The Morning Bee MORNIN G—E VENIN G—S U N P A Y ■THE IIEK HI m.ISIIINU CO.. fubliBhrr._ MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Amociatcd Press, of which The Bee is a member# la exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all newt dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rishta of republication of our special dispatches are also reserved. BEE TELEPHONES Private Branch Bxehnngc. Ask for the Department lantle or Person Wanted. For Niirht Calls After 10 P. M.: f nilii Editorial Department. AT lantic 1021 or AT. 1042. _ OFFICES Main Office—17th and Farnam Council Bluffs —15 Scott St. S. Side. N. W. Cor. 24th and N. New York—World Bldif. Detroit—Ford Bldif. Chicago—Tribune Bldg. Kansas City—-Bryant Bldg. St. Louis—Syndi. Trust Bldg, si# Angeles—Higgins Bldg. San Francisco—Holirook Bldg. Atlanta—Atlanta Trust Bldg STILL GOING TO THE MOUNTAIN. Ever'arul anon we are served with the informa tion, piping hot, that Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, the big chief of organized baseball, is about to get it where Cora displayed her beads. But be fore we who have tears to shed are given opportun ity to shed them, along comes the news that Judge Landis is still the big chief, with those who would oppose him again eating out of his hand and purring with contentment. A virile and appealing character is Judge Kene saw Mountain Landis. Born, as his given name would indicate, at a time when the country was suf fering the storm and stress of civil warfare, he has been living the turbulent life. There is nothing of the pacifist about Judge Landis. It may be that he is averse to starting a scrap, but once started any where in his vicinity and offering him any excuse whatsoever to get into it, he is right in the middle of the melee and rejoicefully taking a most active part. As federal juuge he may have been at times spectacular, but all the time he was showing that he was on the side of the people. His $29,000,000 fine assessed against Standard Oil did not stick, but that, was the fault of neither Judge Landis nor the law and the evidence upon which he based the penalty. When organized baseball was in danger of going to wreck upon the rocks of public suspicion, after the expose of the Black Sox conspiracy to throw championship games, it was to Judge Landis that it ■ turned and called upon for help. A devotee of the game, and knowing it from the inside out, and a passionate lover of cleanliness and honesty in sports, Judge Landis accepted a position that practically made him the czar of the baseball world. There is no disputing the fact that it was Judge Landis, because of the confidence the great sport loving public had in his honesty and fairness and ex ecutive ability, who restored the game to public confidence and made organized baseball as strong as ever in the affections of the people. Naturally there arose those in the circles of organized baseballdom who grew jealous of his authority and his popular ity. But just about the time such as these think they have perfected the combination that will hum ble him, they discover that they are grieviously mis taken. And a mighty good thing for the game that such is the case. The stench of that gambling con piracy has not yet ^entirely dissipated, and every time there comes an effott to humble the man who aved the game there arises a suspicion in the minds of the fans who have not yet forgotten. , It is-jjpfte true thaflfjgfllpn -UNis draw* a tig alary for being the court of last resort in the world of organized baseball. But it is equally true -that he it,worth evepy dollar of it because he has the con Idence of the people who make the game profitable. Judge Landis has had some tough fights on his hands since he took up the duties of his present position, but to date he has given ample evidence that he is the worthy son of the sire who was among the blue dad soldiers who swept up the sides of the moun tain for whom that son was named, fought and won ihe battle among the clouds and set Old Glory float ing from its summit. The baseball Mahomet will continue for some ime to come to go to the Mountain. JAZZING UP THE BIBLE. There is no more intent to be sacreligious in writ ng that caption than there is on the part of those ■vho would rewrite the Bible and give it to us in •vhat they term modern language. But, after all, sn’t that just about what it all amounts to, this new ersion, written in what is termed newspaper style? There is nothing in these attempts to modernize he Bible that has any appreciable appeal to those vho love the old book for its wonderful imagery, its ublime poetry, its inspired history and its moral eachings. Every new revision results in the injec ion of more and more of modern thought and mod rn ideas of what it should contain, with a resultant oss in its appealing power. The great scholars who ;ave us the King James translation approached their ask in humbleness of spirit, and with no other de ire than to retain as far as possible the original hought of the inspired writer. The great preachers .nd priests and teathers who took the King James ■ersion in hand and went forth as leaders in re gious thought and education wrought a work that lias not been excelled, probably not equalled, by heir successors v ho were not content with the King James version, hut. must have something a little more n keeping with modern human thought. Certainly :he new translations have not had the effect of mak ing any clearer the obscure passages and it is equally ertain that in many cases the modern translations i ave merely lowered the sublimity of the original. Between the progressives and the fundamental -is, between the liberals and the conservatives, and irtween this translation and that, is it any wonder hat controversy in the religious world waxes greater vhile the impress of religious thought and living eemingly grows weaker und weaker? The Bible does not need any more translation. I is not in need of being modernized. It is in no oed of being set to popular phraseology. What is iceded most of all, is more Bible reading and study, norc willingness on the part of all the people to u-oflt by its wisdom and its admonitions, more effort in the part of rations and of individuals to follow ts precepts and walk in the paths it has surveyed or the feet of all niuBkinil. The world has had quite enough of the wrnng :ng and janglings of theologians, anil an ample suf ieiency of commentators who insist upon others ac •epting their ipse dixit as to what this or that pas age may mean. What the world needs most is to liscard all these thing* and to take the old hook at w hat it says, and says so clearly, and start over again with a firmer determination to live by it and die by it. It is not because the Bible is a complex book, impossible of understanding without, the explana Iions offered by wart in* theologians, that the world is stumbling along these days. It is because its won lerful truths and beautiful teachings have been too nearly hidden by the smoke screen of translators, and modernists and controversialists. The sooner the world gets back to the Bible as it is the sooner the world will he brought back to God. REPUBLICAN CONVENTION PLANS. Two things that came out of the room of the republican national committee on Wednesday will interest everybody. Cleveland is to have the repub lican convention in June, and it will consist of 1,036 delegates, instead of 984, as When Harding was nominated. Nebraska, under the new apportion ment, gets 19 instead of 16 delegates. The purpose of increasing the number of dele gates is to give to sections where the heavy repub lican vote is cast a greater proportional representa tion, and not to decrease the vote from the south, where the prospect of gaining any republican suc cess is remote. For many years the subject has been before the republican national committee. It has s?emed unfair that votes from a section wherein the ticket to be named would receive but slight if any support should have an equnl voice with the republican states in naming that ticket. On the other hand, a great reluctance is felt by republicans when it comes to disfranchising the thousands of voters in the south who are hopelessly held down by democratic policies. One hundred eighty-six electoral votes are practically assured the democratic nominee in advance. No matter who is put at the head of ^he ticket, he starts with 186 votes, and must secure by his campaign but 80 ad ditional votes in order to be elected. The republican nominee is compelled to go out and contest for 266 electoral votes, failing to secure which he is doomed to defeat The unfairness of this is not to be denied. So long as the oligarchy controls the “solid south,” so long will there be a demand for the direct election of the president by vote of the people, rather than oy the electoral college. If the dmocrats are eager to see the last vestige of state sovereignty swept away, they will cling to the antiquated system that permits them to disfranchise the greater part of the voting population in the southern states, and at the same time to have full representation in congress and in the electoral college. Other parts of the country have long resented this domination by a group that is traditionally opposed to the progressive policies of the republican party. Were elections free and untrammeled in all the south, the situation would be different. So long as in Texas, for example, 16 out of 18 congressmen go to the polls without opposition, and all are demo cratic selections, there will be discontent through out the nation because of existing conditions. PLEASURES OF A POLAR EXCURSION. A more or less hectic prospectus for the North Pole expedition, issued by a member of the Geo graphic society, talks of a “paradise to be found by the explorers. One of the great advantages will be plenty of floe ice to alight on, should engine trouble or anything of the sort develop, with the further boon of continuous daylight, by which to make re pairs. After the flora and fauna are located and described, and this includes whales, seals, polar bears and a lot of other mammals, the fish will take up some time. When all the animated life of the re gion is dealt with, comes the prospect of a great adventure in real estate. An area three times larger than Texas is to be looked over. At present no one knows if this is dry land covered by ice, or just sea water, mostly frozen over. The outlook for a pleasant summer’s journey is bright for the aviators who will talje part, and it is certain that much of valuable knowledge will result from the quest. Clearing up the one point as to whether the top of the world is solid or liquid will . be worth while. And, if nothing else happens, to revert to the pros pect alluded to, the explorers may serve science to some extent by pulling up a few blades of grass that grow beneath thousands of feet of ice, so the agronomists of today will be able to note the tex ture of what grew before the glacial epoch. Seri ously, the expedition has much to attract the im agination, and its discoveries ought to be worth all the trouble they will incur. And now they are stealing trolley cars for joy rides in Chicago. The notion that riding a Chicago trolley car is provocative of joy is one that demands the attention of alienists, not of the police. Mr. Ford called on President Coolidge recently. It is rumored that Mr. Ford told the president the history of the Muscle Shoals case. Mr. Ford says history is bunk. The country agrees, in part. The president is from Massachusetts, the senate majority floor leader is from Massachusetts, the speaker of the house is from Massachusetts—Massa chusetts, there it stands it needs no—etc., etc. The Toronto Star believes that the Baltimore woman who became the mother of quadruplets is the one who put the “more” in Baltimore. Also the “Bal” in Baltimore, wc says. Frank Crane says it is all a mistake to say that if anyone knows a thing he can tell it. But it isn't any mistake to say that a lot of fellows who don’t know it can tell it anyhow. Nothing startling about the news of the discovery of lipsticks and rouge in an ancient Egyptian tomb. But did they find any mustache' dye or breath killers? Atchison’s need now is a larger payroll, declares the Globe. And so many of us can sympathize with Atchison, too. As Mr. Ford dropped from sigrht in the South Dakota primaries, did he hid McAdoo? Homespun Verse —By Omaha's Own Poet— Robert Worthington Davie NEBRASKA WANTS A SONG. Nebraska wants a song that l* In words her vale* and hill*. In melody the audible refrain* of rippling i His, In beauty everything she holds devoutly to her breast In love the fervor of a son whn know* Nebraska heat. Ami from some hninlet In the state a bird tongued bnrd will spring With soulful cadence In his voice and of her virtue* sing. Ami rhnni her glory till hla song with pure elation thrills Her folk from the Missouri’s bluffs unto the far Sand llills. Nor shall the sweet "Mv Maryland ’ surpnss hi* master piece Which In Nebraska homes will ring till nil good tiding cease; Ami Iowa. Oh, Iowa.” will slumber In repos# Until another anthem conies from whence the tall corn grows. Have faith >o mariner* who runm the realm# without success. Some modest haul will write the lines find bring your happiness, And there will be rejoicing In th« land that Imh for long Ihen searching #v«i vainly lor u true fc'cbrubku sung “The People's Voice" L'ditnrial* from reader* of The Morning ilee Header* of The Morning Hee Rre .nvitru to u-e thi* eotumn freely for expression on matters of public interest. Twelve-Hour Day. Council Bluffs, la.—To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: I note the article in the "People’s Voice," written by a t’nion Pacific watchman from Coun cil Bluffs, who is trying to make light of Mrs. R. J. Rogers' article written several days ago, respecting the work ing of watchmen 12 hours. Regard less of position, salary, etc., 12 hours is too long to work even a horse, for 365 days a year, with no relief what ever Should like to quote what the sec retary of labor, Washington, D. C., wrote: "It may now be said that we are within sight of the time when no workman in the I'nited States will be forced to labor from sunrise to sunset, and that wo are within a few years of the day when we shall have realized the hope that each man shall have eight hours for work, eight hours for play, and eight hours for sleep.” I happen to bo a personal friend of a special agent of one of the other railroads, and I know that they are not working their watchmen 12 hours a day, and even though there are other roads working their watchmen 12 hours, it’s entirely too long. I have made inquiry to the position that this certain watchman holds ami I find that he Is a yard watchman and he can go where he wishes to and get a hot meal, but there are other watch men in the shops who have to stick to their posts for 12 hours Hnd eat a cold lunch from their dinner basket. 1 would like to ask this watchman where he worked just before coming to Council Bluffs and taking his pres ent position, and what kind of work lie did. There are watchmen who be lieve in taking care of their families and like tp be home with them at least a part of the time; also go to church. IRA HALL. So Mention of Tornadoes. Omaha—To tho Kdltor of The Oma ha J!ee: Why tho Japanese earth quake? Was the hand of God visible in this, one of the greatest disasters to over befall a nation? Was God's hand visible in the flood When all were lost but Noah and his family? Why was this great disas ter brought upon the people of that day, and what does the Bible tell us about It? What do we rend about the great cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, cities that sunk to tho lowest plane of gin and licentiousness? What about the city of Babylon, a place which had become the center of vice and corruption and wan taken from King Belshazzar in a night of one of the most licentious debauches recorded in ancient history? Also the destruction of that great city of Pompeii, destroyed by one of the most horrible disasters ever vis ited upon a city; destroyed at a time in its history of most licentious con duct. Kecent uncoverings of the ruins of this city disclose paintings and statuary that were licentious be yond words to describe. Then, what shout the city of St. Pierre, on the Island of Martinique, that was so completely destroyed that it seems a matter of history thnt only otic man- escaped? At the tiino of its destruction, St. Pierre was known to be a veritable sink of vice and depravity. Before the disaster that came upon this city, nil Brot cslant missionaries were driven cut of the city and in derision of Jesus Christ a pig was crucified in their midst in public scorn and derision of the word of God. It Is a recorded fact thnt 60 per cent of tho Inhabi tants of thnt city were born out of wedlock. Bet us come closer home for an other instance where the hand of Cod is believed to have appeared. Only recently In our own gr-.it city of San Frnnclscn the most destruc tive disaster ever visited upon an \merlc,an city shook the very foun datlons of the city and visibly demon strated that the wrath of God was there in evidence. Can there be any significance In the fact1 thnt at the time of this disaster thnt there was in existence, and had been for year*, in what was known ns Chinese head quarters or Chinatown, one of the sections of most damnable wicked ness ever allowed to exist. In any country, anti that right here In our Cnlted States, supposed to be the most enlightened nation on earth, and this situation allowed to exist by those In command of the laws of this country against vice and. cor ruption, and when an Incarnate devil seemed to be allowed to go hither and yon at will and not a hand of the law effectually raised against his reign? And now romes the great Japanese disaster. There seems to he a fenr, a suppression of known facts readily nccessahle, and no doubt known to our dally press, but seemingly cov ered up, or at least not made known to the public, aqtual facts that would be of far more Intere.W to the people at large than some of the news of the day appearing In the press, thnt might shed light on things that should be more generally known. It Is a fact well known to those who have had occasion to bo well in formed and well known to official dom of Japan, that at the time of tho destruction of Its mighty cities that miles of Its cities were set apart is segregated districts, where thou sands of Its most beautiful and at tractive girls were forced Into sin and shame only to fill tho coffers of the vilest men In all humanity, bent upon the most unscrupulous de hanchory for the gain of the almighty dollar, as they consider the dollar. At the time of this disaster there Was no place |n the known world of such vice and corruption as then ex Isted In Toklo. Considering these well known facts, enn It he doubted that while Hod Is Infinitely good, yet His hand of warn ing Is visibly shown In llis wrath at the vileness of man'* If Hod's wrath In not visibly shown In Instances ns related above, then why the disastrous destruction when these cities were In the lowest stages of sin and debauchery, vet were not destroyed until they had reached such a stage of corruptness that If Hod Is Ond. Indeed. Ho could no long er withhold His wrathful d« strut* tion OHonor H UAWKTN*. 2HJ0 Ames Avenue. Keeping Pace With Dante Fashion. Next spring, skirts and coats are to he shorter ng'tln. the National Man ufaeturera* association announces. The truly thrifty woman will have her skirts equipped with r«cf points, like those on n mainsail. Then, reefs may he taken In or shaken out, in accordance with fashion's fickle hreese.—New Y«ik Tribune Why i'lrk Don’t Marry. Klght million employed American women receive subtile* cf $2,000 or more and spend more for « h»t In * than wives of $10,000 n year men. This an suers why the girls can not afford to marry Pittsburgh flasett* Time* \ Difference. The old fashioned girl kl*°*'d to make up; the n*idetn mu makes up tu kiss, rassaic Herald. “From State arid Nation” —Editorials from Other Newspapers— Two-Way Interpretations. Front lh» Sioux Falls Press. There Is no chance for confusion or misunderstanding about President Coolidge's rejection of the league of nations, but argument already Is un der way as to the president’s exact tmsitlon on a world court. Some of the republican leaders, formerly at variance on this subject, now profess to find their contending positions sus tained in the president’s statement. This seeming confusion may ap pear strange, to some extent, but it is a logical sequence of the presi dent’s discussion of that subject. He did not commit himself to any par ticular type of world court. He sug gested ’’favorable consideration” for the proposal pending before the sen ate for a permanent court of inter national Justice, "with the proposed reservations clearly Indicating our refusal to adhere to the league of nations.” To what does the suggestion lead? Certainly no further than to an al leged court without responsible back ing from the various governments. Apply the same idea to domestic af fairs and analyze its effects. What would be the foreo of effect of state court edicts or federal court edicts If l>ased upon the understanding that people could use their own pleasure about accepting or obeying the ver dicts? Those who have not taken time- to read all of the president’s message should at least take time to digest the following extract on the world court question: “Pending before the senate Is .a proposal that this government give Us support to the permanent court of international justice, which is a new and somewhat dif ferent plan. This is not a partisan question. It should not assume an artificial importance. The court is merely a convenient instrument of adjustment to which w-e could go, but to which wo could not be brought. It should be discussed with entire candor, not by a poli tical, but by a Judicial method, without pressure and without pre judice. Partisanship has not place in our foreign relations. As I wish to see a court established, and as the proposal presents the only practical plan on which many nations have ever agreed, though it may not meet every desire, I therefore commend It to the fav orable consideration of the senate, with the proposed reservations clearly Indicating our refusal to adhere to the league of nations." Tty organize an alleged world court and at the same time refuse inter national support for such a tribunal involves no progress in world affairs. An arrangement of that kind, at best, would be no more effective than The Hague tribunal, which w-as In exist ence at the outbreak of the world war, and which did not even have erfough power to deal with thp inci pient stages—the Austria-Serhlan dis pute. Those of opposing views who wish to adhere to President Coolldge may he able to satisfy themselves with the guarded utterance on the world court proposal, but if so, It is because they are deliberately In the mood to tie easily satisfied. Mild as the pro posed participation In world affairs nuiy be, It i* too much for the Un compromising isolationists and cer tainly not enough for those who will continue to hope for vigorous and unapologetic participation by the 1 inited States in practical measures for world peace. Magnus Johnson's Peace Plan. From th# Minneapolis Trlhun#. Senator Magnua Johnson's world peace plan, outlined in a joint reso lution introduced in the senate, is simple enough in what it proposes, but it requires a faith that Is child llkn and bland to believe that the purpose expressed ran le carried out while the nations are in the present frame of mind, one toawrd another. The plan is an extension of the ar bitration jsillcy put forward by,Wil liam Jennings Bryan when he was at the head of the State department under Mr. Wilson. Mr. Bryan con cluded treaties with 31 other na tions, binding the t.'nlted States and these signatories to submit to tin ar bitration commission all disputes that could not be s* ttled in the ordinary diplomatic pn eases. The contract ing parties agree not to declare war or begin hostilities until after the commission shall have had time to investigate the matters in controver sy and euhmit tts finding*. Neither party to the contract is bound to respect the report and abide by the findings. One of the main objects Sir Bryan had in mind was to In sure a cooling-off period. during which the nations Involved In the dispute might do socne soher think Daily Prayer | Pray no* unto tho I.ord our Gog — J*r. 37 3. We thank Thee, our Heavenly Fath er, for Thy care over u* through the past night. We thank Thee for the Bible. Help u* to understand It. tol>e lleve It, to obey It and to love It, We thank Thee, Blessed Savior, that Thou didst come from heaven to earth that we might go from earth to heav en: that Thou didst die that we might live. We thank Thee that Thou didst rise from the dead, ascend up on high, and dost ever live to Intercede for us. Wo thnnk Thee that Thou didst say. "Come unto me all ye lhat labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." We cotno to Thee. Have mercy on us. We have done wrong. Forgive us. We want to do right: help us We are ainners: be Thou our Savior. Fill us with Thy Spirit: consecrate us to Thy service. Comfort the troubled: guide the per plexed: strengthen the weak: succor the tempted. Bless our country. Bless Thy church everywhere, and bless all Christian workers. Fill the whole earth with Thy glory. Wo ask all In the name of our t-ord Christ Jesus, and for His sake We pray, ' Hod Mo** «ur going out. Nor lea* "ur turning In, And in tk«* them sure find Me** our dally bread. And Mem vthale'erw* do whgte'er endure May rt**th unto Ilia peace awake ua. And heir* unto Ilia mlvfttlon make ua '* Amin ntCN MU> BOYD WFinsTKB. 1» D. Wilke* Harip. I*a NET AVERAGE CIRCULATION for November, 1923, of THE OMAHA BEE Daily. . 73,950 Sunday.79,265 Oort not Im lude return*. Irlt* ova* a. sample* or paper* spoiled in piloting and Include* no spatial naira ot ftee tin illation •( any kind B. BREWER. Gen. Mgr. V. A BRIDGE. Clr. Mgr. i Suhat • ihed and awom la helnre me l) §tk d »\ •! Pwnahei I Mi < W II QUIVEV. (Seal) Notaiy Public ing on the relative merits of force and reason In composing differences and reaching agreements. Senator Johnson proposes that the president be authorized to call a con ference of all nations, at which poll tical and moral suasion would be brought to bear to have each na tion sign an arbitration treaty with every other nation. If 50 nations signed such treaties with one an oliter, the whole number of treaties would he 2,450. If t»0 nations had mutual agreements. the number would amount to 3,540. That is a lot of treaties, and it looks very much at this time as If it would be a big job to garner them from such seed as might be sown at the conference proposed. The following nations signed with the United States the Bryan arbitra tion treaties: Great Britain, Spain, Russia. Equador. France, Greece, Norway, Denmark, Italy, Switzer land. Salvador. Guatemala. Panama, Hondura, Nicaragua, the Nether lands. Argentina. Brazil. Bolivia, Per sia, Portugal, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Venezuela. Uruguay, Para guay, Chile, China and Peru. Ger many and Jujum did not sign up. The United States government cer tainly would not object if all these nations were to enter Into mutual agreements with one another to re sort to war only as a last recourse, but the government ought to he care ful about starting something which It would be up to others to finish. It Is a question whether the futile conferences in Europe in the last two or three years did not do more harm than good. Following the example of his illustrious predecessor, Presi dent Coolidge doubtless would shrink from calling the conference proposed by Senator Johnson unless he were well assured in advance that some thing amply worth while would come out of It. Girls vs. Jobs. From the Kansas City Post. Rich girls need jobs and It is a grave mistake to oppose them, says Jean Hamilton, dean of worneit at the University of Michigan. ‘ Nine tenths of the daughters of wealthy parents are living in a vacuum.” she maintains. “If they are too young to marry, their parents should find jobs for them to keep them out of mischief.” Miss Hamilton claims that the pampered girl, who is brought up In luxury, becomes a wife who is a mere spendthrift, and not a partner. Fur thermore. she nays, it is strange, hut, true, that hosts of mothers of rich family girls, who want to go to work, oppose them, apologize for daughter s whim and do their utmost to have the daughters go stale at country clubs end inane pink tea life the fathers’ incomes afford. This seriously vicious idea works great harm to the girls, thinks the Worcester tO.) Post. The mere fact that a girl has money does not assure , her brains or the knowledge of ap plying them. Brains must be de veloped. and riches take wings. The girl of the work and business world has infinitely greeter advantages than the girl who stays at horn ■ and 1< lls In luxury, idle and really being merely another woman. Many Miles of l ii wan destroyed by fire recently, and Mrs. Merwin, who edits a spicy de p.-s rtrnefit in the Tim**-Tribune, says she shudders to think of how many pies and cakes will be made and sup i served by her sisters before a | new church Is erected. • • • “A willintrne.es to srn to work." ob serves the Fairbury News, “would fro | a long ways towards solving the un employment problem. A Handy Place to Eat Hotel Conant Ifeth and Harney— Omaha The Center of Convenience Just try Cranberry Sauce as a relish with beef—hot or cold Cranberries are good themselves and lake other foods taste good. Economical—no waste—easy to prepare. A recipe folder, containing many ways to use an4 preserve cranberries, will be free on request. Lrt th* Spint of Christmas lar throw* h the uinttt trip on the. | Vt lux* Train thru to Miami daily will please most • I Through Sleeping Curs to West Coast Resorts The Floridan it (he only solid through train to Miami and East Coaat retort*—the taitrtt and tineat to Florida. Dhe Seminole The dependable all-year tram to Florida —leave* Chicago daily 9:10 p. m.; learn St. Lomu J0:$5 /*. rn. Arrive* Jacksonville 7t%0aecond morn m*. connecting lor all Honda reaoct* INrough *lear*n* car* with drawing roonii.i i'inr*rtmrnti ami Off* section* to Jailui'ntillr. l amp*. Miami and va «innih.t*t. Observation car,dining car and cMchn.1 I.eavr« Chicago 11:40 A.M. Leave* S*. Louia 3:10 P. M. Arrive* Birmingham 3:00 A. M. Arrive* Jacksonville 8:t0P. M. , Arrive* Miami 10:20 A. M. Observation, club and dining can: drawing-room, com partment— single or cn suite—and open section sleeping can to Miami, St. Petersburg.Tampa ansi Hradcnts'wn, also serving Sarasota. Valet and maid. Powerful new mountain-rtpc locomotive* insure smooth riding and on-time arrivals, l'ullman passengers only. Illinois Central Service all the acts For rrserveftosn, farts anj descriptive booklet, as* Cm Tiskvt <>gcc. 1«I»IVh!<» Si Pkoiic VTtaaoc *JI« ll MssJack PistiiM PsvtenSn Meal. llli«.u* CtaWs1 Railroad 111 Cut Nsnoasl Hn«k Bids . link «nd IUr»*, Sta. Ph. nc 1 kckson IVYS. Osnsks Nek Illinois Central zt *