nvo THE .ALLIANCE HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY GO, 1922. Shr Mianrr Hrralft TUESDAY AND FRIDAY BURR PRINTING CO., Owneri Entered at the po.stofTice at Alliance, b., for transportation through the ails as econd class matter. will l.c shipped by water, even after a t-rder, they scoin i-cumlal unl notori-py.-ttm of inland waterwiivs hip i rr- " . !. no ... ... ...11.: t . How mu.h of an effect uiif . , " , iown tionnl nin.H of trarurorta-. 1 6 U"tr!y .Konc lo lhe ,!emnilifl" GEORGE L. BURR, Jr. -Editor KDWIN M. BURR Business Mgr. "nment control. Will the inland l OCtPd ? this hi tion have on railroad freight infos Will the Auvinp4 on n few items he mfTioicnt to olfspt the, additional money we may have to rav on others? Tim Miltn..i, w Rr,...,.i u.. no,n t t HlXllM CM I'V I'll MUC ., .. . rn;.i .i t,oi ., i,I(w 'il these wild einment control. Will the inland ft"", anyway ? chamber of commerce, an ait associa t on, a parent-teachers' association and a chapter of the D. A. IJ., to say nothing of lodges and rending looms. ptories ever get Official aewppaper of the City of Alliance; official newspaper of Box Butte County. Owned and published by The Burr Printing Company, George L Burr, r President; Edwin M. Burr, Vice rreeddent. ONE OUT OF MANY. It happens in the best regulated Hates. A storm of protest is ansing from Colorado, where Governor Shoup, few days ago, pardoned Harold F. Kenwood after the latter had served but eight years of a sentence to life imprisonment for murder. Henwood hot ami killed a man for whom he 'M gunning for domestic reasons, but his manner of seeking revenge was. so carelew that he managed to kill an in nocent bystander and seriously cripple a third man. Henwood had money, or friends who vere willing to spend it on him, which amounts to the same thing. At his first trial, the jury brought in a ver dict of life imprisonment. Some way or another, a retrial was secured. Hen wood expected an acquittal, but the second jury brought in the second ver dict of puilty, fixing the penalty at banging. This was commuted to life imprisonment. He started on the life long job in And now, Mr. Henwood is free to go where he pleases, eo long as he lays away from IV-iver. His nttoi rey, John T. Ilottomley, appeared lie- fore the governor and pardon board, wept a few crocodile tears, and the victory was won. The trial iudue and prosecuting attorney were not consult ed, although this is u-.ua) in Colorado, u is in .-curasna. It was known that Henwood had been a most troubje sorno prisoner at the penitentiary nt tanon City. And so Colorado is arou ed. Prom inent attorneys, club womon and ci aens are voicing their condemnation, but thats all the fiirther is will vo After a few weeks,' this sensation will be forgotten and others will hold th attention of the public. Henwood, with money behind him, will still lie free, vnue hundreds of lesser criminals vvith less influential friends, will still De incarcerated. it is cases like this, not only in Colorado but in every other state, which has brought about a (Ipmnnil that the pardoning power be taken way irom governors. At one time, when it was comparatively easy to railroad one's enemies to prison, this port or a safeguard was needed.' It ifn't now. The whole pardoning sys- lem r.os become a menace to good povernment. Prisons are no longer places of punishment. The new theory is that criminals ure sick men, and prisons are hospitals. The minute a man apparently shows signs of im provement, out he goes. A fake cure is as good as the genuine, so far as the criminal is concerned. No pardon should be granted to any criminal for any infraction of the law until it is not only probable, but prac tically certain that he will go straight henceforth. Assurance should be !oubly sure in the case of murderers. It is high time that there be an end to the mawkish sentimentality which has made it easy for criminals to get away with almost anything. waterways be simply another tremen dous drain on the public treasury, and like so many other public schemes, cost 110 for every dollar saved? There are plenty of reclamation and similar projects where the government THE ALLIANCE EXPERIMENT (Beatrice Express) Alliance has just closed her first year under the city manager plan of government. She is the first munici pality in the state to try the experi- can spend money and be assured that.S, rHkSS the returns will be infinitely greater i watched with interest. man me outgo. j nere was a timel n,lul,ll"K io press cuspaicnes, an io when river transportation was the rule cnl riP0,:iti"n been silenced by the in this country. It was discarded 1-1 nHle ." r'P. .?tin Figures Are vonleiful things, whe ther they be mathematical or natural. Thus, the powerful lobby that is sup porting the rivers ami huibors bill, which h espectcU to come up In tne senate Within the next month, is show ing that on u single recent shipment hi .-corasKa wheat moving by river and rail from Omaha to New Orleans, a saving of JT.r.OO in freight was ef fected. With this as a basis, it is easy to figure the tremendous saving on the entire crop of the western states, Profit is ns sure and certain us the little advertisements would have us be lieve is to be found in growing mush rooms, ginseng or chickens. e are reminded that this shipment of wheat went partly by rail and partly by water. Had it gone all the way by Vater from Omaha to New Orleans. the saving would have been at least $15,000. "The great advantage to the farmers, manufacturers, merchants and shippers generally of the vast ter ritory tributary to the Missouri river, from its mouth to the end of naviga tion, in giving them access to and from the sea, is beyond computation, as no one can vision at this time the preat ossibilities of the complete de velopment of this important portion of the United States." Before we acclaim this great saving too hiirhly. let's do a little figuring of jDUr own. How much of the vast crop LET'S ALL FIGURE, in this country. It was discarded be cau.-e rail was found to be more efficient and economical. that the country can worry alonir with the railroads, and that they can bring about economies which will bring the cjist down within reason, but in any event, it's doubtful whether the public in this part of the country, which must be served by railroads, can gain any thing by supporting a measure which will inevitably tend toward raising pieiniunis covr ring two months to have ilnir insurance reinstated. Old 'nary piudence dictates the nc cessity of every ex-service man know ing ju.-t what his government in.-ur-ance I ights are. ix hundred thousand veterans e.re now carrying govern ment policies. How manv of the re maining 4,000.000 veterans, who once held policies but let them lapse, do not know their own rights? NOTHING GAINED (Lincoln Star) Carl A. Sutter and wife are creating something of a sensation by attempt ing to live in the Maine woods for a month in Adam and Eve fashion, their purpose, they say, being to prove that man may depend wholly upon nature even in this highly civilized world. They entered the woods last Saturday, but emerged for a few minutes ye-ter- rub .nn sticks together and manv pro day to ten their adventures. Though pies today make their garments 'out of somewhat scratched by thorns and Imik. n .i I them are many tiangers if overdone, at what are they ro;ng to prove, W hether this man and woman will even though they live for n month in benefit or injure themselves, physical LoVTm y.nav Iraly made ly, will only be known at the end of bark c othmg and a timber shelter. I their thirty days. It is a iree coun Mr. Sutter started a fire the first .lay tiy ami one mav do a great many by rubbing two sticks of wood together things without giving account for hi lor about thirty m.nutes. So far they act.ons, but so far as any good to so i w? , f P,n;.'Pa,1-v; roots. but ciety resulting from their experiment, they will probably catch same game it is difficult to see just what such in tno npnr future At tVio mI f I c i . :r. v , i .. . . . utiieiit jh vo oe. imny nays iney w.n oe aoie to wnte or tell their experiences which will not be unlike those of Robinson Crusoe or any number of other shipwrecked travelers who have lived for even longer periods in the wilderness. In dians long ago started their fires by Wet wash calls received before 8:30 will be returned by 2 p. m. 20 lbs. for $1. Alliance Steam Laundry. 3&.tf It's possible year., while the cost of city Rovem- . . I mitnl f c. i' tint i mi liiwK u . . i I was neany z.i per cent higher than lor me lust year under the citv mana ger plan of government. The report voni'nups: manager plan went into elfe.-t, there wasa balance in the city treasury of exclusive or registered warrants. while on May 1, 1V22, the end of the ursi year under the present city gov ernment, there was a net balance of the rates that we must pay. Figures' tLTjn" a net ba.,anc? of i . . .. . K 1-10, after the city manager s sa arv u ni .c, oi course, oup n is an ac- of 55,000 was paid. Mr. Kemmish is millvllil (rni I T i Y T M 1 f I 1 11 .. . lim w t !..lhvn CV. VII(V UUI. llUJf HOLLYWOOD THE PURE Funny thing, the way impressions get, spread about. Nine out of ten people will say, if you ask them their opinion, that Hollywood, Cali, is a den of iniU:ty and a sink of sin. They will point to the shrieking headlines in the newspapers; they will whisper of movie scandals of murders, di vorces, bigamy and worse. There w i l be talk of booze breakfasts, and din ners and suppers of wild orgies and all that sort of thing. Two or three nationally known writers have visited Hollywood. Their lepori is mat us a lair sort of a dump, with plenty of shade trees. Irv. lob') remarked that he didn't fin I 1 ooze running in the gutters, and iliat most of the movie colony ,-ecmed to be hind workers, even if thev weren't hard lookers, or words to that elfect. Hut even Irv s word didn't convince any of us, really. Hut at last there is evidence that cannot be overlooked or winked at. It IS absolute1 V food. Tbn Hiwlnoti W man's club of Hollywood is sending out a protest to other club women over the country, asking for simple justice. And inasmuch as we love justice, no mntter where we find it, 'tis but fair to listen to the business women. And this is what they say: We Wunt vnn in LnntiT iKi ...v. I t, J v HI: t J U LI I about Hollywood; that it is one of the art centers of thp nutinn- rt.t . nowned art:sts. writnra mnciniaKc , IIIM.'IVIOllfp make this city their home; that Holly wood with 75.00(1 of homes of the highest class, with a church attendance of 40,000; Holly wood the Obe the only place in the country where me ingiimage i'!ay is presented each summer: wnere. a so. in a natural nm- ihitheati-p in ilm liillo iia . nit; KICUl Ihilharmon.c Orchestra may be heard. Hollvwood has thf fotlnu-i A high school of 2,500 pupils; 11 grade mm rifTiu private scnoois anil the southern br niuiornia wun us 3.70) . stu onts. Among its many civic organizations are: I he chamber of commerce, sec ond in size in the state; the Hollywood iu.-nit?s men s c ud: tne tin vu-wu Business Woman's clnh? tVi vinii... - - I I " I I 1 WOOll Art nssfwiiifinn. Pa.rt.T..L 1 iiiiiii-i 1 iv 11- ers association; Daughters of Ameri can nevoiunon; women s club of Hol lvwood: Krnton:i irwtitnto nf TV. phy; Christian Science reading rooms; .uson:c lotige ana many others. The HoHvwnhl Piicma.-o ww-v , L t-- . t viiivtii a club with a membershin of who are business owners, heads of de partments, manairoi-a rmnirlotli.n. . , r,-.-, ..n.uiuint: of all professions, including education al cu vines, or necessity has its hand on the rv.!i.e of its nnhii. in.v, v, movinfr pictme industry and it value to tne community atja the world. This muu.iry. comn-..d of about 12,000 PCOflta. thrliii loc iU .1: .... ptoducer and writer. These people nc iwnu.li u.seiui lives, even as you and I they are inoffensive as to con duct, and moved by ideals of a high limler a four-venr rnnti-nrt wtm-ti'nr. I IHI 1 at ifo.OOO a year and increasing $f00 a year up to $6,500. The first year under the city manager plan was the only year with one exception, in the iusi seven years mat the cost of run ning the city has not greatly exceeded the revenue. This lpft a eari'mm - - li iwu.t iifiair cial situation for the city manager to lace wnen he began, but in -spite of the heavy bonded indebtedness which is being paid olT little by little, the snowing made is considered exception al by the entiie city council, who are unanimously benind the present gov i" 1 iiiiieni. It stands to reason that one exper ienced man. workinir under thu mbw, al direction of :n eliHte.l secure netter results than when re si-omihility i.i divided and uncertain i.eauice took a Ions.- forward step wnen sue roi p iwr ri- nrn'iii nn 'i Hiiibaviuii down Horn a counnl of r ir 1 tn ii i;m i.iission of three, ancl she refu-ed em ph::t. rally to go backward when the iuestion was submitted lat year. It is not only possible, but probi.'b'e, that tMuany grauiying results might be secured from the adoption of '.he citv manager plan. It all deperds, of course, on the character of the man chosen, but the personal equation must always te considered, whether uHiiirii. commission or manager are to be filled. Mr. Keilimish. thp All!nnill manmri.! was formerly eh toured in tmbl i litilitv service, his last employment having leen us manager of the York electric ngni piant oetore going to Alliance lhat sort of experience should have been, and apparently was, valuable training for his present line of work THE INSURANCE THAT LAPSEI (American Leo-ion WpV1v A world war veteran died at the age of twenty-six in a middle western citv a month ago leaving his widow and ins uaDy son to tace the world with out funds. He had permitted his War Risk insurance policy to lapse several momns oeiore nis deatn and never had renewed it. The most poignant fact about th's u-agedy is that had this ex-service man only known he could have rein stated his insurance policy while he was waiting for death. He could have arranged ior nis tamilv to receive $10,000. the amount nf 'tho which he paid premiums during the war. He had been seriously ill for a year, suffering from a disease whose earliest sj mpioms nad developed during his eiirhteen months in Fruna am.- lations governing both war risk temi insurance and converted insurance pro vide that if a person is suffering with a disease or injury incurred in or ag- irravaieu dv arnvA mi itsrv naval service during the world war, he may reinstate his policy, provided mat, ne is not totally and permanently disabled, by the payment of all pre miums in arrears, together with in terest at the i-hta nf A na- .n no,. year compounded annually from thp date of euch f rcmiura. This provision, ver.cn.her, applies tc nica lMio are surtering from disease or injury men who would be refused new polices or reinstatements by uri- vate insurance companies. It should be noted, however, that reinstatements of term or converted insurance may not be made after a man is totallv and permanently disabled. Men in good health are not required to pay up all duck premiums tney need only pay fllf ft MBfS Mi1 n Our advanced equipment and efficient organization make it possil.le for us to conduct a beautiful, satisfactory funeral in a manner that meets with the public's approbation. Our efforts are always marked by courteous anxiety to please mose wno employ us. business connections m every state. Miller Mortuary Phones: Day, 311 Night, 522 or 533 MORTICIANS 123 West Third Street THE UNIVERSAL CAR The Ford Sedan with electric starting and lighting system, with demountable rims with 3$-inch tires all around, is a family car of class and comfort, both in summer and in winter. For touring it is a most comfortable car. The large plate glass windows make it an open car when desired, while in case of rain and all inclement weather, it can be made a most delight ful closed car in a few minutes. Rain-proof, dust proof, fine upholstering, broad, roomy seats. Simple in operation. Anybody can safely drive it. While it has all the distinctive and economical merits of the Ford car in operation and maintenance. Won't you come in and look it over?. V Sri ihjuSSSSei a f FATE BANf Tl) J you come in and look it over?. Ill pfeS!; ' COURSE Y & MILLER I j u Alliance, Nebraska F ' v ' ft v ego 00 co O qp0 o o j A snpnrlinfr int? nnrl n linmo hvpxr Mfr fl-irkJi. o-ff x 0 vnu ciXtA Ull UULb cliU very similar. An exhilaration that proves empty a "morning af- tnv" fillpfl with Hvparv flp;nnnflpnrP Anrl 7 , -ii i 1 "w... vuunuutu 1 ciJCWUUU Ul either will bring ultimate ruin. Tf vnn ponsirlpr thp fnrnvp nf m " ; o j uui lanuiy, u. yuu atrt'lv innpnpnrlpnfP n nnnnv n rl nop thoi-o ic rmr u- ...:n i.t 1' " " i'i'i' "a t ikJ iiiu Liiat Will J1L1 J iX great deal an ever-growing bank account. Come in and start one TODAY! The First State Bank x