THE OMAHA BEE: SATURDAY. JTTLT 8. 1922. The Morning Bee MORNING EVENING-SUNDAY THC Itl WBUSMtNO COMPANY KBUOH IIPPIKI. Nbluh. 8. SMWSB. C. M.mcw MEMSIR OF THC ASSOCIATED PRESS UlM I IM M w WMIIWIIH 1 til mm IWWM tradlU M H af " 1 "" ia saw, sa aiaa im imi am (UUMal kema. m Nf W1U IHU tit MM HMMM. Nt Itflll cixcttUtUa ml Tka Oaaaka Baa. Juaa. 1IJ Daily 71,731 Sunday.... 77,034 hiwu oaearai Maaaaer ELMER S. ROOD, Ctrcuiatle) Ikaal kafara mm Ikla Ilk J. ml (Seel) W. H. QUIVty, Natary Ier to a wfcacrlea kalere m this Ilk day el Jely, IMS, TuMM Omfc tt axakar at Ik. Aa41l limt ar Clmlauaes, tW SalsaHlr a rlhmlMHa) aalla. aa Tka Hmi aliaulauaa la Mm. BEE TELEPHONE! Pift Snath Eiehana. A.k for th D.aarteieat . ., Of Paraaaj Wan I ad. lot Mht Call AfUr f. H.I E4ltarlM Paaartm.nt. AT Untie 1011 or ltI. 1000 OFFICES Main Offite 17th an Fanwa Ca. Bhjff . ... 11 sott St. South Bid 4131 8. 14t St N.w York Id Fifth Atssu Wwhlwtoa . . 4t sur Bldf. Chictf . . Sutr Bid. rsris, rimii9 K.f at. Honor TAX FACTS FOR THE PEOPLE. The people are entitled to the fullest informs, tion concerning public affaire. Very often their interest ceaiei with the election of officers, to whom ths entrust every responsibility subject to no check inf up until the time for another vote arrives. This apathy has to sn unusual degree been dispelled in ths case of taxation. People that are hon estly seeking; information on this subject will find many useful facts in a pamphlet that has just been issued by Phillip F. Bross as secretary of the stste department of finance. This analysis of 1921 taxes In Nebrsskt tells the taxpayer who gets his money and how it is spent The amount of revenue of each school district in the sUte is given in one chart. Another interesting table shows the taxes of each incorporated city and village, giving the population, valuation, distribution of ths tax dollar and ths tax on a 1,000-dolIar valua tion for general purposes, as well ss ths per capita local tax. The amounts spent in each county fdr . roads, bridges and other purposes likewise are listed. Of the total taxes levied for general government purpose in 1921, only 19 per cent was for the state government, while 81 per cent was for the local sub divisions of government. This means that of the average tax dollar in 1921 in the 93 counties, 19 cents went to the state, 0 cents went to the county government, 16 cents to the cities snd villages, 3 rente to the township organization, and 42 cents to the city and rural schools. The pamphlet thus shows the way the state spent its 19 cents of the average tax dollar: Roads, bridges snd paving, 3 cents; relief of ex-soldiers, 2 cents; new capitol building, 2 cents; state institu tions, 3 cents; education, 6 cents; leaving only 3 cents out of the average tax dollar for the support of the general state government, including the m- ' preme court and the district courts. If the state house t Lincoln had been closed during the year 1921, ell the state courts disbanded and all state ac tivitiee discontinued, except the care of dependents, the building of the new capitol, the university and normal schools, the purchase of bonds for the relief of ex-soldiers, and the construction of good roads, the taxpayer's dollar would have been reduced by only 3 cents. A further analysis of the state levy of 33.30 on a thousand-dollar valuation is also made in the pamph let.' This analysis shows that of the $3.30 stste levy on each thousand-dollar valuation, 61 cents goes to the university,' 47 cents for the road building, 69 cent for charitable and penal institutions, 5 cents for the eradication of animal diseases, 20 cents for the normal schools; capitol fund, 30 cents; relief of ex-soldiers, 29 cents; constitutional officers, boards and commissions, 26 cents; code departments, 18 cents; courts, 11 cents; aid .to local schools, 8 cents, and legislative expense, 6 cents. In compiling these statistics the state has done a useful service. A full and unbiased statement of this kind should be issued each year for the benefit of the citizens. The smaller governmental districts should make similar analysis of their reyenues and expenditures. These facts must be widely known before any great improvement in the methods and amount of taxation can be accomplished. had the last word to say, and all hit colleagues sre weary of a debate that already ha sadly tried the patience of s public that is eager to have something settled. CHEMICAL PATENTS AND THE PUBLIC. Demand by the federal government that the Chemical Foundation return the German patents sold it by the Wilson administration appears to be in line with justice. Americana hardly will accept the presence of a domestic monopoly which may become as destructive and as oppressive as one of foreign origin. When the German patents "were seised by the alien property commissioner, they were disposed of to the American Chemical Foundation, that dye stuffi might be provided for our textile industry. The mistake seems to have been in granting exclusive control of the patents. . Since the close of the war the topic has been discussed at length from several angles. Generally, the trend of thought is in sup port of a projective tariff that put the imported dye stuffs on a parity with those of domestic manufac ture. This, however, should not be made to support a monopoly, which is capable of practicing great, abuse of its powers and privileges. If the govern ment again acquires control of the patents, it is pos sible the formula may be devoted to public use, and be made available for any. Then the monopolistic feature will be destroyed, and while a protective tariff will exclude foreign dyes, the home trade will be supplied under competitive conditions, which will in sure both quality and price. If this view is correct, the move of the government to recover the patents deserves to succeed. TARIFF TALK TO CONTINUE. A move to invoke cloture in the senate as refers to the tariff debate failed for lack of nine votes. In a large sense this is in harmony with the spirit of American institutions, for a free and full chance to debate any question should never be denied. At times, however, the privilege is ssdly abused. For many weeks the senate has given up the molt of its time to listening to tariff debates. Not only have particular schedules or items been subjected to the most profound of disquisitional argument, but the general history and theory of tariff and revenue taxa tion has been many times descanted upon learnedly and at length". Plainly the program of the democratic minority is t$ prolong the consideration of the meas ure to the utmost limit, meanwhile taunting the re publicans with their failure to enact legislation. In the end ths measure will be passed, but nope can say just bow when -the vote will be taken, for the discus sion is to go on unremittingly, until the senators tire of the free exercise of the right to talk all they want to. Sometime the vote will be taken in the senate on the passage of the Fordney-McCumber tariff bill, but that time will only be when the last senator has OIRMANY'f FINANCIAL PLIOHT. Stock market quotations support the thought that shew down has eome for Germsny. It wss Inevitable when the republic began to issue in enormous quanti ties fiat money to meet current expenses. Nothing will be gained by discussion of thli phase of the ques tion; what is needed is some solution for the problem. Germany is not in the position of Russia; it has a table government functioning in all the essential ways of administration. German industries are on a going basis, mills, mines, factories, railroads and hipping lines sre busy, and wealth is being produced under conditions that normally would be profitable. Germany's trouble primsrily arises from the finan cial plight which has been induced by the emission of such enormous quantities of psper currency as have fairly drowned the commercial and Industrial life of the nstlon. Collapse is imminent, and help must be had or disaster will follow. Where this help will come from, and how it will be applied is yet to be decided. Suggestions that the Treaty of Versailles be re vised and that the reparation! requirements be modi fied have not met a ready reiponse. If the Germens thought they were influencing the Allies to a soften ing of terms, and such msy have been the thought, the fact proves their mistake. Consideration of this, too, may be adjourned until the present crisis has been averted. ' Mr. Morgan's expedition to Europe has not snded its work. His first program fsll down, because it con tained provisions that were not acceptable to either side. It is unthinkable that financiers will stand idly by and see Germany swsllowed up in financial ruin, if a reasonable loan to the government will rescue the nation. It Is equally out of the line of reason able expectation to think that outsiders will under take to support the mark in Its present state. Ger many will have to drain off the flood .of fiat money before the dry land of financial stability will reap pear. When the printing presses are stopped, and several huge bonfires are lighted and fed on irre deemable paper money, the Germans will be on their way to health. SAO SIDE OF DIVORCE. Frequently a divorce means just a little more than the shipwreck of a matrimonial venture. So long as only husband and wife are concerned, as generally is the case, society can look on with some thing like complacency, although the frequency of divorce these days amounts to more than a scandal and has become an actual reproach to the nation. When a child is involved, the whole affair takes on a different aspect. An incident in one of our local courts illustrates the point. The judge had awarded the father tem porary custody of the child; the mother started to leave the courtroom with the child in her arms, when her husband sprang and seized it from her. Why should comment proceed farther? Knowing nothing of the circumstances, the inference is that the judge knew what he was doing when he gave the child into the custody of the father, but leaves the main question open. ' Fathers and mothers show slight appreciation of the responsibilities they have assumed when either gives the other occasion to seek divorce. In bringing baby into the world they have obligated themselves to that child to cherish and nurture it until it has become able to take care of itself. Evasion of this duty, for any pretext or reason whatever, springs from only one source, selfishness. Love msy die, respect may vanish, but duty re mains, and the little one has the first and highest claim on its parents. Baby hands may not always hold a home together, but the thought of losing that baby should be enough to deter any man or woman, not wholly devoted to self-indulgence, from doing those things which will warrant a court in giving the custody of the child to another. OPINION- What Editors Elsewhere Are Saying THE BEE'S LETTER BOX Weight Vartce With Planet. aabal M Ul ( the l'SUa4 Naval Oba.rtatary, The weight of objects on the earth In determined by the name surface pull of gravity that Itgend tails ua brought down the apple on laaae Newton's head. The strength of that pull depend not only on the Is of the earth but on It denilty or the amount of matter It contain In proportion to Its else. The ur face gravity of any other body In spar relative to that of the eitrth I found by multiplying It density compared to the earth' density by It radlu relative to the earth' reitlus. The radlu of the moon, for ex ample, la a Utile over on. fourth that or the earth and the denaliy of the moon in about three-nftha that of the earth, to the surface gravity of the moon relative to that of the earth I the product of the two or about 6ne-lxth. A man who welch IRQ pound on the earth would weigh only 27 pound on the moon it ran be round In the tame way that the eama man would we I ah about two ton at th surface of the un, lnc the aurfac gravity of the un la about !7.l time that of th earth. On the moon a man would prlng about with the agility of a gracahopper while on the un he would be crushed under hi own weight. On Mercury a man of 160 pound wouia weign to pound: on venu. lie pound; on Mar. II pound: en jupitar, about 400 pound. On Sat urn, Uranu and Neptune he would weign, respectively, 171 pound, ill pounds and 119 pound. In plt of tne great size or tnese planet tnese weights do not differ greatly from the 160 pounds that he would welsh on our own planet. This I owing to the fact that the densities of these planet, which are fully a Impor tant a the radlu In determining the surface gravity, are so extremely low compared to that of the earth The density of Saturn Is only six- tenth that of water, while Uranu and Neptune have densities that are, respectively, 1.44 and 1.09 time the density of water, while the density of the earth la 5.53 times that of water. On- the largest asteroid. Ceres, which I 486 mile in diameter, the urfac gravity in o low that a man would have no difficulty In throwing a atone with ufflcient fore to end it off into apace never to return. On a email asteroid, 20 mile In dia meter, he could easily jump off into spare himself if ha felt o Inclined. The surface gravity on Antare, the greatest of the red- giant atara, we might expect to find very great elnce its radlu 1 600 time that of the un. It density, however, I only one-thousandth tQjat of the air at sea level or one eight hundred thousandth that of water, which give it a surface gravity about twelve thousandths that of the earth. So, owing to the extremely low density of this star, we get the surprising result that objects at Its surface are held with an attractive force only twelve.thousandths of that of our own planet. A man of 180 pounds weight on the earth would weigh, then, only about two pounds on Antares. emVlency of th efficiency expert themaelvM, which might t diacon carting la th expert and enlighten ing to th central public. Kor ma have more than a alight uplrlon that eome of the efficiency expert ren t nearly o efficient themaetvo as they are trying to look a they hand out their theories about how the world should be run. President' Dinner .to the Farmer. rVum th. Fittahurik TreM. There aren't ninny real farme dirt farmer, a Washington rail them in "Who" Who In America." but any man who undertake to compile a who' who fr the um of statesmen and not merely obituary editor will be very foolish If he leave them out. President Harding ha entertained the captain of the steel Industry and th captain of the railroad in dustry nt dinner In the White llouae for the purpose of ascertaining their view and urging them to co-operate with the government in effort to better condition In those Industrie and thus stublllie business. Hut there are bigger Industrie In thl rntintry than either railroading or steel mak ing. The biggest of all I agricul ture, rlo now there la to be a Whlto House dinner for the farmer. Per haps before it I all over there wilt be a dinner for plain, everyday wage earners. Whatever the practical effect of these dinner, everybody should ap plaud the president' desire to take as many, and a large, as possible groups of people Into consultation with the government. Th farther he get away from th spirit of the two emperor who met on a raft on the river JiUmen at PtUlt over a hundred year ago and said "W are Europe," the nearer he will come to the ideal of democracy. COLUMBUS OR A PEARY. The little boy who rode his bicycle from Denver to Omaha may or may not get the $100 prize he set out to win. He did something that is worth while, however, for he bravely conquered the terror and the hardships of the journey.. To be sure, no savage men or wild animals beset the trail, as once was the caie ; at no time waa the youthful adventurer out of the reach of civilization. N He even had the advantage of good reads, some thing denied the wheelmen who made the journey not so many years ago. But he was alone, and must have felt very lonely and inclined to turn back at times. That he could persist, and finally push his wheel into the city of his destination showa he has true courage and determination. He had some ad ventures on. the way, for he reports that he was rob bed at Lincoln, where he stopped to rest, and he came to his journey's end famished and destitute. But he won. Columbus did nothing more when he dis covered America, nor Peary when he reached the North pole. It was the culmination of a high ad venture. A devoted group of Alpinists for two years as sailed Mount Everest and finally turned away baffled. Their disappointment will never be known to this lad, for he goes home with the satisfaction of know ing he reached his goal in good shape. We hope he carries through life the same quality of pluck and aticktoitiveneas he showed in this, for such elements make up the useful man. Senators Tacklo the Flapper. From the Philadelphia Bullatln. Precisely what bearing the duty on ferromanganese has on the dress of the frivolous flapper might be ex plained by a metaphysician turned tariff expert. But a discussion of the giddy girl's scanty raiment in comparison with the voluminous draperies of her grandmother was sufficient to awake the drowsy sen ate from slumberous inattention to the droniag debate on the Fordney MeCumber bill. Philosophy benefited by the sar torial Interlude by reason of Senator Underwood s portentious explana tion that the wicked tariff has forced the flapper to reduce her dress to the proportions of a pocket Handkerchief. Sociologists and mor alists who have been theorizing on the significance of the flapper need puzzle themselves no longer. She is a living, breathing', sprightly, mis chlevous, provocative demonstration of the protective principle. One who believes like Senator Un derwood in the incalculable superior ity of the good old days of our grand fathers and grandmothers may be stony-hearted enough to look upon her as a horrible example. As against this Jaundiced view is the MeCumber vision of her as a rare blossom in a beautiful flower garden. If she has been cultivated by the tariff, then, in his opinion, we should thank heaven for the tariff. Will Hays' offer of co-operation with the teachers of the United States supplements his pledge to Jhe women that he will clean up the industry. These pledges are made in good faith, but it still remains necessary for the public to do something, or the best efforts at reform will come to naught. A French public offleia"! sought to learn to play poker. He is now accused of embezzling 40,000 francs. If he learned that much he is ready for graduation. The anti-lynching bill is put on the list of things to be done by congress, which is warning to the dis orderly. Nebraska may have lost a crop from too little rain, but never from too much. Russia's "bread loan" is a success, snd may super sede the Russian bread line. If anything can be talked to death, it will be the tariff. Another thing Omaha can omit is boy bandits. The franc shivers when the mark shskes. . On Second Thought By H. U. STASStrEJL Don't get discouraged: it may be the last key In the bunch that ooena the door. Eating Automatically to Live. From the Brooklyn Eagle. Not long ago a Russian actress walked into one of our automatic 'restaurants, ate a meager automatic meal, returned to her hall bedroom and took poison. Poison seemed to her th inevitable dessert to fellow so mechanical a repeat. Here perhaps we have a contrast between American and European civilization. Is an automatic restau rant a reductio ad absurdum of our civilisation? Isn't it the last word in speed, system and huMe? Do we really know how to live? . Men and women of the older European countries are inveterately leisurely. They cannot be hurried. A meal to them is a thing to be dawdled over and enjoyed, pot a mere feeding of the face. The Frenchman sits at a table on the side walk before a cafe and sips his wine like a true epicurean. He take time to be a gourmet. The German lounges in his beer garden and in vites his ease. The Russian he has all the time in the world foi every thing, even for thought. But the American snatche hi meal and rushes back to work. He doesn't know how to enjoy even food. He eats in a manner calculated to give a foreigner the impression that he is paid for consuming edibles and that he will lose his job if he doesn't show the proper industry. It is no wonder a Russian woman tries her best to commit suicide after attempting to follow his example. Of what use in life, she miiat have ask ed herself, if living Is so little fun? H Cutting Out School Vacations? From the Arkansas Democrat. Some sort of an efficiency expert we suppose he is some relative to the man who Invented daylight-saving has it all figured out that sum mer vacations for school children are & bad thing, wasteful In time, in money and In energy. They ought, he figure, to be eliminated or shortened, th time saved being spread out over the year, in shorter school days. W do not know but what the school day itself might well be shortened, o a to provide for a little less Indoor cramming and a little more outdoor frolic lor the kiddies, but as for cutting out vaca tion, or making them any shorter thin they now are, we are going to vote "nay" a long as there ia breath la our body. And if the efficiency experts do not quit trying to take so much joy out of the life of the youngsters with their efficiency theories, baaed on dry-as-dust statistic and psycho logical and philosophical arguments, Telephone Practice. From th Chlcafe Tribune. Our telephone ring. W answer It. A sweet vole ak our Identity, and. having etabllhd it. request that we hold the wire as Mr. Bianx wishes to sneak to u. We do o, while Mr. Blank finlehe whatever ia in hand, perhaps gives a word of instruction to ni ecretary, ano flnallyteom on th wire to find u in no aiiauia moon. Or. arain. not havln a subordl nat handv to do th mechanical work of getting a number, perhap wa nail Mr. Blank ourselves. Hi secretary answer and ha u hold tne wire. Alter an interval sar. Blank anwr. Not having watd anv time, h may b In good humor, and we may not. but the call is our affair, not hi, and if w are wi wa will make th best Of it. There I a great tangi or wire and voice, of messages, request. and the transmission of Information among Chicago's hundred or tnou. and or teiepnone users in a aay. It is worthy the attention of an effi ciency expert. If not of an authority on etlquet. students in acreiariai course in business college, we are told, ar Inatructed that they hou!4 save thlr employer s time. If ;t one i to wait on the telephone ' ii o me omer employer. That is not sound business Intruc. tion. Moat persons who put in a telephone call went something. They seldom call to do the other person a raver. They should remember, therefore, that they are mor likely to achieve their objeet If they find the person whom they are calling in good humor. They cannot do eo If they keep him Idly waiting their pleasure. Beginning s telephone conversa tion, particularly on business mat ters, is as Important a beginning any other conversation, A few points are worth remembering. When answering a call one should give his name and bualnes connection, or merely the firm name If not in au thority to discus business matter. When making a call one should pref ace his remarks with a statement of hi name and business connection, whether he be addressing a subordi nate or the person with whom ha expects to talk. But no discussion of the tele phone would be complete without reference to the pests. The greatest of these probably is the conversa tionalist, usually a woman on a party line, who wastes hours for her ac quaintances and many minute for others waiting for a line while, she discusses everything' from the baby' new tooth to whether she should bob her hair. We fear to suggest a fitting punishment for thi pest, but we would pray thm to have a heart. Sensationalism In Textbook., From the Chicago Day News. Should school textbooks adhere to established facts and generally ac cepted views, or should they be al lowed to exploit half-baked theories, indulge in heroics, challenge noto riety by paradoxes and half truths? Several states, among tnem mew York, have been wrestling pf late with this strange question. The adoption by the United con federate Veterans of a. report ad vising the use throughout th south of a pamphlet written Dy a rormer confederate colonel, and purporting to prove that Abraham Lincoln "de liberately and personally" conceived and planned the civil war, cap the climax of a series of school history sensations. Tt Is unnecessary to argue with the belligerent southern colonel of the old school. He is fully answered, hv historians of authority and adequate equipment for the ta"k. But the incident directs attention ut the whole question of school W torie and their character. Educators have written elaborate reports on this system, and most of tliem, fortunately, have taken com mon sense views. A school nistory 1 necessarily general. It cannot go into details and make due qualifica tions and explanations of the state ments. Hence melodrama, propa ganda and controversy should be avoided. Any person is free to publish any 1H4 f hiatnrv he nleases. but chil dren in the public schools should be safeguarded against fads and fancies, personal crotchets and whims of al leged historians. "When I Watch My Child." W. B. Tcata In the Dial. When I watch my child, who Is mnt vt 3 vears old. I can see so many signs of knowledge from be yond her own mind; why else should she be so excited when a little boy passes outside the window, and take so little interest In a girl; why should she put a cloak about her, and look over her shoulder to see it trailing upon the stairs, as she will some day trail a dress; and why, above all, a he lay against her mother s aide, and felt the unborn child moving within, did she murmur "Baby, baby?" One Way of Doing It. Wife Have you any secrets you keep from me, dearest? Husband None, darling. Wife Then I am determined. I will have none from you, either. Husband You have secrets, then? Wife Only one. and I am re solved to make a clean breast of It. Husband ( hoarsely ) Oo on. Wife For several day I have had a secret a secret longinc for a new we predict that somebody is cninr Hiwu irith hit tn mitrh f start a little Investigation of thej She got it. Edinburgh Scotsman. Endorse I he Editorial. Omh4. July . To the fcMltor of Tlio Omaha He: I want to epr my appreciation of th editorial In th isaue of The lie for July e, "A fclvrn Hahuka ia Looae Talker." ll ! el.uull make u all think ! J. K. TOUCHER. '.neutrality and the Primaries, Omaha. July 7. To th Kdltor of Th Omaha He: t not with om Inlereat tht "Brother Charlie" liryan dtclare that h I neutral, and thus get In line with th senator on th main uue, that or befooling the voter on primary day. I It poaalble for th cat and th cnry to declare a truce? Oh. potent I th pull of th hut for of fit. How l can w account for th senator having forgotten the "sting of Ingratitude" which rankled long and nre? If time has (lean rned th orua of that wound, other and mor recent abrasion on the pride of th aenator (till show a redness that preclude thought of hi alncertty in any profession of neutrality. If you ar curlnu a to this, ask some of th loyal Michrock onian who It waa held up the pie waeon from ISIS on for two long and weary years, allowing repuhll can to hold job and draw Mlarle that should have gone to faithful and deserving democrat. On th other hand, can "Brother Charlie" blot out by a daclaration of neutrality all th things th senator and his paper have done to "Brother Will" through long year of partisan bitterness and acrimony? Ye, "neutrality" I a fin thing. Also the primaries. DEMOCRAT. He Relieve In Gun-Totlng. Omaha. July 6. To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: I am in sympathy with all movement that hve for their end the maintenance of peace and good order, but I am not in sym pathy with the entire thought or domestlo disarmament under existing conditions. When a writer ays, as one did recently, that "the average citl sen has no use for and no excuse for possessing the high-powered rifles." tc. he I making statement that are utterly unwarranted and that are easily capable of being refuted. The "average citizen" presumably mean the average law-abiding citi zen, who is usually the victim and not the author of crimes of violence. It would seem that the part of wis dom would be to advocate the train ing of said average cltlsen In the us of weapons to defend himself and his home, rather than to advo cate the policy of depriving him of them. "LAws enacted for the pro tection of the public" are all right if they are enforced, but a policeman or aoldler I not always at one's el bow for the purpose of protection, especially In the rural districts. And, of course, the armed outlaw and crook usually take prtty good care that the force of protection are at a dUtanc when he makes his at tack. It em to the writer that for bidding the possession of weapons would be a case of putting the cart before the hore. Rather advocate that law-abiding citixens be encour-1 aged to poa and helped to learn th u "of modern weapon, and crime of vllnr would be likely to dimlnlah. Th National Hlfle ao rlation, government authorised and encouraged l"1y uf vlvlllan. and many lotal nfl and ptatol aeaocla. tion ar lung ttrp In th right di rection. M. L WIGTO.N. Independence for the fllipluu. Omaha. July . To th Kdltor of Th Omaha tie: Referring to a let ter In The lie on day recently. In which th quesilon of Filipino inde pendence was discuiiard, the writer of that letter was tinder th Im prraalon that th I'nlted Htatr gov ernment la spending a whole lot of money for the maintenance of the Philippine government. Today th Philippine government I paying for very cent it spends for H main tenance. The writer I In favor of granting th Klllplno their Independence, be. IrauM they ar a burden, and ad- via in t niii aiaiaa to iev, pa and baaaita. Th rilll'lno ar well and good whether you leave then' bag and bgJS If you plea to do that way. liut why grant their freedom wiih apparent hurl feel ing ? Did you not promt to lve them freT Did you not promt to haul down your flag a oon a a stable government Is established there? Why. then, should you !avo them with hurt feeling nd eat thm aald with dlaguit? If you ineau what you promised, fulfill It, you rhoo to brek It. be frank t My 0. riUPiNQ- CENTER SHOTS. Wonder what a bachelor thinks about a bigamist Triint Journal. , A hou without fly scre doen't need an alarm clock. El Taso Timea Th helicopter InvenUd In Eng. land Is a kind of flying corkscrew. Attention. Antl-Buloon Lejigue: Ta coma ledger. fcniiliinnlrn "Grand Piano A the Rolls-Royce is the supreme in automobiles, to ia the Mason & Hamlin Piano the ultra de luxe in Pianodom. If you wish a Real Piano, one to last a lifetime, an instrument recoisynended by great artists, this is it. The price is higher so is the quality. ,lo$pe do, 1513 DOUGLAS STREET The Art and Music Store teywQi You 7 get just about twice the i wear out of your suit if you I Have an Extra Pair of Trousers i "Qmp nmtJIjim VI VI spsi1 e"JlreeWug Extra Trousers mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmwmmmwmmm , ewaawa or Knickers Included for the Price of the Suit Alone 45, $50, $60 and upwards Famous English Worsteds, Cheviots, Sturdy Scotch Tweeds, Irish Homespuns and a wide range of distinguished American fabrics. Nicoll Tailored Clothes represent true economy, not only be cause they are low in price, but because the tailoring is so cor rect, so individual, that they , keep their style and can he worn long after ordinary clothes are hopelessly out of date. You'll find that this sale presents a rare opportunity for you to secure exceptionally fine hand tailored, clothes at rock bottom prices. And you'll appreciate the economy and convenience of additional trousers or rsUfEEKEMS SONS 209-211 South 15th Street Karbach Block ) it