to THE MORNING OREG ONIAN. SATURDAY, NOVE3IBER 15, 1919. Tin Week MILLIONS OF MEN AND WOMEN ARE EAGERLY WATCHING THE WEEKLY IMPROVEMENTS IN THE "DIGEST'S" REVOLUTIONARY METHOD OF Prktkg a Greai Magazine Witlhoet Oer Typesetters Who Continue to Enjoy Their "Vacation" Midst the Beautiful Autumnal Foliage in and Around New York Five weeks ago the "Digest" faced the most seri ous emergency that has confronted its publishers since it was established nearly thirty years ago. Today we can announce that we have bridged the strike difficul ties caused by the typesetters taking a "vacation" and are publishing a magazine without their aid that is a delight to its millions of readers. The " Digest " is the only magazine of large national circulation that has been published in New York since the strike went into effect. The initial experiment, while necessarily imperfect in its results, awakened the deepest interest throughout the country. Last week's "Digest" showed marked improvement in its typographical appearance over the preceding num bers, and to fill the demand for it eleven hundred thou sand copies were printed. They were sold almost immediately after being placed on the news-stands. We Have Received Hundreds of Letters Like This: "I have just received my copy of the 'Digest' this morning, and I cannot refrain from giving you at this time my unqualified congratulations for the resource fulness with which you have met the present emer gency. " Aside ' from being a modern exemplification of ' Carrying the message to Garcia let it be a guide and a beacon light to other employers of labor. Behind it is the stuff against which the waving of the red flag cannot " and will not prevail. "The sooner workers everywhere find out that the panacea for their ills does not lie in allowing themselves to be organized into disgruntled and non-producing mobs by a lot of foreign-born, hair-tearing, hell-raising anar chists of the Trotzky type, the better for all concerned, and the sooner they will get back on the job and start to produce an honest day's labor for an honest day's pay. Therein lies the secret of making the dollar they earn buy a real dollar's worth of living; and that's what all the fight's about, anyway." This week's number of the " Digest," dated Novem ber 15, on sale today, shows still further improvement, typographically and otherwise, and an increase in size to ninety-six pages. Next week's issue will exhibit further progress, and we are confident that in the near future the reading world will acclaim the "Digest" nearly one hundred per cent perfect. Other publish ers throughout the country are following the . trail blazed by the "Digest" and are experimenting toward the adoption of the new method of publication. If you would know what is going on in politics, in industry, in science and invention, art, literature and every other interest that touches the lives of intelligent Americans, all arranged so that every phase of a sub ject can be readily understood, THE LITERARY DIGEST is the magazine you should read. This week's number will sell out rapidly, so get your copy now. 96 Pages Art Cover by Chase Dozens of Cartoons and Other Illustrations How Massachusetts Smashed Radicalism at the Polls Failure of the Coal Strike Predicted What the Labor Conference May Do Our Allies as Our Competitors When Hearst and Murphy Fall Out Japan's Dilemma in Siberia Rampageous Afghanistan Prince Kropotkin on Russia How Human Power Has Gained and Lost To Stop Race Suicide in France Starving the Insane in War-Time Britain How to Get Coal Free The Whole Art of Sniping Young English and American Writers All Ab out Printing a La Typ e writer Describing the New Method of Printing the "Digest" The First Hamlet The World's Costliest Book Beating the War Idea in Social Service Britain's Partiality to Islam Ukranians in America Where They Are Settled Social Or ganization Ukranians in Canada Production of Cereals in 1919 "Willie Krause" and the German Megalomania How High Flying Affected a Groundling A Cowboy Who Roped the Art of Being Funny A Bartender Tells What Man Did to Booze, and Booze to Man Best of the Current Poetry Personal Glimpses of Men and Events Send 10 Cents for a Copy if You Ca7i Not Buy It on the News Stand Tis a Mark of Distinction to Bo a Reader of The Literary Digest 21 ALU. (n j For a 0 Single Dime 1 at the 1 I News-Stands I Each Week I t FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary) NEW YORK 4