THE " BEE: OMAHA, MOMDAY, AUGUST '9, 1920. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THS BEE PUBLISHING COM PANT. NELSON B. UPDIKE, Publisher. MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tbe AnnrtUH "Was. t whK TM In t I MiM, I m tluMfti muUri tb Um use for mblleaUn of all am dispatches r4! to H or bM otherwise credited in Oil sea. also the lord Maa puMlMMd barwa U tifMj at puMfealioa of our special Slspelchee an alio rpemd. . BEE TELEPHONES Fnrate Brawl Eirhann. Aak for lbs Teslen 1000 Depsrtsseat or Pto Waate. 1 ",er 1VW For Nlfkt Calk Altar 10 P. M.t AUtorlal DepaniDeni T?lr lOMl Olraulatloa Dwl . Tlr 10ML idrartSalni IMpartDMOt Tjler IMM. OFFICES OF THE BEE Ham Office: 17U an raraaa CeuneU Staffs 13 Scott M. i South 814 till M K. Out-ef-Tewe Office, i Ns York it riftk Ate. I Wasoinitoa 1SU 0 St. Cklcato Bugs Bids. I rem francs t In St. Boot The Bee's Platform 1. Nw Unioa Pass.agor Station. 2. Continued improvement of tha Ne braska Highways, including tha pava mont of Main Thoroughfaras leading into Omaha with a Brick Surfaca. 3. A thort, low-rate Waterway from tha Corn Belt to tha Atlantic Ocaan. 4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. COX OUTLINES THE ISSUE. Carefut perusal of Governor "Cox's speech of acceptance justifies the conclusion that he pro poses to follow the time-worn policy of his party that of promising anything that will bring 'him votes. Only on the matters beyond dis pute does he take an unequivocating attitude. Such questions as are open to argument are gingerly approached and dealt with in such fashion as will permit those so disposed - to think the governoi is squarely on their side, no matter which it may be. Thus, on the League of Nations, which the Wilsonites insist is the one and only paramount of the campaign, he delivers himself oracularly, and very much after the manner of oracles in general. For those who have unswervingly ac cepted the president's utterances and supported his position, the candidate gives this consola tion: , The first duty of the new administration clearly will be the ratification of the treaty. The matter should be approached without thought of bitterness of the past. The public verdict will have been rendered, and I am con fident that the friends of world peace, as it will be promoted by the league, will have in num bers the constitutional requisite to favorable senatorial action. After he has satisfied the faithful followers of Woodrow Wilson, he turns to those demo crats who could not conscientiously go along with the executive, and says to them: , It will, of course, be understood that in j carrying out the purpose of the league the government of the United States must at all times act in strict harmony with the terms and ' . intent of the United States Constitution, which can not in any way be altered by the treaty making power. This is so exactly in harmony with the nature and purpose of the Lodge reservations, particu larly that dealing with Article X, that it may be said to contain the very essence of the republi can plan. Just how the adroit manipulators of the democratic campaign expect to harmonize these divergent pledges, unless they admit that the rigid position of Woodrow Wilson on "the heart of the covenant" was mistaken, presents one of the puzzles of the situation. To get the two sections ofthe party into line demands the surrender of one view or the other. Having disposed of the League of Nations in this comfortable fashion, Governor Cox proceeds to another subject, in dealing with which he makes a remarkable appeal. In other days the democratic party has made one of its war cries, "The consumer pays the" tax!" It has argued, and with force and reason, that "big business" invariably succeeds in passing on its burden of taxation to the ultimate consumer. No part of all its dogma rests on surer foundation than this. H his proposals for a revision of the rev enue law, However, Governor Cox suggests that the excess profits schedule be abolished, and that there be substituted for it prpbahly I to 1 1-2 per cent on the total busi-" ness of every going concern. It is to be under stood that the word "business" as used does not include income received by wage-earners, salaried men, agriculturists, and the small business man who should be exempt from this : tax. I How potent this appeal to the Adullamites may be will only be noted as the campaign ad vancs, but its hollowness is apparent, for it mere ly shifts the direction without jhanging the Source cf the tax, , and, like other makeshifts adopted by the financiers of the administration will permit the collection by "big business" of a far greater sum from the people than is ever received by the government in form of revenue. The man vho now pays an income tax will likely find himself better off when making set tlement with Uncle Sam direct. Those who looked to the democratic candi date for possible relief from the Volstead act will find no comfort in h!s words; The legislative branch of the government is subjected to the rule of the majority. The public, official who fails to enforce the law is an enemy both to the Constitution and to the American principle of majority rule. It would seem quite unnecessary for any candidate for the presidency to say that he does not intend to violate his oath of office. Anyone who is false to that oath is more unworthy than the law violator himself. To labor, the governor' holds out that the writ of injunction ought not to be abused, and that a man should have the right to quit work at any time, save as this right is limited by public necessity. This is cheap enough, as is also the expression in favor of collective bargaining, a principle so established in ethics as to be beyond dispute. His dissertation on the industrial needs of the country, the necessity for encouraging production in all lines, of eliminating tenantry on farms, on child labor, and similar noncon troversial topics is interesting, and contains noth ing in the way of novelty. He sorrows that the republican convention was so discourteous . to President Wilson as not to praise his winning of the world war, but the laurels he lays at the feet of the democratic chieftain ought to compensate for the omission at Chicago. Reiteration of the charge that the republi cans plan to smother him beneath a load of dollars does not carry conviction. The gover nor has demanded that a monthly accounting of receipts and expenditures be made, and this hat. been agreed to by the republicans. This should have the effect of relieving the candidate's mind, but he seemingly ' relies on convincing ' nome that his impending defeat is to be ascribed solely tb the corrupt use of an enormous campaign fund by the republicans. Altogether, the speech of acceptance discloses completely the habit of thought of the. candi date: His apparent frankness is bestowed on instilling insidious doubts in the minds- of his hearers, the setting up of false issues, and the employment of halftruths, specious promises and glittering generalities in lieu' of the square toed statements one has, a right to expect from the man who aspires to become chief magistrate of the greatest of all republics. Discursive, vague V and evasive, tle speech is fairly repre sentative of the discovered determination of the democratic leaders to conduct another cam paign of delusion and deception, such as they dioVour years ago. It contains not a word of explanation of the sins of omission and commis sion of the administration; no attempt a justi fication of the extravagances and mistakes made by the high officials of the government, for which the democrats must take full responsibility; of the blundering policy before. during and after the war. All this is avoided by the candidate, who rests his case on praise of the president and laudation of the American soldier. The one thing the democrats have done in the time Wilson has held office to which attention is specifically called is the establishment of the Federal Reserve bank, and this was founded on the Vreeland-Aldrich bill, which was once reject ed by a democratic congress because it was the product of republican brains. Nebraska's Revenue Law. An unusual situation confronts the state tax levying body, that of a plethora of wealth. To accept the figures returned by the assessors and lay taxes as provided by the legislature means the raising of sums far in excefcs of either needs or appropriations. As an alternative it is pro posed that a horizontal cut of $50,000,000 be made on the tax roll. This will relieve the, situation so far as the- state is concerned, but it may prove embarrassing on some localities, Omaha, for example, will need the full amount of taxes now contemplated to meet the ordinary running expenses of the city government. It is pos sible that somei other communities in the state are in the same predicament. The necessity for a reform in the revenue law is thus made apparent. No encouragement should be given extravagance in any form; for this reason, the budget system provided for under the code bill is certain to justify the wis dom of its proponents. Economical manage ment of the several departments of the state government under the new law has already netted a considerable saving, and it is promised that even a greater showing will be made be fore the end of the biennium for which appro priations were made. A readjustment of the quadrennial system of valuations will aid in bringing a better propor tional arrangement between the tax roll and the tax levy. In the present instance the, legislature was guided by the valuation based on the 1916 assessment. Increases moderate enough, and undoubtedly warranted by the facts, have set a grand total that, were it followed, would bring into the ste coffers sums far beyond reason able needs. The remedy proposed by the state board is temporary in nature. A law that will operate more exactly is sorely needed. Suicide Not' Always a Sin. , Suicide is growing more frequent in the United States, with noticable increases among women and children. In six months 88 boys and 137 girls, whose average ages were 16 and 15 respectively, took their lives. Suicide in youth is particularly shocking. Possibly the in crease may be partially attributed to the fact that medical science carried many children into the adolescent period who would have died under former conditions, and who yield to suicide im pulse before reaching adult age. 'Suicide has been called both confession and cowardice. In instances it is, undoubtedly; but who dares judge a soul's secret sorrows which lead it to shuffle off this mortal coil? We much prefer to"' regard it as an insane act; although we believe it may be a deliberate conclusion ar rived at after . reasonable and logical study. In deed, we know a case of a distinguished physician, whose career made him a notable man quoted all over this country and in Europe, who ended his life for two reasons. 'One was an intensely painful, slow and fatal disease. He dreaded sev eral years of physical agony. We were in his house one night when for four hours he battled in agony to accomplish a physical functipn necessary to life. Once a day he had to undergo that torture. For several years he never ate a bite of food or took a swallow of water or cof fee which was not followed by almost intolerable pain. His other reason for ending his life was the fact that his comfortable estate was not suf ficient for him and his wife if he put upon it the expense of two or three years as a helpless invalid- So to save himself unspeakable physical torment, and insure his wife from poverty, he .left home for two weeks to accustom his wife to his absence, wrote her his conclusions, and took his fatal drug. Since we attended that charming friend's funeral, and came to know his reasons for hur rying it, we have never jumped to hasty con clusions about suicides, nor fully accepted criti cisms of the awful act. Another Medical Triumph. Chlor-sal, a new solution that makes wounds heal, has been discovered by a nurse after twenty-five years of experiments. Wounds that do not heal make amputation necessary if on the limbs, and are a never ending source of misery and disability if on the body. A modest announcement of the discovery has been made by Bellevue Hospital, as is always the case in reputable medical quarters. Thus the useful profession continues its work of les sening human suffering, prolonging life, and giving justified hope to the afflicted. It is a noble profession in all its aspirations and achieve ments, and is worthy of its fees. Its greatest advancement in late years seems to be in sur gery. .! : . ., Estimates of the crowd at the Cox notifica tion range from 30,000 to 75,000. And that is the basis of the whole democratic campaign. Wonder how the Tammanyites really feel towards the candidate now? Cox's speech in a nut shell: "Both ends to the middle." ' Omaha's weatherman is both safe and sane. K eyes are on Tennessee today. A Line 0' Type or Two Mw t. the Um. M Mm ssls. tell lrs tin, DOLCE FAR NIEXTE. "Persons possessing 11,040 can spend the remainder of their lives In the Marquesaa Is lands, where they need work only two hours a day to catch Ash and pick bananas." Ship me to the far Marquesaa, Where there ain't no daily pape For from whittling witrBss wheezes I would very fain escape. I would eit unnumbered days out With my back against a palm , Where I'd read and smoke and gaze out On the ocean wide and calm. Far away from witless wheezes, In those islands of the blest, In the sleepy old Marquesas, I would get a longed-for rest. Every day there is manana. For the native's one ambish Is to pick the gay banana And to snare the festive flan. X would take some dusky tulip Not to rear a .lavage race, But to shake me up a julep When I felt the need of brace. Oh. It's there that I'd be winging. From this world of guff and gab, For the bulbul is a-singing In his ancient boabab. In those Isles of peace and plenty I would loaf beneath a palm, In a dolce far niente And a transcendental calm. . v ONE swallow does not make a summer, and one word does not make a phrase. Mr. Hard ing has trotted out a few obsolescent words, but he has not put a phrase in circulation, not even so pedestrain a phrase as "may I not." Wilson, Roosevelt, Cleveland, and many other presi dents were good phrasemakers. T. R. especially was a political "doctor full of phrase and fame." WE hadn't thought of it that way until Old Bab Peattie remarked, "There are two McKin lays running." "Gosh! so there be!" we gasped. Sweetly solemn thought: we shall have to take one of them. THE doctrine of independence thrives in Ire land, writes Felix Morley, because of "the un paralleled ignorance of what Sinn Fein really means." Well, what docs it mean? One writer translates it "Ourselves alone," while another de nies this, and says it means only "Ourselves." There was, we recall, a like disagreement over the precise meaning of "Deutschland uber allcs." The Mexican Thirst Parlor. (Oliver Madnx Hueffer, New York Evening Post.) I live at the back of a pulquerla, A pulqueria Is a saloon where pulque is sold, which is the national substitute for wood alcohol. Some one who was not an enthusiast has said that pulque looks like death, smells like corruption, and tastes like helL Actually It looks like milk and and water, tastes sickly, bitter, sweet and sour at the' same time, with a faint suggestion of a cemetery about it, and smells like a room in which too much beer has been drunk overnight. There must be a hundred pulquerlas in the main street of Tacubaya; you can tell them if you are blind by the smell, if otherwise by the fringe of bright colored paper shavings which decorate their doorways. A pulqueria could no more exist without its fringe than could a New y6rk midinette without her powderpuff. The pul queria is famous for its romantic choice of signs, ranging from "The Tears of the Virgin of Guad alupe", to the "Inconsolable Lover." My pul queria is called the "Beautiful Unhappy One." HOWEVER, pulque is not without on,e jhia,-, ing virtue. Mr. Hueffer says "it makes a beast of the peon in the sense that his face loses all human expression and he becomes astonishingly amiable." MRS. CHAPLIN charge Custard Charlie with "mental cruelty." He stayed away from home, not long enough to constitute" desertion, but just long enough to produce mental anguish. The precise duration of his absence would Vary with different wives. "I DO not pretend," says Mark Sullivan, "to have much more than mere shreds of authorita tive information." The "man close to the ad ministration," the "prominent official whose name for obvious reasons cannot be mentioned," and other fountain-heads of information must have escaped from Washington for a few days. In Which Bertram. Russell Goes Away From Home to Get News. (From The Nation.) I think if I met Lenin without knowing who he was, I should not have guessed that he was a great man; he ..ruck me as too opinionated and narrowly unorthodox. His strength comes, I imagine, from his honest courage and unwav ering faith religious faith In the Marxian gas pel, which takes the place of the Christian mar tyr's hopes of Paradise, except that it is less egotistical. He has as little love of liberty as the Christians who suffered under Diocletian and retaliated when they acquired power. Perhaps love of liberty is incompatible with whole-heart-ed belief in a panacea for all human ills. If so, I cannot but rejoice In the skeptical temper of the Western world. I went to Russia believing myself a Communist: but contact with those who have no doubts has intensified a thousandfold my own doubts, not only of Communism, but of every creed so firmly held that for its sake men are willing to infliict widespread misery. WHAT strikes us as odd is that a man of Mr. Russell's accredited intelligence should have had to travel half-way across the map to discover something of which he might have convinced himself without leaving his easy chair. "AS a general thing." reports a prohibition commissioner, "the population at large is assist ing in the enforcement of the law. At least .they are putting down the supply on hand as rapidly as they can get hold of it. THE SECOND POST. (Received by the Fidelity-Phenix.) Dere xPhidellty-Fenix: I had a Jenny killed by lightning which caused her to lose a good Jack. Had a colt struck by lightning and he ain't been worth a dime since. There haven't been know one to see me about it. If you don't get your eyes open I'll take my policy in. S. TURNIPSEED. "ON looking over the Russian army I cannot understand what has been urging them from victory throughout the last two years." A Ger man journalist. Perhaps the thing that has urged all armies from the days of Moses fear. ( THOSE myerious radiograms from Mars, it transpires, were-Hertzian waves from the sun. But what are the wild Hertzians waves saying? 'THE SECOND POST. (A more than modest request.) Dear Sir: don't think that I am trying to In trude on you but in a qulette way please try to get )2 more added to my salary a week for the high cost of living is killing me and for that cause please take this matter to the higher ar flshell for mo and let me here from this soon. Yours truety, etc. THE Boston idea was to cross to sudden affluence on a Ponzi asinorum, as 'twere. THE SUN IS THE ENEMY OF LITERATURE. (From the Florence, Kan., Bulletin.) The sun shines hot and the corn's tassel ing. Fishing ain't good for the water's low. Rain's as scarce as hen's teeth. It's too hot to write much. b. L. T. Service Badges. Mr. Bryan has declined to leave the party which he savs has "sisrnallv honored htm" in become the standard bearing of the prohibi- iionisis. Mr. aryan nas tour Dnrtai permits, three scalp wounds, seven contusions and a stone bruise to show for his connection with the democatic party, and he naturally hates to leave it. Philadelphia Public Ledger. Fable of B'rer Williams. I hear tell of a man who wuz all time busy "runnin' de devil out o' town," but he didn t have no success at it till de people come ter dc conclusion dat de devil wuz in de man hisse'f, an' den dey run de man out, an' atter dat all wuz halleNna.i Atlanta Constitution. I How to Keep Well By DR. W. A. EVANS Quoationa concerning hygiene, aanila lion and prevention of diaeaao, aub mltted to Dr. Evana by readers of Tko Boo, will bo answer ad personally, ubject to proper limitations, where a tasaped. add raised envelope is one closed. Dr. Evana will not make diagonal ar prescribe for individual diseases. Address letters in care of Tha Bee. Copyright, 1S20, by Dr. W. A. Evans. PERILS OF "TOEING OUT." If a person reaches -20 years of age without having bunions or corns wtll started and toes twisted out of shape, there is a fair chance of per manent escape. If the French fad of going bare legged could be extended, to going bare-footed, except for sandals, and If it could become universal for all boys and girls under 20, we would eventually get rid of 99 per cent ot all foot troubles, and eventually adults could bare their feet without apologies or shame. This statement applies especially to bunions, corns, curled toes and twisted toes. Dr. P. W. Roberts holds children's shoes largely re sponsible for flat foot, weak foot and painful foot. These troubles arise because the foot rolls inward when the weight of the body falls on the ankle. He placed a heel bone on a mirror and photographed it. The photograph showed that the under surface of the bone was fair ly circular, and when set on the mirror touched for a short distance. Not even the pad of fat below the bone altogether does away with the tendency of the heel to roll 'In or out. If it rolls in, great strain is put on the bones, ligaments and muscles of the instep. It the roll ing in keeps up, the result is broken arch, flat foot, weak foot or painful fool. If a person in walking toes out, he Is very apt to develop broken arches or some one modification of broken arch. Children wearing heavy shoes are apt to toe out. koine children wear their heels on the inside edge; the heels of their shoes run down on the inside. The heels of some children are prone to tun in. A parent can easily recog nize any of these tendencies. A child begins to walk soon after reaching 1 year of age. At that time three of the bones of the feet, while they have begun to ossify, are still largely composed of cartilage. The other bones are altogether cartilage, and remain so for a few years. If the weight of the body falls on the Inner side of the heel that bone develops improperly, and the tendency to roll inward grows as time goes on. This tendency: of the heel to roll inward, Dr. Roberts corrects by sim ple mechanical appliances. It: some cases building up the in ner side of the heel slightly is all that is needed. In some a little wedge work at the heel throws the weight to the outside and makes the heel even on the outside. The shoe runs down in that direction. (Some one has claimed that persons who run their heels down on the outside seldom suffer from fallen arches). The simpler means are not suf ficient. Dr. Roberts places in the shoe a small brace which presses against the inside of the heel and about an inch up and tilts the heel bone outward. The parent can foresee flat Toot by the direction in which his child's heel rocks. If it rolls inward he can prevent flat foot by building up the shoe heel on the inside, or by using a small brace to tilt the heel bone out. ox About the Capitol Design. Omaha. Aug. 5. To the Editor of The Bee: If the late capltol com petition had been of no other im portance to the state, it would at least have done the service of show ing what stuff Nebraska architects arc. made of. That may rtot matter so much Just now, when building in dustries are "knocked endwise," and it's a bold man who dares to plan a new structure! But times will improve, and peo ple will keep in mind, let us hope, the professional men who have shown their colors and aroused re spect (or the opposite), according as they have-proved their fairness and frankness in appraising others successful work, their good judg ment regarding the same, and their generous superiority to envy (or the opposite of all these things.) A letter has appeared, written by a pioneer architect of Omaha Mr. Harry Lawrie on which he should be complimented, inasmuch as It suggests all the above qualities. -Replying to a letter in the World-Herald, on the capltol design amiable, but misled by Mr. Frederic Heyn, he corrects the various errors there in, derived, as Mr. Heyn says, "from, a responsible architect," and shows that he has made a serious and re spectful study of the design, and that his architectural conscience moves him to admire and uphold it. In this dignified stand Mr. Lawrie sets a fine example to his colleagues, yet not the only one, I hear. What a great thing it would be if all the outdistanced ones in a race should join in a campaign of praise for the winner, scattering seeds of approval and satisfaction among the public, instead of a propaganda of sneers and sly juggling of facts! Well the millenium is not yet! I notice that many people are doing a great deal of discussing on the capltol design without really knowing anything about it. If they were Interested enough to study its plans, as shown in the public library, instead of getting all their infor mation from more or less prejudiced gosf-ip. often deliberately Incorrect, they would be in much better Shane to judge of this very splendid de sign It is amazing to hear the stupid comments of feomequite clev er people on it, simply because they have not taken the pains to go and look at its detailed drawings or hear explanations of them. It is, in fact, a pad reflection on the intelligence of the city, that everyone in town has not hastened to go and arlmire the exhibit of the competitors' work at the library, said to be as fine a group of such drawings as was ever shown in the country. FAIR DEAL. Walks on South Side. Omaha, Aug. 6. To the Editor of The Bee: As one who probably walks as much every day of the year as any man in Omaha of my age, I am glad to learn that an effort is being made to compel property own ers along Twenty-fourth street, on the South Side, to lay cement walks In place of the miserable brick walks or brick bat walks. The brick walks were laid in the rough-neck days of South Omaha, and were not meant for an up-to-date city. The walks that we have ' to ' travel over now would be a disgrace to a village like Papil'.ion or any small town of Ne braska, and the city commissioners of Omaha ought to compel the own ers to take them up and lay decent cement walks in their place. .Most of The people affected by the change are well able to afford decent walks, for a number of them are classed in wealth in six numbers, and, as all of them ride in automobiles, they can afford to have decent walks for people to walk on who do not own automobiles. I would rather walk a n.ilo on a cement walk than to walk a block on some of the bum brick walks along Twenty-fourth street. II anybody has any influence with the city commissioners to get them to compel the property owners along Twenty-fourth street to replace their very bum walks with decent walks, I hope thev will use their influence In that direction. When private property owners more than a mile from the business section are com pelled to lay cement walks, there is no reason in the world why the Wealthy property owners along Twenty-fourth street should not be compelled to replace the disgraceful walks with walks that will be a credit and not a detriment Mo the city. FRANK A. AO NEW. Gunsights ' The I-oaguo Functions. Another war has broken out un der the noses of the allied council. Greece Is to thrash Turkey, while France and England hold her coat. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. everv vear. has 8.000 negro porters, onns linen worth $2,000,000 and uses $t;o,dOrt worth of soap a year. Youth's Companion. Curing HolshcviMri. ' H. G. Wells says that hiring cheap teachers is preparing a revolution. Hire's a suggestion for a practical ...V... , . knlahAwlani Cleveland Tlaln Dealer. . . What Ho Menu. When a man says he Is burning with a desire to have the country ho means that he Is tired of working fur a living. Saginaw News-Courier, "'DANDERINE" Stops Hair Coming Out Doubles Its Beauty. i Plut-e In the Sun. ' Prosperity depends more on crops thai- on politics. And the Great American, Farmer is wise to that. Ht.nce his place in the sun these days Savannah News. v Might Mention Foch. Now that Germany has signed an other document, what reason is there to believe that anything will conic of it? New York Telegraph. Rolling Hotels. Few people who ride in parlor cars realize how stupendous is the sys tem of which the cars are a part. It Is the equivalent of a hotel with 260,000 beds and 2,960 office desks at which 26,000,000 guests register A few cents buys "Danderine." Alter an application of "Dandcrine" you can not find a fallen hair or any dandruff, besides every hair shows new life, vigor, brightness, more color and thickness. JERSEY&S qheQti$naIick CbrnFIakes Do you like the taste of corn on the cob? Most everyone does. That flavor is retained for you in JERSEY Corn Flakes, the golden flakes that stay crisp in the milk. "Learn the JERSEY Difference." THE JERSEY CEREAL FOOD COMPANY, Cereal, P. Also makers of Jersey Whole-Wheat Pancake Flour r-Toisiy (EMAi rem a . 201 t-A ; J fTA 1 U ' O Effective today, and continuing throughout the month of August, your local dealer is authorized to give you, with each Vacuum Cup Cord or Fabric Tire purchased, , One Pennsylvania 4 'Ton Tested' Tube of corresponding size, absolutely free of charge! You not only save the substantial amount ordinarily paid for tubes, but you also save on the casings. For Vacuum Cup Tires, at prevailing prices standardized net and uniform throughout the United States cost less than other makes of equal quality. , If you cannot secure prompt service from your regular dealer, send direct to Factory at Jeannette, Pa., and your order will be filled through nearest dealer or Factory Branch. PENNSYLVANIA RUBBER COMPANY if AMERICA Jeannette, Pennsylvania m mm saarBSflslVeflaeLMaVsHsaaBBBBBak (Extra Heavy Cord Type) 36x6 $17.75 1 10.65 1 8.75 I 6.90 I i 36x6 $108.40 35x5 80.35 34x4 64.65 33x4 56.00 35x5 34x4 33x4 (Other sizes at proportionate figures) LACUUMCOP V - TIRES ' 37x5 ' $74.60 36x4! '2 58.20 34x4 40.85 30x3V2 23.70 .Pennsylvania AUTO TUBE. TOHtFinfff' (Regular) 37x5 $8.85 36x4 34x4 7.30 5.65 3.50 Other sizes at proportionate figures) 1