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SJHWk THE COLUMBIA EVENING MI5SOURIAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1922 PACE SIX vwt- agFr---"" -a n; JmyMai;wyjiwi, "sjwsk-:-" " -fflJPfHWiJiH' -- - -V r U M c 3 Hh.' & 1 IS M THE COLUMBIA EVENING ire d!rnc,,y "' b W" MiasuuniAn ? . ""' """' " ,w w . Wilson i portrayed, almost in NEWS OF THE STATE 'street lighting svstem, the building of a J I municipal auditorium and the building jof a Memorial Plaza. U. S., THE LAND OF JAZZ PabEcfccd every ciwing except Seadef T WtMrua PuMuliUf AmocUims, lac Jy II. .tf IUI1. CriiiDkie. Uteaoeri. ALFONSO JOHUKrH. tlejalerl Cxab-is-AJvaace SebecrlptiM Retee. 1m. 4 ne. lyr. f, Carrier II JO 2J0 MOO .! la Coanlf .75 lJO S.W i.t.v o.i. 12 lie jo UI.ve. lima .. portrarea, aunos. in pao$ by o the same breath, as a weakling and a die- j fulton for building a new water and light tator. Wilson is also depicted as talking J plant. i SJeraWf Aedil Percee. Qrcelenear) Catered Seeoe4CbM Mail Miner TELEFIICAE .NUMBERS: Neve .......-.... Stixvertuunf end GrcaUtwa .. Su-ielr , 171 SS A NEW LAW BUILDING Mr. and .Mrs. Frank R. Tate of St. hare given $50,000 to the University of Missouri as a memorial to their son, Lre II. Tale. The money is to be ued in connection with the School of Law and the next Legislature is expected to grant . J 1 00,000 which will make povible the erection of a $150,000 fireproof build ing. ' This building is a matter of economy and protection. The present structure, which is not fireproof, contains a library worth $75,000. This will soon be supple mented by another gift, the Law son li brary of criminal law- and criminology, vorth $WfiO0. Mr. and Mrs. Tate could hare left no more fitting memorial to their son than the gift hicn the Board of Curators has accepted. It is a memorial of service to ethers, and it is especially fitting to the memory of Lee II. Tate, who crashed his automobile into a street car rather than rtrile another motor car which wai drir en by a woman. the extreme pacifist view in the question jx .MjSMiirj Pacific Railroad has tf preparedness and the convoy of ships. ', signed an agreement with its shopmen ..... j covering, wages and working conditions. As. lo the question of preparedness, I "- both Mr. Daniejs and Mr. Redfield, for-i Fourteen of the Fifty-seren women who J are confined in the state penitentiary uitp senlr-nrfrl for murilpr nf mandau?h. ter. People often give three cheers for something they wouldn't give an) thing else for. While the ministers pray for Chicago, they might put in a word for the rest of the country. STATUES OF FRIENDSHIP On October 28, 1886, the Statue of Liberty was set up in the liarbor of New York, a gift from the French govern ment to the United States, a token of es teem and friendship. The passing of thir-t)-sii years sees a bronze of Edmund Durke unveiled in a Washington park, a gift from Creat Britain to the United States, a testimonial of amity and good will. Since the days of the Revolution, rela tions between France and America hare been almost as traditionally warm at relations between England and America have been traditionally cool. The peo ple of this republic hare nerer forgotten the services of their shter republic dur ing the ctirring days of 76, and have al wavs regarded hernilh the kindliest of feelings. Likewise, to many, the England of George V is still the England of Cearge III, and they will not let the fires of enmity that flamed almost one hundred and fifty year ago die out. The truth i, that except for a few un fortunate instances the United States lias had no better friend among all the coun tries of the world than Creat Britain, and it wa not really necessary for England to present, us with a statue to remind us of tin's fact. Peace lias existed between the United States and England for. more than' one hundred years. The tie of a common language, the bonds of mutual tastes, in clinations and interest guarantee the continuance of this peace. Great Britain could have" done nothing more appropri ate in cementing this friendship than in presenting to this country a statue of one of her noblest men -who was, as well, one of America's most ardent supporters. The East St. Louis woman who xas married pine times must have believed that, while in single now there is. blessed ness, in numbers there is safely. WILSON AND HIS FRIENDS Woodrow Wilson seems to have been as unfortunate in the choice of friends as in the choice of enemies. This is as suming, of course, that a President's cab inet, fondly referred to as his official family, be clashed among the former. However, due to the nature of American I-olitics, neither choice may be said to be voluntary. A President frequently ap mints a member of his Cabinet because of a scne of obligation rather than be-, cause of a sense of fitness or personal friendship. This is by way of introduction to the recently published letters of the late Franklin K. Lane, Secretary of the In terior in the former President's cabinet. Though not as adverse as the book of zner secretaries, deny the charge of Mr. Lane. As to the second charge, the res ignation of W. J. Bryan for the opposite reason would seem to refute that al-. Both Mr. Daniels and Mr. KedGeld ascribe the intemperate tone of some of the letters to Mr. Lane's illness which, not long after the letters were written, proved fatal. This probably eiplains the few lapses of an other nie high minded and lovable character. That the Cabinet spent mot of the lime in exchanging stories i an inter esting revelation about that mot ecret governmental bod) mot secret and per haps also most futile. No doubt a goml story well told may prove the saving grace of a critical situation. But tli story sliould be the means to an end rather than an end in itelf at lea.-t at a Cabinet meeting. But coming back to Mr. Lane and lo Mr. Wilson, it becomes increasingly evi dent that, in order to be liked, the for mer President bad to be understood, and since so few did the fatter, few aIo did the former. Americanization of Saxophone Has Changed Its Voice, Petitiors inculcated by vlhe Ku Mux' Jazz, that bewitching s)ncopation Klan h St. Joteph. demanding that Gov ernor H)de remove the present police board, were signed by more than 15,000 persons lat Friday. The board mem bers, Walter Fulkenor, Henry Wvatl and Dr. J. C. Morgan, maintain that they will not resign. The 0age County Courthouse at Linn was burned Monday. The fire broke out at 3 o'clock in the morning and was be jond control of the citizens. J. G. Sigler. manager of the Mexico ex cliange of the Southwest Bell Telephone Co., has been promoted lu group manager of Howard Count) for the compan). THE OPEN COLUMN The Klan in Columbia. Editor the Missourion : There arc sub stantial rumors to the effect that the Ku KIux Klan is organizing in'Columbia. It is a regrettable fact if trueTior Columbia has no place for such an organization. The only excuse for the existence of the klan is that which in past days warranted the existence cf vigilance committer which functioned where the agencies of law and order had not yet penetrated. The klan is essentially undemocratic and un-American; it fosters and promul gates racial and religious intolerance. It is cowardly and cruel; it works in the dark, marked and disguised, performing deeds of outlawry and violence. Columbia and Boone County are well protected; the machinery of government is as efficient as it is in mo-t place. There is no need in Boone Giunty for masked riders, hurrying b) night on mysterious errands of barbarism. The klan would be a disturbing factor in our political life and a menace lo the peace of our coramunitv. cs. A drive is being made in 'Moberly for funds with which lo establish a Salvation Army Corps. Six thousand dollars will be necear, it is said, to establish the corps. The Pn-tDipatch .Milk and Ice Fund is now $6,920.89. The budget for the )ear calls for $10,000 and unless this amcunt is sub-cribed by December 1 the distribution of pure milk to children and babies of the tenement districts mu't ceae. Frank M. Robinson, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce convention bureau in Kansas Cily for three years, has se vered relations with the Chambtr of Commerce. Mr. Robinson resigned as head of the convention bureau last month on account of disabilities resulting from an automobile accident in St. Louis last spring. In the three years that he wa at the head of the convention bureau, Kan sas Gt) rose lo eighth place among the convention cities of the country. Rudolph Canz, director of the St. Louis S) mphony Orchestra, is planning to make St. Louis the musical capita! of the West. His plans include the raising of the per- which has taken America by storm the last few years and has now spread its charms to cafes and amusement centers of Europe, is an American invention. To some it has no attractions, while to oth ers it is the actual existence of mirth and, frivolity. But considering the great mass of persons who delight in it, it should be termed the most popular of any class of music. There are no tricks lo jazz in the way of instruments as all instruments used are old. The piano, drums, trombone. trumpet and banjo have been used in our orchestras for years but with the in troduction of the saxophone a few years ago, the "raggy" melodies of jazz were made possible. Though the saxophone is rather new to us it has existed in Eu rope for nearly a century. It was orig inally invented to play music of the most classical nature. The saxophone's range possibilities, its pitch and its resem blance to the human voice, made it sonnel of the orchestra to eual that ofJ?J'ip,ab,c ' fa mus!c-Bu'. !lf Proud Gasoline in Kansas Gty is lc cheap er. The Standard Oil Co. and all other oil companies in the city announced a cut of 1 cent a gallon, effective October 30. Under the new price, gasoline at filling stations will cou 195 cents, and from lank wagons, 175 cents. A banquet was given in Moberly Mon day night for all business men and mer chants. There were about 200 guest. The purpose of the banquet was to bring about a stronger spirit of unit) and ru-oiie-ration among the business men of the city. Obstruction work on roada in Mi-ou ri reached the high water mark during the week ending October 14. The total shows that the work done amounts lo ap proximately fifteen and two-tenth miles graded earth roadway built, and four and fiie-tcnth miles of pavement hard sur- laceit. , inventor would, no doubt, hesitate to recommend it for such use. Antoine Joseph Sax, inventor of the saxophone, was born at Dinant, Belgium, November 6, 1814. His father, Joseph Sax, was a celebrated instrument maker. Antoine displa)ed great musical ability at an earl) age as well as a taste for his father's business of instrument making. His father encouraged him in this, and when Antoine was old enough, entered Servant "Problems" I him at the Brussels Conservatoire de iMusique where he studied the clarinet any orchestra in the country and the pro duction of the same music as is heard in London and Paris. There will be eight) -two members in the orchestra this year and it will cost $15,000 more, this year tlian lat. Another plan includes a tour ffor the orchestra underwritten b) the city chamber of commerce. ADDRESS IS ALL-IMPORTANT j Housing and Are no Worry in England One American writer living in Lon-land flute. The celebrated master. Bend- don, has made the discovery that it isier, made of young Sax a clarinet player better "to freeze to death in regal splen-jof great skill. His skill was never ap. dor" in a pretentious hostelry than to plied in a professional capacity, fi-i.l comfort in a cheaper abode when it' ii; naiuraI bent was mechanical so he is the address that ajtomatically ar- rcturmJ , ,,e workshop where he ap ranges jour social position. Mis. Marv ,,iiej l,;msof , the tak of improving the Margaret McBride. a graduate of the r,r;n.t. alone lines laid down br his jsrnooi ni journalism in tne iotiowir.g:f,th.r NATIONAL FATHER AND SON WEEK NOV. 12-19 Sunday School Association Hopes for Observances Through. ;out; County. November 12-19 " will be National Father and Son Week. Programs have been sent from the State Sunday School H Association to the county associafions t throughout the slate, setting forth a proposed- program for the week. Copies of j these programs have been seat to the! various Sunday schools of the county, j through the Young People's division of the County Sunday School Association.) So far no definite programs have been set by the religious organizations of the county, but as it has become customary for all denominations to observe "this! week, the heads of the Sunda) School , Association believe Father and Son Week will be universally observed throughout Boone County. '"Call Me Back Pal o' Mine." A tenor and baritone duet full of senti-1 ment and beauty. Hear it at Taylor's. Adv. PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER 'Unhrersny Papers, A specialty at low prices. Rh'o Crews Walker 304 Cuitar BIdg. Phone 1569 Tenth Year Here - DRV O'BRYAN A Chiropractor .Elvira Bldg. Phone 38 .J Flowering bulbs from France and Holland: . ' k A special bargain offer that no lover of fW-? CIS uu aumu v vn.iw- . v luiit-iuou. We bulbs for only $155 postpaid. . j 1 dozen double or single mixed Hyacinths. 1 doaen assorted Narcissus. 1 dozen double or single mixed Tulips. All postpaid for only $1.85. Send this ad with your order. Planting instructions in our Free " Bulb Catalog. Ask for il. Now is the time to plant bulbs. V SeBSSm'' r If iSIIIIIIVaSfe Archias Seed Store 1GVSS E. Main St. Scdalia, Mo. article written for the New- York Mail presents a few of her observations of liv ing: conditions in Creat Britain. London: lodav llie carpel sucep- I Due to the fact that llie appropriations for ths blind in the year 1921 was inade quate, the blind tiensioners of Mis-siuri. whose in-nsions ceased March 31, are un dergoing many hardships. These facts jre revealed in the pathetic letters re ceived each day by Samuel F. Cook, blind pension clerk, in the office of the auditor. Opposes Senator Reed. Editor the Missourion: The partisans of a candidate for public office must be in quite a state of mental evaltation when they feel that any mention of thit candi date's official record is a personal attack. en him. Some of Senator Reed's friends whom we encounter give one the impression that the Congressional Record ought, to be sued for libel. With fine emotion they resent any reference to thai sheet. We never have "attacked" his official career with an) thing but the-votcs he cast in the United States Senate. Republicans and Democrats co-operated in the passage of five pre-eminent meas ures to secure, to feed and to arm Am erican soldiers. These five measures covered almost the entire scope of legis lation intended to attain these ends. Ma) not a soldier without offense point to the fact that a senator opposed all of them? Nobody knows today how Senator Reed would have helped these two million boys to save themselves from extinction and win the war. He denounced the plan that was adopted to feed this vast military force, but he proposed no other. When that brilliant Republican of German descent. Representative Kahn, led the fight for the selective draft law, Various methods are ue-d b) friends md relatives f convicts lo slip in nar cotics to the prisoners according lo War del Samuel Hill. One method that lias been defected is for a woman 111 have i-ont-caleil ia her mouth a small package, and in kissing her relative she slips the package of drugs into his mouth. About ')00 of the 2,150 prisoners "u-e narcotics in ome form. Governor Arthur M. H)de recently is sued a proclamation in which he 'pointed out, that there is a severe shortage of freight cars, and called upon the people lo lend assistance in relieving the condi tion in the following manner: Order only such cars as are absolutely necessary. Load cars to the fullest possible capacity. Load and unload with the Iea't possible delay, working nights where possible. The body of Patrick Haley, who died July 3, will be exhumed in the search for a lost certificate of deposit for $27,906, which will mature in February. The de posit was made in the Liberty Central Trust Co. but, the institution refuses to pay the amount to Haley's widow, fear ing that the deposit has been transferred to someone else. AH search for the lost document has been fruitless but it is hoped to find it in Haley's burbl clothes. Workmen employed in excavating for the new Theodore Roosevelt School .at Louisiana avenue and Hartford street in St. Louis, opposite the site of lite old Picker cemetery, found a casket contain ing the body of a Union Army captain evidently buried over fifty years ago. The ers at my hotel came from Michigan. Iiave a strange fondness for seeing them in the hall. ''I wish the hotel people hail also im ported some Michigan steam heating. Iliere is a distinctly winter tang lo the air, anil only firej laces are allcviat-, ing it. Il seems thai some of the newer and extremely American hotels have -team enough. "I asked my adviser, a transplanted American, why Stella and I shouldn't go to one of thoBr instead of remaining at the dignified hostelry where we now free-zc in regal splendor. "It's the address,' he told me omin ously. You need an address. With an address you can do anything. Without you can do nothing. ThiiJs only my seconJ .dax.in Erig-J land, but alreach I know something of the servant and housing problems. To the American mind there doesn't seem to Ik- much of a servant problem since a maid must give a mistress a whole month's notice if she contemplates leav ing. But this, I am told, works Ixitli wa)- the law insisting that the mistress give the maid the same warning. Either ile'l inttlinl liirfiMfeZ nuirrlli c niv li llto ! other. One excellent woman pays her cook an equivalent of $15 a month. The same woman also pays $50 a month rent for a house with a garden and garage right in London, mind you. London Iiouse wives talk about servants constantly now. though I am told they considered il rath er low before the war They also write letters to the London Times about their imams. .And the mauls answer some times which must lie interesting as giving both sides to a moot question." face of the bodv was nrrferllv vvrrinl wncrc .uxniior neea: u got tne and was covered with a heavy beard. The army, did it not? Suppose, in spite of coffin was too rusted lo discern anv marks the result, it was wrong. Did Mr. Reed offer any better plan, or any plan at all? None, except to delay the draft three months. We had lo get to the seaboard, and we had to transport mountains of freight there. Wc had to have railroad control. Republican and Democratic congressmen gave it to us. Where was Senator Reed? Being against that measure, did he pro- pose any other metltod? We had to have the means of making munitions, or become defenseless targets to be killed. And so, we had the coal administration. The factories cot the roal, and we got the munitions. Where was Reed again, and what was his sugges tion for the plan he could not beat? While we were gone, the country swarmed with enemies at home. V.'e knew it then, and we know it today. Hence Republicans and Democrats passed flie National Defense Act. It worke.d and there was only occasional interference with the tremendous task of supporting us in the field. What about Senator Reed? Nothing but criticism for the measure, and no plan of his own. ivow just how did he help us in the war I make no apologies for being a "demo crat, an American, and a soldier. Ex-Suldiek. RAINCOATS MADE TO .MEASURE . ir .i. .l i i ., .. Jtobert Lansing, also a former Cabinet ",c ""?,c ,3m"' ll an1 UP- of identification. With the establishment of the Monetl Tribune by T. L. Tillman, publisher of the Tri-County Press at Peirce City, Mo., Monetl now has two dailies. The Times the established daily, is run by Miss Pearl Peters. The Tribune recently made its debut as a six-page publication with the United Press report, giving to Monett its first telegraphic news service. The Trib une is occupying a new brick and con crete building and has new equipment throughout. Sax removed from Dinant to Paris in 1842 and opened a modest little work simp in the Rue de St. Ceorge. His su periority over the other instrument ma kers in Paris was so marked that Sax soon had to enlarge his quarters in order to handle the orders for instruments which podred in from professional musicians. In this Paris shop, in the year 1846, Sax invented the instrument which bears his name. He made a quartet of saxo ptmnes consisting of the B-flat soprano, E-flat alto. It-flat tenor and E-flal Laritone, thus adding four new voices to the world of music. Although a genius and an inventor. Sax was a poor business man. Through a friend at court he had a practical monopoly over the supply of wind in struments of his manufacture to the French army, but be died in the eigh- lieth year of his life, in poverty and al most forgotten. This work, of a grearinventor which has lived after him, is today perhaps even more popular than during his life time, and has made possible the popular ization of jazz music for the entire world. Harrison County Club to Picnic. Members of the Harrison Coufv Gub will go on a picnic faiorrow afte. noon, providing the weather is favorable. leaving the south steps of Jesse Hall at 5 o'clock. If the weather is unfavor able, the club will meet in Lowry Hall for a business meeting. Former Superintendent Visits Here.! il. llulen ol (,mcLasua. UUa a res ident of Columbia about fifty years ago, was in town )e-sterday. Mr. Hulen at one time was superintendent of schools for ore term in this county. High Grade Shoes and Repairing Heberling's 24 S. 9th. William J. Horn, veteran property mas ter at the American Theater in St. Louis has given Fritz Leiber two human skulls which he used in "Hamlet" in his engage ment at the American last week. The skulls were presented in tribute lo Lei ber's art in acting and are valued by Horn on account of their associations, the same skulls having been used by such actors as Edwin Booth, Lawrence Barrett, Alexander Salmi and John McCuIlough in their visits to St. Louis. m.t .!. .. c . """""" mooring uo.. eoniey ana uen -.., re icurts oi secretary Lanej, t.. n.n . . i. . ii. jissc trail is ouiiosiie us. Aiv .nu ih. ;n.t.n-.: r , - -..-, ... ustaiuiuuu oi a new electric St. Louis is planning a special election on February 14 for a proposed bond isnue to. cover eighteen separate items. The amount of the issue at present is $78.. 100,000 bnt the Council of Gvic Needs is urging that it be increased to 186.240 . 000. Among the eighteen proposed pro jects are extension and improvement of public parks hospitals, waterworks, fire j department; the building of a nV court- To those, who in Columbia live The story is very old, Of how the famous Missouri Swine, Are reaping the farmers' gold. Of course, there's many things in which The pork of the pigs engage But the sweHest we have heard of yet, Is the famous Old Boone County Sausage. Way back in the good old days When packing houses were a joke, When all the farmers their own larder filled ' And no man was considered broke; A man discovered about this time What was considered a treat, And it was no'thing more, dear people, ' Than Old Boone County Sausage receipt. Today the formula is just the same As in "the days of old, And its makers are always on the spot When the choicest of porkers are sold. And only the highest class grocers And the swellest cafes of the land, Seem to know what is best, of all the rest It's the good Old Boone County Brand. " -fHETZLER'S "Where Quality "and Sanitation Reign Supreme" Help Put Boone County on the Map by. .Voting for; . Mrs. St. Clair Moss for Congress She won in the Primaries by a large -plurality at the close of a phenomenal campaign. Boone County has had but one Representative in 60 years. Do you want a Representative from Boone? Mrs. Moss is an able and loyal citizen. She will worthily 'represent the Eighth District Vote for her November 7. EmiliodeGogorza 66094 Ceraldine Farrar 87348 Baniuninn P.icrli rVW3 ..y? "U.";2man a"nraa:chitf (.Wagner; In Uennan Maria Jeritza 7477b Utl, aiccpl Why Uost Ihou Leave M7 (Handel) John McCormack 66096 MELODIOUS INSTRUMENTAL Quartet in C Major Finale (Mozart) Flonialey Quartet 74693 Zapateado (The Cobbler) (Spanish Dance) (Saruate) Violin Solo Jascha Heifetz 66097 Serenade (Jeral-F. Kreiiler) Violin and 'Cello Duet F. Krelaler-H. Kreisler 87578 The Maiden'. With (Chant polonaii) (Chopin-Listz) Piano Solo Irnace Paderewski 74777 Moment Muaical (Schubert) Philadelphia Orcheatra 66098 Don Juan-Part I (Straus) Symphony Cpcheatra under Albert Coatesl. -. 7A Don Juan Part II fMrausii sswms.nMW ri.u..-. .. i an r- --.r??1'0 Don Juan-Part III (Strauss) Symphony Orcheatra under Albert Coater.I77- ,,1 Don Juan-Part IV (Strauss) Symphony Orcheatra under Albert CoaU.""' i- .... . LIGHT VOCAL SELECTIONS uuy uaie The Gypty'a Warning rOrthBaiJnflFAltMljn.SiniA) V !- V V C.IIM. Back Pal o-Mine j. 7 ChIHarrinJ'8944 (S Ter Nlhn8 ' AH Aileen Stanley-Billy Murrayl . RO . , I II Stand Beneath Your Window Tonight and Whiatle Stanley-Murray l(W4-' Lrfe a Railway to Heaven Charlea Harrison-Clifford Cairns,RQ7-- The Harbor Bell Charlea HarrUon-Clifford Cairns169" Away Down South ' -.Peerleae Quartet! IRQ., Way Down Yonder in New Orleana (From "Strut Min Lizzie') Peerleae Quartet ,W'" IT'S .." ,erMdM-sh-"PoiliTefy,Mr.GaBaiIierr By the orbrinaton, IR0.. Mr. GaUasherandMr.Shean--AlfJately,Mr.Soaiir Ed Gallajher-AI Shea109'" '-r, . t, c. . BANJO SOLO Koaa Double Shuffle "Black Face" Eddie RoIRq,,. Kon J" I-BUckFacel Eddie Ro18 DANCE RECORDS" . ' Altera While-Fox Trot All Star Trio and Their Orcheatral i m nappy rox trot t in ;..T. ..J Tl..;.n..l...i.. i When the Leaves Come Tumbling Down For Trot Ttamrr and Hi. rtrr-h-.f.-J Olive Kline and Criterion Quartet! . , ,,a' 12 10 10 12 10 12 JO rl0 M0 I0' 10. jo; io; Zenda Fox Trot Chicago Fox Trot Early in the Morning Blues Fox Trot Suez Fox Trot I Wish I Knew Fox Trot Stutterine Fox Trot 7SJt .Lont for You Bluet Fox Trot I II Build a Stairway to Paradise Fox Ti rou Kemind Me of My Mothei Zez Confrey and Hia Orchestra I Paul Whlteman and Hia Orchestral The Virginians I Clyde Doerr and Hia Orchestra' Clyde Doerr and Hia Orchestral Benson Orchestra of Chicago! si Benson Orchestra of Chicaeoi Trott Whlteman and Hia Orchestral ror. iror, it niieman suiq rui vrrcnesxra i I round a Four Leaf Clovr-r rT Tv P...1 wkiimn .i.J U!.r..-i..... J" U$2. Ruby RinE-Fox Trot Paul Whlteman and Hia Orchestra Three O'clock in the Morning-Waltz Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra1 Oriental Fox Trot (Cui't "Orientale") Paul Whlteman and Hl Orchestra 18928 10 18945 10 1 18946 10 18947 10 18948 10 16949 10 18950 10 18940 10 TAYLOR MUSIC COMPANY i cms i HVOK Just in! Come in! THE NEW NOVEMBER" VICTORS RECORDS It is a great program by great artists and every record ia worth hearing. In case you can't get in, check this list, mail it to us, and we shall send out the numbers you want. POPULAR CONCERT AND OPERATIC The Singer (EUa Maxwell) Frances Alda 66093 Cosl Fan Tutte In uomini, in soldati (Mozart) In Italian LucreziaBori 87346 Somebody Loves Me (Hattie Starr) Sophie Braslau 66084 cons unounovr-rarewea or Boris f.Mouuorgsky) reodorUiaiiapin ooobl nmiung jor i our iteiurn Vuenue-ue uirtu-Caear) . Si mes vers avaient des ailea (Hugo-Hahn) In French raguacci vesta la giubba (Leoncavallo) In Italian M & 'i ift-i 3