Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 17, 1910, EDITORIAL, Page 5, Image 13

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    15
TirEOiLnA SUNDAY BEE: ArRIL 17. 1010.
'News Suppression and Endowed Papers
7 8 dltor of 71:6 E to Prof. Ross Article Denouncing the Modern Newspaper
Th- pr- 1, n institution, and ail nf.
whrm it f4,i t ,, ,h, ,p , of
H prlmar.ly. r at least s-on.1a-iir. , rnuo
limine lt9 rr,, rfht to d
ewe. the qntca and tlie lead. nd ,
or both If th o,in ,arr... Ihe
Profanity. I, K upn i:, a,cnt. Incrn-
. v-V""" th" PrWW h'ar ' "itlr.
anVablr. .mi to deb.t- fault, .,, th,lr
rhlr smicsbly. N) critic;. m that is
amor should ar..us rf-rntin,.nt. pmvul-l
the pnm who uij-rt.kw It is B,.t l.amil
eapjwsl by a diablln, ignorance of the
eubjert ha tackle,. r a dualifTlna; preju
dice aint the Institution he atta. ks
Then Prrf. Edward IWs published In the
jtiazire Monthly, an article muckrakiM i
-he American newspaper the r.jt,:-ter- 1
Journal v.ntnr-d t. p..int out certa'n In- j
ccurPie aa to f jets and defe-ta of !..(,..
nd few error In conclusions h;-fi j
marked the article a the output of a,
mind unfamiliar with the affairs of the '
work-a-day world and the conduct of news- :
papers. Victor Roaewater. of the OTiitha j
Be, discussing Prof. Rrs' article at some i
length, tvjrins by quixii.s; him as follow; j
"Ws altogether too much time on I
the daily newypaper. jome of you may be
(wjtJnff haif an hour to reading the paper
saw day. Cut It down to fifteen minute?.
jaitou will find that you are not loam
anrihln. When you hare u creeled ln do
In this, try reducing the time to ten min
Wss. and you will find you are doing (till
batter. Then iut that down to five minutes
47 "1 pretty soon you will be able to
cut out reading the newspapers altogether
and roa will" get along Just aa well. The
daily newspaper cannot give you a true
account of current events. Tou can get all
you need to know ln the weekly periodicals
and the monthly magazines, and If you
read two or throe of theae you will have all
th Information about what Is going on
about you that la worth having. Time
pent ln reading the newspaper la worse
than thrown away. Don't waata your time
on newspapers."
Thi is what Mr. Roee water heard one
day when entering, unobserved, a ciaes
room in the University of Nebraska. Upon
being chaffed by Mr. R-wm water for hia
excoriation of the newspapers, rhe lecturer
aid tie did not exactly mean what he
aid. but that the lecture was originally
written under great provocation, when cer
tain newspapers In Pan Francisco bad
crltlislsed him.
"From his article In tha Atlantic." says
Mr. Rosewater. "Prof. Ross shows that
wile he has not fallowed his own injunc
tion to Tut out rad;ng newspapers alto
rthr." he has retained his prej ldlr-es
aeaipsr the prfss. and Is as prone to ex-
kt-rat. i;s faiil's and deny l:s virtue
lie was after the San FianiM-o papers had
Iw-en grilling him nnmrrHfTiHr.'-
The Pr(r(ssr' Watlve.
It Is a rule In courts of law to establish
the moilvs befor seeking to prov th;
prisoner at bar su'lty of having murdered
the individual wtioke "remainders' wrr
fn;nd by the roadsde. Mr. Ro-eBier
seems to have had the evident e at hand
and established the motive after witnesirg
the assault. If Pnf. Ross' animadversions
upon the probity and usefulness of tht?
press are traceable to an encfuinter with
tte San Franciscf ra,-f. and the Atlantic
Month'y Is his sutwn fir attacking a
lass rranso an Individual, i t Individuals.
aro.ie.1 his Ire a iinn years ago. his as
sertions and arguments are hardly worthy
of the friendly consideration that was ac
corded U them bv the t "ouriei - Journal
"hen his article was published. Put grant
ing, for the sake of a little pleasant tuck
et ing. that there is no connection with the
professor's feud with tls? Pacific roaat
papers and his fulminatiuns against those
of the rest of the United States, he fails
to make a caae which mould prevent any
level-headed Judge from giving peremptory
instructions In favor of the defendant.
Prof. Rows' charges boll down to the
allegation that the press leaves undone
pretty nearly everything It ought to do.
and does nearly evervtlnns that It ought
not to do. Additional sins consist partly
in doing those which it ought to leave un
done and doing tha bidding .f
those who never leave the people un
done. The crimes charged are monstrous.
If the accused were guilty nothing but the
extreme penalty would vindicate the law
or protect society from future harm.
pre "ISewa."
One complaint of Prof. Ross Is that Im
portant news la suppressed, but he cites
aa proof of his assertion the suppression
of nauseating scandal by the Philadelphia
newspapers, and asserts that the Influence
of an advertiser was the cause of this
failure to print the news. While the news
papers are occasionally forced to print
such "news." it la unclean, and ought never
to be published. The subject Is unfit for
discussion outside of the lecture room or
office of a specialist upon nervous and
mental disorders. If the Philadelphia
papers were subservient to their adver
tisers they were wrong ln principle, but It
Is Strang that an educator considers the
result unsatisfactory from the viewpoint
of the public. Anc the a.g-jment that the
press supcre-.es the news is capsizrd by
the admission that wh: fie rhllad-'phia
pipers did not print the New V"rk nnprs
l.d nit suppress. This ju.cv mor-el :t
-'mportani news " was dihd up for Phila
delphia despite ;he vna it;. yi the count
ing rooms, or the decency of the editorial
r.frs. In the ray in wh eh the lamentable
event occurred.
I Basis r iaallt-tmeats.
The naif professor indicts the prs be
caue a lawyer give to three newsaper
men a story supprte.1 hv affidavits, that
, n thug hired bv "a rr-m n emporium" had
kilhd a striker, and although the three
newspaper n:i n sccpie.J ,t a. true, and
promiwd to print it. that account neves
appeared.
Possibly Prt K;r. d.f n"t "now that
affidavits weired hv .vto.eys interested
'ti tn;-t;tuting act;. ins for damages iir not
proof, but testimony, and that libeling "an
emporium " or an indtvdual to helo a dm
; age suit la-.tyer earn a fee is a crime,
i S3'nst which individuals and emporiums
j ar property protected by the law. of
Course the "news " of the murder was not
; suppressed. Such news never is. But "that
; account"" w;ts doubtless nut accepted as
final bv M e reporters or editors,
j "A prominent social worker" held con
! trscts sitm-d by salesgirls infamous. The
! pre- did not crusade. Prof R. s sees in
this proof of corruption. Upon the other
; hand cer;a:n papers would not espouse the
; cause of street-car -mployes in a ' justl
j f"'tl- strike.- becauK m jUanta threaten
j t mithdrw advertisements. Why answer
j such flap-c'oudle?
j rasreralsc ews tilie.
- As Mr. Roovewater inslvts. rivalry, and
! tiie unwillingness of newspapers to be
,1 beaten, develops most of the news that
ia north priming, and a gosl deal that
j ian't. If one Journal suppresses a "story"
! 4. . .. .
j "m ui ujun me rroni page or a eoin
; petitor. But editors disagree as to news
I v-.luos. and outside of editorial rooms
. there are countless persons who have
different opinions as to what ia news, and
divergent views aa to 'what policy the
press should pursue. Many of them may
honestly and (nnoocentiy believe that
whenever a given newspaper does not meet
j with their critical approval a combination
of corruption and ignorance lie behind its
Imagined failure to discharge Its full duty.
Prof Ross assertion that the popularity
of magaxlnes as vehicles of suppressed
news results from the lamentable morals
of the press, calls from Mr. Roosewate:
the statemept thst most of the facts in
m.iganno artlr'es d.-sling with politics are
those previously published by newspapers.
It m;ght be added that the files of news-pape-s
are the mine most, corrnnonly
worked bv the "muckracker " The mini
.ne article is interesting, and useful, be
cause it sums up news that has been pub
i shed piecemeal by the press. One of the
first of the series of "murkrake- articles
tint have flourished in t!ie magazines
dutiT'g the last doaen years was 'The
Shame of M .nneapwlis." which brought
l.,ncoln Steffens into prominence. Mr
Steffens is an earnest Invest gator, a force
f tl writer, and en admirable yiung man.
It is no disparagement of his taients or
h's motives, and no reflection upon the
value of his contributions to matraaires.
to say that the facts he set forth in Mc
Clure's magaxine weren t "news" in Min
neapolis. Far Fetched Rxaaaplea.
Prof Ross sees In the popularity of lec
tures the wickedness of a news suppressing
pros We pass over Mr. Roscwater's dis
position of the charge, which ends in a
auertion as to why the chautauqua lecturer
' so grateful for punll.- tv. and why he Is
so wlliing to i"e for the photographer
who represents the press
Reference was made some t;me ago I v
the Courier-Journal to the tllumlnat.rg
fact that In seeking for examples of crook
edness In editorial rooms Prof. llvs was '
forced to describe the rules that Roveened
the moulding of the news by a thb-jgo
Pier published by a man who Is now j
serving a term in the penitentiary There .
Is no law to prevent an individual who is ;
shaping hia course in the direction of the 1
penitentiary from publishing a newspaper, j
but a good many things stand In the way i
of his giving character to the Ame-lcan '
i-ieee. ti rmi rtoss is more amusing, in
his tneptnesa as a cftlc. at one point than
at another. It Is when he castigates the
newspapers because they stotd together,
without the formality of a gentlemen s
agreement, to minimise the bad news and
play up- the good news durng the panic
of lXTT-. Such an argument needs no an
swer. It def.-ats Itself.
The Courier-Journal does not recall the
cassus belli that precipitated the clash be
tween Prof. Ross and t!;e Sun Francisco
papers In point of fact we never read the
history of that war-but possibly It was
some unreasonable and etsjly p-.inctumble
statement of his
at the I'rttle Illustrates.
H;s assaults urcn the prss aa an institu
allegatlons constitute nothing mo: than
tton h. r.o ti ue e tner as const rucTTve or
destru.-tlve citticlsm lv neither points the
Pathway upward nor U s a monster low
If Its spirit was engendered by grilling
of the educator bv certain newspapers, it
mav be put down as "a piece of logic which
w.l hardly pass In the world, that bec ause
one man has a s.ire nose all the town
should put plaster on theirs."" Rut. fctvlng
the alienator the benefit of the doubt, his
another illustration of the fact that nearly
every one who knows nothing about jour
nalism believes that he knows Infinitely
more about how to conduct a newspaper
than any one who has devoted hia l:fe to
the work.
By all means let there be established the
endowed newspaper, recommended hy Prof.
Ross, which will net "dramatis crime r
doctor news or publish gossip.- yet which
will fearlessly print such "news" as that
which tha professor regrets that the Phll
ade'ptiia papers suppressed, and which wMl
let no combination of advertiser fir thi
restraint of scuilery scandal prevent
from publishing ti e story of the unfs;rS
fulnees of a mcrrhar.t s wife or the Inrt
cretlcn of his daughter SlH h a newspaper
elitel bv d. tors of dlvin'tv. sociology ant
lews would he hwile-t l a hntnor-lov n
preee as a -ontemn.rarv rather than feares
bv comift pubiicalions as a compet'tor
tot with It at onee" " It fiere b light;
l et "ea h reporter and elltor he some nnt
who has aired his views upon the vlciou
nes and rapidity of newspapers publish
by newspaper men.
Old rets Blew Mr sr.
Art old darkev. w!;, Hi f. some d'etancs
fr-m town, had a very s'ck mule H dovt
Into town to see the village veterinarv aa
to what to ,li for the mule The doctor
told htm to get a pound of calomel and a
hollow g'aes tube and Mow the calomel
through the tube down the mute's throat.
Arvout a week after that the darky ap
peared In town look.r g very de'ected snd
paie. He met the dew-tor on tl.e street and
said: "Ssv. boss. I gut the caiotnei and
the tube and put the calomel in the tube."
and Just then the doctor asked him If bt
b e"v it down the throat of the mule, and
the dr.rkv ee.-d:
"No. miss, old Pete ha done blew first. '
-Philadelphia Reco-J
ACRKAGC
TRACTS
FOR THE
INVESTOR
OR FOR THE
SMALL FARMER
THIS ia our specialty. From
One to One Thousand acres.
This business ia made to
serve your interests. No sum of
money, however small, is two
small to get our best attention
And no sum, however large, is
too Urge to tax our rapacity to
TO PLACE AND PLACE WITH
PROFIT TO THE INVESTOR,
We would like to have you
write to us for our booklets,
literature and other Informa
tion. We are sure that you
want to know about IDAHO.
It Is the last West and the rap
Idly growing section of the
United States. Here you can
make big profits on small In
vestment. Land can be bought
on credit.
Wrie KigU Nor, Write IoJjj
GRAY GRAY
INVESTMENTS.
POCATCLLO, - . IDAHO
farmers, gtockmen, Investors, peculators
525-acre farm and townsite $20,000 worth of improvements
Land alone worth what we ask for the whole proposition
Buy
this and
it will
make you
rich.
, " .-
' . Mi.
I ! s . Z
Present
owner has
become
independent
and wants
to retire
This Strictly Modern ta-Room House 1st on that Farm
' From every standpoint this is the best proposition in the
central west and will be snapped up in short order
Townsite of Langdon, Atchison County, Missouri, together with 525 acres of
choice bottom land, on the main line of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy
Railroad, 60 miles from Omaha, Neb., and 60 miles from St. Joseph, Missouri
Description of Farm and Improvements
This ia the best 515 acres ia northwest Missouri. It ! all
level and tha soli is aa rich as cream. The land has all been re
newed ln recent years by rotating to clover and alfalfa. This
land will grow 100 bushels of corn to the acre and It will grow as
much timothy, clover or alfalfa to the acre as any land on earth.
The land la all fenced and cross fenced. SO acres hog tight,
and the Improvements constat of a big 2 1 j story brick mansion,
with 13 large rooms. In addition to the 13 rooms, there is a bath
room, pantry, halls, closets, large colonial porch, cellar under the
house and a complete water svstem in the house. This houe
could not be duplicated for f25.000.00.
Big hay barn holds 150 tons.
Horse barn for 16 head of horses, with hay mow and gran
aries. Hog and calf barn. 40xlf 0 feet.
Buggy and carriage house, hog sheds, chicken house, ice
house, cribs for several thousand bushels of corn.
Two wells wiUi windmills. Five driven wells with pumps.
J50 barrel cistern.
Flv acres ln full bearing orchard, consisting of apples,
peaches, plums, cherries, etc. This orchard brings a revenue
of from $500 to $1000 per year, besides supplying fruit for family
use.
100 acres tame grass. (Timothy, clover and alfalfa.)
Fine feed lots within 100 yards of tha railroad stock' yards.
Living water on feed lots. Cheap rates and no shrmk. Tou drive
your stock from feed lota to stock yards a few minutes before
loading and they are on the market within three or four hours.
It Must Be Seen to Da Appreciated.
Townsite and What Goes With It
The townsite of Langdon, Mo., is situated on the
east side of the 525-acre farm. There are two store
buildings, five residences and a. blacksmith shop, all
rented to good tenants and brings a rental of about
$1,000 per year. All these go with the land.
Adjoining the townsite on the east is the beautiful
Nishnabotna river. The finest and most popular fish
ing, resort in the west is at Langdon, Mo. One of the
best hotels in the state is located near the depot and on
the banks of the "Nishna" and for several years has
been a Burlington railroad eating house. A large num
ber of boats with complete fishing equipment is kept
by the management During the summer months hun
dreds of people from Omaha, St Joseph and St. Louis
spend their vacations there; where fishing, swimming
and boating cannot be excelled.
There has been quite a demand from the people of
these cities for town lots on which to build summer cot
tages, but the present owner has refused to sell a single
lot for the reason that they did not want any town there
to interfere with their farming and stock feeding business.
EeFySlniSinicj Goes !of G90,000
$5.000.W will tie it up until March 1st, 1911, at which time $40,000.00 more will be pavable and possesion will be
given. Balance can run 5 or 10 years at 6. Interest will be allowed on the $3,0u0.00 pavment until March 1st 1911
For further information or for a date to look this over, call on, write or wire
v. " r"i?3"' -' -- ,
IM no
Y
You WANT TO BE A BIGOEB MAN!
Tou never saw an office clerk proud of his
job; you never saw a small merchant with
any confidence in himself. If you did he
didn't stay a small merchant long. He grew
into a big one! And when he got too big
for his town he went to A BIGGER TOWN;
a place where there were more opportuni
ties. "Dont keep on plodding; sticking to
the same old road ALL your life, thinking
Rolling
Down Hill
That's the Way
Dollars
invested in
Real Estate
Come to YOU
A.HO
that something will turn-up. IT NEVER
DOES. You have to turn things up. YOU
CAN DO IT IN IDAHO. Throw away the
pen behind your ear; yox are not proud of
that! Do something you LIKE TO DO.
BE A MAN! You CAN DOUBLE YOUR
MONEY IN IDAHO. We can tell tou how.
We will tell vou how IF YOU WILL GIVE
US A CHANCE; IF YOU WILL WRITE
AND SAY: 'Give me a chance!" Write
for our book on Idaho. Pictures fit to frame
with the most wonderful opportunities for
YOU set forth. Write for it TODAY.
Y toil, labor, and sare, until
UU pinching penary Is your
normal state. In tha Middle
Western states there are OVER A
HALF MILLION FAMILIES which
must live on leas than S400 per
yesr. In Idaho this Is different.
There are the broad, level sorts.
Irrigated with a constant atresia of
water from the inexhaustible
Snake river; wheat yields as high
as 75 bushels to the acre. Five
acres of orchard land provide a
living for an enure family and
leave them a balance ln the bank
at the end of the year. J. H.
Stolu. secretary of the Commercial
club, as a matter of record, de
clares that the statement was made
at a public meeting of the club
that A MAX WHO HAD BUT
THREE ACRES -m which he
reaped a living fo- hia wife and
family and saved $1,000.00 at the
end of the year. Ton are on of
many thoussnds of men who wish
they .con Id better their condition.
Tou can do It ln Idaho. Ton can't
make a success of toil alone. TOC
MUST COME TO IDAHO FOR
THE CHANCE. Write to ns.
jr caa point the way to sac-
cess in Southern iaano to
17
fou. We can show yon how to
DOUBLE TOUR MONEY In a lit
tle while. THERE ARE TWO
HUNDRED AND FORTY THOU
SAND ACRES ON THIS TRACT;
enough for everybody. There Is
room for you IF YOU COME
RIGHT NOW. Write to us; we will
send a picture book; a beautiful
book free and
THIS FREE
BOOK
TELLS HOW
This ftook has a moat sxquialte art
cover; filled with pictures fit to
frame; and tha lnformatloa la it has
been examined with car. Tou caa
sursly us this book to sntda you.
It coat over thirty eanta each In an
Ht Ion of 10.009 coploe. This book la
ABSOLUTELY FREH TO TOU. Juat
sand for it and stvs ua your addrsas.
Idaho la a pleasant place to llva;
Idaho la a most fertile country; pro
ducing everything' In abundance. TOU
HAVE XT TO COMS TO IDAHO.
FI.VD OCT FROM LA
Anybsdy
ran uaake money in
Idaho. The soil is
so fertile; the season Is so long
and ths markets are so close that
It 18 THE EASIEST THING IN
THE WORLD TO MAKE MONEY
IN IDAHO. George uaaeett; Just
an ordinary farmer, like any other
man who tills the soil, made S100
an acre from ten acnes of appla
orchard. Made It net. Lived well,
with his wife and ram II v. and pat
the money ln the bank. Another
man (name on srpllratlon) cul
tivated three acres to celery and
fancy garden stuff, sold his pro
duct to th hotel, and, ln a single
year, BANKED ONE THOUSAND
DOLLARS AS A RESULT OF
THE INTENSIVE CULTIVATION
OF ONLY THREE ACRES. One
yonng man. a cleric fn the office
of a harvester company in Chi
cago; who had never seen a farm
until he cam to Twin Falls hadn't
a cent when he "struck town."
Today, two years later, be Is
worth TEM THOUSAND DOLLAR
IN HARD CASH. Cattle ralatns;
dairying, fralt raialnc. sraln. hay,
and the Irrtsatad and dry farranla;
lands rive y vour opportunity.
WRITBTTO fra TODAT.
ence tou win
rilCE like Idaho.
Tou WANT to know
about Idaho. Send
for ths Look NOW.
JLJILL TAYLO
Irrigated Farms
1R
TWIN FALLS, IDAHO
Idaho sails
to you.
NEEDS you. And
You need Idaho.
Write Us today.
S100.00 Per Acre
Net for Apples
"V KNOW the commer
X J 11 cial value of fruit. No
body laughs at the fellow who
went ln the orange groves a few
years ago. He's rich now. Then
It was regarded as a fad. TOU
want to know about IRRIGA
TED APPLE ORCHARDS. We
can tell you. One man ln this
section raises apples and reaps
a net profit of 1 104 per acre
from his orchard.
You can DO THE SAME.
Write to us about this. Wt
have the most handsomely illus
trated booklet written about
this. THE TWIN FALLS
TRACT ln Southern Idaho, thai
has bn printed for a Ion;
while. It ia mighty informing,
too. IT 13 FREE AND WE
WILL SEND ONE COPY TO
YOU IF YOU WILL JUST
WRITE A POSTAL CARD RE
QUEST. WIUTT5 TODAY.
J. E. WHITE.
a "Square Deei"
en the Carey Act
Lands In Idaho
H J. FAILOS, C.;er THE TWIN FALLS BAN! & TRUST
CO., mi al i mitht of t-e Comatrcial CI Uut ke .enoBiIlT
aJ a T?' With a fami,y' who IIAD ONLY THREE
and that that man liviaj for himself and
JSi7 year AND PUT ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS
OF SAVINGS IN THE BANK. You can't do that
a VMJ Jn it.
a 111 M ACUS leas than i..
mile, from tne city Every faoc
under cultivation. Is acrea in al
fsifa Lies aa level aa a floar.
!ne location. 8mail hoaea, goe
J1-. iL"y '""M. raasy to move
rlft In. Price, per sure.... SlH
MO. S Yatis tS A CTTT KOXSi
and Twin Kalis ia a beautiful
'. one af THI? afOST BBAU
H'L. 'od. OS THE W HuLK
CONTINENT. To U1 ENJO?
,Jf la AT TWIN rALi-JL in
Idaho, six-room bungaiow all
moat modern eonatrocttoiC floe
'" craaa. sua4e traee.
barn for rwe horssa. room for au
tomobile, eow. ao4 Its JTT
Jff- BLOTTtS FWOaf THB
rt.NTls.rl Or TH2 CITI. J CAN
AT A TIME for Hi r.
Is a splendid! Inrastmaut at list.
aTo. s s icui. mm
m m m u T I rrv
w Wfl
nAXJX. auartar mile from
t eur acrea plant to orr-hsri
Tre tnrea rwa eld. BJBAJDT
J10 aa ra la ajfsifa.
Small house aaaS Sam. XT' a a
BAMS 1ST AT .7. . . S30OS
aaXIXQUIflHilBNTl: Wa ran not
tail you ail uwut rellnquuhmenta
InanaJvertleemant YOf MI'HT
mi? mi. ja!
xt"-"- ha a limited num
ber fur saia at a small bonus.
Theae Carer Act ianoa provide a
So4 way to aoasia tow aaaae.
It la a releaae of rtrht. aoeerer
whara roe better laa4 at a
less price than tou reuld ptrl, ftr,r
asowt ntm twin Tsar uaz.
Vf. A. Moomaw Irivestincnt Co.,
TVTIN rALLS, IDAHO
PktBTCt Fit ta Fruit, All Dtit h a Littlt BsoL Fise far i.l.
s
H
y u ."jj,, , TZ " ! l
- M 9 YOU
6 W aet Ad
uliomas Cl Weems,
Sole
Agents
Fullerton. Nob.
TWIN FALLS
IDAHO