THE BEE: OMAHA, SUNDAY, AUGUST 14, 1921. r- " ! : .lr 1 CENTER SHOTS. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THC BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY NELSON B. UPDIKE. Publiihtr MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tk AaoxUMd Tnm. of which Te Ba It member. It -eliuerai, anuunt M Ua m M reeoauceii el all ae rtu-lm erMIMd to H ot no Mharwta credited In UrtJ W. end aloo lb kwU e- wibtlahed hereta. All rllhU of repub lioaUoe ef out aoertal- dlenetenaa are ale mentA. Tbe Omaha Bee I a nemner of ID audit Bureau of Clrea litfcna. the reeeanlied authotur en circulation adulta. BEE TELEPHONES Print Brani Ikb. for AT Untie 1000 Uw DeearUMrit ot reraoa wanted. " aww Far Nlfht Call. Aftc 10 P. M. Editorial DaparttMot - ATlaatlo UU or 10U OFFICES OF THE BEE u.tn nrfipr 17th arut Vunia SM Plfla Are. South Bid 4833 South 14th Out-el-Town Offkaa 2M Fifth Are. I Waehlniton I'll " St. Wrlfley Bid. I Pari. Fr., 4M Sue 8U Hoaora Coosetl Bluff New Tort Cnktca The Beefs Platform 1. New Union Passenger Station. 2. Continued Improvement of the Ne braska Highways, including the pave ment of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha with a Brick Surface. 3. A abort, lowrate Waterway from the Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. 4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. It Knowledge Really Power? An off-hand reply to that question is not likely to be dependable, for, no matter which way it may be answered, someone is sure to set up to the contrary. Maybe the provisional response, that it all depends, is the correct one. A couple of years ago when we were comparing the wages of teachers to those paid hodcarriers, opinion inclined to the point that a weak mind and a strong back when rightly coupled have decided advantages over the opposite combina tion. Happily, however, that condition is pass ing, for it was only temporary and could not en dure, and things are slowly righting themselves, socially as well as industrially. As a proof that knowledge may be translated into power may be cited that so-called workers' universities are springing up, to be supported and patronized by workers, to the end that they will be trained in mind as well as in muscle. Even the experiment of the short-term summer school for working girls at Bryn Mawr is reported to have accomplished a great deal for those who attended the classes. This movement is significant of one of the neglected manifestations of the ferment that is working. That the manual toiler should yearn for mental emancipation is natural, a wor thy ambition. Indeed, a fundamental of our government provides for the education of all the boys and girls born under Old Glory, and most of the states have rigid compulsory educational laws. An accompanying fact, however, is that the workers are seeking to establish their own schools for higher training. This indicates a dis trust of existing institutions that ought to be dispelled. What the workingman sees is immense en dowment funds, subscribed to by men of great wealth; his inference is that these benefactions are bestowed because of especial favors ex pected. Frequently a "high brow" affords sup- ' port for such conclusions by indulging in tion- isensical discussion of problems he only half un derstands. Now and then one breaks out on the radical side, and capitalizes his dismissal from the faculty of a great institution into an income far exceeding that of any professor, merely because he is adept at spreading the miasma of false philosophy. It will not do to say the worker can not use the knowledge he seeks at the university. In England is "that man Hodge," leader of the miners. He was sent to school by his union, graduated from Oxford with honor, went back to work in the mine, was elected to a small office in his union, rose to be its head, and now is looked upon by many as the next premier, to succeed Lloyd George. What may well be lone in America is to readjust the great state univer sities, every one of them open to the workers on easy terms, so that their sound teachings will not be swallowed up in fads or specialties, and will be relieved of any suspicion or taint of reaction, to the end that they may fulfill their great pur pose, that of affording enlightenment to all the people. And the endowed and private schools may reach a higher stage of usefulness when they search a little closer for the truth than some of them are now thought to be doing. It will be a sad calamity for popular education should it ever be divided on class or sect lines, s has happened to the church. Men are far less likely to-be tolerant in dealing with demonstrable facts than they are when in the realm of specula tive or hypothetical things; and the history of religion shows how sad a state it is for men to differ about the way which is said to be both straight and narrow. Let us have schools open to all wherein the workers may learn and feel that the knowledge they are gaining is not only an element of power, but is power because it is equally truth. Elusiveness of Fortune. One of the pathetic figures in modern fiction is "No Creek Lee," in Rex Beach's story, "The Barrier." He was the only "sour dough" in all Alaska who had not had a creek named for him, and this because he had never made a strike. Years of patient effort and unremitting struggle had brought him no reward, save the half-pitying, half-derisive sobriquet. His prototype in real life, from whom Beach is said to have taken the idea, Con Van Alstyne, is now reported to have been kilted and probably devoured by the wild beasts in the wilderness he roamed so long and so futilely. It is told of Van Alstyne that once he located a claim that gave little promise of yield, and traded it for a better looking one. The man who took over the Van Alstyne claim went back to Settle with more than $2,000,000 in dust, while the discoverer of the bonanza didn't get wages out of his. So all through the" years he spent in that region of wonders he was always just out of the, way when Lady Luck-went by. But he never lost hope, and. went on to the end, serenely con fident his turn would come. If his life held any lesson, it is that of per sistence. The great reward of discovery was not his, and through no especial fault of his own. That he could and did sustain the buffets, and kept his courage to the end is to his everlasting credit In this he succeeded far better than many another man of less worthy mettle, whose spirit has snapped at the first setback, and who has weakly ended it all rather than face a world that had frowned at him. . . "Sweet are the uses of adversity," if we have the philosophy to apply them; none can say just what joy Van Alstyne got out of life, but he must have been sustained in some degree, else he could not have gone ahead so bravely against "the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune." His end is as obscure as his life was fruitless in material things, but who will say he lived or died in vain? aaaaaMMaWMaaaeaaMai Making Uplift Self-Supporting. In his section of comment on the drifts of af fairs, Editor Glenn H. Frank of the Century Magazine cites the case of the Players Guild of New York as an example ol self-supporting up lifters. This group of genuine devotees, artists, actors, writers, musicians and managers, so con duct their business as to not only produce wor thy drama, but also at such rate as returns to them modest but sufficient revenue. No philan thropy is connected with the venture, no wealthy citizen donates to meet its deficit, it stands on its own feet Contrasting this successful so far at least undertaking with some of the subsidized "foun dations," Mr.' Frank finds reason for expressing the hope that more worthy enterprises of the kind will come to active life. One of his critical remarks anent the endowed institution is that it too frequently is devoted to the perpetuation of ideas of its founder. Some are free from the "dead hand," but most are restricted to the car rying of yesterday's ideas over into tomorrow or the day after. In the Survey Jeffrey R. Brackett, discussing constructive charity, cites a case where a will was made setting aside what seemed to be a modest amount to relieve distress among a lim ited class in two small towns. The property from which the income is derived has increased until its value is many times what it was when the will was made, while the class of persons in tended to be benefited decreased, but the rigid terms of the document bound its administrators, who found a steadily mounting surplus in their possession which they were forbidden to dispose of. A court order cut the bonds, but the incident is illustrative of a great many. What is heeded is a more intensive study, both of the "foundation," and the charity trust, in order that real good may flow from the bene factions that are now misdirected because of lack of vision on part of the founder or benefactor. One-Age Companies in Army. . A new effort at classification of "rookies" is getting a tryout at the Plattsburg training camp this fall. Instead of associating the boys and men who are present by towns or localities, as has been the custom in the past, they are grouped according to age, beginning with the 16-year-olds, who represent the minimum in years, and grading up from that in years. Out of this has come the formation of four provisional com panies described by their commander as being "the friskiest lot of young soldiers that ever capered in uniform." Also it is reported that these youngsters are keener and more alert and learn the routine of the soldier's trade more quickly than do their elder brothers. It is easy to account for both manifestations, they being ascribable to the ebullient youth of the lads. A boy of 16 has not been so long subject to the treadmill of life's activities as a man of 30, and therefore his mind is nearer the condition of a blank page on which is to be recorded the new impressions of military drill and discipline. Actual proof in warfare sustains the theory that the boys are more daring and venturesome, just as they are in civil life, but the elder are the more dependable in the long run, for the rea son that they are seasoned, their steadfastness being the result of an orderly mind, just as the lad's dash and gallantry flow from the impulse of unabashed youth. The' one-age classification has advantages resting on the fact that effort will be less restrained for the reason that dif fidence due to discrepancy in years will be ab sent Maybe the Plattsburg trainers have found out something new about war. Moving Picture Censorship. A convention of considerable public interest will meet at Los Angeles on Monday. It will be made up of delegates from the varidus cen sorship boards of the United States and Can ada, and will devote its sessions to a discussion of the topics in which its members are the most concerned. What will come out of the gather ing can not be told, but it is not so hard to out line what might come out of its deliberations. First of all, producers, authors, directors and the like will be greatly relieved if these censors will reach an agreement as to what is and what is not proper to show on the screen. A definite decision on this point will be of real service to those who have to do with the making and exhibition of films. Maybe it is not possible to standardize the exhibitions, but basic rules might be formulated without any violence to the independent action of the separate boards and thus a general guide be afforded for the con trol of the industry. Maybe the gathering will set in motion the oft-promised but long delayed change in the character of the movies. If that important part of the amusement life of the world is to retain what it already has and go on to greater things, it must be careful not to forfeit public esteem, and it has been perilously near to doing so of late. The work of the cen sor may be made a great deal easier, if not ren dered entirely unnecessary, by the producers. The convention will give both (ides a good chance to reach a common ground, and the case of the movies will be helped if they do get to gether. ' A sneak thief is reported to-have disdained a bottle of rum, found in a valise he looted at a camp meeting. He either had a tender heart or an ingrowing conscience. Not a bad idea, to give the gasoline vamps who offer free rides to young women a free ride at the city's expense to the police station. That horned and winged fossil man found in Tennessee answers the descriptions of Auld Clootie, but the old boy has not been missed yet Eamonn de Valera is showing himself clever as a diplomat He knows how to prolong the negotiations. A furniture makers' trust is being formed, as if housekeeping was not already under sufficient pressure. The Husking Bee It's Your Day Siari ItWithaLauSh J Starting Them Young. Out in San Francisco, enthusiastic women golfers have discovered a way to play their game without neglecting their children. They just use the caddy-bag for a go-cart, and carry the babies around the links with them. Cleveland Plain Dealer. THE GOLDEN ROD HIGHWAY. It now is the bright golden season. Vacationist time of the year Yet Nature gives man every reason To greet her bright fields with a tear; Her beauty is polychromatic And brilliant the fields we come through, But in the still air there's a static At-chool When dried are the dews that have fallen Asteraceous flora upon. And verdure is shedding its pollen Across Nature's lavish-hued lawn ' We are pleased in a sort of a wry way, Our nostrils are quite tickled if We travel the Golden Rod highway . Sniff, sniff! This highway is paved with intentions Of those who have traveled of yore, While they have tried cures and preventions They're back to the highway once more; For Nature that gay-hued deceiver Whose fragrance is borne on the breeze, But brings to her victims hay fever, Sneeze, sneeze I PHILO-SOPHY. Wrinkles are the furrows in which are sown the seeds of discontent. When a young man falls in love with a girl at the seashore it is usually merely a matter of form. There is one thing to which a girl gives a lot of close study and that is her mirror. Old-fashioned woman used to do all the family marketing in a basket and carry it home on her arm. Nowdays, frail housewife thinks she has done her duty if she lugs home a new hair net and an ounce box of rouge. LACKING. "Hello, old man. Have you confidence enough in me to lend me a five?" "Yes, but I haven't a five." When a friend owes you a dollar you can for feit his friendship by asking him for it or you may retain his friendship by leaving it a loan. - LINE O' CHEER. Be cheerful and gay, for that is the stuff Of which joy is made, O my brother, To laugh at misfortune is easy enough If it's the ill-luck of another. N ' LAPSUS LINGUAE. Say, Omahans, 'jever notice when you are touring the west and you felt the old nostalgia, better known as homesickness, grip you by the heartstrings and you hopped a Union Pacific rat tler at Ogden and settled down in a double seat for the old home stretch and inyour ardent imagination you are nearing home even faster than the train can carry you and as the train slacks you peek out of the window wondering how far Omaha really is, and you find you are dragging into a station which a sign informs you is Green River? Any pleasant -memories of the pre-Volstead-ian period which the sign conjures up are im mediately overshadowed by a meaningless post- errinf'iuriirll aplr in inform VOU that VOU are 176 miles from Ogden and 817 miles from COUN-1 r r T r TTrrci I With your mind full of Omaha and although you have a faint recollection of having heard of Council Bluffs some time in the dim and misty past, you feel a keen sense of disappointment and even wonder if you are on the right train. At Laramie, Cheyenne and other stops you are again informed of the distance to Council Bluffs, and having finally satisfied yourself that you are really headed for home, you spread a gratifying haM-hour ruminating on the myopic obliquity and judgment that would prompt an engineer to waste so much of his life in the use less ; operation of doping out the distances to a burg where the trains merely stop for water. For a transportation company that prides it self on being up-to-date, you decide that these U. P. signs are sadly wrapped up in the cobwebs of antiquity, and you resolve to write the com pany a letter advising the officials to look up their records of ticket sales and ascertain what percentage of travelers are Omaha-bound, and to change those signs accordingly. They will find a large majority of their pas sengers are not interested in the distance to Council Bluffs, Abydos, nor the Isle of Yap. Admitted that Council Bluffs, but Omaha de livers the goods 1 FAMOUS SAYINGS. Judge Cooley: "I haven't had to comb my hair since those bandits slugged me. Between these hard-boiled yeggs and Doc Kinyoun, I got a permanent wave." ' Economist advises the purchase of the cheaper cuts of meat. 'Sail right, maybe, but can't ex pect a family to make a square meal off round steak. ... BUS SERVICE. Street car system over at Des Moines died of suspended animation. Company wanted 8 cents, but people protested that 8 cents wasn't fare. City commish slapped street car omciais siuy. They were kind of silly in the first place. Motor busses were already to duplicate tram service. Duplication means as bad or worse. First thing motor busses equipped with was straps. Busses run on Darwinian theory that man descended from monkey. If he hadn't he d still be hanging from cocoanut tree. Wise cracker who invented slogan, "Pay as you enter." Enables transportation buzzards to get the shekels before bimbo's right arm gets so paralyzed he can't get his hand in his pocket. Bus with six double seats has carrying ca pacity of 40. Twenty-eight of 'em hang from ceiling. Other 12 are dozen men who entered ahead of the ladies. Whiskered gent sticks to seat like fly on bald head since 19th amendment gave man equal rights with woman. Bus company furnishes elastic schedule. Should furnish elastic elbows. When bus people put forth elastic schedule, gullible public grabs other end. Company begins to stretch schedule. Public gets tired. Lets go and knocks bus magnates for set of flat tires. Street cars promise to stage comeback for" 7 cents, provided flange-wheel busses are kept off car tracks and rubber tires off paved and un paved streets. WATER, WATER, EVERYWHERE. (Add realism in the movies.) Alice Lake in "Uncharted Seas." No, Myrtle, it isn't the initial cost of a "bob." It's the upkeep. SURE ENOUGH. Some girlies wear a gartered hose Up o'er the knee-cap's bone, But there are tome, observer knows. Prefer to "roll their own." AFTER-THOUGHT: The ideal ideal is a square deal, . BHILO, How tb Keep Well R. DR W. A. EVANS Queetioa concerning hygiene, aanttatiea and prvethm el oMaeaae, aubmlttad t. Dr. Evana by reader el The Bee. will be aaawered peraonally, "bJct proper limitation, where a tamped addroaaed envelope la encloeed. Dr Evana will net make oiagnoai or preacribe lor individual diaaaaaa. Addrea letter la car el The Bet. Copyright. 1911, by Dr. W. A. Evan SYMPTOMS OF PELLAGRA. Tllarra B-anarallV hrln With a mmtrh Indication and bodily and mental weakness and fatigue. The tongue is pointed at the edges. It may be sore. Tnere may db reu nafr.v.aa and fl.anron There Is a feeling of burning which runs down the throat from the mourn ana inio the stomach. In the more typical cases the skin shows patches of sunburn. The sunburnt appearance la typi cal, though tta distribution may not be. If It comes on the back of the hands and wrists it may form a wristband extending around the arm. It may form a collar around the neck. In fact the no-called Casal's collar is one of the best known skin pictures. It develops on the front of the chest. This lo cation Is not reserved for those who wear low neck gowns or waists with triangular openings In front and In nrhar word, while the eruption looks like sunburn and Is In the sunburn locations, wnen one bores Into the case he finds there has been no exposure, to sun or not enough to account for the burn or that the burn is not entirely ngni for a sunburn as to location and shape. , Goldberger says that as a rule there Is constipation and no one has seen any more . of the disease than hi, thi oVnort Nevertheless many cases have diarrhea and some have foamy diarrhea similar to tnat ot sprue. Some cases have a burn ing which seems to extend from the mouth throughout the Intestinal tract which is accompamea oy diarrhea and a brassy odor. Mental weakness and mild delirium char acterize certain cases. In' the last several years wnen me disease seemed to bo getting milder the proportion of atypical cases seemed to be increasing. There were cases without delirium or other nervous symptoms. Other cases had no diarrhea. Still others had no eruption. In fact there seemed to be no landmark present in an cases. As a rule pellagra cases develop in May, June, July and August. TViav hotn rn rOanr lin In Stantem- ber. The symptoms may disappear entirely In cold weather and return the next spring, xne percentage of recurrences the following season is said to be five. In recent years only 10 per cent of the cases die. Ten years ago 60 per cent died. This difference is more apparent than real, since mild cases were seldom diagnosed 10 years ago. Nevertheless, since the disease is regarded as so deadly- and since nine cases out of 10 get well. Disciplinary Homes From the Nw Tork Time. Professor Perry of Harvard has an elaborately Ironical article in The Atlantlo Monthly on "Domestic Su perstitions." He tells us that "par ents and other adult members of the family belong to the priestly caste. It Is their business to preach the doctrine and to be ostentatiously on their good behavior." How many families of readers of The Atlantic boast of a father of a family who has been able to keep the hieratio pose, the majesty and the authority of a family father of the old stock? Probably in the largest number of such families there are no children, or not more than two. Years ago that courtly Boston patrician, Mr. Robert C. Wlnthrop, used lo say in effect: "When I was a child I never dared to sit down in the presence of my parents. My children always 'sit on' me." The Fall of Father has been going on for more than a gen eration. At best he doesn't hope to be more than the tolerated Inferior, occasionally the equal or companion, of his one or two children. His po sition, social and political and do mestic, has also been reduced to one of subordination to Mother. Why does Professor Perry gloat' over the fallen? Why does he choose to imagine that Father leaves the office, longing for his fireside, for "a certain comfortable chair waiting for him in an accustomed spot near a reading lamp?" Why not near a whale-oil lamp or an "astral ?" Mother, on the contrary, is pining for "a dance or the theater, friends, gayety and late to bed." It is like enough that some Boston suburban fathers are "funny," but are they so marked off from other dethroned domestic gods as that? Are there no -restaurants in Boston? At any rate, the region hereabouts is full of fathers who have no taste for reading, and whose domestio ideal is expressed in the comic-opera say ing: "There's no place like home, when all the other places are shut up.' " This doesn't mean that these unsuperstitious people neglect their children, if they have any. It means only that Father, in spite of his de cline and fall, is not without the fetch of his first ancestor. He tries to "save his face." He leaves the hearth of an evening only to please his wife. She knows better. Of course, there are a thousand varia tions of domestic habit; and if we make large assumptions It is merely for the sake of keeping pace with the Cambridge Ironist. "A man's Idea of Sunday," he writes, "Is to surround his house with barbed wire, lock and barricade the doors and windows, disconnect the telephone, put on his slippers and an old suit, and then de vote the day to reading the paper and 'puttering.' " No golf, no motor car? Why, even in the most bucolic parts, the household issues from the home to enjoy the revel of "a walk to the cemetery." Are there no movies in Cambridge? Slippers? How archiac! Does anybody wear slippers except for bathroom purposes? Do Middlesex county papas sit about the fortress of the home in blue-flowered dressing gowns? Professor Perry is a mystifler. Is it permitted even to a professor to make this ironical sweeping as. sertion: "Why should scolding be peculiar to the home?" If it were, who would wander from his own fireside? Congress is rich in scolds, The pulpit is not poor In them. A thousand high-brow persons and periodicals avoid the ducking-stool only by the mistaken mildness of our laws. Professor Perry is mere ly feeding his amusing theory. Home life, with its scolding and various frictions, is a school and discipline: Both children and adults, con sorting with one another In every combination of age and sex, in every condition of health, at ev ery hour of the day, and in a great variety of moods and tem peraments, exhaust the whole repertory of human relations and learn how to live together. The best name for this is patience. It is the lack of it which distin guishes the bachelor, the maid, the orphan, and in some degree the only child. Many of the saints practiced pati ence without matriculating in the family university for that purpose. But we best appreciate Professor Perry's theory of the home by quot ing from It ' As for the impatient, undisciplined "only, child," how many Atlantic families have more? there are a multitude of pellagra cases. , whan if nmaa to. treatment the sheet anchor is good food plenty of good fresn meat, ir-sn mur., cheese, bread and vegetables. Ooldberger says 60 years ago Roussel made this statement as to pellagra: "Without dietetlo measures all remedies . Removal to a cold climate is help ful. Symptoms are to be met by the physician. . Needs More Information. ' J. C. S. writes: "During the last na f T.nnirv and all c,t February I suffered with kidney colic, thought to be stones in tne Kianey, out doctor failed to find them by taking X-ray pictures. Since about the middle of March 1 have not been bothered, with the exception of a little soreness in the left side where tha -M,hla urns. T urn writing VOU to ask that you give me some idea as to what is best tor me to eat iu avoid similar attacks." REPLY. Sometimes X-rays fail to show a stone that is present. When stone is present the attacks of pain re sult from movements of the stone. C!iis.h mnvamantA WOllld be ' in nO wise influenced by diet When this tendency to stone is aue to excess ot uric acid, the diet advised is one that contains no liver, kidney, sweetbreads, plucks of any kind, meat, meat gravies, peas or beans. It should contain considerable po tatoes and other vegetables. When this tendency is due to excess of cxallc acid the foods to avoid are rhubarb, cranberries and prunes. When the tendency is due to phos phates, the result of ammonia for mation , it is doubtful if diet in fluences the condition. You see you must get considerably more infor mation than vnu now have before you can decide what diet you need or whether you neea to aiet at an. Sharing Nervousness. W. C. F. writes: "In your col umn you discuss asafoetida and faith. -You might have added that the nervousness complained of by Miss M. D. couJd be passed on to her friends if she used asafoetida. The odor of her breath would soon knock 'em out." Des Moines' Plight irmn tha Sortnrfleld Vnloo.) Des Moines, a city of Just about C 1 a!a le witllOUt Street car service. Worse still, there is no i.rospoct of it being resuni-u ly and no bus service sufficient to bridge the situation satisfactorily. The Des Moines people held out for years against anything steeper than a five-cent fare. They had been told that three cents was nearer to the correct amount, and they considered six. seven or eight cents extortion ate. The city council took the popu lar side of the controversy and held it until the street railway became so involved in debt that it waa thrown into a receivership. "T"6" the courts took the case In hand and ordered an eight-cent fare as the only alternative to quitting the bumness. Did the public , learn a lesson? Hardly. It packed the jitneys and congratulated itself on being en abled to ride for five cents by this method. The doctors, viewing the case of the sick trolley company, found that the medicine had been administered too late for a cure. It continued to go in a hole and now is awaiting a purchaser under fore closure proceedings. Nobody seems desirous of acquiring the property. It is strange that conditions should have been permitted to reach this pass. And it is even stranger that the laws and ordinances should be of a nature to prevent the cars be ing operated on an emergency basis nanrllnff a. I"fl d IllRt TTI an t. If 0n8 seeks a first-class example of how not to manage the affairs of trans portation, Des Moines is a good place to look for it. Worth Insuring. It takes pretty .near $1,600,000,000 to run the U. S. A., according to Secretary Mellon's estimates. This indicates a property well worth a little insurance in the shape of an army and a navy. Boston Trans cript. Restriction. The United States started this prohibition business, and now she's starting international disarmament. When a fellow can't emnK or ngu, what can he do? Cleveland Plain Dealer. Don't be content with your lot till you have a good houe built on It. Savannah Morning News. About the ony difference between the old-fashioned dime novel and tha wild west movie show is the war tax Birmingham News. Again Washington comes to the rescue of the American farmer. A 35 per cent tariff has been imposed on "foreign-born" kewples. Sioux City Tribune. Inasmuch as Lord Northcllffe seems to have made the going pretty rough for Lloyd George lately, the latter has fitted up the government political machine with a very effi cient set of s n u b b e r s. Denver Times. Hard knocks are good for a man unless he's doing the knocking.- Fitchburg Sentinel. - VWY THE TIRE AND RAUATOB MAN "We fit aniIAinf MO o.l3tK St. Phone. Dou9603j Thorough Treutment Best Mrs, L. B. D. wries: "Is it at all dangerous to apply nitric acid to destroy moles, even large ones?" REPLY. Leave them alone or have them thoroughly removed. t Have Her Examined. Mother writes. "1. Is it possible for a girl of 10 years to have loco motor ataxia? My little girl stumbles around and seems to have no balance at all. She eats well, but is always pale and thin, irritable and nervous. Her father had the same trouble for a year before he died. "2. What would you advise?" REPLY. 1. It is possible. 2. She should be thoroughly ex amined. While locomotor, ataxia is improbable, some other- form of nerve syphilis or organic nerve dis ease is to be considered. Why Not Tax Franks? (From the Chicago Evening Poet.) - President Harding 'has indicated favor for an Increase in first-class letter postage as a means of increas ing government revenue. Net in come from the Higher rate would be turned into the United States treas ury for general purposes. Congress, searching for sources from which new revenue may be produced, thinks favorably of the idea also. So we may set it down as reason ably certain that the increase will be made. It will raise between $70,000,000 and $80,000,000 a year and without costs of collection. You'll - simply pay the postmaster 3 cents for a postage stamp instead of 2 cents; or 2 cents for a post card instead of one. It is all very simple. There will be vigorous protests, probably, from mail order houses and other businesses which conduct their advertising campaigns largely by circularizing. The average letter-writing citizen, too, will growl and disagree. Here, to him, will be a visible evidence that the oost of government service has gone up, not down. For on its face there is no . separation of the amount that goes to defray the cost of carrying his letter and the amount that goes to the treasury as a war tax. Up in Canada they do It different ly They have a one-cent tax on letters there. But it is a separate and distinct stamp. It is labelled as a tax stamp, and must be licked and placed alongside the postage stamp on eath envelope. It is not camou flaged or concealed as an increase in postage. Still, most Canadians end up by using an ordinary three cent stamp Instead. This letter tax leaves open only one tax-free form of communication. We have a tax on telephone con versation, a tax on telegrams and ar about to have a tax on letters. but we have as yet no tax on the I weighty political eommunicauons 01 congressmen to their constituents. The franked envelope, which car ries no stamp, will evade payment of the new letter tax. Yet the tons upon tons of free mail sent out from Washington is no email contributor to building up a postal deficit. If the new letter tax were made to apply to congressional mailings, it would help the government finan cially In two ways. It would bring in revenue direct ly from all necessary congressional correspondence. And it would out to one-half or one-quarter the volume of political propaganda that now clutters up the government printing offices and the mails out of Washington. That would be a tax that would please most of us! Woman Progresses Fast ' Smoke compartments for women are to be provided on the Canadian Pacific. Providence Journal. BUSINESS IS GOOD THANK YOU LY Nicholas oil Company Vacation IMusic Ukuleles, Guitars Banjos and Mandolins SCORES of styles from which tb select. Every youngster from 8 to 88 enjoys string music. Uku leles are now played the "Amer ican" way, which is far superior to the original strumming. Ask for a demonstration. Visitors are always welcome. 1513 Douglas Street The Art and Music Store , M "How Much Do I Owe You?" He Asked D D n u High Cost of Armaments. Uncle Sam ought to " know th high cost of armaments; he financed Europe's. Washington Post LIGHT VERSE. At night the si lampa light our (tract, Electrlo bulb our homea; The ga la blll.d in cubic feat, Electrlo tight la obnu. But on illumination atlll I brighter far, and wetr; It Is not figured In a bill. Nor meaeured by a meter. Mora bright than light that money buy, More pleasing to dtacernor. The ahlnlng lamp of Helen'a eye. Thoa lovely double burner I Chrlatopher Morley. In "Sang for a Little Home." la tb Bookman. "Nothing," replied the Trust Officer, folding the Insurance Trust Agreement. "And we will keep this in our Vaults for you without charge. Our fees do not be gin until we start to handle your insurance money in accordance with this Agree ment." He went away well satis fied. He had made sure that his wife would get a life in come from his insurance money. And the children were to get the principal sum at her death. He was comparatively young too. But he believed in provid ing for possibilities. Do you? Come in. PSJ D D D D D IMttb taf?0 Sritst (Compang D Affiliated With ehv Hnitru &laUfl NatUmal fttttlt 1612 Farnam Street v Omaha, Nebraska