Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 08, 1920, Image 4

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    THE 17EE: OMAHA, ftOiNDAT. 'KOVfiAlBUK 8. 1920.
The Omaha Bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
THE BEB PUBLISHING COMPANY.
NELSON B. UPDIKE, Publl.her.
P '
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
TtM Aieoelated Prws, of wblca Tb Ba li etember. U
iIus1It entitled la Ui im for imblleatiuo el all ntw dnystonee
cndiud to II or aut otherwise rrxlitxl In this paper, ud alto the
om publlthKd strata. AU Mains of publlcauou of our apeclal
ilinwirhM ere 4lto twentd.
BEE TELEPHONES
Prttate Branch Exchani. for Tvlr 1 OAfl
Uie Department or llim Wanted. 1 JTiCr aVW
For Night Calls Altor 10 P. M.l
Editorial Department Trier 10001
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Adrertillni Department - Trier 1001)1.
OFFICES OF THE BEE
Main Office: 17th and Faraan
Council Bluffa 19 Scott St. I South Side 1311 M St,
Out-o(-Town Off Icon '
- New Tork Iff fifth are. I Waehlngtmi 1311 0 fit.
CMcaro ' Slerer Bids. I Parle Prance HO Kue Ht- Honoro
The Bee's Platform
1. New Union Patienger Station.
2. Continued Improvement of ' the Ne
braska Highway, including the pave
ment of Main Thoroughfare iMBing
into Omaha with a Brick Surface.
3. A short, low-rate Waterway from the
Cora Belt to the Atlantic Ocean.
4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with
City Manager form of Government.
GROUP GOVERNMENT.
We may always depend on Mr. Bryan for
at least novelty in suggestion, His present pro
posal that the president resign, and, by moving
up Mr, Marshall, he in turn to, appoint Senator
Harding as secretary of state and then resign
himself, in order that the president-elect may J
I at once become president in fact, is engaging
for its simplicity, but may not bear out the J
purpose he has in view. The four months that
elapse between election and inauguration is not
too long a time in which to prepare for the
duties the newly chosen pretidenj is to a3-
sume. He must be allowed some - time for
reflective contemplation, for consultation and
determination of policies, a business that can
not be carried on during the campaign, and
which 'should be reasonably well established
when he goes into office That is one of the
chief reasons for the setting of inauguration
four months after election.
Another phase of the question is brought
forward bv a corrcsoondent. who fancies, the
"parliamentary" system as affording the flexi
bility our government needs. Under this the
' defeated government would immediately retire,
and the victors would take over power at once.
Even that would only furnish relief in event of
threat of calamity, which is not present nor a
conceivablaeflanger under pur, present system.
One of the remajkable and pleating results
f ii. . .1. ... f r .
or me election was me uiier lauure oi ppeais
to groups. Trades unionists, farmers, women,
and others were beseeched because of special in
terests to vote for Cox; Senator Harding em
phatically declared against any approach to
class government; the issue was -made very
plain on this line, and the outcome is to be in-
tcrpreted only as indicating lack of progress
towards class consciousness or group govern
ment in the United States. Such agreement; of
purpose among the heterogeneous elements of
our population holds great promise for the fu
ture, as it shows a desire on part of all to attain
a common goal, regardless of racial or other
divisions,. evidences of a condition from which
all are trvinir to cret awav.
Group government tends almost inevitably")
. to class government. This is clearly shown by
the experience of Germany, where groups in
parliament reached their highest development,
theirharpest delineation, as well as their most
delicate subdivision. Group government has
long been a familiar experience of France, al
though it has not been accentuated by the in
tense factional discord that marked proceedings
in Germany, where parliament was more of a
debating society than an agency of government.
Groups btgan to appear in the British parlia
ment shortly before the end of the Mast cen
tury, but only since the war has this manifesta
tion of class distinction assumed definite out
line there. However, it has proceeded far
enough to convince Americans of its undesir
ability. ,
Mr. Bryan's plan is about as impractical as
are most of his proposed panaceas for our po
litical ills. This answer ought to meet the
aspiration fqr "parliamentary" government, Jor
our present system provides amply for the -expression
of popular will, admits a change in the
popular branch of the government every two
years if sought by a sufficient number of voters,
and in the executive in quadrennial periods,
under the same conditions. This is turning over
' rapidly enough to meet requirements of either
political or industrial growth.
1
Future Relations With Japan.
Honeyed words from Baron Shibusawa will
not deceive Americans as to what really is in
volved in the issue between California and
Japan, and which is now becoming a national
issue. The federal government, at present nego
tiating a treaty with Japan, will surely recog
nize the sentiment of the Californians, as ex
pressed in the adoption of the alien land law,
and will also' take note of the fact that generally
Americans are inclined to support the people
of the Pacific coast.
One of the remarkable traits of the Jap
is that he does not seek to pioneer a country,
but prefers to insert himself into one where
prosperity is already established and where he
ctflTsupplant his competitors by methods that are
" peculiarly Japanese. Eastern Siberia presents
a magnificient field for the builder; Japan's J
: .:n:. 1 j .n t.. t j i K
suipius luiuiuua tuum wcu uc einpioyca mere
in developing the resources of an admittedly
rich region that only awaits enterprise. But
that calls for a quality of which the Japanese
has so far shown little sign, enterprise ' and
initiative.
v Five years ago Baron Shibusawa made a
Hasty trip to New York and returned directly
, to Tokio, from which point he sent out a ten-
tative oroDOsal that foreshadowed in a wav the
fate that overtook Shantung. It was that the
United States should furnish the capital and
Japan would supply the expert management, and
between them the exploitation of Chinacould
be carried on with profit to both. This pro
posal, of course, did not attract ajny favorable
response, but it Joes indicate the course of
Japanese thought
It seems quite likely now that Japanese ex
clusion will be insisted upon by treaty pro
vision Exoerience under the Root-Takahira
agreement was not satisfactory. While ob
serving it in the letter the Japs avoided its
spirit and pursued their penetration of Cali
fornia persistently. Senator Harding gave the
Californians an unequivocal pledge on the point,
while the action- of, President Wilson at Paris,
where he shut out the Makino racial equality
resolution, may be taken as-an indication of
how he views the situation. At any rate, the
thought of Americans just now is in the di
rection of nationalism, and while they abate
none of their devotion to tfce cause of huuinanity,
nor their willingness to share with their neigh
bors, they do feel justified in determining who
is to be admitted into the intimacy of the house
hold.' -.
"Wilson, Not a Quitter."
In lending a consolatory message to Gov
ernor Cox, Private Secretary Tumulty indulges
in an expression that may call later on for a
little discreet interpretation. "Woodrow Wil
son is not'a quitter," jays Mr. Tumulty, thereby
implying perhaps many things. It is not ex
pected he would abandon the fundamental
principles' of his causes but as a rational man
Jie might admit himself mistaken, to say the
least, as to how his views and projects were
regarded by the public. Tiis does not requirr
"quitting" in any sense; nor does it necessarily
mean what Governor sCox conveys in his utter
ance: 1 v . v ' v
In spirit I am as proud as when the fight
started. I would not retrace a single step
nor yield a single jot in' principle. It was a
privilege to make the contest for the right
in face of overwhelming odds.
Accepting tfte Cox view, the voters of Amer
ica have started the country off on the wrong
trackf He may yet live to see how far he is
mistaken- in ths, as he was in his estimate
asi to the turn the vote would take. The prin
ciple mostly concerned, that of peace on earth,
has suffered nothing but has gained much
through the defeat of Cox. Senator Harding
and those who supported him are no less de
voted to the cause of mankind than those who
are numbered with the minority.' It is. unb.e
co'ming in the highest "sense for the late can
didate and the secretary of the president to
insinuate that they, whose party scarcely ex
ceeds the size and importance of a faction now,
alone are right.
Woodrow Wilson is not a quitter; he has
not been so accused by any. Yet we may con
fidently expect to hear from him some sort of
admission that he may .have misjudged his
countrymen in his effort to do something which
has turned out so disastrously for him and his
supporters. "It's no disgrace to run when you
am scared," and no man's reputation ever suf
fered severely because of his. disclaimer of in
fallibility. , Debs MuVt; Stay in Prison, s
According to word from Washington, Mr.
Wilson does not contemplate pardoning Eugene
V. Debs, now serving a term in prison at At
lanta, following "his conviction on a charge of
sedition. It would, says the president, be set
ting a bad precedent. In this regard he differs
from his secretary of war, who went into the
pardoning business on a wholesale scale about
two years ago, when he liberated a battalion of
slackers from the military prison at Fort Leaven
worth. Many of these were surely entitled to
clemency, because of the nature of their de
fense, but most of them were as. culpable as
Debs, and deserved punishment fully as much.
DebsV is in prison because he flouted the
authority of the United States government in
time of war; he was convicted d "attempting to
cause insubordination, disloyalty, mutiny, or
refusal of duty in the military or naval forces,"
of "attempting to obstruct the recruiting or en
listment service of the United States," and of
"uttering language tending tovincite, provoke
and encourage resistance to ttte United States
and to promote the cause of the enemy."
In other words Debs undertook to destroy
the -government of the United States by crip
pling it in time of war. If he had had his way,
we would have lost and Germany would have
won. It is not easy for the lay mind, however,
to draw the fine distinction that is necessary
to distinguish Debs from the slackers who" were
caught up in the draft, but who refused to obey
orders, preferring to serve in prison rather than
in uniform. These too, "except those, who act
ually had conscientious scruples, against ,war,
sought to destroy the government by crippling
its effort at defense. v
Patriots may extract a little comfort from
the reflection, that the president has at this
late date inferentially rebuked the secretary of
war for his order that liberated the "conscobs"
indiscriminately.
When Harding Meets Obregon.
Arrangements for a conference between the!
presidents-elect of the United States and Mex
ico at or near Brownsville are said to be under
way; Such a consultation may well be produc
tive of considerable mutual benefit. Ten years
of turmoil in Mexico seems to be' coming to an
end in the approaching inauguration of General
Obregon, while the "watchful waiting" policy
of the Wilson administration will hardly pre
vail under his successort. No good reason ex
ists why the southern border of our land should
not be as safe as tbt on the north, other than
the disposition of our neighbors on the south.
If Obregon is able to carry out his own pro
gram, he will restore iitdustry, make property
secure, and generally tranquilize Mexicaivpoli
tics. Should he accomplish this, he will do more
than any of his numerous predecessors to re
store good relations with the United States;
at least he will remove much of occasion for
strain. Senator Harding will undoubtedly meet
General Obregon in a spirit of amity, and cer
tainly, will accord him courteous and even sym
pathetic attention as he states the case of his
own country. And Obregon will find that the
president-elect of the United States is a man of
broad humanity, anxious to keep the peace, but'
determined to maintain the dignity and preserve
the rights of his government and its. citizens. If
the meeting is held as planned, it ought to do
much towards bringing about the settlement so
sadly wanted.
We hope the teachers will come back again
next year, and as a united body. But, we wish
them well, whatever they decide to do.
France was willing a year ago to accept
the Lodge reservations.
That landslide was going some when it caught
Champ Clark.
"Less talk and more action" will help much.
A Line 0 type or Two
Haw to At Lino,' lot ths quips fall hers they may.
After the Avalnnclie.
There In the twilight cold and gray,
JJfaless, but beautiful, he lay,
.Stilt grasping in his hand of Ice
That banner with the strange devlce
"Peace! Progress! Prosperity:"
IT was no secret that the democratic admin
istration was unpopular, but did you realize that
it was quite as bad as all that? The election of
1920 might be termed the Great Aversion.
THE only interesting statistics, are those
which are not obtainable. Frexample, it would
be interesting to know how many votes "in a
presidential election represent a last-moment
change of mind.
AND HOW THE LADIES VOTED.
One of Them: "How did you vote on revi
sion of the banking laws?"
Another: "I didn't know anything about it
but I voted for it, because I thought it wouldn't
do any harm to revise anything."
"Well, I didn't know anythlngabout it.
either, but I didn't vote for it, because I thought
they were doing too much revising."
A CHEERFUL tlmewas had in Lock'wood,
Mo. ,A handbill announced: "Dinner and supper
served by the Cemttery Association election
day."
Far From the Madding Crowd. '
Sir: Did 71 miles of desert today in five
hours. Flat? No. Lumpy. Will rest here and
study the many good points of Needles, and
resume our investigation of the g. c. of C. on
Sunday. If you have lots of time and are not
a bathroom bigot, never travel by railroad again.
Motoring is the life. . J. U. H,
WHEN one is. sequestered from the wprld
one develops, reports Comrade Debs, "an aston
ishingly keen faculty for sensing things." Where
upon he predicts a socialist landslide in 1924.
Really uncanny.
LET'S GET ACQUAINTED WITH THE
ZINTSMASTERS.
-From the Marshall, Mich., Chronicle.) '
Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Zintsmaster have re
cently installed a private golf course of
nine holes near their fine country home.
The golf links are private and will be used
by the family and friends. 'Next season the
Zintsmasters will issue membership cards
for the season of 1921 with no charges
whatever. They will keep several dozen
golf clubs and balls on hand so their friends
can play without purchasing these articles.
Their home has several large rooms suitable
for dancing, one being 18x27 feet, and are
all connected with double openings, and
have oak floors. They havev recently in
stalled f. player piano; aso a private electric
lighting plant and automatic electric pump.
- Everything will be ready tor enjoyment for
the Zintsmasters and their many friends
the coming season.
ANOTHER fear that was disposed of was
the fear that Mr. Harding, if elected, might
have a democratic senate on his hands.
home brew 'vse
(obeisances to riquarius)
yeast
and things
that boil
yeasty things that boil
i time them
with my big ben
1 am napoleon
bring up, the cannon
, ogosh
listen to the music
ot the brass band
hello cleopatra"
. isn't it warm tonight
' let's crank up
x , the old boat
' blue elephants
gorgeous blue elephants
-yft'aylng rdandolinzh
one spoke to me
i knew him in afrlker
footstepsh here and there
this walk won't stay shtill
I'm all right
but the walk'zh drunkazell
home brew
how i love it
doggoned shtuffs
got best 111 kick yeversaw
w. s.
, "WOODROW WILSON is One Alumni."
St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
A host in himself.
AD in the Iowa City Press-Citizen: "Tomor
row See that Beautiful Looking Blonde, Lionel
Batrymore, in her latest picture, 'The Master
Correspondence From Japan.
Tokyo, Oct. 6. Nowcometh the Wrold Sun
day School convention, to decide whether the
Christian Japanese not quite up to v entrance
requirements of the Land of the Free is to
be permitted to enter the Pearlyr Portals side
by side with the immaculate soul of the Occi
dental, or be restricted to the tradesman's gate.
JBut already Buddha has put the Evil Eye upon
the godly assemblage; four hours before the
time set for the formal opening of the great
new tabernacle it was burned to the ground.'
One dear old lady delegate, however, absolved
Buddha from all blame with the remark: "It
was to be expected; the carpenters worked on
Sunday" , , SIB.
THE manager of the Hotel Pomeroy, Bar-1,
bados, W. I., warns: "No cigarettes or cock
tails served to married ladies without husband's
consent." - t
I Music Hint.
Sir: P. A-lf Scholes, In his "Listener's Guide
to Music," revives two good laughs thus: "A
fugue is a piece in which the voices one by one
come in and the people one by one go out."
Also he quotes from Sam'l Butler's Note Books:
"I pleased Jones by saying that the hautbois
was a clarinet with a cold in its head, and the
bassoon the same with a cold in its chest."
The cor anglais suffers slightly from both Symp
toms. Some ambitious composer, by Judicious
use of the more diseased instruments, could
achieve the most rheumy musical effects, par
ticularly if, a la Scriabin, he should have the
atmosphere of the concert hall heavily charged
with eucalyptus. E. PONTEFEX.
IS Mr. Harding still a private citizen, as
Mr. Wilson reminded him, or does his election
allow him a measure of liberty of speech be
tween now and March 4?
CONSIDERABLE MENTAL HAZARD.
Sit: Are you interested In the fact that the
Rev. Jay Crowe is a missionary at Shanghai?
No? Well, then, permit me to hazard the opin
ion that the persons who speak of areoplanes
are the ones who in former days made men
tion of areated bread. CALCITROSUS.
"CONTEMPLATING young lady stenog
rapher desires position from 9 to 12 a. m. Phone
Uptown 1S04-W." New Orleans Times-Picayune.
-
Is fhere anything you'd like to have her con
template for you?
THE TRAITOR VOTE.
Sir: As Mr. Cox predicted that every traitor
In America would vote for Harding, it would
seem from the size of the vote, as Artemus
Ward said of Traitor's Gate, "that there was
room for several mlddlin'-sized traitors to go
through it to onst.' C. P. M.
EVEN landslides have their compensations.
Colonel Lewis escaped a close shave.
t A CHANGE FROM LATIN ROOTS.
(From the Reedsburg, Wis., Free Press.)
Miss Edna White resumed her school '
- duties after a week's vacation for -potato
digging.
WHEN do they count Mr. Harlan's votes?
Or don't they? ' B.L.T,
Saving Gasoline.
A Parsons newspaper says the. economy
wave has hit that Kansas town. The young
people are conserving gasoline by halting their
automobiles in some quiet lane near town. This
is a new definition of economy. Topeka State
Journal. -
- - -i'" - -i i
The Garter Record.
The world's most efficient garter was the
base v ball magnate who suspended seven Sox
at one tiroe.Cleveland Plain Dealer, i
How to Keep Well
' By OR. W. A. EVANS
Questions concerning feyglene, sanita
tion and prevention of disease, sub
mitted to Dr. Evans by readers of Ths
Boo, wit! bs answered personslly, sub
ject to proper limitation, where a
stamped, addressed envelope is en
closed. Dr. Evens will not malts
dlagnoaia or prescribe for Individual
diseases. Address letters in cars of
The Bee.
Copyright, 1020, by Dr. W. A. EvsdsT
HOW TO GROW OLD.
I publish a scries of receipts for
attaining old age. ' They come to
me from various sources:
airs. II. rettit of Wyoming, 111.,
was 97 in September. 1920. She
ascribes her long life o work and
heredity. She comes of a long-lived
stock and she has three children
each over 75. She always gets up
to breakfast and after breakfast
does some work, preferably in her
garden. She eats what she pleases.
Mrs. J. H. Cutter of Evansville,
Ind., is 94. She attributes1 her long
life, excellent health, and unusual
vigor to mental poise. In early, life
she was a pampered, ill-tempered
invalid. According to her friend,
Dr. Paine, under the influence of
religious teaching she discovered
and corrected her bad montal habits,
cultivated a graceful behavior, and
developed charm. To her physical
health she devotes a Wood deal of
attention. It iaher habit to remain
in bed reading until noon, then to
take a cool bath, dress, eat lunch,
and enter on her life of mild activi
ties. She does not come of long
lived stock.
About 100 years ago, Hufeland, a
German physician, wrote a book
telling how to attain old age., In
this book he says that Terenti,
wife of Cicero, in spite of the many
vicissitudes of her life, lived to bo
103. Llvia, the wife of Augustus,
was domineering and tempestuous,
but she lived to be SO. An actress
of the time, Luecui, appeared on the
stage at 112. Sis was on the stage
100 years. Galena Copiala, a dan
cer, lived to be very old; She per
formed before Pompey, danced
probably, when she was 90 years
of age. A few years later she per.
formed before Augustus. It may
be that births were not recorded
in that day.
Hufeland, after investigating the
age of Bible characters, Concluded
that "the duration of life 3,000
years ago was about the -same as
today." The apparent difference is
due to difference in the way of
reckoning.
Buck "Daws of - Modern Med
icine" quotes Pythagoras, one of
the great characters of ancient his
tory, as having lived to extreme old
ager He attributed this to modera
tion in eating and daily gymnastic
exercises. In his book of advice
"Just to Keep the Kecords
Strulglit."
Omaha, Nov. 6. To the Editor
of The Bee: So much recently has
been said in the Omaha papers re
garding tho heroic- work of Mf
Charles H. Van Deusen, newly ap"
pointed Chief of Detectives, during
the riot of 1919. when Mayor Smith
was so nearly killed, before a few
bravo men rushed to his rescue at
tho risk of their own lives. I be
lieve in fair play mid feel sure that
you do, therefore, call your atten-.
tlon. to your article of September
29, 1919, when you recorded the In
cident about Vie riot.
In that article you stated matters
as they were and now it sepnis that
the scenery has been shifted and
not alone has Mr. Van Deusen re
placed A. C. Andersen as chief, but
also as the ono that rescued Mayor
Smith. As a matter of fact, allow
me to recount this unselfish deed
and attention to duty by three de
tectives and State Agent, Mr. B. F.
Danbaum.
Mr. Danbaum, driving his own
car with Detectives A. C. Andersen
in the front seat and Detectives L.
O. Toland and Van Deusen in the
rear seat, drove through the mob
ho counseled moderation In all
things as the essential for long life.
But he added: "A man at 80 and
beyond should reckon himself as
having ceased to live."
Dr. A. W. Foreman is only 80,
but he has "lived 100." i He was
one of 19 children, of Whom 14
lived to be over 70. In his creed
for long life there are four articles:
"First, I was born right." He came
of long-lived stock. 'Second. ? I
always have been a hard worker.
Third, I never permit myself to get
angry. Fourth, I always manage
to have lots, of fun."
J. L. Hammett, wKo is in the 80s
and very active, does not think hi3
people were long-lived. His father
died at 80 and his mother at 84.
His grandfather (his father's fath
er) died at 34. However, that was
due to an accident yellow fever.
Doesn't Need Operation.
Sam writes: "1. WUat can be done
to cure varicocele, besides an opera
tion? 2. I am a member of a gym
nasium which I attend three times
a week and take part in boxing,
handball, and basket ball. Is it
possible that pueh exercising would
be harmful to me?"
REPLY.
1. (a) Wear a suspensory, (b)
Getting married ia the best cure.
2. No. Varicocele Is of slight Importances
on that nevcr-lo-bo-forKOtten Sep
tember evening, not caring for
stones, olubs or fhotguns, and
grabbed the mayor .away from the
mob. After Mr. Russell Norgard
had untied the rope, these brave
men drove throiiBU tho crowd to
the city Jail for first aid to tho
mayor, and then finding they were
still being pursued by the mob,
again placed the unconscious mayor
in tho auto and by round ubout
way took him to he Ford hospital.
I Hon't know if the mayor ever
knew who rescued hiinT at least he
has never said anything about It
to my v knowledge, and as my
brother, A. C. Andersen, has .re
peatedly stated, he was only doing
his duty.
Above are the facts even as re
corded by your papor and also set
forth in the' little Blue Book, called
"Omaha's s Riot." i Hence, I am
much surprised to' now see the ar
ticle In all papers stating that Van
Deusen and Danbaum drove an
automobile through tho crowd and
rescued the mayor making' the im
pression that these two were ths
only ones, when the truth is that
jy. C. Andersen got to the mayor
first and lifted him in the auto.
Let us be fair to all the boys.
There was enough honor for all in
that night's work and it is only to
keep the records straight that I
ask you to give this article space
In your paper.
CHARLES J. ANDERSEN.
M,,iiiMiniMlMiMli.HstMawieepaf..l
A package of lorna doonE
Biscuit in the pantry means
many a shortbread treat for
the family. Tender, mealy,
and with just -enough rich
ness. Try them today. y
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if
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4
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For more than forty years Boston Garter has
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Most men ask for Boston Garter as a mattter
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J
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opk makers loolfvery much alike on the
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Heavy reserve stocks of National Blank Book are
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can fat itin tuirryl from blank book head.
quarter,
A set of Da & Cr. Potting Sllpn sent free
from the factory to accountants.
j SEE YOUR STATIONER OR OFFICE SUPPLY HOUSE
Send for a free copy of "GOOD FORMS FOR RECORD MAKING"
showing hundreds of really ruled and printed forma for accounting'.
VuL J sjrV' I jf
ill s-r. iii.ii M
I 11 M Mat"
1
e
Are you a skilled man ? Are you satis
fied'wijh your job and your prospects?.
Have you ever wanted to be a sur
veyor or radio operator oif to -hold
down a technical job?
There's where the big pay is and
getting it is only a matter of fowmng
enough. . '
If you want ttfknow rriore, the Army
is a great place to learn.
A soldier has a chance to learn to be
expert in one of many technical jobs.'
He earns a good livingVhile he's study
ing. He has money in his pocket at
the end of every month. It doesn't cost
him a cent to fit himself for a "big
pay" job when he goes back to civil life.'
And he sees new places and faces while
he's earning and learning. j
It's a good job an unusually good
job as jobs go, nowadays and it is a
way to a better job afterwards.
Ask a recruiting officer.
EARN, LEARN
and TRAVEL
.1
I