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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 26, 1921)
ma una: omaha. Monday, September 2C, 1021. TheQmaha Bee Mat iMOiniVOf-KVCMNG-fcUNUAY THE 9H rCPtlaUIINti COUrNY kcuum v crsiKK. rMiM MtMBC Of TMC ASSOCUTCO fHISS fi. tmmvmm Vmm turn M , M s tw M aw sis MM am "on rf nvuMiMtua af Of iMMM " MM 1. Mi mm tf i Afct Imn Cm latl.ac It MKItMtW M tMw w.u. sec TBicnioNcs STKSS 'JTr. itS AT Untie 1000 r Night cn a i p. m. UHmid BM(MM . T tsar IMt M 1011 ortKti Of TMC III mm K. I Im sSI Vr Mr Mr imwi Oirt.e.Te. (Mlbe Km tan) ! I 1111 (I M. Ul ffnalay U I ran rr., M In K ktoawt The Bee's Platform t. New Vfoa Pmmii ti. 2. O.tln.ad' i.rprvsae.t f th. Ne fcraah. Highways, iacfooTiag lb p.v MM .1 Mate TWrNfMirM ) ' bit OmmIm rtt a Brka Swtim.. 3. A short, few-rat. Waterway r"r. tb Car. Belt I la Atlmtl. Oca. 4. Hm Rata Chart far ObmIm, with City Maaagar .ran of Genera-sent. English Language for Nebraska. Admitting all that has been said in favor of teaching a foreign language to the children of parents who ih fheiti t learn another besides the language of the country in which they live, it yet rcmaint trim that instruction in the Ne braska public school should be in English. Judge Button, in his decision1 holding the Nebraska language law unconstitutional, gave the very best reason for upholding that law w hen he said: The soul of a people is reflected in the language they oeak." No question will be made of hi. further state ment that possession of a working knowledge of a language wilt give an insight into the life of the people who habitually and naturally use it; nor that acquisition of a foreign tongue tends to broaden the mind. Yet the point is that the law that prescribes the English language was made necessary by the fact that in Nebraska children were and arc growing up in ignorance of the English language. At this time the Douglas county authorities are holding as a witness a girl 19 years old, who was born and reared in 'Ne braska, who is unable to read or write English, and has only a limited conversational use of the language. How can one such as she have any idea of the soul of America?, , ' The language law does not strike at religion, nor education; it sets no limit on culture, nor does it interfere with the privilege of acquiring one or many other tongues. It merely and properly requires that a child be given instruction in the fl-1ih Jant-uaae that it will have full ability to take part in the ordinary affairs of life in the United States and will not be forced to seek a foreign language in whieit to receive the knowledge It should have of what is going on in the tandjvhere it lives, v We are. waiting to hear ' - Tanan T wtlttncr for "lnnreuinn. , One of the outstanding facts in connection with the armament conference is that the Jap anese are not approaching the meeting with the frank Openness, that might be helpful, France flatly says that disarmament on land will be Ap proached only when guaranty is given for pro tection against a revived Germany or combina tion of Russia and Germany. It may be ppssible to soothe this feeling, ahd convincethe' French their, apprehensions are undue. England conjes four-square with the United States in an earnest desire to reduce armament. Japan, however, con tinues '.to! send out conflicting reports as to Its aims'sind aspirations, always leaving the infer ence that Its statesmen hope to secure a real bar gain at Wasliliigtoii. : v ' ' x .'-In appealing to the league of nations on' the 'matter' of Yap, against-the claim of the United States, setting up that the question has been settled, Japan overlooks the fact that the presk. dcilt of the,United State 4 formally protested against the award of Yap to Japan, and that this government has. never 'assented to the mandate. As ouc of the.Aictors, the United , States has a right iitdct-ermining the disposal of territory taken . front Gerniaity that can not be abrogated by action of a body that did not exist when the victory avss won. and of which this nation is not a mcniacr. 4' Insistence' of possession "under the circumstances is not merely assertion of a justifi able claim, but hiore in the way of holding to a trading point oit. whichi some other concession may be "Won. ''-' . ;" - -A similar course, of deduction may be applied to the announced determination of the Japanese government to maintain its settled plan for national defense Permission to go ahead in Siberia ' might, easily operate to modify this policy ;in fact, the whole program sent out from Tokio 'appear to be something like a price-list, with quotations subject to change without notice. The Japanese arc persistent rather than astute, iu their diplomacy. "' , sr fotnrf td a.xtr.giK, liwfncicncy and wanton aruJi f the rights and needs of the citisens art (uUo4u each other day by day, Vhn New York City rejected Mayor Mitchell for Ifylan it iccatstJ to license Tammany control, but it ap ptr that.the authority for bad government is in daogrr oPtxkig withdrawn. Motor Tourista and Omaha. Many highways lead to Omaha, making it eenfer of automobile tourist travel 'The con cm of the Automobile club over lack of suit aula actipnimodation for motor campers accord ingly welt, in point. Scarcely any of the motoring parties wbae way lies through this city pan on without .topping. Most of them ei.it the shops and other places of business, spending money at well as time on their halt The hnpfska Omajta makes on them will in many in-fauce have something to do with the Dame and fame of tbe city. Tb hospitable welcome of a ctcan and con venient tocrKt park is one of the bct adver tisements Omaha could have. Some of these vbitors arc driving across the continent, others are from 'cities or states nearer by. Almost all are tired and dnity.' In Elm wood park and at KivcTriew park the city has provided' space for teuu, but little more. There is some firewood available for cooking, . but water and other sanitary conveniences are too distant. A tour ist park should have a camping ground thor onghly sanitary, protected from flooding in rainstorms, and perhaps even with tubs at which a few garments could be washed. Cross-country motor travel is growing in volume each year. There are some who wel come the luxuries of a hotel along the way, but of the others, some 4ack the means and some simply prefer the out-door life and take their chances on finding a pleasant spot on which to camp. There ought to be no discouragement put in ok way of these adventurers. Travel, whether by rail or by road, is broadening; it is good for the man from the east to meet with and understand life in the west, and for all others to see parts of the country with which they have been unfamiliar. Many smaller cities and towns in Nebraska have better equipment in tourist parks than Omaha, ami in every part of the country com munities, gfeat and small, are devoting thought and care tt providing hospitality of this sort for their temporary guests. It may be that the park board does not feel able to make an appro priation for this purpose. Something, however. must be done before next vacation time comes. It might be well worth the while of public spirited business men to raise a fund for, this purpose, or the levying of a nominal fee on campers in return for complete comfort and convenience might even be considered. AjtertheAVar Production Control and Distribution One -Problem Not Yet Fully Solved. (Prom the Boston Transcript) Control of production and distribution on a national and int rnatioual scale is apparently one of the dcvck'i ents arising Irom the world war and the worlu wide economic dcprmioii follow ing the war. Such control, with tin minimum of governmental direction and the maximum of public service motive on the part of private agen cies, should help to bring about that industrial stability which is the goal of far-seeing business statesmen. During the lant few mouths signifi cant developments in this field have taken in two Industries, automotive manufacturing and rubber production. What the ultimate cticcts will be, time alone can tell. But the tendencies thus re vealed are most interesting. In one case the suggestion of stabilized dUtrihution comes from the United States Department of Commerce; in the other, from an organization of industrial leaders themselves. Up to very recently, American manufacturers of motor cars and. the line of products described by the word "aiftomotive" have concentrated their attention chiefly on Great Britain as a mar ket. A year and a half ago the British demand How to Keep Well f DR. W. A. EVANST QiMttiMM Mwamlnt kytM. tMutaliaa aravnlUa at iiM, tukaillt4 to Dr. Evaaa ay rWt af Taa U k aair4 prrtHf. auaiwl a ra limiiat.o. wkwa a uhm aa?S aavaUaa t mmIm Dr. Ems will Ml aufcr. a alaM mar araMrlaa lav laaivtaua! Simni. AaarMt aUs ta aua al Taa Sm. OrrlsM. lift, ar Dr. W. A, . SURGEON LEARNS FROM NATURE. I hava baan Interested and edifled by a rwraadina of a book Untied nearly twrlva yaara ago by a aur aeon Atumlinf aomu of tha grent I.mlon rn.iiuunir wiiiiam ii l; nnett. It hua to do with frncturea nrnt upralna and the management of Miff JolntB gnraHy. While it la frankly apactnl ploud In, tt la Interesting and provocative neverthelraa. It la written tr aur geona and moaeur, but It haa an appeal to the Inlty. since aurgeona dnra not run too far contrary to pub lic opinion. Sir William call nur attention to the good reaulta following frarturca of the tionaa of wild animal where no Immobilizing of the bonea haa been posiiibl. Also to the rood re- Tammany af Bay. . It begins to look bad for Tammany in the New York City campaign. The struggle for good government, Which is to say, the fight on the , Timrnanjr machine, deserves ,the attention of the country, and not only because of the in fluence of this outfit !n national politics. . Mayor Hylan, uuder whom municipal affairs not once were lifted from the status of gang politics, is being hard pressed by Maj. Henry H. Curran, the forceful .candidate of the coalition of good government forces who won his nomination in the republican primaries. It is interesting to note that in the primary election ' a candidate who stood for lax enforcement of the prohibition laws rgn a bad third. This rejection of a com promise with law violation would indicate rather more of moral purpose than some of the reform campaigns in the metropolis have had. Although the semblance of a party fight is maintained, party lines have broken down com pletely in this fight With his 5 short planks Mr. Curran haa drawn men from the ranks of both major parties. Home rule and 5-cent fares are the bait used by Tammany, neither of which is in it power to give. Tbe breaks are going against Hylan now. The mistake of the police in breaking np crowds of unemployed men who were being fed in a perk, revelations that the police commissioner had aaceived gifts from a millionaire, whom he apfCnted a deputy, ex-, Milk For Example. There is nothing particularly new in the dis closure that Douglas county farmers are receiv ing only 2 or 3 cents' a quart for milk which costs the Omaha housewife 11 or 12 cents, cx cept that the margin between producer and con sumer is somewhat more disproportionate than n many other lines. Nor is there anything new in the reason for this disparity, as related by the milk dealer, nasaely, the high cost of han dling the product, including transportation, in spection, refrigeration and wasteage. The same situation exists in the marketing of other prod ucts and the same reason is assigned. The, fact is that we arc suffering from an excess of organization. Civilization advances at least so we persuade ourselves to believe- but as it advances it takes on new complica tions. It accumulates innumerable frills,' some designed for the general, good of society, some for the, good of particular members of. society, but all effective in increasing the gap between the beginning and the end of things. ; Takentilk, for instance. No longer, dots the farmer drive, up M Our door with his product Business practice requires that lie hire a truck ing concern to carry his product to town, that He sell it to a milk producers' association, which in turn sellsHt to a creamery which cleans it, Ikirifies it and mixes it and which then sells it to dealers who' peddle it about the city. Nor do the men who handle the milk work twelve or fourteen hours a day for board and $20 a month as they used to. Labor has advanced and now insists, upon-: eight hours a day, with one half holiday and a wage more commensurate with adequate standards of living. - Again, the pub lic, through health officials, '.demands sanitary handling and careful inspection of the milk, that " we may", be .saved from , the ' spread of disease;- " ,.;,'. :' -',!. ',.' ,;-,; . Naturally, it all costs money. Naturally, the consumer pays more. Mayhap he pays too much, even .so; that question is" and "will con tinue to. be argued at length, But there carl be no doubt that a part of the increased cost is rightly charged to the new frills required by advancing civilization. ; ' '' ' As with milk, so with other things. Busi ness and labor, have gone hand in hand in les sening the "scope of each activity, in increasing the nurtibtr of middlemen. Save in certain notable exceptions, such as the production and sale of oil, the tendency is for each handler of a product to do a specific thing in its march from raw material, to final consumption, pass ing, it then to another to do the next Business organizations have encouraged this by the tight ening of the lines between manufacturer and jobber, between jobber and retailer. Labor or ganizations have) done the same by their sharp' defining of "jurisdiction." We -are becoming organized most beautifully but we'are paying for nV In the international court eight judges are from countries using Roman law, and only two from those basing their legal system on the com mon Jaw. However, any means that reaches the end of justice will be acceptable. Why not attain the end of retribution by casting "Fatty" Arbuckle as the villain in a movie and giving the role of the heroine to Clara Hamon? ' . , "Jim" Hanley has been enlisted in support of the international bank, which ought to insure the success of the enterprise. " Two hundred gallons of home-made grape wine may be easily managed, but how to make it non-intoxicating is the puzzle. eulta In fracture of the rib where for American-made cars, parts and accessories j "'"m motion aa there I goe on un u,.. u u. .ni p.,i,j k. h. impeded during the fracture. On me 'thWaVural KmarkTt foVusand in ' 1920 England took 40 per cent of all the Amer- , oKoJ 1 many fact alog jean car exports to Europe. Our trucks were there line. 8lr William wa led to a even more popular with John Bull, who bought more than half of the entire European consign ment But in 1921 conditions shifted. Our automotive exports to Europe fell off, and the share sold to England fell off still more. In stead of buying half the European importation of American trucks, during the first six months of 1921 England bought one-fifth; instead of buying 40 per cent of all the American cara that went to Europe up to the end of June, England had purchased only 8 per cent. In all probability, experts assert, we have not lost our market for automotive supplies in England. But this sudden . shifting has been costly and has pointed a moral which the iudus- , I t 1 . . 1 ' . - , - Tt iry as. a wnoie is now taxing 10 ncari. xne les son is put in these words by . William I. Irvine, trade commissioner of the automotive division of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce: It would appear that in the future it will be to the advantage of manufacturers to put less stress on the British market and give more attention to the development of the Scandinavian, Iberian, Asiatic, Oceanic and North and South American markets. By having a diversity of markets they insure the stabilization of their exports. Those manu facturers who have concentrated . on Latin American markets will find it to their advan tage to make connections in the Far East, and in Oceania. Quite a few manufacturers who have concentrated on Latin-American markets, particularly Cuba, are in as disad vantageous a position as those who concen trated on the British market. If this advice is good and it sounds good it is of the utmost value, and Mr. Hoover's policy , of reviving American industry by affording American industry adequate information on which to base opinions and plan policies is given a practical illustration. In the rubber industry a not dissimilar situa tion has arisen, and here, as already suggested, a policy of conscious group control of the inter national market has been attempted. During the last 19 months there has been a depression in the world rubber trade. Rubber, like many commodities, was being over-produced. In the last year and a half the stock of crude rubber in London climbed from' about 22.000 tons to nearly 71,000 tons, the price per pound falling from 70 cents to 18 cents. Confronted with such a situation, the rubber growers responded with the natural economic device of restricting production. Orowers in Malaya went so far as to ask the British government to enact legis lation to enforce a 50 per cent restriction. This, however, proved futile, and it is now proposed to form associations of rubber grow ers, with these purposes: ' I. To control the rubber output of their members. 2. To fix the selling price and regulate the sale, of the rubber produced by their member. 3. To regulate the opening of further rub ber lands by their members. 4. To purchase or make advances on the rubber harvested or to be harvested by their members. ; ' - ' . These proposals are still m the argument and discussion stage. There is a grave doubt of their eventual adoption, partly owing to international complications, and partly owing to complications of interest among the pro ducers themselves. Dutch and' British must be harnessed together if the plan is to work, There appear to be two possible programs first, the monopoly scheme just outlined: sec ond, the policy of letting supply and demand take their course, killing off the weakest The millennium in trade, as in other human affairs, has not vet been sighted. " Certain "iron laws" of economics rise to combat man's Well-laid schemes, and man endeavors to find a way to make his plans accord better with those laws. Having conquered nature sufficiently to make the' motorcar and the infinite variety of products of rubber gum, it would seem within the possibilities that man might learn to con- tror the turning out and distribution of the raw and finished products. Motoring as a State of War. Popular conceptions of the deadliness of the automobile derived from local death lists hardly do justice to its destructiveness to human life. The estimate is made by the Insurance Press that life insurance companies of the country paid $4,500,000 in death claims from automobile fatalities during 192U, and statistics are quoted indicating that for the year motoring killed 12,000 persons in the United States, injured 1.500.000 and caused disabilities and property damages amounting to more than $1,000,000,000. This is a prodigious total of death and de struction. The railroads at their worst never took such a toll of life, and it would require a ffAAfl mantf Hicactrrme train writrtt in fTrf a property loss of $1,000,000,000. ' - Motoring, indeed, m the light of these figures. is a state of war. The army tank may be an instrument of slaughter, but the automobile is the real death-car. New York World. policy of treating both fracture and npraln by dully mniaae and motion beglnnlaT within three- day after tne lMury. In the raae of fracture upllnt and cast ar to be used, of course. liut the neighboring niufclcH, tendona, llpament and joint are not to be loft quiet and undlxturbed. It hn tioMFtlme happened that when frac tured bom were found to have licalod nicely and a perfect Hurgiral result waa achieved, the patient would be In a pretty had way for a year or even for life. Thn nearby Joints were stlft. Sometimes it wns necessary to. give an nneHthetlo and looeen up the adhesions in these Joint. Sometime the ligaments and ten don seemed to bind. Sometime the muscle were found to be consider ably shrunken. Sometimes nerve were caught In the inflammatory mas and the patient had rheumatic pain, rainy weather pain, neuralgia pain and pain and tenderness on exertion for a lonir time. Dr. Bennett claim to lessen all these after effects of fracture by startlnsr motion in nearby Joints, gen tle rubbing, massage and pasnlve motion within four day after the fracture and keeping them up daily. If the fracture, wag in the forearm the patient is instructed to work the fingers every day from the very bo ginning. About three days after the first dressing the baek splint is re moved for a little while end gentle, even stroking of the nearby Bkln is done. The back splint is then re placed. A little later more massaging and more passive motion is given. The nutrition of the muscleB Is kept up by the use of electricity. It is claimed that following this method fractures heal better, there are fewer aanesion in joints, the inflamma tory mat bends fewer parts together, muscles shrink less and pain and tenderness are lessened. Generally Self -Curing. II. J. S. writes: "I would lik'o some information regarding a vari cocele." Reply Varicocele is of no Im portance, generally calls for no treat- ment, and gets well spontaneously. The Narrower the Better. E. B. S. writes: "Is lime Juice taken as a reducing agent effective and is it harmful in any way?" Keply It Is wholesome, but Inef fective. The only way l the straight and narrow path. Illicit and I-cfl Handera, D, 8. M. writ: "(I) I Wt ham' odnM acquired after birth or I It Inborn? (II 1 there sut'h a thing aa rent ambidexterity T (I) Can real Ivft handed pern ever bwome realty efficient with the runt hand? (4) hop the riitht aliU ef the brain control In cae of left hamednM? J) Do you advUe a li-ft handed adult or child to attempt to overcome lift handedne and becomo right liamh'd?" I.eply I have an article on thl subject now in tne composing room. Watch out for It. 1. A Bouih Dakota observer ha proved that dominance by one hiid, while It develop toward the end of the first year, I baned on congenital dlFcrence in the two side, t. Ye. S. Not to a liUh degree if the left handedness I of a pur and definite type. 4. Yea 5. No, To try to develop th 'till of the off hand to a moderate extent U advisable. Must Find the Cnnae. It H. write: "I have been troub led with hive every summer for the lust four. I can't eem to discover what cause them. For a while 1 thought that It might be tomator. I Btopped eating them, but It did no good. It set-ins one fond will do it one time and another food another. I am wondering If thero is some per manent cure. I have applied severul lotion externally, but they only seem to do good for the time being. These lotions have ull been pre scribed by physician. Is thero some special diet that one could stay on that would help? The lust two days they have been worse than ever. They have Itched so that I can hardly Bleep." Reply Hives is a skin condition which results from eating or breath ing, generally the former, some sub stance which while wholesome to the general run of people I poison ous to you. when you discover what that is and keep away from it your trouble will be at an end. This ran be done by using certain 'easily ap plied skin tests. Until you go at it rightly you may use a hogshead of lotions and a ton of salve without getting anywhere. Four AH-Stccl Thru Trains Daily The Manhattan Limited Leave Chicago 10 JO A.M.C T) Arrives Washington 8.0$ A.M.cr, D ALL LIMITED FEATURES Through Drawing-room Keeping Cars, Dining Car, and Club Car (Schedule quickened one hour and fifteen minutes) NO EXTRA FARE The Broadway Limited Leave Chicago 11.40 P.MAC T.) Arrives Vvaslwnjton 9 20 ai;i T) ALL LIMITED F2ATURE3 Tluou.h Lrawlng room Sleeping Cars, Diilnj Car, and Club Car (Extra fai of $7.20 fron Chicago withdrawn) NO EXTRA FARE The Pennsylvania Limited Leave Chicago S.30 P.M.tCTJ Arrive Washington 4.20 P.M. (IT) ALL LIMITED FEATURES Through D-.ewing room Sleeping Crs, Dining Car, and Club Car NO EXTRA PARE Steel City-Washington Express Leave Chicago 11 JO P.M.CT.) Arrive Washington 10.13 P.M.(T.) Through Drawing-room Sleeping Cars, Dining Car, and Club Car (New through sleeping car service established) , NO EXTRA FARE For full information concerning Perm sylvania System Train Service, Pullman reservations aua travel details, consult local agent or PeartyWanla SyaUm W. H. ROWLAND, D. P. R. SOI Bslrd Building Ttlephoa A'Untle 8119 USE BEE WANT ADS THEY BEING RESULTS School Children's Faulty Spines. That three-quarters of the school children of the United States have faulty spines is the asser tion made bv the National League for the Pre vention of Spinal Curvature. The league has started a campaign to remedy this situation. . A prize of $1,500 is offered for the discovery ef the most perfect spine in America. -Washington Post. .';-'" . Spirit of Confidence. The statement credited to the elder Morgan that a bear on the United States is sure to go broke reflects to a profound degree the un quenchable spirit of confidence which forms so engaging a ieature ot our national character. Saturday Evening Post. ."- UnnatnraL ' . "Pa, what's an incongruity?" 1 "An incongruity, mv son. is a divorce lawver humming the wedding march.- Boston Tran script. Real Russian Question. With the first American food in Petrograd. there mav be. a definite renlv to th Ruuinns' A scientist predicts that automobiles will yet query, "When do we eat?' Pittsburgh Gazette be run by sun power instead of gasoline. This j Times. , - , - - ought to put a quietus to joyriding after dark. ; I , . . .. ' , - T i,nm l. . u r . . . l. . . J VU,U UWT WVM VII .ill- VAruitiluu. 1 1 IV i noise of the bidding would raUe the rfcf off I , New York's mayoralty campaign, is one in which fusion i opposed to confusion (Th Bee offers Its columns freely to it render who care to dlsciiM any public luestlon. Ita requests that letters be resmnably brief, not over S00 words. It nlao Inniots that the name of the writer accompany each letter, not neraarily for publication, bnt that the editor may know with whom be Is deallnr. Tbe Bee does not pretend to Indorse or accept views or opinions expressed by corre spondents In the Letter Box.) Another View of Ireland. ' . Omaha, Sept. 23. To the Editor of. The Bee: If an Irish army In vaded England"ftnd at the end of 600 years of butchery, arson anct robbery succeeded in conquering the country and dividing Its land among the Irish soldier and scattering the peace-loving people of England to the four Wind, it would not be nec essary for Benton Brown to take us back to the chronicle of Julius cae ear to prove that England and Enir land only was to blame, for flon't you know, if the English were not "spoil ing for a fight" the Irish Invaders wouldn t have to kill any of cthe English. Very plain, Is it not? If the-Belgian and French too were not "spoiling for a fight" the kaiser wouldn't have had to kill a single one of them. Why, it is so plain. But, Mr. Brown, if the' Irish are "Threatening-to Involve the United Ptate In war with Great Britain." they are doing so from patriotic American motives for our own sake only and not for Ireland' sake. The Irish have England whipped. It I only another case of the mon goose killing the serpent. 1 I, myself, was an English soldier for five years. I saw service in In dia and Africa. I did my best then to be a good Englishman. I do my best to be a good American now, and I believe we should build up our army and navy. I'd like to ask those hyphenated English-American Just this one question: What Is England building her monster navy tor? - - , ' . MACRICE CARROLL. Ittook yEARSVEAlS to aeveion "Put the J In Idea." "Personalize your thought," says a philosophical sharp in the papers. In other wordn, put the "I" in the idea. Boston Transcript. Could Make It a "Book." It's about time the leaders In the coal rebellion Issued a black paper. Indianapolis New. Constipation Vanishes Forever Prei Pwrmanenf IMkf CAJtTUr LITTLE LIVER PILLS BarsrtaiL rurelvveg- uune act mm gently ea toe tcc. Eras aw dinner tfla4 treat cor A rect indigeg- H tion; huusuia 1 th complaxioo brighten the cycs We worked on Camels for years before we put them on the market. Tears of testing blending experimenting with the world's choicest tobaccos ; And now, EVERY DAY, all our skillmanu facturing experience and lifelong knowledge of fine tobaccos are concentrated on making Camel the best cigarette that can be produced. There's nothing else like Camel QUALITY. And there's nothing else like Camels wonder ful smoothness, fine tobacco flavor and freedom from cigaretty aftertaste. That's why Camel popularity is growing faster than ever. A better cigarette cannot be made. We put the UTMOST QUALITY into THIS ONE BRAND. I CARTER S MS the Stat. House. Boston Tratucrinf : - . BLKND Wy, rK litrtl i