: , Food is plentiful everywhere. I saw no body starved or starving anywhere. I saw no one who was not clothed decently. The prospects for the crops are excellent. Let me say now once and for all that nobody need to worry about Europe so far as food and otner direct necessities are concerned, wnat ' they want is transportation facilities and ma chinery, and I, for one, am going to see that i they get them. These are the wlords of a big executive, just home from a successful business trip a man who sees a long continuation of business pros i perity for America. "Nobody need be alarmed," ; he says. " "There is not the slightest fear of a panic. We are better off in many ways than all other countries of the world. All we need to do , is to keep cool have confidence, roll up j our sleeves and go to work. I was at this desk at 8 o'clock1 this morning." . This cheerful worker further declares that Americans are not being discriminated against abroad, that fair business men from this side are received with open arms, that tourists encounter no unusual dangers, that diseases are not preva lent, that law and order are restored, and that, they know their business over there. Concludr ing, he says: "If you want to know something of the real conditions in Europe, go yourself " and don't send your office boy," which, also , ieems to be directed toward the White House. We have not read anything for a long time BDOut tne countries lately at war so reassuring, jso obviously common sense, based on impartial observation, as the words we have quoted from this man of high repute in the business world. We would trust what he says against the report jof any political commission from the U. S. Gov ernment now in Europe at public expense seek ing some excuse for their presence there and for their continuation as tax-spenders. The con tempt for them all expressed by Mr. Vauclain is What; everyjbusiness men feels for the paid poli ticians who have meddled with business at home as these commissioners are meddling abroad. ' The busybodies of the Wilson administration, from top to bottom; have been a blight on every branch of industry they have touched. any presidential candidate who respects Wil son's views." . ' It is a stunning blow to the .prestige of the White House autocrat, a jarring impact from a clenched fist on the )it of the administra tion, with the heart of the south behind it. i Following tha Murder of Carranza. The cruel and treacherous assassination of Venustiano Carranza, at the. hands of followers he believed to be loyal and with whom he had cast his lot in an endeavor to escape the exultant rebels who had driven him from the capitol, puts a delicate tinge on the Mexican problem. The virtuously indignant outburst of Alvaro Obre gon will not lessen an impression that the latest president of Mexico is a victim as much to be deplored as was Francisco Madero. As an epi sode in Mexican history, it may have import ance, illuminating in some degree the character of those with whom we are expected to peal. What will be the course pursued at Wash ington? When Madero was slain recognition was specifically denied Hucrta because of his supposed connection with the crime. Is it pos sible now to except Obregon and extend him a boon denied one of his predecessors? Fol lowing the Huerta precedent, the answer would be no, , but Mr. Wilson modified his position later when he declared in favor of allowing the Mexicans to settle their affairs in their own way. He manifestly indulged at 'the time the hope that Carranza would be able to so adjust matters in his country as to bring peace and prosperity. In this our president was disap pointed. Carranza not only did not bring peace to Mexico, but he increased the occasion for irri tation and distrust on our side of the border by his unconcealed enmity to all things American. His antagonism took many forms, from his in triguing with the German junkers to his annoy ance of Americans domiciled in Mexico. His attempts at reforming the land laws and in other directions were all based on his anti-American disposition, and for that reason proved largely ineffectual. Obregon, on the other hand, has always pro fessed warm friendship for the United States. This is said to have been the reason for the split between hint and the man he established as president six years ago. His own control of the country for thetime must be that of dictator, and so presents a problem that may be embar rassing at Washington. One thing is apparent. A . strong, efficient government is needed in Mexico, and it will not be obtained until the United States can find some reasonable way of assisting in its estab Key to the President's Policy. "There's a lot of bunk about this plan busi- !. . ........ ness, says Air. uanieis, somewnat testuy, out very truthfully, so far as his administration of the Navy department is concerned. Indeed, his comment may be applied to the entire Wilson administration, lasting over seven, somewhaf eventful years. ' The president himself announced a "watch ful waiting" policy at the outset of his executive career, and Aas pursued it with tenacity and consistency. Not only has he omitted to plan anything himself, but he has frowned on any one else who 'did. Two members of his cabinet tried it, Garrison and Lansing, and both failed. Josephus Daniels has not been suspected of it, nor Newton D. Faker, least of all in connection with the war. Month after we were in, the secretary of war complacently announced that it was ."3,000 miles away " so why get excited. The Navy department did not pretend to adopt any plans until three months after we had been engaged as a putative combatant. Why make plans? Plans predicate prudence, and prudence suggests expectancy, and expect ancy implies suspicion, and how sijjy it is to show distrust of the future when war impends! It belies prescience, and whwas there to deny the all-enfolding foresight and intimate knowl edge of past, present and future, possessed by the president? So we have muddled along, not only through the .war, but before and after. Not a problem has arisen for which the remedy was' ready; not an emergency for which there was any preparation; not a crisis that had been even remotely anticipated. .Mr. Dauiels is right Plans are all bunk. "Motley is the only wear." A Line 0' Type or Two Haw to tin Lias, M tha sulpt (all wkort the mtj. Oregon Jolts the White House. ( On the face of feturns so far received, George Chamberlain is renominated as demo cratic candidate for United States senator from Oregon. v This is another direct jolt to the ,White House and the League of Nations. Presi- "rli.nr Wilson's recent messsc to Chairman Ha. maker of the Oregon democratic state commit tee was, an open demand that Chamberlain be 'denied a renomination, because of the disfavor into which he had fallen with the executive. ,The League of Nations covenant was dragged in as the pretext, but back of that is the feud which broke out openly in 1917, when Senator Chamberlain, as chairman of the senate's mili tary affairs committee, took issue - with the president on the conduct of the war. In asking that the citizens of Oregon1 endorse tha League of Nations by voting against Chamberlain, Mr. Wilson also sought the' destruction of a demo crat who has been independent of the White House whip. The answer returned by the vot ers.is in line with that given in Georgia and Nebraska. , , Georgia on the March. Georgia leads the south, no longer solid, from the caves and 'gloom of Wilsonian inter nationalism out into the sunshine of American independence. She has struck the fetters rom her wrists and emerged into freedom by the action of the dominant party of the state, led by Senator Hoke Smith and Tom Watson, in a finish fight against Wilson's policies and, federal office-holders. - Clark Howell, editor of the Atlanta Consti tution, was hustled off the national committee by the state convention,, and Georgia demo crats are on the march to San Francisco bearing a banner with this strange device: "No third term for Wilson; no League of Nations cove nant such as Wilson advocates; no approval of ; Rotten "Psychology." Dr. Hall of New York, talking psychology last Sunday to an audience of women, told them that within fifteen years married life on the" Fannie Hurst-Jacques Danielson 'plan will be the common thing. "Within ten years," he said, "the so-called non-conventional marriage will be the rule in France, Belgium and even Eng land." All because of "the growing desire of men and women everywhere for a larger degree of freedom, which they believe is denied them under present conventions." Stuff and nonsense! Marriage will stand the strain of all attacks on its "conventions," which, it should be remembered,- are the accepted standards ol conduct which clean society , has found necessary because of the vagaries of that unsafe element which would throw down all standards that protect wholesome community life. , FIRST IMPRESSION'S. When first I saw the crescent moon Peep at me from on high, 1 I thought it was God's finger nail He'd flung Into the sky. K. DeM. THAT may have been one of Galsworthy's first impressions. Somewhere he speaks ot i moon as thin as the paring of a nail. . A FELLOW FEELING MAKES, ETC.- . I Sir: Driving down the Boul with my mother In law. I was hitting It up pretty lively. At the bridge Bill Dineen stopped rr. "What's the. Idea of all the speed?" said he. "Why." I ex plained, "I am taking my mother-in-law to the 9:15 train, an" "Drive on " said Bill. CAV, THE birds are -busy building, the lilacs are opening, the cherry is nung v(ih snow, and the lawn is. a mass of gold. All of which reminds us that "Willard Bloom is a landscape architect in Peoria. ' ) ' AIN'T HE THE FRESH THING, MAME? rSYnm 'tha Hfnllna ninnatrh.l Wanted Stenographer. Must know how to soell at least as well as a third-grade pupil. Do not want the singing or whistling kind. If you can run a typewriter and take dictation you do rot need to know how to play the piano. We go out socially now and then, so you will not be interested In hearing about ' where you were last night or where you are going tonight. A good place to work and good pay for good work. Address T-3. "As a club, we aim to abide by the law, and submerge our inclinations for the public good. Board of Directors, Westmoreland Club. 1 What do you mean submerge? Hein? Prblem of Conduct. Sir: Called on a retired farmer today. Tbs front door was opened cautiously by his missus, who directed me toward the barn. Arriving with reluctant feet where the pigs and chickens eat, I found him beneath the IVd, lying prone on his back. (Cannery 1,475) and busied with repairs. Keeling about as welcome as a daschund in a French kennel, I was about to retrace my steps when I spied a flash of Kentucky "anti-collapse" resting on the running board of the car. Would you send back the cork? J. F. B. "I DO not understand why chasms have the yawning habit," writes F. B. T. i No? Did you never hear, the chatter of thf tourists on the rim of the Grand Canyon? NOT OPEN TO CONVICTION. From the Knox, Ind., Democrat. . Will the fanatic who Is mailing me Seventh Day Adventist literature please sit up and take notice. 'Better save your postage money for your church donation or personal use, as the literature is put In the Ore as soon lis the wrap per Is removed. Don't be a mangy yellow cur. Mrs. Jennie Myers. , v The Press Bulletin of the .University of Wis consin reports that the farmers of Juneau county have ordered 30 carloads .of limes. Perhaps Major Dalrymple had better look into this. OLD Walt Mason writes us that he has es tablished himself in La Jolla. Anybody who has lived as long in Emporia as Walt deserves a few years of La Jolla. Give our regards to mine hbst, of the Cabrillo. THIS CONTRIB SUPPLIES TH.E HEADING. Sir: I offer the following: False Teeth, Perhaps: "San Francisco, May 17. Several haber dasheries announced material decreases In men's furnishings exclusive of clothing." M. A. C. G. What Is the Dernier Gri in House Paint? I From the Kankakee Republican. . Auditor Edgeworth, of the 3-1, Is having his residence, corner of Oak street, Chicago avenue, painted a fashionable color. v "WANTED Men who can devote part time or all day." Classified ads. All day would cut into their vaudeville o ing, but perhaps they could spare two or thtee hours. ' WITHERING SARCASM. Sir: Of all the nuts, the nuttiest are those who lay down hard and fast rules for art In gardening; and among these rules none Is more absurd than the dictum that red may not bd "tolerated. As I remarked to a charming resi dent of Mackinac, who complained that all her k zinnias had come up red and she had to destroy them, because she could not bear this color in her garden: Fortunately, madam, for those who still look at women's faces, you have not yet banished It from your boudoir.' And tell me, do you have a sign up by the bird bath reading: 'Cardinals Not Allowed." " SEED CLERK. IRISH & GREEN are .dentists in Fort Dodge No; strange to say, they are Nor wegians. THE SUNSET LADIES. The sunset ladles dance across the sky With many a sinuous bend and sudden whirl , Of orange-gold sun veils; while like a pearl, The pallid moon stands, disapproving, by. BERTHA TEN EYCK JAMES. "$400,000 Fire braws Crowd in Peoria." Headline. Probably turned 'em away. OPPORTUNITY AND THE MAN. - s Sir: Over a little restaurant in Arkansas: "Now Is the time,, This is the place, I ' . To wash your hands v And feed your face."( E. GEE. . The Cause, Indeed. From the Milwaukee Sentinel. With the exception of the carpenters, all the men In the building trades in this city were called out on strike, the cause being higher wages. YOU'LL HAVE TO CALL FOR IT. Sir: Well, if you must have Intimate details, I turn niany a hair. That Is, many a hair of mine turns and re-enters my .neck. Please pass the apricot brandy. I My ablest contrlbs make me write heads for their stuff, too. F. P. A.' A HATFUL QF LANGUAGE. Sir: F. Scott Fitzgerald in the Sat: Eve. Post: "They waited Impatiently for the three, bent figures to move off, and then she kissed him until the sky seemed to fade out and all her smiles and tears to vanish In an ecstasy of eternal seconds." , ' , B. K. AS USUAL. Sir: "Assails Girls' Beach luita," says a headline. Much ado about nothing. . 'CALCITROSUS. THE Hoover boomers are by way of want ing a campaign song. In a pinch, "clover" will do for a rhyme. B. L. T. le o thlei A Disgusting and Heartless Sport Stung to anger by painful attacks, a bull has killed a famous toreador of Spain, whose end, a cable says caused more'emotion in a people who love the sight of blood and violent death than is caused by the passing of a king or pope. The tragedy occurred on a Sunday night, when the cruel sport of bull fighting had drawn a vast throng to the arena. For once a dumb brute was able to avenge the death of his fellow creatures by laying low a professional destroyer of life, an expert in the cruel and revolting sport which has been for generations as popular in Spain as baseball is in America. It is hard for gentle people to understand the Spanish love for the' sickening and abhor rent) tortures of thevbull fight. Mr. Wilson promises to give us the "inside" story of tfte Paris conference. It ought !to be worth reading, if he tells everything. Espe cially how he came to concede Shantung and balk at Fiume. 1 : Chicago also' found a lot of sugar dodging around in box cars. Maybe in time the shortage will be relieved. The Mexico. "ley del fuge" is mighty potent in The backbone or winter is softening. How to Keep Well vBy Dr. W. A. EVANS Soattlona concoralog brfUno, taal an and prevention of dlaeaaa, aub mlttad to Dr. Evan by roadera of Tha Bo, wUI be anawered personally, anil Ject to proper limitation, where a atamped, addreaaed envelope fa en. cloaeJ. Dr. Kvana will not mnka dlacnoala or preaoribo for Indlvldnal dlMaaea. Addreee letter In rug of Ih Boa. Copyrlt-ht, 1110, by Dr. W. A. Evan. Ote VELVET oyjirtfiur -Brooks aker mJ WILLIAM HERBERT WHEELER. When clangs the gong along the street and sparks are flying high, and fireworks from your happy home illuminate the sky; when friends and fellow citizens pour in from every turn and urchins flock in sheer delight to see your shingles burn; when firemen couple up the hose and loose the tardy squirt, and folks congratu late you that you got out with your shirt It's rather late to think about your fire in surance then, but this is still the method oft pursued by sons of men. You think of William Wheeler and the arguments he said, the tears which his assistants sometimes seemed about to shed because you played your line of luck against the odds of chance, neglecting the pre caution of insuring in advance. , But fire is not the only thing with which you take a risk. The ills of fate are up to date, their work is brief and brisk. Some unreflective working man whose brain is in ,his heel may have a fruitful argument wtih counter shaft or wheel; a chauffeur full of one per cent your happiness may mar by running for his private joy your swellest motor car. ' .From these and many other risks of every sort and kind will William Herbert Wheeler free your big, expensive mind. He sells insur ance which will lift the worry from your chest and make your night a sleep of tight, refined, unbroken rest Psychologists assure you that suspense and worry kills, so who shall say we should not pay discreet insurance bills? . Next Subject:, Robert F. Gilder. ' ' CANCER WHAT GOES BEFORE. ' Cancer nearly always gives warn ing. Rarely does It come like light ning from a clear sky. In practical ly every case there is some sign by wnicn a man may know thut cancer is on the. way and at a time when cum ia certain ana easy. ua imiueai 01 an cancers are those of the skin, particularly those which come on the face of elderly people. They start in scaly patches, scabs, senile warts and growths of mac cnaracter. The rule Is that such growths are present ror months or years before they become malignant. They can db easuy cleaned up with X-rays, ra oium, or carbonic acid snow. If such growths 1 become malignant, they develop mild, easily cured can cers except where they have been rjaaiy neglected or wrongly .treated. The cancers which develop .from moles, on the oher hand, are very malignant. The time to look after such potential cancers Is before they occur, because of their great malig nancy once the change has com about. The moles with hairs are less dangerous than the hairless kind. The mole to look out for is the one located where It is subject to irritation as from the razor in shav ing or from rubbing by the collar or some other clothes band. While not one mole in a thousand will de velop into cancer, it is good judg ment to remove all moles which are subject to repeated trritations. Birthmarks . and wens rarely serve as a basis for cancer ' In a bulletin on "The Early Di agnosis of Cancer," E. A, Martin of the University of Missouri . says 2 per cent of all the. skin diseases treated by members , of the Ameri can Cermatologlcal association are cancers. Cancer of the lip is always pre ceded by small ulcers, cracks or blisters, which persist for months. If smoking is the cause a small, dark brown, depression at the area where the cigar or pipe Is held pre cedes the , cancer for several moflths. Iu cancer of the mouth there is a history of some forerunner. Oft times it is a sore area due to a sharp corner on a tooth, or a brok en tooth, or a badly fitting plate, something which the dentist could have remedied easily. Or it may be a pipe burn or one of the hard white patches called leukoplakia. Cancer of the breast starts as a lump. The lump is there for months before any pain or other certain indication of cancer develops. Mar tin says that every woman who no- tines a lump in her breast should bo 'operated on at once unless She is under 20 years of age or is breast feeding a baby. The first incision should expose the tumor. If this shows it not to be cancer, a very simple operation suffices. If it Is cancer, the breast should be removed. Cancer of the gall bladder and liver generally starts with gall stones. Not all people ith gall stones 'Suffer from attacks of gall stone colic. This violent attack of pain results from the tearing qf the stone as it tries to escape from the gall bladder. . There are gall bladder oancers due to gallstones which give no his tory of gall bladder colic, and oth ers In which there , were attacks at one time, but they stopped because the stones got too large to try to escape. Where there is a history dt gallstones there should be opera tion to do away with the danger of gall bladder cancer in later life. George Was No Piker. The intimation of the Joint con gressional printing committee that Oeorge Creel "craved the limelight" Is absurd. What George wf.nUu wa3 place in the sun. Macon Tele graph. ' . Inheritance in Nebraska. Sargent, Neb., May 18. To the Editor of Tha Bee: It is Indeed gratifying to read such editorials as "Maids, Wives and Husbands" (April SO) and "Defrauding Our Wives" (May 9.) You are to be com mended for having the courage to speak up. Keep the ball rolling. Right you are not until they go where they cannot take it with them are husbands in the habit of giving the worthy wife a share of the property she hasneipea mm ac cumulate.' I . It is humiliating to the intell! gent wife to contemplate inheriting from her husband as ir sne were nis child what is rightfully hers; yet the widow's third, say 14,000, for exam pie, la just $4,000 more than noth Ing atd as a wife, she possesses nothing, so she is the more humili ated' by the thought that if she sltould die first she dies a pauper. Nothing to will as her conscience dictates, no estate to be settled by law. To illustrate Mr. ard Mrs. P. marry yourtg, both work hard and manage well, rear a family, have a fine farm and a competence, live well. Mr. P. died. Three grown children inherit two-thirds. Mrs. P. inherits one-third. Her Income being insuf ficient, this wife, mother, grand mother, was obliged to rent her home to strangers and go out nurs ing for a living and made the re mark she had never worked harder in her life. Mr. and Mrs. E. -marry young, both work hard and manage well. rear a family, have a fine farm and a competence, live well. Mrs. E. died. Three grown chil dren inherit nothing. Mr. E. still owns three-thirds He soon marries a widow who has one child (dis pensing with the housekeeping of his own daughter who seeks employ ment elsewhere), and provides for them luxuries, where his own fam ily had been content with humbler things, and because his children re sent the injustice he tells them that if they get "too smart" they never shall get a dollar of his money. (His money Includes the fruits of over 30 years of their mother's hard labor and self-denial for "our chil dren," and also the money she in herited from her patents, a part of which was used to rebuild1 the house on her husband's farm, the family home.) Here we note two ideal American families; in both cases the. women were devoted entirely to home-making; from choice they tried to make one dollar -do the work of two be cause they were interested in saving for a competence in old age and something left for the children the splendid wife and. mother type we read about in obituaries. Both men were the good-provider, indul gent husband and father, honorable In dealing' with their 'fellow-men, sort. In the eyes of the law of Nebraska neither of these men have defraud ed theVwoman whp devoted the best years of her life to his interests The Nebraska property-laws are Considered liberal for the married woman, because, it may be truthfully nald that the laws of descent treat husband and wife alike. This state ment Is misleading because the un written law handed down from the old English common law decrees that the joint earnings and savings of husband and wife belong in the husband's name. Husbands are apt to feel abused if the wife declines to- give him the money she has on hand when they are married. It Is not enough that she give up her salaried Job and work for her board and clothes the rest of her life; she must! make a complete surrender ot her independence by giving into his keeping the savings ot years previ ous to her marriage. Marriage would look more invit ing to the capable woman if our law be made to define all property acquired by Joint (effort of husband and wife after marriage, except by gift, as common property; husband and wife having equal testamentary rights over common property; chil dren inheriting from father and mother in like degree. (Mrs.) LIZZIE MIGHELL MORRIS". , TRADE "BUSINESS IS GOOD THANK YOlf K your 5 il niov a real treat for your nest break fast laying JBRSEYte the original thick flaJies and "J2.eam the JereeyDifference! SOI! -B LY Nicholas oil Company .A. More Nourishing and Costs Less Than Potatoes G ooch's BEST Macaroni Delicious Flavor Sold in The Best Stores "V "AMERICA'S BEST ROOFING" LAID RIGHT OVER THE OLD SHINGLES COMES IN ROLLS LOOKS LIKE TILE CASTING T Mm 1 ' . COSTS LESS THAN A SHINGLED ROOF STOPS ALL LEAKS ECONOMICAL RAINPROOF-SUNPROOF-WINDPROOF Easily and Quickly Laid Over the Old Roof, Making Double Thickness Not Necessary to Tear , Qff Your Old Shingles. PERMANENT AND ATTRACTIVE TILE DESIGN Natural Green or Red Slate. . Ask us for an estimate of cost SUNDERLAND BROTHERS CO. Omaha. Nebraska HAVE A CARPENTER MEASURE YOUR ROOF Artcraft has a positive guaranty if applied according to the simple 1 Entire Third Floor . specification printed on each roll. g 17th and Harney Sts.