The Morning Bee MORN ING—E YEN ING—SU ND AY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY KELSON B. UPDIKE. Publisher. B. BREWER, Gen. Meneger. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press, of which Tbs Bes Is s member, is esdesttslr fait tied to the uee for rspubilratua of ell news dmet.hss credited to It sr got otberwtss credited In this peter, end else the locel news published hsrsle. AU r ffets of republteetlone of our special dtspetchrs ers els» reserved. BEE TELEPHONES Privets Branch Exchange. Ask for the Department AT lantic frr Person Wanted. For Night Calls After 10 P. M. 1000 Editorial Department. AT lantic 1021 or 1042. OFFICES Mein Office—17th end Fernem Co. Bluffs - . - - 15 Scott St. So. Side. N W. Cor. 24th end N New York—286 Fifth Avenue Wellington • - 422 Star Bldg. Chicago - - - 1720 Steg.r Bldg. Paris. France—420 Rue 8t. Honors MAKE THE THIEF PAY BACK. Probably the first move of primeval man in the direction of order was the recognition of property rights. This began so for back beyond any record that only speculative theory accounts for its origin, j Some hold that the first assertion of property right. 1 was in the pot in which ho cooked his food, a genius hav ing devised one that did not break down under 1 its first usuage. Whatever the heginning, nothing is dearer to man, nothing more firmly asserted, than his right to own the things that are his. Civilized man has surrounded property' with every possible protection of law, and provides se vere punishment for any who break over .the laws by stealing, damaging or destroying that which j is another’s. The law, however, as we have it has j abandoned one of the primitive rules, that which re quired restitution. This rule should be revived, 1 and made part of the penalty inflicted on nnyonc I guilty of crime. To send the thief to prison does not make whole the loss of the one who was robbed; to put in jail the reckless youth who smashes up an automobile he has lifted for a joyride does not pay the repair bill, and so on through the list. Justice is not en tirely served by the modern method of enforcing laws against criminals. What is needed is a law that will require full restitution or compensation to any person who is injured in person or property by another who has committed a crime, great or small. Every sentence inflicting a penalty for a misdemeanor or a crime, from which a victim suffers in any way, should re quire that the culprit pay in full damages. Such a law might not check the crime wave, but it would certainly have a tendency to make some think who now enter lightly on criminal enterprise. If the man who steals knew beforehand that, if caught, he would have to restore all he stole, he might consider working for himself in preference | to trying to live at the expense of somebody else who does work. When the man who carelessly or maliciously destroys property is warned beforehand that he will have to make good all damage he is re sponsible for, he may go a little easy in his wild career. A case in point: Not very long ago a thief drove away a small hunch of cattle, owned by an old farmer in northern Nebraska. The thief was overtaken and sent to prison, but the cattle could not be recovered, as they had been disposed of, one by one, to widely scattered buyers. The old man has lost his life’s savings, and gets no return. Why should not that thief be required to make full restitution, ev$n though it take all hi$ earnings for the rest of his life? He destroyed the earnings of an honest man, and simple justice demands that he put back what he did away with. SCHOOL BOYS AND THE FARM. A correspondent writes to The Omaha Bee from Central City, bemoaning the fact that schools cost so much, and saying, among other things: "Not one boy has come back to the farm in this district since the free high school law was enacted." The inescapable inference of this assertion is that were it- not for the high school, all the boys would be back on the farm. Then the conclusion must be that the way to keep ’em down on the farm is to prevent them from securing an education. Such a proposal is absurd. We do not know how to get at the facts, but we will venture the as sertion that the vast majority of the farmers of Nebraska are well educated men. We know of many who have had their time not only in the high schools but in the colleges and universities of the state; who have drank deep at the spring of knowledge, and have returned to the farm to apply in a prac tical way to the needs of agriculture the things they learned at school. More than this, they have found on the farm not only use for what they gained at school, but incentive to learn more. Boys and girls do go back to the farm from school. Many enter the professions o engage in business life, but these are in the minority, else the farm were a’deserted place. Furthermore, the busi ness of farming has in it something more than the dull, insensate drudgery of the olden day, for to succeed on the farm nowadays one must be abreast of the times, thoroughly developed in mind as well as in body. . „ .. The position of the correspondent is hardly the correct one. Our state schools are the most help ful adjunct the farm has, and through it is being worked out the future of agriculture, which will be greater and brighter as the days go on. PICTURES IN BOOKS. Man began crudely to scratch his designs on stone or bone in response to an impulse to com memorate some doughty deed, either in war or chase. Then he used pictures to convey ideas, to exchange or preserve thought, and in time came Cadmus and gave letters. Long before the first books were printed from moveable types, the artist was a coworker with the scrivener, and the ponderous tomes of the centuries before Guttenberg bear witness of the co-operation of the copyist and the decorator, frequently the same individual. Illuminated missals and other triumphs of the bookmaker's art, priceless in value, are preserved to remind the modern man that his advantages do not give him exclusive possession of the beautiful and wonderful. Yet a survey of modern printing will quickly convince any of the efficiency of the art. The en graver of cuts kept up with the cutter or punches, and printing blocks multiplied as did the printing types. With improvement in presses, the invention of photo-engraving, and other of the great improve ments, the book of today is such a triumph for human skill and artistic taste that only superlatives are to be used when discussing them. When next you approach your book case, or come near a bookstall, look at some of the products of the printing presses of today, and marvel at the perfection displayed therein. Man has made re markable advance since the first proof was pulled. LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR’S PAY. Pelham H. Barrows, lieutenant governor of Ne braska, claims the state of Nebraska is indebted to him in the sum or $900 for services as governor. One of the judges in I^ncaster county says the claim is without merit, and dismisses Barrows’ suit. The constitution of the state of Nebraska says, among other things relating to the office, that in event of the governor's absence from the state, the lieutenant governor succeeds to “the powers, duties and emoluments” of the office. The pay of the gov ernor of Nebraska is $7,500 a year; that of the lieutenant governor is $1,500 a year, a difference of $6,000. It is clear enough, then, that when the lieutenant governor acts as governor, his pay under the con stitution is increased proportionately for the time he serves. No appropriation is made to cover this; at the last session of the legislature an effort to se cure such an appropriation was thwarted. The gov ernor has drawn his pay in full, and so has the lieu tenant governor with respect to his single salary. Now, under the constitution, the state is indebted to the lieutenant governor for the time he served as governor at the regular rate of pay given the gov ernor. It. is not a question of personalities, but of justice. Barrows ought not to be required to look to McKelvie for his pay; he should get it from the state. If the state is entitled to any rebate from McKelvie for salary drawn while absent from his office, that should be taken up as another piece of business. One of the first dpties of the legislature should bo to make some plain plan for carrying out, the provision of the constitution, which says the lieu tenant governor shall succeed to the emoluments of the governor’s office when filling that place in ab sence of the governor from the state. SARAH AT SEVENTY-EIGHT. Bernhardt at 78 works so hard that she collapses at the end of a rehearsal. What a tribute to a wonderful woman! Sixty years and more of arduous devotion to an exacting art. half a century the undisputed ruler of the the ater, and still going strong. Ambition could not seek greater honor than has been hers; avarice no more golden reward. Yet neither ambition nor greed ever moved this woman to an act. She is in spired by the divine impulse to create, and so she has gone through all her busy years, toiling at one and then another role, subduing and making her very own such a range of characters as must appal a less gifted person. For no role ever was “tailored” to fit Bernhardt; the greatest of authors wrote with her in mind, but to see her embody their conception of an important character, building it up in flesh and blood, in life and action, throbbing with the intensity of passion, distressed by grief, swallowed up in love, or uni mated by hatred and revenge, but never Bernhardt —always the breath of her genius blown into the nostrils of a poet's personification of some dominat ing motive. What an inexhaustible vitality she pos sesses to be capable of so much. Bernhardt has handled millions, und spent them on her art. She has been accused of extravagance, but never of frenkishness. Her money, hard won by relentless application to her profession, has been expended on new creations, to add greater luster to the theater she adorns. But she has another side, one the world seldom sees. Mrs. “Pat" Campbell, in her recently published book, tells of one occasion when they were playing in the same cast, she was in need of money, and applied to Sarah for a loan. Bernhardt responded with a 50-pound note, and it eventually developed that was all the money this famous pair of women had between them. Omaha recollects her well, for shq visited the city several times. Memory of her wonderful voice is most vivid; her graceful carriage, her majesty of presence, her vivacity of movement and gesture, all frame in the mental picture of a voice the like of which is rarely heard speaking. Tomasso Salvini had it; among Americans Blanche Walsh, Viola Al len and Margaret Anglin most nearly approached it. Yet through all the long list the tones of Bernhardt linger clearest, because of vibrant timbre that gave her utterance the quality that really made her great. The divine Sarah iR truly named. She is the one, and it is no disparagement to other women who have won fame upon the stage, to say she is alone, unapproachable in her premiership, yet human, and delightful because she is human. Mile. Sorel has reached her beloved France, de claring her adoration for America. Inasmuch as her short stay in the United States netted her more in real cash than she would get for two years hard work in Paris, her enthusiasm may be understood. Her expressions may be taken to mean she is com ing back some day. Increase of cotton spinning in November to the tune of 420,000,000 active spindle hours over Oc tober is another straw that shows how the wind is setting in the United States. A divorced wife has secured a restraining order to prevent her former husband from wedding a young girl. Question, how long do the proprietary right* continue after the partnership is broken up? A Seattle sneak thief is much cast down be cause the old man from whom he stole a shirt was Irish. No crime, however, if it had been a Chinese who was victimized. A lot of girl clerks, typists and office help will sympathize with the Michigan miss whose spending money has been cut down to $20,000 a year by a court order. Some of the pagans hereabouts are starting their Saturnalia observation a little ahead of time. The feat really does not begin until Saturday. Iowa now has one auto for each four and one fifth persons in the state. The other one-fiftlj is probably using an airplane. Judge Patrick is warming up to his work as an enforcer of traffic rules. More power to him. Life on Lake Superior is not without its thrills. Belief m Brimstone From the Washington Post. A professor in a Missouri college has been invited to resign “because he does not believe in aatan," as an existing demon with hoofs and horns and tail. AVhlch suggests that if one who doesn't accept scriptural de scriptions literally gets mixed uji with those who do he will be rated as bad company, and if one thus mixed up doesn't believe in the devil he Is apt to catch him. Evidently if one wearies of fearing the devil nnd ventures to ftnd some more comforting interpretation of the Biblical narrative dealing with his satanie majesty, and so expresses his liberalism In Missouri, and if the literalists have their way in the matter he will be in a bad way. Apparently the professor's critics hold that those who would escape the devil by doubting his ex [ istence are on (he road (o him. “From State and Nation" —Editorials from other newspapers— , Who Is the "Hoc" That Gets the Fanner's Crop? (*\v Hhio c. Doming in the Wyoming State Tribune. The Omaha Bye under its present ownership and editorship has taken I "it new life. It is now one of the i readable newspapers of the west, ! whereas for years it was dull and un | interesting. Every page contains vi tality. because there is n working per | sonulity In charge. A recent issue contains a very striking cartoon which represents an ! old-fashioned corn crib with the Mats 1 off at the bottom and big ears of corn 1 lllteriiig through on the ground. The i crib represents, generally speaking, j the product of the farm. In the foreground, grabbing each I ear as it comes out, are razorback [ hogs, which are denuding each ear of the kernels, leaving only the cob for the farmer's share, tine is labeled railroad rates,” another "car short age?' and another “inadequate cred its " The figure may be somewhat over drawn. but it Illustrates a clearly present state of mind. No one can deny that the farmer or the producer has been caught between the upper and tile nether millstone of economic pressure. He has practically nothing left. Very generally it is believed that the freight rate is largely responsible. Ml this suggests that congress and the Interstate Commerce commission or the railroad board should examino the entire situation, find the seat of trouble, apply the pruning knife and restore something of the equilibrium that prevailed in production and dis tribution before the world war fell like a pall upon every home and every industry and left Its blight of debt and death under which we are still strug gling. Young Men mid Old. From tho Marlon star. A successful author who at 25 has put a host seller on tho market avers that it is the old people who run tilings. This In spite of the fart that the present has been called an age where youth takes the helm and as sumes .leadership In all important enterprises. There is truth in this young auth or's observation. The war may seem to have been won by the sheer strength of youth; but it is to he re membered that the guiding minds in that war belonged to generals and premiers, not ope of whom was under 50. Francis Bacon hus said: "The errors of young men are the ruin of business; but tile errors of aged men amount to this, that more might have been done, hut sooner." Where respon sibility and keen judgment, are the foremost factors, thoso who have lived must stand at the wheel. Yet the enthusiasm and tire of youth are essential to progress. What young men huve started old men have finished and standardized. The one is a check and stimulus to the other. No man, because he is young or because he is old. needs to regret his condition. “It is good to compound employments of both,” said Bacon. The world needs both and finds each indispensable. Public Health and Filthy Money. From the Topeka Capital. When New York's distinguished health commissioner is sworn in as a United States senator from that state maybe he will introduce a bill placing upon tho government the cost of transporting unfit money hack to the treasury for renewal In new money. Bills reeking with filth are not only in general circulation at all times, but the filthier the hill the more every body wants to pass it off, the result being that filthy money circulates more generally and rapidly than other money and the filthier the more rapid its circulation from hand to hand. Finally it is gathered lip in the banks which proceed to circulate it among thems'- ves, passing it off for the next bank to go to the expense of remit ting it to Washington as "unfit cur rency.” If the charge for this service was not thrown upon persons holding the money, hut were a charge on the treasury, the country would have clean money, and at no proportionate cost to the boon of being rid of germ infested currency. It would be an In expensive contribution to public health. A New Motor Load. Prom tho Nebraska City Press.*' The suggestion of Secretary George Johnson of the department of high ways that the Nebraska federal aid toad program may be carried out without burdening the general population, simply J?y letting the au tomobile owner pay for the work, is not likely to touch a responsive chord. Tho automobile owner In Ne braska Is already being taxed heavily and often, lie pays a personal tax on his car, a license fee for the priv ilege of honking his horn at an ab sent-minded pedestrian, and a wheel lax if ho lives in a metropolitan city. In addition there are the taxes which are Imposed by the gasoline seller, the oil purveyor and the insurance agent. Mr. Johnson's plan would call for an additional annual levy of $25 on the average car owner. It Is probably true that flO per cent of the people of NO ROYAL ROAD. There nro no roynl roads In life. Horn midst travail, with dangers rife. Thence onward; earth's hesetments cloy, And bar tbe path to perfect Joy. No royal road to happiness. The base inurements on us press To charm our souls, though vain are they, Obscure the true, lead us astray. There Is no royal road to love. That precious treasure high above All worth, forever lies In wait. To mar Its fervor, blighting hate. There is no royal road to wealth. Though youth and strength, with buoyant health Abound in us, long Is the rise, And high rests the Illusive prize. To health there Is no royal way. To sore afflictions we are prey, Up from the cradle to life’s end. For health, for life, we must contend. No royal road to wisdom's height. Through many rears we wage the fight To pain its crest, Its laurels wear, With hopes oft blent with near despair. There Is no royal road to fame. Ha who would win a deathless name From out obscurity must rise, Through patient toil and sacrifice. To heaven there is no royal road. The narrow path to that abode Is rough and steep, and hut the few Survive, said Christ, the Journey through. Rejoice there Is no royal road Be glad But for ambition’s goad That drivps us upward, all would he But clods In mediocrity. —GEORQR B CHILD. NET AVERAGE CIRCULATION for NOVEMBER, 1922, of THE OMAHA BEE Daily.73,84? Sunday .78,105 B. BREWER, Gen. Mgr. ELMER S. ROOD, Cir. Mgr Sworn to and subscribed before me this 6 th day of December, 1922. W. H. QUIVEY, (Seal) Notary Public | Nebraska, as Mr. Johnson points out, are directly or Indirectly owners of automobiles. Be that as it mgy, the motor car owner will never see the situation In that light and. besides, he thinks good roads are of some benefit to people who do not drive cars, for roads are arteries of commerce and commerce benefit!» verybody. A Job for Your Boy. IFiom the YOungstown Telegram "What shall I make my boy?” , many an anxious parent Is asking today as he realizes the overcrowded condition of his own trade or pro fession. The boy will probably make or un make himself without much aid from the old man, but meantime why not turn his thoughts toward the science of chemistry, if he he at all studious ly Inclined? Here we have a field ex 1 panQing In all directions like a dampened yeast cuke. Last year .American industry spent more than $70,000,000 In scientific research, most of It in experiments in chemistry In the laboratory. As a result of this expenditure $000,000,000 is saved annually by in dustry in tills country. The value of scientific research has never been so fully appreciated as it Is today. Yes. chemistry offers a fine field for the hoy just entering high school and not knowing what to do with himself. Every normal boy likes to "experiment,” and chemistry is the very heart of scientific investigation. New Books for Children For the children there Is no gift With more solid pleasure than a good hook. The following publications are all that could be asked from the standpoint of beauty and interest— truly a preferred list: "Pansy Eyes, it Maid of Japan,” by Hesse T. Sprague, all illustrated by Bess D. Jewell, One of the‘Travel Tot Tales.” with two sheets of linen out of which to make the doll, who is the principal character of the story. Published by the Reilly & Lee Co. "Kabumpo in Or.,” by Ruth Plum ly Thompson, a contribution of the famous or stories of I,. Frank Baum. Published by the Reilly & Lee Co. "The Mouse Story,” translated from the Danish of K. H. With. A quaint annd delightfully humorous tale, of a family of mice. Published by Stokes. "The Mystery of Rarunpo Pass.” by Everett T. Tomlinson. The ad ventures of two boys in the colonial army of George Washington. Pub lished by Houghton-Mlfllln company. "Hkinny Harrison, Adventurer,” by Walter Scott Stpry; a wholesome, hut exciting tale of the pranks and activities of boyvllle. Published by Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Co. “The Little Browm Rooster,” by May Byron: a gay little book In verse and with profuse illustrations. Pub4 lished by George H. Doran company. "The Merrie Adventures of Robin Hood and Santa Claus,” written by ,T. Edgar Park and illustrated by W. H. Montgomery. Published by Hough ton-Mifflin com pa ny. "The Boy Magician,” by Raymond Dixie. Published by Lothrop, Leo & Hhepard. ' "The Arrival of Mr. Waddle” and "Mr. Widdle Wnddle Brings the Family,” by Dolores McKenna: little bonks filled with pictures for the youngest children. Published by the Penn Publishing company. “The Little Black Bear,” “The Little Tan Terrier” and “The Little Yellow Duckling,” by May Byraon: jolly stories and pictures. Published by George H. Doran company. “Jack the Giant Killer.” a hallad arrangement by Reginald Wright Kauffman, with many illustrations in color. A most inexpensive and thrilling little book. Daily Prayer I will magnify Him with thanksgiving. ——i*. 69:30, m God of nil mercies, Savior and Sanc tifier of men, we worship Thee, the Triune God, and call upon our souls and.all that is within us, to praise and magnify Thy Holy Name. We confess our sins, but rejoice that they are constantly being blotted out by the blond of our blessed Lord, and because He is righteous, we who have our lives hid in Him are also righteous. We come to Thy mercy sent with joy and thanksgiving, as we count our innumerable blessings, knowing that no good thing shall be withheld from those who love Thee and put their trust in Thee. As Thou hast delivered us from all perils, sorrows and trials in the past, so we are assured that Thou wilt keep that which we com mit to Thee for the future. Knrioh our hearts with Thy Word, that we may lead clean, holy lives, and have power to be winners of souls for our Master. ' We pray for Thy rich grace to be upon our beloved in our home and elsewhere, and for the world which lies in sin, that Thy Kingdom may come, and Thy will be done, through our Lord Jesus Christ. Amen. J H. JEFFERIS. Philadelphia, Pa. “The People’s Voice,r bditorials from readers of Ths Morning Boo. Readers of Tho Morning Be* srs invited to use this column freele for expression on matters of putilk interest. Greenbacks fur the Kotins. Omaha.—To the Kditor of The Omaha Bee: Newspaper dispatches dur Ing the past week herald the an nouncement that President Harding is for a soldirrs' bonus, providing tilt money to pay it can be found. The Fein ml Reserve bank system state ment shows that there is within the eonflnes of the United States over $3,400,000,000 in gold coin and bul lion, a commodity used to base the issue of Federal Reserve notes, there by enabling private lwnkers to charge the people of the United States inter est for the purpose of having money to pay their debts with. The• republican party is not the father of this Infamous banking scheme which is pauperizing the American people, and for this reason the republican party in the nation can restore us again to prosperity by paying a soldiers' bogus in the man ner that the great republican states man did In 1861, when at his request congress passed a hill for the issue by the secretary of the treasury of $60,000,000 of noninterest bearing notes, when issued to be legal tender money for its face value, for all debts, public and private, in the United States of America. L,ct's pay (he ex service men in Abraham Lincoln’s kind of money hy the issue of $4,000,000,000 of nonin terest hearing notes and mail direct to those entitled to it. a sum Com mensurate with the service and phy sical condition, and in no case less than $500. This will pay our debt to the ex service men and at the same time give the American people the necessary money, free from interest and usury, to pay their debts with. This act alone will restore prosperity. R. M. H. In Praise of Daugherty. Kearney, Neb.—To ttie Editor of The Omaha Bee: America still lives. Why did Representative Keller drop the impeachment against Daugherty? Did his radical backers get cold feet? In my opinion that Injunction of Daugherty was one of the tiest and most far reaching of all acts his office ever did. It was based on the princi ple that made America the greatest of all. and he should and does have the inoral and. if need be, tho physi cal bucking of all Americans. * LEONARD ROBINSON. CENTER SHOTS. ' Europe is on the brink,” worries a diplomat. -Surely he means "blink.” — Indianapolis Star. We have ti5 per cent of the world's telephones and goodness knows what tier cent of its wrong numbers. —Nashville Tennessean. Lima Beane says the Grim Reaper has traded his scythe for an auto mobile.—Toledo Blade. Peace hath its victories, but the present generation * Will probably never find out what thpy are.— Springfield (111.) State Journal. Many cities report a shortage of water, but there is little complaint of a shortage in other things to drink.—Indianapolis News. WILLIAM WELCH, Transfer and Storage, Council Bluffs, has had Good year Cushion Tires on his truck for 9 months now, and writes that they have given utmost cushioning and trac tion, while showing very little evidence of wear. Ami now the Goodyear Cash ion Truck Tire is made with the famous All Weather Tread for added resilience and positive traction, and with a pressed-on base for easy and secure application. GOOD! ¥kar RUSCH TIRE SERVICE 2205-7 Farnam Strcat AT Untie 0629 For Christmas ! L. E. Waterman Company, 191 Broadway, N. Y. _Oiicmto_Boston S«n FrmncUco _. The Problem Don't MOW WHtmtM T 6ET HER A ( J FfeWPER W *’ J A necktie - _ *»n*c . j Common Sense Calmness Tuts Over the Big Idea. Do you get excited when you be come Intensely interested? , Enthusiasm Is essential to success hut not the variety of enthusiasm which cuuses a person to talk rapid ly, wholly without the bulance wheel of practical thought. The kind of enthusiasm which real ly counts Is the sort which permits of perfect control of the emotions, yet Is sufficiently strong to permit of full concentration on the subject. There are persons with hobbies who cannot talk about them without get ting wrought up to high tension so that they do little besides jabber. Ho aroused they become that they give little heed, and no sound con sideration, to what any other person may say, and frequently they will break into the conver*nr:on of others in order to advance their own ideas. When a man or a woman is discuss ing something particularly interesting to themselves and their eyes take on an excited expression, the fuce flush es, body becomes tense and the flu gerH work convulsively, there is a fail ure to create a favorable Impression upon those with whom they speak. It is the calm, sincere, thinking person who can put over a big idea. (Copyright. 1KI t The Insuperable Obstacle. It is obviously superfluous to credit Senator Lai f'ollette with the idea of forming a new party. Battling Bob^ was never successful in Hocking with anyone except himself.—Philadelphia Inquirer. "When the Devil's Sick, Ktc.” The party that is out of power has lie most ideals.— Washington Post. GET THE PRICE on that typewriter you are planning to buy and then get ours. You'll find it 25% to 50% Cheaper We Sell All Kind* of Typewriter* All-Makes Typewriter Co. 20S South 18th Street Knabe Baby Grand Used About Six Months Buy it Thursday $ A and you can save vr This is a beautiful mahogany cased, genuine Knabe Piano. It is in wonderful condition and worthy of a place in the finest home. MI CKEDS 15th and Harney Open Evening*. AT. 4361 MONEY SAVED in Our Christmas Savings Club 18 Practically a Clear Gain # because it represents a total made up of small amounts conserved weekly and placed on deposit, instead of being spent in the many ways in which small change is usually expended. Become a member and it will be ‘‘juet like finding to muck money” when you £et a check for your entire savings—plus interest, just before Christmas. The first deposit makes you a member. There Are No jOther Requirement* No Fee* — No Fines — No Extra* Save for Christmas Everybody—Old or Young—Invited to Join. Have Everyone in the Family Become a Member. I ^^ Enroll Now