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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1920)
7 7 N V THE BEE: OMAHA, lULHNUAY, JNUVttiVIB&K ZZ, ' lUU THk Omaha Bee , DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THtBEB PUBLISHING COM PANT, NttSON B. UPDIKE. Publlshsr. MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Th Aaandatad ri Htm nM wMrt Tka Ham la m aiamha. fa eluslraii sutitka la lb um for publlouloa or all Ban dispateiiat eradital ta II or bk otnerala eradiud la tbta paper, and aJw Ui loaaj Ofwi rubllalMd bmln. all litfiu ot DubUaaUoa of out Hartal ai.Mau.4w .1. ajao BEE TELEPHONES Prlnla flrneh Bnhania. Aak lot Tvlatv 1 Wl U. IMmuumhi or Pma Wanted. 1 JTier IWV Far Night Call Altar 10 P. M.l Editorial Dmitamt - Circulation papartinant - - " .diftilni DtputnuBi . OFFICES OF THE BEE Mala Oflloar 17th an ramus IS Uoott St. liouth aid ' Out-of-Towa Offieaai K Pitttt Ara, I Wuhlnttoa Council Bluffs Nr Tork U oara . Tylar 10001 Tjlrr 11KJSL Trlw IMvl. nil it st HOnr Blric I Parli Franc 4i0 Sua lit Roanra i x The Beefs Platfornt 1. Now Union Passenger Station. 2. Continued Improvement of ttt No braaka Highwaye, including the pave ment of Main Thoroughfare leading ' into Otnaha with a Brick Surfaco. 3. A short, low-rate Waterway from the CorB Bolt to the Atlantic Ocean. 4. Home Rule Charter for Oraajia, with City Managerfortn of Government. "REPRESENTATIVE" GOVERNMENT. A correspondent chaJtengcs the city manager form of government for the reason that it is not representative. He finds hia ideal in the old city council system, which he holds to be truly a reflection of the heeds and aspirations of the community. While -admitting the surface value - of alt" he has ket forth in support of his -pro- . posal, it inay do no harm to look a little deeper " into the prpblem. - " A By ."representative" government, we allude ' to a system under wliich the citizens,, delegate a certain portion of their pdwers to 'those who are chosen' to act together with others .simi larly'iclectcd in the name of all. The United States of America is the greatest and most sue-, cesstul example of representative governnent the world eer knew. Its executive head is VVhosen by all the people, inyefted with extraor , dinary powers, whicn he' exercises m the name of the people of the United States, and ia ill things stands towards the whole country just ; as the citv manager would k relation to Omaha. If 4he power of governing Oniahavis too much vt give one man, how .rnucrf greater is the tre mendous power of governing the United States? Ht will be noted hat our objecting corre spondent to his argument for representation lias specified no unit of division", and we submit ; , that one man may look after th business of the . cofRmunity with quite as much .real success as if it w,ere entrusted to a dozen. Ifo taxpayer's or property-owner j Interest will suffer any through haying an; administration nSore efficient and serviceable than is possible, when authority and responsibility. alike divided, and when the members of the government art" compelled to consult political -expediency r4fthe;r than the real needs of the community A Tityx council of board of directors-, similar to the1 Board of Edu cation, may be given the authority to select the manager, but he should be His far as pos sible independent of politics. !n order 'that he npy give the community the service it should ''have from its executive head. I "' . . , The public will give up noncof its right under the plan. ."Let the people yule" will be as rw'ell exemplified wheii the business ft carried on by Nine man as. if it.vere being done by fifty, and the taxpayers will have the benefit of know- hg that the one man will feci his responsibility " more keenly than if he were permitted td pass the buck to forty-nine others,, when anything goes'wrang. J Long experience proved that the old system ' was wasteful, a breeder of corruption, jand a total failure when 1k came to locating the hlame for anything out of gear. The Commission has remedied this to some extent, yet falls short of - the ideal aimed at. The people of Omaha wilt not go back to thecity council plan; thpr ought to go forward to tne""cto manage. ' 1 The Element of Chance. Something very like a sermon may be ex tracted from the experience of the' misguided group of men and bbys who looted the mail car at Council Bluffs Pirst of all, one must be impressed by the element of chance the case evinces. This is so strong that it led to the con clusion that somewhere along the line there was a"master mind." vDetectives and otfierj. accus tomed to analyze crimes, to following clues, and deducing motives from results,, could ' scarcely credit that the thieves' had attacked the richest car in the train, and had selected the ; most costly loot "without some fore-knowledge to guide them. As yet, it has not been satis " factorily and completely established. they were not informed in advance,but-the developments strongly' jndicate they did not .know what they were getting into. Whdjpe they - probably an ticipated a few hundreds, or at the outside a few thousands, they grabbed inillionsNLike the ' perfidious Roman maiden who opened The gates of the, city to the barbarians, they were literally crushed beneath the treasure that fell to them. In their bewilderment, they destroyed a huge amount b securities, "which" must be made good Jhyi insurance -companies, and fromN which they . could 'not have derived-benefit. Even the cur . rency of the United States came in such pro x(usion they could not comprehend it Viewed frora any angle, the crime is one of the. most remarkable eijer recorded and will long stand as, a fitting example of "beginner's luck," with about; the same moral as pertains to the ex perience of the man who wins his first' try at the new game and thinks he has mastered its intricacies. never comprehend what is actually mt-olvedin fjlie business of feeding them, and surely vvbuld be surprised at the magnitude of the undertaking if its details were made clear. Six thousand reindeer make quite a herd, but they could be taken care of in the local packing houses by a single eight-hour shift, and the horns saved to make knife handles, coat buttons and the like. The dressed rrlf at industry is a lot bigger thing than the public dreams of. i Six Thousand Reindeer. Considerable prominence is being gi-en an - iteirtthat sets forth the fact that 6,000 reindeer are to be butchered in" Alaska this winter and sent to' the United States to be sold as meat. Considered .as, a novelty,, the incident is note worthy; as a contribution to the food supply, it is nothing. Packing houses at Oniaha fre quently take care of that" many cattle in a day, -each producing more ''actual pounds of meat than' comes from a reindeerand this entirely outside the thousands of hogs and sheep who give up the,ghost at the. same timejhe cattle ' are passing on. Then consider the factrtJTat at Kansas City, St. Joseph, Sioux . City and Chi- , cago, St Louis and other places a similar work is going on, so that more beef steers are slaugh tered every ; day' than 4herev; are reindeer in Alaska, and the possibilities of that source of Vmeat supply may be in a sense actually gauged. Americans scarcely ever' think of and perhaps j Bankrupt Humanity on the Stage The plays of John Gakworthy are enjoying a yogue both7in London and NewYork that encourages the hope of restoring popular in terest in serious drama. Broadway, having first teen "The Mob," wherein the plot hinges around the fate of a statesman who declines to support his nation in ie conduct of an unjust war, now is in excited controversy over his newer lay, "The Skin Game," which deals with the strug gle between British industrialism and the aris tocracy, or as some critics claim, represents symbolically -the war between Etig,land and In London attention to this native British author has been directed by the revival of "The Foundations which" was originally produced during the last stages of the war, and the farci cal morality of "The Little Man Th London papers find the attraction of "The Foundations' in the uncanny way in which Galsworthy wrote during the war of London as it would be after peace came. Three years ago it was called, a satire, with a cruel and unjust hint that the lessons of Armageddon would be quickly for gotten. , In that time of idealistic vision, it was not popular to-suggest that there woufd be, no new world emerge from the ruins of the old, that women of the slums would continue to sew trousers for a few pence a pair while the phi lanthropic ladies of fashionably neighborhoods would still find it necessary to hold meetings of protest against the sweatsfcop system. The millenium did notvarrive, anivthe play, comes, with' the mocking force of conscience, ' i In "The Little Man," which' also was writ ten during the war, Galsworthy shows a crowd of travelers at a little European station. The American talks at random about the brother hood of nations, 'am?d the approval of his con panions of various nationalities-. One little man J ot nor particular nationality says nothing, but when a baby in the train is suspected of having typhus-, he is the only one of tfie party to ex ercise the spirit of brotherhood. The Test find excuses to disappear while he comforts the -ailing child, holding it close as it bites n his finger., This, declare the peculiarly obtuse critics, is Mr. Galsworthy at his most whimsical, and it is reported that the audience left wondering What he meant Yet the pointed tragedy oHhefalse ness of human jjrofessions of .high idealism when confronted by the actualities of personal service and sacrifice could not have been en tirely 16st on those who saw it. A Line Type or Two Hew to the Lint, 1st the quips fall whara they may. "I THOUGHT Mr. Harding an optimist," writes VJ E. B., "until 1 saw a picture of him fishing in Point Isabel. He was wearing both belt and suspenders." - , t . ' Tho Fullback's Version. ' Hew to the lfne, let tfie cleats fair where they may! - - BOLUTINUS, v THE line In the Sat. Eve. Post, "It left: an aching void for which no palitajives seemed discoverable' leads 1?. B. T. to wonder whether a vftcuiyn cleaner would not serve. "Can you not," he queries, "cair 'aching void, 'yawning abyss,' . and 'depths abysmal'?" Sorry; tho office is moving this week, and the Cannery went with one of the first van loads. C'EST UN JOLl'ENDROlT N'EST CE PAS? (From the Prescott Ariz., Miner.) The party lasted the entire fefternoon and - was ' among the most successful Wednesday teas' yet given x at anendroit celebrated for its pleasing weekly enter THE display of legs at the opera suggests the need of a little book on "How to Tell the Box-Holders From the. Ballet." t Timely Book Review. Sir: Kroch Is displaying Feake's novel "Ell of the Downs." 'Nothing like catching. puuuo lnieresi, wnne is is cenicrea on Satur day's game. ,, " BOOLA. I HAVING acquired the two volumes of Margot AsquUhs autobiography, we shall pull up the wing-chair to the open fire and liKhtone of Mr. Dunhill's briars. Of all forms of fiction, autootograpny is much the most entertaining. How to Keep Well By DR. W. A. EVANS Queatlona concerning hygiene, aanlta tioa and prevention of diseasa, sub mitted to Dr. Evans by readora ol The Baa, will ba answered personally, ub ject to proper limitation, where a e tamped, addroaaed anvelopa ia en cloaed. Dr. Evan will not make diacooeie or prescribe (or individual diaaasea. Addreea lattera in care of The Bee. ' i CopyrigtrtJsaO, by Dr W. AvEvane. Another Effect of the War. Perhaps tlia most unexpected erTect of the war is now being-experienced in Paris. 'It is reported from there that 'apartments are so scarce and rents so high that husband and wife, have Jaken to living together agafh, divorces are fewer and separate maintenance seldom thought of. Simple Americans who are accustomed to spending their evenings around home will not, probably, fully appreciate the predicament of 'the gay boulcvardiere, who finds himself reduced to the necessity of going home just because there ft nowhere else to go. 'One of the characters in a French comedy that had great vogue in America once sneers at- the duchess for being o old-fashioned she occupied the same room with her husband. And now the smart ones are compelled by the. exigencies of war to seek domicile under the same roof with her or him to whom the law and the church, acting to gether as they do, had bound the other half of the indissoluble bonds. Imagine it 1 Of course, this cannot go on forever, because evejLin Paris the shortage of housing must some time be re lieved." , Meanwhile, it might turn out . that the embargoed couples vwill learn, as Others have nnder similar cicumstances, that they really can get along together much better than separately, and the grasping landlord may in fact be doing a better job than Hymen in the matterof bring ing two souls to have' but a single thought. . , Tree-Planting for the Future. Charles Lathrop Pack, hcaiof the American Forestry association, is going before congress at its coming session with a definite-program for reforestation )oi logged-off areas. The wood pulp and paper mn are considering a similar program, to restore the spruce needed for their mills. Back of each of these is a dcfinite"idea, that of meeting a need of the country, not for the future altogether, because the present has imperative demands for timber, but because as a people we have been exhausting a resource that easily might be made perpetual. In this spirit The Bee renews its oft-repeated sugges tion to the people of Nebraska that steps be taken to plant trees in the "sand hills,"! where they will grow, and from which the state7 in time will get immense benefit , Almost 700,000 acres of . waste land in that region belongs to the state of Nebraska, and every acre, of it can be made to produce trees from which in time revnue can be derived. This is not ar dream. The federal government carried the experiment far enough to' show that it is practical. One of the finest growth of pine trees in the central west is that along the Dismal in Thomas county. What has been1 done there can be done all over the region. Will the people of. Nebraska' have it done? . , Politicians have ncfly resorted to the ouiji board to discover the names of President Hard ing's cabinet One in Washington spelled out "Lodge" for secretary of state and "Wood" for secretary of warT and gave'50 years" in answer to( the question how long the demo crats will stay out of power. - -J. ' It was never intended that the Federal .Re serve bank should ruin the cattle feeding in dustry, but that is what it is. doing. . , In the dispute between a telegraph corpora tion and the government mostpcople will stand behind the government ' Uncle Sam's mail is nothing to monkey with, unless you 'are longing for a. trip to Leavenworth. - y The price of eggs is not staying up. because chicken feed is high. , Going to beat home on Thursday? (From Houghton & Mifflin's Monthly Chat.) (llad to hear, that Mrs. Sturgis "Per sonal Prejudices" Is making so many friends for Itself, every one of whom so good and1 Jolly a little book of essays deserves. Has a f riskiness similar to "Th Random Reflec tlons of a Grandmother." One always en ' Joys such excellent company between Mrs. Sturgis covers. , - A DANGEROUS situation exists in India, according to Secretary Montagu. When, dur ing the last half-century, was there not a dan gerous situation in India? z Pottcrisin. Sir: I begaji reading "Potterlsm," by Rose Aiacauiay, at o ciock tnis arternoon; it is now 7. I have read to the bottom of page 46, and have discovered the following" goms: ."Hjifv this war is going to do anything for It I don't know how," "Everyone's got to relieve themselves," ."For such as her," "Her large hands all- over rings,' v"As If 6he was an Im becile," "The most comic parliament who ever sat In Westminster, upon which it would be, eic. - , The publishers say the novel created a sen sation In England, vit ought to start a riot at .Harvard. Still, tho English say that we talk American! C. A. M. THE locution, ''everyone . . . they" is. used by the majority of British writers, we should say; the other gems cited are doubtless the result of haste in writing. But in spite of all its blemhhes "Pottcrism" is one of the most interesting yarns of the year, a really brilliant performance. s - -' THE VHJiAGE'. EYESORE, x (From4 the Portage Register-Democrat") . Quite a little' excitement was caused on1 last Saturday when the fire bell rang call-. , ing all volunteer out to a Are when Mr.v ; Essex's car caught fire by having a lighted . lantern setting in front of the front seat v,hile filling the car with gas at the new garage.. No damage was done besides the burning of the car, for which all concerned I are thankful. . ' ... 1 "SOUSEWORK General woman, experi enced, in family of two."- Chicago Daily News. As a home-brewer "seems wanted, mav suggest Annij Mae Firment of Marksville, LajJ . lTom the Albuquerque Journal.) Anyhow, Mrs. J. A. Moore of Los An geles, who has been a guest at the hotel, reported that a streak thief had entered her I room and selected some silk hose and some ' other garments, the description of which Is ' a very personal matter. The police are puz- , zled. They don't knew-where to start the search. . Motoring, With Distinction. : (Vanity Fair for December.) There .has recently been an attempt on the part of ttie motor advertisements tdicreate a peculiar kind of glamour about ridmg In auto mobiles. To examine these advertisements is at once to be thoroughly convinced that motoring is one of the smartest and most exhilarating of pleasures. One sees handsome, well dressed and dustless young men and women, driven by a chauffeur as consummate asa commander-in-chief's aid de camp, sliding out from between the gleaming white gates of some aristocratic country house or stopping to contemplate a landscaped distinguished as themselves. They paeex emootniy Desiae tne wm canals and the civilized poplars of France; they breast Keenly the cold bracing air of New England mountain roads, where the trees are blazing redly with fall blazing redly butvwith distinction; or they come to rest on the warm and yellow summer sands, where young bathers In debonair bathing suits lounge finely against the car, smoking well oreji cigarets. These people are never cHrty; uiey never become 'flaccid: they never go to sleep In the car; their alert and dignified zest has never been known to flag. Who would not ride forever willingly under -such conditions as these? ..TV V A POSTER 'in the public library of Stroms bow. Neb., durincr :Good English Woek Ao. clared that "Good looks, is attractive! likewise good tnglish." j : - If A CLOTJ17 OF SMOKE. ' V ; (From the Galena Gazette.) A Galena barber tells of a stranger who came Into the strop the"other morning and when opportunity offered he would walk away with a bottle of hair tonic and a bot tie of another preparation' Before reach ing the door he swallowed the contents of one bottle, and then disappeared. j ' T COMPULSORY education' in" English sli6uld.be compulsory for all aliens under the age of 1.:' The .valued Post. " Another Worry, t ' Sir: How to dispose of the obsolescent stubs ofvpocket check books? Elemental? Not at all. For an apartment dweller, out of per sonal touch with the heating plant (If the build ing, has one which some are beginning to doubt), burning Is unpractical. To throw them Into the receptacles for waste paper is to tell the world of one's financial status. No, breth ren, the solution of this problem, before which the disposal of used safety razor blades or even of s. e. posts pales Into insignificance, lies far deeper. x FILBERT. , MARRIED in Saukville, Wis.," Miss Ick- staat ana Air. uttstadt. THE GRATEFUL" MILK PEDDLER. (From the Mansfield News.) x k To our .milk customers: Those paying fcash-will please have change, as we can't " .take off our gloves this cold weather to make change;' also please drain bottles be fore patting money or tickets in, as it i freezes down and we can't get them-out Thawing you for the past we remain, The Mansfield Milk Mjen. NONE of the hunian activities, bulletined at the Commodore in New York was "Life is an art club." Gosh 1 , ., V 't ' -j.; t j Boltlo Grade? (From the D Moines Register) , Dr.Tred Moore will speak on "Nutri tion" at the meeting of the Park Avenue Br T. A.,-Wednesday. The second grade mothers will be hostesses. IN rooms-to-rent ads' the compelling induce ment offered Is "coal all in." - B. L. T, Michigan to Fight Grasshoppers. Antrim county," Michigan, has appropriated $5,000 to fight grasshoppers next year, Emmet county" has set aside $2,600 -for the'same pur pose, and other counties are. expected to "follow suit Grasshoppers have been doing great dam age in northern Michigan, and it is hoped that a well-financed, campaign may be able to con trol them. PAiric Farmer, v , ., yearg. Eug SUBDUING DREAD DISEASES. Dr. Goldberg, connected with the Chicago Municipal Tuberculosis sanitarium, calls my attention to the very rapid fall in the consumption rate In Chicago during 1SZU. . Withjn the memory of living men the death ratfe from this disease has fallen from 220 to 115. He says the 1920 rate gives promise of being be low 115: The statement nasi often been made that the rate is tailing VA per cwit a year. Dr. Goldberg tells me the drop In 1920 has been considerably more than that Duclaux. former director of the Pacteur institute, said we never can entirely eradicate any disease. This may be true, no one will lightly dis pute any opinion emitted by . Due laux, but we can reduce very terri fying diseases to diseases of minor importance. It has been' done sev eral times. Perhaps in time we may be able to make consumption a necliirible disease. Suppose we look-back 100 years and then, having visioned how far we have come in a century,, face about and try to foresee how far forward we will go in the next 100 ugene Sue, a French' physician horn in 1804. wrote at least two wonderful novels "The "Mysteries of Paris." and "The Wandering Jew." Hec combined an imagina tion more vivid than that of Poe or O. Henry with a marvelous ca pacity for reciting minute details. On account of his medical training he not infrequently describes- In minute i detail situations in, which lack of sanitation and bad hygiene make the point to the story. , One of the string of short stories strung together to make "The Mys teries ofrParis" is that which defcl with a poor lapidary, M. Morel, who lived ir the garret of a hovel with his wife and jfive children and his wife's mother, an Insane old bag. Here are come snatches from the story: "In one room lived Morel, his in valid wife, her crazy mother and five children ranging In age from 4 to 12. The only light and venti lation came through a skylight now covered with snow.- The floor of a nameless color, foul, fetid, and slippery, is strewn here and there with bits of dirty straw, old rags and such large bones as are sold by venders of putrid meat and bought by starving wretches. The Wftlls reeked with dampness. The family slept on pallets which enhale a most retid odor. The tick was cut across "and the children's beJs" were In the damp and rotten straw. "Morel, with his body twisted out of all shape by long hours of stooped over grinding, worked at his bench on one side of the room. The wife who had ruined her health attend ing to Morel during a three months' illness., was exhausted bya slow fe ver and a painful 'disease which has confined her to rwd for some montns past The yonngee, r they girls, wasted by consumption, rests her poor little face, blue and livid, on the" cold bosom of her B-yefr-old sister. v ' "An officer enterr to arrest Morel. As the excitement quiets they no-, ticed that the poor consumptive child had expired without a mur mur, cei a ana want naa nastanea her end. although her complaint. brought on by the. want of common necessaries, was beyond care." Need we say that the consumption rate of that time was very high. : Parasite Probable Cause," ' M. B. writes: "Kiiatly stite what Is the cause of diarrhoea. ' I have had it for the last year. Have about six or seven bowel movements a day." REPLY. x When a diarrhoea has persisted for a year the cause should be In vestigated. Amoeba and other In testinal parasites are among . the Objects to City Manager. Omaha, Novembery,17. To the Editor of The Bre: As a citizen of Omaha permit me to reply to your niitorial of November 17th, regard ing the "City Manager Plan." which you claim contains no hocus-pocus, or any magical formula for curing public Ills. But It proposes to adapt business principles to public affairs. If it would even do half what you say it would, it would be better than thn Invlslhln envemment now be ing handed us by the present elty commission, whose centralized -pow- ers with its constant friction is for ever violating the rights of the poo pie of Omaha, and who are now seeking power to amend the city Charter so they can issue bonds , without a vote of the people. ' I But will the city manager plan, as proposed by The Bee, restore to the people a representative form of gov ernment which all good citizen believe should contain that funda mental principle of democracy, "Let the People Rule?" Or will it pro duce the opposite rsult? I cannot help but believe the' city manager plan of one-man govern ment will force upon the people a dictator, whose great powers would be dangerous, and I doubt if the man lives who has self control, sanity and tolerance enough to .use it discreetly and well enough to govern, a city of 200,000 people like Omaha, y .' why not get back to a representa tive form of government? Let the people elect oAe member to the city council for each of the 12 wards in the city of Omaha when we change the charter for home rule. This will permit publio opinion to have its expression In the administrative af fairs of Omaha which Is now being denied and would be denied under the city manager plan. There should be greater tolerance for the opinions of the voters and more especially the taxpayers, Who must defray the expenses of government This ex pression of publio opinion should not lo deprived and its influence will offer a reasonable degree of harmony which the )resent city commission lacis. ' Intelligent and sympathetic toler ation -of the view points 6f our citi zens by our hired men (city commis sioners) will do much toward rem edying our presorit evils of govern ment in Oniaha and allay the feel ing of unrest that exists today amqngst our citizens. What we want is a moro representative form ot government vhero the voico of th' people may bo lu-ai-i and. If you cam show me tliat l10 cl,y manager plait will do this, then you will,' have a convert for tho city manager plan. So far J'OU, have failed to convince mo. ' 1 JWV M. HARROP. ' A Kara Avis. ' A statesman Is what you call a politician who will toll the truth, party orno part.w Thrre are very lew statesmen. Houston lst. causes of this condition. The scientifically bake.d shortbreadVLoRNA Doone Biscuit. Superb in flavor. Just enough richness. 'Al ways ready. Your grocer has them. , NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Maearoni mt I aWeMMMM MaanBaaaw.. i ,. up . 11 ' Hi III kDCONI HP Tempt Flavins WW vV. f Appetites .V' With .1- ' . Savory DisH ; of - Goodi's Besf Cooked With Meat v American State Bank 18th and Farnam Streets y CAPITAL $200,000.00 This Bank does more for you 'than r carry your account We have, the facilities' you would specify for handling your banking business. , ' v We invite your account on the hasis of serv ice. Why not talk business with us? Our .Savings Department pays com pound quarterly interest 'added to your ac count, subject to withdrawal notices T . ' '? i " - -v : Deposits In this BanlrVrotecte by thi Depositors' . Guarantee Funj of the State of Nebraska. f D. W. GeUelman. President. D. C. Gaiselman, Cashier ' H. M. Krogh, AisiaUnft Cahier . I JS twmmtmtmmmmmmmm BUILDS TVTRW JLTJLJLJL ' ' ''''' Give yourself a D chance CflHISTHAS CAR' D, - f ' ffilahd -Engraved 'An appropriate remembrance jor thi holidays ivill he found in Hand Engraved Cards . ' 'Place $our order now so thai V deliver) can be made in time fbr$)ou to' reach all of jnh ' mailing list. y Me'e Einigir'ajlinii C. TYLER, W00- S0i PETERS TRUST BLDG. ! . ' . 1 I- , T .: - o you want to Stay within reach of your own front gate ail your life? - Or would you like to see s6me other part of the country knowTthe differ ence between Lake Erieand the Gulf of Mexico? x " ' j v, In the .rmy yoij see newa faces and placed make hew friends, earn a good, living and can learn to be. a skilled ; man in a trade,, if you like. ; That's why, when a soldier goes' back to civil. life, he has the advantage over, the stay-at-homes. Ife-'s ready for a - better joln-with morl money . .Because he knows more, because he's seen some place beside his own hometown. V . Give yourself a chance EARN, LEARN and -TRAVEL