TWO THE ALLIANCE HERALD. FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 1921 El? Mtaurc Hmxlh BURR TRINTING CO., Owners Entered lit the postoffice at Alliance, Neb., for transmission through the mail as second class natter. Published Tuesdays and Friday. GKORGK I- BURR, JR. Editor EDWIN M. BURR Business Manager Official newspaper of the City of Alliance; fficial newspaper of Box Butte County. Owned and published by The Burr Printing Company, George I.. Burr, Jr., President; Kdwin li. Burr, Vice President. THE EFFICACY OF JAIL SENTENCES A pain County Judge Ta.-h has been vindicated, if there as ever any doubt that his position was wrong. Some weeks ago, in a talk at a church, he announced his belief that the fear of Good and of punishment was a potent factor in doing away with sin and crime. There were jsome who were inclined to doubt the wisdom of this state ment, but it has again !een demonstrated. Judge Tash, some time ago, declared that he intended to do his best to put a stop to the issuing of "no fund" checks. There had been a regular epidemic of this sort of thing, with the result that the county court docket was cluttered up with cases where the man who made the complaint had no intention of prosecuting and desired dimply to have the county collect the money. The court lecideij that It would serve no more as a collection agency and that thereafter any man or woman charged with drawing a check when he or she had no funds in the bank to cover it would be held to district court. Notices to this effect were issued. Since that time there have been but two rases. Other counties are still worrying about the 'no fund'' check, evil, but H bi,f ceased to exist in Box JJuttc county. 'Juilge Tasli has now turned bis attention to the bo8t- leggers and the men who buy and consume their products. Since the first of the year he has had but one standard for fines the maximum. In only one case has the fine been less than the maximum, and in only one case has ny portion of the punishment been suspended. During the past week or two, the judge has changed his tactics again. The fine of $f0 for intoxication has not proved heavy enough to put a stop to the crime. However, it Is within the discretion of the court to impose a jail sentence. Thirty days 'or sixty days in the county jail, it is believed, will have a better elTect than a fine. And so the judge is handing out sentences of this sort where he thinks the effect will bo saultary. Those interested ir prohibition enforcement are watching the experiment with interest. There is every reason to believe that it will be fully as successful as the handing out of heavy punish ment for the men who drew checks without funds to pay them. The law provides, in cases of intoxication, that the defendant may, if he sees fit, disclose to the proper offi cials the name of the person from whom the lftUov was procured, upon which the judge may remit the punish Went. With only a $f0 fine staring the culprit in the face, this provision has seldom been used. The average drunk feels that his honor will not permit him to divulge the source of supply, and he would rather pay the money and take chances of collecting from the bootlegger than violate the connnence reposed in him hy tne man wno makes and sells it. With the understanding that he may get a jail sentence, however, unless he comes through with informa tion, the culprit will think pretty hard before be goes to jail. What a delicious bit of humor there is in this "honor" talk, as applied to bootleggers and their product A mar vill sell a homemade compound that isn't fit to be drunk; lie will ask twenty times what ft is worth, and take the money without a blush; he may know that it is as deadly as hydrocyanic acid, and yet he can stand back and count liis profits secure in the thought that his victim is ar honorable man and will not "stjueal." One business mar told the police officers that he would give $.r00 to have the bootlegger convicted who had sold hooch to his son v and yet, two days afterward, when approached by one of that tribe on the street ,held that it was a point of honoi not to inform the police. It might have been the same mar who debauched his son but honor Cod save the mark too.l jn the way of justice. , ... ... V Tere is needed, to control the white mule traffic, i bunch of vigilantes substantial business men who wij" Unite with wholehearted enthusiasm to stamp out the whole race of hounds who will sell poison. It won't be pleasant work; it may mean that they'll have to go on the stand and perhaps lose some trade from friends of tht bootleggers. Men with exalted and perverted notions of tionor won't approve of their activities, but they'll have the respect of decent people, and that of the others isn't worth having. Add to this recipe a bucket of tar, a sack of feathers and a rough pole for the fellows who will sell white mule to boys, anil there's a pretty good start toward law observance. The courts, in giving adequate sentences, end the newspapers, by pitiless publicity, can complete the job. It's wort hdoing, and it's worth doing well. rule out productions like "Twenty-three and a Half Hours' WB Leave," where an army sergeant falls quite shamelessly in love with a general's daughter or was it a niece and manages to win her. By marathon kisses, we suppose everything over the eight-foot limit will be barred. Those long movie kisses only mnke the audience bored, nervous or envious, and therefore they can be dispensed with with out adverse comment. Under the proposed plans, there will be no crime in the movies. Gone forever will be the story of the pretty girl pickpocket or the winsome second-story worker who falls I in love with one of her victims and is reformed before our very eyes. If ridicule of church or state is barred, we'll have no more tales of political bosses of the Tarn- j many sort, for this would be lose majesty. No more will the comics poke fun at the police and the Gus Ifyers type of booze hound. No more will we see the comic wit ; the Toonorville cops chasing law violators mile" and miles over the roofs of buildings. If there a: no gambling! scenes, all marriage ceremonies will of necessity be for bidden. With nakedness ruled out, bid farewell to all the ' bathing beach beauties. It is possible only to conjecture the tei r'ble change that will come over the silver screen when all of these j reforms have been carried out. About the only thing left i will be dramatizations of biblical scenes, some of which will have to be expurgated before they wil' stand the test. Of course, the producers can use the Elsie books, too. There will also be a reel or two of current events, and maybe a travelogue or a ford educational weekly. How ever, it will be safe to let the children go to the picture show without fear that their moral resistance will be weakened, and this should compensate the adults for staying at home, for that sort of a program wouldn't draw the iTragc grown person two blocks on any kind of a night. Somethimes the thought comes to us that it would be well to let the reformers and childless child welfare ex perts have their own way in regard to the movies, without let, hindrance or interference .from the general public. If this were done, it is likely that after one year of censored films, the great American public would rise in its wrath and kill all the censors and massacre the welfare experts ind other reformers, after which life would be one sweet , jream for at least a generation. THE WETNESS OF PROHIBITION BE One'of the strange things about this present-day civil ization is the ease with which men some of them fairly 4eady in the upper story attempt to kid themselves ilong with the idea that simply because it is possible to jet around the prohibition laws; prohibiten is a failure vnd that conditions are worse than they were before the -ountry went dry. There is hardly a ton or city in the nation where the police and prison records will not show hat there has been a diminution of all kinds of crime luring the dry and dusty years of prohibition, and that lespite the alarming amount of bootlegging, conditions, n the whole, are much better than in the old days when he stuff could be bought over the mahogany bars. Un 'ortunately, the fact that bootleggers are willing to take he risk of selling hooch is used as an argument that there sn't any such thing as prohibition. It's so easy to talk through one's hat. The very fact .hat the price of a low grade whisky substitute, strong nd vile enough to kill a dog at forty rods, can comMmd i price of $25 a gallon is an indication that only fools will continue their drinking. Wise men wouldn't pay that sum 'or homemade goods. Those, who are chumps of that :aliber, and who are willing to insult their stomachs by (linking it, would play the fool in some other way if there were no booze to be had. This stort of stuff that is being old nowadays will finish the average rum hound in six nonths or a year, and every one of the old time bar flies who passes on leaves a much better lesson for his cronies n death than his life ever furnished. The booze problem Aon't be a problem in another five years, at this rate. I TAKING THE KICK FROM THE MOVIES Just how tame do you want your movies? It appears that every reformer has something that he wants elimin ated, and that no two of them are agreed on the same list of things that must be taken out before it will be safe to allow little John or his Miser to sit cn the front row. This week a group of movie producers and a mess of reformers are meeting in New York City, and under the guidance of Dr. Wilbur Crafts am. William A. Brady, have slated for the scrap heap such things as vampires, sex appeals, marathan kisses, crime, nakedness, ridicule of church 01 state and gambling. It is something of. a question in this editorial mind as to whether a movie would be worth seeing if all these things were eliminated. Some of them could well be spared. We have yet to discover a" single person, child or adult, who really likes the vampire stuff, for instance, If you'll stop to think it over, you will realize that there hasn't been a real vampire film for five or six months The producers found they didn't draw well, and they have been gently but firmly dropped from the list. Even Theda Kara, the queen of all the vamps (but a perfect lady in private life, of course) is temporarily out of work, so a recent article in a coast magazine declares. If sex appeals are to be left out of plots in the future a whole lot will have to depend on the definition of the term. Almost all of the catchy love tales are based on eex appeal, and if a strict bluenose censor; the films, he'd The example of the helpful hen may well be studied by followers of the industries these days. Although the price jf eggs has fallen 2 cents a dozen in the last two weeks, he goes right on producing just the same Lawrence Kan.) Journal-World. One of life's inconsistencies a mouse is afraid of a nan, a man is afraid of a woman, and a woman is afraid f a mouse. Wiggins (Colo.) Courier. One of the country's greatest needs for 1921 is a few list-class funerals of third-class yeggmen. TIM, THE CHANGING SENTIMENT (Bridgeport News-Blade) The so-called "wave of crime" will be checked, and a eturn made to law and order, only through the solidifying t public sentiment for law and order; and the sentiment s undergoing a great change right now. All over the ountry juries are bringing in convictions upon evidence which would have stood for acquittal under ordinary con- litions. The editor saw many murder trials in Box Butte county luring a rather long residence there, and few convictions vere had. The man who stole a steer in those days had poor chance to get away, for public opinion was against attle stealing, and public sentiment always finds its way nto jury rooms; but the protection of life had not found io strong a place in the public mind, and murders and ninor crimes against persons and properties went prac tically unpunished and could be committed almost with mpunity. But at Alliance the other day a woman was convicted of murder an almost unheard of thing in the state and was given thirty years in the penitentiary as a punish ment. At Gering John Guytonwas convicted of rape last Friday, upon evidence that didn't seem particularly strong, yet which probably proved his guilt. And all over the 'ountry, judging from newspaper reports, juries are dis daining quibbling defenses and are bringing accused per sons straight to justice without delay. This sentiment will n time solve the problem of the "wave of crime" and will make the enforcement of law a thousand fold easier for our public officials. BEER ON PRESCRIPTION (Omaha Bee) The determination at Washington to adhere to the ultimate decision of A. Mitchell Palmer that whisky and beer may be used, ami even manufactured, for medicinal purposes promises great relief to a land that is theoretic ally arid and parched, but really is far from such. It is not yet definitely known just what type of disease will be specifically served by the application of beer as a tonic or redeye as a stimulant, but we may prepare for an epidemic of the same when once a name is put to it. The onward sweep of the "flu" will be snail-like in comparison. More over, the officials at Washington, tentatively debating the matter, say it is not rea.-onable to expect that a bottle or two will do for one who is ordered to take beer as a tonic; he will be permitted to have it brought to his home by the case. This we take it, equally applies to the man who is condemned through physical weakness and necessity to take' his "mornin's mornin " and his night-cap as well in form of a good full three-finger "hooker" of whisky, and he will be allowed to have reasonable supply, say a gallon or two at a time, at home. Looks like we are in for a dreadful lot of sickness during the next few months. proved We Offer You One of the Best Investment opportunities ever given in Box Butte County Pay SI, 000 down and pay the bal ance in one-fourth of your crop each year until the farm is your own. If you are occupying a rented farm this year and you want to buy, we will rent you land and apply the rent on the purchase price. These farms are all broke out ready for crop. , Cet in early as they will be all cropped this year. - Don't waste any more time. See us at once and get to work this year on your own farm. The Nebraska Land Co0 1 J. C. 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