The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, August 29, 1922, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    r
NIK OMAHA HEK: UEMUY. Al'iil'ST ViVl
The Morning Bee
MORNING EVENING SUNDAY
TH ME rBUHiMQ COMPANY
t, VrPIkC. rHuk.r. . MCWll, Cm. '.
tUMStlt Of THC A&aOCUUD rum
W ImiII t ttm a TW a U MWt ar.aliatf
attiM u a aaa iwmnin a, att aj wm mkwl aa at
at MWVUa ai' la Ul p. r4 Ua M a .aaa
It riV at aw aajial , imi it.
Slat imui lfuUtt. ( T Haiki JuIt, It I
Daily 71,023 Sunday. .. .70,332
. BMtVlR. Gaaaral Mar
llMtK I. HOOD. Unuiaua Ma
vara la i MaacnM kalar aa lata 41b a l An art, tU.
ISI) W, H. QUIVtV. Katarj "nal
fta ftajaaa aaaar ar n Saail at fliaaiaUaaa. M
aaajataal aataartw aa anaaiauaa 4,i. aa Taa Sat ulu U Mn
(an aua iaau attwiauiaa.
HI TtLXrHOMS
lrtl u-n(. Ail fr taa trrtiit' iti,,,;,
r.a a(a. rar WHat fall Aflar I i" at I V J!!?"
fall-rial taartawt. ATtaaU 111 af III!, 1000
I. .
Wsiaia'
orricu
Hi ffl T(h ' Frai
. . . II Raatl Hi. Vaulk Sla . . 4111 1 !ik It.
K Vara-:i r-'tfUl Araua
. . 411 Bit BM.fhie 113
fan., fraaca : Bua ft, Uanara
Tha art atrraia daily cirrulatlon ft Tha Omaha rla
far July, H:i, aa 7I.42I, (am u( 11.114 ar July
af H:l Iha pat ' Vun4ar eirrulatlon af Tha
Omaha tin far July. H2l. 14.111. 4 tain af IS.i.S
r July tit l!l. Thu la a lar.r (am than that nada
it any athtr daily or Bandar Omaha tnw.painr.
PEOPLE'S RIGHTS COME FIRST.
President Hording in giving coiuideration to
what course is necessary to secur relief frura a
uttualion that )i now intolerable. Congress lia
responded promptly to his request for a Jaw to pro
tide for inveatigation of the mining' problem, that
a permanent solution may be found and the country
I t inured of a steady supply of fuel. The next biff
rjuetion is to get that furl to the consumer.
Thin involve the railroads. Domestic and indus
trial conditions demand at present a greater sen ice
than the roads can give, even were the functioning
100 per cent normal. Figures given out at Chi
i ago put the shop forces at 56 per cent of normal.
Colling stock is daily falling back, btcauta of lack
of repair, and the immediate needs of the country
all for the use of every tar and locomotive in
existence.
The president is informed on these points, and
h is alfo committed to tha principle that public
service is above any private consideration. What
ever merits the dispute between the managers on
the one hand and the shopmen on the other may
he, the right of the people to be served by the rail
losds is above either or all. Groups of obstinate
men, each insisting on its position and declining to
compromise, should not be allowed to penalize the
tntire nation. Great factories are closing down for
'ack of fuel, in face of an increasing demand for
their output. No matter how busy the workers in
mines and railroad shops may be for the next few
months, it will be difficult to supply fuel for do
mestic and industrial needs.
That is the situation today. Mr. Harding has
ncted with great patience. He has endeavored to
secure a settlement, proposing terms that the dis
putants might have accepted with no loss of honor
or dignity, and these have been rejected, first by
one, then by the other, and the deadlock continued.
Now has come a time when the folly can not be
permitted to go further. Railroad managers and
railroad workers alike must realize the obligation
they are under to serve the people. Governmental
operation of tha lines is not looked upon as desir
able, yet it may prove the only solution.
If Mr. Harding does ask congress for authority
to take over the roads, it will be because there is
no other way to secure the service that must be had.
And, just as he has had the loyal support of the
disinterested thinking public, so he will have it to
ihe end. In the meantime, we may be sure that
( onsideration is being given to ways and means for
averting such disasters in the future.
n.ioui ta diaper ef (hams that is alt mhf inter
ctd bidders sea go4 thine in purhaitif them
for Utile er nothing in cempariaAn wit their ro.i.
It may in the end prate to ha ieaary, even if
not wise, to tharge the whole shipping adventure
to the rest of the ar, and rrgiH anything that is
savtd from it at salvage. Yet even that is aa r4
reaten for giving away hulls that new owner ex
pert to use profitably,
i vnt. ur muuiiKt s KAua.uii.5
8 vrnty five men ar trapped by Are, almost
three-quarters ef a mile below the surface of the
earth, in a California mint. The fire is raging at
the 3,500'foot level, and they ar below it. To get
an idea of what this depth means, stand at Twenty
second street and look down Farnam to the B. A
M. headquarter building; er imagine fourteen build
ings like the Woodmen of the World, piled one on
top of the other, and a shaft running through, only
keeping in mind that the shift goes down into the
earth, and you may understand how deep the fire
is below the surface. And some of the men were
at work 1,000 feet further down. Little bop is
entertained of saving any of the seventy-five.
Human means scarcely ran reach them in time to b
of service, They will die in the depth of the pi..
Her is one of the tragedie of Industry that will
come horn to the readers of newspapers with telling
force. It contains elements that are undeniable in
their appeal. Yet it is but on of the things that
happen so frequently, that they have com to b ac
cepted as part of life. Minds wer shocked to numb
ness by the awful wastage of human life in con
nection with th war, but th Industrial toll of life
and limb in the United States i annually equal to
the los untained by American in battle in France.
Safety appliances, devices of all sort for protec
tion of life and limb arc adopted, but the absolute
in protection is not yet provided. Home day the
goal may be reached, but until that time worker
will go on, daily assuming risks that ar part of the
game, flirting with death very minute, because it
is man's work, th world' work, and because in the
end it provide bread and butter, and shelter for
the night. Life may not amount to much, but the
efforts made to sustain it suggest that it is priceless.
From State and Nation
Editoriah from other nei ipapen
I,
4 fUrarrij(i 1 hink It Oter,
fraaa iha SVaMaklarf S'ar Maraid
Te ntirtirai4, Mint in
apatiiv mtMi ma other
aruitrma Juat what waiit4 tt.ien
if ttv Mm atrnk nf alrhi-my thinss
, fouM la aii't'luily t !infil Vr
, -.ianea, aui'ix.aiiiK t man bnucht a
firm, lo.-Hiad mixt am hare in thl,"',!
I nitad Huira hilt pirailhl4tly a
iw on; ht ihe iitirvha (Ti'-e
w4 II0A an acr: that afire he
t'J ukn poanraaimi h rii4d
ny rrn or tmn, and than deride
i branc-h out. and ao, ham a ltlnua
tl Mintr, h mlui i1 turn una ta
loan him 1 1 in an a r on the uhoi
farm; Bn1. Mine alat anmeihln
lit)! tu4 Id th (liKitaiih Af. .
a-ribm tha flight ut Marlnia ml
I 4 retro. Iliwiauar li-nr liuur unit l lll.
dv, was M 'f ll-uuti f.ilir
tl.
It arrma ! hr) fillHl.il. i-m thai'
IN r.lm air su li f4U aa i)u,m of flic
livimatia would data barn imnna.
VVIhit icMitiiraii. iha mora
tn illri, i...ii ,f a gal. f a
llClit nuitur inalaltrd 111 th'f
"Slhlf ta," a .Ml i,.u. ua. ami
. i i i ttis i i. nSjrmriil tn a l atin.
As Our Readers
See It
diiarial fraaa wadara ai Tha Mara
A. Baadar at laa Siaraia Baa
Mi, ll-d aa rh aHa Iraaty
tm0 aaawaaa-ta aa a-atlar aualH
laia.aat.
WHERE YOU DIDX'T CO WIS YEAR
Haiea I oumr tinrn t'rwp.
AMERICA AND PALESTINE.
One ot the speakerj at the Jewish celebration on
Sunday emphatically disavowed for his people a divided
allegiance in their efforts to aid in the restoration of
Palestine. America, he pointed out, is the land where
ihey found freedom, and the rights to which all men
are entitled. The speaker was born in Russia, and
endured all the oppression sustained by the Jews in
their unhappy situation under the czar, lie also is
aware of the unpleasant predicament of the Jews in
Russia under the present regime. Having tested of the
loys and privileges oi American citizenship, he has no
thought of forfeiting his present status to join in the
quest of the restoration of Palestine.
But he and hundreds of thousands of others like
him are ready to give good dollars to assist their less
lortnnate brethren to escape from the hard conditions
of life they must now bear, and to begin in Judea the
building up of a new home for an old nation where its
glories were th light of the earth in Solomon's tftne.
That is what Keren lleyesod means. Xo question of
loyalty is involved, only a willingness to help in a prac
tical way to accomplish a great benefit for some Jews
who can not come to the United States.
The Jew has rroved his loyalty to America front
the very first. In colony days, and through the forma
tion of the government, down until today, the Jew has
had a great and honorable share in the work of giving
i he republic it permanence. Immigrants from Russia,
.iich as the speaker referred to, have added tt the in
dustrial and commercial hie oi the nation bv their
energy, real, thrift and othar d!r4lile quahftcdtions.
It is but natural they should burn to help those
escape from the bondage they -e tree itom. and this
voraing does not mean tbry ar !s loyal to the
lOumry of their irptifn. It only metns 'rut thev.
tit longer oppteswd, ' to Iff othert
WOODKN tiuttS HAVirioMK VALUE
Th government 1 in r-"iou of -,:t. wmi.Jen
LAND FOR THE LANDLESS VETERAN.
In connection with the debate on the adjusted
compensation bill in the senate Mr. McKary renews
the proposition of reclaimed swamp and logged-off
lands as part of the project for aiding tha ex-service
men. He sets up that in the United State ar 96,
000,000 acres of swamp land and more than 20,000,
U00 acred of arid land. An expenditure of $350,
000,000 will bring all this into use.
The McKary plan is sound enough, if one fea
ture is amply provided for and conditions thoroughly
understood. Young men going on to this land
should be permitted to do so only with the assurance
that they ate to have all the needed help from
the government, that they may not suffer undue
hardship or privation while waiting for the returns
that are to come in the future. It is not necessary
to pauperize them, but equally it is not fair to set
them to draining swamps or depending on irrigation
ditches provided themselves. To bring into service
any of th land that Senator McKary has in mind
requires the initial investment of capital far beyond
the means of the veterans who are expected to
benefit under the plan. The government should pro
vide that capital.
At best the soldier boy will have to wait a con
siderable length of time before he can realize
more than a living from a farm of the nature con
templated by reclamation. He will invest his labor
in the work of making the land tillable, and if he
has grit and ability equal to the task, in time he
will hsve a farm home where he can live in com
fort. To get the big work under way is not his
proper task, however.
Settling such ex-service men as wish to engage
in agriculture on tracts where they may be reason
ably sure of making a living and with an estab
lished future as a reward for industry and thrift ia
worth while. But such settler ehould not be under
any illusion as to the nature of the enterprise they''
are embarking in.
the Kdlior of th Ornsha Jit; An
(inisii.i i,ier, undrr (ldi fef Attcufl
Zl. If.'.', publishes a ai.-.al ti.'
(Mli lt ' tipull III" I'M'tlUiMl lif I tl
, rt, M , ., i II. mi mt,A ..ft,.. 1
Jijill.lin. ih ti.iiiMiis , llieuounu,. purporting lo Mv, hem!
.am.,.,,-, r-n.. i., m- i, uppropn. ,nrtr,,( 1y A K A)i
SaTWT-
-a,.ty
TARIFF AS A POLITICAL ISSUE.
Opponents of the administration are spreading
a propaganda of the most insidious sort against the
tariff measure, and hope by this means to gather
enough adherents to the cause of free trade to gain
control of congress. The Manufacturers Record, pub
lished at Baltimore, representative organ of the in
dustrial interests of the south, says the "prosperity
and primacy of America is threatened by the wan
ton, vicious propaganda of the free traders," and
goes on:
It is said the republican party will lose the
lections if it passes the tariff bill. It will be
snowed under if it does not. The emergency
tariff act has saved more than one whole state
from ccneral bankruptcy. Informed men know
it. The Underwood law had this country in the
throes of. the worst industrial panic it had ever
known when the great war intervened to coun
teract Its influence. And If the Underwood law is
permitted to remain on the statute books, again
will the soup houses be the Meecas in our cities.
Let politicians beware lest they mistake the
houtin of some larg newspapers as the voice
of th people. The eleetions show that ths peo
ple, in fact, are doing their own thinking, And
on of th things they ar thinking is that a
tongreaa which fails to prott them against th
niest menacing- enmpetltlon they hav vr
known is a worthies congr, too cowardly or
uninttlint to warrant further support.
When the people come to understand what is in
volved in the tariff, and whst the interests are that
seek to defeat it. the verdict will soon be reaehed
in favor of the measure. The big isiue is: Shall ifw
the American market be kept for American prod
uru, er will it he opened to the world? Ar we in
terested in providing jobs for Ameriean workmen,
or ar we to make certain that English end C!r
! nuns ar employed, regard! of our own"
Oklahoma rot ton growers re reported ta h
.srgo terrier., built during Ih war. whn th fver ( rea?hJ th conclusion tht th monkey i not th
fr ihtpBtisMmg at t height. Mh th ar
rt t valuable or a mieb! as th (! hulls
tHn set ?, but they da rprnt nihinf f
shi H wf f iM tees if , Th u ( Hairm
4-r tt b fe't, whan H ttjf t , Ut tk.
bid m4 1r th pur h .f tS ntif hhvk, )(
ltrni;n4 to i,..p if th ' t pro! sal.
Jl m waj wHi.(fit h ,l) n ir. jn4l f oh of
'''! it re t4 re mtt of t it m to
(ittwnj w..i t --!v a Unt, h,t ft . Nn.
It t f rfr'i4 ! vlM ah ft i h k .
,hSi f I-1 ' pf 4" 1 ! Ve, WiUtit
i'"t iH.ppsf bJ. "! ' ' . !i ivytva
il-,t ' f' ' C ijj'itu".
V t .i'!'' .1 1!H . f i ) t I ' i ..!-.,,, ' g , p .
. ai tie ,-. if t?r ' H , ' .1 , i tii
.? ):i.M !- t i (
: r;. t -.. t two i,. u i'" H.p.
). Tl' '' 4 -:JF -" )'H'W
ktc tt..r t ) '.r' t; '4 !
4 f ia 11 it w Mr Ut.f ta
! answer to th bell wil. Only a short iprtwint
was needed to prv that th tan4rlg it th am
in ths tonntry s in In4.
If th vrrra)nl tnutt a railroad aieU'o,
fAi m U K th man. At y r. b p'ai
hsx-ii th hard boild iw.t.hm ts df
sari'i.
Kstt t 4i'.y si.is-l to kt tag it . f d
'rtd by fvrortit krt, t4 t f.!
.'! ' w ! (.my
l '. o r it hv d to
l tri-v-'itir- in fafo.
-1 . i ui ' A't n, ii '
On Second Thought
rmaniiar, h then fiirmd Itinia.lf
into stork roiiipsny and waiarr
tit am, U fr a coupla (tf bunrlra
inor per arrnd ihn bo fmnul
nut that hi rrop r two would
nt pay out and that bl Inveatment
wa to much for hl Incetin but
h aw tit hn -1 his had with him. mul
o b stent tn th kintv govrrn
bint. under whu-h h slin. and
It rnnfaHi that h i-ouldn't ttmk
It: that th one of fsrrn rrndirt
a down o low Hint h rutildn'i
lav hi Inltreat. let alon hi prln
ilpsl, and a the whritt prndui-eil
on tnit rami, ami lb corn, ami tn
potstoi-a mid nil iha oilier fiml
srurra being an actual neetwity tn
th panpl of th government -lb
nvariinietit ahnuli ny: "ll
armr John, you v got st.iO an
aer lnvtil In thitt 1nd mid iou
ar entitled to at lat a rraaonahl
interest on our lnviment. and
don't e how you rtn tiink It
undr rrnt rondltlonn, and n.
Inst to show you that I hav snnr
Interest at heart, I II mk tip what
ver lna- you Iihv on your net
few crop, ami. so that you should
proper. J'll guaranl you I J, J per
cent lntrtt annually on what
Vuv' got Invested In th place. Jf
tl:t satisfactory. Farmer John
said It was, and so they drew tip an
agreement to that effect, ami In
order that everything might 1 legal
and satiafiictory to Farmer John
thy pminl a law, making It binding
I'pon all th people, and they called
it th Ech-Ctimmin luw. Later It
wa discovered that th government
had forgotten to put In th contract
that Farmer John was to conduct
his farming operations economically
or that he was to keep th weed
out of th crop, or that. If th farm
wu an Irrigated one, that he was
to water th crop t th right time,
and in fact thut a lot or details
wr overlooked.
And then our mind got sidolrack-
d over the sugar tariff, and w
remembered that our good and
beneficent legislators had Just raised
the tariff on sugar to J-.30 per ion
pound. Now there ar about '.'60
pounds of sugar mad from a ton
of bts, snd that means thut the
tariff raises the pric of tho sugar
in a ton of beat lU:0g. It muat do
that or, other thing being equal,
we would import th sugar for that
much loss: or to put it the other
way around, somebody could, or wo
wouldn't need the tariff wall to stop
them. But, at any rate, somebody
that buys augur pays the 16.08.
Naturally that must hslp the manu
facturer which ia fair enough, and
we are glud about that but we are
thinking about some fallow who
bought beet land and devoted all hia
tim to hard work, and soma way
the Rtli -Cummin law didn't func
tion in his cas and he didn't muk
much money because the reorgani
zation of business forced the price
of beetn from $12 to 15, and so he
got to Htudying and wondered if the
people paid $8. 0-8 mor for the sugar
In bis ton of beets because of tho
tariff wall, and th government wa
getting the SS.08 a ton on the im
ported sugar, and w were importing
two-thirda of what we consumed,
how much it would help him if th
government would divide the $6.0
with him. And he didn't want all of
it. either, just say about $2 a ton
bonus. That would leave the gov
ernment still M a ton winner on
each ton raised, and Mr. Beet Raiser
wouldn't ask for any guarantee on
his $100 an acre land, and he i
wouldn't form himself Into a, cor
poration and water the stock, at. $2firt
an acre; and there wouldn t ne any
on crazy enough to loan him $150
an acre on It anyway: and anyway
If he didn't keep the weeds down,
and water the beets, and hoe them,
and do all the other work necessary
to raisin r a crot). why, of course,
he wouldn't raise a crop, and, of!
course, if he didn't raise a crop the
government, wouldn't have to pay .
him any $2 a ton bonus--and any-,
way, if he didn't raise any beets, and ;
the people still had to pay so."
more for 260 pounds of sugar and
the government collected $6.08 from
the Cubans and the rest of tho other
foreign sugar-raising countries how
did that help him if he couldn't raise
beets and malt a good living at it '.'
And. besides, if the government did
this it wouldn't take any of the
henefits away from the manufactur
ers as the result or tne ". wu
wall.
Of course, as we said at the. be
ginning, w are "iuat restrospecting"
and wondering what would happen
if farming, the basic foundation of
all prosperity in the industries of
the nation, was looked after and
guarded and insured prosperity, in
something like tha ame manner that
is exercised when om other lines
of endeavor cry hard time. And we
wonder why some bright senator or
(.ongressman doe not rise up and
champion the ckiiso of the bet
rsiser and Insure htm a guarantee
I that he can meet Interest payments.
I W ercially wonder why they do
' not, when eminent financiers, who
i ar regarded as authority by the
1 pof3l of a ration, tll us that pros-
parity will sweep back across tne
, countrv whenvr condition are
sue h as ta make th rarmer pn j
porous.
Tho German Mllplane. j
, w T' T.m.
Th achivmnt ef Hanti" m
the glider Vmplr In Ihe hills nr
Wibdn ih rmind aloft t
heiit-a and 19 second med the
pretention 1 aviator. An. wll II
might. Thev Vnw that lh g tiding
machine ' th Wright b'tlhert
.mild rtni b kept In th air for
,ncr than arennd. and that not
until rrl mte tnatlled
m u thr a High! f rtiueh
a I Hn. Two i rr
pat hafajf thatr flan iemml
4lnfl fnr Mlf h"r nt
rtn 3 It mil At W -rliupi,
!" th Hh Ml Henuett In !',
Vmfi. with. H.i'r tn 'n l
Dte!lr. rorttnvd t ay t, f'ir
llnwi tn a e f th W rll '
i ) I 4 t (h aJ llnt- 4
giftad itniiK't tl l kllnilra, 1
a hit . . tt.. 'r
iMlM M W . iilliafcd
ta th - ! In m , hl
(. ti rer'M !. I
.rj.tititt aeai- itia,i M
,Mjf !. th 'r'.. It ! '
' -mi.itl an -Jtd nil- in 'f'.
. ' to I' ' I '
i -e rr-r'e
ha rl f ts fic'
,i4,tV an I" i t ' i '"
fv WiB-4 in. t-t-ar ' l'ii I '
a it 1 anile . tt '
t ., ( 1 ' " -iie,-)
l4 .
4 h if t at is 'i '.ii..
i tlter 1i ! f 'ii
v a,.., t i,rm' a a
h m:l r.l'l , ,M
It.nai . f nl,. a r il I
ate nm, A diapati h from Herlln
b"t light Upon the de-gn of th
machine;
"Tho W iaei kupi' (le Ittii. all
eh.,la aia Mtying gr4t ailriitnni to
th t,nli It-m of a tnntorlcaa airplan
derlgned to tiil thn wind for go.
log tip, for mining ilnwn and for
mmioit f.itward, with or agalmt the
wind. Th ptMblitii la rlly tli4l
of M'lHiiig m th alt Thco m
iliine nr not glider ''
Tln Pacific (,mU'h.
If IOC Ihe Sj,I t.ak- Trluu"'
ITi1cni liurret M, Wilkin ,f the
I'lali .M iiinf... I ii i. ri. ' AHaociHllon tlld
a wl thing when li urrd members
of that orKiinUailoti to refrain from
tailing lictitltina or iring upln-
ton wiiit regard tn tn controversy
ttween Iha rtoiilhtin I'nclflc and
I'nlon J'ailfie over the Central I'a
ClflC
Mr. YVilMn' te.isi,niiig Is so lugiral
snd convincing that II I minted vcr
batltn "Tho bu:lnr men tt I'tah
nd the Intermounlain territory face
on of th mot serlou problema
that hav over confronted ihm.
Ult caro and much lii"ly is necca.
!try for a determination of th prop.
r course to pursue In solving this
problem. At you are well aware, th
Southern f'laciflo and the rnlon Pa
cific railroad ate rngaged In a bitter
controversy tvr th control of the
Central Pacific syatein. Your board
of directors ha not had an oppor
tunity to tnak the InveatlgMllon
tiei:ciai y to it determination or th
proper court to pursue. are
mm-trely desirous of adopting that
course beat designed to develop this
territory and to hav th Central Pa
cific system awarded to that road
hlch bst serve our interest.
You. doubtless, as individuals, enter-
ain view regarding this dispute.
Th association Is now engaged in a
very' big. progresaive campaign to
develop this territory', and it would
not only be regrettably but seriously
detrimental, if the association should
assume a wrong attitude in this controversy."
Th heating by lh Interstate
Commerce commission on the dispo
sition of the Central Pacific is still
ouple of mouth distant, so thot.
n our opinion, th people of I'tah
will be wire In withholding judg
ment until they are satisfied that
tli fact lmve been presented to
them that ar needed in formulating
the correi t declalon. This Is entirely
a business matter and should b set
tied on business principles, and not
on tho ground of friendship or sen
timentality, or to please some on of
he good fellow, of whom both rall
oads have a number in action.
rued by A, K. Andcisuii. state
imp kiatiatk'lan. In which h ttt
that lh com crop In JO counties
of southern Nebraska, in which
lUte county I Included, I dam.
ei from $0 tn 7 per rent, h
far a I know, ihia may be trust of
nm of th nther murine men
tioned, but it I not true and is a
libel a to llayr county, Dtirln
th past 10 day I hav been in
ne-iely even pn of th county and.
having farmed or been Interested In
fsrmtn all my life, and for the past
34 yesr In Have rnunly, I know I
ran better jmli th condition of
the corn rrop In Hayea county than
ill. Anderson, who ha never been
In the county, unlra to may po.
s'bly have crossed th extreme
southwestern part of th county tin
ihe p. i- I) highway, from wlilcn
h could not observe t, ced '1
per cent of th corn aerrng of the
county, and I am sine -hat tha corn
crop In Haves county I !') per cent,
if not abov that. If Me. Anderson
".III come to JUye county and drive
over It u h can se our wondetfu.
field nf corn now maturing, and
then if h doe not say that ho ha
don I'm county an Injustice by in
cluding Hayes county in that report,
I will pay every cent of his ex
penses, including railroad and
steeper fares, hotel bill and auto
hire.
Sin h report as th.it Is a libel on
southweatern Nehraka. fur at the
best it is bard for many people of
eastern Nebraska to realize tliat
southwestern Nebraska has devel
oped Into on of th beat farming
and stock sections of tha state,
many still believing that w ar con
tlnuully menaced by the Indians.
buffalo hiintlnr a daltv snort, horse. 1 1
stealing the principal occupation of
many; that w travel by ox team
never rode on a railroad train or
saw an automobile: non t Know
what a high school I for. and get
our religion instructions from ml
sionari ent out hy th enlightened
east to Impress ti with crude idea
of civilization.
If Mr. Anderson will refer to Ihe
trop snd agricultural report of the
state, presumably to b found in his
otlice. he w 111 And that for many
year Hayes county haa ranked well
toward the top in unit farm produc
tion of corn, wheat, alfalfa, cattle,
hogs, poultry, milk products, etc.
That there has never been a bond
issued against the county, or a gen
eral fund warrant registered for ".'t
years; that th per capita wealth of
the county exceeds that of many. of
tha suppoaed-to-b more wealthy
counties of the eastern nart nf tha
I .tat. C. A. READT.
' 1T-4B ' I
WI(XlAM4- - (j
In It. Nebraska leprenciilativ i I t
congress should be urged to Ml
vane It.
That combination' would n-liete
the iiiidd'c wckI shipper of an
ennrmniiN tax in the eliupc of IiikI
rate from tin const. It won II
mean nullum spent for wage fm
an Increat'd force of railroad work
er In th middle west.
Hest of all. it would menu I lie
speedy construction of the .Medicine
linw cut -off. thus malsloif the Not tit
i I'l.ittc vh Hi v branch of the i'liinn
I'.u-lfii- in imlltv ,i main line. h
iiiiM put the Ninth Platte vnlb-y
I ii tin' bllillleei mni of the wm Id
Nut bci mi'ic the I'iiIkh Piii llic
wante ii, but bei-ause It would mean
mi iiiin ii for the middle weal, n1
i ffii i i.. liy for the North Piatt v I
lei. The M.ilnrll urges the roin
fninliil urgiitilraiioti of the valley
ti et bun-,,
r.-.at'Vh'? Pr"- . (Jf n.oorunce.
Over 3,000 persons were Injured ' frm iha Oariur nid.i.
in auto accidents on the streets ofi If tli neunle of North Platte val-
Loa Angele" UtirinK tha first seven , ley knew what it meant to them to
months ot the year anil the ratio of ilinvo tho Union Pacific secure con
accident to the number of cars in I t.rol of the Central Pacific, and make
commission does not acem to ehrinkjtlie system what its original builders
even a half of 1 per cent. Fresh I intended and tho government want
sets of regulation and crusade j ed, they would be exerting ihem-
a.gaint speeders do not appear in 'wive to the utmost to mak that
pull down the deadly average. Itiinntrol poaslbl. Kvcry commercial
la becoming1 accepted as a part ol ! organization in th valley should
the day' work. I adopt emphatic resolution demuud-
f
; i
LOW FARES
EAST
Unusually low fare round trip
tickets on sale daily via the Chicago
& North Western Ry. to the moun
tain, lake and seashore resorts of
New England, the Atlantic Sea
board and to New York City,
Atlantic City, Boston, Toronto,
Portland, Me., Montreal and
Niagara Falls.
Liberal return limits nd favorable stop
over privileges.
Fast trains at convenient hours make direct
connection in Chicago with all lines East.
This affords a splendid opportunity to enjoy
a sight-seeing tour or to visit your friends
in tbe East.
For full information apply
Chicago & North Western Ry.
l'M-lS-nS Farnam SI. Telephone PO tig lit l S40.
CftBsollrlsled Ticket Offices
Hl Pad St. Telephone P0gls 1M.
ft.--....., j.j.-s.r ,,.,',- i ii' I, .
Don't think of Nokol
as a mechanism
Nokol is
a heating service
that rids you forever of
coal furnace drudgery
There are two things that Nokol
does for the home it serves: it rids
the home forever of the entire
drudgery of furnace attendance,
and substitutes clean, even, auto
matic heat for uncertain, uneven
heat with its attendant grime from
coal and ashes.
Nokol is a heating service just as
electric light is a lighting service;
both depend on perfected mechan
ism, but the owner need not think
about the Nokol mechanism any
. more than he docs about the elec
trie light mechanism.
Make up your mind to have a real
heating service next winter. The
comfort to you will be worth many
times the small initial expense.
That's the experience of more than
six thousand home owners who
now enjoy Nokol's heating service.
The Nokol Heater burns oil. in any type of
heating plant, instead of coal. It can be in
nulled iit a few hours. Controlled by a ther
mostat, it consumes only the amount of fuel
nectssarv to maintain the temperature desired.
It operates automatically.
There arc mso to 170 installation in Omaha. A
list of users will gladly be furnished you. Some tf
your friends are among the owners. See the in
stallation in our oifiii at 17th and Howard St'cel".
WE GUARANTEE ABSOLUTE SATISFACTION OR
WILL REMOVE THE BURNER AND RE FUN 11
YOUR MONEY. Incidentally, we have never yet had
to remove a Nokol.
Call at Our Olitce, I7ih and Howard Sit
lor Df monttr.ttoil
FSwiiii fin :
Automatic Oil Heating for Home
Vii(rf by Dvtk Ocrratf Ptitnu
Approve J hy Salinnal HotrJ e( fir I Wrrar,,.,
Nicholas Oil Corporation
"Rusinva . CoqJ Thank You"
MINNESOTA'S
TEN THOUSAND LAKES
Aire Calling You
Get -ay ttora th sheltering rt,th ntr) nd
ntH-at el il cily. Com to Minivtraoi, her you
irt breath tnvis0rtint, ptrtf-acewtHl ir r-iun;
tntii iocU trytj-clear tcvll uinu, anJ
lhen )t, md Kf tK finen K n4 nuAit
hKin in H tkorUL
Com r "aKtl Kfiwn is t i be. July n4 Auivwt at
th kWl usamK. TH vt . tmpriur it f? vit-rr. 1 ht
HKt f (OoL lltj tvf i tanVno.
la fata-ti-.U-'oxm in CH -vnt p 'rhan tody hi ;&
tin trt itarmikm hi M.nn.
Kt-aU, "InfUnaJo-lilwSivlUu
Mil mi til t,.
t..i it r.... ri
M I M'Vlktl
tlt P.M... 4Wl
. .at .-. l
. a.a I .aa-a
Hotel Castle
OMAHA
Clear Baby 's Skin
With Cuticura
Soap and Talcum
'ijfts eittra-swi tj'ii Mr-tkp lTs-jihj
thtmm ianirt,h) t M rntm
Notice -to Pedestmml
Gtt ZJ GYPSY TOOT RELIEF
it you want to feci the awful
pains from sore, burning ttitt
c&lfouses, corns, bunion, and
swollen, tcnder,achln2 feet
CfflCAIK) (MAT WESTERN
'
ktii
St ttllUMI
SB ltf f .,
Ill "v i ' ' i '
If I f
II
It t
at km t ',. '
a a t u. 3.
I . j
ttt I
I . t
. "I i
A giw
; !. Wl w!