The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, August 30, 1922, Page 6, Image 6

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    OMAHA liKt: WKUNKSDAY, AL'iiLSl 30. r.
The morning Bee
MORNING EVENING SUNDAY
THC ItC f UBLttMINQ COMPANY
bVMOH B, CrtMIE. f..li.ar. B. BKCWta. 0k Mant'tr.
MEMBER OF TM ASOOCUTSD PBUt
T i !! h at WW , !, Il
aua w uw aa tanktMaiiaa at all Mat iMfeM .ratna w M at
at iwnt mial la UK hht, aa aia um ha
.4 na) at wmj w al aw ajaaiai aa mm
Nat itmii ircitUtiaa l T OmM Baa, July, ItU
Daily 71,625 Sunday.... 70,332
B. BRIWKB. Gni Maaaaar
ILMtft 1. HOOD, OnwUttaa Mutftr
vara M tad autuciaaa' kalr a 11. 4ik at Aafuat, ItU.
iMl) W. H. QUIVCV, Naur, faalH
TW Oataa few It tl IM aat Sax. a? CliwitUmt, IM
ataiM aa nwa Jla. TM IM. t alnralauaa It ma
laria alalia at IBM artMiiMMB,
Bit TILtrMONIl
M'.ta Branra Etrkaae. A.k far tha Draartaiaat 1Ti ...
r raraaa uM. tof Mlatit Call Attar It f. M.i '
Mtuwial Daaar'aiaaV AT kMM ttll t Hit, 1000
orricu
Mil Orfita 11th aa4 Ptrata
Ca. B,fft .... II Butt St. South 814 . . all S. J4lk IL
Br Yart ttl Fifth Araau
Wa.kiMta 411 U BMf. rku . Hit Bu$n Bids.
Pint, Prtaca 41t lw St, Hourt
Tht a.l av.r.tt daily tlrculatiaa of Tha Omtha Ba
far Julr, IK '.'I, tl.tat. a aaio of 11.711 av.r July
af IVII. Iht nat Kirui Kunriar rlr.ulailoa of Tht
Omaha Uaa far Julr, ltl, w.i It.tll. a (tin af It. lit
e.f Jaly af 11. 1hlt It a liw t.ia than ikat ma4t
y an eth.r dally or Sunday Omaha Btw.aaiwr,
95.2 prr tent of norm!, in jjit o( the mike ci the
thop handi.
Wheat receipt ( the lour leading primary market
in itie district were down 12,714,000 btuhelt, while corn
.liowej an intreate in movement of 4,123,950 buthelt
and oali an Increase .of 459,000 biuhtl. Increased
marketing of rattle and hog ia reported, with an in
rreatt in packing; threp thow i alight falling tfl. Lett
flour v. at made in iho district than Utt year, yet the
total output t ,tjOJ,46J barrel.
HuMtiPit it good and gives prombe of getiiug let.
trr in thit irction of the world, thank you.
HUNGER STRIKE IN INDUSTRY.
The closing of the great Ford manufacturing
plant ia not, we are told by Ita owner, on account
ut s shortage of fuel, but it a protest against what
he considers extortionate ratea demanded by coal
producers. He hai enlisted In a crusade againt
pronteerinir, and declnrea hit Intention of battling
to the end against what he calls the greed of the
coal men.
Borne reason exists for tho belief Mr. Ford ex
presses. Secretary Hoover's fair price agreement
was not sufficient to restrain all, nor did the dis
tributing agency tentatively set up achieve more of
service. Illinois operators lent week announced an
arbitrary increase, of f 1.26 per ton, for the avowed
purpose of distributing strike losses over tho cominir
eight months, so that in April next year they will
be just where they would have been had the strike
not occurred. Such B "head I win; tail, you lose"
policy was never before known In American indus
try. However, a broader and deeper policy is involved
than lies in the mere charge of profiteering. The
law of aupply and demand ia the basia of trade free
from artificial control. The owner of any article
" PRINCIPLE OF A LIVING WAGE."
The Railroad Labor board, according to latest
Information, haa been asked to set itself a definite
task, that of determining what ia a living wage. More
has been said and written about thla point within
the last decade than on all other economic topics
combined, with the possible exception of taxation.
And, a on almost all other mooted points in the
science, the opinions cover the entire 180 degrees
from pole to pole.
It ia not easy to give the proposition in simple
terms, for It involves too much. All through life
examples are afforded of two men working side by
tide, under similar conditions, performing identical
operations, and paid at exactly the same rate. One
will accumulate savings, tho other will barely pull
through. Which of these is to be accepted at the
example to support the principle of a living waget
Concrete examples nearly always confuse ab
stract proposals. For this reason it will be ex
tremely difficult to lay down figures that are rigid
and exact. A living wage may mean much or little,
according to the quality of living that is to be pro
vided. A saving wage Is open to the sumo criticism.
What Americans expect ia that workers will be paid
on a basis that will permit them to enjoy aome of
the good things of life, to make provision for days
of adversity, whether from sickness or age, in other
words, to render them secure against evil fortune.
The difference in individuals, in disposition and
capacity, is an always present factor in wage agree
ments, affecting not only the wage but the atint on
which tho wage in based. W, Jett Lauck on one aide
nnd Dr. Charles P. Neal on the other may produce
bewildering arrays of figures, the results of abstruse
calculations, and each convince his followers. Yet
the "living wage" will be as far away as ever, for it
is natural for a man when his wage improves to
equally extend his way of living.
RIGHTS FOR ALIEN RESIDENTS.
The Kellogg bill, intended to give effect to the
president's recommendation that atepi be taken to
afford proper protection to resident aleini, is now
before the senate committee, where It is subject to
attack from labor representatives. Their theory ia
that the Kellogg measure ia simply designed to set
is commonly permitted to affix his own telling price t! up the federal government as a strike-breaking
to that article, and it is the right of the purchaser I gency.
to pay it or decline. Coal is subject to this law,
with the preacnt disadvantage that coal lit not alone
subject to artificial control, but that an unusual de
mand exists for the output of the mines.
Congress is considering measures to place the
distribution of fuel under governmental direction
for such period as the emergency may continue. It
is not clear whether fixation of price will be included
in the measure. Yet the distributing agency's oper
ation should have more than a tendency to also con
trol price, for it will prevent discrimination In de
livery, and so in a measure forbid extortion.
Some further expression from Mr. Ford may be
of interest, for example, his idea of what la a rea
sonable price for coal. He has several times said
that the existing prices are too high, but has not
told what he thinks the figure ought to be. Laying
this aside, his protest is one that will get a great
deal of attention. His own record is in his favor,
for he has consistently reduced the selling price of
his output as often as quantity production made it
possible to lower prices and yet receive a reasonable
return.
How far tho crusade will be effective must await
the issue. It is a novelty in American lifa, the hun
ger atrik in industry. Things have reached a pass
where the great bulk of public thought will doubt
less approve Mr. Ford's course in theory if not in
practice.
WORK FOR THE LEAGUE.
Some interesting problems are to come before
the League of Nations at its approaching meeting.
One of these, it- is said, will provide a real test of
the quality of the organization's fabric, it being the
first dispute between first class powers to be pre
sented. France, it appears, has given offense to
Great Britain, through undertaking to force French
citizenship on certain Maltese domiciled in Algeria.
How serious the dispute may be will turn on ex
amination of all the facts in the case. Once such
a procedure would have been the equivalent of a
declaration of war; nowadays it partakes more of a
question for inquiry and diplomatic adjustment.
Yet, with relation between England and France al
most at a breaking point over the settlement with
Germany, even so slight a matter as the status of
insignificant islanders or colonials may prove enough
to snap the bond.
Another matter which may come up and which
is of considerable moment will be the suggestion
made by Austria to Italy that the two nations be
economically united. Whether this ia a question
for the League, inasmuch as Austria is not a mem
ber, and the union is not to be political, may be de
bated, but the proposal ia one that will bear exam
ination for ita merits at well as for it novelty.
The approaching session of the League, there
fore, it to bo fraught with real interest, because of
the important European questions to be considered.
Out of this may proceed proof of the utility or lack
of it on part of the organitation.
As framed, the measure is designed to afford pro
tection to foreign-born residents of the country, sub
jects of other powers who are temporarily domiciled
in this country. Omaha has, one one occasion at least,
noted the effects of a mob pursuing men so situated,
and it was not with any purpose of settling a strike
or stabilizing the labor market. On a number of
occasions the government at Washington has been
required to make the shameful confession that it can
not protect foreigners against violence, because of
the peculiar divided responsibility under our form
of government. One of the notable incidents of this
nature was the case of the Mafia riots at New Orleans,
when Mr. Blaine found it not easy to convince Italy
that the federal government could not invade New
Orleans to give police protection to threatened sub
jects of Italy. i
When an American abroad is assaulted, or sub
jected to any indignity, a great fuss is usually made
in this country. Not that we are bullies, but because
we want to protect American citizens everywhere in
the peaceful pursuit of their lawful business.
Equally, then, we should give full protection to citi
zens of other countries while they are here. These
are not always strikebreakers; quite as often they
are strikers. Whatever they are, so long as they are
peaceful they deserve protection, and to this policy
no reasonable objection can be made.
SAVING THE WORK AT MUSCLE SHOALS.
An appropriation of $600,000 is set aside by
congress to carry on the work at Muscle Shoals,
where the money spent on the great Wilson dam is
in danger of being lost because of deterioration.
This will be for the month of September only, as an
additional $7,500,000 becomes available in October.
Whether the completed works be turned over to
some private agency to operate, or whether it be
conducted under the direction of the government, it
will stand for all time a monument to the reckless
method of conducting the war adopted by the Wil
son administration. The money spent there was di
verted from other purposes, and, while it may rep
resent the judgment of the president and his secre
tary of war, to most of the people it stands as a
part of the great scheme whereby certain shrewd
manipulators secured an immense amount of gov
ernment cash to push a private speculation. This
phase did not cease with the war, but has been
persisted in since. The Norris report on the Ford
proposal gives an excellent survey of the tituation,
and what the federal government it in danger of
losing, unless vigorous and comprehensive action is
taken to protect the enormous investment now tied
up there. Congress is protecting the work as it
stands, but there is more to be done.
The embezzler who gave himself up at the peni
tentiary rather than fool around with further ap
peals to the law probably thought ha was saving
himself and the taxpayers trouble; and he may be
right at that.
WHY FOLKS ARE FEELING BETTER.
V tubllt tomelhlng hit ptrmtAtcd the atrmophtic
lor the (at! irw week, giving ever) body a little more
(Outage, a but. m'f optimum, a little mote tietrrmi.
tutian ui tt-vk it out. Jua wht thi tomtthing wat j tj( yovl .Vvr notice, that the man h mistakes
the fMiif. mnit.hed the i'fdrri Korrve bank lor . inoc,,t rn for a burglar usually killt with
A veterinarian announcea that a hog hat ad-
i.Ui;n over man in way of provisions made for
health. The hog alto producet better bacon and
sausage meat.
the Ttath tlnttut may vtUit. liusinm of the d
t(M ior July hAt 4 J Hint impMvf ntrnt enrr JuU,
I'JI, Mtui4 by titbit bv bmVt to in. In I. but v
umU lor lour fi'.'tn ,u-ul J, bmm.tt ut
il ibttrut ttiJ Jf pr tmt. t'ul mounted It) a
t .!.l ot llVJ4l
Some tilHtt Ki'nu iuke 4 even nu-rt mounting
flutno j.!f tar t I ur '. ti
ut r tun tct a4 JH ,Wt, ut t sl luibtiti, t
' tin;'! m . j.i'y. I.'l. .'! th
t bt k't Kabul!! V'mt.t, 1 ..M. , 4
't IM tut m tutuunt tii the !' Uitt& t
t 4 t'tt.
P Uti l4t pt'ftt'U ! 4l'-t i li!t ,if I u!,
,'.', 44 i fi. ! it a i ;
t ret et, i'i p-v tit . 'H,!H tt i
r.tt'1 t ' Nnri it.titt ,. I !' tnt t
.".!' mr, i ' ' itn ' a I ((.'! it! . M ttit. wet
i i t.J k atif t m J.'y vi U.t t i i.
ttattnrat ( tmUiti f '' . Attttt 1 1 u
( the Art th.t?
(ivivmtvr NKKrlvit't plain talk to the ttriktrt
' will appeal to hit fellow citunt at welt timtd and
' tinirxiui.
OKI King Ak w trough fur the ataxia al the
, I'.n, but Jwii wait till he greet yuit at the Field.
i If lae flfuttt tKr,'il anaan eitjih r fl
jiotitmue t y "Skual!" in 8eJn
Te i.t ei Unity want Ut tt at e at.ua.
From State and Nation
Editorials from other rtcwipaperi
Itt'iry 'i4 mjr Ink tae lrd jtt.
On Stcwul Thought
" m m i tttuta
atf f ! h t.r' 14 -t
fJttMt
I 4 tl ' ut
Hjuau-,"
Pram tfct y.v Tark Pimi.
Whlrh earns ftrtt the h.ii tf.lioa
or the cam of quoit? Man b
l'an a pUyfut follow from tha at art,
anil ilia cliunirt era llmt lie tonlt to
laatlna r!im at l' lurnt ttofora ht
pot a run ml to taimriK tha Imrtt, to
y nothing of irnipi tin llm fret
of hi ronqurtt. Hut once pttaaraaltia'
horaaahof for utilitarian pur pom-,
lie found them hnnrly for fun.
Howevtr tti la Important point In
hUtorlcnl riir h may be darlilmt
ly the aavanta, the fact I that quoits
pronounce'!' "gu !" or "liora.
hoe," a Hie modern have it, la
our moat popular piiHtltn. ulr) John
Marnull, who tiar-4 to aprnd niitny of
Ills pur hour amnlliif at quolta
aaalnat lttvr currier anil oilier
rlt linn prominent In the almpln life
of hi Uiiy, woul'l rejoice to know
that the Amnrlca he dnl o much to
rerv la atill plK hlnir quoit. At
long at w etick to quoli and the
conalltutinn we era titfe.
(if lute yenr the port hue been
popularised by recreation director.
who perceived In It it Kama In which
all men could meet on even tt-rtn
without elutiornta preparation. Ilane
ball and football are fur the youna
ani. fit; Rolf I for the leinurcly nrnl
well-to-do. All three sport require
time, training, apace, eiiilpnient and
uniform. A dulbir will outfit the
nuoltuman, and all tie nenila to do
by way of preparation I to toa hi
coat aMd and roil up hi eieeve.
Thu equipped lie alnrulH forth
airalnst hi competitor, und !t the
beat man win.
From imdry rmrt of our broad
land come talc of niiKhty doing
with horwtlioot. Thr nre tint
chnmplonhlp. aectlnntl champion
nhlp and pcrhap before Ion we
una II have the opportunity to hull a
national champion. One hear of
whole town turning out to wlineHs
the bout, of hank president and
laborltc conleetlnn with and imnlnut
one another, and of tho hclirhtiined
community plrlt and dlmlnlahed o
cliil end Industrial etroin followlna
theae rnectlnira on the plane of
wholesome play. For they who
fnreaather In fport are not likely to
iliny one another In the more aril
ou concern of life.
The present boom In "lior'enhncH"
may paa. There I danger, too, that
the homely old aport may be refined
Into aomethlng prettier and lee sat-iHfylng-,
In the Ion- run, to a buny
populace, But a folk have been
plti-hlna; quoit In America since
colonial time, we may confidently
believe that the Kama 1 tenacious
enouah to be with u till the end.
American of the dim future may
travel exclusively by air, speak an
other tongue which contain no
word to convey the meaning of
profit, poverty, strikes, or war, but
even thoe far descendant of otir
xelve will know how to pitch horse
shoes at a peg- In the back yard on
summer evening.
The Time.
From the Batrlc Eprtt.
The present generation hu been
branded as Immoral: but a lews
superficial survey will reveal the
fact, rather, that It Is Increasingly
critical. "We are living In lax times."
"Our country 1 on the way to pcr
oition." "A wave of Immorality ha
swept over ue." Theo are expres
sions rife at the present time In all
parts of the United States.
The plays which are drawing the
largest crowdn on Itroadway, It 1
true, may contain problem hereto
fore considered too Intimate for dis
cussion. The Joke In other success
ful productions may strike harshly
upon sensitive ears. The book of
the day may dwell too liberally upon
the principles of life.. Even the
young people, who have not had the
advantage of tV.elr elders' restrictive
training and censored reading, are
the targets for much indignant criti
cism. They are not modest; they
have no reserve!
But a true critic snoum ne amo
close etudont of history. Have those
who made these Judgment studied
similar condition In other periods?
The original reading of Shake
speare" plays has no rival among
the most suggest ve play of today.
Life appeared to have little value
set upon It, let alone rules regarding
the conduct of that life. The crude
lack of restraining law Relative to
the personal safety of, women set
another seal upon the degeneracy of
the old times. If men are opening
their eyes wide today it 1 surely
true that their vision is growing cor
respondingly clearer and more dis
criminating. Prompt Justice in Kansas.
From tht Wichita Eagle.
William Alexander killed two
women on a bridge near J''Porita
Kan., last Sunday night. Thursday
morning, after the fune ral of his
victims, he was sentenced to lire im
prisonment in the Kansas peniten
tiary. Sentence was not pro
nounced earlier because it was
feared a mob would hang the mur
derer if he were brought to Emporia
for arraignment before the funeral.
At thi moment, the confessed
murderer probably is doing the
lockstep which is to be hi life
rnarch from now until death cla 1ms
him. Hi incarceration Is essential
ia the welfare of society, for he Is
a killer. I
Such prompt justice os this does
much to remove the excuse the ad
vocate of lynch law hang their
case (and their victims) upon.
How to lilinlt Homicide.
From tht llllnolt Btai JUltr.
In reportina that the United Plate:
had 9.500 unlawful, homicides during
the b.st year and over 5.onO dur ng 1
.a.- il. v,,rat ft onrtl fll i 1 1 Oft Of '110'
American Bar aoclatlon auys , l he
criminal situation In the l nlted
State o far crime of vlolem
are concerned I worse than, that or
any other clvlllied country. Here I
let rePct for law."
On the contrary. In regard to
crime of dishonesty such a lar-ci-ny.
eitortlon, counterMUna. fie
ery, fiaud and the like thl count rv
U said to be more moral than any
othr cf tho laiser counlrl.- of th
There t a tnrt feellna that In
tht cuntrv homicide, like v
I mad too '. and ' ,h " ,n
clival wave In which It m'l
la throuah Insufficient U- d U
tnfotcam.nl of ! vernln '
0.,.lnp of und rml't t.irtiy fire-
"'Aaother thl h r..nttlmt
the ueft t III i u't.hroii nJ
dtUfnry i.rt" -f 1" '''
touna turola and ...hli. i
I re l4.l)V adtiimltietail a t. .l'
v.rt tha purl'.' "f he 'ill 'd
1,11 !..... anwn.il rtloitna!" 'l
ih r..miiiinitr h ouht t" wn
j n1 IU tUM-a. , , .
thera I anUM ti" tl"
tmuiht hr hp '.'
iwta rael at4it i l'" '"''
. . . w hi. . atti, h .html I
ts4i4 l"l aaihot .t.' 4 " '
ilth ! I '
It ' ).. a ni'r4 "'"
tpt ' '
II faalle t t . tiniH
lhal ae a. t I !. " '
at ' el tha I . a
.-.
t aut .a " i I 1
I ..i tl .mt-t ... l Ut I
... at'u at ta .!.. tha .-'"'
aa,
Ta I Ml IHI a... tt
t rl f tmiilni iBnt.i'1 1 1
Uat )txr were tonimlittj lih pi.
tola.
It la necratary only for a f w per.
una . carry firearm, and If ithr
were not parniiued to carry them
even theae perai.n would not be
Under that riHvaaalty.
Thl may ha curijln It too far.
but the trouble Jn.t now la that the
i iifui rcniBiii of h luw I not being
carried far enouah.
iH'famatlnn of Natluii.
I'luin ilia Wa.lntoa I'uti.
All Ihe paaalinlata ra not In Ilia
United rliniia. Wa Imv our eliain
of them, Indeed, and If a mart ware
to bae an opinion on the tilulutlona
and Jeremiad concerning the aup
oae d'Kfliern.-y of lh timet
honied, iiieiiipliorlcnlly, from the
housetop here, there and every,
where, h would ba forced to the
com luxloii tli.it die country I
headed almlaht for what Mr. Man.
tnllnl would doubt Ice have railed
the demnltlon bow-wow. Hut.
lurkllv. there are also In poeltlon
lo make themaelve heard eron
of a cheerier temperament who rn,
and do, dnacry and deaerlli virtue
und Rood point, and Unix. Boiling
off the Id t Ml M of Ilia l.ilier rlM
ugilnat the acciiautlon of the for
titer, the avcriig cltlsen I enabled
to strike a fair and reaaonable
balance,
In Knulund thlnu are much In
the Mine elute, Iean Inve of Lon
don ha eurned for hlmaelf the tit la
of "tha Bloomy Ueun" by hi wurn
Ing rcKanllng the trend of the
time and llm public and private
conduct of bit fellow rtritlxher. If
the world were to be guided solely
by the denunciation and vaticina
tion of thl aturntn churchman.
It would naturally Infer that Eng
land' cup of woe I filled to the
brim nnd that a national catuclyirn
1 Imminent, nut the climax of vi
tuperation viiii reached by Itev. John
H. Wakely. prealdent of the v
leyan conference, who ntit-lleroded
Herod in ht recent Inaugural ad
flrei. He flayed the Immorality ex
luting la KugllNh noddy, high and
low; the open pooh-poohing of the
tarred neMa of the marring relation.
the dominance of liiKt und the
cheapness In which life I held. On
the Hume day there appeared In the
London newapaper it dispatch In
which the prevalence of vice and Im
morality In America wa denounced
by the national council of the
I'rotcstunt KplHcopnl rhiirch. so
that the woret poanlble picture of
condition In the two great English
speaking nations were prcented
almtiltaneoUHly to lirltlxh reader.
All thl. of course, i in the nign-
et degreo deplorable. Ice us
uredly exiets, here u well aa there,
but it always ha existed, and will
exist to tho end of time. What the
would-be reformers forget, or omit
to eay. I that virtue also blonm
and that the great man of the peo
ple is sound at heart. He would
be a rash Judge who on the evi
dence available would decide that
the majority of mankind, even of
Anglo-Saxondom, I going the prim
rose wuy to the everlasting bonfire.
It Is a pity that tne lmprcsmon
should be broadcast that we are liv
ing in a decadent age. when so many
testimonies to the contrary nre to be
found on every hand; but none nre
so blind as those who will not ace.
It I not fair to a nation to expose
to view only the dark sldo of the
picture It present. Truth and rea
son alike demand tnat orrsiiung
good qualities should likewise be
portrayed. In the domain of mornls
In particular, eatlre, to succeed In
lis aim that is. ir us aim oe io
uplift must be both temperate and
Impartial.
Allcnbit I Obllsln.
"Are you sure you can prove my
client crazy?"
"Why, certainly," replied tno emi
nent alienist. "And what Is more. If
you are ever In trouble ana need
my services, I'll do the same thing
for you." Birmingham Age-Herald.
As Our Readers
See It
P.4ileil Iraae raaaart f laa Maraia
Hte. . al lk. MeaU Met
a laaiMM la laie lna freeia
tar a.Baieaj a at Mm. al BttalM
Iki.mI,
THERE JUST AIN'T NO SUCH THING
The Terminal
Warehouse Co.
702 S. 10th St., Cor. Jones St.
Packs Stores Ships
Furniture Pianos
JAckton 1504 Paul Fleming
Cap hTivt on Weal t).
Omaha. Aug. It. T' Ih Editor
of The iiiiiuli lira: I would like
throuah the letter tloi of your high
ly appreciated paper. The Omaha
(He, tt rtla. ue a, few fad trgard.
, Ing our litreaeiit treet tar aervlce.
rtii.iilly on VVeat U streat. About
in per rem of weeihtiumt Wrat y
irevt car are twitched In at Thirty
third and 4. where they remain to
Wiihi lima lo reauine their at
ward run. At Forty. third itreet, IU
block further, the end of the line,
car stand until et are nearly all
iMtcupleil before they l.av. l'i
waril of too, luoatly workliia tlrla
and women, mut park theitiarlte
un coin corner In all kind of
weather fr from III lo II minute
waiting for a car. then hang to a
trap from lo to 4S minute to in
to their work.
Then talk about government of
tha people, for til peopla and by
(not the people! Ih atreet par com.
ntny! Now to wtiinmarlx the whole
situation pure Injiitllc I put
ting It right. The time waated at
Thirty-third atreet would be auffl
clent for that cr to make the run
of 10 block further we.t and by so
doing would relieve the congealed
condition and give u people on We.t
Q a fulrlv aood aervlie, and per
baps would provide a et so people
who are compelled to work could
get a few minutes' rt before start
ing their ilnily grind.
t'oinplalnt have hern submitted
several time In a persunul way, but
have fulled to produce result. The
war I over; there I no excue for
testing the patience of the people
until It become unbearable. .Most
people can endure great hardahlp If
neceatary, but there I a limit. Thl
I not a tiei!elty. It. I pure eclflah
ret and Independence that Induce
the street car company lo handle It
affair to "Hit iteelf.
A W KHT Q KTIIAI HANCEU.
Striker and llic Farmer.
Hunter, Kan., Aug. 2. To the
Editor of Tho Omaha flee: For five
yearn railway men nd railway cap
ital have been receiving a bono of
l3,rMl.0U0,Oni annually. Thl figure
out about f 1 7, &00, 000, 000. Itailroad
freight and passenger rate touch
every man' pocketbook. These
men, alert nnd able a they were,
did not realize what was about to
happen on did the hualneti clement
who were In the habit of paying
freight bills. Aa a cold fai t of eco
nomic history, not a single Instance
of high wage and low price ut the
same time can be cited. Hallway
wage were) enormously advanced
before the great advance lit railroad
freight and passenger rate.
Tho farmer are bgelnnlng to re
alize thl truth. The manufacturer,
the dealers, tha middlemen can pa
the Increused cost on to the ulti
mate consumer. The largest body of
ultimate consumers In this country
are the farmers. Kecaune of that
labor bonus the farmer have re
ceived Ice for what they sold and
paid more for what they bought.
Moat of that tdx thousand million
dollar w taken out of the farm
er' porkei hook. On the inoHt of his
product he ha to accept the export
price, ea tha freight, luaurance,
coinmlaalon, wastage. Any honua,
any schema to tux on das for tha
benefit of the other I'laa. Will in
Ih ultimate analyst be paid mainly
by the farmer, without recourae.
No one hit ever proposed a bonus
of a billion dollar for the farmer.
I.t each tub stand on It own hot-
i torn. W. F. HAM SAY.
min-
Dlalntrrctthil Information
Country Hoy If about 15
uter walk from here.
Mr. Homeaneknr Fifteen min
utes? Why, the advertisement say
live.
Hoy Well, you kin believe tne or
you kin believe tli advertisement,
mlatf-r; but I ain't tryln' to sell you a
place," Boston Transcript.
"Ton Mill Muke One Cent."
For convenience you can remem
ber that the mark Is worth Just about
a mill. Htill, a you never saw a
mill In American money, thl may
not help you much In getting a line
on the Merman money unit. Man
chester Union.
STICK IT OUT.
Wloa vuur frerl4'e abeat t i
And lour bark i at.in.i lha !!
Whin ruu'ra ftilu l!d r.tie! tn
ui tar rout i
'than It ...in. that naufht eta t'o II.
All your pi... aixt plant can I e tl.
O.t t (rip upte yarttit ane a ! l
II lull
Any nav.n foi.l quit,
liu) a man with pluck and rit
will hoi in. ui th. vary final ttinut;
In ih tnartin i..ih ef torrew
It. will l.otn and a.rt "T.morr.a
Tht lu k lll rtiana.. , . . I f wt.t
I'll tthk It out.''
Tht lurk do., rhanitt roil Vnoa It,
All Hit r'urU provt and .how It
And th. men who viu art rn.a vhi
ttr.mlt doubt,
Wh hMU.i. iter tw.rvt,
Who have silt nit ul. and a.rt
A ad vhuat motto la rl a y hard, tad
tick It out.
j you, ah.e thin, to wren
And you think you nut la.t lore
That yau'vt al to quit nor ..t Iht
(In. I bouti
Smll.. tmllt at your bthatdtrt, .
Clench rour tttlh and tqn.rt your
.htuidtr.
And flint! Tou'll win If ytu but stick
It out!
Edmund I,tmy, la Porfet M.l.tln..
MR service to
the
m
mm
quick time and Canadian Pacific
hospitality from Vancouver, British
Columbia Itpaa 10 diy China
14 days Manila IS day.
Further information Irom local iteanv
hip taenia or
R. 8. ELWORTHY,
Cnml Atnt 8, 8. Put. Dept.
40 N. Dnrborn St Chlctio
. i i it I 1 ,.
' 1 1 lmTaWaT
Money to Loan on
Omaha Real Estate
Lowest Interest Rate
Easy Repayment Plan
CONSERVATIVE!
SAVIVCSGLOAN ASSOCIATION j
? Yarn o y
The Century-
where men of affairs meet
One REASON for the great
popularity of the Twentieth
Century Limitedamong men
of affairs, traveling between
New York and Chicago, is
that they are accustomed to
meet on this train as they do
on the great Atlantic liners
people of distinction from
the four corners of the world.
"Ctntury" H'tHbounJ
Lv.NewYork 2.45 p.m.
Lv.Bo.ton 12.30 p.m.
Ar. Chicago 9.43 a.m.
"Ctntury" Etttbouni
Lv. Chicago 12.40 p.m.
Ar.Bottoa 12 not
A . VawYArlt 0.40 a.m.
Omaha Oflxro.; 808-809 Woodmen of the World Bldg
NEW YORK CENTRAL
mm
i
Wabe.h Trail. No.
J.V. ( HICACO o:30 A. M.
AR. !KTKOlT 5:S5 P.M.
AK.BIIKAI.O i;5D A.M.
lo Ukaaa
AR. FI.MIKA i:ll A.M
Wi. fit 'K ANTON I0:4i A.M.
H NKWACK -i-o I'. M.
Ait. HoitoKKN an I'. M.
AllNtW YttttK ... a a r.M.
Waba.h Tiaia No. tl
I.V.ritltAiitt 11:24 P.M.
Ait I'Kiuoir m A.M.
AK HtrrAt.lt 5 H I. M.
AR NKW OHK . , . 45 A M,
From t'hicaito to New York anil the Kant, the Wabash
offi-rn unusual smice with its through equipment of all
itffl rk'fping car anil coache antl fine tlininjt car service.
Summer Excuriion Fare
an now in effect from Omaha via Chicago to many
Kaitern vitifa anU resort. No evceas fare i Wabaah
the lowet fart, either one way or round trij, arply.
pi AMOS
M Tl'MO ANB SBaW
atPAiata
AM Wark 0artailM4
A, HOSrE CO.
Itll laala Tat. Baa SMS
tut t atKixtsK'
We intte uu to write, rhone or call fur Information. Wy WCtJJ fttUt
W.baih Ticket Officei, H16 Dod.e St.. and Union Station
li. C. ShielJi, Divition fata. Agent, 1909 Harney, Omaha
:USK UKK WANT AUS-TIIKY lUUNt, KKSUKTS:
ht.v, rrti4 aatt tucttttlul, K.I
nthi tin oat a iu ft live it.n.t
i u t i n iriemtelve or t)e
!.' r trtpt la a le ttt tht
tiitr t tt k ua ia e
''l"i'l Irom the tttltit keei t
"trm t't la ! ttomta tat
h'tn!i til 4 ,eriity, vH4 th
'. one t)' Wt. tn el te !
'I ! i''ti It i ae "
v. h.atr. ti btirnir i
ri. fit H ' a'v,t ' that malt
il. 'i at tst h'H 1
I ! t I '4Sti.i i Vi t oiv
y-iM"4 Kt m'.t rtb t '
, ill tlaj I lt lf