Evening Star Newspaper, July 17, 1922, Page 6

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1019, and the mext year 30,046, while last year 37,5664 motor yehicles were mainly coiaprised the fleld of this in- quiry 321,273 motors were recovered Iast year. ties upon conviction of the thieves. No matter how drastio the penalties, the g of cars invites the crooks as a profitable venture. This means -':'a.'w that there is undoubtedly a well es- tablished trade In stolen cars.. The thieves presumably do not steal ma- fs made by ¢ chines for their own use, but ship or g of cach manth. S run them out of the zone of ownership ey Adva: into a region where they are not like- Rate by Mall—Payable n Advance. |, " jentined, and there sell them to “fences,” who perhaps resell in the same neighborhood or send them o AL s farther on for disposal. Maryland has a good law as a means of checking this business, by which every motor car owner is required to establish title, and a car cannot be sold without the transfer of that title. Such a law should be enacted and fully enforced in every state. Honest dealers recognize the value of such a safeguard against the marketing of stolen cars, and one of the purposes of their association is to forward the Daily only. Sunday only Wanted: Industrial Peace. There is a feeling In the alr today that the nation has come to a parting of the ways; that we are on the eve of events of tremendous import Which will leave a deep and lasting Impres-{ogoiment of such laws and others sion on our industrial life and the lspoe™3era’ 1o lessen the fleld of the every-day life of the great masses of [ oo shiaven the people. The issues at stake De-| yi j5 jmpossible completely to dis- tween the striking miners and their |z ico the identity of a motor car. Ex- employers and the striking railroad { cpange of parts fs possible, but with shopmen and their employers have be- | e separate part of the car num- come subordinate to the more ""3‘|bcred. Bowever flanterdiced machincs question as to whether it is to con- may be, if a full record is kept stolen tinue possible for a small groud Of | carg can be recognized. This involves cltizens, pursuing the very human ob- g tnoroueh organization and the keep- Jective of.looking out for their own in-| ;4 of jdentification records similar to terests first, to throttle the national |ipe Angerprint files of the police. The life by cutting off from it those suD-golution of this problem may lie in & plies which are necessary to existence. | nation.wide extension of these meas. The feeling has been growing, and | eg now has taken deep root, that this question ought to be settled once for all. No one wants it settled in a way that would deny justice to any indi vidual or any group of individuals, but Americans are not willing to ad- mit that the genius of their govern- ment is so faulty that to safeguard personal liberty it must imperil the national life. The foundation of gov- ernment laid the framers of the Constitution has stood the test of civil war and foreign war, and every other test to which it has been put, and it will not be admitted now that it is unequal to the task of bringing the rights of the indlvidual into harmony with the rights of the whole people. But in undertaking to solve this most vital problem which confronts us today it must be approached without bitterness and without prejudice. Lin- coln’s dictum, ith malice toward |@8Tee to merge at the instance of e none, with charity for all." can be|few New York enthusiasts. Not all of helptully applied. The question of |the labor people, members of unions who is to blame for the situation|and federations, will align them- which has arisen has become a minor |Selves. Indeed, a very few trade union one, and there should be no effort to|People will join the standard of a new fix that blame with a view to inflict- { Party, for the great majority of them ing punishment. The strikers un-|know that political labor solidarity is doubtedly believe that they are acting [first of all impossible, and that it within the law, and it may be that Would be futile if possible. they are. If it is possible lawfully for In justification of the new party, an organized minority to strangle the | Which is patterned after the labor nation, then the law ought to be|Party of Great Britain, it is pointed changed, but in changing it great|out that the socialists have lately care must be taken that a way is not|been waning in strength in New York. opened for the oppression of minori-|A few years ago the socialists elected fiie. ten of the sixty-two assemblymen from Even if adjustments of the railroad ; Greater New York, and last year they strike and the mine strike are arrived [elected only three. The present or- at the government still should move |#anization is really a movement to forward to the finding of a permanent | Save the socialist party from complete solution of such difficulties. The na-|{Wreck. As an evidence of good faith tion cannot afford, and the people will | the organization meeting adopted reso- not submit, that there should be re-|lutions condemning the action of the curring crises which threaten hard- |Railroad Labor Board in the present ship and sufferiog to the millions who | strike, demanding recognition of so- have no direct stake in the game of | viet Russia and-;Mexico, calling for industrial conflict and whose only de-{the opening of the jails to political sire is that the right thing and the |Prisoners in this country and asking fair thing shall be done always to(that the death penalty be not imposed both employe and employer. on those awaiting trial in soviet Rus- sla. This last was a substitute for a resolution calling for the freeing of o r:rifiom?fing?‘;‘::;“ of a | the political prisoners in Russia. which ; was voted down. A strange blend, in- speech he had made in the orient onlgeeq, of consideration and radicalism! the subject of the American merchant | marine, Secretary Denby has cabled e Trar Yokohama that he 1s “atiangis |l ». MOUCIATY ) system that fwill dis. e ship wibeidy.” pense with gold as its basis is often Prabably mare strongly since arriv- | CiSht Y. ecomomists, The ‘human Hig In the orfent. Japan ls/one of the | =.c> s been accustomed for so many Wb auiccesatal of ihelocesn carriers. | ETottations toixegard gold o8 ibe: real and as achieved success by assisting | T.000) (Bat it will require a high fHast conducting the busliiess. She 1" Ea850/OF universsl edqcatinn (3 win popular faith to anything else. Values a progressive, up-to-date nation. with = are matters of general belief as well y el , i itl eyes in her head, and a disposition to a8 of intrinsic quall employ processes that have proved thelr value elsewhere. o Her policy toward her merchant ma-{ Announcements of organizations for rine did not originate with her. She {the purpose of antagonizing move- had seen it emploved successfully by |ments already under way are fre- other natfons. and simply and properly jauent. An organization whose pur- adopted it for her own purposes. And |pose is conciliatory might find intelli- it has served her purposes quite as|&ent encouragement at this time. well as it has the purposes of the na- —_—————— tions from which it was taken. Anarchists are not distinguished by Ts it not capable of serving our pur- | good eyesight either in aiming a bul- poses? We shall be meeting as com-fjet or in identifying an intended vic- petitors for ocean business the na-{tim. tions which have assisted and are still S assisting their merchant marines.| = i Should we not assist ours? Can we umper” crops indicate that the, farms have been more successful in hope to succeed against such competi- , tors unless we do? ! business operation than the mines and railroads. The word subsidy is a shopworn bugaboo. Why should it affright any- body in the light of its wide applica-; The Hague conference is remark- tion in this country and in all coun-{able chiefly for the distinguished list tries these days? Governments are !Of those present. # assisting many enterprises and voll-i A New Party. A new party was born in New York the other day, under the style of the American labor party. It was organ- ized as a nucleus of a national group to replace the farmer-labor party end the socialist party. Some of the more enthusiastic delegates urged that it begin to function at once in the na tional field, but it was finally decided to let the mew organization serve as a holding company, as it were, for the old parties, end in the campaign of 1924 to put tickets in the field in all the states and to name presidential candidates as well. Of course, there will be opposition in farmerlabor and socialist circles to this new organization. Not all of the members of those two parties will 1 cies having to do with public service Zeal at Zion. and benefit. A hot-weather diversion comes from —_—— |Zion City, Til., where General Overseer The public, belng unable to organize | Voliva is conducting a housecleaning elther a walkout or a lockout, is com- | of his community by holding a general pelled to content itself with a fine dis- | confession. Every sért of sin from play of patience. gum-chewing to chicken theft ha: been acknowledged and denounced and probably shrived. A remarkable range of repentance was manifested. Judg- ing from the réports of the proceed- ings, Zion City is not a particularly / riotous assemblage of souls. 1Its The Motor-Theft Industry. |wickedness is rather! of the “cake- Motor car stealing has become one | eater” kind. One tsaveliffg man, for of the leading industries of the United j example, acknowledged that while States. It is estimated that during the | marooned in a small town he had past year cars worth $100,000,000 have flousht to relieve the monotony by at- been taken by thieves in cities and !tending a picture show, whereupon even in the rural districts. Only a|Voliva roared his condemnation end small part of the cars taken were re- {admonished the sinner to occupy his covered, the thieves netting probably | time by writing to his wife. The re- $50,000,000 to $75,000,000 in motor | pentant drummer pleaded that he did values. * | write to his. wife, leaving the impres- The National Automobile Dealers’ |sion that this diversion did not fully Association has been investigating this j occupy hia time or satisfy his desire question in conjunction with the other‘(or entertainment. But Zion City has natiohal motor associations, and fig-{no use for entertainment. Life there - ures have just been given showing the | is real, lite is earnest. If anybody en- . growth of this criminal activity. From | vies Voliva his job bossing & place of _ ' "reports govering anly s small part of | that sort let him try to start s colony ' the country 33,508 cars ware-stalen in [ of rigid rightsous livers ang see bow Lack of coal may compel blast fur- naces to close down. C€oal shortage means one shortage after another. hard it is. ‘There are 80 to tempt the weak spirit taken, In the twenty-elght citles which | Iron resclution is nseded on the part of every member of & community of that kind to look not upon the steer- ing wheel on a bright summer day The chiefly disturbing fact in this|when the flelds are beckoning and the connection is that the thefts increase roads ere smooth. Plain food, plain despite the Imposition of larger penal- }drink, are imperative. Plain clothes are required. Plain speech=-not theea and thous, but the aimpli of sin- cerity—is ordained. It is for the members of the colony, but infinitely harder for the bosa; He must set an example himself and oversee all the detalls of the livea of those whom he leads. True, the door swings outward for the gum-chewers and picture-goers, and at any time they can be shooed away, but what leader wants his fol- lowing to go ahead? \ which occurred in Maine, cost six lives. A motor car containing seven persons was hit by a train. Five were instantly killed, the sixth died later and the only uninjured occupant was a babe in its mother's arms. The man driving the car was the husband and answered. Indeed, in practically every 8ix More Dead. ‘The latest grade-crossing tragedy, father of two of the other victims. He undoubtedly thought he was careful. He would not deliberately drive his family into danger. Yet he took his car upon a crossing in front of a train. Did he think he could get across in time? Did he know a train was com- ing? These questions will never be one of these grade-crossing tragedies the truth is never known. It must al- ways be assumed that the driver knows of the grade crossing and that he takes his chances. If he stopped, his car before going upon the tracks he would hear the train coming. Yet not one in many hundreds stops the car. In fact, only a few really slacken speed. The usual practice on ap- proaching a known grade crossing is to look both ways and ‘“step on the gas,” to get over as fast as possible if there is no train in sight. How, then, does it happen that so many people are killed? Because, as the event proves, the drivers are not careful enough. They perhaps unconsclously figure that for every car hit thousands cross in safety. But the percentage of safety is lessening as the number of cars increases and as the habit of un- reckoning speed grows. ——— ‘The member of the Georgia legisla- ture who introduced a bill to punish a man who goes fishing without his wife's consent by a long term in the penitentiary represents in its extreme degree the type of statesmanship that wants statutes on the principle of “the more the merrier.” ———— The government has power to do a great many things in an emergency It is, however, the duty of good citl- zenship to avold a crisis which calls for the exercise of a form of authority which the traditions of a republic have taught the people to regard as arbi- trary and paternalistic, —_————— In complimenting the Prince of ‘Wales on his services to the British empire by his world tours, Llovd George evidently recognized the fact that the first duty of & prince is to be popular. The need of aggressive states- manship will be met by the cabinet. —_——————— ‘The chancellor of the exchequer de- ciares that a debt is a solemn obliga- favor suggestions of laxity in relation- ships which would estabiish & danger- ous precedent in world affairs. | ——— Whenever any great industry is threatened with {interruption Uncle Sam is called upon as the willing worker. SHOOTING STARS. BY PHILANDER JOHNBSON. Unlimited Perplexity. T cannot see the sun by day So tranquilly behaving, ‘Without some restless thoughts that | thought that they would be.” On his original proposition, however, Mr. White has the indorsement of stray ‘To themes of daylight-saving. I cannot see the stars by night, Afar in lofty stations, Without some fancies that take flight With Einatein’s calculations. So problems rise on every hand, Ouyr brains, we warp and twist ‘em, Since our perplexities expand Beyond the solar system! The Best to Be Hoped For. “You appear to be universally popu- lar in your district.” ““There’'s no such thing as universal popularit answered Senator Sor- ghum. “But T do pride myself on the fact that I have been able to limit my unpopularity to an uninfluential mi- nority.” Jud Tunkips says he'd be a law- abiding citizen if he could only remem- ber all the traffic regulations. The Tariff. The tariff is a question deep ‘Which puts an euditor to sleep, But Jater, if not solved aright, It makes him walk the floor at night. Discouraged Insects. “How are the mosquitoes out your Way? “We haven't any,” replied Fariner Corntogsel. “So many summer board- ers have been experimentin’ with bootleg products that the skeeters would rather starve than come near ‘em.” 2 “It's éasy to find fault,” said Uncle Eben; “but de discovery mose'ly ain’ no use after you's made it.” The best that can be sald of some the work of others.—Portsmouth Times. When last heard from the Senate was discussing the tariff on muts, but no rate of duty will keep outsthe kind that is Imported by the lecture bureaus.—Detroit Frea Press. Girl bank clerks are being taught the use of the revolver—News Item. —Wouldn’t it be, easier to hire a bunch of self-made widows?—Arkan- sas Gazette. B s *“Dar ain’ no_ kind daylight- savi said Unele. 3 gwineter prevent @ man from kickin’ 325,000 In addition, It period. to lower its previous year; One answer vehicles on Wi building. presence’of on sitting behind deed, oftimes pe: faked' mit. Inspector to drive a mot on a hill, such as may be found.on 13th or 14th street, between E and F streets, an RECENT announcement of the J Natfonal Automobile Chamber. of Com: in automobile agcldents during 1921 13,600 fatalities during the same The announcement prompts the question: What is Washington doing. found by observing: tests which ap- plicanty, for permits to drive moto put through daily on the thorough- s fare i in time to prevent & sion. in the vicinity of the District Al typical toute over which api These tests are performed In the Al involves, perhaps, 5 of Taspectar At crossing policeman’s signal at J. Headley's traffic bureau experis. )i . oeion of 14th street an plicant hands the official observer a clgar or two, drives half a block on’ 2 quiet street and quali termined that no one shall be licensed of Columbla until he has manifested beyond doubt his familiarity with devise new tests designed to prevent & recurrence in the case of persons applying for permits. Changes in|gre overlooked by a sympathizing of- fcer, who realizes that new cars usuaily are difficult even for experienced chauf- the customary routes are made or addi- merce estimates that persons were injured is stated, thi were accident records of to this query may be ashington streets are| "o sicuation, board and appli while an’inspector is in lt“n&' before trying again for a permit. *x k¥ 1t s sald that this test was incor- porated In the routine examination after a successful applicant, who had been in possession of a permit for sey- |’ eral days, was forced not long ago to} stop by a blockade on a ‘hill In ‘the downtown section of the city,” choking the engine. Confused by the conges: tion, and not being familiar with the hand emergency brake, the driver was unable to start the motor again with- out releasing the foot brake, a number of attempts resulting {n dangerous slips backward. Final lly & erby, taking y umnes to the running the emergency brake plicants are directed to drive begins at the 14th ct entrance to the District bullding: halting to lv&llt ::‘ e in- d Pennsyl- the iring, and, in- 3 des stop on the piring, vania avenue; includes a pto\anl rspiring, driver. There | 14th street slop for & per-f ;12 about in final “stumper” "o ‘marrow . thorough e near F atr the wake of traffic east on F street where the ap-} ® 5 gireet and goes south across the Avenue again to one of the streets |7 south of the District building, where a is encountered—turn- fare Headley'd men aré de- | by shifting the gears alternately into or car in the District d his ability to oper- proper caution. * x % or overscrutiny 1 or examination’ are fouratto haudls. By thus safeguarding of late applicants are against the menace of forward and reverse. * K ¥ K 1t the new driver succeeds in accom plishing these manipulations with rea- sonable facility he Is considered well qualified to operate his car alone there- after and a permit is forthcoming. The examiners take into consideration the nervousness naturally attending = rigid cxamingtion and are careful not to ter- rity applicants by unnecessary urging Stalled engines often public incompetent stop their automobiles automobile drivers, the municipal au- thorities are taking great steps forward in_ the accident prevention campalgn. d then to start forward | Educational drives also are accomplish- again. his involves, In most cars,|ing much good. Washington school the application of brakes and the|teachers and children have been made shifting of gears simultaneously— | eligible to compete in a $6,500 prize the brakes to prevent slipping back- ‘ward and the incline. It has been found that a|ing the street surprisingly large number of appli- cants have falled to qualify on this essay contest in this connection. gears to pull up the| That all of these factors are remedy- accident problem is shown by the statement that the state of Massachusetts halved its accident essential point. In such ‘instances|record in one year and that twenty- the man or woman is told to ac- | eight other cities reduced their motor tice stopping and starting on a slope | fatalities In 1921 Times Have C son naturally satisfaction of gressive 1d them. White is the He lashed hims: recently when stray dog over to the dog pound. “Bill* White had bee indescribable and happiness cold muzzle bare leg and when, with a democracy that humans canine pal swapped fleas with his human friend. Emporia coun: scendants of a the Boys. They don't do it the same way now- rising generation. But recent events have proved to the nearly represents Kan. “times have changed and boys with home town offered a reward of “two bits” to any boy who would turn a |should catch up with other things. can now have our trousers pressed, our 3 | shoes resoled. our hats cleaned while jwe wait. It is good to know now that we can be fined while we wait. may delay us a little, but after we get away from the tomobiles an e them with * As causes for automobile crashes are ascertained the officers are pro- vided with “material” from which to tional points noted. For exampl being made t. EDITORIAL DIGEST 'hanged and So Have [21d suggests. “not even the years of helps that idea along. upset.” the one man who more , and 1ts pro- Justice Justice on Wheels. now goes on wheels. tin can episodes have destroyed their confidence,” and “If it ever entered the dog mind that a boy was a crea- adays. ‘William Allen White, the |ture, whose function it was to sell “sage of Emporia,” will testify to that fact. He s a great bellever in the price of a couple of ice cream sodas, His college boy 'the whole balance of youth would be tray dogs to the executioner for the No than any oné else that | longer can we complain that our courts are glow, for down in Florida justice will travel in automobiles, overtake speeders, try them by the roadside and friend of the helples fine them or imprison them. Certainly elf into justifiable fury | the world do move since the perfection the city council of his | °f t'= floating axle, the rubber tire and n a boy. He knew thl feeling of joyfulness that follows when the pushed against one’ well might envy, the | [OIL0E COUTE A cil as unworthy de- the gasoline engine. Perhaps it is time that our court: We time lost. court will have some salytal So White assalled the | 1¢'s man is speeding and ls caugnt by Al s vnwortits) this swift fustice, tried immed tion. England is too wise a natlon to| When Fourth of July came White [ Aned he iz likely to remember, It, Jack: risdiction iatel 1t d Jack- resolved to show Emporia that the)punishment is best for speeders and offered a reward for the boy appear- ing in the Independence day parade with the largest number of canine pets in line. What happened? Not a single boy nor & single dog turned out. However, as explains it, “boys of the present day haye so many ing fishing, visiting the old swimming hole and even ance. Huck Finn would find | the greatest benefit 2 back number in a group the New York World | He will put his isn’t right.—Syracuse Herald. Health and Nature's Laws. boy and the dog are synonymous. He | we are not so sure that .vukuonriue[ The average person takes better care} of his watch than he does of his body physical em throngh all sorts of strain or make it work it the ofling and repairing that are ob- new Interests that go- | overtim. after day. without x!vlnnl fraternizing with dogs ! tained from pl ot boys of this day and generation. | playing games. not that no Emporia jasm and clears the cobwebs from d ready to parade with one's brain in a manner that routine The wonder is boys were fount ilheir dogs, but that a canny authority and a proper amount have declined in the relative scale of | of rest. Exercise is very important, but is derived from se when the latter is obtained in Play arouses the en- exercise will not do. on boyish character should have If every one would be careful to ob- many editors. joities sympath understand, while the men who rep- resent the hust ties, who are in constant contact with i unspofled boy White position. “You man!” asserts the Jacksonville Journal, “go back to your youth. Re- member how proud you were when a vou? b; ray o o fnau? jRemember | that the American playwright is not | keeping up with the ~ numerous mother to let you adopt him—'He's a nice dog! No boy who loves a dog i hopeless!” True, and likewise there is the natural affinity between a boy ana 2 dog, the Nashville Banner points out, because tween man and dog is really one or the most touch be he stray again, “the man who lov is pretty apt to love dog Those of the larger tain a proper amount of pure water. pure air, pure and rightly balanced food d plenty of exercise. work. ize with, but hardly | brighter, a happier and a more pros ling smaller comm . o atth | Oklahoman. life, agree with the times you begged % | course.” the 1 authors here “the relationship be- ing and beautiful (hnll or otherwise.” Then, wn. season will not witne: typical American play the public was beginning to feel that American drama was coming Into its o American Plays. From the long lisy of European plays just brought to thik country American producers it would seem the demand. ist of “arrived” is not large, but how much of this condition is due to the unwillingness of producers to Elve newcomers a chance will never be known. 1t is g gamble to launch the product a new and untried writer, but it we know. It would be a very poor N e et lfl“!u a bit disappointing that the coming sight of the friendship of a good dog probably a number of especially as play perous world, whether life were pro- longed thereby or not.—Oklahoma City ot Wayne _ Journal-Gazette says . ; . ) ps the American playwright dogs are man's best friends—more oy have to establish his ability faithful by far than the two. animals that pass the death s upon them. N and bestial at abroad before it is recognized at home, as the American singer once Orohia nme was obliged to do before an engage- heart, would murdering a dog. And when he is| . nies here. tempted to brul in indorsing thi t and the m tial editorial thereon, Insists that they must also have known “the tireless, endless, worshi tality by some crabbed e original White New York World Lo pful. glorious devotion of the ‘gang dog.’ ‘Admitting there are stray dogs, The Greatest,” a Popular Game. which, in the interest of public health, ! ¢ )een successful grown-up's quarter, a crime has been Committed.” And the Buffalo Times,|haVe been produced here. ment was possible in the opera com- American plays have the outset, abroad after they There might possibly be a foreign market in which ‘We are now being treated to the event the timidity of the American producer would promptly vanish.—, New York Tribune. should be removed from the streets, gninjong of various people as to wh 0 the Asbury Park Preas insist 2 manlere’ the twelve Ereatest American 3 women _and the world's six greatest thayL toleeve maney Lo hlsting the |men. The opinions as to tne women vary vastly, albeit a few like Jane should do such ald of the boys dignity of men jfice. There who accept public of- fs "enough cruelty and |Addams, Mrs C att and Mrs. Whar- ton are included in most of the lists venality in the world without en-|_,5t ail. It is impossible to reach !} couraging It among the boys of &i, verdict—there will communit. And, agaln, the Win-[p, o jury !(on-Bllemy Journal declares, {of the kind of boy who valued =j ‘ uarter above og on earth! keep dogs out of the pound it has hit upon an excellent plan. For no boy who is worth. his salt s going to let the city or any one else kick his Car is that they do not interfere |dog around,” because, as the Portland wl ‘Oregonian sayi men, the adhes the life of a dog—any And now H. G. Wells' tells us who are the six greatest n:u res in world history and he includes Christ.,Ari It the citv wanted t0]¢otle and Abraham Lihcoln. Ther: intended for the comfort, we believe, |4y Englis] of boys ‘who have erred and been 8] , and who ne 2 roug! DN 5 tough tongue upon their tear-|°ver Lincoln. ‘ punis ful cheeks. An having had = manly. gentle and courageous, for dog, more generous.|. . .y " eqhp would find 'several to whom they would give the preference hundreds of millions who will qus even the inclusion of Christ. Chinese would say Confucious. Mohammedans would ' substitute the s d}leader of eir religion. OB AT e oneho|mans would strike out Lincoln and : S e Thoy were | 24d Frederick the Great or Bismarck; | very partisans of Y] the French, Napoleon' or Louis XI; ‘The Ger- And so the guessing contest con. y boy is the better fOT | (inues and nothing is decided, nothing only interesti thi about it i that the guesses-givi {true dog is all of these. and In the | v ™ o iene into the ntental Prate fullness of time, after wherl death comes to hi: nd and attitude of the guessers—and even | always be af YOUK FRIEND who owns 3 Marmon to let you drive jt— 8 new eensation awaits. To steer with 7, Tzl such gentle touch and to 'brake and shift gears so casily is exclusively Marmon. MARMON q/ze‘f}'oremoat Qine Car T. V. T. MOTORS CORP. 1501 Connecticut Avenue Telephone North 7853 At Dupont Circle NORDYKE & MARMON COMPANY Established 1851 11 INDIANAPOLIS R A - e o A A =W 2 “Let's Stay Home This Evening™ That's what you'll be saying when you let a great big, comfortable over- stuffed chair come into your living room. When you “park” yourself in it you’ll‘forget the movies or..vaudeville; and.-you'll...; soon save enough by staying home to pay for it. On display at Mayer’s Lifetime Furniture Store you'll find a large assort- ment of overstuffed chairs. Their magnificent tapestry, velour and mohair coverings and their graceful but sturdy construction will add attractiveness as welt as comfort to the living room. Come down and look at them. You'll be surprised to see the big, fine-looking Karpen-made tapestry chair you can get for only $59.75. Lifetime Furniture Is More Than a Name Seventh Street MAYER 69" CO. Between D & E T N Theres no substitute for }\ifling.it right— Drink Delicious and Refreshing will know the poignancy of 2 sorrow that cennpt but ennoble him." “Man’ about having to get up in the mornin’ laina, ors Ince. :::I to go to work."—Vancouver.. water cooler. LL 1 ge the. dog is the Tea the e e Jower orders d love rlington that {s not important—only Interest- ing.—Fort Wayne Journal-Gasette. '8 for his dog Is not mere| Tpe fa Tt sontimantanty - tire Brookiyn B e fayorite Summer, resort fa the e News.

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