Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1922)
tilt. V.' THE OMAHA BEE: WEDNESDAY, JULY 19. 192:.'. The Morning bee MORNING-EVENING aUNDAY - .5 ftJtLUHIWO COMPANY mimsui or the aisocutko nut 13 " sessr. ultiaiMM m niiiiK tMt. H MVW lnUie(i ml Tke Omaha aW J- lail Daily 71,731 Sunday.... 77,034 sms.es BM. WMW WHIM tUU 1. ROOD, CmW(JM Mini wa m IN mmtim safer MM ibi Hi aar Jj.. tlx (Mail w. M qUIVKY, Ne4ar Ph1m i Is er Ik asM In, at rtwainea a. as BCK TILXPHONU Meet lnak Ksafcaaf. A,k (or the Dirvtant ,, m .Pereea WaaU4. Foe Ntikt Call Attar It f. M l AT at, ATlaaUa 1(11 r IMS. IOOO omcu Mala Offlee lttk 4 uuss Oa. Brtftf .... it gwu . Sls . . 4m g, tta Bt . Tt n riria Areas WMkliftM - 4SI Star Bid. Ckicaa . . 11 it Ucr Bid rana. erase 41 ua Bt. Ueaere g saa mg-r-, , COAL MINING TO feE RESUMED. "I InvlU you to raturn to your nine properties, tad to resume operations." With that sentence the president dismissed the oft coal mine operators who had called to inform him that they, like the men, had found it not to their likinr to accept his proposal for arbitrating the dif ferences that led to the strike. Whatever other interpretation may be placed on the remark, it has one unmistakable meaning. Presi dent Harding is more mindful of the welfare of the 109,400,000 people of the United States who are not involved in the production of coal than ha is in the disputes which have kept most of the mines idle since April 1. The time of year is at hand when coal must be had, and there is only one place to get it, out of the ground. Word from different sections of the country yes terday indicatea that the operators are moving to accept the president's invitation. Some time must pass before the mines, so long shut down, are ready to produce art anything like capacity, but while the organization of the plants is in progress some other features of the problem may be worked out. Generally the president's invitation is accepted as meaning that ample protection will be afforded to II who seek to work in the mines. Where local or state authority is insufficient to afford the protection, federal power will be interposed that the work may go on. If this be a reasonable understanding of the situation created, it will be approved by all right minded people. A condition had arisen that could no longer be tolerated. Both sides to a great indus trial controversy rejected a fairly made proffer of arbitration, and thus threatened a prolongation of the idleness in the coal mines, which in turn enhanced the menace of a fuel shortage during the oncoming winter. If the president's invitation to the owners to operate their mines is a mandate to start work, it may equally be taken as notice to the miners that they are also expected to get busy. How they will take the "invitation" is not signified, but the probabilities are that work will be resumed. Three and one-half months is long enough for the contemplation of the futility of voluntary idle ness by both operators and men, and with the strong support of the federal government back of them, most will be glad to hear the call of the whistle in the morning. It is merely a generous recognition of a patriotic duty. The call is from the government of a free people to a group of its citizens for service, and the chances are that it will generally be heeded. BALANCING FARM AND CITY. With less than three-tenths of the population liv ing on the farm, it is apparent that America no longer can be called predominantly agricultural. For the matter of that, neither is it possible to characterize it as mainly industrial. An economic equilibrium appears to be established in which each phase of human activity balances the others, contributing to the maintenance of a well-rounded and largely self sufficient national life. For the first time the federal census has listed farm dwellers separately, and the announcement is made that there are 31,614,269 of them. This amounts to almost five persons to each farm. It is difficult to compare this number with those depending on manufacturing for their subsistence. The count of persons in all mills and factories, however, shows 9,096,372. These, with their families, might equal in number, but would not much surpass, the farm dwellers. v The previous census merely bulked all persons living in communities of less than 2,500 population under the classification of "rural." Until 1900 every person living in towns of less than 8,000 was so classified, and then the limit was cut to 4,000. No reliable estimate therefore can be made of the rural exodus, although a basis has been established for future census comparisons. Jeremiahs have not shown that there is anything alarming in the drift from the farm. As a matter of fact there are more people on the farms of America today than the census of i860 showed for the whole nation, city and country. The development of rural schools and social life is removing one cause of the drift to the cities. The time when any one could consider lift on the farm degrading has long passed, and only economic forces henceforth will count for much in the ups and downs of rural population fig ures. If the dumber of farmers goes up or down, it will be aa tha natural result of the demand for their products and the profit to be made. ceptions. No one need fear for the lad who saved his brother's life. He msy rise to fame, or tread life's path in the shadow of obscurity, but he is of the stuff that dependable men are made of, and what ever his future msy hold, he will be trustworthy. The boy thief will not; it will be a long time before he recovers from the effect of what he engaged in when he set out on his career of crime. OPINION- What Editors Elsewhere Are Saying WHERE WILL CONTROL END? In order to heed off snd discomfit "predatory wealth," Senator LaFolleite now suirsents that the United States take over control of all "sources of wealth." That simple formula has been put forward on a great many occasions, yet the people of Amer ica have shjed at it, for reasons its proponents over, look. Russia has, since 1917, given the plan a fairly thorough tryout, and with results that do not espe cially commend it to Americans. For many years the coal miners have favored "nationalization" of the fuel industry; for at least five years the railroad brotherhoods and unions have demanded the federal ownership of the transport in dustry, at least so far as they are concerned. So cialists have from the first sought common ownership of all means of production. So there is nothing novel in Senator LaFollette's suggestion, and it must be remembered that he is seeking renomina,tlon in a state where a large per cent of the voters are so cialists. The question always has been, Where to end the process 01 nationalization? Miners are willing to stop with the mines, and oil wells; Plumb planners will be satisfied with the railroad and steamboat lines. But why not go on, and include the farms, the print ing offices, the cotton mills, and all the rest? Plumb plan advocates looked to the federal treas ury to supply any deficit in operating expenses, ignor ing the fact that under the law that would be an ad ditional burden on the taxpayer, and that if the gov ernment owned the railroads it would not only have to pay the bills so incurred, but would also have taken from the tax roll some eighteen billions of taxable property. In Nebraska, for example, where would the state, county, city, township and school district turn for the tax now collected from the railroads? "Predatory wealth is pretty well hedged about by restrictive laws in the United States; predatory individual selfishness, covetousness and envy, which breed most of the discord in our country, are not confined. Improvidence still attacks thrift, indolence assails industry, and incompetence rails at the capa ble. Well directed work is the way to success, and the only sure path. Socialization of all sources of wealth will lead any nation just where Russia landed. HOME BAKING. Home made bread has recently been the subject of learned experiment by the United States' Depart ment of Agriculture. Tests m an experimental kitchen show that the quality of flour, the kind and price of fuel, the sort of oven used, and the number of loaves made at one time are important factors in the final cost. Five loaves were made of materials bought in small quantities and baked in an ordinary gas oven, with gas at the rate of $1.20 a thousand cubic feet. Each of these loaves cost 7 1-3 cents. Another batch of eight loaves, made by a more economical formula, figured out at 4 1-5 cents a pound loaf. Materials were purchased at better ad- antage, dried yeast instead of the compressed va riety was used, shortening was omitted, and the bak ing was done in a kerosene range. Strong flour, which gives a high bread yield, was selected, and it was bought by the barrel, as the farm wife would be most apt to do. In neither this nor the other experi ment was milk used. Home baking has gone pretty much out of fash ion. It is hardly to oe expected mat tnese ngures will encourage its revival. No account is taken in these estimates of the value of the housewife's time or labor. Of all labor saving devices, bakers' bread ranks among the highest. Home baked bread has its charms, especially when served hot from the oven fragrant and tasty, but its production is now almost lost art. Even farm families buy their bread in town now, and frequently it is shipped from some great central bakery in Omaha. COMPETITION TO THE RESCUE. One of the effects of the coal strike that is likely to be of a permanent nature is the encouragement given the production of electricity by water power. Forty-two per cent of the electrical output of the United States is now secured from waterpower. This is a gain Of 8 per cent since last March, when the prospect of a coal shortage first appeared. Fuel consumption by public utility power plants in the same length of time has decreased more than .000 tons a day according to the geological survey. These signs of competition between white coal and black suggest the inability of the coal industry to stabilize itself is leading to a new adjustment. The same economic laws will function in the case of the railroads. Once the public is forced to depend on motor transport, it would be difficult to win back all the lost traffic to the rail lines. What the public desires is certainty of service, and if the old methods do not guarantee this, new ways are bound to be sought. Symptomatic of the healthy condition of Ne braska is the large special edition of the Cozad Local. This was devoted largely to discussion and advertise ment of the pure bred live stock industry in Dawson county. All industrial activity is not demoralized by strikes. Boston builders have just concluded a con tract with the unions, the first in over a year. CONTRAST BETWEEN TWO BOYS. Two boys were brought sharply to public atten tion in the Monday issue of The Omaha Bee. One of these because of his quick-witted action by which he saved the life of his brother. One was in danger of electrocution, being caught in a swing and a live wire combined at a swimming pool. His brother saw the danger, and with presence of mind that is too rare to pass without notice, struck him what ha later told his mother was a "dirty crack," dislodging him and 1 dragged him out of the water. The other boy was arrested while leisurely looting a home from which the family was temporarily ab sent. He, toe had presence of mind, for he nearly convinced the officer who caught him that he was a nembet of the family.. What strange quirk is ft that turns the eapabili Um of these two boys into such widely different chan nels? Each is bright, Intelligent, prompt, and in ap pearance a, boy any father would be proud of. Yet (he one stands out as a modest hero, the ether as a rather cheap but in hi own estimation a daring crook. ' Society must find out what that quirk is, if ever it is to be safe. The boy who thinks it is smart to steal or to do other mischief must be in some manner racked, snd a balance established in his moral per The male voter who has preserved his distinctive registration as "bull moose" certainly has no right to pretend to be progressive. A father who puts his son in chains to "keep him out of trouble" seems to be in need of some intensive instruction himself. Our election machinery may be a little cumbrous, but when it gets under way it delivers the goods. Wonder if the grocers and butchers will maintain their reputations as rainmakers? Eugene V. Debs apparently does not feel com fortable when not in jail. Calling names and never settled a dispute. saying "You're another!" Dog days now impend, but the approach this year carries little of terror. How many winners did you pick yesterday? On Second Thought By H. U. ST ASM FIX. Whfla some men practice what they preach, others wraM O aabamed to preach ball they practice-" The lTrinkr Ilard. From Ik N.w Vork Thik- Kven tn ha days whn "the duk were scolding like omnibus driven and the lord twtarlnc like aUM rx.ya." Mr. Lloyd (iaorse could al way find tranquility and huppy escape In Welsh. In tha IJunyatum awy inatltuie he could pour forth romantio and rythmic eloqusnre In Walsh, fa tha dellitht of hla com patriot. Now not all the care of emrjtr. troub e forehm and dome tie. Rusaia. Ireland and the 1M- lUrda, C,in choke hla native woou note. Welsh verae of hla, corn- nml soma veara .co. et to niUHlr were aunt at the Anslfaey mtiaU'Hl feaiival. To him thnt ha no lnh the orlKlnal looks like a diinoo of aranlte conHonanta rudely embrac ing vowela. To the expert ear doubt leaa there Is an Ineffable choral con- onancy In such married Bounds aa tll.n, . krvnliti h.rtWH rfWVll bmtl Cfihlu rymru w-n ayn laiiellun wl4 Ona auaoerta tha traualutlon: rmbrl' rhllitrun dr dwelt unil pll, fliifk- M.t nil. HMtlnn i-inatl(ut itur might. "A tranlator la a trultor." No doubt. In the ordinal, Mr. Oeorge'a song la worthy of C.ruffudd ab yr Ynad Ooch. The title la "Wales la One" one for Mr. Oeorce, It mny be added. If England were Wale the patriot atateemen who hove neen lonalnff for Mr. ueorre enoea woum find their sole hope In the tables of mortality. He charm the house as he charms the Kiateddfod, and the mealc lost In the English rendering of hi Welsh chant la fully reveaioa every time he faces his opponent in Bt. Stephens. The older race of British state men smoothed out the cares of office with classical diversion, alcalca, sap- phlcs, Iambic pentameters, transla tions from the Anthology. Mr. George ha the good fortune to be bilingual and to compose verses In hi second native tongue. One likes to think of the resourceful, resilient, Indomitable little man aa a bard. He ha the fervid, emotional tem perament. Hla oratory ha the Im agination, the passion, the music of the poet Those wno love mm noi wijl say that In politics he Is some times too imaginative and abuses his poetic license. Well, the United States hardly ha a statesman-poet to compare with him, though John Oulncv Adam did make verse which the world has willingly let die. Baby Shortage. from the Cleveland Newi. France is worried by Its diminish ing birth rate. France has been ex pressing uneasiness over that fea ture of thrifty French life ever since most of us began reading n.wnnnar. Vt FraTlOft had TIO trouble In mustering millions of its son to ngnt neroioany m mo Marne, the Alsne, Verdun and else where throuah more than four years of desperate war. But the 1.400,000 young men France lost In defending itself were not sons and brothers alone; they were future husbands and fathers. Their loss is Dams multiplied in the loss of the children they would have had. r omiiiQ. aminil Are the reasons reported as advanced by the fathers and mothers of France to account for the baby scarcity, the many fam ilies have few children or none. They speak of high prices, high rents, high taxes, tne nousing iijh age, the Impossibility of finding homes, refusal of landlords to rent to families with children, govern ment aid promised families having five or more children but long de layed by red tape and ludicruously insufficient when given. They point out that wage earners with large families to support are paid a little and taxed as much as single persons having no depenaenis. Americans experienced In family supporting can Imagine the earnest ness in which these protests are voiced. The conditions complained of are duplicated in this country and have been growing In force since the war, discouraging parenthood as never before. The United States does not pretend to grant bounties for babies, but the government con ception of the cost of supporting children has been expressed In Washington In regulations allowing a father an income tax reduction of sometimes as little as a year for each child under 18! Woman Mayors. From the Indlanapolia Newi. Mildred Adams writes in the American City of 15 women mayors in the United States. The towns over which they preside range In size from Rochester, O., with a pop ulation Of 145, to St. I'eter, Minn, where the population is 4,335. Tn 1 c n.nmon mivnra nre well a is t rib J I, 1. 1 . 11 - tio rnnntrv. Some ot these women were elected because they voluntarialy went into politics and tried for office. Others were drafted. Mrs. A. K. Gault of St. Peter was appointed by a council of mon ftor the man elected mayor raf,i.H tn nnalifv. Mrs. Abbie Howe Forest, mayor of Thayer, Kan., and five other women were am f-onrtlHntpS for CitV offices and elected over two other tickets. TWr rsrre Miller, mayor or .TnoVunn. Wvo.. has a council of five women helping her. Dr. Amy Kaukonen, mayor of Fairport, O., who is 23 years old, is a graduate nYiv.tolnn SVlO hd BtlthoritV tO tLV- polnt a chief of police, a board of health ana a, cnemisi. ne iook. an these powers to herself. In her ca noxitv g. chief nf notice she arrests "bootleggers." As board of health she considers the menace of "boot leg" liquor to the health of the enmmnnitv. and as town chemist she analyzes the stuff. Finding it bad as a chemist, she then warns against It a the board of health. Miss Adams has found. In Investi gating the work of the woman may ors, that they think In terms of municipal housekeeping. Men think of municipal problems In terms of engineering, she says, but the woman officials consider the town merely an enlarged family to be educated,' clothed, fed and kept or derly and in good health. Indian apolis News. Baseball for Englishmen. From the Boston Transcript. The Inertia of the masses is per haps the most powerful obstacle with which Sir Arthur will have to contend as he begins to carry out his self-appointed role of acting as baseball' advance agent in England. Britishers of all ages and conditions have clung with all the Briton's tra ditional tenacity to the game of cricket. Itself a sport with many good points. There is something in the lumbering gait of the cricket eer, and in the leisurely requirements of a cricket match, that seem peculiarly well adapted to the English temper ament. A cricket match Is a social event lasting a often as not for several days, and afternoon tea Is a time-honored ceremony at most of the leading matches. Imagine a half-hour' intermission for tea, for both spectators and players, in the seventh Inning of a baseball game, when excitement on both sides is at a whiteheat pitch! Effort have been made in years past to trans plant the American national game onto English soil, but these efforts have heretofore met with Indifferent ucre, Granted that bast-bull I a better gum Intrinsically than cricket, that It I much batter suited to the lire and danh of youth, the fact remain that English bnya for a hundred yeara have been brought up to play cricket with tbelr elders, and a habit of centuries la not easily to be broken. Logically, baacball, properly Introduced, ought to cap ture Eiicllah youth literally over night. Hue will It thus be accepted, even though ao eminent a man as blr Arthur la Ita aponvor? What Ht-ally Count, front ttas Orsnd Island Independent. One doe not wlnli to belittle the Invention of the radio. But we need to be on our guard against the pre vailing attitude of prostrate and awe-struck adoration of the mere machinery of existence. It la not the all of the megaphone thnt counts. It is what la uttered through It. A moving picture film speak to millions. Bhakespeare'i plays spoke originally to audiences of a few hun dred. Hhukespeare hu lusted three centuries. How many of our movie nuns win ha wanted 300 yeara hence? It I not the sit of the audience, not the lung-power of the voice, but the truth and wisdom of the words uttered. This is what we need to remember In a time when we think we shall be heard for our much and our loud speaking. NEBRASKA. N'lohrsra, Weeping Water. Moomsh, Wehoo. Hiawatha Olid ye In a rippling rune Ocallsla, Winaetoon! Nemaha, Red Cloud, Wauneti, Iodipol, Oconee. Dakota. Brule. Trknmah. Broken Bow. Omaht, Arapahoe! But, romance wildly totter Hosklns Ptshelvllle. Watts, Potter! Lett our ears attuna to siller Butka, Korthy, Pllger, Dlllerl Helaht of the sublime one minute. Then the depths a plunge' riant la It. Thus Nebraskal This and that: L'eau-qul-Court and then North Platte! Maurice Morris, tn Hastings Tribune The Bee's LETTER BOX (This Separlaneat la Seetgaeel Be a braadrastlag etatloa Ureas h athsrb r4 ar of Tka Omaha Re ma? saesb t aa audlrewa aaaabOTiaa well abva tM.vo a subjerle ( pit bile luteeeet. letters khwild be ebort aot war than SO wertte. Karai letlee sauei be aacaaspaiiUe) kg lbs ante u the srriter, ea Ibeeaa bo re ousel thai It not b nabUebeil. Farmer anil the I'arm lllor. Newcaatle, Neb,, July 15. To the Editor of The Omaha Hen; There him been a wonderful awakening all along the line regarding the need of furmera of the agricultural belt. The tragedy of 1 20-21, whereby the farmer were literally held up and forced to puy the bulk of tha enor mous after-the-war deflation ha been Impressed upon the entire na tion, and hit demonstrated the Im perative necessity of placing farm ing upon a sure and aolld footing. The furmer should know when he plants hla crop that he has a rea aonable assurance of remunerative returns from hi harvest. He should not be forced to take the terrible chance that fairly broke his haok after the war. The so-called farm bloc la but an Instance of the awak ening of public sentiment to protect farming the basic life of our na tion. It has done It bit, but should lneltide in It number every member of the senate and house. H. A. M'CORMICK. I'arolc Board. Oninhu. July 17. To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: Clarence Davis. Governor McKelvIe and Secretary of State Amsberry, constituting the board of pardons and paroles, have once more overriden the sentence of the courts of the state and have once more turned a criminal out from the penitentiary to prey upon the public In the way of the releaie of Mrs. DeHart, or, lr not yet re leased, by the contemplated release, as Indicated by the newspapers. The facts, which the board could have obtained prior to the hearing, can be obtained today, relative to the murder for which Mr. DeHart was convicted by her plea of guilty, and there Is no question about the facts, either, notwithstanding the manufactured story subsequently JVtwJk LadJ th World tn Motor Car Voiuo 11 1 A cardinal charac teristic of the Nash is the faithful constancy of its per formance over a long extended period of time. Fours nd Sixes PrUa rang from $96$ to $2jgo,f. 0. i.atlorj NASH-VRIESEMA AUTO CO. Retail Wholesale Service Tenth and Howard Streets EXCLUSIVE LOCAL FACTORY REPRESENTATIVES Phone AT lantic 2916 (omitted from telephone directory) CV Tp " - told by the Dellart and a MadUon county lawyer. Tha Dellarta owed Jdle. tha inur. drd man 17ft, DaHaria war gln serosa country. Mine ae with them and atld h waa gulng tu stay with them until lis got til money. Trior to tu day of tha murder Dvllart told hla wlf that If tha old man waa with them whan they reached tha Niobrara river ha waa going to get rid of him. The next day they reached the river, and liellurt t out of their wugon nd called the ol.l niMit'a attention to something up the river, and while Mite wa look mg up the river Pellart atrurk hltn In the hack of the head with a ham mer. It only stunned him and he turned and grabbed DeHart around the leg and both fell to the bridge. Then Mr. Pfllart, the woman the board ey should b paroled he causa she ha a child, ete.. picked up the hammer and finished the Job on Mlse. Both the Dellart then tied his arm and leg together, put a sack of sand around hi body and threw the body Into the river. Both of the DeHart were repre sented by able counsel of O Nell, Neb., and hotn pieaaea "" -ting recommendations of llenlenry on a compromise from the county L.. hne are the facte. and no doubt they can all be verl fled by the board of It jmould care to conault tne iwnnna ..w. the sheriff or the county attorney. Under that atement of fact, what excuse Is there for the release of either Mr. orjlffi About Totirlng Camp. Omaha, July 17. To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: After reading Charles B. Ayres letter regarding a .-.. Ae tnni-lais whn were driving a high-priced car Inquiring for the tourist camp, one wouia mm ini the old adage of "clothe do not 1 ha .n" has heen renlaced by "Judge a man by the tar he drive." The tourist party In a flivver may be driving that kind of a car by choice, and their financial statement us well as their record for enjoyable times will often exceed that of the driver of the larger car. I have driven both klnda of cat mi tours and hav found the lowly flivver to b better aulted to lhl clasa nf traveling, whether th reule take on through the mud ,of Ioa and Nebraska, tha sand of th deaert country or over mountain trail and paaaea. In these iravela It has been my good fortune to become acquainted with many other tourut. on lb road and In camp; they have been th kind of people on la glad te know, rrgardlea of the name on their CMr. The introductory topic of conver. eatii.it when tourut meat are route I roads, destination and c amp ground land the fame of desirable and com fortable camping alia I apread I Pi who have never tried this man ner of traveling. overland perk. In Denver, should be visited by th Omaha official whe will have charge ot th designing ol the tourist camp ground hera onmhit's need will never equal thai of Denver1, hut many of th Ideal could well be mad us of on f smaller scale here. A few Improvement could alee v b mmla In rooking and dlnlna . farllitlea and the entire eost kept well within the amount reported te bo available for the construction oi this camp. A KI.IVVRK TRAMP, Whenever Opportunity Offer. I9IANO II TUNED AMD REPAIRED All Week Cuaraatasd A. HOSPE CO. ISIS Douglas Tel. $35,500,000 1 for New Equipment THE 1922 equipment order for New York Central Lines calls for 17,500 freight cars (145 miles of cars) and 75 locomotives, costing $35,500,000. As the nation's business re vives and railroad traffic ex pands, New York Central preparedness invites fuller production over a wide and in dustrially dominant territory. X Cw.rehtl29 N.w York Cwtnl Wlrrad Ce. NEW YORK CENTRAL LINES BOSTON & ALBANY -MICHIGAN CENTRAL - BIO K)UR -HTJSJHIBGH V.IAJJUBB KANAWHA PMICHICAN - TOlEDOfCWO CShmtAL AND THZ .KEW -TOWC CENTRAL- AND - SUBSIDIARY LLNES 'M A Sure Crop Every six months, regardless of wind or weather, depositors with us harvest their interest money a sure crop. By depositing your idle money in an interest-bearing account you, too, can participate in this sure semi-annual money crop. The Omaha National Bank Farnam at 17lh Street Capital and Surplus $2000000 n Very Low I Excursion! Fares to 1 the Great Tourist i and Fishing District i ol Northern Wisconsin S . 7 7 . ? 1 Plan your vacation in this great outing region $ $ where you can camp, canoe, fish, hike over pine $ scented trails or just loaf. $ Following greatly reduced fares in effect $ tickets on sale daily return limit October 31st. From Omaha Rua U From Omaha toJnp Trip Fan to Far Cable, Wi. $26.75 Lake Owen, Wis. $27.00 Cumberland, Wis. 23.20 Shell Lak,Wi. 24.15 Gordon, Wis. 26.20 Solon Springs, WU. 26.60 Grand ViewJWia. 27.75 Spooner, Wis. 24.50 Hayward, Wis. 25.85 Turtle Lake, Wi. 22.50 V Corretpondioglj low (ares to other adjacent tourut dqrinarirais. Virgin forests, winding, woodsy trails, cool, restful days await you gamy fish will test your sUl with rod and reel K5 sfarJaasssBssassisssaafut Foldtr "Omt'of-Doen in Uppn Witcontin" telU about it Our representatives will take pleasure in giving further infor mation, advising you of our excellent train service and assisting n arranging travel details ot your trip. Chicago & North Western Ry 120M203 Farnam St Telephon Dough 2740 Ijij COHWUDATlDTICHTOrTICK iio uodg at. TdtpleMDaatluKM 3