THE ALLIANCE 11 Eli ALL), lUESDAV, JAOTAiliT71yir ROOF GARDEN WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT DANCES. FINE MUSIC GOOD CROWD. LOWRY & HENRY. PACKING PLANTS INDICTED BY S. P. C. A. SPEAKER Investigator Declares There Is Need less Cruelty in Killing Animals for Food. A strong indictment of the South :, Omaha packing plants for needless V cruelties has been made by a repre- tentative of the society for the pre vention of cruelty to animals, who made a personal investigation of several plants there a few weeks ago, and detailed the results of his visit to the convention of the American Hu mane association at Omaha. The in vestigator was Dr. Rowley, well known in Massachusetts, and he pre sents a picture that is far from pleas ing. The average citizen, who is in terested only in having meat for his table, is not informed as to what hap pens before it gets there. Dr. Row ley said, in part: According to the Government re ports for 1U19, there were killed for food in the United States during those twelve months, in round numbers, be sides a quarter of a million goats, 9,000,000 calves, 13,500,000 cattle, 1G, 00,000 sheep and lambs, and 71,000, 000 swine; a total of something over 110,000,000. A hundred and ten mil lions! What does that mean to us? How many stars did you ever see with your unaided eye on the clearest night? Never more than three thou ' sand. Who can think in millions? Put these animals in line according to their average length, allow six inches only between them as they wind on day and night, summer and winter, to the blood-stained shambles. That line would reach seven and one-half times around the globe. Think of it! Fol low it in imagination. Dream of it. "Who is responsible for it? You and I and every other eater of meat. I am not speaking from the point of view cf a vegetarian. It's the cruelty that concerns me now. How are these animals killed? With the exception of the 13,500,000 of large beef animals, which are gen erally knocked in the head before their throats are cut, except where the Jewish method prevails, and part of the 9,000,000 calves, all the 16,500,000 sheep and lambs, and all the 71,000, 00 swine, nearly all this line reaching seven and one-half times around the globe, driven, hurried, prodded, fright ened on their way to their sad doom, are jerked up by a hind ankle, and, so suspended, their throats are cut and they are left to bleed to death. How long does consciousness persist after the knife thrust? From one and one- naii to three and one-half minutes. The things I am to tell you today about the way these animals are killed are not founded upon what I have read, but only upon what 1 have seen. I have been through the abattoirs of Chicago and many of those across the water. Fearing that I might do an injustice to the slaughtering institu tions of this city, which I had never visited, I spent last Monday at one of the great abattoirs in South Omaha. I thought I knew something of brutal ity that was possible in the destruc tion of animals killed for food, but I saw there deeds of savage cruelty that surpass anything I had witnessed cither in this country or in Europe. Painful and pitiful as the picture may be, you must let me describe it as well as I can. Look yonder into this room, half as large possibly as this hail. There are perhaps fifty or more cattle standing there waiting their turn to die. As fast as they will pass into the slaugh ter pen, others will take their places. Water is falling in a fine spray over them from pipes attached to the ceil ing. I said to the man who was tak ing me about, "It isn't hot enough to day to spray the animals." I marveled at the kindness that had suggested this cooling process for days of ex RADIUM CURES Also Tumors, Bleeding from the Womb, Tuberculosis of the Skin, Birthmarks, Deforming Scars, Many Types of Ulcers, Etc. WITHOUT THE USE OF THE KNIFE Employed by the Specialists connected with the HOT SPRINGS CLINIC Hot Springs South Dakota Hlfi ) This undertaking establishment occupies a position of eminence in the public mind. We have won the people's commendation by painstaking, praiseworthy methods and an up-to-date equipment. If you are in need of our services you will be pleased by the manner in which we transact business. Glen Miller UNDEHTIXDTQ FAKLOKS Fhanti: Day, 111 cessive heat and wondered if it had sprung from compassion, or from the purpose to benefit, in some way, the flesh of the victims whose excited and fevered condition in these last mom ents might injure thp meat for food. "Oh," he said, "We don't spray 'hem to get them cool, but the hair is o thick that unless we wet it down it s such a poor conductor for our electric punchers that they don't get enough of the shock." Opening from this pen is a door hrough which may be hurried a cer ain numler of animals into a pass-ge-way perhaps six feet wide and ixty feet long. These figures are only .pproximations. When the passage or alley-way is full, there are doors that are dropped which divide it into compartments, each containing four cattle. These doors are lifted as the animals are rushed out of the spray ing room of which 1 have spoken. Mow are they started into the death chamber? By an electric prod that is sufficiently powerful and terrifying o hurry them in at the speed of a dead run. All the way down the line at every few feet stands a man with one of these prods who shoves it onto them, hustling them along as fast as their legs can carry them. "How powerful is the shock of this electric prod?" 1 asked. "Put it on a bull's neck in the right place, and it will knock him to the ground," said one of the men. "The thinner animals, that is, those poor in flesh, are often knocked down when it touches them." This is what I was told by one of the men who was using the prod, and he was not con tradicted by two others who heard him. I had seen these prods in Chicago. There they did not seem to affect the cattle by any means as seriously, and I am told there the men sometimes use them on each other in sport. Nothing could make me believe, how ever, no matter how the current may have been reduced since then, that, on the day of which I have been speak ing, the shock was not a violent and torturing one. Animals do not cry out with such sounds as I can still hear ringing in my ears, from a slight prick of an electric wire. I had supposed these animals were to be stunned with some degree of hu maneness. I had seen them in Chi cago where they came one by one, so that, with little room to move their heads, the man standing by the ani mal had a pretty fair chance to strike the one blow that generally dropped them to the floor. But mark the situation here. Four animals are standing in one of these compartments with their heads in various positions relative to the man with the poleax, who is on a plat form raised a little above them. lie is now about to give the so-called stun ning blows. He watches his chance for a head sufficiently at rest to strike it. He chooses a head. ( I am describ ing carefully what I saw, nothing else.) He strikes one blow. It is not in the right spot. It is just above the eye. The steer does not fall. He strikes again. This time the victim goes to his knees, but recovers him self and turns his head out of reach j of the poleax. Unable to finish with this steer, the man strikes at ' nother. Two blows send him to the floor. By this time the first one has moved back within reach. Another blow, and he drops, rises again, and finally the fourth blow sends him down. There are two left whose heads have not yet been near enough to warrant an at tempt at hitting them. With their 'two fellows down, but struggling in their death agony, one of these at last looks up into our very faces, and then with a crash the iron descends, and he lies prone with the other two. The fourth steer is felled, but only after being struck twice, once too low down, and once the fatal center between the eyes. Of the four, one went down with one blow of the poleax, two with two blows, and one with four. Must we call this killing? It seem ed more like murder, and murder with THE NEW Scientific Surgeon CANCER J'"j 1 123 Wtit Third Street utter indifference to the suffering of j those slain. It was simply poundirg j the life out of creatures, helpless, : nonnp.I in unit ulwillv un:ihlf In nuike jthe slightest effort in self-defense. Behind me in the other compart ments where the poor cattle were be ing knocked down the same method wa being followed. How many blows enrh received I cannot tell. It may have been less; it may have been more. That such conditions prevail every day, 1 cannot say, of course. The man with the poleax, by whose side I stood may have had an off day. He may have lccn a new man. Noth ing would indicate either supposition so far as I could learn from him. He said nothing in the way of apology for his failures to kill with a single blow, and, what is more, I did not see how a man, leaning over four cattle free to move their heads as these were, could be sure of his blow more than about once in three times. I had seen enough of this sicken ing attempt at stunning. I retraced my steps down the line and out onto the , small platform from which I could watch these dying animals as they slid out onto the slaughtering floor, when the doors at the side of the compartments were lifted. They were still kicking, struggling, some of them violently. I am perfectly will ing to admit that with the most of them it was the spasmodic muscular contractions of an unconscious and dying life. But one steer was paw ing and kicking so vigorously that I expected him to get up on his feet at any moment. I took out my watch, and between the time I first observed JJiim, as his supposedly unconscious foody landed from the compartment onto the floor where the animals are pulled up by the hind legs to have their throats cut, and the time when his struggles had sufficiently subsid ed so that anyone dared go near enough his heels to fasten the chain about his legs, it was nine and a half minutes. One of the employes told me this I am only quoting that there were times when they had to send to the platform above for one of the poleax men to come and knock some steer in the head again, lest he get upon his feet and become uncon trollable. I thought, when visiting the slaugh ter pens in Cuba some years ago where they practice the nape stab. that is, drive a two-edged knife into the neck behind the horns and direct ly over the termination of the spinal column, that that was the most hor rible thing in the way of killing cat tle I should ever see, for while the nape stab destroys the power of mo tion, it does not destroy consciousness, but the horrors of this abattoir In South Omaha surpassed even the tor tures of Havana's merciless shambles. The address closed with an appeal for legislation that should compel the humane stunning or rendering uncon scious by some humane means all animals killed in packing plants. ALIBIS FOR ERRANT CITIZENS Life Takes Exception to Claim That Publicity Causes Crime The police commissioner of New York City explains the wave of crime in that city by blaming .the newspa pers. The newspapers, he says, are constantly printing accounts of rob beries and murders, and these ac counts simply encourage other crim inals to come to New York and do the same. If the papers would stop giving all this publicity to crime, the crooks might forget that there was such a thing. As it is, they read about it in their newspapers every morning, and sooner or later have to go out and try it for themselves. This is a terrible thought, but sug gests a convenient alibi for other er rant citizens. Thus we may read the following "News Notes": Benjamin W. Gleam, age forty-two, of 1941 Ruby avenue, The Bronx, was arrested last night for appearing in the Late Byzantine room of the Mu seum of Fine Arts clad only in a suit of medium-weight underwear. When questioned Gleam said that he had seen so many pictures in the news paper advertisements of respectable men and women going about in their underwear, drinking tea, jumping hur dles and holding family reunions, that he simply couldn't stand it any longer, and had to try it for himself. "The newspapers did it," he is quoted as saying. ... Mrs. Leonia M. Eggcup, who was arrested yesterday on the charge of bigamy, issued a statement today through her attorneys, Wine, Women and Song. "I am charged with having eleven husbands, all living in various jarts of the United States," reads the state ment. "This charge is correct. But before I pay the extreme penalty, I want to have the public understand that I am not to blame. It is the fault of the press of thi3 country. Day after day I read the Mat of mar riages in my morning paper. Day after day I saw people after people getting married. Finally the thing got into my blood, and although I was married at the time, I felt that I simply had to be married again. Then, no sooner would I become set tled in my new home, than the con stant incitement to further matri monial ventures would come through ! the columns of the daily press. I fell, it is true, but if there ie any Justice in this land, it will be the newspapers and not I who will suffer. Robert C Benchley In Life. now could they identify a modern girl If she were to fall into a river T Brush (Col.) Times. TEMPTATION TO IU)OTLr.G(.i:US Over Two Billion hollars or;h of llooie In Storage A suggested cure for present boot legging evils, due to the enforce ment" of the Volstead act, is olltu in the January Sunset, which sa,s: War profits as a source of sudden wealth have been succeeded in the last few months by booze profits. Boot legging has become an organized and highly lucrative profession; its tainted money has corrupted police depart ments in scores of cities and in many instances the officers charged with the prosecution of the bootleggers have succumbed to temptation. Bribe giving and taking, arson, theft, and even murder have been the conse quence of the illegal liquor profits and the end is not in sight. The saturnalia of graft and crime can be traced indirectly to the over zealous enthusiasm of the dry forces. Had they allowed sufficient time for the disposal of the country's liquor stocks after manufacturing was pro hibited, the present situation could not have arisen. Ninety per cent of the organized bootlegging is based on the availability of whisky that was dis tilled several years ago. Of this stuff 60,000,000 gallons are stored in bond; most of its represents a cash invest ment of less than $4 a gallon; once in the hands of the bootlegger, it can be sold for a minimum of $40 a gal lon less $6 a gallon tax. Therefore the bootlegger can afford to pay bribes aggregating $10,000 per thou sand gallons withdrawn from the bonded warehouses illegally and still retain a huge profit for himself. The remaining liquor stored in bond offers the bootlegger a profit of near ly two billion dollars. Why not re move this temptation ? Why not give the owners a year in which to sell this liquor legitimately under proper regulations for personal consumption of the producer? Such a procedure would remove the greatest incentive to crime in the country's history and produce a tax revenue of $360,000,000 which sum, invested at 6 per cent, would create an income of $18,000,000 a year for prohibition enforcement, three times the amount now available. A POSTOFFICE ROMANCE Friendship, N. Y. Love, Va. Kissimee, Fla. Ring, Ark. Parson, Ky. Reno, Nev. Illinois Siren. NOTICE Members of the Modem Brother hood of America will stand in sus pension if dues are not paid before the last day of the month. By order of the Supreme Lodge. F. E. SANDERS, Pre., E. L. LAWRENCE, Sec. 10-13 Lots of women who take men "for better" find it really was for worse. t I . .t. "w.i ' -'"'- mm- ' BOAT RACE Stroke stroVc- stroke, the cox swain is shouting to the shirtless joung oarsmen, and they are pult'ng every ounce of energy in the task be fore them. Boil'es that have been un der systematic training for many months are now finding nn outlet for their pent up force in the most fa ored of nil navy sports boat racing. These youngsters are taking part in their last athletic venture before being sent to sea. They are products of one of the Naval Training Stations, and have been "through the mill" that turns a flabby, soft muscled youngster Luncheonette Service You will find our place just the place you've been looking for, when you want a hot lunch, while down town shopping or after the show. F. J. Brennan New Location Next to First National Dank Building DON'T RISK IT NO USE taking the risk of carrying money or of having it around the house. You may have it stolen and you may lose your life at the hand.s of some bandit. DeposiJ your earnings in our bank and pay your bills by check. We do the bookkeeping. The young man in love often goes into raptures about "the Be Practical blue of the sea in her eyes and the golden haze of autumn in her hair," but remember this, young man she'll eat just the same as any other healthy girl. Therefore get down to practical affairs. Save your money, deposit is in a good reliable bank like ours and get ready to own a home for you and the girl and to provide the three square meals a day that you will both need as long as you live. You know when poverty come3 in at the door, love sometimes flies out of the window. WE PAY FIVE PER CENT ON DEPOSITS The Fir stNational Bank J into a healthy athlete. Seven months before it would haw been impossible for these same young men to pull one-quarter mile without becoming exhausted. On the eve of their depnrture for sea they are abl to take their places as members of & race boat crew and send the sleek craft over a two mile course at a rapid gait, ' There is always a trophy for tha winner when the race is run, but winner -5"1 loser 'share alike in tha knowledge that they have a strong, healthy body that can stand tha "gaff" in any race.