11 1 illE DUiUl m, I ' .Heavy Income -Taxes Imposed J in Netherlands Man With $1,000 Income . Pay. More Than 27 Prr Cent to Government and Municipality. By J. C. A. EVERWIJN. Mlnkur ml TH rlhrrlnnda ta Ik I bIImI Main hi Th .Saltan's HimIm. In our country v. .get hve gone up in the last few yer according to the higher coM of hviiiu and al though the retail price are going down a they have all over the uorld they have not o much fallen at the wholeale prior and the vagrt are (till on a higher level. The increase of wage .ha caused a tremendous increase of the ex pintrt of the government and of the 'municipalities, for which increae the factors of importance alio were thi coniidrraMe expenioi for allocations to unemployed and for Providian houes a the housing problem in our country is a very serious one. So it ratne that although Holland i not a militaristic country and doe not keep a big army nor a pow erful navy the budget of the govern ment aroe from about 238,000,1)0 guilders in 191J to 938,000.000 guild ers in 1922 ad the total of the bud gets of the rnunicipalities rose from 279,000,000 guilders in 1913 to 850, 000,000 guilders in 1918. A later fig ure is not available for me at this moment but I think that it will not be very much lower now. This big increase of expenses created a tre mendous increase of taxes, for we think it necessary that budgets must be balanced, and so at this moment the man with an income of not more than $4,000 pays more than 27 per cent on income tax to the govern ment and to the municipality. As e have very strong progression in our taxes in Holland it is easy to understand that the people with big incomes pay much more. ( Now being in this situation what would be the standpoint of a Nether lander with regard to the reconstruc tion of Europe? I say as a Nether lander because here I am talking simply in that quality and not as a representative of my government. The first wish, of course, is to have the taxes cut down, but this is a rather internal affair. It may be that the cutting down of govern ment expenses all over the world would help a great deal toward re construction. With regard to foreign competi tion, there are two currents in our country, one wishes the government to take measures to restrict impor tation and the other one is opposed to that, being convinced that, should even restriction of importation foster the sale of home produce on the home market, export could not be helped by that, and the lack of ex port and the low prices which only could "be got' for exported products should make impossible ameliora tion of the general conditions in our country. They think that an issue must be found not on nationalist but on in ternational lines, that one country cannot be, healthy when the others rT jjfifc and that for the health of the other countries much cannot be expected from partial measures but from restoration of sound conditions necessary for production in every country and removal of all unneces sary restrictions for the traffic be tween the different countries. After 14 Years Courtesy to Woman Lands Automobile Thief in Jail Detroit, July 1. George Brown, alias Gurnley, 22, of Cleveland, em ployed in a downtown restaurant here, is in jail charged with stealing an automobile, because he was polite to a woman, a former coworker. The woman, Mrs H.. Eaton, wife of a Cleveland patrolman, who, with her husband is honeymooning in De troit, entered the restaurant for breakfast. C When Brown worked with her in Cleveland she was a "Miss." He went up and spoke to her. Mrs. Eaton recognized Brown as George Gurnley, who had stolen an auto mobile from the Searles Mercantile agency of Cleveland, where she had worked. She told her husband who the man was, and the Cleveland patrolman took Brown to the central station. Man Regains Health by Returning to Primitive Los Angeles, July 1. Frank Han sen has a new way of cheating death. Told by physicians that he was rapidly approaching death, Hansen has regained his health by returning to the primitive life. Hansen is said to have lived like a wild man on Santa Cruz island, off Santa Bar bara channel, for 18 months, sub sisting alone on mussels, abalones and fish. His only garment, it was rtidv-was a bathing suit, which suf fered considerably through hard usage. v It is claeimed by two ship captains that Hansen attracted considerable attention because he made friends with wild foxes and boars found on the island. Cultural Education Is . Necessary, Says Speaker Westfield, Mass, July 1 Henry Turner Bailey, director of the Cleve land School of Art, cpeaking before the graduating class of the Normal school in this city, declared that "bootlegging, loafing, gossiping and other forms of useless activities would disintergate the entire social system if the majority of working people had four hours of leisure time." - Bailey emphasized the need of mak ing ht most of leisure time, saying that the present level of intelligence would disrupt the entire country if people weren't kept busy. "A cul tural education is as important as a practical education," he said. French-Spanish Tariff Squabble Grows Bitter Paris, July t. Bitter feeling has keen aroused by Spain's latest move in the franco-Spanish tariff squabble Spain -has raised duties 80 per cent for all countries whose money is. depreciated as much as 70 per cent ja relation to peseta, - - . j T t. Ft in 'Skk. ' ZJt V it " I V 1 v . t- i - . t After 14 years the aiphalr paving laid bj Hugh Murphy on Douglas street east from Sixteenth street is still withstanding the battering of down town travel. The paving is two inches of sheet asphalt laid on a 14-inch concrete base with an inch and a half of filler. It's almost as good as the day it was laid. Rider's Legs Blistered by Motorcycle r.xnausi Bellaire. O.. Julv 1. William Yocum is applying salve to blisters on his legs. Between doses he is wondering why some one doesn't in vent an automatic fire alarm system for use in notifying motorcycle rid ers when their trousers ignite. He would even carry a can of water that would spray the pedal extremities when their temperature reaches a certain point, just as do the sprinkler systems in buildings. While riding his motorcycle along r..,n, airwt Vnrnm discovered that the exhaust had set his trou sers on fire. Oil ana gasoune naa ignited. Abandoning the machine, he ran n aimer whpre he was ''extin- w e - o - - guished" by a car washers nose. Drs. F. S. Wright and P. L. Ring dressed the burns. The motorcycle was completely ruined. Just because father thinks daugh ter's millinery bill is excessive he needn t class her as a do dad. Commercial-Appeal (Memphis). Unique School Record Is Held by Youngstown Girl Youngstown, O., July 1. Finish ing her high school education at the age of 15 years, Miss Julia A. Ipcar of this city, has a unique record. When Miss Ipcar graduated from Raycn High school here this month she completed a four-years' course in three and one-half years. She was numbered on a list of 19 honor students of this year's class, won a letter in girls' athletics and figured prominently in the school's social activities. Divorced Man Must Work in Jail to Earn Alimony Detroit, Mich., July 1. Alfred j. Higgins will remain in the Detroit house of correction until he has earned $386. And at $12 a week, the amount inmates receive, he will probably stay for a long time. The money is alimony due : his formr wife, Helen, for the support of his 8-year-old son, Alfred, jr. Mrs. Higgins told Judge Goff her hus band had paid her nothing. Higgins was sentenced for contempt of court. Oil Leakage of Ships Killing Rare Sea Birds Extinction, of Specimens Will . Follow Unless Preventive Measures Taken, Says Naturalist Berlin. July 1. "Oil from ocean going steamers kills sea birds by the thnutands and soon will caue the extinction of the rarest specimens among them unlets measures to save the fowls are taken at once," writes the foremost biologist of Germany the government ornithologist of the Heligoland observatory, Dr. H. Wei gold, in an article of the Hamburger Fremdenblatt. "The pipes of the ship pumps are not tight, he states. "So hundreds of gallons of bad oil find a way into the water at open sea or at ports, thus covering the surface of the water with a thin skin of oil. Sea birds expecting to find something edible wherever they observe these oily spots, rush into them, moisten and soil their feathers with oil and ran never get rid of it. It makes the feathers stick together so that the air no longer has access to their bodies. Air is indispensable for them to keep them warm. Most of the birds getting in touch with oil catch a fearful cold, become tired, lose their strength and slowly fade away. "In this way thousands of sea birds perish near ports on the California coast where oil is .being unloaded. And since the war some 10 or 12 specimens of seabirds simply were When in Omaha Stop at Hotel Rome SUNDERLAND BROS. CO. Are Now in Their New Home Sunderland Building (EUctrie Slia oa Tap) 18th and Harney Streets Coal Coke Building Material "It's Good If Sunder Und 511 It" irwrnmrnmrnimmtm HiiwwwiiyiW'WHiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiimww wipi N HQ wer Mmd Wfeat the feather Mm Says i, a Make imr Own Breeze Get out from under the idea that all you can do is grin at the heat and bear it. You don't bear it! It lowers vitality, saps energy, ruins dispositions! If you will look at it squarely, you will realise that it is just as unwise as it is uncomfortable to let the heat have its way with you; and you will also realize that it is unnecessary, as well. Phone for a Fan makes the breeze-makers that make it unnecessary. Enjoy one in wisdom' and comfort. Phone for a Fan! OMAHA Auburn Electric Co., 2423 Leavenworth St; DOuglas 4407. J. Burns Electric Co., 4532 So. 24th St; MArket 0890. Thomas Durkin, 2223 Cuming St.; JAckson 2519. Kettell Electric Co., 4408 No. 24th St.; KEnwood 1424. LeBron & Gray Electrical Co., 116 So. 13th St.: JAckson 2019. LeBron Electrical Works, 318 So. 13th St; JAckson 217. Modern Electric Co:, 5912 Military Ave.; WAlnut 6190. Nebraska Power Co., 15th and Farnam Sta.; AT lantic 3100 Nelson Electrie Co., 406 So. 15th St; AT lantic 7649.; Omaha Electric Works, 1214 Harney St.; JAckson 1181. Schneider Electric Works. 1108 Farnam St.: JAckson 2455. Wolfe Electric Co., 313 So. 17th St; AT lantic 1414. Orchard & Wilhelm Co., 414 So. 16th St; AT lantic 3000. Modern Electric Co., 2924 Leavenworth St; HArney 1255. COUNCIL BLUFFS Bradley Electric Co., 331 W. Broadway; Phone 393. Citizens' Gas and Electric Co., 26 Pearl St; Phone 4700. . Johnson Electric Works, 113 E. Broadway; Phone 873. - I L: . OMAHA III! lJIIllilIJIIIil"(ltJILlll'Mlisi Distributors laUssisMsMMMai SIOUX CITY T""rnYiinr-i doomed to (ktinclion in lUligoUnd bay. which was a naval bate, "AUo, oil wah4 ahire, apart (row detnyiiig the ipawn by pre venting the accr ul vital oyiien, coven the breeding pUcr of birds with a Mutum of Jut a frw millimeters which, however, are uf ficient to render any food unfit to tat. Thus hundred of guillemot, auks, divers and other rare bird were simply wiped out." Soon or later, ays the exuert, the government will have to handle thi important question, a some speci men of tea bird, apart from form ing the delight of ornithologies of all countrie. are very useful to the fishing trade. If Consn Doyle could get into touch with John L., he probably would hear something worth while by way of an opinion of the heavy weight championship monocle. De troit New. U.Yrar OM Bride Clurgei Uuiliaml With Nomuppurt Iktroit, Mich., July I. Dougtai C, Sniylie, Y. son of Robert W, Smylie, prominent banker, is defend ant ag4iut noiuupport charge, sworn to Iv hi M-year-old wile. Keva. Pougla married Reva five ivrrkt aa. The youthful wife, blue-eyed and with black bobbed hair, appeared before J mine Fault and iked that the boy husband be a reted. Judge Taunt authorized the warrant The charge is the culmination of a vouthful romance. Smylie met the i:irl wife, Kcva Dunn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard it. Uunn, while they were attending business college. Their friendhip was quick and complete. Finallv Mr. Dunn suggested mar riaRe. The wedding took place and they separated alter the ceremony. I V-Mr Invest your July divi- IiSkaw V 'Isw' dends, interest money or wWj, vl V HfBLt othcr surp,u funds in ill Home Builders' 7 First Mortsraize Bonds This new issue is secured by first mortgages on central busi ness property in Omaha just com pleted for reliable owners. Take advantage of the market when interest rates are falling, by buying these 7 securities maturing' in from one to ten years. Tax free in Nebraska. Owned and recommended by Home Builders'. , nnnminalinni $1 OO .t7fW $500 and $1,000. ' W For Sale By The American Security Company BROKERS 18th and Dodge Omaha, Nebr. Movie Machine) Plarrd in French Senate Hall Pari, July I. A motion picture machine and projection room have been installed in the palace of the senate, one of the inont dignified kgi.laiive bodiesMn the world. Sn- tor may show tneir coiic.r. cational films illustrative of po"t they wi.h to drive home. A sene of dims illustrating life in the French colonic wilt be the initial pre gram. POLITICAL Alltr-HTfcKMt:T. 1-Ol.trit AL AIITI.M.MT. Direct-by It's Co py afil Adlirtkm, ranee EFFECTIVE mail advertising is not just paper and printer's ink any more, than crude metal and rubber is an automobile! The advertising'must be planned and constructed by those who have studied the principles and had the experience to make the EFFECTIVE finished product. Our Advertising Service Department is adept in preparing the COPY and LAYOUT; our Printing Department will take care of the APPEARANCE! NATIONAL PMfWIEW CO. 12th and Harney Streets AT 0406 Chas. H. Randall of Randolph A BUSINESSMAN B FOR GOVERNOR What Randall Stands For r: -Reduction of taxes to the lowest point where effective government can still be maintained. -A sympathetic attempt to solve the problems of the farms and business aa they touch the state government, utiliz ing the long and intensive experience of a large farm owner and manager. -A close relation between legislative and executive branches of state government in the interest of better laws and the administration of them. -A businesslike administration of the executive branch, utilizing the experi ence and capabilities of a successful business man of large affairs. Read Randall's Record POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT 1 STEBBINS for TREASURER W. M. Stebbins of Gothenburg is a candidate for. the Republican Nomination for State Treasurer. He has lived in Western Nebraska more than thirty years. A member of the state legislature 1913 and 1915. Member Constitutional Convention 1920. A business man whose strong asset is the respect of his home community. , Attorney General Republican Candidate for United States Senator "I appeal to no particular class or faction, league, creed or organization, but only to that great body of Nebraska citizenship who believe in clean government and faithful administration, who are not afraid to depart from the creeds of yes4 terday, but will never pursue the mirage of radicalism." ; . v 1 '