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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 19, 1922)
THE EEE; OMAHA. FRIDAY. MAY 19. 1022. The Omaha Bee MORNING EVENING SU.VDAY. TM fUVUKHIHO COM f AMY HUiM . UrDISS, ft. tllCW CM, bMftJ Dwiif Mcutei or the assoc urto mm af vttt tM H mmtmt. 0 ! fx i(ii.4ifc 4 ax nai MJU4 H ee TtO OaaM Baa MM (I fta MM Vjl- tetMM. la I III IMOIU IIMibM M 10 h l MMIMk SJ ite'lf I KNUMIIM, Tis sirsaUliosj of Tk Omi Bm lor Aril, 122 Daily Av.r.f 72,300 Sunday Avtrag ...70,505 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY B. StRRWER, Cwnl HiMfW . I 1 VI It a. ROOD. CaraaleiMoj MimM ftwens te oad aokocribes Mor ll 4 r (Seel) w. h. quivey. Neiarr rui EE TtlXrHONU , Prlvete lr Esaaanaa. Aik for ike Potartieant or 1-or.os ATlsstl Nlast Call After 1 r. M l tdilnnel .fw) DutilMtt, AT ball IMI t ! OFFICES Mais Offte ITlh t rrna ... C. BUffs IS (Mott Si. laulk St! S. I4lfc lb Nn Tor Ut HiS WMkltffto-llll O. M. Cbw-MO Hit 8Uff BI4g. ferla, free I Kim St. Honor Responsibility of Communities. A damage suit in the Douglas county district court bat directed mention to an overlooked tcction of the Nebraska law that was patted to give effect to the prohibitory amendment adopted by the itate, and which became effective five years ago. A great deal of water ha run under the bridge since then, but the law ttitl atandi as it was enacted by the legislature of 1917. Section Si of chapter 187 of the Session Laws of 1917 provides: Every person, married woman, minor or other person under legal dlsubillty. who shall be Injured In his, her, or their proporty. per son or support. In consequence, in whole or in part, of the intoxication of any person, and shall be able- to prove that the mayor of tlit city, or chairman and board of trustees of the village, or the county attorney or the county board of the county, or In metropolitan cities and In cities of the flint class, that the city eontmlMilonrrs were not endeavoring; In good faith to enforce the liquor laws of this state and the provisions of this act. and the city ordinances or village ordinances, or rules or orders of the commissioners, If any, in refer, ence thereto; and that such officials had actual notice or knowledge that Intoxicating liquors were being unlawfully sold, kopt for sale, bar tered, furnished or given away in the county, city or village In question, or In the absence of such notice or actual knowledge, that such offlcisls could by the uhs of reasonable dili gence have obtained such notice or knowl edge; shall have a right of action, et seq. The section is very comprehensive, and the judge before whom the case is presented has held it good to the extent that he has permitted the implication of the City of Omaha as a party to the defense. The saving clause for the commun ity rests in the proof that must Je submitted by the plaintiff. It must be shown that the authori ties are negligent, lacking in good faith, and fail ing to exercise due diligence in the pursuit of the illegal traffic. This will be for the jury to decide. The purpose of the law is obvious, that of keeping the authorities keenly alive to the busi ness of enforcing the prohibitory amendment to the state constitution. It has nothing1 whatever to do with the national law, or the efforts to en force prohibition under that. . Some question may arise, as already some have come up, as to where state or national control shall be applied. Confusion exists as to this, and, until courts have formulated definite rules governing the mooted points, enforcing officers will be at a loss tjs to how to proceed. That the communities are at the peril of being required to defend damage suits, with the consequent liability of being called on to make settlement with a damaged litigant, may serve to stimulate public sentiment in support of the quest for bootleggers. : , 1 r ' Backing Up the Budget. When Director of Budget Dawes made his report to the president, in response to a demand from Representative Byrns of Tennessee for a showing as to what is being dons, he exhibited a prospective reduction in governmental expense for the 1922 year of $1,600,000,000 under the 1921 cost.' This was challenged by Mr. Byrns, who accused the director of budget of having pur posely and wickedly juggled the figures in order to deceive the public. Perhaps the Treasury de partment is in on the conspiracy, too, but its re port on the first ten months of the year backs up General Dawes in fine shape. Figures given out on Wednesday show that for the first ten months of the fiscal year ordinary expenditures of the government fell off by nearly $1,500,000,000 from the record of the first ten months of the 1921 year. This requires by little over $100,000,000 for May and June to reach the Dawes total, or about a third of the monthly rate of saving so far effected. Transactions" the public debt indicate a falling off in treasury certificates, which means the country is rapidly getting back to a cash basis. Here is another source of democratic consola tion rapidly drying up. They are deprived of their customary charge of republican extrava gance, for the Harding administration has actually reduced the cost of running the government,'-:. ' ' " Our President'' The nun or woman who sees the capitol at Washington for the first time almost invariably is impressed by the majesty, the power, the glory of "my country." The great dome reaching sky ward typifies his thought architecturally; the in numerable associations of this scene with great events of history completes it. Hardly a man or woman but is thrilled by the thought that here centers the .authority of governmental direction over one hundred million people; here the ideals of this people are fused into a common ideal and this focused to practical purpose; here has been developed and still is developing the world's great est "experiment in democracy." It is indeed "my country" and few there are who do not glory in it. At the other end of Pennsylvania avenue is the White House and there lives the president In so far as any individual can personify the na tion, he does. He is chosen by vote of its people, a thing, when it was conceived, which was, sym bolic of the transition of authority from "rule by divine right" to rule by the people themselves. He is "my president," "our president" ' Once elected, he represents us, the United States, in the eyes of the world. "My president!" . Hit words should mean, something. .They ' : - . . "" f ' , . should Hi4H tht tiit man who happen 44 M1 th ,&. recti' our rt.pect and eur rotirty, lit it "pur." Wt may differ ith kirn; we may ay to. Cut wt should not brcklt hua and bar bun j w thouM not seek daily for petty fats nor bt constant carping fruit.' Wt should be reasonable. Wt houI4 bt decent. That much wt ot ourselves, a well i "our presi. dent." .1 - . . . 4 Omaha's Live Stock Rates. Omaha is the natural market for the products of Nebra.kt farms anj ranches. The contention of the livt ifotk growers that freight rate 04 the Burlington railroad should bt lowered on shipment of rattle and hog to the Omaha mar ket I barked by public opinion. Tht complication that i now before rrprt tentative of tht Interstate Commerce commit- tioh and the Nebraska Railway commission arises out of a singular solicitude for the stock ) arc's Interests of St. Joseph and K trust City, At a result stockmen along the Burlington lines and branches from Lincoln and Aurora to At llanre have been forced to pay heavier shipping charges to Omaha than have those shipping over the Northwestern or Union Pacific. This hat operated to reduce the volume of bu.ineis com ing to Omaha and encouraged shipment to the two Missouri point. Back in 1907 the Nebraska legislature passed the Aldrich law, which reduced rates on agri cultural commodities 15 per cent within the state. This struck the other Missouri river markets as discriminatory, and their complaint resulted In the official decision that no railroad could charge more than 6 cents a hundred pounds additional for carrying rattle past Omaha to Kansas City or St. Joseph. The Burlington was the only system involved in this regulation, since it hss the only line covering both states. Instead of reducing its rate to the competing cities, the Burlington increased its Omaha tariff. The Union Pacific and Northwestern continued at the old scale. Stock shippers along these two systems can get to Omaha considerably cheaper than can those shipping from the same points or the same distance over the BurNngton. This is the esse that is now being reopened. There has been a continual loss to every Ne braska interest. The Omaha market has suf fered, the shippers have suffered, and the rail road itself has lost traffic to its competitors. The contention of the Burlington's lawyers that the Other Nebraska roads should raise their Omaha rates in order to save it from the disadvantage of its own act Is matter for grim laughter. Why They Need America. ' A selfish and at times sordid Europe, whose every geographical line tells of purposes con summated wherein human rights played little part and wherein . national greed was the dominant impulse, calls again upon America for help, this time at The Hague. "We need Amer ica's unselfish interest, her great moral force," it says. For what purpose and in what cause? Omahans recall a speech here by Woodrow Wilson in 1916 when he said that America should not and could not join in the European war then raging until she was certain of its causes and the aims of its participants. Later America went to war for reasons and with aims of its own. After it was over, President Wilson went to Versailles. When we consider, the result of that journey we wonder whether, even then, he knew the aims of the nations with whom he dealt. Do we know them today? Is this appeal for our "moral influence" sincere? Will our in fluence be heeded? Or are we wanted simply to bolster and finance selfish aims of ambitious politicians? . . When America issued invitations to its own arms limitations conference, it begged the aid of no "moral influence." It outlined a job that needed doing, outlined it definitely and clearly, It called together those who had it in their power to do the job. The whole world applauded the result. , ' . ' ' Is Europe ready to proceed that way? ' Has it suffered enough to forego selfish interests and really join hands in a directed united effort for common benefit? That is the question before Mr. Harding and Mr. Hughes today, Verdict of the Primaries. , Anything is encouraging to a democrat these days.- That i"s why Judge Hull pretends to ex tract great satisfaction from the nomination of Albert J. Beveridge for the senatorial seat in Indiana and likewise from the victory of Gifford Pinchot in Pennsylvania. If he can twist the nomination of a republican into a rejbuke for the administration, he is certainly a wizard. Reac tionaries are rejected, is the shout, but these critics are overlooking or ignoring the fact that the attorney general of the United States was the Roosevelt leader in Ohio, a plunging "bull mooser," just as Beveridge was in Indiana and Pinchot in Pennsylvania. When the people begin to replace republicans with democrats in con gress, it will be time to talk about the repudia tion of the administration. , Judge Hull can not have forgotten what hapened to Woodrow Wil son in 1918, and so his present pretentious clamor 1 of glee lacks sincerity. It is no calamity for the nation when one republican is selected to succeed another. ' , . Norway is modernizing its radio station on the mountain near Bergen and expects to open wireless telegraph communication with America. More interesting just now are the radio' tele phone connections between that stafion and Eng land and continental countries. Its radius will be 1,000 miles. South Dakota's tax of 1 cent a gallon on gasoline brought in $26,000 in April. State- of ficials expect to take in $450,000 a year from this source, all without any heated objection that was heard when a similar impost was proposed In Nebraska. Samuel Untermeyer thinks Harry Daugherty is unfitted for the high office of attorney general. Pernaps Mr. Untermeyer might get a similar cer tificate for himself, were he to apply to Mr. Daugherty. . The Russ is willing to go to The Hague. Any place else, if it only promises to give him money. ' Lady Astor is said to use slang, and thereby is not unique. ' - Why quarrel with the weather when it is like this? TJncle Sam is actually living on less, From State and Nation Tr totaling itss Apl0 Trr." rm IS Chimin fiSMt tut. Jftsrun lvwa wrens', betau.s the rauna he ssrved ss wrung. Hut It did what was right, as ha saw the right. nt uriy Urn Bisntory should have ttt saved the rsrud Hie of the old story about his wearing female apparel in an slturt ui p iprvtuiuioa aficr the fall f ih tonfderai.'y, but on the fifty fit nth sitnlveraarr of his capture near li-ma. tills, tis., tho io survisipg iimmlcri of the Fourth Mirhitan cavalry, whuh enacted the rupture, piled Iheir pip and sisrtod In, Olio In spencer, ., and the oihr in Kliu4, Kan, TIm ohiu survivor dmd that Jelt lvu had on any (male apparel eievpt a Hat. The Kao rap. rraoniauvo of the Fourth Michigan cavalry ar I ayed him like a flappor of tht suiios. Hiatory has long sine cleared Jefferson Davis of trying to be a Dapper for tho occasion. And when you read the story of ills III, you are Impressed deeply by the man's raiser, lie was a Ana soldier, his formation of the re-entering angle at th battle of tiuena VUta being a really famous esploii in our military s inula, lie was a very srhcteni secretary of war under fierce, and his course In tho senate at Iraat showed such great ability I hat ho was the unanimous rhoU-e of the seceding slates aa the president of the confxtlarecy. And hie farewell speech In the senate showed love for the union and poignant sorrow, of course, his task aa president of the confederacy was too great for the ums.. It would have been too great almost fr any man. Hut hs had great taorag.i. and so Impartial an historian as Jamrs Ford Jthodea give him high raise In speaking of threatened reprisals; "From suoh shedding of blood snd Its bluer memories w were spared by the caution snd hu manity of Abraham Lincoln, Uen. Lee and JcRVraon Uavla." If Jeff Davis Is sble to get 'into such hu manitarian company In formal history, our In. formal historian should at least give hint buck his clot lira. Tlie Cob? Doll. fm U S.B LM Tnbuo. Announcement that an Indestructible golf ball hue been perfected has caused no Utile ex citement among golfers. Hitherto golf balls have suffered tremendously under the vicious assaults of gentlemen afflicted with what la athletically known as a "peeve." Golf balls have been hammered with relentless fury. Sometimes they have been hammered straight down into the ground snd sometimes they have been ham mered orr among trees and sandbanks snd mnrasMes and other undesiruble places. At any rate, they have been hummered. Kince th rubber-cored innovation various at tempts have ben mude with ucces to Increase the length of' flight uml the truoneas of roll by changing the core and the hurdness and toughness of the cover. In some cases the wind ing was about a sniull bug of water, while in others the central sack was filled with a heavy acid, the lutter plan proving disastrous to the eyes or several inquisitive boys who disHected the globule. Another plan for Increasing the efficiency of the golf ball was the application of an everlast ing paint made of some, rubber composition which lasted well enough, but gathered dd the dUHt, which could not be washed oil. Heretofore resiliency and durability have proved somewhat incompatible. But if the Innovation of 1922 proves to be both lively and llfclonir. the future golfer will need nothing but a self-retrieving at tachment to make one golf ball last him forever. Developing Boys. From the Sioux rtUj Ariua. Where two or three boys are gathered to. gether there is the start of a ball game. It mat ters not that an alley, a street, backyard, is all that is available. The rules are adjusted to suit the conditions. The American boy holds a mas ter's degree in accommodating himself to circum stances. One who observes the efforts of small boys in playing ball amid such restricted surroundings can not repress a regret that better facilities for play are not afforded. Yet those who make the best of what they have are learning a valuable lesson. thouKh they may not be aware of it. The small b'oy who is able to play in the confines of an alley ana get a lot or fun out of it is imbib ing instruction in the philosophy of getting something out of life wherever life finds him. He should have a better place to play but a wider space might make less demand on his in genuity. Thus there are lessons to be learned in cramped quarters for the boy who is alert And tne right kind or, a boy who learns to make tho best of an alley will be the kind who will make the most of his circumstances in later life and he is not likely to be satisfied with an alley when he, pets old enough to work for him self in the most serious game of life. - Fads and Taxation.' From tht Rock Iiltnd Arpu. Those who protest asrainst high taxes mav have had more to do with making them high .than they imagine. This is an age of fads and reform. We are anxious to do so many things to correct our neighbors and to elevate the race that we advocate this and that without any thought of the cost. We meet and solemnly re solve that the life of the community demands that this or that be done until we find the cost of maintaining city and national government has risen to a figure that paralyzes the average man with astonishment. Then there goes up a wall which reaches high heaven and every one for gets all about the things deemed necessary a short time before, and the whole community spends its time denouncing mibllo officials for making taxes so high. If we paid more attention to" the conduct or government from day to day we would have lesrr occasion to spend our time walling because we have to pay for the very things we are responsible for. Silences Radio Buzz. Chicago Another device for eliminating the buzzing in radio and of operating the wireless sets by attaching them directly to lighting wires through an ordinary socket instead of using ex pensive storage batteries, has been perfected by B. P. Mieffner, a government expert during the war, he announced the other day, The radio is attached to any 110-volt al ternating current through the ordinary light socket, Mr. Mieffner said. In place of rectifiers and filters now used in attempts to eliminate the hum, Mr. Meirfner uses balancing devices. The electrio current in the light wires is stepped down to six volts. , Mr. Mieffner formerly was connected with the army and navy aircraft department and assisted John Hays Hammond In perfecting a radio tor pedo during the war. Devices which are said to obtain the same result as Mr. Mieffner's are said to have been perfected by the government re cently, but details have not been made public. Customary Suits of Solemn Black. From the Emporia Otntte. ' Al Gufler had On his black suit fodar to en tertain J. Harry Tregoe of New York, executive head of the National Association of Credit Men. Thursday and Friday the Gazette's boss had on rus black suit to entertain Joseph Hergesheimer, the novelist. In this to'wn the black suit on Week davs la . sie-n nf enmnnnv fnrtVinr oncf than Kansas City. It takes a man farther east tnan Chicago to get W. W. Finney into his blacks. He had a bunch here ten days ago from St. Louis and only had the windows of his telephone office washed. Which is our idea of great sang-froid and nonchalance. "Policeman on the Beat" The man most feared by the criminal Is the policeman on the beat. If he is alert and vigi lant and if he is given a district sufficiently lim ited to enable him to cover it, he can put down crime. New York Tribune. Where Are They Now? ; ; A diary of Just two years asto notes that if the overalls idea could be linked up with the home garden idea both might have a longer run. Where have they run to by this time? Springfield Republican., More IjogtceJ and Convincing. If an old admirer mav sav so. Sir A. Conan Doyle was much more interesting when he was communicating with Sherlock Holmes. Kansas city star. Locating The Chips. . Frank A. VanderllD teleaxaohs from Genoa that Russia "sat down with only chiDs prions h to open the first hand" and now has the highest stack. France, however, still has the chip on its shoulder. Springfield Republican. Cotton Preferred. It is a safe prediction that the thousands of men who have found Jobs within the last few weeks in Detroit are not golne to save money this time merely for siljt shirts. Detroit Free tress. How to Keep Well Pf Oft W. A. EVANt Queeiieo sexomlag kyftaaa, eaailetlao) sad taeveetioa ol disaeso. mkmllUe' lo Ut, tveo kv reaao et Ike aW. UI oaaiMnd ai ally, so lest 10 Meat paiileliea, Sare s SHaie.e oooVoss.4 Mfeiaoe to easlsiad. Of, r-ea vol oo osoSo a distoeate so- preMrtk h fesoivsSaal . ASereM Stitare h tore el Ike free. Cemissll i:s. A TOOTH UX AGE MM)M The very greet Interest In oral hygiene insui(aie4 by phvio!iie dentist and the ;iubliu generally during the last 14 years relstvs in th msln to Infections of the gums. pyorrhea and so-called root ao M-eaM-a. The reason for this grest Increass in Interest I In tho fact that rlieu inaiism, neuritis, anaemia snd other ronHIMilional diseases, and dieeaae located In remote parts nt th body. have been proved to bo dus In some rases to absorption or hscteria rrom lite sum and from around th roots of tho teeth. Doubllra sumo of these bacteria g"t Into th deeper tlasu of the gums and Jaw through tho teeth them selves, but tho easiest routs is through the sums. It results, therefor, that people have been thinking shout the gum and furgettlng th teeth themselves. V need a renaissance In which tooth decay, tooth cavities and poor composition of the tooth structure will again take tli center of the !. Long befor th child I horn th teeth begin to form In their neat well below the gum line. Even th tth that are not due to erupt until the person had reached 10 to 20 year of age are being built, up be fore birth and during the first three years of life. lirlck cannot be made without straw. Unless th mother's food con tain enough of the elements needed for th formation of teeth, and un less she passes It on to her baby, both befor It is born una while It I at the breiiMt, the teeth are bound to be crumbly. Likewise, If tho buby's.food. from whntevor source, Is deficient In the first several years of life, the teeth will be of poor quality. That which makes tooth substance different from other bony tissue is the enamel. That which makes enamel different from other tissue, according to Dr. J. N. Hurty of the Indiana health department, is a chemical known ns fluorine. From here on I quote Dr. Hurty: "Whence comes the fluorine .so necessary for making tooth enamcIT It is present or absent In ce reals, according as the earth they are grown In may or may not con tain it. It is reported as also being found in carrots, potatoes and other root and tuber crops, according as they are grown In soli containing it. "Sea water always carries fluorine, as also do all sea foods. So far. It has not been found in fruits snd berries. Sea salt, made by evaporat ing sea water, Is well supplied with fluorine. In the mineral kingdom fluorine occurs flourspar, which Is calcium fluoride, and is fairly abund ant. "If tooth decay occurs only In 1 formal. Drill Imrra. ilin. My ! f.trnuny' float. ilrbt imrrjrfd between April I May Id by JO,6$3in.0 mark, now amount to .K.Vtfrt.ftm.tttJ. the AUgniicuie A'tung today. teeth poorly provided with probab) poor enamel, then relief front dnta car s is in tsht. for it win oniy n necessary to supply fluorln In or SMimllabls form in mother durtnA pregnancy and tho nursing period, i "Then th child should be glveil th fluorln bearing food until Ih4 second teeth have all appeared. "8a salt In our food would prob ably help greatly. Inland salt, front salt well, does not carry fluorine and aa need not look In that dl reotlon. Fooslhly. If powdered fluorepa wer added to commercial fertiliser! the cereals would tsko It up, sn then. If we did not 'high-mill' th various cereal flours, ths toothleaf age, now being entered, would staved off." There's Danger la Spanking, K. V. H. write: -I read th lettrf Mrs. H. T. K. wrote on th euhjt of convulsion from crying and whs she did to her child "Mother told ni soma few yeal ago mat wnen I was a naoy or i months I did ths earns thing. Tq first tint th was very frlghtsnel and when relating th experience a neighbor was told that the ns time 1 did It to giv ma a real go spanking. "Well, the next time happen when I w about l month old a mother aay th mlnut I darted cry that way (eh could tell by t way I cried that I waa going Into. convulsion) sh spanked me so ha ( drink i . ill ywtnuhed stavWojfaa) taf Smb f SW fata KaiMiaOi I SmSV mm Uil, SiSal SuO, A-k tar fees - o LT 1 v .i . n v irl WthtYtmtl : Want Ads bring result. l r m Lit WOM EN will be glad to " know of a Uxauve that oDeratofl without triple; or weakening. Thousands will tell eo tbev get more eatlsfsetory results from Dr. Caldwell rnio Peoeia than tram etlts. nilla and draatlo aalhartiaa. Srruti Paoaln la mild, eanlla leinser snd resulstor. UeesUeaty about oent a dot. DR. CALDWELL'S SYRUP PEPSIN THE FAMILY LAXATIVE . Tsk Dr. Caldwell' Snap Peprln wbtn oonttlpsted, bllloa. headachy oroutof sorts. Yon will And your gen eral health and oompleslon so un proved thst let eosmetlee will be needed. Tbontsada of worses sav proved this tra. rlAIXOUNCI BOTTLE FRtt F ..tap. enurlarion. m m if in it net noxlM a laxartw at Mi aianwat bt au mtU jom a Hajr-Oimct Trial Betas .fan Syrup PmiIk FREE OP CHARGE m that you will (law (I hoiwfa whtn mirt. Sfmpfo ssad jntir nam. and additu (a Dr. W. 0. CmiiwM, su WatkSsneii St, MeerfctOe, JUL wnMiMMAri. - ll feXWVlTffiA HOMES i EASY MONTHLY REPAYMENTS is&e Conservative ; Savings & loan association S .. 6 ff o r n o y - PAUL W. K.UHNS, President o1 E. A. BAIRD, Vice President J. A. LYONS, Sec. i. h. McMillan. Ta. i' DO YOU KNOW That an Egyptian mummy has been discovered with bobbed hair? About the Japanese move for alliance with Germany? ' The scientific theory of twins? What is being done to reform spendthrift Uncle Sam and what this will mean in taxes? About the Soviet sculduggery here scented by Gompers? Why the Russo-German Treaty is called the "Typhus alliance"? How many millions Japan is now de manding of China for evacuating Shantung? ' - , About the color conflict in South Africa? Whether . tobacco-smoke kills disease germs? How radio guides ships in fog? What an electric current is? .... . .. .. , . . -. How to make the best radio aerial? How American inventions are confis cated in Europe? ; Whether men like educated women? Who are the best actors and actresses this season? : - ,Why Christians are asked to drop their A prejudices against Jews? ' , Why the Protestant churches are grow ing faster1 than the Catholic? Why most, preactiers are "easy marks" for swindlers? The tragic story of the creator of "Nick Carter"? The damage the floods are doing in the Midwest and Southwest? The latest German charge that America "began the war"? The real, not the reel, cowboy? . I'-. . . The story of the daring, attempt to fly; v from Portugal to Brazil? The difficulties of motoring in China? The new automobile highway signs? How many autos there are in each country in the world? What 5, 10, 100, 1,000 or 1,000,000, marks will buy in Germany to-day? Tne origin of jewelry? " Where diamonds are used to save money? : About the new stainless steel?, Just what to take on a motor camping trip? .-A;;;.': ."'.;.. How to train your ear to detect motor troubles? . Why Beveridge beat New in Indiana?, You will find all of these questions and thousands more answered in the news- , articles in this week's "DIGEST", the world's greatest news-weekly for men and women who would keep step with progress. " Millions Read It Every Week." May 20th Number on Sale To-day At All News-dealers 10 Cents The TV . est FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary). NEW YORK 7 1 : 1