TIIE ALLIANCE HERALD, TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 1022. 3be Alltaurr Hrralb TUESDAY AND FRIDAY BURR PRINTING CO., Ownere Entered at the postotTice at Alliance, Stb., for transportation throuxh tlie wuJa aj second class matter. CKOKGH L. BURR, Jr Editor "EDWIN M. BURR Business Mgr. Official newspaper of the City of Alliance; otficial newspaper of Box Butt County. The telechrometer, as it name) day, his time is his own. He comes! Owned and published by The Burr Printing Company, George L. Burr, Jr., 'resident; Edwin M. Burr, Vic President C LEAN-LI' WEEK. About every bo often, every city and town jn the country has a clciin up week. Not since the days of "Spot less Town"' has any succeeded in j;et tinr every alley and vacant lot, every Imck yard and every front yurd to shining, but while lack of complete (success would seem to be di.-couranii'Ki actually ovry little bit aecomplised helps stir up enthusiasm. Some day the averse man will realize that not only for the sake of civic beauty, but as a protection to health and an up buildcr of mnj-al.s and morale, clean PurroundinK's and fre.-h paint are in valuable. When the day comes that the public is thoroughly educated, clean-up campaigns will last three hundred and sity-five days out of every year, and that's the length of time they ouht to last As it is now, all of us are willing to overlook the pile of ashes in our own back yards, while our eyes seek the trash pile on our neighbor's lot. Paint costs money and while we ap plaud the enterprise of the man who paints his house and bam, we hesitate to follow his example, even if we know- that the paint will more than save its cost by retarding decay (luring the next ten years. A lackadaisical raking of the front yard, and lick and a prom ise at the back yard and a small bon fire may be all that we can nerve our pelves to do, but it all helps. The next year we may be encouraged to do a bit more. The value of a clean-up campaign is largely cumulative. One address on fire prevention doesn't ac complish much, but continued urging wears away the lazy resistance of the most careless householder. The chamber of commerce and the city authorities deserve credit for the way they are tackling this problem Even if the end of the week doesn't show a bright and shining Alliance and hundreds of yards of fresh paint, every heap of rubbish that is cleared away will mean so many million less flies to fight during the summer. This part Fay. implies, measures conversation. Thoe who talk by the yard will pay by the yard. Those who.-e conversational powers are unlimited will have to curb their natural inrl nations or go into bankruptcy. Ah, Fuflercrs on party lines, how beautiiul, how splendid a future stretches befoie you in pios ect. Ami how srns'bb; swli n system is. Long moons i:r, the telephone coin-1 panics adopted this system on long distance ris. If tliey had ilied to make a flat charge for long di.-trineo ervice, they would have b'len bank rupt. Street car t ystems have adopt ed zones; o has the post office. Every other thing is sold by the pound, the yard, the dozen or some definite meas ure. Only telephone talk is cheap. The company didn't yr into the telechrometer system without investi- gat'on. Numerous te ts were made, and all of them showed the same Jiing that the folks who did the most talk ing didn't pay for what they got. It was found th:.t one bu. iness house having two lines used an average of ten minutes a day on both of ;hem; another, with the same equipment, u.-ed an aggregate of r,"7) minutes Yet both firms paid the same for phone service. On one four-party residential line, one tubscrilrtT u ed less than ten minutes monthly, while a neighbor used an aggregate of 2,010 minutes. I ins iact, l no reort says, was ills covered by other subscribers to the party line long lwforc the meter was installed. Uh, the telechrometer is a Messing. It sol vps the problem of what to do with the telephone pests. Take our o'd friend, the listener-in. The tele chrometer begins to work th minute the receiver is lifted from the hook Thus, nlthough the party-line listener cannot be prevented from snooping, at least those who are listened to can have the satisfaction of knowing that the listener will pay for what she hears ami it will undoubtedly cost her more than it is worth. The follow who leaves the receiver down and for gets it will never do it more than once. With the company getting paid so much per word for all talking that is done, central will have less tempta tion to insist that the line is busy The Washington company is trying out the system for two months. Mean time, a world is waiting breathlessly or nearly so for the result of the try out. If it works but it must work, that's all there is too it. Such a boon to telephoning mankind cannot be al lowed to fall into the discard. THE REST CURE W. V. Matthews, former president of the Pioneer State bank and the Guar anty Securities company of Omaha which went to the wall through some- of the country doesn't have the natural on'8 mismanagement, i now an in advantages of many others. . There' niate of the state penitentiary. His are fewer trees the lawns are not so green the winds now and then bring in new sand to cover the pavement. But if it takes ten years t,o awaken the civic consciousness in favor of keeping the city clean, painted and free from eyesores, it will lie worth all the time it takes. Stranger still is the fact that clean ing up sometimes arouses actual re. sentment. The Alliance Tennis club recently rented two or three vacant lots on one of the city's principal busi ness streets. They tire making it ir.to a place that will be a credit to the city. They thought, when they started out, that the only toes they'd be treading upon would be those of tent shows and carnival companies, UrAi-tunat. ?.'e Vacant lots have been used by a dozen farmers who tied their teams there on Saturday afternoons, N one disputes that the lots look better; no one disputes that there are places just as convenient to tie horses, but some people have been crabbing because the team-owners weren't consulted. In the o'd days, the same wail went up when the hitching racks disappeared from the main streets of dozens of towns, but two years afterward not a and goes just like one of the prison of ficials, receives callers, his wife visits him once or twice a week, and on sev eral occasions he has had his steno grapher come to the penitentiary and take dictation. He is how organizing a holding comp-iny for the Uuarant Trust und is inviting, wkh the ro operation of Ivs business asociate , the two hundred .-tockholdrrs in Ju concern to join. Warden Kenton remaiks that Mat thew is a "very capable fellow aiid a darned nice fellow, too.'' He must bo. Aside from ihe fact that he is not permitted to leave the grounds and that his golf score must be suffering omewhat, Mr. Matthews must have hard v. ork realizing that he is in jail. I'eihrps a golf four e can be built for him before long- he has served but six weeks of a year's senienre. But what do the other convicts thin'; of these privileges to a man with money? There's only one way of looking at it either Mr. Matthews was guilty of embezzlement or he wa. innocent. The court took his plea of guilty and sentenced him. Mr. Mat thews thinks it a vicarious murtvrdom. The court nn;l have believed him guilty or it would not have imposed r sentence upon him. If guilty of em bezzlement, the b'?st of intentions fither lie fore or after his sentence should not alter the fact that hi pri. on term is intended as a puni. h rnent not as a vacation. . Mr. Matthews had a better chance in life than ninety-nine out of a hun dred of his fellow co.nicts. The priv ileges extended him show that he is being given that much advantage in making good. And this is a country where men are free and eijual. Bunk! read and decide for yourself whether the criticism is justified, it beine under: toed tht Vordsvo:t!i, who has long since gone to his reward, has no longer any worries as to the appre ciation of his gcniu: In you'h from lock to rock I went, From hiii to hill fn discontent Of p'ei sure hi"h and turbulent, Mo.-t pleased v.hen most uneasy; Hut new my own delights I make', My thi t at every rill can slake. And Nitu.e's loe of thee partake, Her much beloed daisy 1 The winter in the g"ilar,d wears, That thinly drvk his lew gray L-Jrs. Spring parts the clouds, w th so. tost airs, That she may sun thee; Whole summer-fields p. re thine by right ntl Autumn, melancholy wight! is a sort of glorified incarceration, ac cording to the newspaper reporters, just as his conviction was a sort of a martyrdom. Mr. Matthews, in a loi g statement which was pr'nted in full by the newspapers, claimed that he was "guilty of no crime or wrong doing, but had pleaded guilty to an embezzlement charge as the best means of holding the business together and saving most out of it for the bene fit or those whose money had gone into it." The court sentenced Mr. Matthew;, reluctantly, to a year in jail. The pri:on authorities reluctantly re ceived him. But it was plain to be feen that he could not mix with toe com mon convicts, and he was immediately rated as a trusty and given some easy work in the storehouse. He ate in the regular prison dining room for a day or two, and he admits that he is "glad to have hail that experience," but as a trusty he is permitted to dine with a few favored souls in. the warden's kitchen. He wears a natty business suit of blue serge, with a blue cap and hose to match, russet shoes, neat neg ligee shirt and necktie. When Mr. Matthews' duties as as 1 & : , i r . - . l. voice was heard against he move. The. Naiam' " m-'" ti ior uie tf. l.l :.. it i l.. i iicinui is in wivor, u need ne, oi con tributing to a fund to place horses in a feed barn while their owners ate shop ping here, but any old time a vacant lot can be cleaned up, lot's do it. G E N I I S U N RECOGMZ E D. All amateur writers have harsh words to say of the critics who reject their manuscripts. Whenever you talk to one of these writers, you'll get an earful of such words as "favoritism," "incompetence, ' and others that are even worse, but when all is said and done, the critics, judging by the popu larity of the magazines, seem to under stand their jobs fairly well. At least they gauge the public taste with Fome accuracy, and while now and then some great work of art is delayed in reach ing the public because the publishers' readers are stupid and stubborn, it'. seldom that any masterpieces are lost to the world permanently. At least great authors all remind us that in the days before fame marked them for its own, every mail used to bring back rejected manuscripts. Mrs. Bertha Greene, art supervisor in the ScottsblufT schools, who has con tributed little bits of verse and life to the magazines at intervals, became convinced some time ago that the pub lishers and critics gave her efforts ony the most superficial sort of an exam ination. Anil so she hatched a diaboli cal plot. She copied Wordsworth's 'To the Daisy" and sent it to a St. Louis publishing house as her own. Back it came, bearing this criticism: "It :rems to get nowhere, is rambling, lacking unity of thought." And now Mrs. Greene is laughing wickedly, having convinced herself that her own poems have not been get ting the attention they deserve. It's a little difficult to say whether this failure to recognize a product of un questioned genius is sufficient evidence to warrant a conviction. Mrs. Greene ihwuld do as do all the other struggl ing writers keep the mails hot with the manuscript until its worth has been appreciated. We refuse to condemn the publishers until we know whether the author sent this one poem alone, or with some of her own productions. Mayhap Wordsworth's "To a Daisy," was on the bottom of the pile. The criticism fits most amateur produc tions and even poets with a reputation might consider it as a caution. If the poor critic waded through half a doren poems, his mind might be suficently clouded that he couldiit recognize genius if he met it face to face. As to Wordsworth's poem, you may Doth in thy crimson head delight When rains are on thee. HE DOESN'T KNOW (World-Herald) 'Go.h," sai l K..tty Aibuckle. "I don't Know what is all about, ior I ii. ought i was well sU.itel on my 'comeback.' " j IL' doesn't know that re.-pon. ibility for tbe death of Virginia lu p? is o dy I one count in the indictment against him' ijeioie tlie coins, or pu'iiic op:n on. I He dresn t know that ac;uttul of1 tae ih.i'rge of manslaughter, largely t on to. tiiriony that tiie dead girl was no better than he, doesn't absolve him from paving the penally for otienses committed against common decency and morality. He doesn't know that the profession which made him a national figure is fighting to maintain Its Independence l'lom legislative meddling ana that to win that light it must shake oil' the incutius of those who understand m little what they owe to it. He doesn't know that the order of Will Hays, guardian of the morals of the movie-, is Wie best stioke of policy ever made to inspire confidence in the public that movie managers niu hon estly trying to develop u high stan dard lor tl.cir art. He doesn't know that easy money isn't a public license to indulge in it perpetual oibuuch of last cjis, ni.-t. women, bootleg booze and pajar.ia par ties. He doesn't know that Fatty nlono is responsible for the scandalous i.ml disgraceful exposures which his iriends saw only as "rotten publicity i lie poor iKiuui A TAX ON TALK. Heaven's choicest bless'ngs upon the Inventor. Suffering poverty, jeers ami other unpleasant things, the inventor works on alone. And from Everett, Wash., comes the joyful news that will bring tears of gladness to nine out of ten people who subscribe to telephot.es, The tenth man or more probablv, woman will utter maledictions, but if these pests should put in the ret of their lives cursing and bewailing their just retribution, they would never even up the score. The inventor has come to the rescue of those of us who have suffered from the talkative voice on the wire. The Puget Sound Telephone company on April 1 installed telechrometers all over its system, and henceforth, unless the plant is wrecked by irate men and women drilligators, patrons in that fortunate city will pay for what they r- one-eleven cigarettes 9 m T?k Tfircc rricndtv TURKISH VIRGINIA BURLEY III II 11111 r-i 1.1 I 1 ' I J UV .T1 LOT I i v I if orFIFTEEN Jn a new package that fits the'pocket At a price that fits the pocket-book The same unmatched blend of Turkish. 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Genuine Ford parts and skilled mechanics. 1 IMPS COURSEY& MILLER Alliance, Nebraska 9.9 K We're strong for the Clean-Up and Paint-Up Campaign Starts April 23, 1 922, and Lasts Forever And while you are lending your suppoit to this worthy cam paign, give a moment's thought to cleaning up and straightening out your finances. ARE YOU SAVING PART OF YOUR INCOME? If you are not, you ought to be. We have plans that make it veasy, if you'll say the word. 57c INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS FIRST STATE BANK Alliance -! Nebraska