o THK OMAHA HEE: SATURDAY. llKCKMT.KU L. 1W2. T'lE MORNING BEE MORNING EVENING SUNDAY Kit IILtl rUIII.ISKINO COMTANY H.r. SON D. UriUhfc, Jul.li.har. U. HKMV.K. (ia. Miwiir. Mf.MBtR OF THE A540CIATID PKESS Tia i4,'l l-iaaa. f atit.-t Tb La It mtalat. if mclwunlt Mll"4 It M.a tif, f'p l-tutul. ao i.f all 4iai4U-ht arariiiatj id m a r l f'li.fa.t, rr,.if In t, tail. ai"t al, ll.a l.ral nawa LUbHWMd 4 I I l4t$ if llHi 4i';. i( c i iI t.tl.LM aa tin MMnii DI E Tt U-PMONLS rrll Iiran-r, Knhsni!. Anil l irirtnn-iit AT Untie " ' M wanti-ii. r rini i alia Aftr IU I', M.I mnn .lll..nl Iiiaflminit, AHai.nc 1U21 or I9W. ,ww of nets Utm fffi- 7ia and arrant Cs. JJluffa . . . . J Htuli SI. flu. kiiJa, N W. Cur. tiih n4 N Nm Yurk 2 lit If Ih Avaoua Vaililiifion ill (Oar Illil. I'hlrago 171 lUgar Bid rtr.i, (r. i.a lu Hua at, Honor PRESIDENT HARDING'S "DRY" WARNING, A tightening up of prohibition law enforcement ftll along the line is jiromixi-d by development in vvanhing'un, A recent cabinet meeting devoted iti time to con. nldcrlng the effect of the moral fiber of the people of the open diarcapect for the law aaina intoxlcat- intr liquor. The very next day the nation was pro video" with a Hriking example of laxity in thii re gar I by the celebration of the Army-Navy game at J'hilMdclphia. A White 1oune pokeman, who directly rep- mi nted President Harding, utatcd after the cabinet me. ting that prohibition enforcement wa a qucation artly more important than om have thought. It wax intimated that the prcaident would make a (evolution in the near future a to what wan going on in the way of luw violation that would he astound ing to the country. The int treat of the federal gov irnment, it wa declared by Mr. Harding' apokes mnn, lay in the undermining of the moral ene of the people by flagrant violation of the law. An ap peal to the conacience of the American people waa one of the moves under consideration. .Secretary of the Treasury Mellon, in whose de partment the duty of enforcement lie, hold that the prohibition office i doing effective work ao fur a it can, hut that if it wan at least three time a large it ktill would fall far short of accomplishing an effective check to the making, sale and use of in toxicant. He believe the law can be enforced ef fectively only with the co-operation of the great body of citizenship. ' Government reports show that whisky, wine and other intoxicating liquor are flowing in torrent over fcll border of the United States. "Dry" enforce ment official are deluged with offer of bribes and JiUi-.fi money. Charles A. Gregory, the retiring pro hibition director for Illinois, i authority for the ctory that he wa offered $5,000,000 in bribe during hi year in ollice. His predecessor resigned after Jive month, declaring that "the job was never in tended for a sane person." While many effort have been made to clear the service of men susceptible to bribery, doubtless there still remain some who will wink at infraction of the law. There have indeed been instances of men retiring from the prohibition service who later turn up as member of some book legging ring, UHing the knowledge they have gained to guide their avoidance of justice. "Dry" leaders have a duty at this time to advance practical proposals for securing stricter enforcement of the law. If the fault i not in lax enforcement it may be found in poor organization of the work and in lack of co-operation between the various public officers assigned to the apprehension and punishment of those who have defied the law. The question is sure to be raised whether or not the people are in earnest about prohibition. The Association Against the Prohibition Amendment, which announces that it is pleased with the prospect of stricter enforcement, may have the idea that such a thirst might be created that the law would be repealed. "Dry" advo cate will likewise be pleased by sterner measures. Heavier sentences for law violators may be expected to accomplish some good. Prohibition is the law of the land, and as such should be enforced. President Harding' note of warning come at a time when the violation of the Volstead law is widespread. The subject is one for grave consideration and firm action. NEBRASKA SPUDS GO TO SEA. When you get to Omaha you are about a far from tide-water in any direction as you can get on the American continent. When you reach Kearney you are half way between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Therefore, while there is little choice between the oceans, except that commerce has for untold cen turies followed the flow of the rivers, Nebraskans are glad to get some attention from the Pacific. Our boy have done well in the navy, and some have sailed on merchant vessels, and now potatoes grown in tl.ii stutc are to be used in feeding the company on .Shipping Hoard vessels that sail from western ports. Commis-sioner Plummer of the board noticed Ne braska spuds on exhibition at the Spokane show, and was so well impret.-cd with their appearance and quality that he ordered the purchasing agent to buy several carloads of the tubers to be used in feeding passenger and crew on the liner tho board oper ates. He might have made the order for a few ship loads, and it would have been tilled as handily. A a mutter of fact the Nebraska potato is win ning it way; not by being meek and lowly, a it wa in the hennaing, but by standing up and battling lor it riifhtful place. Where it is shown in compe tltinn it tukes second place to none in site, appear ance or quality, and where it i rut on the plate of a hungry mortal it make a friend. Commiionrr riummer b h"n good Judgment in hi and we adUe him to put in hi call for a second h ,iing before the it ply i exhausted. MIXED IUSTOKY AND CARTOONS. V gniil hstiUu prna li the nuMic mini en ui.ii y nmttrt. m..i t Uti m tho oriem if Thankifiv- and it. ciii.i.tiMn with p!rmni'h K-rk. Thrr frr it huM b nM. f f'C t inrtubH!on that our . . t .1...- .-..I. I.I.. I . m ,,. A P A t aern-l I'M' ' nr' ,!l f. !'!.' VIUl'if mi.vifri4 l' fcaUi.c ti.micii l i'car vip lhi p-HM V.i ve km" it en rU"Wtvtnf dT 1'it-rima Ut. i.d a. I'Um-u'H R-nk. and fiwlaMy ! rv"lt Hr '.!! a !' ef tiky. I d .i t mur ,K' Tt''lWiv in ly t rl a ' afr lB.n; a I nU reu.r ef ' hi-mh ei ? t ,i.,.'t u Tk-' t'h ,h ( tfn4 I. ,uhtf t K r vi ...ltt,.t. Nf ! the tI Ua lH'k' l-i.-k U ,!.. i a f t Knlma t.t. X U VIS sKuiatJ r"' ! ,i!.r, . f-r la ia t f t4 M ,.i..i7 a . sl tf a t ! p a ft .11, l-l 4 H 1 f-'. ! U ' w, t 1 i-.'! 4 M if-ra f tk ,i,li, i iii.,j'i t il.-r ( i I rilr.lo U .i . I tfff4 t k .tl4 lt'H l' f- OMAHA-FRISCO LINE NEEDED. Utah announces itself in favor of continuing con trol of the Central Pacific by th Southern Pacific. Idaho and Wyoming, whose interests in the trans portation service involved far exceeds that of Utah, record themselves as favoring the transfer of the "C. P." to the Union Pacific. This in a sense measure the relative merits of the case. Not only are the local shipper, those of the states that will be affected because they are traversed by the lines, directly at stake, but shippers in general are concerned. When all the Pacific lines were under unified Hsrriman control, freight waa hauled across the continent via Omaha; under the Huntington control, as now exists, freight is diverted over the longer and more difficult route via El Paso and New Orleans. When the Pacific lines were projected the one plan was to have a continuous line from the Missouri river to San Francisco bay. That two companies were formed to carry out this plan now appears to have been a serious mistake; then it was looked upon as a mean to hasten completion of the railroad across the continent. California's civic pride was engaged in the work on the west end, over the Sierra Nevada mountains to the junction at Promontory Point. Huntington's vision went a little farther, though. No sooner wa the Central Pacific Joined with the Union Pacific in 1869, than Huntington set about to create the Southern Pacific. When that line was carrying traffic over the El Paso-New Orleans route, he began the neglect of the Central Pacific, so that when Harriman picked up the piece, he found a sad state of affairs. Harriman it wa who revived the Central Pa cific, bringing it up from the acrapheap to which Huntington had consigned it. Harriman built the I.ucin Cut-Off, and obviated the difficulties that lay around the head of Great Salt Lake; Harriman took the kinks out of the line in Nevada, boring tunnels, bridging chasms, crossing the Homboldt river again and again, until he had from Ogden to Truckee a fairly straight and level road. Harriman would have tunneled the Sierra Nevada had he lived. Nono of these things were good for the Southern Pacific, but they all were good for the Central Pa cific and the Harriman system. If tho order now goes out to restore the Central Pacific to inde pendence, or to Union Pacific control, the original plan of a direct line from Omaha to San Francisco will be restored, with the benefits that come from the constructive genius of E. H. Harriman, and the finest piece of trunkline railway in the world will bo at the service of the public. That is what the west ern states really want. "brom State and Nation" Editorials from other newtpapers. In JEST and VERSE r'teni That Are Paliif. liypU) ami Comments on ONE ADVANCE IN TURKEY. Our attention is fastened on the announcement that Caliph Abdul Medjid Effcndi, just elected to be sultan of Turkey and appointed head of Islam, has abolished the harem. When he reached the palace in Constantinople he found it occupied by more than four-score houri and the like, left behind by his predecessor. Under the old rule of procedure he would have selected such of them as he felt might fit into his domestic scheme, and have the rest sown up into sacks and dropped into the Golden Horn. Times have changed, it seems, and the new head of state and church simply dismissed the abandoned harem beauties, to be cared for as best they may find accommodations. He brings his own wife, with their children, to occupy the seraglio, and in the state of well established European gentlemen he will maintain his simple home. This will revive some of the earlier doctrine of the prophet While Mohammed did not exactly frown on plu rality of wives, he did not encourage the practice. He listed Solomon among the Wise Men of all times, but not on account of hi adventure in matrimony; rather, it was in spite of his home life that the He brew monarch won a high place in the estimation of the founder of Islam. Many customs, centuries old, affecting women have been abandoned of late years in Turkey. It is no longer immodest to go unveiled; women may be seen in public places, are even permitted to assume duties once forbidden them, and now that monogamy is given the prestige that flows from the example of the head of the church, the western status of woman may be put down as fairly established in Turkey, if nowhere else in the east. The crime wave is evidently receding. At any rate, police in different parts of the country have bagged quite a few bandits of late. The Homing Power of Cats lie l'atlillnilcr, Tlie difficulty it: a cut that (toes not want to be lost Is well U'.f Tlie anincil's ability to linn lis way back a!nio;l iiilalliMy to familiar and approvea liuunt Is uaually attributed to a peculiar hoinln In Ktinct. Just what the nature of this instinct ia has never been definitely dcti rinlned. Prof. V. H. Herrlck of Adelbert college. Cleveland, O., hn investigated tho matter sclentlcflcally. lie reports the result of hi experiment substantially as follows In the Scientific American: A cat which was born at his home and had spent th tlfteen months of It life there as taken in a (tunny sack to a point mre than four mile distant. There It wa released In ie quarter and provided with every thing necessary ' . lin comfort. Within a short time It eetnel to feel perfectly at home, but forty hour after it removal It showed up at it old home. To r't back tt had been obliged to traverse unknown territory. rro a aully ami ascend by a erle of terrace in a heiRht of 4U0 feet. Next a rielghtmr' cut. a femalo with kitten, wa made, th subject of a aerie of expeilini-rit. In each cuiix she mil taken under ueh circunistunce that there would be littlit probability of orientation through alirht, hearing and milt. Hh aa carried ui',.lly m lif erent dlrritioiia, gradually lu.'i ewn.njr the illntanca) in Wisdom of the Wild. fiom th Cm a per Jiarad. Prof. Will.arn Heel, who went to South Aiiierlcii and narrowly ecapl ili.a th In the JudkI after aiti'inpting to capture ft giant armnillllu by !l'iil blng it by the tall remark that Junalo uniimtl are far superior to JuiinWi men. Only the short reach of the armadillo aaved th professor to re murk tin. one Ooian't blum th profeor ror hi conclusion. Why grab an animal armored tank by the. tail with bare hands when a H' 30 bullet would have turned the trick. A bullfighter I our pet peeve. After bathing hi fevered brow the profi-HMor stated brletly that limn ha a better bruin, but animal know how to use their gray matter better. Tho jungle animal make a much tetter liiiwing than man with the limited (jualitle that nature rui given them, he ald. Life with the animal I more direct and Irmt.nctive than In our world. Animal do not war on one another except In pursuit of f'sxl, wherei man w:ir on hi fellow for dozen of IIIok'cmI reiiaon. At thlu time Homebody halted the professor to ask blin about l.dison and ford and a hulf dozen other c.l ebrltle. '"True enough," said the professor, who I a sport, ' but how many JCdlHona can you producn to I he thousand? Yet you can take tlie average wild animal while xt tit young end teach It a variety of trick. A parrot can talk like a mini, but how many men can talk lilto parrot?" The (uetloner ald ho would ask his Wife. In the Jungle, man I almolutely safu because the animal are: too busy to notice him. lie Is apart from their existence, lie I not lit to eat and he :nn't fight. The profi-Hsor say that no wild animals bother the average man until tlie man commence talk ing. You are safu as loiin' as you keep your mouth shut. All other nnlmala are allent at their work ex cept man. He runs Into bard luck when he start talking or grabbing 'irmadllloe by the tall. After all, it Isn't the size of your head, or the bulk of your brain, so much a It la how much you exercise what little gray mutter you poises, foran bruins fire sinlnial llk-j In that they hibernate all winter and nil summer. If a man can get six months work out of his brain every year, union houra, he can go down to any jungle and lord it over the imteatcrs end tho tail-spinning scientists. If you keep your mouth shut. Radio Report From Congress. From the Waahlnfton Blar. Broadcasting the proceedings of congress, which Is proposed and for which preparations are now being made, will Involve wide possibilities and some peculiar problems. A radio report of tho proceedings of the house and senate would undoubtedly he of great interest to many of the people of the country, and yet doubt les there are some, probably a large number, who would prefer song and stories and Instrumental music, and perhaps market report and weather bulletins. ltoll calls, for Instance. will hardly be particularly Inspiring, and often documents are read that do not hold the attention even of those on the floor of the house or senate. It may he questioned whether there are more than a score of people tn Washington, outside of those In charge of Its publication, who read the OongreHHlnnfll Record dally "from klvver to klvver." Another point to be considered is the fact that the two houses are in session simultane ously. How will the the radio waves be divided between them? Evidently the post of radio editor of the congressional proceedings will be one of great Importance, and will call for the exercine of unusual Judgment in selection, and for a strict nonpartl sanHhlp. InfiHmuch as the proposal Is to have the? very voice of those who speak within the halls of con gress to be spread out through the ether, thp proceedings cannot be kept in storage and let forth on tap. In short, the broadcasting keys must be turned while the hpeeches are being delivered It. may happen it Is not unusunl- that Important and intereHtlng speeches are being made slmultane oiinly at the two ends of the capital. Will the house report be sent out at one vibration and the senate at an other to avoid Interference? Obviously, the radio report of con gressional proceeding will have to be confined tn big Items, presidential speeches or addresses by distinguished foreigners, or perhaps Important talk by eminent members on vital (luestions nnd at critical points In do bate. And even at t'.iat there Is dan ger of blockading the broadcast ser vice with more congressional material than the people wish to recdve. A "high point" condensed report of what happens In house and senate may lx effectively radioed, however, and Inasmuch as congress seldom work at night peruana the use of tho afternoon atmosphere for this service will not Interfere with the evening programs that now delight great number of home receivers. Our Experts Must Hat Gon to Iowa. (Vrom tha Waterloo, U.. Courlr.) Th park commission ha filed It a mm I report of uctlvttle at Wand park last auniiner, almwlng total re ceipt at the bath house to be IS, OTlist, with expenditure of IWMfi, leaving u net balance- of $4,'iS.71. 11. A, L. 1'HE PEOPLE'S VOICE tf.lwlal (raw ihki e Ik Hflt IhM'I a) ? rtia f la lla la ISH iia treaty M anna etanift a (. AROUND NEBRASKA Ceoige Cleiiienccuii said lu hi apm-ch at the Aditorluiu, according to th t'liicugo Tribune: "In the hoiiM of a formter at Pout inr ken barrel of ,;( etitlmeUr tlt-lil gun wore loca- be A Program fr Ih luiure. Omah.-i.To .b Editor of The Omaha Hee: J.lfu I a mystery, a vast, complicated, piofouiul mystery. He lllml u I the inevocable pat. fast tailing away lilt tbu receding uim-s broken upon trot shore of turn-, la fur ue be tbu unknown iin-l unex plored future, a future so pr giiani with doubt ami pi iplcxltus. a ftuuni along whom pathway are hidden pit falls, concealed iiuieksatnls ami rug ged lock iK-ni-ath treacherous wave". (.'an we r-hitu these lis we go Mindly, groping our way? Wo cry aloud for ted." (ieorge. you should not alarmed. If the Jlun ever hit ynn UjM, nmi tin- echoing answer to nur with one of their .iTceiitlmter ileal plaintive wall repeal our iiuestmn iTiin ami Jon find It out you run go v,, ,,k around us at the wide mean r it lit to fi Justice if the pi-are and ewear out a warrant charging them with ills'Tderly conduct. Also Oeorgea, when you get home nd lis a neat little book on tho metric sys tem, A In Old . aniens. A In obi garden , when with summer dour. A Itose, beluted, lift fair petal to the sun, And all the air grow sweet with van ished wooing, Above the drifting leave of Autumn's strew lug, So, to my henrt a to the garden cloe,' The memory of you la llko a Itose. A to olJ gardens, In the fading light. Old J.ovi come Imck aa on miiiu ypMie might. When May stands deep In gold of Autunin'a sowing. And all tlie world la gay with youth' bestowing, I turn to walk In memory's garden fair, And at It Heart, behold, I find you there. A, A. A. Oh, We Thought Claymore Wa a risii. IlIIL Ah. what a problem! lild you or didn't you print the wall of that very homesick Hoot in all seriousness? J'ho picture of Kikl Kcot romping lightly over oatmeal rake (bannocks) and the. variously described peasant oy nilnuing a nock of two-handed claymore 1 touching In the extreme. Why, a claymore la a sword. There are others, too, flock of other Just n rich. Honest now, KIIL, did tho canny Scot fool you, too, or did ho not? Pat. I,ooU Wliut the Child Went and Done. Whoso sensational charges tint Harry Poulin la the father of the self- onfessed illegitimate child."-Ono In tho Chicago Tribune. R. I,. K. Thank You. It. H. There should be no ? after reading the last lino, as to the mean ing of It. H. I.. Keal Hard-I-abor. Am I right? Will you send me the names of two reliable Chicago assas sins that I could send to Havana, Cuba, to hollywood tho fiend who broadcasts the pupping of champagne corks and the gushing of H&H? Craftsman, of tlmo and w o It strewn with wrecks: some financial wrecks, some social wrecks and some plivt-leal wreck. Misfortune seem to bti the common heritage of man; tin-re Is no class or sect that can claim ex emption from thesii disasters. Inci dental or accidental. lie It a It may, aro we not moro concerned about the future than the past? One Is serviceable, the other Is uncertain, perplexing. Can we wish to forget while we are ahvny lunging for soinn Insight Into the future? It 1 thu fu ture that ha puzzled the mind of all people of all ages. Nor can we hush or Mltle this imiulry that arise ill every one' mind. It was seen and satisfied In the early duy of prophecy In tlio orio les and soothsayer of thu middle age, In the astrologist and psychic of the present timethe dis membered fragment of empires, kingdoms and prlnclpnlltle drifting down the stream of human history solemnly and subllmelv pwielalm In their utter desolation the Inexorable truth that fell from the lip r.f priest and prophet, Tha disaster and deaths that fell llko terrible Judgment upon tho live and work of great military chieftain have only tended to fasten the facta so prophetically spoken by soothsayer and oracle, and now In this ago of progressive thought, his tory is fast repeating Itself. Appar ently th! Is a res'less world, nnd prejudice seems to have gotten the better of our good Judgment and there seem to be a general uprising nmnng all nation for supremacy. Ilefore long the Hon of Man will be unlike th beasts of the field -the foxe have holes nnd tho birds of tho air have nests, but the Son of Man hath not where to lay his head. Let forget tho past nnd look forward to a brighter and a more prosperous fu ture. Let us rally around the Star and Htrlpe of this great country, for its gleirlous achievements and better mint of nil conditions, with one bril liant Idea In view: All men up and no man down. JOHN WILLIAM SHIELDS. As for the shivering and ragged gentleman himself well, let him be thnnkful that we are going to come out pretty eoon and give him a fjuar tr. ft. II. L. A Book oj Today 'THE MIDDT.H OK THIVeJS," by J. R Fletcher. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.. rub-Ilsheis. One Cause of Car Sliortaite. from tha Wtchits Tiaaron. The Kansas Public ftllitles com ml: slon bus notified 14 milling and lumber companies that they are re sponsible for holding freight car much longer than necessary, which open up an Interesting subject. Cars have been held four, seven and nen nine days while the ton- ignees b (surely unloaded them. In the meantime wheat nd other prod mi have lieen ro'tlnf In the field and country bank buve undergone .million unbearable atrain l ecaua if I the tick fif (r It; lonse.iueiif When one read a mystery story ho liken, subconsciously, to endeavor to unravel the mystery himself as he goes along with the characters In the book. But a ho nears the end and the author's solution he half hopes his suspicion to prove correct and he half hopes that the author has a sur prise for him. If the answer Is "Just as I ex pected" he ia a bit disappointed; if it is completely the opposite of the read er's deductions, there Is disappoint ment, too. Hut J. S. Fletcher is a master of plot ami in his "The Middle of Things," he contrives to let the read er's suspicions) in the murder of John Ashlon, wealthy Australian, be half right and half wrong. The murderer of Ashton Is intro duced early In the book, but there is nothing to cast the slightest suspicion In his direction. Accomplices, too, enter the book in early stages, and one or two of these are easily recog nized by tho reader, but Mr. Fletcher permits thla only to satiate his read er's desire for a slmre In the solving of the mystery, which becomes moru and more involved as tho pages are turned. And yet. "The Middle of Things" Is not one of "those murder stories" which should not be read at midnight. Tt deals with the disappearance of ait English lord when a youth, his flight to Anstraln, friendship with another Englishman there, his marriage, birth of a daughter arid his death and the secret is known but to two men, John Ashton and his murderer. The action is Kwift. The style i agree, able. The description is good. Thu rhnracter are interesting and the plot 1 excellent. Oppose Collection of Debt. Hodge City, IOin. To the Editor of The Omaha, liee: Gurct Garrett's "Notes on War Debts" In the current Saturday Evinlng Post, discussed In the streets and press, has assured the wise one that John Bull and France are the wickedest iiaxtners with whom any nation ever entered into a Joint enterprise. of course, Mr. Garrett did not kliow that Jjaugherty was at tho moment bringing suit against profiteers nearer home who made an unnecessary four million building Funston. He has also for gotten that that archangel and hater of war, Henry Ford, made only eleven millions oft the taxpayers buiMing .- lot of unseaworthy submarine fliv vers, misnamed "Englo boats." One ought not expect a literary genius to discover that every dollar of the war debts was Incurred to lake care of the trade balance favorable to the Cnlted States, and that if Eng land had not used the sums to peg exchange, and France had not charged us wharfage, we would Rim ply have had to lend them such addi tional sums as would have been necessary to permit them to buy our needed steel, wheat, 1 beef, etc. He naively admits that he does not un derstand the suggestion of McKenna's that a nation cannot afford to re ceive payment of such debt. If he were a beef nroiliicer nnd found out that Argentine's beef ex ports had been growing the last three years whil- ours had declined to one Mfteenth of our 1919 foreign sales, or he l ad discovered that our wheat ex ports this current crop, were 42,noa,- SAVE 25 to 50 on Any Kind of Typewriter We sell all kinds, guar antee them to give 100 service and back up our words with action. All-Makes Typewriter Co. 205 South 18th Street e0 bushel l.-ra for the sama time thai) last year, while Cunad.i had III rrceisci! tremendously, be might un d.. aland how England' pa.uin nt of f.'ui, una. iiou of gold i-oht our farmer alone more money than all the got I we collected from England thl year. ; I ithcrwli.1' Mr. Garrett's article I good fading n, will contribute jalsiiit as nun Ii to trad.' restoration iind Intel national ko, feeling a Kli I tllof's brllleiot i',.tiijiLi f..u u,iUL, ago. t ', C. JSELV, What ll.ne Women Hrlier fn hay? Omah.i. Te the Editor of Tho Omaha Pee: I wish to call attention In I he great. -st menace of the auto mobile, nnd that I the women drivers. Women p-isiilvely nre not tit to drive autiiiiiohllcN. They lack the or dinary caution that a man knows is necesMiry. Any day you i-nti rig plenty of women thiuid ring through the crowded fin-els In big cars, re gardless of the Inilllc rules and peo ple flying out of the u.iy nnd escaping narrowly, llanlly a nay passe with out its story of an automobile m-c.l--b ut In which a woman wis driving the car. There ought to be a tiw or city or dinance against women driving auto mobile at least In the ojty. if they Hunt to drive, let them get out on the prairie where t h- y won t run over anything but prairie dogs and go pliers. They have no business at the wheel of car in the city street be cause they have no sense when It come to running car. They take chances. They lire a danger not only to pedestrians but also to careful men drlvei of other ears. And then. If there Is a collision, why, of course, thu woman always trie to make out It wa tho fault of the man In thu other cur and nine time out of ten It was the woman fault. They'll ho to escape the blame. Let put a stop to the menace of women automobile drivers. A KEAL MAX. Genoa Leader: Election I over aiJ't If you are not aattsne.t with the result there I only one thing to flo an I that i to forget P. Tho country won't go to the Isiw wow umbT the new of llcinl even If you think It will. It will t-iill bo the bit lountty on earth. Nebtanka lainoc-rat (WuyiuO: R cause of tho Incompetency of the rail road to move crop as tin w alumlil be growrrn In Hierlit.ni county stand to lose no less than '.'tlli.OOO bushel ot potatoes. Cur for shipment were or dered more than u month ago. That mean another reason why the gov ernment should oh n and control the common carrieis The roiiiH lay It to the strike, mid ih hirllcrs lay their action to the toad inHm.ir agement. Trying in make ptolit on valor to puv big siliiiiei to th i ttli'ialH and a small wage to th- lr labor. Beatrice Express: A lot of troiihla on the other slile of the world todav come from the fact that on outpost of empire In too of I en an oil Wt-IL (teem l:k the flspp-r would f!o( Hill ef her flippy elulliea, A-l'l (tell tiers' If III lK I" s'"P Tti i hill wli'-n nitrth wind I, low flcenm list- alu-'tl tfiiiritit-n out hr shirt And liull.tn un her wn1M. H, front on 1.1 nut her wuhunne buit Nor tiaki-d km-'-a-'S tnale. 8ema Ilk siifbielty w iillil np When healih ilenira It way; Heeina llkn in a.iiiia nl1 f;iht'ii.i1 ahnp WIipis S'leit aehaa vet hnl. la away, l'hey'rl ill out flannel ..t t ten ta Anil h'ls-ht r! M,..,IIn to.iie. An.t elnllie lliein-. vm fri.ni foot to thrott l.lka tileoiiiln' I'lH'iuliimui. IVrhfin they'll ft. I Ihla, hut my nt Al.otil IIih fi-ppar irt-w, la that In Hrtliii.a iind in itT-,iaa They II ...it ii..K lie. or y.el Ah"Ui whm ih.-y limy un er ivnr, An. I. MeneM. If II. -y llifl. I'm aure flint 1 wiiut.t prmnpl di'-lnia ' igur titato, nut mine, ann-i ia. Clay t enter Hun. Weather Signs. line Kansns Editor says Wo are to have Another mild winter Hecauso the corn husks Are light this fall and the Angle worms ure tardy about mak ing their disappearance. Wichita Jleacon. itusines Enough for All. It Is becoming Increasingly appar ent that tin country Is big enough for both motor truck and railroad train. poston Transcript. Hamilton County Iteg.fter, Aurora: Tho sheriff of .Morrill and Thurston counties, removed by the state law enforcement department for lac; of doing thetr d'.ltv, Were both fb fi-afed at tho polls. H. A. Hryant, county attorney of Maunder, who was simi larly charged nnd who agreed to run and leave it to the voters, was also beaten. The only victory of an official charged with laxtuss lu law enforce ment was in 1'i'dar county, where tha accused received home endorsement. Grand Island Independent: A Grand Island man say hi daughter got a good start with tlie touch system when she wanted to borrow thf money from him to pay for In r type writing lessons. Why Rub It In President Harding say that the world owe much to bankers: which Is no doubt true, but lie needn't rub it In. Cleveland I'lain iK-aU-r, A Missouri Kecelpt fur Worry. You can worry a man by keeping him waiting and a worn in bv keeping her Ui-siog Um i vuie Dcuincrat-t'ortini. each teat, and In r ich case ! w f-leasei at dusk In j (arslyai i f bimne unknown territory. A!y ir " taken that thr houlil t- nothing tt Interfere with whatever homing In stinct she p.a-ad. Hie returned home en tun in iicvriu from tsiliit vsrylc- from or tn threo mile distant, t'tiwlly. It not'-!, h h1"t In the direction ft hm tii.nie-tiately With-nit fiv attempt li Irare M. Vwi-I tl reu't laU.-n bv the !, Pi .; li ihe lie I 1" u i m!-iI. Th -lll! tliiliill 4 thru '.ralil. bv t iltol"- f 11111 al tiii.e! ti a point t in;l.i a.l fe!f from h.lii. Complete nmi. leu-run b I rMriiel P the ii. e if hr (! t u( Ilea - ' u!-"l In a d r t. ii i ppostte th i l t'f h.o". h ln. hr wev rut i-IT r ' t-i'9 i I f li ti led O n' la h. h b I I . n r nf t, Tf a: tui-.nl ii I. Sill ll wi'l'MP-l ,.,! g U tf- a-retth t. t It r I e'.e n . -n i . t- il ! vu.iu v if mile I Kt'.t ih-'x l-f tn-t I i emi 1-1 I in iM e b-' f'-iu -'t M to i,.it- t-aa. - ill , - . h . v .f ' i jr.- t ! - I wii-.o .l tt na-nl to. I .-.! ef .at 4n.f l a I ta'. i-) sW.ut . ,.. at.iti.-u I. a . I It lie e' t fnol.if ..,,la I . Ai.l I "I tea .at I V.i t t I a. to a at Ii .la at I f i h. i . a t . t .e -a. i I i " l fka cl a.,..' ! 11 h lt -I tn! ! em I t tea is, tM t l.i I vt U. .a a aa I t I I M I h'-m' l M ! lt , Las I ,tt. I t, -. i e. Ha ety I are--" I I s a-- t k m e 'i. Mit.ii ! j nti ei-'ei.t f f. ., ' ! ve . t-i-i. 1 ,i 14 li. i.i!ii t e I I f t " ' 1 i eft - t .t - a t I- t-e I w , . W t..a 1 t a - .11 t - - i t-i- , . i - ' e 1 it, I a tf . l ,l. l k, 4 t i t. Any hutni ni'iii who bol.la freltbt iar a dy l-nr !n I" hh..ui-ly lew" ! rrt!nly short sighit-il ard sr'iuh. aai vrT other t-utne iiin ttinul.t n hi lai affoit in i-.er'ii. b.ece of iin) !l!fiih! fl 'v. Thai eon-ern lhi boll .tn un. t e.e.4i.t i Mfiki. s at p own t-roep rt . it iY h itifC t worai tn.t b.n e,. lam trv iVi'iioih'.-t Ke.tf t, Ts ef Rav. Kv1 h it fertile t '..late.T, rioe.tii t-, ' K I ey a In K'a t;' s.j . (-,, i -tlSlt '..t.t A I'tntr-i p.. nat. e to ftait.t "li 'i t bi .r . f . ' t M Ho - ". . "at. e-w i a ) aiat K t C. li ittit t, 1 tit tet ' t,a .... .fii al b t H em M l',r.l tat ef ! f a .. -nt r.,i 'age I lint ki . t in i a., . tt !. l'it!' I T ll kvtti i Nt tin . ' t istt r. . . ,is , . i t. t .' t , aaa-ttL-isti -.-! Trouble of I'enioiial lluilgel. Th cost if pleasure continues to he m of the rrasoii why ntiin the. , budget t- the incomti 1 Uiltleult . inititr. Hcaton Tntnscript, Winner of Ford Car No. A-7325 If this numlier is not pu sen ted to tlie Secretary a: Moose Temple by Thursday Lec. 7. 2 o'clock hnr new numlier will be published W. A. BARRON, See. Mooaa Lodge A Gift for all the Family What Gii't would lie more appreciated by all members of the family than a Piano. And it is pleasing to know that, although it is the most appreciated of gifts yet it need not be expensive. Beautiful Upright Pianos 295 Beautiful Upright Fianos in either walnut, mahojrany or oak. A Piano that is of such C quality that even the most discriminating of t musicians will say it is a dandy. Specially priced at f The most liberal terms may be arranged. If j you think you cannot afford it, come in and let ffJJ m us prove to you that we can arrange terms if r whereby you CAN' afford it. J 1513-15 Douglas Street , t I M , fc 4 t 1h do., I a 'M. I I. . I , t -i o ti , - ! . . V ! Divide ntii Quarterly Absolute Security Sr'tAZ; 'l-fv - I ?3lWaP Three Investment Tests m .,c4 4 r tkf mi th it i,fi t-t 4 1 lit t i1 i-irl-v4i-.t M e l J. mi' I ml- kMm f Il.t4 in.en- I)- --'4 -mt td t i tf I f ( . .a, ft 4 ! fM- lk ftas-wyi I ft tf 4 r, J - 4e SUFFERED 1 LARGE PIMPLES For Tvio Yeirs. On Face. Itched and Burned. Cuticura Heated, "1 uflrd (or two yu with (ilmflrt on try ft. They r hard. )i(. n 1 inl, n4 lomMlmti iW4 pvat. Thev taaia citfil all ov t my He, nd hn I wh4 ttiff luhJ iv4 b'n4 alttatlfully. "I ut4 4(ln fmi. uk. ul 'K.-taa. I bn ua.i ( Cuticur Sip irJ Oinltnani. ni aflat Mm lt takaa of Cuki.1 aft nj cn .t ul Caii-uf Ll i n. atil I Ym4." (M,nal Mi. Mt'tiM H.aiMfta. n. k. : tv Jl. k. it, f. In4., Jb. 1, JJ TkM ffrn mol'iann , '.) yat 4 lui 'i h.ila H, S Via n4 fwil. ClininM te nd ', T.u" a fvmim n4 fj'i. aaaiMaiiMuaa, tawaUa t lt mm tt aiM .... . aa V i-tMtv itt t V atta at a a4a aaai l KHTI.MC r. mrs.lula mm FULTON, ARK, Suggests to Suffering Wo men the Road to Health I Iiiiiiiiiuhiiiiiiiiiii i if) f . nil m. -IB UIM ASO IUHHIV II tMi IH tMVMV W'httl Ul O.fiiht l Hotel Rome V Kt l hi Nratl t f t l ll J!e A.l. Fulton, Arkanw. "I ue 1 I.ydia F. I'uilihara' Vei;i-tat!t) 1 ointMun I I for nwrencd m my nuie. I ou!. ul-r.il-i v irj ntiios? (rcni mr vt a i .4 1 t.'ut I n'--i' t Ih( t on n y ( t half the t . I kA iM't bio t i: i n t ('t lthiut hi I v.ir -?tfi. I'm-. f un I a Hrt. i in a i,ti.iim ,p iM ll a It r tf tl. N i t i an Bi ak 1 .1 . t - ! t (k nr .. :f r( ' .! , m v .or V rtfv I al,. t . !n)iv ,h I In, '. ' l' t . i i;, , N ttt : I h,!.,.- t n m I r -. . f t, , i , i, Ki. lat, i .il l-i i. a t I h,. ay a i'H ftt: tr. 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