THE BEE: OMAHA. FRIDAY. SEIf EMBER 16. 1921. TheOmahaBee DAILY (MORNING) EVENINGSUNDAY THE SKI ttJBUSHINQ COM FAN V muox i-rouc, rubikf MEMtTN OF THE ASSOCIATED rHUI Te imim run t i Tks Mas M M at- shbM.eif ejtuoa I Ik fe ressSJfcelbai sf all ,apl.sas rattjia! U M MW l.ia1 Ums rapee. t4 alaa im M Mm sauna !. " ntM ar isevsuctuaa uf fcyill 41 iww f t Mania, as a mMf if llw saSil ureas, sf Cum ISltaht, U WiI.H SSUWfttf M KIMUUia ' Prim ase la tasrinat BEE TELEPHONES Sili? AT Untie 1000 Fee Mfkl Call Altar 10 P. M. MiWUl Dwnwi .... aTUau mi at ltt orricu or the see ti.ia nrriMi lfih aa riraas) CeuaaU ataf II ou M. I So M tU W talk Out-sl-Tawa Olfka v f. tM s-ieik An I wradiaatna lilt l IL Ifeaas till vViilf IU4s, I I'tftk, u In M. HOTwt The Bee's Platform 1. Naw UbIob ruBr Station. 2. Continued improvement of tha Na braska Highway, includiaf tb pave mbI f Maia Thoroughfare leading iala Omaha with a Brick Surfaca. . 3. A abort, low-rate Watarway from tha Cora Bait to tha Atlantic Ocaaa. 4. Worn Rula Ckartar for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. The Double Loss of Accidents. , To apply thrift only to money matters is to fall into the condition of penny wise and pound foolish. One may be thrifty with his health, his life, his sight or even with his peace of mind, for it is but fair to consider one who wastes his energy in fits of temper as a spendthrift. . Illustrating the possibilities of economy along these other lines is the statement of the National Safety council that $1,000,000,000 a year can be saved to the industries of this country by the prevention of the 20,000 deaths caused annually by industrial accidents and of the many thou sands of injuries suffered by workers. In addi tion to these accidents are 55,000 deaths and hun dreds of thousands of injuries met with else where than in employment. Automobile acci dents alone are responsible for 12,000 of these fatalities each year. Taken in the aggregate, the monetary loss entailed in these various ways is beyond calculation. ' Omaha is not behind any othci city in its efforts to reduce the toll of motor casualties, and the crusade quite properly has been made a com munity activity. A similar organization of pub lic sentiment behind the ideal of prevention of other accidents would not be without its effect. With this end in view, the tenth annual safety congress of the National Safety council will meet in Boston the latter part of this month. More than 3,000 men and women who make a business of saving lives and limbs will attend. Among thein are teachers, factory managers, highway engineers, railroad officials, mining representa tives, industrial experts of many kinds, govern mental authorities and insurance men as well. Problems of. long hours and fatigue, carelessness, lack of safety devices, of safety education through motion pictures, fire prevention, elec trical hazards, and all the others having connec tion with the cause or prevention of accidents will be threshed out there. All this will be se verely practical, starting out with the considera tion that these mishaps result in loss of income and of production which mounts up to tre mendous sums of money. But for all that, the thought of the avoidable suffering and the misery and distress that bulks so large will not be ab sent from the mind of anyone who has witnessed the dire results of the maiming and killing which they will discuss. The fundamental justification for safety -first is humanitarian and only inci dentally economic. ' ' '- Omaha; as a Farm Loan Center. '..' That the war finance corporation intends to get as close as possible to the farmer is indi cated by the selection of Omaha as one of the centers for . handling applications for loans. Omaha, furthermore, has again won recognition as the center of a great agricultural empire. With the appointment of three local bankers, F. W. Thomas, chairman; R. P.- Morsntan and A. W. : Pratt, as loan commissioners, assurance is given of efficient and understanding administra tion of this district's share of the $1,000,000,000 fund which congress has set aside for the benefit of farmers and live stock men. The question of agricultural credit was made of more than usual importance by the low and uncertain prices for products of the soil, the im poverishment of Europe and by a tendency to ward relying on farmers or primary purchasers of their crops to do more of the necessary hold ing. Instead of attempting to pour' American - credit into Europe, which is said not to be as eager for extensive loans as some American politicians and others have .mistakenly claimed, the credit is to be used at home instead. Eugene Meyer, jr., managing director of the war finance corporation, will come to Omaha in a short time on a tour of the agricultural dis tricts. The thorough way in which he is investi gating the farming situation, and the selection of Omaha as one of the main offices would seem to promise much both to the farmers and busi ness men of the district.- . Cheaper and Faster Freight. Eight steel barges drawn by a towboat -arrived at New Orleans the other day with 12,000 tons of freight from Cairo, 111. As any one would know, the cost of transporting this dargo by water was less than that by rail 20 per cent cheaper, as a matter of fact. Another advantage, however, is likely to be overlooked the trip was made much more quickly than if it had been attempted by railroad, with the customary' and inevitable delays in terminals and along the way. Cotton, grain, steel girders and general mer chandise composed this shipment For the most part this represents the coarse bulk freight that congests the railroads in times of great business activity. The development of water traffic such as that proposed for the Great Lakes and on the Mississippi river would not only result in moving this faster and cheaper, but would clear the lines for quicker movement of other products by rail. ! The great inland waterway systems of Amer ica have been neglected, but trie demands of business are growing so rapidly that they will be-forced -into use. ..The federal, government during the war undertook to establish freighting a the Mississippi and hs had considerable sue- cot, The Mini advantages and more art latent in the project for opening up the Great Lakes to ocean iriitli. Testimony Subject, to Test. A French agent ior a brandy distillery is re ported to have ..id, as i result of world-wide investigation, that drunkenness is more preva lent in the I'nitrd States and Canada than any where le on earth. Such an astonishing state ment would challenge attention, coming from any source, and will naturally be subject to ex amination, for it contains an aspersion on our national character that can not be lightly pasted over, At the very outset, the asiertion is sub ject to a liberal discount, because it is made by the agent for intoxicating liquors, the sale of which is forbidden in the United States and in a greater part of Canada. His credibility ordi narily is not affected by his business, yet in this instance it is likely lo be affected in some degree by self-interest. However that may.be, it is worth while to inquire as to the foundation. Enough drunkenness prevailed in the United States before the war to arouse the people to such action as resulted in the adoption of the Eighteenth amendment. The charge frequently is made that more liquor of one kind or another is consumed now than ever before in our coun try, No reply may be made to this in exact terms, us no way is known to determine the out put of home breweries and distilleries, or the quantity of synthetic "moonshine" that is dis posed of to the dupes. Actual per capita con sumption of distilled liquor in gallons as shown by returns to the internal revenue bureau dropped from 1.60 in 1917 to 0.79, or less than half, in 1919; for wines the figures are 0.41 in 1917 and 0.50 in 1919, an increase of 0.09 gallons, in no sense an indication of increasing drunkenness, In 1917 the per capita consumption of malt liquors in the United States was 17.95 gallons; in 1919 the total was 9.17, a reduction of almost 50 pr cent. Police court records, the experience of city health departments, and all dependable agencies from which information can be gleaned, agree that there is less drunkenness in the United States than before prohibition went into1 effect, If this is true, and if the statement of the French lquor agent is based on fact, then the world is to be congratulated, for if there is more drunken ness in the United States and Canada than in the lands where liquor is sold openly, "Pussyfoot Johnson's job of sobering up the world is already nearly accomplished. Human Nature in the League. Trusting persons who pinned their "faith to the League ot Nations as an agency for the es tablishment of permanent universal peace and concord must be amazed, to say the least, at the proceedings now under way at Geneva. The league as constituted is a double-barreled affair, and, as is not infrequently the case, each barrel is inclined to shoot at a different mark. For ex ample, in selecting the judges for the world court, a sharp difference of opinion has arisen. The assembly elected Dr. A. Alvarez of Chile to be judge, but the council rejected him. He was then elected a deputy judge by the assembly and again rejected by the council; four times this has occurred, and the split that seemed in evitable has been for the time avoided by the ap pointment of a committee on part of the .as-. sembly to talk the matter over with the council. What will happen if the council does' not deign to name a committee to consult with the representatives of the lower body? The council is imperial, autocratic in its power, capable of vetoing any act of the assembly. Out of such things as this wars arise: broadly stating the cause of war to be lust for conquest, for com mercial supremacy, or any ' of the generalities commonly employed, it is finally true that back of any war may be found, if search is carefully made, some seemingly trivial point on which agreement could, not be reached. Human nature is the same, whether exhibited in the lowly walks of private life or in the rarefied atmosphere of international statesmanship. When men can be taught to insist less upon having their own judgment accepted, and as sume a willingness to be guided at times by con sideration for. others, then will have come a chance for the end of war. Disarming is a step forward, but it does not mean the end of quar reling. ' , "Low Down" on "Babe" Ruth. Would you like to know the secret of how "Babe" Ruth is able to boost the ball over the fence and break up games? It has been discov ered.' One day last week experts at Columbia university took the "bambino" from the Polo grounds to the university laboratory and put him through a series of tests that lasted three hours. When it was all over and the figures totaled up, it was discovered that Mr. Ruth assays 30 points higher than the normal man. On a basis of 100 points as physical perfection, 60 is accepted as normal, and Ruth scored 90. This has to do with co-ordination of brain, nerve and muscle, in re pose and in action. Just on the basis of batting, it. was determined that a pitcher is required to pitch faster to Ruth by 20-1000 of a second in order to have him on a parity with other bat ters, assuming they are normal. Ruth's eye reacts that much faster than the average of man kind.- Some other very interesting facts were discovered. For example, he welted the test ball a blow that deduced for the mathematicians a probable distance of 400 to 500 feet In flight, sorne elements being undetermined, such as the effect of the "english" put on the ball by the pitcher, its relative resilience and the like. Also, he holds his breath when he is swinging. Pitch ers who have watched the ball sail over the grandstand will be relieved to know that the home run record is not a result of their weak ness, but because they have been pitching to a super-man. " .-,' Several notable improvement projects have been adjourned by the city council, subject to renewal at any future time, when the taxpayers are more in a mood to assume the burden en tailed. Just now the price seenu to be a trifle too high. Argentina expresses the belief that the dis armament conference in Washington is of more importance than the League of Nations, and that it holds the key to the situation. How nice; now the only problem is to find the key bole. . ' ' . Dame Nature seems bent on keeping the Ne braska farmer busy. At any rate, she is making ample provision for fall plowing, planting and pasturage, three very essential "p' in the An telope state's pod. . About the Ku Klux Klan Amj.ng Mixture pf Mumbo Jumbo and Something Els. (Continued From Yaiterday.) The victim themselves were 'sometimes bad characters and sometimes of good repute. One wa a former marine who served at Chateau 'Ihierry. Another, Sherwood Vituon. was the son of a lifelong resident (l.ulkin. Tex., who writes to tne American Uvii Liberties union thus: Xf y 19-year-old hoy, Sherwood Vinson, re- reived letter through our mail ordering him to leave and advise his bootlegger friends to go with linn. I took the letter to the grand jury and ask the jury to tell my boy if he wa violating the law but they done nothing so far at I could tell. Later they caught the boy on the streets of Lufkin with a pistol in the hand of one of ther.i, put him in a car, went to the woods, tarred and feathered him, brought him back to the streets of Liifkin, set him out, and our sheriff paid no attention, so far as 1 could tell, to the pistol or crime. The boy says he knows the men that done the work. I have lived here sixty-four years, not educated, but want right, want the laws executed, and tried to get the grand jury to do so. We can get the bunch it we can get the law handed out honest. Although the state of Texas has been more favored than any other by thcc manifestations of a desire to bkss mankind, they have ap peared elsewhere, throughout the south. At Miami, Fla., on July 17, the British rector of a church in the negro quarter was tarred and featli- How to Keep Well By DR. W. A. RVANS Quotient caacsraia aysian, aaaiUlisa ana1 aravaalisa l atissssa, ukajilt4 U Or. Ivans as- mdm ! Tha Sm. Mi a swsaaalls-, sustasl ranr limtUIlM, kr Htmpti i4rttn !! U IW. Ot. van will aol a aiaiiuMit Aadrttt lttrt In (trt Ikt BM. Mr arttcrika far iaivi4ul fitaatat. Cupyright, J1CI, by Dr. W. A. Evtni. THEORIES ABOUT ECZEMA. It ia irotalile Uiut we ar on the toad toward a solution of tha ecse ma problem and nearer tha goal Hum wa ever have ben. 11 u n gin by trying to underotnml what inn-ma Ik. Anions? Iiiy neonlo any eruption wrk'h Inula any time, which itchra mid which It tn any drare niomi at any time la apt to be called veto mo. In fact, wa could Inn off tha third f thvta requirement- and ay any chronic eruption which ttchc come to be railed eczema. Thla mean, of course, time tha term ia applied to many tkln din mm. aume tnruruble. aome easily curable, aome in between. auue due to one thin, so mo due to nnotner. In comtMiucncft of thja loopeneya llieie are hundreds of ecxema cure, all bucked by honent people who hnva been genuinely cured or think they have. Kven whrin we awa'p the skin pexlallMls' uroiip of ecsemtt and throw out U the nilncelloneou n ceteras that the Iny poople dump Into the ecxema box wa atlil are holdinir on to a inlm'pllaneuiiH a- surtment of akin troublm. The Archives Bf Dermatology re ceiitly published an address on this ered by masked men. The day before, an elderly tuujcct Kiven by Dr. r . u. Harris as farmer was s nil ar v se red and whioned it '--i" l" "- Warrensburg, Mo. On July 23, a man and a woman at Birmingham, Ala., received like treat ment. And so it has gone. Of course much is charged to the Klan that can not be traced di rectlv to Mr. William IoscdIi Simmon's dues- school of Vienna navincr nrfrnmzatinn. Thi cami warn ton tnvit- I school of Hamburg, ing; naturally it had imitators. Some call them selves Ku Klux Klansmcn without paying dues; others indignantly oppose the Klan but copy its methods. An anti-Ku Klux Klan organization logical society and prepared for pub Ifratlon by his widow after his un timely death. He Raid ai to tne cause or eczema "tnere are inrce tchoola the external irritation the infection and the hu moral nchool of France. As a mat ter of fact there are many cases of eczema due to external irritation. 'Most . cases of eczema of the hands come from substances which The essential of cure In these cases is to protect- the skin or else to change occupation or method of car rying out the harmful occupation Dr. Harris suggested that there mlcht be a relation between de in southern Texas adopted the slogan, "Kill 'em get on the hands while at work. on sight Mike you would a mad dog. J. he Black Hand of Joaquin, Shelby county, icxas, threatened to burn the whole town if Klansmcn committed more violence. And in Charlotte, N. C.i a 19-year-old ecnius elected himself "ex alted dragon" of a junior Ku Klux, and collected flclent adrenal secretion in the blood 25 cents dues each from a large number of his in all diseases which were charac- nner fr nU Thpra c nnnl rnnfncutn tCrlMQ DV UCninff. I nut lnciuues .. k . . .. ,, . uiai uiat vo juauc ui cuiiivijiiiihi v.. is against oiue raws, mil in ie,xas n mrcatens t , d f the adrenal KUlnd. jt is bootleggers. In one Honda town a group ot Rlven by hypodermic and applied aueeea is.iansmen even inreaienea a juage guuiy locally. of mfnrrinor the snreil laws. But the theory which is attract fit l-. iU.r. -n.nn cor nil. ,- urn., nf 3 ltlC ItlOSl &UenUOn HOW IB IUB financial nature against the Klan. Major Craven, French or hum ! plan.tlon of the grand dragon of the invisible empire lor the . .. . 4U,t hol,'n . th. realm of North Carolina, recently issued an order of eczema are due to eating foods disbanding the Klan m that state, saying that as which, 'while wholesome enough to conducted in North Carolina it is an organiza- most people, cause eczema in some. tion engaged exclusively in collecting initiation tees under Jalse pretenses, without any legal standing in the state, and is, in my opinion, a failure and a fraud. He added that the most notorious criminal in the county got in by paying for it . . . and the organizers kcot him in because he was. bringing in others of the same high protein diet, and alcohol were ua rr,nn'i Dotent factors In causintr eczema. charges are disputed by the king kleagle of the 's 'nY?si'5a'i0-n' .I1,0- 3"! i ir tir r J i . it U U I 1UOUS IHW UWUUio we mica- realm, Mr. W. V. Guerard, but they should per- I rupted by death. In about half the naps serve U watte uuier puujit; uiniiciis iviiuvv the example of the mayor of Thiladclphia, who has directed that inquiry be made as to the dis position of the fees for which membership in the order is bestowed. These fees are large. -It costs $10 to be initiated into the Klan, plus $6.50 for a white robe and it is obvious that these robes can be produced at a cost of about SI These fees appear to go to the grand aulic of the lmoenal wizard at Atlanta. Local branches In an investigation digestive trou ble was found in 70 per cent of a series of cases of pruritis, 68 per cent of urticarias, 75 per cent of rosaceas, 54 per cent of eczemas, 62 per cent of tetters in babies. Harris found that constipation. cane of ecsema. diet appear to ba tha raima. Kxiirrlnieniation In em-h cava should thow what food tlutt person should avoid. Heller lie KiIihhI. M. It. O. writ: "I have read ev. (nil article lately In reaard lo the du nger of diabotea and have Do come alarmed. 1 am 23 year old. b feet ineheu tall, and weigh HO pound. I went through an exam ltmUon hut December and waa told there wa too much augar In my blood yind that I had a blood pre, are of 140 pound, which th doe tor claimed waa entirely too high for a girl of my age. I have given up diarchy fooda and weeu. The Mia thing I really vat along thla line ia ice cream. I have eoiimilttd another doctor and ha claim 1 am too young to have trouble of this aort. What is your opinion? Do ou advlno mo to aee another doc tor? I have not had my urine examined." UK PLY. You are not too young to have diabetes. No diabetic should eat lee cream. Neither should an obese pirsou. You khouM nave your ucine examined. However, high blood pressure of Itself la enough to make you go on a low starch diet. Child nnd Beauty Culture. Mrs. P. P. writes: "1. At what ago are nuts, salad, and raw fruits beneficial to a child? 2. Often after the least bit .-of emotion on my part, or after washing, my face breaks out In red blotches. Is that due to a faulty akin or blood? I. I have a mole on my nose, which often Itches and smarts, although I leave It strictly alone. Would you advise Its removal, and, If ao, how?" REPLY. 1. Children 3 year old and over can take salads and raw ripe fruits. Nuts are safe enough ftt 4 If you watch to see they are well chewed. 6. I do not think so. S. Leave it alone. Symptoms of foolish iicm. M. J. writes: "Can you kindly tell me the symptoms of diabetes? For the last two weeks I have been drinking entirely too much water. The more I drink the more thirsty I seem to get andmy tongue always is dry and irritable. It cannot be my stomach, as I have taken quite a number of physics?" REPLY. The symptom which is worth all the balance put together five times over is the presence of sugar In the urine as shown by chemical test The hot weather could explain your symptoms. Taking physics could aiso explain tneni. mow can you expect to feel good when you take -physics frequently? First thing you know you will be taking calomel and wondering why you feel like the devil. Going Too Far The Great Unwashed (From the Philadelphia Ledger,) Bath. England, was an appropri ate place for the deliverance of Sir James Crichton-Browne on the sub ject of bathing. This eminent medl- i L ...it... j.. ..,..,ii s tin .nm.oliv cal authority asserts that If every- Whal becomes of all this money is not Uj u gg uuLTsou The imperial wizard says he pays himself only t. alatomBt immeflintpiv $100 per week, but an Atlanta paper recently an- giVeS a ot Cf the little fellows a nounced the purchase by the Ku Klux Klan ot chance to bark at the heels of the an entire block on Pcachtree road, which was big one in the hope of jetting them- to be made national headquarters "at a cost of selves noticed; but, of course, taking about $1,000,000." "Lanscape improvements," the tst(a'T.l '.fHi fhfli,. . , j. T ' ' '! j k.. ttn nnn was intended to be taken, the speaker including an artificial lake and about $30,000 ,s right A great manyr j,aths ln worth of marble and plaster statuaryi were to water mean8 baths in the open air be made. "Lanier university," Atlanta (a school as well! and the idiotic agitation to which docs aot figure in the rather complete list I make people cover themselves up of academic institutions in the World almanac), when they bathe so that they can has also been taken over by the Klan, and the wmiy oreame ana p.u imperial wizard himself, it i announced, will be Jg-J , ood'UiatVo! the new president. It may ve said that William i,.n..tv, lnfforahi of ihn Allen White was probably not unjustified in highest morality. exulting that it was "to the everlasting credit of The author of "An Outline His- Emnoria that the organizer of this cheao clan tory of Tubbing" in the August is- found no suckers here with $10 each to squander." sue of Gas Logic (New Yorlt) points It is of course, unlikely that the remarkab,e ; series of mob outbreaks were foreseen by the . fc om rm,mn rinrinnBti imperial wizard in 1915. Such a program would in 1842. He had run the gauntlet have been too hazardous to have been deliberate. 0f the severest medical censure, and But what should have been forseen was that such was told that the abhorrent custom a consequence was well-nigh inevitable. . The would lead straight to the pr.lmonary n,n nr;nrre fmm th fnomnru n! nnct.n'vil War and phthisical ailments wnich Sir lawlessness! when the 'negro was disfranchised 3l4SW. by terror. It proclaims its purpose to maintain phIa the common council, that per- white supremacy and to protect womanhood, the enniat fount of all wisdom, actually two customary cloaks for lynching. Its leader debated with vehemence and failed asserts its purpose to protect the security of the to pass by the narrow marsin of two neoole "in the absence of inadeauacv of the forces votes an ordinance that would make It i.. j .j- t ,i,-,v,; bathing illegal from November 1 to Ul lavr aim u'uu. ita ,uv.,..uv,o. ,j, . 1 Ta vn'h 1 K Tr, Tlnotnn a similar nrAi . . . , T t , j , i mart: ii ju, x jduoluii a, oiuiuni vim- closes an unmistakable anti-Jewis -and ant- n wa3 not repeaied until 1862. cainouc Dias. us organizers in uic nuiin amim in the latter seat of learning it was at private meetings that there it is to be mainly unlawful to bathe except upon the an instrument of anti-Semitism. Its nrotesta- prescription of a physician. But It tions of 100 per cent Americanism and its warn- l on record that some Bostonians ngs tsKag.tf.tor. suggest the familiar tactic. i ot d o; IIIC CUnvciIUUIiai UUIIUIICIIIS Ul uixainitu uum. (. 4ic,i .ttlno nf a nn Indeed the group of rowdies at first described as dominantly saponaceous character' American Legion men who tore Mrs. Ida Lroucli even before the civil war. They Hazlett from a socialist platform in Mason City, I prided themselves on having more la., last month, and drove her out of town, were space behind the ears than most quoted by the United Press correspondent as ul . ...... .l-. k.i j v. i. Though the bathtub was ana- saying mat nicy prerrcu m u.v. thema there wfire opportunities for jvu in.iux xvian, aim 111c xvaosas v-ujr ui naun.- ,athnK in Philadelphia even in the lv describes the Klan in that .part of the world eiehteenth centurv. Georee Easterly as an anti-Nonpartisan league organization, uver in revolutionary , times advertised the whole ha been thrown an amazinir haze Ot "meaicai waters lor ariniiing ana mumbo jumbo with its imperial wizards, its king paining, masing nasie 10 auu, n 1.1 1 a a t,..i rtA I is aeterminea to Keep tne Dest 01 n.cuK-ta, b.i.u u.a6Uu nquors of all and eVery kind." He cyclopses, its fiery crosses and the rest. It was cirove a thriving trade. Ths so-called inevitable that all this should have attracted those wiewam Baths were oDened bv John most easily stirred to mob action and that the Coyle on the flowery marge of the range of prejudice to which the order appeals fcchuyikin in 1791. Patrons mignt should have led to repeated outbreaks. The im- disport themselves in two shower Priest in his travels could not see the water there. His annotation runneth thus: "On the table there svere coffee, cheese, sweet cakes, hung beef, sugar, pickled salmon, butter, - crackers, ham. cream and bread." One Coghlan, to- the ac ceptance of the many, ran floating baths at Windmill (Smith's) Island in 1826. The Philadelphlan who bathes no longer feels that he is a daring In novator, like the hardy pioneers of 1842 -who put bathtubs in their houses and then stood back, arms folded, and said: "Let the law do we have made some perial wizard (Mr. William Joseph Simmons) should have foreseen all this, tie cannot now absolve himself by proclaiming lawful and bene- ficnent purposes for his empire. He had much better ' destroy the child of his own handiwork, as he threatened to do not long ago. It is a child conceived in the tradition of a lawless past and brought forth in the extravagant obscurantism of present-day prejudice. Its life cannot and hould not be a happy one. the modern -hu Klux. Klan does not deserve to live and it had much better die. Lower Freights; More Business. The reduction of freieht rates on wheat for its worst!" export, it is said, will enable American wheat to Progress between 1842 and 1921. We . r I . J 1 ' I , f I ...J Keis. improvea export acmanu wui ui iuuisc ujj, cellar, tend to raise tne price, out 11 mere De any ad vance the credit therefor probably will be ac corded by the protectionists to the emergency tariff. Topeka State Journal. . 1 the bathroom to One Strike Generally Aprpoved. The waiters of Holland who are striking for the abolition of the tip ping system, with an increase in Na Prm Vminf Olvmmi. "ages to maKe up lor consequent ' I lnaa in tnntimp will hnva tha avm- Accordinz to the president. Secretary Weeks I nnthv of & rood manv oeoDle the is jocularly called ""Mars" in cabinet meetings. I world over who do not approve of We mav imaeine that IJavis. the Pittsburghef. truces aa a general xning. spring i railed "Vnlran!" IJenhv. "entnne-." Hoover. " iwpuuubiii -r . 1 . r nermes l nsmegisius, me patron 01 mcr- ;-rt nl of h ... .1 ' ..j u.t ta... nu,. 1 u:n.. 1 - - vuauis, x uuu, .u.i., 1 wn, om.ftn(! ni-as. Invent a Homers ferocious old boy, docs for Hil) tra..rnni,.P that win tnm the ora- Hays. Anybody can complete the cabinet list! tions of the learned Into bread for for himself. Brooklyn taglc, - ithe poor? toiversalist Reader. (The Bee offrrs Ha column freely la It readers who cure to diaeuM any public question. Ita requests that letter be reasonably brier, not over 30 words. It also Insists that tha name o( the writer accompany each letter, not necessarily for publication, but that the editor may know with whom he Is deallnf. The Bee does not pretend to Indorse or accent views or opinions expressed by corre spondents in the Letter Box.) Ak-Sar-Bcn Ball. Cheyenne, Wyo., Sept. 12. To the Editor of The Bee: A number of us had planned to go to Omaha and take in the festivities of Ak-Sar-Ben. bringing our wives along, and attend the coronation ball on the night of September 23. This was in recipro cation of the presence of the Com mercial club of Omaha at our big Frontier celebration. Now in read ing your valauble paper we are in formed that no outsiders will be permitted at the ball, as It's only for the members and their family. This is not the usual Omaha hos pitality, and I am greatly surprised that such an edict should be issued by this splendid body of citizens who comprise the Ak-Sar-Ben. Besides, you know that we people of the great west are not pikers, and us ually pay as we go. This kind of treatment is not an Omaha idea and quite in contrast with a custom that means. so much for the prosperity of Omaha. Ak-Sar'-Ben has a host of friends here and when we come to Omaha we spend our . money freely and stop at your best hotels and patronize your big department stores and leave many a dollar with youi My wife is greatly disappoint ed in the action of the ball commit tee, and it's not too late to rescind this unjust order. The widest publicity can be given to an occasion of this kind by a good attendance of nonresidents. Omaha will be the loser if some thing is not done at once to remove this social barrier. Friends ought to bo welcome in any man's home. I hope your great paper will publish this and Ak-Sar-Ben render a serv ice to the community. "FAIR PLAT." Editor's Note The rule limiting attendance at the ball to actual resi dent members of Ak-Sar-Ben is made because of the physical Im possibility of accommodating at the Den all who would be willing to pay the fee for the privilege of attend ing. It is not lack of hospitality on part of the knights, but a sad proof of the fact that the Den is not big enough to hold everybody. Get out Your Latin Grammar.' Richmond, " Va., which saw the first trolley railway, in 1888, is try ing the first trolley omnibus in 1921. The "trolleybus," as its promoters have named it, is by no means the first "trackless trolley" to be oper-j ated, but It is the first transporta tion line to be' largely served byj such vehicles. ; "Trolleybus!" We wonder how it is pronounced?. And if a compound word, with its three syllables, equally accented? Or, as if a Latin ablative: trollibus? Which reminds us that "omnibus"- is an ablative. Is "trollibus?" Could "every schoolboy" tell us? Thai Churchman. -i- A Progressive Suggestion. If it is proper for the cliy to sell gasoline, as has been proposed, why not peanuts? There a abundant op portunity to take the profiteering out of tho street vending the nut that pleases and feeds the children. Florida Times-Union. Warn of Disarmament Foes. Those with high hopee for dis armament must be on their guard against low tricks and Jokers. Washington Post. City People and 3ioises. City people complalrf of noise, but when a man habitually slams his doora there's one who doesn't St. jLouie Globe-Democrat, rvasa Iks . Yafc Time. Far from us be tha spirit of In tolerance or tha wlah to apoll euort, but tli burglar, gunmen and nils rellansous unclassified bandit era really abusing Ihelr privileges. Urt threa in hi a in auoceaalon aoma cf our loo nthuaiaitie gaiigatera, rac ing along In their ears, have tried to kilt mera pedestrians, not legitU mately, aa It were, br running over ilism. but by ahootlng . at them. Lspsi-lally must wa remonstrate with the gentlemen who fired from an automobile on hevenlh avtnua and shot a man who waa walking with it oung woman. Kven If there wa acme Intention of "passional crime." It la not agreeable to person on tha street to have I lies hula fan laslet with firearm executed In Ihelr presence. Professional etl quet and a proper sense of cour ttsy to tha public ought to prevent thru rapid flrera from playing their llitl games in auch clrcumsiHnres. It not most indiscreet on thtlr part, too, to rob ao many house that th burglary Insurance com panies ar forced lo put up their rates? Kven from the point of view Of good business, thl enthusiasm, this excessive professional activity, I Injudlcloua If not restrained by volunteer agreement It will tend to make even cltizena possessed of their full ahare of the patience necessary to tha dweller In thl rtty querulour, Inquisitive, and even a little apery. They will begin to ak If tha authori ties hav ever heard of the Biilllvan law. Why la that Inw honored In the breach and not In the observ ance? Why I it easy for anybody :o get a "gun" and to us the same for nnn-altruiatie purpoae? Why are robberies, burglaries, murders, assault with intent lo kill, ao nu merous and roiiiiniiied with auch larva shut nf impunity thai aveti ihil"soihi txtisarvative feel bound It, protaal? (, alls-stars will b aaiignter, but they should Irani a little mora mod oration. If lliey don't, Hi commu nity may get into a passion, and rn th I'tillr may hsva mska up; though, of rouise. no though ful t'ltlien would press litem loo hard to lurrt from such vital dulirs a wairhing tha carea anil restau rant 10 wmk on Htiih trivial mat ter a (he protection t'f life and property. CONSTANCY. In Ih mornlti esily Lots wsnl leuahiii e Powe the rosil I" Ar.-sil, And rosy wss ins sky. Easer arms I lift. Kafir ass my rail U vnl Isushln down ih resit And did ant hsrd l all. New lAts'f steps sr lasting, Now ha stalls ma Ions. Put I slay wlihm the nout And sin a little song. , Sin a i-aiele.a amis-, Lots, iv I seem snl free On. I ilsra not let ynu guess Th htsvy heart of ma! Pe not fim ma patient. Come snd storm the daort Tou will find ma msIIIii you, As tar ss before. AhiKSII W, Creasoin In tha New Totk Itaisld. "BUSINSS IS COOP THANK YOU' LV Nicholas Oil Company Pathe Phonograph & Lloyd Baby Carriage Exhibition, Saturday Union Outfitting Co. A Handsome "Lloyd" Baby Carriage Given Away at . End of Demonstration. Realizing that many music lov ers are thinking of the fall and winter evenings . indoors, . the Union Outfitting Go. has ar ranged for a special demonstra tion of the new "Electric" Pathe Phonograph, starting next Sat. urday. These balmy Autumn days are also ideal for baby and, as many mothers are getting out for daily walks, an exhibition of "Lloyd" Baby Carriages at special prices will also take place. - Advertisement Universally Acknowledged! THE BEST PIANO Lin anywher any timet Your Judgment, Pleas. Mason & Hamlin Grands $1,650 up Kranich & Bach Grand $ 1,250 Sohmer Grand $1,200 Vose & Sons Grand $900 Brambach Baby Grand $695 Allowance mad on usad pianos and periodical pay ment planned. Our refinished piano bar gain in standard Mahogany, Walnut lid Oak Upright Piano, priced from $155 and better.:;, J 1 r .1 i ' ;.i Payment at low as $1.50 per Week. 1513 Douglas Street The Art and Music Store I Luxurious Appoint 1 - A irfclTriaOlVT AT XT Al IIP Mill II I II iivui . vui I ir ' " - w W aW, The Omaha Bee O'CLOCK EDITION Carries the World's Up- to-the Minute Telegraph News as well as Late Day News of Doings in and about Omaha. T Serve Yourself With the Very Latest News Every Night in the 5 o'Clock Omaha Bee as, , i . ...