s THE BEE: OMAHA. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 21. 1921 TheOmaha Bee DAILY (MURMNQ) EVENING SUNDA TBI M rOLUHIKO COM r ANT KfUOM 9. CfDJII, futlleUs UUU Or THE ASSOCIATED MttM , fM a ml fmtk it TM M W ' Mianla aamlaS IM M l nhMimim ef eU mm HM ntt$4 la M 4 m DtMii. wetM f M C Ml rvailal laawtaS SW ale millSL TW OMtt hill MM ar M 4tt NM at OM U i Ik raaestiiai stfkamr a eMraiauae Mall. IE mXTMOMI STS? fVS. AT Untie 1000 gl'WUI P rubral .... ITIHM un W IMJ emeu or thk mc MieS Afflsi ITtfe m4 fwWssMB fc! KM M riXik ara I Sai t.4 iM tUt ftta OwM4.TMm T Tar im rm 1 faUM . tfti 9 at &lSf UU tra s: I faM, Wlllki ft") The Bee's Platform I. Nw Union Pi t eager flatten. S. Catiaud ijrwvJat nf th Ne braska Highway, laslodlag th mnt ! Main Tkaraagbfar l4iag iat Oawka wllk a trick Jerfea. 9. A (hart. Uw-raU WeUfwey fresa the Cam Ball la la AUanlla Oaaaa 4. Hama Rala Charter far Onuka, with City Maaegar farm af Gaverasarat, Amending the Esch-Cummins Law, Tba little cxperienca the country hi had with the law under which the railroad were restored to private ownenhlp hit not been euch at to win public confidence is its proviiioni. On behalf of the law, it may be laid that it bai not had a fair trial under norma! condition!. Some thing also may be said for it because of mani- feat disposition in some quarters to discredit the law by failure to observe either its letter or spirit. This is regrettable, because the measure does contain the principle at least on which operation of the railroads by privately-owned corporation! may be successfully carried on, hav fog at all times due regard for public control and regulation. A demand by the governors of certain west ern states that the section of the law permitting the earning of 6 per cent be repealed is to go alongside the demand made by a railroad presi dent that the transportation system be relieved from the intensive regulation to which it is now subjected. Other demands are those from cer tain of the great roads that the labor board be done away with, and from the unions that the board be given plenary power. These requests or objections indicate not only the difficulty pre sented by the general problem, but the diversity of opinion as to how the remedy should be ap plied. The guaranty provision of the law is per missive rather than obligatory. Whenever a road earns above 6 per cent, the excess is im pounded by the government for specified pur poses. Objection lies to this, not became the government has assured the railroads that they will be permitted to earn 6 per cent on the capi tal they employ, but because of the fact that the law will make use of the earning power ot the strong road for -the benefit of the weaker. Be tween Omaha and Chicago, for example, the Burlington, Northwestern, Rock Island, or Mil waukee might be asked to contribute to the relief of the Great Western, should its earnings fall be hind and those of the stronger lines exceed the limit SU per cent is not inordinate return en capita! employed. In the revenue law allowance is made for as much as 9 per cent before the ex ecs profits tax applies. ( . Repeal of the provision will pot hava the ef fect of automatically lowering rates, although it will re-establish a, forgotten principle of busi ness, that of open competition, where every tub stands on Its own bottom." What the country really needs Is the abandonment of the mountain of tangled and incomprehensible schedules, the result of many years of tariff making by inartic ulate nd dislocated bodies, a restoration of the competitive system tinder which the industry developed, with one single governmental agency to control, the, only guaranties being sueh as flow from the application of sound principles to a great, business problem. If the Esch-Cummins law can be modified to achieve this, the work may well be begun Vt once. v Let's Have a Welfare Federation. There should be the fullest "co-operation be tween the charitable organlcations of Omaha. There Is no need for competition in service given or in tha collection of funds, . There should be fewer tag days. Both, these objects can be attained by the formation of a central council of all social serv ice agencies such as is now being considered. The federation movement and the community plan of financing relief work is spreading through the country,' James F. Jackson, secretary of the Cleveland Associated Charities, declares it neither a panacea nor a bogy, but says: 'There Is no question about the ability to get better work done under the community fund plan because the energy that was onca spent in get ting money is now spent on being more helpful to humanity, and the work is dona far more economically because of the joint budgeting done by competent, judicial men." v"- Representatives of twenty-five charities have conferred on a project of this sort for Omaha. Any move in this direction is sure of the back ing of the public. . Long Life in California. Figures will jump through a hoop or lie down and play dead for a statistical. This remark might be applied to the present dispute between light rata experts in Omaha, but for present purposes there is even a clearer example in a boast made by California. . People live fourteen years longer there than in other states, according to this set of figures. The assertion is backed, by statistics showing that while the average age at death in tha United States as a whole is 36 years, the average aga at death is California ia 50. Now, if anyone attempted to point out that tha. le P of those in an old folks' home is longer than that in a children's orphanage, a great laugh would go up, although its truth could cot be denied. California occupies the position of the old folks' home. For years there has been a steady stream of retired farmers and business man and their wives toward the golden west Tfti? U after they hay nude their pile, and the children have left the old home. In many cues they are far beyond tha average death line of California when they arrive there, for in these days few are able or wilting to retire before 60. There they live out their allotted span, and California accepts th credit This is no proof that the Pacific coast climate hsi any life living Qualities that Nebraska lacks. Hereafter tha boasts should be unaccompanied with statistics and left safely In the realm of fancy and opinion; neither to be proved nor disproved. The Blocs in Congress Republican Laadera Movt to Restore Discipline to Majority. In Honor of Will Carleton. Cognoscenti may get comfort from celebrating the 600th anniversary of the death of Dante or was it his birth? but the common folks will find a lot more of interest in following tha pro reeding! at Hudson, Mich., today. It will be the dedication of a memorial to the name of Will Carleton, born in that county seventy-six years ago. To Dante it has been said the world owes a yawn; to Carleton, a wreath. The one wrote an epic that very few read; the other wrote songs everybody knows. "Over the Hills to the Foorhouse" has been sung in every land, for its sentiment, and many a tear has been shed over the sorrowful fate of those who suffered because of the ingratitude of their children. . Its companion and answer is not so well known, because of the perversity of human nature, which takes more comfort from contemplating the sorrow and misery of the one that it possibly can extract from the joy of the other. When this is disposed of, we yet hava Draw up the papers. lawyer, and Make 'em good and atout. For thlflfa at home are crossways, And Bety and J are out. from which many a grin lias been extracted, as the old farmer details the number of vexatious experiences he has had with the partner of his joys and sorrows. In turn this was followed by -How Betsy and I Made Up," And so we eat a-talktn' three-quarters 0' tha night. And opened our hearts to each other until they both grew light: And tha day when I waa winning her away from so many men Was nothtn' to that evenin' I courted her over again. What a lot of trouble would be saved divorce courts if husbands and wives were to remember this example. But Will Carleton's "Farm Bal lads" contain many beautiful pictures of rural life, and deserve alt that has been said in praise of them. That is why the doings at Hudson, Mich., today will interest Americans more than the Dante celebration did. Will Carleton sang for the people. Internationalism of Anarchy. Americans have just been afforded an excel lent example of what is contained in the radical movement for the destruction of existing govern ments. In Massachusetts a pair of Italian anar chists were convicted of a capital crime and ac cordingly sentenced. In Paris the American am bassador received notes of warning that, unless the sentence passed on the murderers In New York were remitted, that he would be attacked, Naturally Mr. Herrick notified the French police, yet, in spite of vigilance, a bomb is Introduced and exploded in his home, fortunately with minor damage only resulting. Anarchy 1s International, a menace every where; No matter under what mask it lurks, it till is the. same, and the soft-headed idealists who mistakenly encourage the loose ideas pre valent as a result of "modernism" give aid and- comfort to those bent on destruction. No less do those "bourbons," who stubbornly persist in opposing all forms of social advance, contribute to the continued life of the red movement Men still mistake liberty for license, and still ding to the foolishness of striving to right their own wrongs, real or fancied, resorting to violence when the law rightly administered affords them ample protection in all their rights. From the mild form of "parlor" bolshevlsm 'to the extreme type that smuggles bombs into the mails, the path is direct, the connection intimate. Anarchy knows no country, bolshevlsm , is bent on destroying all governments save that of its own approval, and Americans should recog nize this. If our institutions are to be preserved, t will be through the vigilance of the people, with the enforcement of law everywhere and against all offenders, no matter what their sta tion. Anarchists must ba taught they can not terrorize a free nation, and others should learn that no man in America rises above the law. Cheering Newi from Chicago. ; While no definite information has come from the conference between the Labor Board and the brotherhood chiefs, the meeting opened with an optimistic feeling prevailing. It seems reason able that where all hands go into a conference hoping to reach a settlement, that some satisfac tory result will issue. Not in a long time has So momentous a gathering assembed in America. On its decision rests the question of further peaceful progress toward resumption of business, or whether that 'course will be'stayed until a question of mastery is decided by force between the managers and the men of the great railroads. his country does not need a strike; even the threat of one has disturbed business to a far greater extent than appears on the surface. A means for peaceable settlement has been provided by law, and it is the fervent hope of all that its operation will bring about agreement that will permit the country to go ahead without the dis turbance incidental to a general railroad strike. News from Chicago is tot definite in any respect, but its tone cheering. t (From tha Philadelphia Ledger.) It was on Tuesday that James Eli Watton, republican senate leader, gave notice that hence forth he would demand a "republican bloc" in the senate. It was about tlms that some one de. minded this, For months now we have been trying to legis late by "blocs." There is a Tscific block" and a "mint blocs" a "manufacturers' bloc" and last, but by no means least, a "farm bloc," that has How to Keep Well r PR. w. a. tvANa QkmIim 1 wnirlp rt e smIm. Uh aaj pmw'i a I Sim to Dr. Inn k Mim m4 TW tae. ui be earner ad MnwUr. swaiect to ,rm tiiMlia, ,lun a KwaaWL iseVims ,! la ee alaead. Dr. tvaaa UI oat 1Mb laaaaai rtto far U4llual liaeaaa. aswiM Mlwe la (are el The a. Ceproakt Hit r Br. W. A. grs. 'A Conference of Equals THE MILK IICXNESS. Itow much Abraham UncMn waa influenced by Ma stepmother k... ik. .... .-.u. .... ........ -i ,... . .11 na wnm wouio na.r reen in snaot X.V r r" ..,,.., ..m on h, mmfl ambition, personality, The republican party in the senate has been h.ih.. hi. .,. Li.. k.J. split into 'Dloes' 'that give their nnt allegiance been different had Nancy Hanks pern mucu oiecuMCU lived, hava Questions. In fact, Nny Hanks haa bean the theme of a great deal of dlacue. elon and few Incident of her Ufa hava escaped dlscuealon. Bom of me jvancy tianka societies attribute her death to the ttrlvatlona and viouuitunes or tne lire of poor pconie in tne west in tne ear v nart of tha laat century. Nancy Hanks aiea not or poverty, privation, and exposure, but of milk ulcknena. a diieaite which we are told killed hundreds of Pioneers in Fnencer county, Indiana. Aor was she the only ancestor of a great man to die or thla niynter! oua disease. Gov. Chase On born. writing In the Iron Master of hla mother, said: "Both of her parents aiea or a mysterious sicunena within two oays wnen my mother waa a babe In arms. This dlnease.woa canea milk slcknewi." Nobody knew anything about It nor now to cure it, nor does anyone up to this time. During a critical A woman 100 years old has received a pro posal of marriage from a man of 103, but she probably will not wish to be an old man's darling. - Harvard is to give instruction in the Chinese language and the Orientals no doubt will have their bit of fun over the Harvard aceent. Governor Kendall wants something done to relieve tha stagnation in the central west. If ha will be patient be may get his wish. Lloyd George yet hopes to be at the Wash ington conference. Fortunately, the national capital may be reached by water. Any loyal Nebrsskan can afford to put in with the home industry movement, as it is for the good of all. Unemployment is diminishing in Omaha, ac cording to the official reports, which is good news to spread. to some "class; and us legislation and their republicanism hava been running a bad last With sixty of the ninety-six senators answer ing to the name of "republican" and listed as such in the Congressional Directory, the republic can program has jammed and stuck fast Ad ministration measures and party pledges have been battered out of shape and kicked around like empty tin cans in an alley. The hoof marks of tha "farm bloc" decorate many sectors of the administration profile. The embattled farmers from the corn belt and the cow country have mutilated the Harding pro gram and made the administration cat much dirt on the tax, tariff, railway and other pet White House measures. What the "farm bloc" hasn't taken care of in the matter of sticking crowbars through the administration wheels and tossing pipe wrenches into the machinery the labor bloc has been glad to look after. Party lines, so far as the republican ranks are concerned, have ceased to exist in many in stances and on divers occasions. When they ral lied the republican majority for an attack in force the old-time republicans fell sprawling in epoch In Ohio and Indiana, hun the barbed-wire entanglements far, far from the dreds of plonoera died from It it first-line trenches. I" more deadly than tha Indians Cal ed uoon to eo "over the ton " the bovs " p" . "ver ana ague were who make up the "blocs" were Inclined to hold a meeting, take a vote and refer the proposition to the locals ot the American federation ot Labor, or to the farm bureaus of Iowa. Kansas and Wisconsin and the Cotton Grawers' union of Louisiana and Oklahoma. Senator Watson has served due notice that all this is to come to an end. Republican senators are to be kept on the job, by night and by day. and an effort is to be made to' redeem party on oak ridges near small streams J t . I I tv 1 . I H.I.U (..... Wa, T . r- I promises anu piauorm picages. iiie majority " y does not exoect to oernetrate anv outrage on the shade. In the spring when the tne minority, to muzzle the democrats or carry out any set program ot brutalities, in mention tng such purposes and determinations the In nana senator warns his tellow partisans: We on the republican side have a majority. The majority must act or government based on the will of the majority will fail and be de stroved. He might have added that a more immediate timea eat at aamiele. a weed which danger lurks in the certainty that unless the re- is green when most other vegeta. publican congress does what it was pledged and tlon la parched, even though the put there to do it may cease to be a republican 0' an4 552.1 I S2S r-..,,,. . Th ,' h ;, M ,h . nA r,t If they eat small does of it the cowa n? .uu t.2. P d 0f may have no symptoms, except loa the party whip lash. . . 0f appetite and weakness. If tbey The republican majority has been turned into eat heavier doaee they develop trero- a minority by the "blocs" it shelters. They have blea and many die. If the dose defied the nreslrfenf ' nrnrl thrir hirlit nx th taken bv the COW IS considerable,' party and snapped their fingers under the noses ;om ?rt,'L01f Ah .d.5 ttSf thl1. X J!ra2 StfE PoplVVho drink- thVmUfc vW viuu(i, mi. un u,jr develop mllK sickness. - -- party lash. miiv .irVnu in tha human cub' Is that lash now to be applied in earnest? Ject may take either of two forma. van tne auuuniiirauon onna dick ine discipline it ui mat has been broken r We shall see what we shall sec Just nothing at alt Becauae thla disease uuu-ed havoo In his family aa it had done in tha families of Abraham Lincoln and Chase Osborn, Dr. A. J. Clay of Hoopeston, 111., decided to end tha mystery. He found that cattle con tracted it from eating a plant EJupaterlum ageratoldes. or white samtole. This plant grows best In rich sol paetures are good cowa will not eat this weed. But in August and Bep tember. when the grass Is parched, the weather is hot and the fliee are bad, the cows like to stay in the shade, In order to brush off the flies thsy like the woods where there is good deal of undergrowtn. stand ing under the treea they will some A Shortsighted Policy ' Announcement that friends of the late Frank lin K. Lane have raised a fund of $100,000 as a memorial to the former secretary of the interior. the income to be paid to the widow during her breath. continued drinking of milk containing a little of the drug. the only symptoms aro prolonged nruliTii. dvsDerjsia. loss oc appe tlte and low blood pressure. This condition may keep ut for months. It the doee is large we symptom are vomiting, unconsciousness, ins- mor of the tongue, great weakness, eonstleation. pains in jegs ana ao- domen, low blood pressure, subnor mal temperature, great thirst, and a peculiar characteristic odor of the veatn irequeuuy w. after a few hours or a lew aaya. Rtwn todav there is a mooeraw amount of milk sickness in human h.inra. it occurs Just about this season of the year and cases have been reported irom many secuon of the country. Milk containing tne nolaon la not altered as iu lasic, odor, or appearance. Needs More Sunlight. n A nr. writes: "Will you tell me what can be done to straighten the legs of a girl baby 18 months old who is bowieggear nvo naiv of ahoea ' for her With ankle supports built up one-eignm men on the outalde. but Improvement la very slow." UTvnnalnir the leKB tO BUllllght, having her live in the open air, and lifetime, is a reminder of the niggardly com' pensation we give our public servants. During the last htteen years of his lift Mr, Lane was engaged in the government service, having oc cupied two positions of great responsibility. As a member and chairman ot the interstate Com merce commission he made an extraordinary record of usefulness, displaying Qualities that would have commanded a large salary as an ex ecutive in private business enterprise. He re ceived numerous offers of positions that must have been exceedingly tempting not only on ao count of the financial considerations, but be cause they presented opportunities to become a leader in tne world ot business. I hese were con sistently refused. As secretary of the interior Mr. Lane was generally regarded by the country as the strongest man in Mr. Wilson s cabinet and it is no secret that had he been born in the United States he would have been the choice Ktvin her wholesome food in suf. n( Vi mn.t mnfrfaM. anil nflnnlal 1tmnf r( flnlant vorfptv nrobablV Will CUre . mvi) ..vi.v , ., v.v i tiviwi, i - - fh rirmni-rstif filrtv . p.nIM,i ,r nWQi.l II tniB iailB mey un w dent. Ahter a distinguished period of service I operation. , She has rickets, at Washington Mr. Lane finally found it im- Showing Job Piker. possible longer to retrain from making pro- j c. H. writes: "I have been vision for the financial future of himself and his ftffucted with scabies for more than dependents and resigned to accept an attractive 20 years. The itching In my skin business position. And then shortly alter oc curred his lamented death. He had had no time In which to secure a competence. Now his friends have found it necessary to provide a fund for his widow. There is much to be said for the British sys tem whereby men who render distinguished service to the state are not only adequately com pensated during their term of office, but are pro vided tor liberally upon their retirement when necessity arises. It is the way both to get and to keep good men in the public service. Pitts burgh Chronicle-Telegraph, No Vision Painting ' Those who are dissatisfied because the presl dent has refused to proclaim the birth of the millennium express a criticism that is hardly cal culated to further the success of the Washington conference. The president would not raise false hopes ent sdlarrhoea, probably because keenly conscious ot the dam age done to the world bv his predecessor's loose promises of a "new era and a new order ot mankind." Mr. Harding has seen the conse quences of dangling promises impossible of ful fillment before the credulous. He beheld with is something terrible," REPLY. im vnn rertain vou have scabies? Scabies can be cured in three days -lttt suionur ointment prouuw iisa It. riehtly. Using the rem edy rightly is more important than oiartlnn of a. remedy when it comes tn un Vint, there must oe na." . ' . 1 iw 1. on hour or scruDDins uu iuv water, soao and a brush. Every mfah must be scrubbed off. Next horo miiKt. be half an hour of rub bins in the ointment. Tne suipnur must get into every Itch warren. And last the bugs in the clothing must be killed by heat. Anyone n.v.n h.i hnr! seven veara itch for 30 years should displaca Job, but why ehmiiri mv intelllrent person in this Anv ot areneral information suffer 20 years xrora a aiseacv " a lew aaya 7 Infection May Bo Cause. TT. It writes: "I am a woman of 87. I am troubled with persist X aiet, ue nai, uw smithhB ODium mixture witnoui success. It is of many weeks' dura.' tton. Can you help im?" REPLY. Onlum mixtures ara worse tnan useless in acute diarrhoea. If you aiet ana 1 a mlllr ..... ....... ... . I IMfcVB VI ITU a. bk, pain tne beekwasn ot aismusion tnat swept over better, you should have a the world when the peoples discovered that their nhvsieian examine you. Chronic idol had leet ot clay. .diarrhoea in an aaun mw w The oresident has no dislike of sentiment and to mrection or tne imeounai fine phrases, but he is practical and knows that giio words and formulas can not transtorm man. kind over night. He shows a wholesome ap preciation of the difficulties which confront the conference, and this knowledge bids him not to raise talse hope. 10 accuse the president ot a lack: of high purpose because he refuses to predict miracles shows blindness to the truth that great things are usually achieved without a preliminary boast of high intent. It is to the credit of the presi dent that he is no millennialist. The present generation has had enough of such. The pro gram-maker who stubbornly upholds the sacred- ness of his plan is a pest. His ecstasies may be sincere, but this does not take away their harm' fulness. New York Tribune. with some parasite. animal or vegetable A sauerkraut cocktail might go well-rafter a good many other drinlu. - Unknown Soldier, a Leader. The cause for which the unknown soldier died was the cause for which the conference is called, to destroy militarism, to release the na tions from the ever increasing burden of arma ment, to institute a reign of law in the world in the place of the rule of force. In thanking God for the valorous lives iriven. let us pray for His aid that we do not sacrifice to our own distrusts or misunderstandings what they died to give us. 1 --djrracuse rest-standard. BnlluM mi fhlpf Jnatloe Tift. The new chief Justice, besides his great legal training, is excepuonmy equipped to render accurate judg ment wherever aueetlons of public policy are Involved. Pittsburgh Gasette-Times. timthm Sunflower Enieratu.' When there ia nothing more to be said, some fool always up and says It Kansas Industrialist. WAIL OF THE HOUSEWIFE. Day In ear eat! Lerd A'miihtr. v-hat a sriadl Vt'.uln' eat year tlnf.rr. Wtarln' eat yoor mine. 3t te make Uvla' ot tn poertit aino. Ear la ear eotl . Atwayr, nthln' dirty <he. Pfelln' old potaton. Fnln allmr f!liea. Tryln" hard to harcer Everybody a wuntr. Iay In dar out! Siavln' tor tba tia tUat kind; Hovtn' toward a coffin Cool and aatln-llned. Xrd A mlghty knows tt'a . .Nathin' bat m nrind! Nan TerraU Rscl la Vt Tork Xlftiea. ( the Wev T .) Nothing could be more uphappy than for the United Htatas to enter the Wsshlngton conference with an air ft complacent superiority. An overbearing or dictatorial spirit on the psrt of our delefstes would be both offensive and futile. Tint the administration will be anxious to avoid anything of the sort may ba taken for granted. The president and Secretary Hughes know th importance of a gentlemanly and canslderate bearing In foreign nio tlatlona. Not all members of eon. rM do, if one ware to Judge by seme of their speeches. A common fotm of sxpreasion is to the effect that thla country oueht to meet the representatives of France and Fng. land as a severe creditor, telling them that If they don't do Instantly all that we want them to do w shall demand immediate payment of their 110.000.000 debt. Thla would really be very like the poature ot tha two American seamen brought into a London colics court charged with disorderly conduct. One of them called out: "It thla darned country paid all it owed it would b bankrupt." But the magiairate Quietly replied: "You should not throw our poverty in our facea. ray fln of nve shillings eacn ana tne country will be so much better on. Even if America is, s tne mem ber from Buncombe would put it. "the richest country on God s green earth." it will never do for It to go swaggering into the conference with purse-proud arrogance. In sober truth, our assumed plethora of wealth is today partly of the nature of an embarraaament Mr. 11 00 ver has Just been underlining the argu ment. Our surplus, being unable to nnd European purchasers, ia a xina of weight on our hands. Financial dlaturbancea across the Atlantle affect us directly. There Is little chance, not merely of getting back the money we loaned to Europe, but of resuming our old business with her, unless some way be found to stabilize foreign currencies and tlx exchange rates. That is a work in which tills country must take a part, and must do it, not in a domineer ing way, but in a co-operative frame or mind, th eame nota is sounqea in Secretary Mellon' appeal to con gress in the matter of funding the foreign debt We are virtually in the same boat with our debtors. It Is for ua to help, not to hector. At Washington the nations will meet as equals. This will be so not alone because tha theory of inter national equity demands It There will be equality because there will ce an equality or need, or anxiety, and, it may be hoped, of purpose. To remove causes of friction, to cut down the burden of military pre paredness and to diminish the prob ability of war these ara objects which all must give of their best on terms of frank and mutual respect. No fear need be felt that our gov ernment will, in Its approaches to th foreign delegates, overstep due modesty and delicacy. But it is Just as well that the too enthusiastic Americana and the newspapers given to tall talk should be asked to leave off all bragging and dictation while the difficult and critical labors of th Washington conference are being undertaken. OX Optimism and Unemployment (From the Waahlnrton Star.) The decision of the United States Steel corporation to spend 10. 000, 000 in extension Of its manufacturing plants and improvements deserves the wholehearted applause of the na.. tlon upon two main grounds. In the first place it marks the first step upon a large scale of what is obvi ously the most practical and certain method or meeting tne unempioy ment crisis. In the second place it connotes a degree of optimism as to tn near ruture or American in' dustry which cannot but have a heartening Influence upon thove to whom the depression which haa overlong gripped the nation haa brought chronic gloom. in assuming the lunction of pio tfeer in reducing unemployment through tne effective means ot fur nishing additional employment the steel corporation Bets an example which all who can would do well to emulate. Under sxtating market conditions it has been found lmpos sible to operate the mills at even 6G per cent of capacity. Many thou sands of employes haye of necessity been laid off. The corporation, seek ing a means of alleviating the re sulting distress, determines to avail Itself of an excellent opportuniiy to extend its existing maximum capac ity. It is true that to enter upon such an undertaking on must be possessed of Strong emergency re serves either in cash or credit, and that the nonpossession of such re serves will preclude many from fol. lowing the example which they will applaud. A " time when the unit cost of production is greater than th unit price of sale could hardly be held to be an advantageous occa sion ror increasing tn number of units produced and sold in a normal business. Yet it is equally tru in many instances that, playing an equal part with depleted reserves, the timidity with which many indus trial establishments today regard th future is contributing extensively to current unemployment The action or the steel corporation should go far toward dissipating that timidity. Here are th responsible heads of a huge industry who, look ing forward into the future to esti mate the probable trend or business, decide that the prospects aro such as U warrant the expenditure of $10,- 000,000 upon plan extension and im provements. Operating at 40 per cent capacity today, they anticipate an industrial revival in the near future which will demand more than joo per cent capacity from their existing plant Deliberately, and with all the confidence borne of an assurance which i ' patent to all forward-looklpg buainess men, they have decided to take advantage on an excellent opportunity to prepare for the flood of ordera they antici pate, it is probabi that nothing oouio more surety nasten tn arrival of the hour for which they are pre paring than would a general emula tion of their sound policy by all who are in a position to do so. American Legion's Big Work. The report at tha convention of th American Legion of New York atat is on that suggests tha grow ing worth of the legion poets to the communities. Bom of their patriotic activities are illustrated by this list In on country visiting mor than 000 foreign-born adults to explain opportunities for instruction in the schools; in another, assisting in maintaining night schools for adults: In another, seeing that every house has a nag; tn another, entertaining 160 newly naturalized citizens; in another, maintaining a flagpole and raising the flag daily, and in many. furnishing leaders for Boy Scout troops. New York Timea One riace a Ford Can't Reach. "You couldn't drag me into thai United States senate, says Henry Ford. An Hennr couldn't push him- eelf in. there seems to be reasonable ground for his statement MUwau-) ke Sentinel, ' (Tha ta airwa la (alannw frroly !!( fMt w. U tfl.ua any auklta mallow. It rn a thai Miara tw rrwaaaaMy arlaf, ane .,.... m uiaiais laai ina or tka rlir a.rawiMtay wk tallar, arllr Sa tvbhralkHi, sat Ikaa tha avHor m.r fcaww aiili wbam 9 la aWlas. The Dm au aaa arrt.na la aaaaraa nrrafit lwa or aplnlaaa eiraaa4 tf rarro. speadaaie M IM uu poll, Ukn The Ik-o'e Mitbod. Omaha, Oct. IS. To tha lMltor Of The O: As one of the inlnla. tars Interested in the "Glpay" Hmlih campaign, I want to prs my deep gratification at the way In which you hsv bn handling and featuring th affair of this move, ment. I ant quite sure that the wide pub licity given to the "Qlpay" and Ills worua win oe neiptui not oniy 10 our own city but ulo all over this state and western Iowa served by your paper. With deep appreciation, I am, cor. dlally jours, TUX'S UAVK. Pralae for Dudley. Omaha, Oct. !. To the Kditor of Th : I'leaae, .Mr. Editor, you appeal to Chief Dempeey to ahollali the clownish performance of Traffic Officer Dudley. WliyT Did be try to get yon to rfapona to ma direc tlon? Did he use a little too much personality? He Is right; about half of the people driving automobllea Should not. He Ignores your enerra, also your smile: his whole heart la In his work. Where is there in all the world another policeman that work as hard aa he does? lie could bluff like the rest, lie Is full of pep and energy. . In one day he utilises more energy .than President Harding does in a year. And he could step in and fill Chief Dernp aey'e poaltlon in 10 minutes. What Chief Dempsey should do would be to put him back on Bixtecntn ana Karnam and double hla salary, and fire about 14 of those truck horses be has directing traffic. I think he could take your position, Mr. Editor, and put a Unite more pep in this small-town paper. Itead im. it you could take nis position for one hour ana direct trafflo without having an accident or not have the tratflo tied up five min utes I would. give you half or my year's salary. The cause of most accidents are not thinking, slow thinking, slow driving, not pointing direction ana irtt-nana turn on tne busy corners. Don't let tho trafne officer guess the way you are going; point; he should know. lit Los An geles it is a law that every suto have an arrow pointing tne airection Now.' Mr. Editor, call Ud Chief Dempsey and tell him you were Just little miffed, and ask him if he can't find a few .more officers that have a little pep that can give the taxpayers at least 60 per on the dol lar. Dudley don't have to work that hard! ha eould aluff like the teat II unit iinush energy to knwW Don't lt Chief Dempaoy knock Mm out. He is a rlaan, lionrau brisht. rrapaftfitl offWr. tlo down to th Auditorium and hrar Gly fcmllh, he will touch that hard at'Ol. On that ean tell a tramo onVr. a. Lfco arisvL.va. . Inipmilitptuw and Vandalism. )n nothing thai w hava don havrr Improvidence and vandallam had a freer hand than in th elnughlr of our gam and the deatrurtion ot our foreata. The 1 11 at to kill bayond the limit of the law and decency ha wiped out our game; th ramp rim end th dtarct butt l bvn sbl allies of tli ax in murdering our forests. Saturday Evening 1'c.t. tp-to-Iaie rrorrhM. Every nation takes lh view thai disarmament, unlike rharltv, almuld not begin at home. f hoe Keteller. LVJiCHOu. oil Company pngl (an ce., tme Gulbransen Player Piano Best Piano ton, easiest te) play by hand, still easier to pedal, wonderful results, Jow est priced. . 1 Three Models Three Styles Three Different Finishes White House Model, $700; Country Seat Model, $600; Suburbaa Model, $459. . , Payment if desired. 1513 Douglas Street I ' - ' ...-.; ljI 1i Tuats a savings account with the Conserva- IE M Ml fi That's a savings account with the Conserva tive. And happiness is that which you have longed for, but always seemed beyond your reach. " fils it not worth wliile to take just a little from your daily comforts and luxuries and store this happiness in a savings account? U The saving will be a pleasure in itself-iyou will be working with an object in view, and each day will bring you a little nearer your goal. . START A HAPPINESS FUND The Conservative Savings & Loan Association 1614 Harney 'j .pJs? 1614 Harney El fAVt W. XUHNS, Pr7,C" A. LYONS, Sae. ifil I rj E, A, BAIRD, Vice Praa. J. H. M'MILLAN, Treat. fD ( I -i a a The ten cent cigar ha Q ff again come into its own HR? La Azora leading the ..i i crowd as usual. Jt ife M ROTHENBERG k 6CHLOSS " ' lfe ft CIGAR CO., DISTRIBUTORS I IS s aj 1 rj