The Morning Bee MORNING—EVENING—SUNDAY _ ” ’ ' —.* '• '** mni an in * «rr KIWI rfilUfiJ. OMAHA’S STAKE IN IRRIGATION. The future of Nebraska is wedded to irrigation. The outlook is brighter and surer for that fact. A more complete and exact control of agricultural production is possible by irrigation than by relying on the uncertainties of rainfall. For a good many years the people of the state weie hesitant to admit the existence of certain sec tions in the west where the precipitation was too scanty to insure a crop of anything more than grass lor grazing stock. Then in the vicinity of North Platte, Gering and Mitchell ditches were dug which poured out the waters of the North Platte river and converted semi-arid lands into fertile fields. The success of this reclamation work is evidenced today in the harvest of small grain, alfalfa, sugar beets and potatoes of tho^e regions. It is shown further more in the intention of other districts to resort to the sam* means. fnere are times when even the humid regions suffer from lack of rain. Supplemental irrigation, supplying the subsoil with an inexhaustible resetve of moisture is coming into use. The adding of water at certain times of the year and the removing of superfluous water at others is not a contradictory policy, for irrigation and drainage are co-ordinate practices, L ields may be parched at one crucial season and too wet at another. In Central Nebraska, from Hastings to Hold rege, there is a region whose rainfall may he abun dant one year and insufficient the next. One fall there may be an abundant yield and the next a crop failure. Supplemental irrigation, which con sists sjmply of turning the water on the fields at the flood stage of the Platte, is being advocated to remedy this uncertainty. A government survey in dicates that there is sufficient water available to soak the subsoil and make every year a sure crop year. What this means to Nebraska, and to Omaha, which is the main market for Nebraska agriculture, it is easy to see. A party of government officials from the De partment of the Interior are now going over this project. They have also inspected irrigation pro posals from Shelton to North Platte, and visited the existing districts around Scottsbluff. South of the Plattp, opposite Lexington, they have looked into the new project that will water 540,000 acres. Omaha is vitally interested in the progress of these various irrigation projects. John L. Kennedy, a member of the agricultural committee of the Omaha Chahmber of Commerce, pnd Carl R. Gray, who in addition to being chairman of this commit tee, is president of the Union Pacific system, are making the tour of inspection with A. P. Davis, assistant secretary of the Dep< r ir of the In terior, and his reckmation engine - s. Thursday they will bring Mr. Davis to Omaha to speak at a public-" affairs Jundieoi. at the Chamber of Com merce. It is big news that they bring Hiiii/.'tjH business men of Omaha are vitally interested In , hearing of development of this reclamation work. A GENUINE REFORMER PASSES. , Twenty years ago a new name flashed across the • national sky. It was that of a district attorney, who ; had set for himself a gigantic task, one of the big ’ gest ever tackled by a single man. He pitted his ! strength ami the majesty of the law against injustice, , greed and corruption, arid he won. V/hetj Joseph Wingate Folk was elected district attorney for St. Louis it was in face of consider able organized opposition, for he had declared in advance his intention of cleaning house. His word was not taken by all the forces of evil, else he might not have been elected. At that time politics p and the election machinery of St. Louis was in the , hands of a most unscrupulous gang, whose opera tions included all things and whose apparent con trol- reached from top to bottom. Judges on the bench, the city government, members of congress and of the stato legislature, all were affected in some way by the combination Prosecutor Folk set himself to overthrow. His methods were direct, his proceedings drastic. Grand jury investigation was followed by indictments, these by trial, and as a lesult of the trials some of the leaders were sent to prison ai d the hold of others broken. Race track gamblers were routed, election hoards were purified, and the civic life of St. Louis was made *. cleaner and better by reason of the tornado of judicial wrath loo . d upon it by Joe Folk. * . The people of Missouri caught the infection of "the St. Louis citizenry, and Folk was made gov ernor of Missouri, an office he filled for two term While chief executive of the state, he concluded the * vfork he had commenced. Laws were passed that ~ cured many of the abuses, some, like the child labor r law. that still blc:s the people of Missouri, while - many other actions of the governor showed him to 2 iie a man of advanced and liberal ideas of govern 2 tient and its responsibility to the voters. Folk’s career in Missouri brought him national 2 prominence, and he was talked of in 1908 as a can didate for president, but he deferred to William Jennings Iiryan’s claims, and missed his big chance When Mr. Wilson came into office in 1912, he asked. Mr. Folk to come to Washington as a solicitor for the Treasury department, and for several years the government had the benefit of his ability in this and other capacities. ,.n. i ulx» career deserves consideration, be cause of the character and quality of its intrinsic ^corth. He was a citizen of the type that has made qhis republic great. A comparatively young man When he began his public service, he brought his High ideals and his youthful enthusiasm to the handling of a job that had discouraged older and rtiore experienced fighters. His zeal and courage was such as inspired the citizens, and once they learned that they had a champion who would not. falter and was not dismayed by the evil influences and power arrayed against him, they rallied to his support, and a great triumph for civic righteous ness followed. The political label affixed to such a mull is not of much importance. He was an American, full of the holy light of liberty, personal and general, but strong for the right and brave enough to assail evil in its strongholds. Ilin pa»w ing will be noted with regret, but hi* record will l>« remembered because it is one full of good for the ncople of a free count**, “THEY ALSO SERVE." Memorial day this year will recall to Omahans that all the men who have died under the flag were not those who served in the great wars. No city in all the United States has more of reason to know this, and yet, curiously enough, our people have accepted the presence of the men of the regu lar army as so much of a commonplace as'to not think of them as volunteer soldiers. Almost throughout the entire history of the city soldiers have been stationed here, and for sixty years Omaha has been headquarters for an im portant department of army administration. In this time many soldiers have died at one or the other of the army posts and are buried in the local cemeteries. These graves have not been entirely neglected, yet it is true they are apt to he over looked by the great multitude when the day comes around for bedecking the grassy tents with flowers in sign of memory of the men who did wear the uniform and serve under the flag. No man more truly serves his country than he who volunteers to give some of the years of his young manhood as a soldier. Because the military is subordinate to the civil authority in time of peace, citizens forget now and then the necessity and im portance of an army. The permanent force main tained under arms at the various military posts is not large, but it has a wonderful record of service, j Omaha has much reason to acknowledge this fact. It well befits a republic to do honor to its de fenders, and none are more truly listed in this than the men who make up the standing army of the United States. “Neglected graves” has a harsh, discordant sound, and we hope it will never again be heard in Omaha. “AND NOT A MAN SURVIVED." All some people know about the Custer massacre is gained from the lithograph that used to orna ment so many western bar rooms, The United States government did give Curly, the Crow Indian scout, a pension, hut as to his being the last sur vivor of the Custer massacre, the original state ment made in this paper and questioned by a con temporary, stands. As well call each of the officers and men of the surviving battalions of the Seventh cavalry, those who wore under the command of Majors Reno and Benteen, survivors of the mas sacre, for they, too, rode on that reconnoitre with Custer, and came out alive, but none of the battalion which followed Custer that morning in June ever returned. As to the government never doing anything wrong in connection with this affair, it may not be entirely amiss to refer to another episode of that famous outbreak of the Sioux. When General Crook was riding north to join with Terry, he en countered Red Cloud and a war party of bucks in the neighborhood of where Edgmont now stands. Red Cloud insisted he and his followers were merely on a hunting expedition. Crook knew they were heading for the general rendezvous, but he told them they could hunt as well on foot as on horse back, and so killed their mounts, 450 cayuses, and Red Cloud and his party returned to the agency near Camp Robinson. Some fifteen years later, the United States government paid Reel Cloud $45, 000, or $100 apiece, for these ponies. Nobody familiar with the facts ever questioned General Crook's judgment, but the official act of congress will stand in history as rebuke for him and a justification of a wily old Sioux, who never was a friend of the white man. It is not pleasant to revise history, but it is very easy to distort the i - record. CLARA PHILLIPS FINDS IT OUT A figure unique in criminal annals is Clara Phd lips. But for all her cleverness, she is not to escape the penalty of her crime. Hidden away among the mountains of Central America, yet the law found her and hrought her back for punishment. In the moment of tempestuous anger in which she beat the rival for her husband’s affection to death with a hammer she could not have been think ing of the consequences of her act. After her con viction in the California court for murder she may have realized for a time the meaning of the law. Later, when by bribery or stratagem she was en abled to flee from her cell, she may have felt with Dogberry that the law wax an ass. Supplied plentifully with funds, she made her escape out of the United States and no doubt was beginning to feel safe once more when she was de tected in Honduras. There is among some crimi nals the dangerous belief that they are above or beyond the law. This mental attitude may be com pared to thp megalomania of monarchs in past ages, who considered that t+iey could do no wrong. H. G. Wells places Napoleon in this category, and there have been countless little Napoleons since that day who have found that such course ends up in St. Helena. Mrs. Phillips knows now that the law ran not be outwitted. She matched her wits in vain against the force of justice and is now reduced to the ex tremity of claiming to have been convicted of a crime she did not commit. No one will waste tears on her, nor is she entitled to any sympathy. The whole case is filled with spectacular occurrences, but soon she will be back where she belongs—be hind the bars. Roy Scout camps at Omaha this year will cost 75 cents per Hay per scout, which is offering the biggest value for the least money the bargain coun ter has presented in a long time. The offer of a billion dollars for the ships, etc,, held by the United States government indicates that the stuff is worth something to somebody. Abilene kicks in with a mnxtmum of 100, show ing that it is summertime somewhere. "Joe” Folk's death will awaken many echoes in old Missoo, Homespun Verse fly Robert Worthington Davie MEMORIAL DAY. W here Bear ones rest In death's repose Beneath the May! I me sod, We tread to pin. « our love, a rose. Ret ween their graves and (led. A tribute to their memory As life may best endow— f.lived ones who with US used to he. Rut sleep In silence now. Reside the tilei. 'lie sacred place, Unspoken thoughts reveal Mure than a kiss nr an embrace The love w> living feel Up grnre I he consecrated neat In reverential way. Thus the unspoken Is eapiessed Upon Memorial day. “From State and —— Nation” hdilorinis from othrr ruavspapors. Bovine T. It. l-.nulbation. j From the Kearney Hub. It is diffic ult to comprehend the continued hostility of Governor Bryan to the bovine tuberculosis eradication campaign, and his assumption that it is almost entirely in the Interest of tlie packer* and veterinarian*. It will be remembered that the governor op posed the bill in the last legislature for tlie continuance of the appropria tion for eradication purposes on the grounds above stated, and that next to lhe administration code issue this was the outstanding feature of tlie j session. However in the face of the gov ernor's opposition the legislature | passed a bill separate from the gen I oral appropriation bill, appropriating $286,000 for the purpose of eradicat ! ing tuberculosis in Nebraska cattle .Sixty votes in the house were neecs ] sar.v for passage, blit the majority for it exceeded that number and in | eluded a number of democrats who | were otherwise supporting the gov ernor's measures A large proportion of the farmer members, who evident ly did not coincide with the gover nor's views, assisted in its passage. Contrary to expectations the bill was not vetoed and became a law in due time without the governor's sig nature. Within the past few days Governor Bryan has explained that lie did not think the governor had tlie "moral right” to veto a bill passed by so large a majority. Possibly not, I but If he was deeply and con | scientlously opposed to tlie measure for the reasons ho had stated. it would seeni that it was his "morat duty" to veto it, and having failed to i do it to add his official signature. i ne latest pnase nr tne governor h | hostility i;« exhibited in an arraign j rnent of the state university college , of agriculture officials for their aetlv* , ity in seeking to induce the farmers \ of the state to forth county organ iza j tions and take advantage of the work j of tuberculosis eradication. This ar I tiv ty is characterized by ths governor ] as “a raid on the state treasury." and not a part of the duties of the stat»* 1 institution. Seemingly this criticism is pretty farfetched and more quer eiout than consistent, for tt seems to j he the natural and proper thing foi the state college of agriculture to co operate with the agricultural and live t stock interests in a work that i« in i tended not only f«>r their benefit Hut | for the protec tion * well of the pub lie health nnd interest. Any person informed as to the in roads of bovine tuberculosis and rhe startling effects that hive been fre fluently in evidence may well stftjrider w hen endeavoring to realize the calam itous effects of a “bars down" policy, with every fellow for himself and the devil take the hindmost. Tils contin ued assumption that "this scheme ! hacked by the veterinarians and pack- j era neither eradicates the disease nor affe« »** the health of the public.” !* so violent and vulnerable that tt is not deserving of consideration. Five Issues for 1921. From the New York World. In his statement made to the World. Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler. , president of Columbia university. I names the five issues which he he iieves to be paramount before the , American people at this time These issues are "our foreign policy, pro lubitlon, the railways, taxation and the problems of agri ulture and the agriculturist." It would l»e denying the obvious to question Dr. Butlers statement that "the prohibition ques t n has been kept out of national I party platforms for a generation thicjgh f« of polite al consequences, but tt cm n not l»e kept out of I the minds *»f voters any longer ‘ To this mind have the Volstead a- t and state enactments of which the repub i Ucan Mullan Gage law Is a sample, rough! a public which in opposing the s-1loon or alcoholic excess never j needed to he convinced. The problem* of the railroads are • 1 • farm p hi* m, as P JPn f i •- "toijcl.- .> both t be q ..*■** ■f foreign policy and the question of railways." That is a very real proh lent. Taxation bunions lu sts of Amor a.-ijis who before the vvai felt it only indirectly. But I>i Murray corrot h estimates tin comparative weight i of his Issue* when he discusses flist of all our relations with foreign lands. "Probably not few* r than KO per cent of the voters of the country he says. " are in favor of a constructive policy of international co-operation " That constructive policy is before the vot ers in the form, primarily, of Presi dent Harding s appeal to the country for participation in tlte perrusnent i court of International justice. But he | hind that immediate Issue appears the hope or the fear real «>r assumed, that the court might lead tis som* ! pa- • further toward participation In Daily Prayer i>.ft-r** f i«v unt« 'on 't no th.. mb? for vour i f*' what \*- ■hall »•»*». what v* ■hall drink, nor yet for jour l i ly, what ' ** eh* II i»’i* on I* not »h* lif* mnr« than rues' end * h# hod» titan r * nnent ? R**he denied, is that th*» Ameren? people .ire well aware that we cannot ignore world Questions and expect world problem* to p*s» us by unt-un he«l Off the Track. From Fremont Tribun* Isn't it possible that Mr. Bryan in so energetically pushing his fight Against the evolution, theory sr.d hta opponent* in as energeically support j Ing the same principle are both wan dering far afield from the teachings • •f ('hrlatianity? After all. what doe* it matter by what manner man came to be upon j this earth so long as we do not ques tion the fart that it was through th* nr? of God that the genesis t true to pass? A body of men. go.»d men and treat men. ha\e been assembled at Indiana polis for tile exp! eased purpose of ad \Slicing the cause of all religion, and they have succeeded in little beyond the creation of bitterness ami hostil ity In the minds of those who bold dif fering opinions on the question as to ! whether or not the human evolved to his present state from a life germ similar to the form* of protozoa known to biologists through the va rious forms of nniui.il development. The leaders of the Presbyterian church would look a lot better in the estimation of the general public if thev had spent their time seeking for a solution of our moral problems or In working nut an antidote for the prevalent criminal trndem lr*. “THE PEOPLE’S VOICE” tdlt.rltl lr*m r.«i.r. •« lh. Bm »f Th» Bm id invited to uee thli column freely ter i»preeeion •o meiteri if public latcrMt. The American Home. David City, Neb—To the Editor of The Omaha Uee. According to God * laws and commandments, there must he homes and children, for without them one generation would see the end of mankind and all things ma terlal. Then, If there must be homes and children, why is it so extremely difficult to establish and maintain ihe home? After careful study and thought, I am convinced that the highest, ambi tion of at least a majority of young men is to establish and maintain a home, free and independent of any outside help or interference, and the same noble ambition prompts a ma jority of our young women to want to have her part in the establishment of the heme, which should lie the hap piest spot on earth, in which w e should find a happy and contented man and woman; some healthy, happy bright children, growing up among pleasaal surroundings, developing high Ideals along the lines of our Christian civ ilization. taught to have faith in our flag and reverence for the laws of our government and state. Where the father and mother have time to play with those children, to go on strolls, or go camping with them and In other ways to make the environ ment of those children such that they will develop clean, strong minds, he healthy and naturally happy and In dependeent ns they grow older. Hut. alas, how many homes like that do we find? Just think it over a little and you will he able to call to mind many cases like this: A young man persuades the lady of his choice to share his lot, they es tablish s home, maybe go in debt for their furniture and other home equip ment; they both have good health, are working steady and are able to meet their payments as they come due The future looks bright to them for possibly several years, then a babe comes into their home and they are extremely happy for a time, but soon find that with the added expense of the little one, and only the father working, lie Is soon unable to meet the hills for only the bare necessities of life and must deny those he loves many things they should have. As the years come and go and other little ones come into that home ai .1 must be provided for. the cares of life hang too heavy, and God only knows how many either suicide or go lo the asylum. The same thing 1* true of people on the farm or In business. When Gr-d touches ihe hearts and c-in-ejener* of men of great influence and unlimited w ealth, when they once get (j,o vise - of what might be on this earth In fact, when our highest officials the men who control and direct our nations! affair*, can com prehend and grasp the true meaning of the golden rule, then will it tie pos siblc fi r any man who is honejr and willing to work to establish and main tan a home which h» and hi* family will ho proud of_O E DAVIS. Damage of "Sloppy Thinking.” Cambridge, -Mass. — To the Editor of The Omaha Bee While 1 hold no brief for m against Henry Ford, the straw Mite in o Kier • giving that gentleman the bad for president of the I'nited S'i''« m Ifijt. brings into relief two pertinent fact*. First, that straw votes seldom come out like real "ties, second, the slimness of thinking that the American people bestow on the most important thing*—the;r gov ernment Simply be- aure you know a man's name, a Ford car, know that he pays good wages, does not net es i-arily mean that that man is ti'ted to rurr the United States government. Yet, bei ause they don't think much al>r ut their government, th# Ameri can people do think a Ford car or its equivalent un be president of the Untied States. It is all a part of what Governor Pin. h ' calls sloppy think.ng ’ ai d President Emeritus <" W Eliot of lla: raid university ihe growing irra tional excitement of the American peo ple," And. the danger comes not only from the sl-.ppy thi: -.mg Itself, hut from the advantage taken of this poor thinking bv men who hate brain*. For example, there ate men today who want to attain certain cods, “wet, warlike or monetary end* To help on these ends ihev (>ervert the morn g of word* and fi-tcn them tight onto then- amazed ail versarles. Just now the word that Is being used over tlme is i onununtst." For example, i national officer In a large women’s organization was approached the other dyv by an editor of * reactionary t-l'eef and told th it She ws* a rnm mirnst, because she believed in fed EARL H. BLRFF.T M K.BURKET &son F»t*bli»hrd 1A7* FUNERAL DIRECTORS Farnam Street at 34th V___ VISIT FORKS! LAWN You and your friends are cordially invited to visit Forest Lawn Cemetery. The profuse floral decorations, the brilliant hues of bloom ing shrubs and plants, the magnificent forest trees with count less song birds, the broad expanse of undulating landscape, all conspire to enhance the charm of the natural attractions uf Forest Lawn. —the most beautiful ceme tery chapel in the country— The mosaic chapel will he open for inspection all day Memorial Day. Visit the Three Soldiers’ Hints I AM NORTHBOUND ELECTRIC CARS Office* •! tha C«m»t«ry and 720 JRrandait IKaalai Rutldmf ! era! aid for education and In federal i prohibition. In tho aame way morn tier* of thin group talk about "so cialist*. commu nut*, international let*." Their aim would seem to be to Incite people of pretty near zero men tality to dub civic-minded people of real mentality dangeroua radical*, thus caualng a panic In the brain market of noble reform that might go far to overturn thege reform*. The result i* a deplorable mixture of poor moral* and poor thinking. Peo ple who believe In federal aid, fed i eral prohibition and a world court I are not dangerous radical* seeking to i overturn the United Blates govern ment by violence. They are reformers of sound minds, and to throw the dust of false epithet* around them. In the j hope of discrediting their crusade, is ' dangerous generalship. It is slaught ••ring the innocent >«■ order to bring about in the minds of the Indifferent and the nebulous, a brain panic that shall call retreat on protective legls lotion, prohibition enforcement, fed eral aid for education and partlclpa ] tion in the world court. I Democracy cannot be run unless It has behind It exceptional honesty and exceptional wisdom, The really dan gerous thing today 1* the loose think j ing of our people that allows Itself ; to he played on by reactionary male ' fa' tor* of great wealth interested primarily in their own pocketbooks. Watch your thinking—don't let the : highest bidder own your political I power. ELIZABETH TILTON. "Larks” and the Laws. Omaha—To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: In the matter of lies* B. Nixon, who, with a companion, is al leged to have attempted a holdup in San Francisco, ex-Judge Bears, con gressman elect, is quoted by the 'Omaha Bee, May -’3, 1S33, as saying, ' among other things, that "The boys were hungry and broke, and were too proud to wire home for money, I | would trust Hobs with anything I line, he is a chap of excellent char acter, and I believe him when he' said it was only a lark.’ ” Grasp the significance of this: Con giessman Sears first admits that Ro*s attempted a holdup to get money be- : t cause he was broke and hungry and, ; m the next breath, declares that it ] was only a lark. When our law* maker* consider felonious acts, committed with a con fessed criminal intent, as mere larks, because the *aul maker is a friend of the confessed law breaker, is it any wonder that there l* a I"*s of respect, among the masses, for law and nrdeU5 Uongressman Bears got* on to say , "It * a shame, too. for Ross won’t leave the house on account of the affair." Had -Mr. N’lxon been a pen niless, disabled, ex soldier. It is very possible that he would not have had a chance to either enter or l»ave his home for some time, after this lark ROr A CARD. 509 South Twenty-second street. Abe Martin ■> Remember when we used t’ be foolish enough t’ think Germany would come across? One dandy thing about a late spring—it gives winter elbows a chance t’ shed an' clear up. A Book oj Today Johan Bojer's "The Last of the Vik ings," is the latest of the great Nor wegian's works to be published in America, it follows six o'hers which have had American publication, of which "The Great Hunger" has had the outstanding success—in fact, a success which was phenomenal in ex tent and quality: one of the rate ex ample* of a truiy great book (ac claimed as such by the most notable of American and Lnghsh authors and critics* becoming a genuine popular favorite "The Last of the Vikings" has been published in America as a serial in the Century Magaz.ne. in France in “L illustration," and then as a book by Calmann Levy of Paris in a regu lar edition and an edition deluxe. It has been exceedinly well received there the author has written to hi* Ametican publishers, tha Century company, that he "had no dream of the possibility that this book should be such a success.” It is a s.mple unstrained narrative, with no apparent reaching alter ef f«*et. of the fortunes and lives of men of the Lofoten fisheries in their homes on the fiord and in the far. dim. north ern seas off the coast of Norway. The Actional theme is a Asherwife's hatred of the sea, and her attempt* to draw her sons away from it: but, as a mat ter of fact this, though a strong thread of interest, is only a thread in the wearing of a marveloua tale. Vocation climax j Traveling westward, see the Rockies, jjj Weber and Echo Canyon*. Great Salt -i lake, the Sierra* and Amencan River W Canyon. t Even as a tale of adventure carries you on to a thrilling clitnaa, so your journey via the Overland Route carriea you on to San * Francisco. Thar# ia no other city in tb# J world like Sen Frandaco—non* offering Such variety ol entertainment. San Fran ciico shows you Muof old Spain, the M editar ranean, tha Orient and tha South Seaa. Chi pa . from every port and throngs of plaest ra seekers from all ovar the world. Near by art Yoae'iita.thc w orld's biggest trees, mountains set. shore, and, ju t -var tha western horizon, Hawaii No tour of tha west i- complete without a viat to San Francisco. Go direct via tha Overland Rout# or return that wsy, and, incidentally, sea Yellowstone Perk en route — it's only overnight irom Ogden. San Francisco Overland Limited Leaves Omaha at 9:*5 a. m. daily. Solid Pullman train witS observation, buffet-club and dining cars. Continental Limited Leaves Omaha at 130 am. daily. Standard observation and tourist sleepers, chair cars, diner. Sleepers ready at 10:00 p. -TV Greatly kedoced Round Trip Sommer Tourist Ores 9 F.- wmaim, cemrlea mFo—ctnce end aaciffue heciiea, A. K T'urte, city raaserg.r tgent Vnlon Ta-iftc pTstem. lf*t I % 1c- ?r Fhore Jackson r>.t. Omaha. Neb Consolidated T*- net Office U1S Dod«e b* . Phone Atlantic JCU or I'nton Station, loth and Marcy £t.«. Union Pacific Take This Tip From Experts Cookery experts agree that the best and most healthful baking powder is made from cream of tartar, derived from grapes. That is why they insist on Baking IWder Th* ONL Y nationally distributed ( ream of Tartar Baking Powder Contains No Alum —Leaves No Ritter Taste