1'HK OMAHA KfcE: THURSDAY, JUNE 'J9, 1922. The Morning Bee MORN NG F V E N INC SUNDAY THC nil riltUSHINO COMPANY KIUOK 1. I.THht. IMklisasr. . BHaMia, G.e. Mssmst. MCMIER OF THC ASSOCIATED MUS tw asmsuis. rw wa tw at if a as, u )? M I M mmMIwui f 411 m iuw mum St MHWH HMW HI ISIS HW, 4M SISS IS iMkl Mm Slt tWW. u nss) f isvssiissu er ear sparisi imun sis mm Net vr ta-tulaU ! Tea Oassaa , Mar, U Daily 72,033 Sunday 78,642 B. BHE.ww.rn. Gnml KlUflf ELMER I. ROOD, Cirsulstiea Hu,H vera I ukKrlssn Mm M this U 4m y ( June, IfU. M W. M. QUIVtT. Nelsry fiislts TW Oaths ass W t Mkw ef IM ! hwi ef flmlMlaM, Iks nmkihi ssuunir sa wmtuuoa ssoiia, set tm (imiMH It nn Itflf SS4JU UMt S(iaMUa. BCC TELEPHONE Prlts Branra Eirhaas. Ask tot the Dfrtmvvi p u.ni4 r., Ni.k r.n. a(i.. is At la EalUrlal DepsrtBtat, AT Untie 1021 er !!. 1000 lis OFFICES Wsla Offlre lllh ana Ferns. Cm. Bluffi . . . . U Scett St. South Bid 4938 S. Utk St. Nw York tl Kifik Avsau rVsibinf toa 4: Star BIJg. Chitsgs 171 Sugar Bldf. fins, irsnc iit Rut fit. Honera BRINGING ORDER TO IRELAND. Processes of order are being- supported in Dublin by the severest of measures. Regrettable as it may appear to any thinking person, some recalcitrant men have set themselves up to defy the constituted provisional government. This government is justify ing its right to the confidence and support of the Irish people by moving sternly and vigorously to es tablish its authority. Self-government has been and is being put to an intensive test in Ireland. All the extraneous ele ments of religious and political differences may be omitted from present discussion, although it is dif ficult entirely to overlook them, as they are at the root of much of the disorder. The great outstanding fact is that a concrete program was put before the people of south Ireland, and by their votes they de cided on a plan for action; to carry this plan into effect a parliament was chosen, and under this the government of the Irish Free State is to be set up. Extremists of the so-called "republican" party have resisted to the utmost, and force has been em ployed to dislodge them from buildings in which they were entrenched. So far as this operation is concerned, its end was in sight from the beginning; the government's forces were sure of victory, al though the ultimate settlement may be delayed for weeks. What must impress the American beholder is the fact that the provisional government has ceased to temporize with the opposition. It is not north against south Ireland, nor Orangeman against Catholic, but the representatives of a majority against a faction of the people of south Ireland. Rory O'Connor is perhaps as devoted as any to the cause of Irish free dom; his advocacy of the republic has been proven to the very limit, but his final defiance was directed against the people of Ireland, and not the crown of England. There was his mistake. Order will be restored in Ireland, for the crimes that have stained the land during the last few months can not long be endured, nor will they ever effectually serve in assisting the erection of a free government. Only despotism possibly can rest on assassination, while bloody reprisals settle no issues. With peace will come prosperity. The dream of a republic will never die, and perhaps may in time come true, and the Free State is a long step along the road. That the government is strong enough to defend itself against armed rebels is a good omen. AGE AND THE TOWN. Did you ever shed a figurative tear for the town that has grown old or the part of a city that has grown old? Human beings grow old and feeble, decrepit and forgetful. So do towns and neighborhoods grow old and dilapidated, ugly and useless. The man or woman, as long as mind remains, still finds pleasure in memories of days gone by, still is able to-direct the. mind to thoughts of happy days, still retains thereby a degree of comfort independent of the immediate and present surroundings. The town that is worn out has no such recompense. A neighborhood grown old is a scene of tumble down shacks, of unpainted boards, of crumbling bricks. There are no new buildings; repairs cause wild excitement. . Everybody passes it by, save those few whom necessity forces -to tarry in it. Laughter goes. Drab cheerlessness remains. There are many such towns in the eastern states. Some there are in Nebraska. There are such neigh borhoods in every city. There will be more. Some times these towns "come back." Sometimes a turn of population trend brings new people with new ambi tions. Then old buildings are torn down and new ones reared. That is the one chance the old town has which human beings miss. The old town may live in hopes; there is one chance in many that it will be reborn. THREE BILLION "FARM DOLLARS. The bread basket of-America consists of Ne braska, Iowa, Missouri, Minnesota, Kansas and the Dakotas. This fertile region, classified as the "north central states west of the Mississippi river," pro duced farm crops valued at close to one and a half billion dollars last year. A sum even larger than this represents the value of animal products from these seven states. Three billion dollars is an impressive total for a single industry, but even so ft bids fair to be eclipsed this year through better prices and a more balanced yield. " The cutting of wheat has started, and one after another the fruits 6t the harvest will begin to move to market The devastating experiences of a year in which the prices of farm products were shot to pieces mate the coming season one that will be anxiously witched. A good farm yield and a stable market mean everything! to the prosperity, not only of the farmers, but of the nation as well. BIGGER BATHING POOLS NEEDED. One of the' sad accompaniments of summer is the fact that many young lives are lost through drowning accidents. The invitation of the cool water is irresistible on a sultry day, and caution often floats away on a wave of kappiness, and the water that is so alluring proves relentless and claims a victim. Under any circumstances the tragedy of a drowning is depressing, but it is especially so when it occurs where seemingly every precaution has been taken to prevent such mishaps, and where trained experts are on guard all the time. If the victim happen to be a swimmer, almost fit to be classed as an expert, then the event appears almost inex cusable. Yet these very provisions contributed to the death of little "Pete" Gillotte, at Riverview park. The life guards were on duty, the boy could swim, and yet he was drowned. Why? Because the bathing pool at Riverview is too small to meet the demands upon it. Between 150 and 200 bathen were in the pool at tht time of the accident. This overcrowding led to confusion, and in some sy the lad was stunned and drowned and nobody misted him in tht crowd. Tht remedy is bathing pools of larger dimensions. Omaha has plenty of room in it parks, and plenty of water available, to furnish swimming holes that will be big enough to takt cart of thost who want to uit them. No greater boon can bt con. ferred during tht summer days than tht privilege of a plunge into tht clean, cold water of a well ap pointed bathing pool, and monty spent to provide such comfort for old and young is money well spent. Hut it It only well spent when it maket also for safety, and the overcrowded pool is not safe. THE PUBLIC STAKE IN INDUSTRY. Rather interesting is tht way in which great busi ness interests art turning, not to captains of industry, but to public men, sometimes loosely classified as politicians, to pull them out of their difficulties. First Judge Landis was called at arbiter for baseball; then tht moving picturt corporations secured Will Hays. The theatrical Interests are reported to have unsuc cessfully invited Barney Baruch to a similar posi tion. And only the other day Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected president of the American Construction council, with wide powers in regulating tht asso ciated building industries of tht country. In each of thest instances tht purpose it to clean up evil conditions. The Lockwood investigation of the building trades in New York showed a condition of affairs that shocked and amazed the public. Mr. Roosevelt, it Is announced, will "co-ordinate and standardize efforts for increasing the efficiency of all kinds of construction." No doubt he will, but the establishment of moral standards, the elimination of graft, restoration of competition and the winnlnz of public confidence is plainly a major duty. It it not a matter empty of significance that busi ness men thut should turn to public men to lift them out of their difficulties. These arbiters or dictators, through years of public service have won the esteem of large numbers of people. In a way they represent the idea that the purpose of this nation was not the amassing of wealth but tht benefit of the citizena, both as producers and consumers. This theory by which business is considered not as an end but a means, to be run for the good that is in it rather than entirely for the profit, is taking hold of the na tional mind. OPINION OF State anoV Nation THE BEE'S LETTER BOX DEMOCRATS AND THE FARMERS. Whatever the result of the. primary election in North Dakota, Porter J. McCumber's standing with the democratic party leaders is fixed. He has re ceived the endorsement of the farm bloc in the sen ate, and this is objected to by the party which objects to anything a republican does. Senator McGumber is especially offensive to the democrats just now, be cause his name is attached to the tariff bill, under which an effort is being made to secure protection for farm produce. At the moment an onslaught is being made on the farm bloc because of its support of a republican, candidate for United States senator, a violent attack is launched against the agricultural schedule of the McCumber tariff bill by Senator Walsh, democrat, from Massachusetts. He is willing that the farmers have little or no protection, and in this seems to voice , the sentiment of his party. The connection is direct and the conclusion is unavoidable, that the whole move is one to blind the farmers to their true inter est, and to secure votes for the free trade opponents of the pending bill. Members of the farm bloc knew what they were doing when they recommended Porter J. McCumber. to the republicans of North Dakota in preference to Lynn J. Frazier. The choice will be made by the voters, who will consult their own interests, regard less of advice from the democrats. HIGH PLACE AWAITS GREEN. Joseph W. Fordney of Michigan, chairman of the house committee on ways and means, has just an nounced that he will not be a candidate for re-election. He will retire at the close of his present term, after a service of twenty-four years in congress. The interest locally in this fact is that the retirement of Mr. Fordney will bring William Raymond Green of Council Bluffs into the spotlight. He is the ranking republican member of the committee, and, if the republicans retain control of the house, will by right of seniorfty become chairman of the most important of all its committees. This will bring a further dis tinction to add to the already long list Iowa has achieved by reason of the service of its senators and representatives in the congress. Mr. Green has been a member of the ways and means committee for many years, and knows the history of the revenue laws of the land from the first. The prospect of his elevation to the chairmanship of the committee, and therefore to a place of control in all revenue legisla tion, must be gratifying to his constituents. AMERICA'S AID TO HAITI. Hectic discussion of the situation in Haiti and San Domingo was handed a severe jolt by the senate special committee on Monday. This body has spent many weeks inquiring into the political, social and economic affairs of the island, and has made particu lar effort to ascertain the effect of the presence there of the United States forces. It finds: In brief, under the treaty (between Haiti and the United States), the peace of the republic, the solvency of its government, and the security of its people have been established for the first time for many years. The report contains a recommendation that a re duced force of marines be kept in the island to secure order and uphold the government until peace is fully established. Mistakes are admitted, but the con clusion is that American intervention has been of "constructive service" to the two black republics. This is a perfect answer to the propaganda of the critics. TONS OF RECKLESSNESS. Three men, at a single police court session Tues day, each drew sentences of fifteen days in jail on charges of reckless automobile driving. That is as it should be. A man who hits another over the head with a hammer, without provocation, faces a term in prison for assault with intent to murder, if nothing worse. The automobile driver who hurls a weight of from one to two tftns through the streets at upwards of thirty miles an hour, or without due care for others on the thoroughfare, is potentially in the same class. Probablj 25 per cent of the students now in American colleges would achieve greater success in living if they had never entered, is the amazing declaration of President Faunce of Brown. If this is true, there is something seriously the matter with the educational system no use to try to blame the boys. Rev. G. K. Stark, a minister from Minneapolis, is speaking in the churches of Sweden in favor of prohibition, greatly to the disgust of the wets. And the prospects are that they will feel even more bitter after the national election on this question. Thrv Duma." Frm lha Clstslsna riila-Ditter. Three tramp on a Wabash freight train: the train rumbles at midnight throtith the little town of lisment. HI. The liotioes noii.a that there la a houea on Are: their dual na la not prissing: they tumble off the train to Investigate. No one else in awake in Hement. In the house are a father an. I a mother and a little child. The trampa do not know who la inside, but they derm It a good tint for precipitate action. They break down a door, awaken the imperiled householders and lead them to aafety. Aa the home smolders to charred ruina another freljht train cmties rumbling through Hement. and when the people look for the trampa there are no trampa. ll waa all merely an episode in I ho life of the three wanderer. There waa nothing; the grateful vil la Be could do for tlifin. Confirmed biima" they were. The merry life of the bumpers and the "blind bag gage" wna the life for them. Prob ably they considered it rare good lurk that another freight came along Just when it did. Otherwise they might have had to stay in De ment, and that would have been bad medicine. You never can tell about human Impulses, you cannot with aafety predict Juat when and where nobil ity will be disclosed. rerhaps nine out of ten tramps would have atuck to their Itinerary and let all Dement burn. Bement was blesaed by the providential advent of three hoboes whose hearts were not all droas. It was quaint, odd, whimsical; this In terposition of society's outcasts. But it Is safe to assume that aome of the people of Bement will here after be less Inclined to set the dogs on every stray vagabond who chances to drop oft at the water tank. From hoboes to heroes and back again In one short night; there's a epicy variety of life! Getters and Given. Kr"i th Wichita Esgls. The American magazine asked H. G. Wells to namel the six greatest inpn in history. The answer of Mr. Wells is worth reading. v ho are the six greatest men of history? Opinions will differ as to the inclusion or exclusion of certain important names. Opinions will vary as to the rule by which one may pick the six greatest men or the million greatest men of history, sacred, pro fane, ancient or contemporary. But Mr. Wells has his ideas, and Mr. Wella is a man of keen insight and posesolng a marvelous store of knowledge. Here are his six greatest: . Jesus Christ, Buddah, Aristotle, Asoka, Roger Bacon, Abraham Lincoln. Two great religious teachers, one philosopher, one king, one scientist, one president of a republic. One from Judea, two from India, one from Greece, one from England, one from America. Most of them Mved a lonir time ago, according to the customary way of computing time. Only two of the six spoke the English language. Only one was born since the discovery of America. Not a military hero anions them all. Not a fighter in the lUt. The pages of history are lurid with the endless procession of the conquerors. but not one of them lands in this list of selected great men. Nor, by the same method of judging greatness would one of them land in any such list, be 'it ever so long. For Mr. Wells says, very reason ably as it seems, that the men who have really impressed their personal ities uDon the world, the men who have changed humanity's ways of thinking and of living, have not been getters, but givers. NaDoleon? Alexander? Croesus? Rockefeller? Amenophls? Their names have been written In the blood and sweat of multitudes. But that, will not do. The Judge sends them out of court with a wave of the hands. For they were getters. They got things for themselves. In the list made by Mr. Wells there is but one rich man, who also is the only king in the list Asoka. He is little known to the world of our day and place, f!hd his right to a. place in such a select list will be questioned more severely than that of any of the other five. He was a king of Magadha, an Indian state of great extent, and died about 223 years before the birth of Christ. Wells is a great admirer of him. He points out that Asoka is the only war king who' had sense enough to stop fighting when he had put down opposition and made peace in his realm. Among millions in the Orient he still is venerated as a great edu cator, civilizer, humanitarian. Per haps if we knew as much about Asoka as Mr. Wells does we should be inclined to agree with him in this selection. But, not being thus ad vantaged, we would venture to sug gest the name Christopher Colum but, a great giver whose gifts to the world have changed profoundly the ways of life and thinking of count less millions of beings. In prisons, in fastings, in tribula tion of the spirit, they gave to us what makes us rich ia-soul and mind. They asked in return nothing that this world can give. They lived suc cessful lives. ' Judges Agreed. From the Cleveland News. ... Strangely enough, the decision given by- Chief Justice Taft in the name of the United States supreme court, holding that labor unions may be sued for damages resulting from strikes and their strike funds may be levied upon to pay such damages, waa a unanimous decision. That seems a fortunate circum stance, whether the judgment is considered a "great victory" for the United Mine Workers of America, as claimed by counsel for that or ganization, or whether the doctrine of financial responsibility extending to unions is deemed a staggering blow to organized labor's tenets. Apparently the decision was fully concurred irf, not only by associate justices of conservative or repub lican history, such as Messrs. Mc Kenna. Holmes, Day, Van Devanter and Pitney, but as well by Messrs. McReynolds, Clarke and Brandeis, appointees of democratic adminis trations, and perhaps considered by some, as to some of them, excep tionally liberal, progressive or radi cal In their legal views. 'The un usual unanimity gives the ruling strength, as a self-evident proposi tion admitting of no doubt even where differences of opinion is com mon, and removes it from the ar senal of politics. Political opponents of President Harding's administration have been calling It the "friend of big busi ness," a "rich man's government" and all that sort of thing. The ef fort to discreditthe party in power by process of vague insinuation will doubtless be intensified with the coming campaign. The supreme court decision that labor unions have no special immunity from re sponsibility for their acts would have come in very handily, could It be called the work of the republican administration. As it stands. It Is bipartisan, legal, logical, business like, anything but political. X ; .- "How to Wudy." Omaha. June ! To the Krtltor of The He; May I rail your etten. tlon 10 an edltarlnl In The Omaha Hee on June 14? Thla editorial un intentionally ronCradicta or isnorea the main advertulng feature of the School of Indvidual 1 nut ruction, a private erhool which has aa Ita ad vlaory board Mr. J. E, Pavldaon, Mr. f. H. IiMldrlge. Mr. W. J, Foye, iar. nenrga n. rayne ana Pr. Ham Uel Mi'CleitNBhan. Hlnce May I I have advertised ex tenaively, emphaalslnc the point In question, "We teach your boy or girt now to atudy." I feel that aim pie Juatlre ralla for a statement cor reeling the erroneous Impreaalon created, aa mere la a school right nere in Omaha that haa built Its succeaa upon the basis of teaching now 10 ptuqy. CHIIIBTEL VAX rltATT. Church anil Ireland. omahM. June z7. To the Editor or Tne tiee: it la tragic thing when a num or men let pride overcome thm) and Imagine themnelves supe rior to all other men. The bee does not gather honey from a particular nower, but often from many. All of the virtues and good works are rarely round In one man. Ho powerful have the IrUh become In our fold In this country that to me worm tney are synonymous with the church. While I take off my hat to all the many saintly people of Ireland, they have also had many naa examples and scaadalizers of the uatnouc cnurch. The late pope, and I am sure the present also, condemned violence from whatever hands It came. Ac cording to my instructions In the faith, we are obliged to "render un to Caesar the things that belong unto caesar." We are commanded to be loyal and patriotic to each of our countries, however despotic and tyranous It may seem at times, to bow before all duly constituted au thority. The majority of the Irish people have evidently bowed to Eng land, having just approved the treaty In their election, thus attest ing the "rendering unto Caesar." If I were privileged to judge the two young men who slew Elr Wilson I would call It willful murder: but, to exercise charity, perhaps their act was the result of overlnflamed pas sions and temporary insanity, and consequent falling Into temptation. Since the war the Irish have bom barded the press and created a gen eral racket, and thus far have ap parently accomplished nothing. All that they have got is a sugar-coated pill, high-sounding names, "free state," "dominion rule," etc., but the same status as ever. Perhaps it would be better for every one to keep hands off that subject, as at this long range very few of us are very familiar with the troubles of the Irish people. Dr. McCrann had better study his ''Lives of Saints" and say his pray ers for the freedom of Ireland in stead of sympathizing with lawless members of his race. A CATHOLIC. Reforming the Criminal. Stanton, Neb., June 26. To the Editor of The Bee: The world has tried everything in the form of punishment that can be devised. Death was the first punishment. All lirlmltlve people Inflict the death penalty without any exception. In Inflicting thla punlahment Ihey usu ally accompany It with the greateat amount of torture that they can do viae. Why this torture? Let the ad vocatee of at. verity panne and reflect. ThUi torture la Intended aa a warn ing and a threat to all evll-doera to beware leat a like faie or a wore one overtake them. The advocate of severity really has a savage mind. ma anui la that of the primitive man. Although he lives In modern times, lie la of the bush and the primal jungle. Aa man's Intelligence awakened he came to regard the eeonomio low In the killing of prisoners. Hlavery was subatltuted for death, except In exceptional raaea. Theae exceptional ones were reserved more ae holiday carnival, more potent threat, a eop to those that Judged that the Judici ary had grown soft. The rUe of labor and craftamen overthrew elavery as a general prop- ONition, except In Nebraxka and elae where where slavery la retained n a punlMhnient ao that men may he Imprisoned and tuny produce cheap er goods than free l.ibor, .honorable labor outalde, can produce. It la fine thing to cutitem plate, an honeat worklngman compelled to compete with prison made goods and the fat profits reaped from prison contract ors. Mr. Hee Man. junt register this for me: I will not buy a thing that Is made in a prlxon. Register this again: I haven't any use for the farmer that wants binder twine that la made cheap because It la made in the North Dakota or Minnesota prlxons, or In any other prison. don't want any Nebraska made brooms, either. You can get mine from a free workman outside of prison and let the contractor go to well, wherever such contractors should ao. The trouble with all theae la this: Punishment Is wrong. Reformation and not punishment Is what Is need ed. The criminal has a wrong Ideal. a warped notion. He judges and measures by a warned moral yard stick. He Is right according to his notion, but his notion is wrong. Punishment of .whatever severity or mildness will not give him this cor rect view. You can't beat right no tlons Into him nor scare wrong ones out. Force won't make a bad man good nor will fear keep evil-disposed men from plying their nefarious acts. Punishment is wrong. It is tne wrong way to go about correcting evil morals, evil conceptions. I once chanced to be standing near and observed a well known person about town across the street. This person was not of good repute. A curious thought came to me: If I were the Almighty, and were to re cast that one of evil, what would I put in this one's character, or what would I leave out? What would I do to that one to make a thoroughly moral, lovely person? I couldn t think of . anything that wa3 needed except a correct moral measure of values. Now, then, how can this thing be done? If you 'can tell me, you have solved the criminal propo sition. That is all there is to it, and that is all that is needed. Do you judge that fear can do it? If you do, I don't think much of your mental ability. I wouldn't give a rap to-have It solve any of my prob lems. Do you think torture can do it? Just imagine shutting the crlm- -aw When Jimmie Thrift arrived to greet his happy pa and ma. Dad hooped 'et up and spread the news to friends both near and far; "I'll teach my boy someday," said he, "his wise old dad to thank." So in the tiny baby hands he placed a savings bank. Many boys and girls in Omaha have comfortable sums placed to their credit in the Savings Depart ment of the First thanks to the foresight of their parents in open ing a baby account for them at their birth. This is a splendid investment for the future of the baby. ' Iirst National Bank of Omaha Mans JO I! "Spend Four Days at Clear Lake" LEAVE FRIDAY NIGHT ON NEW THROUGH CLEAR LAKE SLEEPER Leave Omaha. . . . Arrive Clear Lake. .7:40 P. M. .7:30 A. M. Yon may occupy sleeper until 8 a. nt. RETURNING SLEEPER will Leave Clear Lake Tuesday, July 4th at 10:30 P. M., arrive Omaha, 7:44 A. M. $10.75 Round Trip Tfckats, reservations, etc.. from MARSHALL B. CRAIG. G. A, P. D. 141 1st Nat'l Bk. Bldf. Phone JA 0260. CONSOLIDATED TICKET OFFICE WIS Dodte St. - Peon DO 1684. THE CHICAGO GREAT WESTERN Bee Want Ads Produce Result;. CUNARD ANCHOR ANCHOR' DONALDSON Excrllont accommodation Is still available at low rates for July. N. T. to Cherbourg snd Southampton A(!l ITAMA July 4 Am. I Anc tt BERENOARIA ...July 11 Ana. 8 Ao. MAI BETAMA . . .July IS A us;. 15 Sept. S N. T. to Plymouth, Cherbourg & Hamburg CARO.MA July g Aug. SI Oct. S SAAO.MA ..Aug. 3 Sept. S Oct. 14 N. T. to Cobh. (Queenstown) A Liverpool I.AtOMA (new).. July S Aug. 3 Sept. 7 CARMAMA July 13 Aug. 17 Kept. 14 SCVTHIA (new).. July 20 Aug. SI Septra Mediterranean Cruise CAMEROMA July S N. Y to Londonderry snd Glasgow ALGERIA July IS Aug. tS Sept. II COM MBi t July S3 Aug. IS Sept. 14 CAMEROMA Sept. S Oct. 7 Not. Boston to Londenderry A Liverpool ASSYRIA July S Sept. 15 ELYSIA Aug. S 'Stops at Glasgow. Boston to Queenstown Liverpool SAMARIA (new) Aug. SS Sept. SO CANADIAN SERVICE Via Picturesque St. Lawrence Route Montreal to Glasgow SATrRMA ..July 14 Aug.lt Sept. 8 CASSANDRA July S Aug. iS Sept. tZ Also calls at Moville, Ireland. Montresl to Liverpool TVRRHEMA new Jnly i ept. t Sept. M ALBANI A Aug. 19 Sept. t Oct. Zl At SOMA (new).. Sept. IS Oet. 14 Not. 11 tiontresl to Plymouth. Cherbourg a Lon.lon i AVPAMA July Aug. 54 Sent. ?i A STOMA Aug. S Sep'. Oct. It Apply Ceespaaj'a Local Acta. KTerywhere ittal up, the man with the srrd moral measure, f r a Irrm, as the law dlroits, a tut tltni triune- hint out again with llm ssitia ure) morttluy Ye amis, tin yon wnn.ter that we have Kreit Hruwua I like rlill.trcn. In.lre.1 do, lull dr.iM kids with whisker. I want my kids to ha rhil.lrrn In ihvsiral and mental ai't'Oiitanimtit, I dun't want, a man's liysuiie and a rhlldlsh mind. Allow me lo make a auaatln: That we reform our Jtidtrlal prm-. tire with the Idea In mind of reform ing the t-iimimtl rnnvirt. IVrhaps we shftll tired a autxeoti In ronif cusp Inelrnd of it rell. I knew ft one null -ue where a suraiful op eration eradicated the evil In a man's life and made him a nst-fui niemlier of em-leiy. There might tre rime where a little physic! apU ration of the old shoe In. Ill wood shed would set some Inndvert fonlinh youth thinking about htm. aelf. We had a raae here recently where three boys about II threw stones and arnvel at passing; auto, late, and hroke five or six wind. ahlrldi and nuieed visions of hold ups and anna mid handita. I believe that the old ehoe and a strong nrm would Imve done us well; and more Rood, than the j0 and costs. May he the SS0 wua let. Well. I don't care ao lone ne the dose reforms the foolish ones, for this la what they were, JiiHt hoya whoso minds uldn t grow with their years. A criminal, whether detected or undetected. U rally a morally sick man. Cure his sickness and you haven't any crim inal, and no more crime. Since It is Impossihle and abso lutely foolish to think of trying to cure morally sick men all by the same treatment, and within any pre scribed jierlod. It is obvious that our sentencing to prison for any definite term la folly. If It were possible to cure any by a term In prison, Juat think of the folly of turning any out half done, half cured, because of the expiration of the sentence pro nounced upon this one. Suppose, on the other hand, that one waa cured In half the time. Pardon and parole? Tes, possibly. Fred Brown was good whlla on parole. Was he cured? Was society ever safe from him? Are there not other Fred Browns, some that have never been brought to Justice at all and others that have merely escaped detection for their continuance In criminality since their discharge? I would suggest that the court's authority cease with the conviction of the criminal: that the court Im pose no' sentence, but that convic tion per se hund the criminal over to a board or commission charged with the cure of the criminal, and that they should have full outhority to adopt suitable means to cure this one or to see to It that this one (lid not trouble society any more. Let the cure take years, a surgeon's knife, a doctor's pill box, It matters not. These shall not be discharged to go at their own volition until they lute pinged themselves fYoin every 1 rriniHul notion, would ie thie ! b,trd power 1 o parentis. ,u) n or should the prisoner he his own free Miirnt until they had disvliare hint. He would be Iheir ward unit' Ihey were convinced that lie was. safe o g.t free If Krrd Itrown ht been under thia rrstraint tie would have been going good )l. for the record s iImi he wa amid while on parole, lie should have Ixn kept on parole, it would have seen cheaper for the stale and better for Fred. fWiely would have been saf meanwhile. All board are sometime wooden, ami because Dure might he In Justice Inflicted where the members of the hoard ucte not all that they were auppoaxd to he, I would have the riiibt of the prisoner to an an peal to the court for a review, open ao that ho might come Into open conn, 'and present any evidence of hi good conduct and the probabil ity of hi going straiKht III the future. No, Mr. Kdltor. we need reformation mid not punishment. Itefortn doea not come from punish incut or fines. In must cases the wife mnl huhlt-s have less In eat and to wear whenever a fine I Inflicted. 1 am opposed to fines lh.it feed fat official and reduce litv. I'd rather pnv the ttix myself than to get mlno reduced thill wny. Prison sentence, torture or lhrcntyou can't mnk m had man Rood tli.it way nor prevent any ao disposed from doing bud deeds. will n. woomiCjtv. Fuel on I'wu's Flrr. Teru. Neb.. June II. To the Ed itor of The Dee: We are glad that The Bee has a department in which busy people enn express their vlewa cn mutters of interest to the public. Through The Ilea's Letter Box we ' want to thank J. M. Howie for ex- pressing our sentiments so clearly In nis letter in Tuesday nee. lie roum have made much stronger statements and still told the absolute truth. - In Prof. Howie's removal from tlie Teru State Teachers' college Peru la losing Its most highly educated as well as one of its strongest teachers. The community as well will feel the loss of one of its most prominent and Influential citizen. The taxpayers do not kick on high taxes when they fe: they are ret ting value received for money ex pended. In this case we feet we are being cheated. What we need la a fair-minded, Impartial, unchaperoned Investigation or tne reru state Teachers college. The right kind of un Investigation would be appreci ated by every taxpayer in the stat A GROUP OF TAXPAYERS. The Newspaper Visitor. "And so you work In the com posing room! Isn't that fine!" "I've been here 10 years." "Won't you sing something: you've oomposed?" Life. orthe and Vl-ovl NOW, when faxes are the .lowest in years, let us plan a neverto'beforgotten tour for you. v The GratNorthfafbod coun try of Wisconsin; the big cities and seaside and mountain resorts of the East; combina tion rail and boat trips; we can include them all in your vaca tion itinerary at surprisingly low cost A wide choice of routes boat trips on the Great Lakes or along the Atlantic Seaboard. Stop-over anywhere en route. Tickets on sale daily until September 3a The famous OMAHA ' CHICAGO LIMITED leaves Omaha at 6:05 p. nt, arrives Chicago 8:05 a. m. 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