Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 22, 1919, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE BEE: OMAHA. MONDAY, DECEMBER 22,' 1919.
OPERATORS ARE
FIRM ON STAND
AT SETTLEMENT
Renew Denials That Previous
Agreements Bind Them
to Accept Govern
ment Plan.
Washington, Dec. 21. Coal opera
tors of the United States through
their executive committee explained
further tonight their reasons for re
fusing to participate in the govern
' ment's plan for settling the bitu
minous coal strike. Renewing 'the
denials that previous agreements
had bound them to accept the gov
ernment's plan, the operators as
serted that while they were bound
by and had agreed to accept strike
settlement proposals made by Or.
Garfield, former fuel administrator,
the government proposals as ac
cepted by the, miners differ vitally
from those of the Garfield plan.
The insistence of the operators on
, the stand left open tonight the pos
sibility, it was held, that the com
mission named Saturday by Presi
dent Wilson and given by bim, pow
er to fix "wages and prices of coal
necessary to sustaain wages, might
be unable to function. The execu
tive committee did not say, however,
that operators would stand aloof
irom'the commission in its investi
gations and decision, but left the
question open to be settled prob
ably at a meeting Tuesday in Cleve
land, O., where a general session of
the scale committee, central com
petitive field and other operators
generally has been called.
Operators' Statement.
The operator in a formal state-
. nient tonight said: - '
"In the light of the statement
of Attorney General Palmer of yes
terday, in' which he says that it
i would be an amazing repudiation
of their own statements if the oper
ators do not acquiesce in the plan
which' their official representatives
have repeatedly agreed to, in the
settlement of the strike, the bitum
inous coal operators feel impelled
to re-state their attitude so that
it may be clearly appreciated by
the public. '
"Attorney General Palmer, in his
statement yesterday, asserted that
the operators had agreed to the
memorandum of the attorney gener
al and John L. Lewis, acting presi
dent of the United Mine Workers
of America, laying down the terms
of agreement for settlement of the
oal strike. The fact is that the
operators never6 learned of the ex
istence of that agreement until after
it had been presented to miners at
the Indianapolis conference of De
cember 1.
"The operators did accept the pro
posal of the government, presented
through Dr. Garfield, former fuel
administrator and referred to in Pres
ident Wilson's letter of December
f. Under the terms of this proposal
the mine controversy was to be set
tled oh the basis of the fiveprin-
ciDles announced by Dr. Garfield.
The application of one of these
principles determined the 14 per cent
advance which was granted the
miners. The Garfield proposal fur
ther nrovided for the establishment
of a board with advisojy powers
only.
Stand by Garfield Plan.
"The operators still stand by the
acceptance of the Garfield proposal.
The president's letter December 6,
referred specifically to it and it
seemed clear to the minds of the
operators that it was the intent
proposal was to he used as the
Pretty Girl, Dressed as Boy
Roughs It for "Local Color"
Leaves Ohio' Home With Hair Clipped and in Male
Attire for 1,500-Mile Jaunt 'Cross Country to
Study Human Nature Worked in Omaha as
Hotel Bus Boy. , -
TROUBLES ENDED
AFTER 20 YEARS,
mvn nrm iiiiirn
oATo UUALul Ntn
Suffering Overcome After
Taking Tanlac and He Gains
Forty-two Pounds.
"It's a fact, I was in such misery
rom stomach trouble and rheuma
tism that I was not expected to
liye, but now after taking Tanlac
I feel as fine as I ever did in my
life, and have gained 42 pounds in
weight," was the remarkable state
ment made recently by William
Burg, a well known coal miner, who
lives at 1714 East Miller St,
Springfield, 111.
"I had suffered for 20 years,"
he continued, "and was in as bad
a fix as a man could get in. I had
indigestion so bad that the minute
r ate anything it would sour and
cause gas to form and I would
suffer terribly with cramps in my
stomach. Even liquid diets would
make me deathly sick and nauseated
and I often wondered how I lived
through such agony. I also had a
bad case of rheumatism and my
joints were so stiff I could hardly
bend over to lace my shoes and I
had such pain in my elbows that
I couldn't lift a pick and my feet
were so swollen and hurt so bad
that my' shoes would hardly go
on. I tried all sorts of medicines
and treatments and liniments, but
nothing ever gave me any relief.
"But when I began taking Tan
lac, it went right after my troubles
and I began to improve right away.
All my troubles have completely
left me and I feel 20 years young
er. I can eat anything set before
me without the least fear and every
trace of the rheumatism has gone.
I sleep like a log every night and
work like a trooper every day. Peo
ple who knew my condition ire
actually astonished when they see
me now and without question I
consider Tanlac the best medicine
ever made."
Tanlac is sold In Omaha at all
Sherman & McConnell Drug Com
pany's stores, Harvard Pharmacy
and West End Pharmacy. Also For
rest and Meany Drug Company in
South Omaha and the leading drug
gist in each city and town through
out the state of Nebraska. Adv.
Denver, Dec. 21. 'Ellen Vallery, 21-year-old
itinerant philosopher, of
Youngstown, O., has secured suf
ficient "local color" for her proposed
writings, the declared here and, fol
lowing her arrest bv local oolice
when she was discovered in a freight
yard with her hair shaved off and
dressed in boy's clothes prepared to
"riA K. ..,. Mr.. : L.
nv li.e IUU9 JlliU jrvuiuig, wc
has decided to remain in this citv
until her "hair grows out again" and
men return home.
Six weeks of adventure, during
which time she has traveled some
1,500 miles and worked as a waiter.
bus boy, and performed various
otner tasks In the garb of a boy, is
enough, Ellen says.
Ellen, who is pretty and decidedly
feminine, despite her efforts at
camouflage, learned that she could
do a man's work, a year or more ago
when she replaced a mail flarrier in
her home town that he might jour
ney to Europe and fight the Ger
mans with Uncle Sam's doughboys.
Could Do Man's Work.
"I thought if I could do that I
could do anything a man could," she
told City Chaplain Jim Goodheart,
o whom the police paroled her.
So, with the desire to prove that
she could do a man's work love of
adventure and an ambition to ob
tain "local color" for articles she
planned to write on equal suffrage,
the pretty wanderlust victim left her
mother's home in Youngstown,
O., early in October, planning to
travel to the Pacific coast.
Ellen had a little money, and she
says she never 'really beat her way."
She "shipped out," for the most part,
with employment agencies, dressed
in boy's clothing and secured work
assigned to men. y ,
Faked Deep Voice.
Her first .stop was Detroit. "I
cut my haii off and put on boy's
clothes," she said, "and to keep folks
from knowing Jhat I was a girl I
'talked way down in my throat'
cumsah," and she warbled a few
bass notes. In Detroit she worked
as a bus boy in a hotel.
From Detroit she went to Chi
cago, where she worked as a waiter.
An employment agency in Chi
cago was advertising for section
hands in Wyoming, so Ellen
"shipped out" as a section hand. On
her way to Wyoming, however, she
decided 'to stop off in Omaha, where
she again secured employment in
the dining room of a hotel as a bus
boy.
. From Omaha to Morgan.
From Omaha she went to Fort
Morgan, Colo., where she worked
on a farm, and came to Denver,
MILK BATHS AS -AID
TO BEAUTY
ARE ADVOCATED
Greek Dancing and Rhythmi
cal Exercises Also Recom
mended -Course, $5,000.
n be ni m mft&v m m a m
Hiss EtTen, ValtetT
where her identity was discovered
while she "was preparing to catch a
freight to' Wyoming in the company
of two -men.
"Men are the best pals in the
world," she told Goodheart, "and
when they find out a girl is straight
they are straight, too."
A Miss Vallery declares that she has
gone to churchi every Sunday since
she left home. "No harm can come
to anyone who has done no wrong,'"
she said. ' "All I have done is to cut
off my bair and put on some boy's
clothes." '
Notwithstanding the girl's mas
querading, she lamented the loss of
a suitcase containing feminine finery
and a wig'that she had shipped to
Wyoming.
"I'll just stay in Denver now until
my hair grows out and then I'll re
turn to my mother in Youngstown,"
she announced, and 'Jim' Goodheart
has promised to secure employment
for her here.
basis of settlement of the wage con
troversv. . c
"The ooerators never have been
consulted in regard to the memo
randum which was drawn by the at
torney eeneral in conference with
President Lewis and secretary
Green of the miners organization.
"Th memorandum eoes fat be
yond the Garfield proposal to which
they assented. '
"The ooerators ooint out the fol
lowing radical differences between
tin. Garfield nroDosal and the Pal
mer-Lewis memorandum which was
accepted at Indianapolis:
Radical Changes Noted.
"1. The Garfield orooosal would
have established a board with ad
visory powers only. The Palmer
Lewis memorandum agreement
would establish a commission not
advisory in character, but with full
power definitely to fix coal prices,
wages, differentials and to determine
h details of workinsr conditions
within each district covering that
memorandum.
"2. The auestion of differentials
and internal working conditions in
the many bituminous coal fields af
f ! hv this memorandum are so
involved and complicated that a com
plete review, in order to make an in
telligent decision, would be an in
t..m;n,KU task. These matters are
of vital importance to the coal in
dustry. The differentials tnemseivco
are not in dispute. .... f
"3, Furthermore, the findings of
the commission contemplated by the
Palmer-Lewis memorandum may be
retroactive without limitations as to
time. ' ' .
Want .Practicable solution.
"There are other important differ-
ences between me uarucm upl
and the Palmer-Lewis memorandum
which have not been made ciear ij
the operators up to this. time, lne
operators repeated that they had
never agreed to the Palmer-Lewis
memorandum, and that they still
stand upon their agreement to ac
cept the terms of the Garfield pro
posal. They will unite with all the
well thinking people of the coun
.,, that in the. final conclusion
of this matter, all interests will be.
faithfully protected and servea, aim
a practicable solution of the prob
lem worked out" . . .
Attorney General Palmer m his
statement last night took exception
to statements by A. M. Ogle, chair
man of the operators' executive com
mittee, as made before the , senate
investigating committee Friday. Mr.
Palmer said, newspaper reports
credited Ogle with declaring that the
attorney general had "proposed a
surrender." This Mr. Palmer said,
was false. .
Mr. Ogle tonight responded to the
attorney general's remark, by refer
ring to the transcript of the commit
tee session. That document, it was
pointed out, showed that the conver
sation took place before any pro
posal had been made by the govern
ment and that Mr. Ogle remarks
were "qualified."
South Side Brevities
Scores of hUhy eanarlM. Tour cholca,
$10. Frank By.ra. Phona South 801.
S. F. Martin, Well I
Known Over State,
Uies at Diair
Blair, Neb., Dec. 21. (Special
Telegram.) S. F. Martin, aged 75
years,' prominent , citizen and busi
ness man, died Saturday evening at
the family residence in this city. He
had been suffering for some months
with cancer, but was able to be at
his place of business until within a
few days ago.
Mr. Martin was born at Somerton,
Ohio, and went with his parents to
Des Moines, la., where he entered
the hardware business as a clerk,
later owning hardware stores at
Lewis. Atlantic and Carrol, la. He
came to Blair in 1903, and with Jo
seph Nurre, bought i out and reor
ganized the old Blair Canning com
pany, under the firm name of Martin
& Nurre, about five years ago.
Upon the death of Mr. Nurre he
took over the entire plant, and later
was associated with C. O. Dawson
of Los Angeles, Cal. He was mar
ried September 8, 1868. at Norwalk,
la., to Miss Agnes Reeves, who,
with a half sister and two half
brothers survive him.
Funeral services will be held from
the family residence Tuesday after
noon at 2, Rev. W. H. Underwood
of the rowell Memorial home, offi
ciating. .
Takes Bandit Into
Home and Is Beaten
Up for His Kindness
Sioux Falls, S. D., Dec. 21 (Spe
cial.) A stranger giving the name
of "Al Jennings," but who disclaims
any intention of representing him
self to be the famous ex-train rob
ber, is subject to the charge of mak
ing a murderous attack on Town
Marshal Williams, of Winfred.
The town marshal, out of kindness
for his prisoner, rather than keep
him in the unsanitary town jail,
took him to his own home. Jen
nings took advantage of the first
opportunity to attack the marshal,
striking the officer with a "black
jack," lacerating his face and break
ing his nose, and then made his
escape.
The fugitive was trailed to a farm
house by Deputy Sheriff Frye and
a Winfred bank clerk and recao-
tured. The fugitive slept in a straw-
stack the night before and was near
ly frozen, as the temperature was
around the zero mark.
E. Vaks Again President
of Local Junk Dealers
The Greater Omaha Junk Dealers'
association at a meeting held Satur
day elected the following officers:
President. E. Vaks: vice president.
A. Richard; secretary, S. Feldman;
treasurer, M. Lozerowitch; trustees,
S. Epstein,. H. Lieberrrtan,1 I. Stei
berg. Mr. Vaks' election was the
sixth- consecutive time he has been
so honored by association members.
Fistula-Pay When Cured
A mlldiystem of treatment that cure Piles. Fistula and
ether Recta I DiaeatM In short time, without a (ever tnr
iteal operation. No Chloroform, Ether or other genera
anaathjitfo mmL A rnp ananntead in awaiT eau aemnf m!
for treatment, and no money to be paid until cared. Write foi book oo Recta 1 Diaaaaea, with name!
nd testimonial of more than 1000 prominent people who have been permanently cored.
DR. K. It. TARRY 240 Emm BatMlng OMAHA, NEBRASKA
Paris, Dec. 21. With milk bath,
Greek dancing and rhythmical exer
cises Geo de Merode, the most en
chanting woman in France, plans to
restore the Parisiennes' reputation
of being the most beautiful women
in the world.
Ten years ago the dazzling actress,
named the "modern Diana by the
late King Edward VIII and King
Leopold of Belgium, both of whom
were enthralled by her charms,
ranked with Liane de .Pughy and
tt:i:.. ji - t .i. .
cuuuciuic u ninitun as one oi inc
liveliest trio of belles in the world.
Now at the age of 43 Cleo retains
all her beauty. Her admiring friends
contend she has not even lost the
bloom of youth.
Recognizing her undisputed claims
to beauty unmatched in Paris today
the inner circle of aristocratic
France, whose dictates in matters of
taste and style are never questioned
by European society, met at the be
ginning of the winter and decided to
entrust to Mile Jpt Merode the task
of reviving in the growing generation
of girls the old-time paramount rep
utation oi f arsiennes tor beauty.
The choice of the Paris arbiters
of beauty have added to their com
mittee some of the leading painters
and sculptors, was arrived at only
after passing under review the re
spective claims of Cleo de Merode,
Gaby Deslys, Jeanne Prevost, Lina
Cavalieri and CecilC Sorel The field
soon narrowed down to Cleo de
Merode and Cecile Sorel, the lat
ter's claims finally being disallowed
despite the fact that Marshal Foch
recently paid her the tribute of tak
ing lunch with her.
Doesn't Wish Honor.
In an interview with Universal
Service Mile, de Merode disclaimed
any wish to pose as the premiere
beauty of b ranee. I prefer the
blonde, myself," she said. "That is
why I have so much admiration for
American beauties."
Her head resting against cream
colored cushions to throw into re
lief her dark beauty, she admitted
that Paris society leaders had re
quested her to take over the beauty
training of their growing girls.
Asked to describe her curriculum,
she said, "I propose to work solely
on the plan I have always myself
adopted. I think wherever possible
girls should bathe in milk at) least
twice a week in order to impart to
the skin the lovely sheen of silk. I
also prescribe Greek dances in loose
costumes and progressive exercises
designed to give suppleness to every
muscle in the body. Care, however,
will be taken to guard against ex
cessive vigor producing overdevelop
ment, and; I shall .strongly discour
age robust college games such as
hockey and basket ball.
"At the same time I believe girls
can derive nothing but benefit from
such healthy and beautifying exer
cises as skating, riding and fencing.
Inculcates Ideas.
"As my pupils progress and pass
the age of 18 I shall begin to in
culcate into them the paramount
importance of making the most of
their heautv. This can be done ini
a variety of ways. Obviously of i
first importance is the selection of
styles and colors in dress and mil
linery to harmonize with and em
phasize the individuality of each
woman. To mention an extreme in
stance of what I mean when I say
that women should make the most
cf their charms, I believe that beau
ties of the '.peaches, and cream type
would gain by sleeping between
black silk sheets, which are not only
more restful than white linen ones,
but enliven a woman's sense of es
thetic values. More particularly,
too, does this apply to women of
the Gioconda type that is, those
possessing a dead white complexion.
"I have rented a large hall in a
fashionable quarter of Paris and am
having it painted and furnished ac
cording to my own ideas. The color
scheme and furnishings will be
bright and cheery, for pretty sur
roundings are the finest aid to love
liness. Each child I shall accept
pupils from the age of 7 will have
her own little dressing room, taste
fully furnished and individually
lighted, and she will be costumed
for all her exercises in strict ac
cordance with her individuality.
"Brunettes will wear bright col
ored robes, blondes dark ones. Each
child's taste in dress will be care
fully trained. Of course facial exer
cises will play an important part.
Children will be encouraged to drink
plenty of pure fresh water and sleep
in the open air. ' .... ...
"An orchestra will play classical
musicduring the dancing and exer
cises and I shall explain to my pupils
that the influence of good music on
the esthetic senses is of importance
in beauty culture." . '
VWill you teach them how to
love?" mademoiselle De Merode was
asked. - I . . .
"No girl needs to be taught that,
was the reply. "Personally I believe
that little affairs of the heart are a
great aid to beauty, for nothing
makes the cheek glow, the eyes
sparkle and the senses jingle so
much as thoughts of love. '
Mile. De Merode, who is about to
take the leading part in "Mephisto
pheles" at the Lyric, stated that she
did not propose to desert the stage
in the interests of her new profes
sion. She declined to say what fee
she will charge the wealthy parents
of her pupils, but it is understood
that the price of her complete beauty
course wll noit be less than $5,000.
Annual Election Officers
of the Modern Woodmen
At the annual election of officers
of Omaha Camp No. 120, Modern
Woodmen of America, Arthur D.
Curtis was elected vice consul, Ron
ald Herbert, worthy advisor; Wil
liam Wollman, banker; C H. T.
Riepen, clerk; Arthur T. Beber,, es
cort; John A. fieber, watchman;
John H. Killian, trustee and A. J.
Prohaska, past consul.
The regular Christmas celebration
of the camp will take place Friday,
December 26, at the DeLuxe Dancfng
Academy, 111 S. 18tb street, with
a big Christmas tree, singing and
dancing by Miss Agnes Britton and
her pupils and other entertainments,
closins with a dance. ,
GRAVE AT LAST
RECEIVES THE
MYSTERY GIRL
Unknown Woman Found in
Ravine North of Florence
Laid in the Earth
Yesterday. (
At 4:45 yesterday afternoon the
body of the "Mystery Girl," found
murdered near - Coffman station,
north of Florence a month ago,
was lowered into a grave in West
Lawn cemetery.
She was still the "Mystery Girl."
The combined efforts of state.
countv and citv officials had failed
to reveal who she was, who killed
her or why.
When Undertaker John Gentle
man sprinkled the first shovelful
of clav over the casket he sealed,
probably forever, the mystery that
stirred the middle west for nearly
a month.
Found in Ravine.
Thursday morning, November 20,
A. I. Peterson of Calhoun, driving
along the road, connecting Coffman
station with the ridge road,
noticed the body of a girl half cov
ered with leaves, lying in a ravine
to the side of the road. A bullet
hole under her right ear apparently
told how she had died. Her hat,
coat and shoes were gone, but ber
hands were encased in tight kid
gloves.
Not a spot of blood stained any
of her clothes. Carefully manicured
Brief, City News
Have Root Print ItBeacon Preu
Taeoma Cleavers Burcasa-Orandsa Co.
Army Storm Open Army retail
torea win remain open unut r eDru
15, 1920. at least and parcel post or
ders will again be accepted after
January 1, 1920.
Brownell Hall to Reopen Jn co
operation, witn tne ruei administra
tion Brownell hall discontinued Its
claaaea and closed all lta buildings
but one ocoupled as a residence by
out-of-town members of the faculty.
Miss Macdonald, principal of Brown
ell hall, announces the reopening of
the school, January 6.
nails, told that she was not of the
plebeian class. Physicians 'said she
had given birth to a child.
Newspaper reporters worked night
and day to clear up the mystery.
City; detectives, private detectives,
sheriffs and attorneys, all struggled
for a solution of the mystery.
10,000 Viewed the Body.
More than 10.000 persons viewed
and examined the body in Gentle
man's, mortuary.- Scores of persons
swore that it was the body of their
missing sister, or daughter, but in
every single instance, their claims
were disproven.
All efforts of modern criminology
failed to reveal the girl's indentity.
Eight of the reporters who had
worked on the case, acted as pall
bearers yesterday. A score of curi
ous ' men and women formed the
funeral cortege.
In her nameless grave the girl
is sleeping., One of night's thousand
eyes my in time see the murder
following the mandates of tradition,
wander: back to the scene of his
crime. In that little doctrine of
criminology, the police see a ray bf
hope that some day the mystery
will be solved.
Bee Want-Ads Produce Results.
NEARLY ARREST
GEN. PERSHING
FOR SPEEDING
Chicago Suburbann Policeman
Makes Apology After Dis
covering Speeder's Identity.
Chicago, Dec. 21. Gen. John J.
Pershing, after inspecting Fort Sher
idan hospital Sunday, at night ad
dressed 5,000 war mothers at the
auditorium and decorated more than
a dozen officers and men with the
Distinguished Service Medal.
While on a motor tour of the city
General Pershing once seemed in
imminent danger of arrest for speed
ing. A suburban policeman, discov
ering the identity of the occupant of
the car, apologetically backed away.
At Fort Sheridan he reviewed a
regiment of men in bed, in wheel
chairs and on crutches. Two of his
former orderlies shook hands with
the general again. One was
Sergeant Walter H. Hyatt, who left
his left leg in the Argonne, the
other Sergeant Henry Topman, 42
years old and a soldier for 24 years,
who received the commander in bed.
Topman, who served under "Black
Jack" Pershing in the Philippines,
is recovering from a machine gun
wound in the lungs and mustard gas
poisoning. -
The general and his staff left for
St. Louis, where the party will dis
band until after the holidays.
The general's sister and Warren
Pershing, his young son, will join
the commander in St. Louis and go
with him Tuesday to La Clcde, Mo.,
his birthplace, where on Tuesday, he
will be the guest at a homecoming
celebration. Capt. Frank Pershing,
the general's nephew, will accom
pany the party.
Premier of Egypt
Has Near Escape
From Assassination
Cairo, Egypt, Dec 21. -An official
communication gives the following
details regarding the attempt mad
to assassinate Yussuf Wahba Pasha,
the premier: , j
"As the prime minister was motor
ing from his home toward the min
istry a Coptic medical student named
Arian Youssuf Haab stepped into the
roadway in the Medan Silesman
Pasha and threw two bombs at his
car. The chauffeur saw the student
as he was preparing to throw the
first bomb, and stormed the car with
the result that the bomb exploded in
the road several yards ahead of it
The student hastily threw the sec
end bomb, which went over the car
and exploded in the road also. No
body was iniured.
"Yusbashi Selim Effendi Zaki, who
was in the car with the oremier.
jumped out and ran towards the
student who was trying to draw an
automatic pistol from his pocket.
With the aid of constables beloneinr
to the premier's motorcycle escort,
Zaki was able to disarm his assailant
before he could draw the pistol. The
student had two loaded automatics
and 24 cartridges. He states that he
had been seeking an opportunity for;
seven days to kill the premier. Ani
inquiry is being conducted."
Germany Asks Holland to
Return Officer for Trial
The Hague, Dec. 21. The Ger
man government has asked for thai
extradition from Holland of FormerH
Lieutenant Vogcl, accused of thai
murder of Rosa Luxemburg. Thai
request will be heard before , the)
tribunal at Haarlem.
over
The railways of the United States ara
more than one third, nearly one half, of
all the railways of the world. They
carry a yearly traffic so much greater
than that of any other country that
there is really no basis for comparison.
Indeed, the traffic of any two nations
nay be combined and still it does not
approach the commerce of America
borne upon American railways. "
1 United Statu Senator Cummint.
ASK any doughboy who was
JL V there" and -he will tell you , that
American railroads are the best in the World.
He saw the foreign roads in England
and France, the best in Europe and in
other Continental countries and he knows.
f
The part railroads have played in the
development of the United States is be
yond measure!
American railroads have achieved hicrh
standards of public service by far-sighted
and courageous investment of capital, and
by the constant striving of managers and
men for rewards for work well done. x
We have the best railroads in the world
we must continue to have the best.
But they must grow.
To the $20,000,000,000 now invested in ou
railroads,, there will have to be added in the next
few years, to keep pace with the nation's business,
billions more for additional tracks, stations and
terminals, cars and engines, electric power houses
and trains, automatic signals, safety devices, the
elimination oil grade crossings and for reconstruc
tion and engineering economies that will reduce the
cost of transportation.
To attract to the railroads in the, future the
investment funds of many thrifty citizens, the direct
ing genius of the most capable builders and man
agers, an4 the skill and loyalty df the best workmen
iri competition with other industries bidding for
capita, managers and men the railroad industry
must hold out fair rewards to capital, to managers
and to the men. , ;
American railroads will continue to set world
standards and adequately serve the Nation's needs if,
they continue to bebuilt and operated on the
American principle of rewards for work well done.
2My adwtiAemmt i& publi&lied by the
Tknf dnirtnf informntitin coflfmniiip ike railroad tituntimt may obtain IUw
ture bv writing.to ThtAttociationof Railway Executivet.61 Broadioay, JVie York.
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