THE liEE: OMAHA. MONDAY, h'lSBKUAKV 7, 11131.. The Omah a Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENINGSUNDAY - : 1) THE IIEK PUBLISHING COMPANY, , NELSON B, UPUIKE, Publisher. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The amx-itied Press, of whloK The Be It t mnilMr. la -rlusiieir entitled to tb um for publication of til nana d.aiUihoa nradlltd lo It or ant olhaririaa rmliltd in this esptr. and aim the hwel nirwa publlahrd herein. All rlbu of mbUcitloo of out i.-ial (tunatraae are elao rearrrrd. i BEE TELEPHONES ! Prirate Branch Sirhsnre. Aak for Tvlet 1000 tea Department of 1'rraon Wanted. ssws svvv For Night Calls After 10 P. M.t Editorial Department ....'..- e'trculattmi lienartment adrertlslug Department . OFFICES OP THE BEE Main Offlra: Wth and Famam Council Bluffs 15 Suoit St. t South Bids ' Out-o(-Towa Office: Trier IMOt Trier 1001. War 10091. N Tork I bk-aafl ;s rtfth An. -Stoset Bid-. Waehtntton I'UI 0 St. Parta.Kranee. liOBueSt. Honor The Bee's Platform ; 1. New Union Passenger Station. 2. Continued improvement of the Ne. braska Highways, including the pave- . tnent of Main Thoroughfares loading s into Omaha with a Brick Surface. 3. A short, lowrato Waterway from I ho Corn Bolt to the Atlantic pcean. 4. Homo Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of , Government. ; No Jury Service for Women. Whether it Was intended as an act of gal lantry or not, the action of the house at. Lincoln in killing the bill to provide for woman's service on juries, in our courts has putva limit on the citizenship of women in Nebraska. As the law now. stains, Lancaster vcounty -is the only1 place in the state, where .women may serve, as it is the only county iii the state with more than 30,000 or less tb'au! 100,000; i lh Douglas county the statute specifies "all male citizens of the United State," subject to certain ljmitatiofas. In the other counties of the state only males are quaP" ilicd, but the intent plainly was. this should include voter A- simple amendment, striking out the word, "male" might have been all that Mas needed to cure the statute and would have niadex women available for .jury service. The effort to extend the compulsion under Which males rest to include' women naturally arouses . opposition. -' 1 In assuming the prerogatives of full citizen ship woman is alsp supposed to have taken ott all its responsibilities. One of these is service on juries. .From the standpoint of ideal citizenship, this is one of the highest of privileges. Twelve good men and 4rue are clothed, with the power of deciding questions-of right between man and man; trial before a jury of his peers' is the right ' of any accused individual, and in, this land, where all are sovereign, each is the other's peer before the law; So in, the past any 13 men might be called upon by the court to serve in determining the true, facts in any casci Now that women have been added to the list of sovereigns, is it not. to be expected that they. also take on all ' that goes with such sovereignty? , i One of the unpleasant experiences of our national life is that many men deliberately shun the duty of jury service. This led ,to the presence or a class of so-called "professional" jurymeJ), against whom, objection was lodged because of real or fancied venality. To avoid as far as possible the condition'-comp.lained of, certain stringent provisions have been :made into law, particularly a,s regards the power of the court to compel men to' serve on juries. To extend such compulsion to women has aroused a very ani mated discussion. We believe that it is a matter that safely may be left to the discretion of the csjirts, once the qualifying restriction of "male" is eliminated, but we realize that much hardship might be inflicted it .women were required to take their places in the jury panel tinder the law that now contemplates having every voter in his turn take up the performance of such duty-. Yet it is part of citizenship, and we feel sure that a large number of women Will gladly v so serve when called upon at least once., ;. a The issue opens up generally the whole vista; or the political relations -.of the' sexes, and, while it .will be admitted that woman its quite as completely equipped for jury service as she is" tor voting, we gravely question whether she will sustain the one as gracefully as she does the other. It may yet become apparent that adop tion Of the Nineteenth amendment did, not dis pose entirely of all the points of disparity between male and female. 1 King Albert's Cup Race," Nebraska is 4'ar enough away from salt water to hold at least a judicial view of a yacht race. 1 herefore' the proposed contest' for the cup to "be provided by Albert of Belgium appeals to us. A trans-Atlantic'race, with no handicaps of any" kind nobody barred,, open, to the world, to any sort of craft Using the wind for propelling power, holds something that interests the sport fug sense. 'Contests for America's cup have oe generated into the feeblest form of yacht racing, ,' participated in only by specially designed sailing ' machines, of no earthly use to anybody after 'the purposes of the race have been fulfilled. Belter by far are the contests between the fishing . schooner sailed last fall from Halifax and won .byke Yankee boat. But the race across the ocean promises something more inspiring. In the pasfsuch events have excited lively interest, although only four have been field, the last in , 1905.y The entry list should be a long one tnd -next Fourth of July around Ambrose Light . ought to be a lively occasion -it" the spirit of the Belgian ruler's proposal is even half way met War Debts Can't Be Shifted. : Muoh. talk of an unofficial nature" is heard in Europe, of cancellation of war debts. Thus far no connected plan lor action of tms nature . has been presented for public consideration, for the, subject is one that amounts to bankruptcy and repudiation. The war, of courseyimpover- ish'ed many nations'and the promises that with peace conditions' would become better than in the era before the war were vain and foolish, since only after the losses and destruction of war had been tnade good by work and frugality could a higher Standard of comfort be possible. ; Any proposal to shift the burden of paying ,for the conflict on to the -Shoulders of the coming , generations neglects the very real fact that our ow.n generation already has met the cost through the . destruction of vast amounts of capital Likewise, cancellation of these debts would not produce any more of the, necessaries of life or provide work for the unemployed. There has been no talk of cancellation in the . Vnited States, the nearest any one having come to this being in the suggestion of Dean Johnson . of New York, university that ia a set date the American people make a bonfire of their liberty bonds "as a sacrifice on the altar of economic readjustment." The effect of th is would te to lower taxes which, "taw go to pay interest and principal, but the nation as a whole' woutd be no richer and no poorer, If everyone sacrificed liberty bonds in an amount corresponding to the amount of taxation he paid, absolutely no Change would result. But to the extent that these securities have been gathered into large holdings and have passed front small ownership, a read justment of the distribution of indivdiual wealth . wouiq occur. ' NJ iv.t: 1 J.!..- - .( i.- 1 - 1 owe to themselves, and if the next generation, through the process of refunding, should inherit our war debt and undertook to pay it, the action would simply resemble taking money out of one packet and putting it in another. N Experimenting With Germany. If all the nations of the world were to adopt a protective tariff against German goods, the result would resemble the imposition o Ujj per cent tax which the allieslan for all products sent abroad from Germany. High export duties such as this arc almost unknown, and the United States constitution contains the provision that congress shall levy no tax on exports. How ever, restrictions of this kind have been applied in the past to divert labor fronf disproportionate production of raw materials into the manufacture of them. Thus England, from the time of Ed ward III through many generations, forbade the export of sheep or raw wool, while aiming to prevent importation of wroolen cloth by a pro tective duty. The desire was to stimulate the cloth industry in England. ' . Even the best informed men disagree over the proposed arrangement with Germany, and doubt is expressed as to how it will work out. It is clear that to the extent any foreign nation buys German-made goods, just to that extent will it be paying the. German indemnity itself. It seems probable that international trade can not now be dominated by the German manufac turers as was threatened before the war. If .Germany sells less abroad, it certainly will soon er or later-buy less also.' The export duty would first diminish exports, which would mean that gold would begin to flow out of Germany, as it would be buying more than it sold. As gold, grew scarcer and more valuable, prices in Germany, would be so lowhat the Germans would tend to use only home-made products and buy little or nothing fronf countries where ;g6ld was cheaper and would buy less. '' , -. -v- ' This is the reasoning of the theoretical econ omists, and it will be an interesting spectacle for the world to watch the actual demonstration. J Germany, always largely self-sufficing, and en tirely so during 4ther war., apparently will be forced "to be more so in the future,;, producing what it consumes, and consuming .what it pro-' duces.. .... - : , : '. 1 ..--.; A Line 0' Type or Two How to the Line, let thi quipt fall where tbey may How to Be Twins. , A lotof things are wrong with politics, among them being that most of us have been taught from childhood that it is a game of fraud in which the stakes are offices and that love of country or desire to serve the public seldom enters into campaigns. As a result of this sus picion and lack of interest, when men of talent and worth enter the arena, they often fai'-o find the support" to which' they- aro .entitled.t Good men and women who neglect the dtttieS , of tcitizenshin are little short of a" menace ; Even when this sort of people comes out' to vote;' their attitrfde is likely to be purely one of protest. They are like an after-dinner speaker who recently confessed: "I never vote for a candidate; I always "vote against one. As- soon as the nominees have been selected I sit down alone and decide which, candidate . I shall vote against. And, do you know, sometimes I wish I were twins!" '' That's what the citizen who is too good to twins; go to the polls is The Assassination of George. .... Poor old George is dead. , It was the not altogether melancholy duty of the St. Paul'Civic and Commerce association to officiate at the funeral. For a long time every one. was agreed that something ought' fo be done. When the city did not grow as it ought, .:when public improvements lagged j en officials made mistakes, when, business seemed under a handicap and labor developed, grievances, When the housing shortage pinched and every thing seemed to be going wrong, it was eus tomary for ali good citizens to agree that some body ought to' do something. That's where poor old George came in. "Let George do it," was the cry. But George never did it, and so the people of St. Paul de creed that he must d!c' and held a pyblib cele bration at his 'funeral. '" Now the people, liav-e no one but themselves to depend on in pushing public movements. . J - , ' v ! Noticing hrft a tuch bevvhiskeicd citizen who has lived 100 years advises the use of com plexion cream to all ho wish long life, the world waits to learn how he managed to apply it at the roots of alf that underbrush. , At least, when congress was filled with great orators the public could forget that not . much was being accomplished, but flic present session not even camouflaging. - "' ' No doubt.it would require a poet in galoshes to rhapsodize ' about being ankle'dcep in Feb ruary, which is Vastly different from being knee deep in June. ; v . -. - ' Reading of German admiration for Bergdbit. revive sVemorics of the friendly Way in which Americans used to regard Europeans who fled here to avoid compulsory military service. " No matter whether .one likes Herbert Hoover or not, it must be admitted that as food con troller he had considerable training for the interior department. K ; ' That parrot of William J. Bryan that greeted Mr. Harding with shouts of "Hfirrah for Bryan" is a. durable old bird with a long memory. t put in Nevada the lawyers are trying to cast Mary Pickford for a vamp role. Robbing registered mail pouches is coming to be a popular inter sport. Mary Pickford is in for a little more free if undesirable advertising - - Would Givr Ifctke Acid Test. : f: An interferometer; the instrument that meas ured Betelgeause, might, if cleverly handled, show us exactly Wash Vanderlip's opinion of himself. Washington Post. . A TOAST. v Mthaush Victor Bergcr .Vlay tjuaff the sweet elixir Of vindication, And Unit redoubtable patriot Kenesaw Mountain' Landls .May drain the bitter Urefts Of implied reproof. And those headstrong enthusiasts Who made that impolitic attempt To drag Grover Bergdoll back PYom the dear old Fatherland Are to be roundly censured, And pramlnent ladies " Of Chicago Are planning a fete Of benevolence For the suffering professors Of the KCLTUR incubator, AVe gain some solace i FroYn the old-timer Who refuses to conform To the program of the vote-hounds, , And who refuses to apostrophise 1 ' Our army, its accafmplishments, or its allies, And who does not give . One good hot damn . ' What he says, 'Nor to whom,- Here's to you, Charlie Dawes! Give 'em the other barrel! . -- ' " ' , At. J. B. THERE is a tpast that many of us will be glad to dtink. Nothing in a Blue moon has given us so much pleasure as the artistic bawling out that General Dawes gave his critics. -"I AM a cub reporter," writes" W. H. D., "and am going to conduct a column in a few weeks, I think," Zazzo? , Well, you can't da bet ter than to start with the announcement that Puis & Puis are dentists in Sheboygan. And you might add that if the second Puis is a son the firm should bePuls & Fils, v OIIVERY WELL! (From the Kewanee Star-Courier.) Notice I have been getting numerous calls , for nursing, tl wish not to be called as my health does not permit me to overdo. Espe cially I have two canaries and house flowers to care for. t may when weather gets warmer take a few cases. Mrs. Lizaie Hague, 63 S Pine. "SINCE Frank Harris has been mentioned," communicates C. E. L.r "it would be interesting to a lot of foltes to know just what standing he has in literature." , Oh, not much. Aside from being one of the best editors the Saturday Review ever had, one of the best writers of short stories in English or any other language, and one of the most acute critics in the profession, his standing is negligible. ' . A MONTEV1DIOUS COMPARISON. (From the Montevideo, aiinn., American-.) v In Albert Lea, the other day, a man was shot dead when found with, another man's , wife. If this practice were strictly adhered to in Montevideo the undertakers would be rushed to death. ,-'-WHEN Galsworthy (or it may. have been Walpole) was visiting here, he lunched here, with a number of the university faculty.. When the cigars were, passed the guest was the only man who took one. "Don't the rest of you smoke?" he inquired. "Well." replied one prof,1 indicating the geologist, "Salisbury can." j THE BACHELOR. I know a bachelor .whom I alternately want to pet and scold. ; When he was in college he wanted to marry, But the girl couldn't love him,, and married thi other man. -So for many years he livfid apart, N ' Arid hated all women,- and scoffed at marriage. And was comfortable and selfish and particular. Add pitied the poor devils who were tied by th$ neck, But It was a luxury, and it cost him something; He is 30 now, and he has that unanchored look. His skin is yellow, because nobody plans his meals. , He has ceased to dress well, and doesn't know It. There Js no one tdsay to him, "Say, dear, you need a new coat ' Tou look like a trampJi -; ', . i i . lie sees all the best shows, and goes to lectures and 'concerts, . But he has never seen a circus with 'a child. He has peace and qufet in his home when he wants it.'. . " - - . But he has a kind of horror of Christmas time. He has never had, those awful nights, running up and down stairs, And watching by little white beds; His life is undisturbed by the problems anl sufferings of young people, And during, the war, as he witnessed the torture of his friends, He thanked his God that he had never married ' and had a son. . , But all the same, he is '50, and he is alone, . And when- he dies his light will be extinguished forever, . ,. ' And when I see him I want to scold him and pet htm, ' And darn his socks for him, and cook him a dinner, And do everything nice for. him that I can, ' . MARGERY. THE CHEERY - MORTICIAN. ,, (From the, Piqua, O., Call.) Why not begin the new year with a perma nent home, one of growing Value to your family and friends? i Protect them from the inclement weather. 1 A memorial room, de luxe section, or crypt. Collett Memorial Co. ' THE incomparable Hermaniner's interest in Mr. Dawes' remarks is not precisely feverish. . THE ULTIMATE. - "Hand me your tape," . Says the Universe to Mr. Einstein, " "And I will measure -My neck, . ' - My collar line, ' My chest, under the arms, How to Keep Well - By OR. W. A. EVAN3 Qucitisni conecrnlnf hyglano, sanita tion and prevention of ctiaoaae, tub milted to Dr. Evans by reader of The Bee, will be answered personally, subject to proper limitation, where a stamped, addressed envelope is en closed. Dr Evans will not make diacnosis or prescribe for individual diseases. Address letters in care of 7 be Bee. Copyricht, 1821, by Dr. W. A. Evana. .. INSURANCE AND HEALTH. Thoe who work for. the promo tion of public and personal health are glad to have the active support of the life insurance companies. We hope some day. they will become aa aggressive In the mutter of human health as the tiro insurance com panies are in flro prevention and control. The latter maintain .fire patrols which go to fires for the pur pose of protecting property In ways that firemen can find no time for. They watch over fire departments to see that they receive adequate ap propriations and have good officers. Each year sees tho lifo insurance companies get a little deeper in the work of health conservation. In California last November the Metro- plltan Life Insuranco company took part in the state vote on certain health questions. Some of the com panies made periodic examinations of their, policy holders. Many of them circulate health, literature. The efficacy of the insurance com panies as aids of the health fight is duo to tho fact that with them it is an economic question" and they can talk to the public on the money cost of ill health better than anybody else can. I have a series of pam unlets on the treatment of under average risks for the Information of tho field force of the New York Life Insurance company. This company as many others, Issues substandard risks. For Instance, a map with heart disease can get insurance, nut he must pr.y an extra charge. "As tho result of studies of many thousand cases they nave decided that on the average a man with a certain kind of heart disease will live a certain length "Of time ana they are willing to insure him on that basis. Of course, In the group are some who willSive out the full life expectancy of a person of mat age ana others who -will live only a few years. This policy serves to put before the persons with heart disease this thought as a class they are crip pled physically, but they are not down and out, they are producers able to do some of the world's work, aDie to Duy ana. pay for life Insurance- and entitled to .it, that they have a reasonably long life expec tancy. , The pamphlets carry brief Infor mation as to What the subiect c.ati do and how he can live to prolong nis nte. xne company is interested in having the man make as many annual payments as possible. And the man does not care 2 cents what the company's motive is so long as Of lifo This series of pamphlets also Is of Interest to the general ,public in that It has something to say about prevention , and - causes. Always, everywhere, here is the central thought all health and physical disability can be prevented. They are, expensive.-v On the average while they decrease a person's ca pacity and liis life expectancy, they do not knock him out. t By right living he can live on in spite of be ing crippled. - . - Depends on Age, P. writes: "Docs a pain In your left shoulder directly from heart in dicate tuberculosis? What does aik itching pain in heart Indicate? What is normal blood pressure ?" - REPLY. 1. Xo. 2. I do not know what that is, but again I answer no. 3. Depends on age. Varies some where neat" 140, according to age.; Have Heart Tested. Mrs. M. V. R. writes: "Will-you please print the cause of shortness of . breath in a woman 40 years old, who seemingly is well otherwise. She puffs for want of breath after going only a few ateps." . ' REPLY'. Have your heart, kidneys' lungs arid blood examined. The important cause of shortness of breath aside .rom obesity are all connected with diseases of these organs. . i and girls, it is easy to see that Pink erton can truthfully say that tho present wave of crime is largely due to the logical results of vicious films. The local exhibitor is powerless he has to run - .the films that are sent to him. I know how it is for I have"been In business myself. The films should be censored In Omaha before they are sent out. As to nudity,' "September Morn," , it was only a girl just about to go in swim ming that was all, no other suggcs-i tion. But the Ufe-sizcd lithographs in the. windows In small towns to advertise, would not be allowed in tho window In any art store in Omaha.- Tho Fox corporation, be it said to its credit usually puts out noble films, like Domby and Son," "Enoch Arden," "Evangeline," "Rip Van Winkle," etc' Stewart Gould In -The Be of February 4, "gave his case away," when he stated: "He deplored, that 10 per-cent were not censored and said that within a year the exhibitors would force all pic tures to b,e censored by this board in self-defense." He was referring to "The National Board of 200 who are now censoring 90 per cent of the output." DR. M. V. CLARK. Our Free Legal Aid Th Bee will give answers, free of cost, to such legal questions as are sub mitted to its ' editor, subject to reasonable length of reply. Wife Grta Half. - Question: Please- advise as to tho law of Nebraska with refovenee to a wife's portion of her'husJwnd'a property in .case of his death. 'where there are no children. . t . Answer: Th wife is entitled to halt of all of the Wusband's property. Lecal Publication. Question; Will you please toll me what the regulations are govern ing a weekly newspaper? If one or two issues were missed, would it bar the firms from advertising for any length of time thereafter, that is for legal notices, etc. Answer: We do not understand your question. Where the statute (provides that publication of a heal notice shall bo for a certain number or conscontive wecKs, mere would tut no compliance with tho utatuto it the paper-In which thq .publication is beiug mado failed to get out lis issue for two weeks. If you havo any jmrtlcul&r case in mind, and will stat the facta and tell us for what purpose the publication is being made, we will try to answer your question. . JOURNALISTIC JESTS. It has taken 144 years to mako the bulk of the United Sutes popu lation urban, and It w-Kl probably tak another 144 years to make It urbane. Boston Transcript. The Janitor of a Portland apart ment house was fined for swearlnir at tho tenants. Tho court ruled that this was a long-cstHblitthed and ex clusive privilege of the, tenants. Vancouver Province.' . t State osteopaths will ask ithe lpcis. lature to prohlbittho sale of high r - - - - . . ... . .i i. villi, iiivvit niyn- ment that is not believed to have neen inspired by a spirit of uplift. . Detroit News. 7fe & My distance from shoulder to elbow and wrist. My waist, . ' - , - ' My length from 'hip and crotch to ankle! And when you have all these measurements, What then V C. S. P. W. THE edict against 'withdrawing liquor from warehouses reminds Ms that B. P., it was esti mated by Old Charlie Hermann that there were 200,000,000 gallons of whisky in government warehouses. - Considering - the amount seized, stolen, destroyed, and consumed since that time, you would suppose that the stock was well nigh exhausted. . ,v Quelque Soir. ; ' (From The Omaha Bee.) A feature of the evening was a strikine resemblance between Grace and Helen Giles, twins, graduates of Central. " , THERE is plenty of snap to the department of mathematics in the Shortridge high school in Indianapolis. The head of the department is Walter G. Gingery, f. "NO 111 Effects Results from Wilson Debut." St. Paul Pioneer Press. v - The week's best headline; prize, a box of left handed golf balls. . THE Bingest Little Drug Store in Spokane advertises, "Still going," A hint to the dry is as good as a barrel. - A SIGN on Vrabash avenue announces: "Art "ALMOST PRIVATE BATH." v f (From the Omaha World-Herald.) Girl wanted to room with married couple. rRed 8,77. 1 THAT committee in Washington did not catch .a Tartar in Mr. Dawes. It was not exactly hunting him. B. L. T. Food for Thought. Perhaps the Germans,-in paying the 200,000, 000,000 marks indemnity, will get- some satisfac tion out of reflecting that but for certain acci dents it would be England, France and America, not them, that would be paying it. And then again, perhaps they won't. Boston Transcript. ' r , He'll Find It's a Honeymoon. Crown prince of Roumania Wants to spend his honeymoon in America. If he comes over here he'll have to spend more than that.-Dayton News. . - But She Loves Him? Still. A Wisconsin woman bought a whisky stitl "to keep her husbar.d at home," but "the scheme failed. He's in jail.Seattle Times. Temperance and Civilization. Omaha. Feb. 4. To' the Editor of The Bee: The more labor-saving inventions reduce . the size of our reserve forces of physical vitality in health-promoting occupations, such as farming, etc., the greater will become the necessity foradopt ing the simple, natural life.. As the hours of employment in open-air hardening toil will steadily decrease in the future and the time for In tellectual work and recreation In creases, race preservation will de mand a 'stricter,- saner adherence to hygiene than formerly, including universal. abstentiousness from alco holic beverages. And to legalize traffic in mild wines and beers would be suicidal, as we have seen for ex ample, in some parts of Canada. Our temperament a reflex of our so cial conditions being abnormal, we crave quick relief when suffer ing from nervousness or ennut and, disregarding final results, naturally grasp fors the. strongest possible counter-irritant. To weaken the practical teachings regarding the high value of temper ance, by allowing "wet" politicians o nae into office on a wave of i Mlptt.. AM,l,nn ...... , . I ai uuv-ini, ieseiiuuent against certain inconsequential blue laws anu otner "popular" grievances, would really amount to an actual calamity. Through encouraging a lax enforcement of liquor and vice laws, such officials would retard success of th anti-booze education by turning the ey'es of our growing folks backwards, leading tfie inno cent down Into the old ruts of cor ruption and" crime, instead of up wards to decency and achievement. Our next city election will show whether Omaha is alive to the situ ation, h. MELI 2017 Leavenworth. SL let '1 i... .-! Liggett & Myecs Tobacco Co. OTb - f '? - "- ' ' , - .''-.' " .,," UlAVURE ' Endorses Movio Censorship. -Sutton, Neb., Feb. 4. To the Edi tor of The Bee: I have read the able arguments of Elmer E. Thomas and J. N. Brooks in these columns io" favor of censoring moving pic ture films, "They are good. 'The fight Is against vicious films not good ones. Recently there was run here a film entitled "A She Tiger," depicting and. illustrating the fol lowing crimes: against the law at least to my point of view: 1. A suggestive attitude on a couch of "She" that would make Cleopatra blush if she were here. 2. Banditry. 3. Arson. 4. Suicide of the leading actress. B.. A public execution by a firing Squad. . A Bllde was run on the screen con taining the names of our represen tatives in the state legislature en dorsing films without censoring with a proviso. Reckoning that this fllm e lion Id be shown in, aay 100 different . towns to the yonng boys ! r, section of the; . OMAhA BEE -formal I adver tising whei'e perfect Yepro auction of illustrations is essential , ' J ' ; OCOAHa Got