- . ... ... I . 6 Hit iiKK: OMAHA, TUESDAY, SEPTKilHEU 13. 1921. TheOmahaBee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY ' 7111 BCS fl'BUSHWa COM FAN Y MUQN B. ITDIKE, ftiblLlitf MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED TRESS Tk Smwim FttM. f Mirk TM M e mtmbf. It M CfMIMO to II M Wmui WIU4 UK H". u ! IM tactl am rvMuM km. Ail ul mwSUmina W TM OfMk total imb ot IU laOit urw ff CUta MMIM, IM tWlglim IVMNflV 9m ttRUWUM tUWlb REE TELEPHONES rum una tukHM AT Untie 1000 fee Nlskt Cilt Afur 1 P. M. Hllarlsl XXxitUMt .... ATlMU ItU M Mil orricES op the bee CtuwU Rluffi if Soou M. I c t 40;i loam tUj Out-tMTtwa Olftett till wruuf BM I ru ri t; iw . www Jlr. Ford's Railway Miracle , Success With D., T. t I. Dut to Lowtr Tonnage, and Higher Rate. (Prom th Railway Age.) Tlie rt!rol miracle' which Henry Ford U uppof d to have wrought by converting tli De troit, Toledo & Ironton from a delicit incurring property to a profit earning railroad in a few month hai been due, not to any change in the method of operation but primarily to an increase in the average freight rate per ton per mile. It it pointed out thia l due in turn to, first, "a great change in the character of the traftic handled,' I of the L'nlveralty of Iowa II ilv too much runUal detail and, second, "the fact that the Detroit. Toledo 'or reader, in consequence The Bee?$ Platform 1. New UaSea Passtager Statiea. 2. Continued improvement of the Na braaka Highway, iacludlag tba pava maat of Mala Thoroughfares Uadiag into Omaha with Brick Surface. 3. A abort, low-ret Waterway from tba Cora Bait to tba Atlaatie Oceaa, 4. Homo Rule Charter for Omaha, witb City Manager form of Coreramoat. i Who Killed Virginia Rappe? .' It is too soon to aend "Fatty" Arbuckle to ! (lie gallows, although he stands in parlous fix ; as a result of his misconduct. When the ma- " chinery of the law has ground out all the facts, then will be known the extent to which the film 1 star is culpable. Pending that issue, we may give some consideration to the wider responsi bility for the tragedy. ' If scandal has marked the growth of the niov- .ing picture industry, a share of the blame greater ' than the half must be borne by the people. Long ago the managers discovered that a hint of the risque served to bring patrons in shoals; if the . salacious could be touched upon, then the success of the venture was assured. The mainspring of the screen drama has been sex against sex. Flay after play has been presented, the argument of which is that the heroine could descend to the lowest depth of degradation and then by a mar riage with a noble youth restore herself to social : if not to physical purity. Other plays have shown how a wayward boy could violate all the laws of God and man, and then through the sav ing grace of a girl's pure love be lifted to a place by her side. Every sentiment of humanity has been outraged, no revolting detail of bestiality has been spared, and the American people have gazed and paid for gazing at scenes that should shock, but seemingly have not. Is it any wonder that the Pickfords, the Fair bankses, the Chaplins, the Arbuckles, feel they have a right, to do what they please, when they please, and how they please? They are commis sioned by the American people, who have ignored or laughed at their immorality, and lavished on them such wealth as ought to be a source of na tional shame. Motion pictures may be clean; most of them are; in fact, the greatest of them are .irreproach- . able from a point of morals. Actors can live cleanly; thousands of them do. Talent does not require smut as a stepping stone to success. However, patient merit does not always imbibe, courage from the spectacle of the unworthy wor shiped by the multitude, It is not caring what "Fatty" Arbuckle does, so long as be is funny in the film; what the pri vate life of any of them is, so long as they are entertaining or amusing in public, which has en couraged them to go ahead as they have. If Arbuckle had thought his "party" at the San Francisco hotel would have brought a reduction in his income, he would not now be in a felon's cell, accused of murdering a girl who, engaged , in the orgy with him. He knew the American public would pay to see his pictures no matter what else he did,7TM so indulged himself after his whim. The people can not divest themselves of at least moral responsibility for "Fatty" Ar buckle and Virginia Rappe. " , .,' ! the prospect for fall busiueu is most encouraging, and whatever flit may be true, Nebraska will be Ptithrr cold nor hungry during the winter that is now not so very far away. So it is well to join with the merry monarch in a few days of genuine ret and pleasure before taking up the last active preparations for the long winter's campaign, Go to the races thia week, and attend the carnival next week, and you II feel better ill winter long. Should Railroads Be Self-Supporting? Railroad earning for last July amounted to almost $70,000,000, which is to be compared with a deficit of almost $12,000,000 in the same month of 1920. By economical management, reduction of wages and enforcement of high rates the net operating income hat been brought up to 4J per cent of the valuation, still somewhat short of the yi per cent profit which the Interstate Commerce commission was instructed to assure by the transportation act of 1930. The movement for a general reduction ip freight charges will find no encouragement in these figures. Through a policy of cutting tariffs on certain commodities, as on live stock in the west, the transportation interesti evidently are counting on decreasing the pressure on them without making any general concessions. The railroad problem is far from solved, and restoration of the transportation business to a profit making basis quite conceivably would only be at the expense of the directly productive in dustries.. To quote from a financial publication of high standing, "It is doubtful whether we are not penny wise and pound foolish in insisting that our railroads shall be self supporting." This expert goes on to say th.it he is disposed to be lieve that if costs of transportation were cut in half, and if the people as a whole were to pay, 1-88 cents, 88 per cent greater than in September, I school standing." i to the rail- uctoDcr, novemner ana i-iecemoer, iv-'u. ane Girls tnuture i How to Keep Well Br DR. W. A. EVANS utM li fcyfiMA eaaltetlee) 4 pcevealtoa ef 41mm, (ukalllW la Dr. ky miui at Ika Im iM Im 4 pcrMMlly, ukiwl ta rar tMiMiiM. kwa a iiimfi 4 a4aMM4 vlf it mmm4 Dr. iil mi auka a 4tMia aar praMrlba tar laaivMual Iiiwhi, ASarM Uiu la r al Ika Bm. Copyright. JIM. by Dr. W. A. tii. LEARNING PROM CHILDREN. The I'hyaieal Orowth of Children From Birth to Maturity" U the title of a atudy made by Dr. B. T. Uatdwln & Ironton ha been able to use the large volume ' W,J 10 '" b"1 c',0.1 of traAie originated by the Ford interest, to se- wfi '.'t fX It jS.t ihl cure larger division, of the through rate, on all fiJI'thS 'w.n'tTn W quVS trains naiiuitu parity cvrr hi lines aim parujr ntm dlSCUMl. I WUD I COUIO QUOlt over other lines. fw thousand word of conclusion "During- the four mouth. September to De- and opinions from thia atudy, but 1 eember. 19J0. Inclusive, after the erttent railu-iv must confine myself to a few hun- rates were fixed." .ay. the Railway Age. "Ine mn .,.,., , v.. - D.. T. L I. handled an average of 9.24o.OOO ton- L!fa:rirvU1eL,rVUWo;ri-.,S mile in revenue freight per month and hadl... h. u. ,, freight earning, averaging 49J,8O0 a month. In chronuluglcal av. In oihur word. the month, of April. May and June, 19J1. the I how mature la the child rather than road handled an averaae freiaht business of 37.-1 how old la he or how well developed 09J.000 ton-miles a month and earned from it an ' Don,i ,r mown ,m - r i i . i s . I m. average or momn. in otucr won ., j h ,,., t , , , ,nJ its average freight business in these three months gam ,',,,, b a,m:d on he bust was almost 25 per cent less than In the last four of the child's ace and the use seleot- months of 19J0, while its average monthly freight ed should be the physlnioatcal. Thia earnings were over 40 per cent greater. the child naturally doi-a and the "This larae increase n freiaht earninas. in pareni ana ieacner anoum muir spite of a big decline in the total freight handled, could have been due to only one cause, and that was an increase iu the average rate. And there was a very extraordinary increase in it. average rate per ton per mile a thing to which public attention never has been called before. In the last four months of 19J0 its average rate was m surr iuii y?l ,5 4,re .vtup ra g ycr ,h- .l,.,.,,.,, H.tflnnmnt of tha Inn nr mil in Inn fu mA liana 1070 ..in I " ------ -;-" - r - . , id - . boy or gin as well a tne age ana tuea from the child's natural ten dvncles. It should be the- baala of InipnlHl exercise and work, likewise of school work. No child should be promoted or demoted with -nit taking Into consideration hi or ht-r phyal- ologlcal age. Daldwln nays: "Child lahor leam- lution should take Into consideration ' Cuba's Financial Muddle. " A peppery leader of the Cuban liberal party publicly complains that the delegation recently sent from Havana to Washington was coldly re ceived. He seems indignant that the $30,000,000 sought by the callers was not forked over forthwith,- and resents our government suggesting methods whereby the wreck in Cuba may be salvaged. He, and the American propagandists on behalf of Cuba as well, forg that the finan cial stress which has overtaken the islanders is the direct result of an effort made deliberately . to hold up the world on sugar. When Americans were paying 25 to 30 cents a pound for refined "sugar and going on short rations at that, the Cuban sugar planters were riding the world with whip and spur. Havana banks loaned money on sugar that it might, be withheld from market in order to maintain the price. No matter what brought about the collapse, it came, and the greedy, avaricious speculators were caught in the crash. Cuba's finances are in precarious condi tion, yet that entails no obligation against us to loan money that will be needed to restore the island government to health. General Crowder . lias once more set aright the peculiar politics of the natives, and in the ordinary course of busi ness the situation down there will be righted, but it does appear unreasonable to ask Americans to liquidate a debt that grows out of the effort of the sugar pirates to raid the homes of the United States. ' . ' . . 1 Al-Sar-Ben's Curtain Raiser.' " r Ak-Sar-Ben will, in the parlance of the track, get away to a flying start this week. The grand old monarch, about the only one of his kind now alive, will come to the barrier with breast heav ing and nostrils dilated, eager to make the plunge into the fall festivities. For a curtain-raiser to the "big show," a program of mixed races is to be set before the king this week, in which horse, man, airship, automobile and perhaps other mov- , ing things will compete. It is about as diversi fied as such a program possibly could be, and ex hibits fairly the temper of the king and his court Action ta what they crave, and that is what has been provided out at the exhibition grounds. From Tuesday to Saturday it will be a swiftly moving procession of events, and the blood, that will not stir in response thereto is sluggish in deed. Xext week the main celebration will be ushered in, but the proceedings of the Current week will be something more than an appetizer. This is a year for celebration. Crops are good, through taxation, the resulting loss roads, the gain in our aggregate national wealth would far exceed the additional revenue which the government would have to provide, by that taxation, iu order to make good the loss to the railroads. This remarkable idea is best explained by reference to the fact that the item of freight al ways appears whether the product has been shipped or not. Omaha, for example, is unable to buy sugar any cheaper for the fact that it is produced in quantities in the beet fields of west ern Nebraska.' The cost of bringing in sugar from the more distant source of larger supplies governs in this as in other instances. Denver, with immense sugar refineries only 18 miles away, pays a price for their product based on what the freight would be if it were shipped from San Francisco. Steel made in Gary, Ind., and sold in Chicago, has included in its price an amount equal to the cost of shipping from the basic point of Pittsburgh to Chicago. Cement, wheat, flour and many other items fare in the same way. . This is not the fault of the railroads, and the fictitious freight charges are not collected by them. But it is plain to see that the lower freight rates are made, the lower prices will be, not only on articles shipped into a community, but on those which have never been on a train, but are sold where produced. The actual saving made by reducing freight charges, then, would be greatly in excess of the bare amount saved on products actually shipped. This was what must have been in the mind of the financial writer when he expressed his misgiving' over the effort to put the railroads on a self-supporting basis. A proper readjustment of the business of buy ing and selling that will take into consideration the actual facts, and not a supposition, an unnat ural state of affairs, will also do something to relieve the situation.. If, for. example, Omaha could buy things produced in Omaha without having to pay freight charges the railroads never collect, wc might be better able to meet the tariffs actually levied; average rate of all the railways in the country is only l..'J cents. more rapidly than boy. Therefore they should pro- areas through Erade faster than boya. should have playa of a different kind, and be allowed o work earlier. Keliaiou awakening occur in children 12 to 16 yeara of age and In girm earner than boya. Given the measurements of a child 6 years old, and the tabic of rate of growth found In this atudy, one can prophesy with a considerable measure at 12 year of as. Given the measurements at 10 years of age, those at 16 can be likewise accurate ly prophesied. This information is of more importance than the satis fying of idle curiosity. It Is of value in determining policies of vocational Guidance, school training, social fluenco of racial stock, of city and country life, of tonsils, adenoids, and nutrition, and or various diseases on the rate of growth are Illuminating. For Instance, he found that for come reason tonsil and adenoid trou ble Influenced early growth material ly. While breast feeding of babies caused them to grow rapidly at the start, the bottle-fed babies had caught up In weight and height by Bryan at Baltimore Playing With Phrases. The inconsolables; who have not been able to see anything good in the Harding plan, arc juggling words again iu a vain attempt to cast suspicion on the coming conference at Washing ton. Senator Hitchcock expresses regret that the president did not Select as delegates men who are more thoroughly committed to disarmament. This is directed at the statement by Secretary Hughes that -the conference will waste no time in discussing the - impossible. Limitation of armament will be considered, a reasonable effort to establish by agreement a condition of affairs that will end the heavy expense of maintaining huge armies and navies.- We may conjecture who it was Senator Hitchcock , had in mind, Borah, Johnson, LaFollette, for example; these were lately pilloried in the senator's paper by a cartoon representing them as skulking while the. war was on but now rapturously attacking the nation with whom we were associated iu the prosecution of the war. Such is, the consistency of the opposition to the president's program. They play with phrases, like the witches with Macbeth, keeping the w'ord of promise to the ear and breaking it to, the hope. America's destiny is plain enough, but it9 fulfillment requires that she stand upright, holding firm to her leadership; and by setting an example of self-respect teach other nations to do the same. An end to war is sought by all, and the people of the United States are willing to point the way, combining the ideal with the practical to the end that happiness and not disappointment will be the result. . "To what was this remarkable increase in the average rate per ton per mile due? Chiefly to two things: First, to a great change in the char acter of the traffic handled. Mr. Ford began giv ing Ins railway practically all of his freight busi ness; and the freight handled directly and indi rectly for his motor works consists largely of degree of . accuracy the else and relatively high grade commodities which pay a I weight, length of trunk, and chest rate much higher than the average. Meantime, the amount of coal handled by the railroad great ly decreased. Coal being a bulky and cheap commodity, it pays a rate much smaller than the average. This change in the character of the traffic alone would have caused a large increase in the railway s average rate. Second v. t lie D t & I. has heen ahle to use activities, ana penoas or maturation the larcre vn1m nf raffir inVlnatet k he Fr,l Baldwin's observation on the ln- intcrests to secure larger divisions of the through rates on all traffic hauled partly over its line and partly over other raliways, and the great bulk ofahe D., T. & I.s business consists of this through traffic. Both the change in the character of. the traltic and the larger divisions of the through rates obtained by the D., T. & I. have tended to increase its average rate per ton per mile and the only really great change which had been made on the D., T. & I. uo to July 1 was iu the conditions which determined its average I the end of the first year provided rate per ton per mile. "But how about the reduction of 20 per cent in its local rates and the advance in the wages of its employes which have been so widely ad vertised? Neither of these went into effect until July 1 or later, and therefore neither of them had anything whatever to do with the increases in the railway's net earnings which have been so widely exploited. We shall have to get later data than are now available before anybody can say what is the effect of these changes in im port ant policies. "It may be said, however, that Mr. Ford is so completely convinced of the desirability of a Ken eral reduction in rates that he has proposed that a reduction of A) per cent be made m the rates of all railroads. It is not our purpose to impugn Mr. Ford's motives, but there are certain impor tant facts about this proposed reduction in rates which are pertinent. The freight earnings of the J should say the Floridian was not a Detroit, Toledo & Ironton are now running at candidate before that convention. the rate of approximately $8,000,000 a year, I herefore, other things remaining equal, a reduc tion of 20 per cent in them would reduce the road s earnings by about $1,600,000 a year. On the other hand, the freight bills paid by the Ford industries to all the railways amount to from at least $15,000,000 to $20,000,000 a year. There fore, a reduction of 20' per cent in freight rates by all the railways would reduce the freight bills of the tord Motor company by $3,000,000 to $4,000,000 a year. In, other words, Mr. Ford as a shipper would be sure to gam millions of dol lars more' by a reduction in rates than he could possibly lose as a railroad owner. Most of the other railways of the country are not fntimately connected with large manufacturing concerns they had been free from sevr or protracted llin. May Vary Itaby'M Did. Mm. T. C. 8. write; "I am nuraina- my 6-month-old pftby and will nurse iter tlirouan tne m weather if possible. tth welaha pounda, nvr haa ndd a physio or enema, and ha two nnd thre good bowel movement a nay. "l. will von kindly ten ma u should a-lve her any additional food or fruit Juice, etc., until 1 wean liar? "2. After weaning her. I good fresh milk eurnVient food? '1. And fur how lone? "4. Hliould it be diluted and, If so, how much? "5. la every three hour too often to nurse her? "6. What cause a strong ammonia dor In the urine?" 1. Stlrk rather closely to breast milk and water during the hot weather. Orange Juice In moderate nuantltv ia all riant. 2. No.' Give fruit Juli'. cereal hard bread, and a little later on oup and muHhect vegetable. 1. A rhlld enn b taking milk cereal, hard bread, soups, and mashed vegetable at 8 month in cool weather. 4. Immediately after weaning use a mixture of 1 part milk to 2 parts water. Increase the atrenrtn to parts milk to 1 of water at end of month. n. Feed her at four-hour intervals, 6. Too much food. How to Detect Fever. Worried Mother writes: "1. Can a person have fever while perspir ina? . !. Can a thermomtcrer Miow an elevation of temperature when fever 1 not present? "a. Can a porson get well of t, without Hbtylng n bed? Thnt person in in fairly good condition, doea not rough much, and Just spltn up a little in the morning. Sleeps by an open window. " It E PLY. 1. Ye. Although free perspiration is generally accompanied by a fall of temperature to normal or there' uboutn, It is not always so. 2. Ye in a certain eenso. Tn som cases of hysteria the body tempera ture rises. On a hot wetiday it may triso also. But these are exceptions, Ninety-nine times out of J 00 when the clinical thermometer show that a person's temperature is up he has a genuine fever. 3. Yes. Whether it is brst for consumptive to stay In bid all the time or not Is a point for tne physi cian to decide. Stewart says that the most successful physicians treating consumptives are those who know best when to advise rest in bed and when to advise exercise and work, As a rule consumptives who run to fever should stay in bed. (From the Baltimore American.) The controversy concerning Wil liam J. Bryan's intentions at the na tional democratic convention of 1912 has never been settled to universal satisfaction, but the account of Mr. William F. McCombs concerning the Bryan strategy will liava a large share of weight. Mr. McCombs' article in last Sunday's American ap pears to shed a lot of ligut on the charge that the Peerless One was actuated by self-interest In the nar rowest sense of the word, first, last and all the time at Baltimore- The Mebrasna n pei-naps we Dupes of the Soviet He Was ostensibly interested only In the nomination of a candidate who could be counted on to uphold and champion the so-called proeressiv ideals native to the Bryan intellect Mr, Bryan, McCombs says, advised the' equal partition of certain dele gations between Wilson and Clark and then when an evident impasse in the nomination struggle had ar rived he went to McCombs and said "You vcan't name Wilson; nominate me," or words to that inspiring effect Clark, if McCombs idea is correct, was out of the running. Bryan had acomplisfied that much-by his own maneuvering. The next thing was to effect the rout of Wilson. But Wllann warn inn fnrtimntfl frnm thA which would save millions of dollars annually by I Bryan standpoint, in the character a reduction of their freight bills. , "The Railway Age had its doubts as to whether even Mr. Jbord could strike the stone of railroad operation and make floods of. profits immediately burst forth, f He has demonstrated in the manufacturing business that in certain ways he is one of the greatest genuises of the age. His success in the automobile bustness has been such as to indicate that if there is any man in any Other line of business m this country who could atep into the railroad business and soon gam extraordinary results, it is Henry Ford. We were skeptical, however, as to whether it was possible within the short time he had owned the D., T. & I. for even Mr. Ford to work such a miracle as was attributed to him. "The results, of an investigation made upon of his support and he could not be denounced a a tool or tne inter ests." Therefore, he must be per suaded or bulldozed into withdraw ing. But for the character of the man at the head of the Wilson force Mr Bryan probably would have succeed ed in his purpose. But McCombs was In the fight to the death and he rad the nerve to stick. He fought on and he put Wilson over and so went into the wastebaaket Bryan'a last chance for the presidency. Therefore, to McCombs, a man of no particular national consequence before he hooked up with the Wilson cause and of no particular conse- ouence after Wilson was actually elected, the country owes not unlike ly a vital change in the whole na the ground and of a study of the official rigures I tional history at the moment when regarding the operation of the D., T. & L show that under the Ford management, the financial results of the Detroit, Toledo & Ironton have been very greatly improved. They also show that no miracle has been worked. The results obtained thus far have been due almost entirely to the circumstance that .the ownership of the the very life of the nation may have run upon the. character of the man In the presidency. If Bryan had been nominated in 1912 he certainly would have been elected. The chances are he would have been re-elected in 1916, because the thing that elected Wilson in 1916 Detroit, Toledo & Ironton has been acquired by I was his peace talk. Mr. Bryan not South Dakota is thought of as almost wholly an agricultural state, and yet only 117,246 of its citizens are engaged in farming; this is S4.1 per cent. -There are 22,626 engaged in trade, 26,331 in manufacturing, 13,796 in the professions, 12,823 in transportation-and only 1,435 in mining. only could have been counted on to talk peace, but he could have been counted on to stay at peace regard less of the desperate menace of an on-rushing Germany. To carry the possibility still fur ther If an unknown, a man named McCombs, had not been possessed of, we might say, an obsession to bring about the election of a certain indi vidual to the presidency, and a cer tain .other individual, Bryan, had Still Cuba is not to blame for wanting Uncle Sam to pay her bills; she has had plenty of en couragement from others no more entitled to help. Leon Bourgeoise also regrets that the United States did not join the League of Nations, but he may yet come to understand why we did not. A gain of $10,000,000 in Omaha bank deposits looks awfully good, however small one own share may be. one of the largest manufacturers in the country, and that Mr. Ford has used his position as a very large shipper to do things on the D T. & 1 which neither he nor anybody else could have done without being such a large shipper, lhe Detroit, Toledo & Ironton now has much the same relationship to the Ford Motor Car com pany that the Duluth & Iron Range, the Duluth, Missabe & Northern and the Lessemcr & Lake Erie have to the United States Steel corporation. These steel corporation railways have been for ecured the prlzei Germany might to- many years among me most prosperous railways i day be overriding the world, with in America. They have been very well man- the allies and ourselves in the dust aged, but their prosperity has been largely due at its feet. Of course, the possibil- to the fact that they have been owned by an in- not have worked out- rtlistr a rnnrern ivhirh i-nntrnls 9 vact bmnnnt Af "" " -wj,, .""s".1" - l rtertlnacltv: nnd Clark was not a Meantime, no man wno is caoanie ot stuav- i w,rto u -ii v,i r, ,n wo ing tne tacts aDOut tne management and opera- on due provocation or if the danger tion of a railroad and drawing rational concju- m staying out became obvious. ion from them will aav that Mr. Fnrd has a Wilson himself went in far too yet worked a miracle on the Detroit; Toledo & 'te- .?ut h d,,dt go in before it was I aitAtvat hAr TtA It ra V-Z 1 1 r -ttYiin nova Ironton." altogether too late. But Bryan never would have gone In. W e can bank on that. Just as soort as this land is properly stand ardized we may sound "taps" for democracy. The grand jury may let a few wild cats out of the bag before It is done. . What' Business Between Friend? . ' French purchasers of supplies left behind by the. American army were willing to send them over and undersell the United States markets. There are impulsive moments in every life when suiting fatally have been due to tne it s d.tt.cuM : to allow friendship to interfere with igh mark! InThat sUte for Intoxicated Motorists. In Massachusetts thi year, to Au gust 1. 262 automobile accidents re, (From the: Xew oYrk Times.) Ludwig C. A. K. Martens. "Am bassador" of the RussHn soviet government, testifying at Washing ton before the senate subcommittee investigatine Russian - propaganda on January 30, 1920, filed a list of firms in the United States with which, he said, he had contracts to supply goods to Russia as soon as the restoration of direct " relation between the two countries made shipments possible. One -of these contracts -was with the Lehigh Mar china company of Pennsylvania for 14,500,000 worth or printing ma chinery. On the same day he tes. tided that "all tha money he got came out of the . treasury of the soviet republic." . Mr. Emerson P. Jennings of that' company is also president of the American comraer clal Association to Promote Trade With Russia. The members of that association are described as "hard- headed business men." That is a-highly ironical descrlp tlon so far as their dealings with the promissory - Mr. Martens are con ,cerned. They were so eager to do Dusiness wun iiussia- mat mey neg lected to find out what was a matter of notorious public record, spread abroad in all the newspapers. There was little to sell and litt.'e to buy anything with in .Russia. Trans portation was broken down; even in ternal distribution of goods wa al most impossible. Martens was : soviet propagandist. He was fiat tertng the hard-headed business men with prospects of a mostly imaginary, trade for the sake or inducing them to bring the United States to recog nize the soviet government. Every body not extraordinarily credulous and pining to be gulled knew that that government "repudiates," ' as Secretary Colby said, "every prin ciple of harmonious and trustful re lations, whether of nations or indi viduals, and is based upon negation of honor and good faith and every usage and convention underlying the structure of international law." Both ' that government and its emissary Martens can have deceived, it would seem, nobody who read the newspapers. Yet the hard-headed business men were easily bitten. They put up the money which Mr. Martens used for propaganda pur poses. Many of them spent a lot of time and money in Russia. They got contracts. They never could get any -money. The soviet magnates are "plain crooks," says Mr. Jen nings. He might have found that out a great deal more cheaply. Soon after he left this country for its good, Martens cheerfully stated that the American contracts had been canceled. Recognition of their gov ernment, a better chance to break , down other governments, is what the; soviet masters have been seeking. The so bepuffed trade is always small potatoes. The long nlscussed trade agreement which Mr. Lloyd George and Mr. Krassin negotiated has brought no golden results. Not much but flax, which was brought in indirectly before the agreement, has been imported into England under it. Our own trade with Soviet Russia has greatly shrunken since 1919 and 1920. For the first, six month of 1921 it amounted to some f IS. 000. 000. of which less than S700.000 was imports. .,... Commercial, sentimental or politl cal, the delusion about Soviet Rus sia is of the strangest. Before the eyes of all th -world a great nation has been driven into utter disaster. Yet even now the men that have driven it have their apologist and their admirers in the United States; and not among their fellow com munists and destructlonists alone, So easy is It to divorce opinion from unpleasant facts. : One Ray of Cheer. There are so few pleasant features ot the It looks as if the "movies" were finally to be I new tax bill before congress that it. were un- I . r , . i . . r c casualties of this classification; 184 deaths were reported during' the same period a year ago. Providence Journal. cleaned up. It pays in the end to be decent. grateful not to take notice of some of thera. One especially is the fact that Representative Claude Kitchen is writing the minority reports on it this time. Kansas City Star. -. - Paddle Our Own Canoe. We have simply got to quit expect ing miracles from the government and paddle our own canoe.- New York Times, ' ' ' Four Projects Suffer Setback Council Kcjecti Committee Report on Street Improvement. Reports of special committee on the following property improvement projects were rejected yesterday by the city council committee of the whole: Widening of Twenty-fourth street from 1'aciiie to Cuming. Widening of Twentieth street, Leavenwrth to Dodge. Opening of Twity.econd street, Howard to Dodge. Widening of Harney street, Twenty-fourth to Twenty-sixth. It is undcrtood rejection of he committee reports will be equivalent to indefinite postponement. Member' of the council are inclined to favor the Htrnev and Douglas street pro jects, the former only between Twen- tsrth and Twenty-fourth tre:t. "I favor all of these improvements and feel confident that they will ulti mately be accomplished," said Mayor Dahlman when voting againM Twtn- ty-fourtli street widening. The city council, in regular e mo n, will announce its policy on these subjects at an early date. 'Quickserve Resumes After Slipping a Cog After rough sailing along channel of credit men and poor bu.tiin.-n, thi good cafeteria "Quickserve" is again on its way, full steam ahead, iu charge of Mrs. Lillic E. Baker, for 11 years in charge of the Y. M. C. A. cafeteria. When Harry Wilcox, the hand some proprietor of the place, left Omaha on the Elks special for Los Angeles last July, the "Ouickserve" was placed in charge of Harry's three sisters-in-law. Florence, Helen and Estclle Siedel. Miss Mary Brewer, pianist, who helped finance the business to the tunc of $400, played piano while the business went on its downward path. Finally the place was closed for lack of credit. With Mrs. Baker at the helm, the good cafeteria ''Quickserve" is again sailing a merry path of popularity. One of the familiar faces behind t;ic counter is Mrs. Clara Cross, who in sists the former manager double- crossed her. Acre Farm Gives Oinahai. Wealth' Hrvtmic From t'ui oJ Honey HriiiK Prosperity After 20 Year. Krvrnue from eugi and toitey on a one-acre "farm" on the oiiukim pf Omaha, cultivated for JO rar, ha brought proP"y Anthony Johnson. Hit uccci i the out yrowtli of an experiment on a small city lot when hi world!." we iuu numbered M stands k1 btt. Mr. Johnson says he Iwi wrncd the quettiuit of the minimum amount t i land uKn which a farmer can live nnd rear a family and at the same time maintain in average standard t.f living. Eronomiula and expert argue from 5 to 40 acres. Mr John ton sas. Hi own opinion i jut one. Whnt he started. Mr. JoIiiHtm knew little of farming an! Ics of the culture of thicken or bees. "Because of this. 1 passed through the period of lice dicar :nd olhrr devastation during my experi ments." he aid. "Finally 1 was tuccetkful and after 10 years added chicken to my Ijrm product. Painstaking experiments gained from bee culture aided in the de velopment of my chicken, although he two specimens are wildy ep trated in their raiing." Knowledge, system and f existent tenacity for exactness in all the de tails of care Mr. Johnson regards is the cornerstone of his inrcess on a single acre. Payment to Depositor! In Pioneer State Starts Paying off of about 250 depositors of the defunct l'ioneer State bank started yesterday at the State Bank of Omaha. A. L. Schant, rccelwr for the Pioneer State bank, said there was a total of about $40,000 jtt time certili catcs, cashier's checks, individual and hank accounts to be paid. i 1 Committeemen to Meet. All committee members of" the Chamber of Commerce will meet at a dinner to be given at the Chamber of Commerce this evening at 0 o'clock. Plans for the coming year will be discussed. The meet ing will continue not more than two hours, according to J. David Lar son, commissioner. Three Omaha Hotels of Merit nrtXT A "KIT SIXTEENTH David B. Youa. Mnr 4V HARNEY Ratal S1.00 to t3JD9 SANFORD Jao. r. Eg tn. Manotcr HitMlt.SOtoU.SO OT7VTCU AVT7 SIXTEENTH Jot. II. Knoaa. Mnoer S V FARNAM Ku 11.90 to 13.00 All Fireproof Centrally Located on Direct Cat Line from Depots Our reputation of twenty year is back of the hotel. Guest may (top at any one of them with the assurance of receiving honest value and courteous treatment Conant Hotel Company, Operators "'a Keep It Mnzzlcd. In spite of the mild and benevolent qualities attributed to the Ku Klux Klan there is no escaping an Im pression that it becomes ugly when it is vexed AVashlngton Star. Exit Ice Man Enter Coal Man. When the summer ice man 1b fairly good to us we sometimes have enough left to jingle when the coal man calls. Atlanta Constitution. zora If you haven't smoked one lately you've mis sed something mighty good you'll never re alize how good until you try it. ROTHENBERG & SCHLOSS CIGAR CO., DISTRIBUTORS C .mr Phone DOuglaa 2793 ftWaattttrOffic OMAHA PRINTING COMPANY Btsr Wl I""; ' " bOOSC UCaVf. OKVICCt A' - A tea.-- Vai