- THE OMAHA BEE: FRIDAY. AUGUST 4. 1922. The Morning Bee MOKN1NGEV1WNG SUNDAY THE ICC PUtUSHlNO COMPANY WHOM . UfDlKK. fnaluaw. B. MtK. Caa. Mi mimics or THE ASSOCIATED fU sauuaa t las aas nw issainiatw, r mi asaa tlsasum ataaiiaa w H at ast most mm snaisa at tau MM. aaa Mm im iasal am as"a AH nt at mMMM mt Mf Mlltl inilif a Ml Mni itaa U on that bfU confldanet in th solidarity of th republican organisation, a A convention will aembl at Lincoln on Auruit 15, to formulato tha platform for tha coming- cam. paign. No tffort will b nada bcrt to anticipate tha content! of that document, beyond the autrtiott that it will be one in keeping with tha purpose of tha party, malting provision for tha preservation of good government under the law. for tha continuance of policy of rigid economy in atata affairs, for tha en- Nat vara aJsaylailaa ml Tha Osaaaa Im. Juaa, Daily 71,731 Sunday. . . .77,034 '" maintenance of order at all B. sitwis, f nmi Mimiir tlmM ni ot tn eonscrvation of the welfare of all iu propis i mi aiaia, wninvcr muaira 1LMER I. ROOD, Ciraulatwa Miutw Wm te aasl mkutM kafara thla Sik 4t ml Jilt. lest. taaal) W. H. QUIVIY. Notars Puklto n OHti aa Is a awatar mt IM iadit llarasa af ftrtalsUsaa. IM taaaaaiasa MiMrur aa smaiaiMa mju, aa TM aass aunlauaa Is saaa- awv aassaas aa aw sraaaiastiaB. EE TELEPHONES FXaata Braatk Barkaat. Ask for tha DtpaHmeat Tl.-4i ar Paraaa Wanlad. Far Nlkt Calla Afiar IS P. M l A With such a platform and the strongest ticket presented in years, tha republican party can safely expect the assault of a political combination organ ised for the ona and only object of capturing what atata offices it may and returning a democratic sena tor to the United States senate for a third term. EaiWtal Daaartaaat. AT Untla lOtl ar 1041. 1000 orricEj Main urfka lTta ana" rarnam k Ca. Ihrffi . 11 Ueit St. South 8lo . OH 8. 14tk St. Maw Yerk SIS Fifth Asaaua . Waklneta 431 Star Mldf . Chirata . IT10 Bttfar Bid Pans, Fraaea alt Baa 81. Henera Tka avsraia paid dally circulation of Tha Omaha Bat far Juaa. I2J. arai 71,111. sain af II.J7 ovar J una a( 111. Tka avarata paM Sunday elreulatioa of Tha Oau ha Baa for Juna, 122. aa 17,014, atn of 20.120 oar Juna of 1121. Thia la lartar sain than that mada by any othar dally ar Sunday paptr. GOOD GOVERNMENT FOR NEBRASKA.. 1 A political party that is only a name, and haa . nothing definite and constructive to offer as a pro- ; gram, does not deserve support. Tha republican party of Nebraska confidently asks support from the voters this year because it has t something definite and constructive to offer. Its rec- ord ia long and honorable, but its past is onty a guar ' antee that its nledsres for the future will be redeemed. li The state is now coming out from a period of dis ci turbed conditions, and is getting back to a stable i. basia for ite business. Certain readjustments are yet I to be mada, and these the republicans expect to make, guided by experience and with courage to apply - methods that have support in wisdom. Forward steps have been taken by the admihis- ,' tration within the last' four years, and these have jj been fairly well consolidated. Whatever of-change :s,r modification is required will be made, with the ji intent of fully redeeming the pledge made in the platform of four years ago, when it was promised , that business methods would be applied to carrying on the affairs of the state. Good government, hon . estly administered, and carried on at the least possi ble cost was the pledge made then, it is the one great purpose of the republican party now. i The ticket chosen at the primary last month is ' not recommended to the people solely because it is - the choice of the republican voters. Other reasons far mora potent should control, and judgment resting ' On these reasons commends the republican candidates, i 'Frora the head of the ticket down to the last name, jf the men selected are men of affairs, and who are known to ba clean and trustworthy in every par-reticular. These men were not selected as a result of trade, -and dickers, of aub rosa understandings "and various forms of secret diplomacy by which political bargains : are struck between bosses and then presented to the !' public aa "compromises" and "understandings," "neu trality agreement," or other transparent subter-j- fuge, Anally paraded as' a substitute for a primary ( 'election. Each candidate on the republican ticket - presented himself fairly to the voters, told them squarely what he stood for, and what he expected to ' do. Such men can be trusted with, office, for they will not betray their constituents in order to gain for themselves any temporary advantage; , THE PUBLIC'S "SENIORITY." Following their rejection of President Harding'a plan for settlement of the railway strike, the execu tives announce, in the language of the dispatch from Washington, tha president has been informed that the door is still open for negotiations "on the basis of preserving the seniority rights of the men who have remained at work, hut not otherwise." This is not a fitting way in which to reply to tha head of the nation. When it is learned that these executives considered the opening lines of the presi dent s note much like an ultimatum, their calm re fusal to accept hia proposal appears to array them against tha national administration. It does not meet the requirements of the situa tion for the railroads to say, "Let us alone and wa can handle this ourselves." Transportation is an in dustry in which tha public has vital concern. There are few other lines of business in which the right of government intervention is so clear. Even if the railroads should end the strike in their own way, that would give no guarantee for the avoidance or settle ment of future controversies. A principle is at stake. Moreover, it was not to the opinion of a single man that the disputants were asked to yield, but to considerations of urgent public need. What is of fered is a compromise that will restore transporta tion, reduce the peril of a coal shortage, and estab lish the principle of peaceful adjudication of indus trial disputes. -The railway strikers have gone far in acceding to terms by which, validity of all decisions of the Railway Labor Board "would Jbe fully recog nized. This point' fs the main one of the whole plan of adujstment. The question of seniority is, so far as the railroad companies and the public are con cerned, a detail. It is, however, of high importance to the individual employe. . Merely because the railway managers issued a statement that strikers would lose their seniority rights a matter involving pensions and promotions is no good reason why the American public should be made to suffer. Between compromise on this stand and a curtailment of transportation the choice is easy. To the public President Harding'a plan seems rea sonable. By agreeing to send their original griev ances back to the Railroad Labor Board for rehearing the men have made a praiseworthy concession. Their employers should show themselves equally reasonable. Not in behalf of the unions, and not in behalf of the owners of the railroads, but for the sake of pub lic welfare, President Harding haa intervened to end this deadlock. . The stubborn stand of the railroads, taken together with their previous legal maneuvers in defiance of the, power of the Federal Labor Board. , provides a perilous example to labor organizations. ONE LESSON OFJHE FLOOD. A report from the courthouse says that roada and bridges in Douglas county were damaged to the extent of $20,000 by the freshets of last week. This is a con siderable sum of money, but it invites comparison with previous experience. Before Douglas .county entered upon its campaign of permanent construction, freshets- were accompani ments of the summer." The Elkhorn and' the Big and Little Fappios came" tumbling down just as they do now, mad torrents of muddy waters, swirling and dash ing, and sweeping, away all they could move. Flimsily constructed bridges, and culverts went out before them, and dirt roads' crumbled like sand piles in their way. Each summer saw the experience repeated, until the county authorities ; took up the work of meeting the problem with more dependable construction. Now roads and .bridges have a permanent character. Many thousands of dollars have been expended to reach a place" where the disaster' of a big runoff .of rainfall, carried along the streams that course the county, and which drain the state for many miles, does not sweep away all the work done on the highways. Douglas county's experience is repeated many times in Nebraska. It was estimated ten years ago that the state had for many years annually suffered a joss of around $5,000,000 a year, because of damage done to dirt roads and poorly built bridges and culverts by storm waters in the spring' and through the summer. The campaign for better bridges and permanent roads j; In 1006 the republicans went beforeHhe people ?? of Nebraska with a definite program of reformatory L legislation. Successful at. the election,.the legisla ture controlled by the republicans passed and a re publican governor signed laws redeeming each of these promises, and the, laws then enacted for the relief of the public and the advancement of the in terests of tha people of the state remain on the books, save the revenue bill, which. has been "changed, first ! ' by the democrats, and af ain by the republicans who ' have sought to restore the law to a condition of serv v ice. To such a record as this the party can point, offering it as proof of sincerity of intent to redeem . any pledge made in a platform. In 1918 other definite promises were made, and these, too, have been re ' deemed. . The one great outstanding issue of the present ." campaign is that of taxation. No matter what other questions may come up, they all turn on this one. j Each republican candidate has pledged himself pub i licly to do all that can be done to lower the cost of i; 'government, at the same time-'preserving the service r-of government Ecohomy wjll.be practiced, but notj then bglin ha$ borne jrujt in-many wetl constructcd : a 4 4 It a ajA4 tltaat twAnai la A itm Aav PAtrnrot wit An oil. .... . ... . . . rv ... ." river crossings and highways that will withstand a .' tremendous floating debt was built up, because of in- cloudburst 0r the sudden breaking up of a hard winter. ; emcient metnoas or collecting revenue, ana wasie f ul methods, of public spending, a monument ;;',to democratic mismanagement, and, which had to be (j- wiped out by special levies under Mickey and Shel j; don. Nor will it be of the sort that marked the ij- Morehead administration, when the governor had to .go into court to compel the treasurer to evade the spirit of the constitution, and devote unappropriated .'"fee collections to the payment of current expenses. ; Deficiency appropriations have been done away with under the budget system adopted by the republicans, ;! in redemption of the platform pledge of 1918, and ' heads of state departments will be turning back sur i plus funds instead of asking the legislature to care for overlaps. Taxes will be lowered, and state gov emment will cost less, because it will be run hon- estly and on a business basis, and not in the hap " haiard fashion that permits each money-spending agency of the state to follow its own plan. ;; ' Democratic success in any part of Nebraska this year will ba made possible by republican division , only. The patched-up harmony arrangement between ; tha Bryans and Hitchcock, between the wets and the drys, tha suffragists and anti-suffragists of the demc ; cratic party is a coalition of selfish leaders, bent on ' achieving individual success, but it also has a mean- ,'ing for republicans too plain to be ignored. Any i factional differences that may have 'divided the party in tha past must be hid aside for the, good of all. ( ' Personal ambitions can be made -secopdary to the ; .general welfare, and the disappointments of former ' campaigns may be forgotten in the forward move ' H ment that ia now commenced. ,; ; A ticket headed by Howell and Randall is of . fered tha people by the republican voters. Three members of congress, whose .record ish worthy, have - been 'reoommated, while in'three other, districts men of proved ability have been selected as the party's nominee. Strong county and legislative nominees are presented, and the general aspect of the situation BLOOD THICKER THAN WATER. Americans have long admired the most outstand ing characferistic of . William Jennings Bryan, his earnest advocacy of moral reforms, whether popular or not He has fearlessly championed the cause of religion, of peace, of morality, and especially of pro hibition. For years he was the only great political leader who dared to openly advocate the complete banishment of strong drink from our land. His con sistency, his courage and his persistency in this re gard earned for him the respect if not the support of the whole American people. v What do we now discover? Mr. Bryan's brother has been named as a candidate for governor of Ne braska, by reason of a bargain made with the avowed enemies of prohibition and tha personal foes of Wil liam Jennings Bryan. The Peerless Leader, whose public life has been one of stern opposition to mofal wrong, finds the ties of consanguinity too much for his resistance. He is willing, that he may aid his brother in the Nebraska campaign, to stultify his record by making a bargain with those who have op posed him in season and out, and who derided and flouted him, because of his principles and his. beliefs. Bryan has, it would appear, made a bargain, not with Senator Hitchcock and Arthur Mullen, but with his own conscience. State taxes are coming down, much to the disgust of the democrats, who thus are deprived of another campaign cry. n, , i, The ever ready pistol is making a lot of trouble again. What Other Editors Say The Wheal Harvest Is On. Trim tha Mian.apoha Journal, Tha sialic of athaat haa baeema tha oraaafrult tree of the world. Bom h trn Mlnnaaota and South Dakota Will .begin euuinsr the wheat thla wk. The stand vrywhre is niatnlflrant. The sight of the grant rolllna flsldi of train, fully rl and wavlne In tha winds of tha pralrls, Is ona navrr to bs forgotten. Through July and Auguat tha buay harvaat hands work thalr way up through tha Dnkoina. throuah Uani. toba. Saskatchewan. Alborta and IlrUlnh Columbia, whers grant har vests are promised. But theaa ar not tha only July and August wheat fields. On the other aids of the world the harvest la on In the Bal kan stntea. In Germany and Auatrla. and also In Hungary, England. nuasis, Denmark ana roisnd. Scot land, northern Russia and Hcandl nnvia harvest their grain In Sep tember and October. Let us follow the harvest further and by months. The record Is a wonderful one. In November the harveit will begin In South Africa. In Trru, Argentina 'and other Darts of South America, while Christmas Ltlme finds the wheat falling before the reaper in Flurmah. Australia and New Zealand follow hard after, of the new year harvest time reaches Indian and Upper Ejr.vnt, Cuba. Ferula, Mexico. Asia Minor and Iiower Egypt cut their wheat In April. May brings the wheat harvest In China, Japan and Central Asia. And now the harvest haa leaped the ocean again and begins In south ern Texas. Wheat Is being cut there In May, And by Juna It has worked up to Kansas and Nebraska and to the Pacific coast on this side of the ocean, while on the other the reaper la buay In Bpaln, Italy, Greece. Tur key and the south of France. ' Thus the circle la complete, and Puck has placed hta girdle of plenty around the world. What a wonder ful panorama, when seen with the eves of the mind, ia thla ever- advancing and never-ceasing falling or the- wheat before the reapers or the world! The harvest never ceases. Is there crop failure or damage in one quarter, then le there plenty and aurplus In another. So varied and ao widespread are the climes where the wheat Is grown that a ' world wide erop failure Is now almost out of the question. Transportation and the breaking; down of hostile bar riers have made the world one In Its .crop of wheat, forever growing somewhere and forever coming to maturity and being garnered. Songs of Summer. From tha Spokane Spokaaman Review. "Where are the songs of sum mer?" Tom Hood once asked. The query still has pertinence and timeli ness. The glory of the Imperial sea son has hut seldom been caught by poets. The snows or winter, the promise of spring and the fulfill ment of autumn move them more. Bishop King of Chichester would have had it spring always, but had to borrow from the summer flowers of June. Matthew Arnold sang of flowers drenched with the dew of auriimer's eve, yet his flowers were those' of spring. Unusually It is summer's associations or scenes that shed back a borrowed beauty on poems about spring. Writers of prose have done bet ter by summer than writers of verse.: Entire chapters In Hardy's novels are the very embodiment of sum mer. It is by exception among the) poets that Tennyson works thai miracle of creating something Ilkel summer when he sings that the lily folds its sweetness and the white and the crimson roses sleep. Wll Ham Morris revealed some of the! marvel of dawn In summer wheni he wrote- that "the morning light slips faint arftj gray betwixt the; cloud bars patiently watting for' dawn, patient and' colorless though heaven's gold waits to float through them along with the sun." Shakespeare's references directly to summer are relatively few, bub his exhaustless magic Indirectly creates hundreds ' of summer days. Again and again he gives the breath and body of a day In June, ana Lowell likewise did so when he ask ed and answered,, his own question: "What is so rare as a day in June?" The slightest or most incidental ref erence that Shakespeare makes to summer recreates and pictures It. Wild music burdens every bough" and "briars be as sweet as sharp." Dobson struck the summer note when he said that "along the south-, ern wall keeps the bee his fastlval." De La Mare bits it with the words: I heard the summer noon resound with call of myriad things unseen." Thompson gave the tropic sensuous-1 ness of the season in these words: Summer set lips to earth's bosom bare and left the flushed print in a poppy there." Whlttier caught the languor of the season when he sang: My ear is full of summer sounds. of summer sights my languid eye." On Second Thought B7 H. at. ST A SI IX. Whether or not life Is worth living depends greatly uoon the liver. Population. From the Cincinnati Tlmee-Star. What does a city exist for, any how? Is ,it its chief function to gather together in one place the largest possible number of people, speaking the greatest possible num ber of languages? Or is it its chief duty to fit itself to be a good place for a smaller number of people to live in? It is curious the hold mere pop ulation figures have on a certain type of mind. Tou hear people pre dicting ecstatically that the United States will have two hundred mil lions of people twenty or thirty or forty years from now. This may be true; if so, what does it mean? It means that life in America will be much harder than it has been. Tou can see in Europe and still more plainly in India and China what crowded populations mean in the existence of the average human being. If conditions of life have been easier in America than else-' where, it is largely because we have had a very rich eountry with a com paratively sparse population. Two hundred millions or Ameri cans in 1950! One million people in Cincinnati in 1940! Great slo gans, aren't they? But after all, what is to be gained from a tremen dous increase in the nation's popu lation or from the crowding of huge masses of people into cities whose census returns go up two or three hundred per cent in twenty years? Women as "Bosses." From tha Knickerbocker Press. During your working hours, would you rather have a man or a wom an for a doss? 'mis question nas been asked in Chicago, with replies that are unanimous in their tenor. You can probably guess the an swer. A middle-aged advertising man eays he prefers to work for a man, because a man doesn't want to be bossed by a woman, anyhow. Se riously, he says, a man is more likely to be solid, stable and busi nesslike, while a woman is more prone to be temperamental and to "act the part of the modern wom an." whatever that is. The men are not alone in this view, it appears. A young woman artist says she would rather be bossed by a man, -any day. - A man, she says, from tha depths of . her experience, will not find at many faults with your work as a woman will. A woman will .scrutinize every angle and try to find something to complain about, while a man will simply let It go for what It's worth perhaps, though she da nut aay so. In reala-nod deapalr of gattln anything batter. Moreover, this girl haa found out that mm will pay mora than women. Than there ia the opinion of a flapper student, who haa not yet guns to work, but who wants a man boss whan ah does. Man, she any a, haven't the nerve to tell a woman to do more than she la able to do. "A man reaped" a woman and he'd rather do something for her to stive her the trouhl. A woman won't do anything Ilk that." On lb whole, it doea not seem that the woman manager or bona gets much the worst of this aym- malum. If her princfonl fault la that ahe la exacting and run not be fooled or kidded, ahe ought to be a fairly efficient employer. "Doomed U NplnattThmxi." From tha Laulavilla Posu The Berlin correspondent Informs us that "26,000,000 women In Kurop are doomed to lifelong aplnater hood." Well, there are many of the :s. 000,000 who will affirm that they do not consider anlnaterhood "doom." Many women do not get married because they do not want to, and not because they never have a "chance." Looking at the figures presented by the Berlin man wa find that he eatlnialra tha male population or Eu rope, adults alone considered, at 224.23i.000, and the female popula tion at 250,000,000. Before the world war there were LOSS women In Eu rop to every 1,000 men; now the na tion is 1,111 women to every l.ooo men. But when we analyse the figures the plight of these women "doomed to splnaterhood" Is not so bad. There Is a great surplus of women In. Rus sia. But do Russian women want to get married? Those that do are not erv wise. In England and Franc and Germany the surplus of women are numerous, but about as many mala children an female are being born, and the ratio will right itself In time. Unofficial Diplomats. ' From tha New York Tribune. The hotels of London and rarls are thronged with American guests. So the nations are hrougnt to gether. Their diplomatic repre sentatives meet one another on guard. The unofficial representa tives, on business or pleasure, aban don reserve and talk rranaiy bdouc questions that no envoy would dare mention. The result is better mutual un derstanding and a discovery that different peoples are much alike, after all.' Friendships built on British golf courses and on French boulevards are the sort of friend ships that all nations need. The presence of thousands or Americans In England and France meana that they are consciously or unconsciously "selling" this coun try to Europe and that they are- at the aame time "buying" Europe. Our peace and comradeship with Canada are due largely to the fact that the people of both countries have long freely intermingled and known each other so well that the idea of a fortress on the frontier seems nonsensical. Readers' Opinions liaie afHnaaai is ssaige aa ataadcMiMs alathMi Iknmah atrsj tmm4 era of Tk Slmahai Ma sxaa uMk I. aa a4lM aamWrlaa wril afeat tae.aee aa MkWli mi aMI intars!. Laetata aaawia a wefl-H mate Ikaa see as. Kak bilrr saaat mm aaamal4 toy IM mmmm mt lae Km, est Ikawsaj M jaw! Ikal H 4 mm aKaaa).t VUy lit WoiHlcra, Omahit. Julv ! To (he Kdtior of The Omaha ilea: A quiik-ihid thousht, t wonder why tha ten dency to exaggarate In thought the vlls of life. Today the quirk phyai- ciogirai ininxer ia tailing you how. Klg huainaaa Is smiling. . Wall stre I telling you how. Oraanixad rani- tnl la peraplcarioualy smiling. Labor Is wondering why. Th proflteers ar smiling. "I wonder why?" Th commonwealth I wondering why Its taxea ar higher than ever before In hlatory. Uibor la wondering why its rent Is high. Th landlords ar situ wining to ask mora, with smiles on their browa, " wonder whyir nign coat or living la her. Th queallon. why? The physiological thinker will tell you why. Ilia bual. neaa and Walltreel la telling us now ami wny. now long ar w wining to let th peaalmlsm xlt? "I wonder how long?" A. O. BLODG ETT. Ilcrrln ami. Oilier Crimes. Lincoln. Aug. L To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: As .. professional man whose Interests are neither for nnur nor capital wnen their activi ties ar aaalnat tha nnlilio .ir... I have followed with Interest your paper's accounts of th recent iruuoios in in roal-mlnlng dis tricts. Thl Is reaction you get from me wim your editorials on the Her rln outbreak. The mont horrible thins- ahnut the Herrin trouble waaknot the mas sacre itself, not that the perpetrat ors nave not been nun ahed: hut rather, that the press should feel called upon to hold a cause In dis repute because of the insanity of a local mob. Why did vou not flaunt In flaming headlines and cry out in editorial wrath against the massacre of . helpless women and children at Ludlow by hired thugs or tne KocKefellers? Ia the lit of a score of homeless wretches who thrive only when a strike exists worth more to society than the Uvea or two-score women and children? Ia it worse to shoot imported strike breakers than to burn in oil suck- linn . babes and White-haired wom en? Why grieve when weeks 'have not brought to justice the poor per petrators at Herrin when years have passed and the great assassins at Ludlow still live? And, too, why have you not been aroused by the super-legal government in the coal regions of West Virginia imposed by the coal operators? The Herrin incident does not shake the foundations of free gov ernment, .it does not ahow an utter contempt for law and order but It was a crude and brutal attempt to get justice on the part of a humble citixenry who have shattered their delusions about the impartiality of the courts and the press. . No one can excuse murder. But WOTTA LIFE! WOTTA UFE! the coal klnga have no right to howl at on little defeat nor no rea son to be discouraged, for they have won hundreds of auch battles In Colorado and West Virginia. Hym pathy ought to be given to the fam ilies of the killed (if they have fam ilies). But If we ar to prevent any auch recurrences of murder, we must see that our Industrlnl condi tions are Improved and, that justice is given the workers. ROBT. FULLERTON. Editor's Note: If Mr. Fullerton will take the trouble to look over the back numbers of The Omaha Bee he will discover that this paper did denounce the doings at Lud low: that it did sharply criticize the governor of West Virginia for allow ing guerrilla warfare to break out there,- and so on. But in the name of common sense, how can a crime in Colorado or West Virginia be held to excuse one in Illinois? Two wrongs never made a right, and justice does not rest on violence.) Special rnpQ 54 Any Style LUUO Each Buttered Toast or Bread, Sc Ca. ALL SIX RESTAURANTS What Is Detroit's Secret? Detroit reports that It Is making money on it municipally owned street car lines on which the fare Is 6 cents. That will surprise some public utility board which have been getting their information about the street car business from other sources. Knnsas City Star. Where Restraint la Needed. . It is equally necessary to restrain those coal operators who are In clined to Jump prices and those pan icky buyers who are beginning to offer high prices. Bufalo Express. 3IANO U TUNED AND LW REPAIRED All Work Cuaraateed ' K. HOSPE CO. ISIS Douglas . Tel. Dong. S5SS lie Voice of the- People IS BEING HEARD ON rrohibitioi mi the Boms ! Nearly Half a Million Votes Have Been Counted and Tabulated in the Nation-wide 10,000,000 Poll "It should be possible to form an accurate estimate of public opinion," predicted the New York Tribune, commenting on the tabu lation of the first 200,000 votes in the "Digest's"' national referendum on Prohibition and the Bonus, when the third or fourth hun . dred thousand are tabulated. In this week's issue the tabulation of more than 480,000 votes is presented; and numer ous publicists are ready with estimates of the state of public opinion which the ballots . show. The Pittsburgh Sun, with an eye to certain humorous aspects of the .situation, says : ,- t : . c "It has been amusing, when not distress ' ing, to read the wild statements of the 'wets' and the more rabid 'dries.' Each camp has assured the patient public a thbusand times it holds 90 per cent, of all. American citizens. Of course, the 90 per cent, can not be in both camps at the same time, tho a considerable proportion of us may carry water on one shoulder and something else on another.1 It will be as refreshing as the outlawed mint julep is said to have been to have adequate and accurate information as to just what we do think, these hot sumfner months. . . . . Whatever the outcome of the vote, it is likely to put an end to the foolish claims of the ex tremists on both sides by affording authentic information upon which to base discussion. And that is what we, the people, chiefly need authentic information." As to the Federal Bonus for Soldiers and . Sailors, a small number of strongly pro-bonus advocates join the several "dry" leaders who have announced that the present poll is not representative. The Indianapolis Star takes a more commonly held position and says: "THE LITERARY DIGESJ is not champion ing or opposing either Prohibition or the Bonus, but is interested .only in disclosing sen timent on those subjects. If the force of public opinion is not back of either proposition, no harm can come from knowing that fact. If it is back of either or both, much good may be expected from such a disclosure." The results of this tremendous poll of the nation will be published in the "Digest" from week to week throughout the summer, and when complete the people of the United States should know, as never before, the .'ac tual public sentiment upon these two burning issues. Other striking news-features in the "Digest" this week are : Quaint Customs and Methods of the Ku Klux Klan Also a Review of the Ku Klux Political Victory in Texas To Keep the Coal Strike from Hurting What Was Settled at the Hague The Howell from Nebraska Uncle Sam No "Joiner" A New Party Hat in the Ring The Supreme Effort for Europe's Redemp tion India's Fight Political, Not' Racial Substitutes for Gasoline Air as a Steel Cutter Radio on Your Pleasure Boat The Rising Tide of Religion A Plea for More Open Air Preaching Healing Re ligious Rifts in Canada Topics of the Day Many Interesting Illustrations, Including Calrtoons. Get August 5th Number, on Sale Today At Ail News-dealers 10 Cents The I Hark ol - 1 1 O JL is lei mJ , V FUNK 6c WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of tSe Famous NEW Standard Dictionary' NEW YORK t & '- J w