The Morning Bee ; MOR N I N G—E V E N I N G—S U N D A Y THE BEE PUBLISHING CO., Publisher. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press, of which The Bee Is e member, is exclusively entitled to the use for repubiicstion of all news dispatches credited to it or oof otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news published harem. All flfhte of republicstlons or our special dispatches are also reserved. BEE TELEPHONES PlArale Branch Exchange. Ask for the Department AT lantic or Person Wanted. Foe Night Calls After 10 P. M.: mnn Editorial Department. AT Untie 1021 or 1042. OFFICES »• Main Office—17tn and Farnam CcJ Bluffs 15 Scott St. So. Side, N. W. Cor. 24th and N I New York—286 Fifth Avenue Washington * 422 Star Bldg. Chicago - - 1720 Steger Bldg. .s x the MAN WITH A “PULL.” .•t • Albert J. Beveridge is not going too far in de daring that the man with a “pull” is doing more to wflsck the social order than is any outright apostle of; revolution. In fact, it is the man with the “pull” or;special privilege of one sort or another who is at thfc bottom of a great deal of popular unrest and difeatisfaction. I Equality of rights, opportunities and responsi ti&tiea it the main object of democracy. A fair field and no favors is the American idea. If men and women feel in their own hearts that their right tollife, liberty and the pursuit of happiness is as well protected as that of any one else, no matter of what class or group, then is there peace and harmony within the nation. Ex-flenator Beveridge recently had something to say on this before a meeting of the New Hampshire bar association. As a lawyer, speaking to lawyers, he* touched only on one phase of the matter, that of equality before the law. He said: » “Everybody knows that the public mind is in a |tate of unrest and discontent. Why? There are many causes', and with one of these the American tench and bar is particularly concerned. That £ause Is Ihe general feeling that Justice is not ad ministered with impartiality. Wherever two or three citizens are gathered the comment may be (eard that laws which should apply with absolute ^quality to rich and poor altk’e, arc not, in fact, so applied. There is a good deal of truth in this com plaint. Conspicuous instances will occur to every body. t “It Is common belief that during the war vast fortunes were amassed by violation of law: that, even now, millions are being accumulated by viola lion of Jaw; that opulent lawbreakers escape whereas lesser criminals are punished. General opinion is that poor and friendless offenders are prosecuted Jvhile wealthy and influential evildoers go unwhipt bf justice. If this is not true, our public authori ties should say so plainly and with all the emphasis 2>f official statement, albeit official assertion has IJreen made of just such criminal practices. If It Is true, then let Justice be done speedily, and without i-e^ard to the wealth, power, prominence or 'puli’ Trf the guilty." J These same principles of human justice must be applied also to every department of life. Respect fijr the law is paramount, and on this rests the foundation of free institutions. But everywhere, ill every relationship betweeen man and man, there i£ the necessity for square dealing. Domeitic piece is not to be had if the belief spreads that each man’s hand is against his neighbor, seeking to take unfair advantage. It makes no difference if the ‘t^ull” in in politics, business or what, the fact of its existence or even the suspicion of its existence, weakens the national solidarity. • The evils of such inequalities, once they are per DtStted, multiply and spread. Those who feel them 4$lvee denied are led to seek, not equality, but spe cial privileges for themselves. A good deal of hop, slip and jump legislation is designed to secure a balance, or to weight the scale a trifle in the oppo afte direction. The haste and passion that accom panies these efforts at equalizing often leaves them defective and futile. Let government, let business, let society as a whole, respect and affirm the equality ol citizens, rich and poor, not alone in theory but ia practice as well, and there need be no fear of unrest or disaffection. 1 , _ - __ it AN ACTUAL FEDERAL SAVING. • Democratic critics of the national administra tion continue to find fault with the way Secretary Mellon directs the treasury operations, hut the tax payers of the United States will not complain greatly at the showing, made at the end of the fiscal year, t&at an anticipated deficit of $823,000,000 had been tamed into an actual surplus of $310,000,000. This ry, but’“Jack” Dempsey got $250,000, and that is what counts in prize fighting. • t j Again Omaha got an illustration of the differ ence between a newspnpci and a dub, . - * RACING WITH A TRAIN. An Illinois Central engineer, Charles H. Barnett, who pilots one of that line’s fast trains over a south ern division, writes to the National Safety News a discussion of the ever-increasing danger of railroad grade crossing accidents. Viewing it from his own standpoint, and that of his fellow engineers, he writes: “I have known engineers, whose locomotives have struck automobiles and one or more persons have been killed. These men never entirely re cover from such an experience. The horror of that momentary glimpse of white, upturned faces in # the instant before the crash, they tell me, Is some thing that time can not eradicate.” Mr. Barnett calls attention to the fact that a train moving at the rate of 60 miles an hour covers one-eighth of a mile in seven and one-half seconds, which is not a very long time. An automobile going 30 miles an hour covers the sam^ distance in 15 seconds. Therefore, if the train is a quarter of a mile from the crossing and the auto 200 yards, the train has the race won, and the auto driver will better admit his defeat. Dealing with this point, Mr. Barnett writes: , “The trouble lies in the mistaken idea of respon sibility. The public must learn to accept its own responsibility In this matter. . . . Judgment and caution are the only safeguards. The man who takes a gambler's chance with death has no one to blame but himself if death calls his bluff.” Such advice from a practical man ought to have great weight with all it reaches. A momentary delay on the road, while waiting for a train to pass, will not seriously affect the affairs of any one, but it will make sure that those affairs will go on after the train has passed. GOLD NOW A CURIOSITY. An old, old anecdote tells of how a youth to win a wager stood on London bridge, offering gold sov ereigns for a shilling each, .and uuable to make a sale. The passing throng was too sophisticated to be taken in by such a ruse. Now a similar tale comes from Broadway. Probably the wisest bird extant ’today is the Broadway bartender. Even the vener able owl could learn something from him. Ilis wits are sharpened day by day through contact with “slickers” of every sort, each striving to put one over on his fellow men. Even a drink of illicit “hootch” is prize enough to tempt the trial of an ingenious swindle. So, when a western man with a pocket full of $10 gold coins went to buy a drink, the bartender was ready for hitn. Anything that looked like a gold coin was spurious; a “sbinplaster,” whether for ru bles or dollars, might have passed muster, and a silver “cartwheel” would have met instant recogni tion and welcome, but a $10 gold piece—there ain’t no such animal on Broadway. For the matter of that, they are mighty scarce anywhere outside the treasury vaults and the banks. The bartender was not altogether to blame, for very few people have seen one of Uncle Sam's eagles since the war broke out. They are still making them, down at Philadelphia, but when made the handsomest coin the world knows goes into respecta ble retirement. Its beauty is not sullied by the passing from hand to hand; silver, “patient drudge between man and man," is seldom seen any more, but while pockets bulge with paper money all is well. VIOLENCE FOR PRQFIT. A strange mania persists in America. Certain of our citizens have imbibed the notion that nothing matters, so long as they have their own way about whatever they are doing. Chiefly, this is exhibited in connection with lawlessness of one type or another. For example, down in Kansas a party of harvest hands resented the effort of two bandits to rob them. Immediately the. robbers opened fire, killing one and wounding a number of others of the workers, whose only fault was they would not fork over their earn ings on demand of the desperadoes. Kansas City contributes a story of how a man working on a new house was set upon and beaten to death by four others who happened to be on strike. From Chicago we get a report of a pitched battle between two gangs, with one dead and several wounded as a toll for the weapons that were freely used in the fight. Not a day passes but a gleaning of news columns will duplicate this showing. What is the answer? A strange psychology is denoted, one in which the underlying motive seems to be to possess something that belongs to another, the money he has worked for, his right to work, a dispute over the division of loot, any of a long list of reasons, but all meeting at the same point. The challenge to our civilization Is clear. Some way must be found to restore the balance, at leasbto put a higher prica on human life than seems to prevail at the moment. An honorable gentleman serving in parliament says the Briti.<^ peerage is a joke. Yet some folks say an Englishman never sees one. No reason is given for the cut in the price of ' lead, but now is the time to lay in your supply. The “glorious Fourth” put up a record almost equal to an ordinary Sunday for casualties. When they get to “hijacking” the police station the time seems to have come for action. Shelby now realizes what is meant by the “cold gray dawn of the morning after.” Sailing in a thunderstorm will not daunt the Leviathan. Homespun Verse —By Omaha’s Own 1’oet— Robert Worthington Davie LOOK UP AS YOU GO. You purchased a home, did you, brother? You vs a wife and it girl and a boy. And It seems to ins you are standing tndny at the peak of material Joy. You grumble because you're not wealthy; you look upon life with a sneer When you'd ought to lie counting the glory snd splen did diversion that s here. You'd ought to be building the future with fatherly ardor and pride. For this little home is a kingdom where fervor and virtue abide. The wife who line given you courage, the children who love you today Are more than the wealth of e nation mold ever In gratitude pa>^. They live to ennoble your efforts, you cannot he deaf to appeal, Ful show them liy deeds of your doing the true sdora tlon“you feel, And let them see life as a minor where rapture and godliness glow, Fur bliss leads us upward toward heaven, and grief to the taverns below* “The People’s Voice’’ E*ttart*li trom rattM •• TM Moral** Bo*. BaaBara af T ha Moral** Baa *ra Invited to UM mil column «raal» lor aurtaalaa an mattcra at aublla latareat. Changing Farm Demand. Council Bluffs, la.—To the Editor of The Omaha. Bee: There i* a fact existing in the mldtllewest that no one seems to take into consideration, and this fact is that gasoline is furnishing almost the entire motive power for traffic on the streets of cities, and much of that In the country and on farms. That in consequence of this fact, horses and mules have practic ally disappeared; the livery stable and the lmrns for dray horses have been supplanted by garager and the farmer’s market for corn and oats has gone glimmering. No editorial article on "The Situa tion In the MiddlewestV or "A Mes sage to the East,” as published in The Omaha. Bee, nor Mr. Harding’s sympathy for the farnjer can alter this bottom fact. Get the statistics on the entire out put of every manufacturer of automo biles, trucks and tiActors in the very recent history of the world and the wonder is that the corn fanner hns any market at all. Imagine the sit uation If tho gasoline supply should fail and we again became dependent on horses and mules to move the traf fic. Where wmuld prices stop for horses and mules and corn and eats to feed them? W. H. PELTON. Proposes New Wheat Plan. Frederick, Okl.—To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: Here Is a new wheat plan whereby the government sets the price and the producer guarantees the price. Let the guverninent call a congress of the representative wheat growers of the country to ascertain the actual average cost of production per bushel to produce and deliver to local market, plus a fair profit, with the average freight haul added to the main market. Let the government set the minimum price, based on foregoing conditions. The government to handle the wheat after the plan used during the late war, with the following exceptions: Ths first of July each year make an estimate of the probable amount of wheat to be pxported, and probable price of same, which will give the approximate loas lietween set price and export price. The government to levy, say 10 per cent per bushel, more or less. «i cording to the amount to be exported. The same to lie levied on the producer at the local markets. laical buyers give bond to pay to hank or postolflre as designated, to lie credited to the government. The levy credit referred to In foregoing sentence shall he con strued to mean and to act as guaran tee fund both to the producer and the government. Any wheat Imported shall be taxed per bushel, the difference between the set price and the export price. The same to go to the guarantee fund. Any deficiency "hall lie added to next year's levy. Any surplus left over shall lie deducted from next year's levy. If the producers only raise what wheat is consumed In this coun-l try. there should be no levy: but, on I the other hand, the larger the surplus to bo exported, the less the producer receives. There should be a small advance per bushel each month, beginning with September, for the remaining year crop, to Induce producers to hold wheat off the market, so It will come gradually W. K fHAMBEBS. Court* And Liberty. Itordvill*. Neb.—To the Kilttor of The Ornuha I!< < ; In on* word "Lib erty.’' is bound together all that America stunde for, and through the misconstruing of that one word every great evil seeks to undermine our problem. Liberty as set forth In th* Declara tion of Independence and constitution of the United iitates does not mean freedom for every Individual, group or class to do as they have a mind regardless of how It affects others; It means very broadly that the people at large of a state or of the nation shall decide on laws for guidance and regulation for each and all of them. The liberty of ono |iei son or many people ends where It interferes with the rightful htierty of another person or other people Thesuprcme court can Bnnul a law enacted by the chosen representatives of a slate, a number of states or of the nation, but it cannot deprive people of reason or change the statutes of human nature. Th* constitution al lowed tJie supreme court to he formed, but the constitution can he amended so as abolish th* present court and provide for the creation of a national tribunal that will not he superior to laws enacted by legialature and the congress. \V. BARTO. Profiteering on Taxes. Omaha.—To the Editor of The Omaha Bee. fcilgh taxes ate now blamed for the high cost of living. Railroad managers say taxes are re sponsible for. high freight rates; land lords use the same excuse to sustain rents, money loaners to Justify Inter est rates, workmen to excuse wages, and so on all along the line. Let us look at a phase that seldom is viewed. When the 1917 revenue law went Into effect. It Imposed a tax on tobacco, more particularly on the manufactured varieties. A brand of smoking tobacco I then favored had been selling at 10 cents per ran The day the law went Into effect I laid down a time to pay for a fresh tin of my favorite, and w:i» told hv the denier that It would then rnst II cents. Why? The gmernnient had Just put a tax on that tobacco. Yes. but the government tax was only one. eighth of a cent per enn Well. Mr. Daily Prayer •*An«1 m tha flare a© ahall thy strength bed«ui. Our Urarloua Heavenly Father, for the light of another day wo thank Thee, for Thy watch rare over UK during the past night when, uncou acinus and helpless*, w# nought rest for our weary bodies. Thou hast g run ted to lia another day wherein to honor and glorify Thy Holy name May It he lived for Thor. May all th© words Mpokeit to on© another and all the meditations «»f our hearts he accepts hie In Thy sight Strengthen un with might by Thy Spirit In our inmost being that we shall be fortified against temptation. Havant to ua more and more th© unspeakable privilege of continuous fellowship with Thee. Shed abroad In our hearts that love, ao unnatural to ua hut of Thyself, which shall enable un to lovo the un lovsly, am! th© unloved, th«»cb who may slight or insult un, and thou© who may despise and hate in Kill out hearts with pear© through the clear conacinunn©nn nf sins forgiven, with Joy unspeakable that names are written In Heaven* and with hope not only for Thy resurrection which awaits ua. but for Thy speedy r«npp©arsm©. May our witness he ho clear nnd un mistakable that aoltt© soul ere this da y Ik over shall he led to ncuujiintanc© v-dtli The© our adorable hard anil Havlnt Amen tt*.\. hen nr w flToyaii. nu. Wheaton, ti^. Omaha *xp*rienc*d aom* pratty cold weather during .January. 1*78. but that did not keep the politJeal pot from boiling over. On the 25th of that month Mr, Roaewater paid hla reape«*ta to tho manager of one of hie local con. temporariea after thia fashion "WHO IS THE BLACKMAILER?” "Cbauncey Wiltse, the man who, at at not a very remote period, declared to a prominent republican of Omaha that lie could send I’hineus W. Hitch cock to the penitentiary if he want ed to, has the temerity to denounce The Bee as a blackmailer. Now. we defy him and the whole brood o£ political desperadoes who constitute the Hitchcock ling to name a sin gle instance where The Omaha Bee or its proprietor has exacted a dol lar of hush money from anybody, or where he has ever levied a dollar upon anybody by threats or intimi dation. “On the other hand, we charge and are ready to substantiate that Chauncey Wiltse has blatkmailed Senator Hitchcock, and through him the United States government was blackmailed out of vast sums of money by threats of exposure. “We charge, and we are ready to substantiate, that the <»maha Re publican, the paper of which Chaun rey Wiltse is manager, lias been for years and is now being kept up by hlackmui! contributions levied upon federal officers. •'We rharge, and we are ready to sulistantiate, that James W. Ne ville. United States attorney for Ne braska. lias been forced to orditribute and did pay within the last four months. $500 toward the mainte nance of the Republican, while other federal offi< ers have, during the same period, been blackmailed out of various sums. Some of the men who have been bled to infuse young blood into Mr. Hitchcock's rejuve nated mummy, are already prostrate from the excessive bleeding; others will lie in that condition before the centennial year expires. "When an organ—conducted sole ly for the purpose of reelecting a man to the United States senate, whom even his own chief organ grinder has denounced as a fit sub ject for the penitentiary—attempts to destroy public confidence In The Bee bv raising the cry of blackmail, it is high time that the public be made acquainted with its real char acter.' Dealer couldn't pay It. and as there was too much bookkeeping to be done, he had solved the problem In the ess lest possible way. He collected one eighth of a cent for the government and seven eighths of a cent for him self All the way along the tine this can be traced. Kverv time a tax was I moated, the price was boosted, so that the consumer not only paid tthe tax, but a handsome profit on it as well. Taxes are high, no mistake about that. Taxes will remain high, and we will get no relief until men agree to pay taxes wtfhnut seeking to secure a profit to themselves equal to what their income wotild lie If there were no tax to pay. As soon as we aban don our inverted finance health will be restored, and not till then P J PRESTON. Why Not a Porta' ( livh* Omaha,—To the (alitor of The Omaha Bee-: The "Hall of Fame" which you have been publishing in your paper has been a revelation to me I did not dream that there were eo many able writer* In Omaha and Nebraska, simply because the fact had never been brought to my attention in such a forcible manner. With the traditions of the pioneer* to encourage them, the wealth of tha stile. Its geography and its people. Nebraska is ideally situated and equipped for the producton of writers of superior talent. I believe that these writers should be brought together In closer com munion. I believe that social contact would 1>« an encouragement to them, particularly the youngerione*. Conse quently I have thought seriously of the advisability of organising a poets' club. There are so many In Nebras ka, and such on organization in Oma ha would furnish a common meeting place for them. The exchange of ideas, the friendships that would ha formed and the mutual interest in a common endeavor would stimulate In tv rest In poetry. I favor a poets’ club simply because I am Interested in that department of literature. Thos* interested in other departments could also form clubs, and in a short time Nebraska would have a literary guild that would !>e outstanding among similar organ izations of the United States. I do not claim my idea of a poets' club as original, in fact, others no doubt have thought of the same thing I am just taking a definite step. If there Is any way w# could encourage the organization of a poets’ club or any others have any advice to offer along thia line, I would he pleased fo have your cooperation. 1 hope thnt any Nebraska poet wishing to form such n club will write me or *Thr omnha Bee JACK l.F.E, Author of Niobrara Waifs. Wasted Energy. If Ihe energy wasted by the Ameri can youth In smoothing hark his re Ivellio.is pompadour were put to bet ter purpose, the lawns of this country could be kept In perfect condition.— Dallas Journal. NET AVERAGE CIRCULATION for MAY. 1923, of THE OMAHA BEE Daily .73,181 ; Sunday .80,200 Do** not Inclurt* return*, left over*. eample* or purer* •ppiN in printing and Include* no eperlal «•)«*. R. BREWER. Gen. Mgr. V. A. BRIDGE. Clr. Mgr. .Subact ihed and sworn to before ma ! thin ?d day of June. 1921 W. H. Qt’IVKY, ; j (Seal) Notary Public i !. _ .. .. _j “From State and Nation” —Editorials from Other Newspapers— Tile Public's Business. From the Fremont Tribune. The jury system discussion started by the Tribune some time ago is gain ing apace. A Central City writer, sign ing himself "A Citizen,” sends the following comment on the subject to The Omaha Bee: ' It is interesting to read the article republished in your paper from the Frynont Tribune in which the editor expresses himself upon a subject which has been apparent to many people for years. The writer has known jurors to be selected to sit upon important cases who bad not even a speaking knowledge of the English language. "The better plan to select Jurors in a given case would be for the presid ing Judge to select them irrespective of any quizzing by attorneys, Eet the Judge take the jurors in a private room and select them, then, maybe, men of intelligence could be secured.” The Tribune cannot regard the sug gestion as very sound. This “secret room” stuff goes against the grain, regardless of where it is pulled, when public interests are involved. Good citizens always get suspicious when a court room or a city council chamlier is cleared of press and public to per mit a "secret” discussion. Huch ac tion gives the impression that some thing important is being covered up. Graft, corruption and dishonesty find their most fertile breeding grounds behind closed doors. The pub lic's business which is in the hands of the public's own representatives should be conducted above board and in the open. Romance on The lUver. From t hs St. Louis Post -Df •patch The •'race" up the Mississippi be tween the towboat* St. Louis and Cairo has done little to waken the sleeping romance of the river. The winner was 12 days reaching Cairo from New Orleans. Nobody seemed to care. No crowds atood on the bank along the way to see the craft mosey past! No tall silk hata were lifted in salute. No silken sunshades waved in encouragement. It was not so in the olden days. Eve ning lawn parties were given then on riverside plantations that the guests might watch the Robert E 'Lee and the Relle of Shreveport storm past, flames lielching from their towering stacks and th> black smoke steaming a mile behind. The boats ran all night, and far as the records s'iow, they never stopped to clean their boiler tubes. Those were the days. Nobody dared ship bacon on a fast packet because. If the craft were challenged, the loyal crew would seize the freight and throw it Into the furnace to make more steam in the boilers. The en gineer was famed afar for his skill and nerve. His religion was "to treat his engine well; never lie passes] on the river, and to heed the pilot's bell,” In times of stress, he would send * negro up to sit on the safety valve, that the precious element of speed might not be sacrificed to mere safety. | I'pon the decks, belle# of unmatched beauty strolled with gav blades of high family connections but lament able habits. In the smoking room poker games were played for fabulous stake*. One of the players wore a low cut aiiken vest, a longtailed black coat, and long mustaches. There was a cold look In his calm, steelv eve, and in his vest pocket wss a double barreled Derringer. He was the pro fessional gambler who was doom'd some day to meet his fate at the hands of the pale young Georgian who had ju«t lost his last acre and his last nigger In the classic endeavor to make on ac# high straight heat a pat hand. In those days, toddies were rarHcd from the bar to card table# iq relays, ore waiter starline l>ack to the snipe of supply as another was leaving with rations for the front. When St. I/Ottia was reached an open carriage met ths captain at the foot of vine Street and he drove to the company's offices to report. Now the raotsin Mephones out home that "he's in" and his wife goes down in the Ford to meet him. There is no pulmotnr for a dead romance. He 'senectutr. Freni the Adveest* of barf A fundamental ouestion in our se rious moment# Is: How best can we prepare for old age? Nothing is more pathetic Ilian a sight of an old man solitary and vacuous. AVith a background of \ear* filled with noth ing but the humdrum of routine, he find* himself at last with no soul sat isfying occupation. There seems to be nothing hut the pain of loneliness. Is this th» inevitable result of life? AA hen Rochefoucauld remarked that "Old age was a tyrant which forbade the pleasures of vouth on pain of death." did he tell the truth? AA*« think not And yet If old age is to find anv recompense It must he pre pared for long In advance This can be done Here Is a man 77 year* of age who writes: "I am all right. Have Just passed Jlmencan Beauty ELECTRIC IRON Tb# Nwt iroa ouuU ■ A At Less OCp Per Than Z3l*Wk. During July we offer the American Beauty Iron— the iron you have always wanted—-on terms thut will interest everyone. A small cash pay ment—then pay the halance at the rate of lest than 25c per week. Come In or Call The Electric Shop |Ntbn*3kdfjjPow#rC. my 77th birthday and am aUll work ing my garden, cutting my own wood in Florida, winter*, and last year gave a course of lectures on ‘The Life and Times of Dante,' and it was great fun. The fun was in playing around with the schoolmen and saints of Dante's age, Just as, long, long ago. It was fun for me to march along a narasang or two, or stretch upon the sand* of I he Luxine with Zenophon and his 10,000. and mount a charger and ride with Cyrus, a boy, over into Media, and tarry with the youth in the home of Astyages, hi* grandfather," XuiO-ly this is a man who has dis covered the secret of life itself. The spirit of thin genuine letter breathe* the breath of Immortal hope. Because of it the possible infirmities of after years threaten with little effect. The writer is a kind friend, for he has lifted from the browr of age it* crown of thorns. “I.ux ex Tennebrie." From the Philadelphia Public Ledfer The greatest of modern surgical triumph* is to l.e ac hieved. If achieved at all. in the Vnlted State*, though by a surgeon trained in Vienna. It Is the grafting of a seeing eye in ^lace of a blind one. The imagination trembfes at the pic ture of such an operation, performed successfully on human lieings. What would not a blind man give for sight? fan It l>e done? I>r. Theodor Kop panyl, famous Viennese biologist and surgeon, has transplanted the eyes of rats and rabbits. He has not carried his experiments to a conclusion be cause of poverty Vienna, once the world's medical i enter, is beggared by the war. There is no money for Science. Otherwise America could not have lured him away from his familiar laboratory. The miracle is to he at tempted In Chicago, which is bidding for Vienna's crown. There are many intermediate steps to lie taken before the last bold ex periment—that of attempting to transplant the human eye. In the course of these experiments the sur geon hopes to prove that the trans planted eye performs the visual func tion. Scientists are disputing this point. To their assertions that it cannot be done the investigator an swers that the transplanted eve has every normal appearance and that th» optic nerve, sutured wfth delicate skill, has knit and grown normally. The world will wait for the final cx Abe Martin * ’ v •r ' ■ Th’ newest thin? in suiters is th* feller that wouldn' have a closed car if you'd give it to him. Com pany is civilizin’ an’ helpful t’ a home even if th' dishes do pile up. < np» right, lttl. perimeut. If it nueccedr' If. some day the l.ndagM are stripped from a blind man's eves, after long dark ness and while surgeons wait breath lee-, he stares about him and cries ou*: "I can see!” For that Is the splendid goal to ward which Koppanyi of Vienna Is working. If the blind can be led nut of the esterior darknean into thn world of light and color, surgery w II have accomplished, by a titan's skilled hands and the vision of hie soul, the kindliest marvel of modern science. HAVE The Omaha ' ** Morning Bee or The , Evening Bee mailed to you . when on your vacation. | Phone AT lantic 1000, Circulation Department. Buy Your Piano Now and Save $30.00 For every dollar of your first payment on a new GRAND. UPRIGHT or PLAYER PIANO up to $30.00 we will give you a receipt for twice the amount. GRAND PIANOS UPRIGHT PIANOS $575.00 and up $300 and up PLAYER PIANOS, §395.00 and up Pay $10.00 and get credit for $20.00. Pay $30.00 and get credit for $60.00. A written guarantee with every piano and absolute satisfaction assured. Attend This Great Money-Saving Sale Sdunoller Silhelkr Piano Gt 1514 -Krlft-Dodfe St,* * - Omaha The Delightful Road to the East Travel is so comfortable, so pleasurable and *o interesting on the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul that every Eastern tour should include ~ this particular route. All the equipment of our one, fast trains is modern and clean. tvery attendant with whom the passenger comes in contact is a Company employe, spe cially trained and eager to please. •Diningcar appointments are spotless; the foods are of selected quality and skillfully prepared; the service is the last word in cheerful courtesy. Let our travel experts help you plan your Eastern trip so it will include this delightful way to and from the East. Very low fares are in effect for Eastern tours now. Tickets on sale daily untUScptember 30th. Final return limit, October 31st JO* S. I6«h°s! "* ! JA rk.m 44SI AT Unite Sill W. t. R«k, Cm Ann! Pin n.,1 . Ornki. N«U Chicago MUwas^&StBwd ««» TOrPUflET SOUND-ELECTRIFIED