THE EKE: OMAHA. MONDAY. OCTOBER 24, 1921. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MOKMN'O) EVENING SUNDAY tm Btt rrvuuiwa courxax kkuom & uroum rue KUUU OF THX AUOCMTtD DtUl tVt Ssmiiisl festa, mt sue tNMil bmss. t rttei.su omis H tk mm tm tssasMteaet m til e-e aiswaissi eeaaiMt: ka II M imim ensued ui tki spr. tit l. total MM fkHMMtt Ail riMt tf nwliUaelles at t eyaslal elsatkSMt V J Writ TM Cult Bit It mmmmt tt tat Itttil sweats ef Cnf '.tttsaa, It IM"a4 ItMU ta CiMb!tUt tu4 ICS TltZTHONM nit-MSlS-KS. 1S AT Untie 1000 Fee MIsM CUt Aflat 10 P. M. tkttt;tl atleaUs u:i tr IN) orriau or tmc ate llua trn.-.! lfth ui IfinkAM l.SU B.U it 0U , I IHU I ttttik 111 0-ef-Teva Otflete New Ttrl tM ri I Wwais-ioe KJJ 4 n, l.is nniiv si, i ran, rr ao su sjsawt Ford. And it lometlmei appears that the rr.en in chrf t of th transportation line themselves are not fully tlivs itbr to the reiponiibilitJei or poitibilitict ei their petitions. If itdotmot pay to run heavy engiiitund heavy cart on thii route, uiitead of eattlni off communication it would be much wlier to try lighter equipment auch aa Ford ctaima the railroad muit coma to. Motor truck are running ever tht dirt hlfhways and handling good deal of traffic; why, Indeed, could not a limlltr expedient ba vied with iter 1 rail Inttead of ruts? The Bee? Platform 1. New Uaiea PeeseBger Statiea. 2. Cealiav! ItnerevesBtat ef tko Ne retka Highways, lesluelag Im pave meat of Mala Taoreughfaree leailag , lata Omaha with a Brick Surface. 3. A hart, ItwraU Waterway fresa tha Cara Bait to the Alloalle Oceaa. 4. Home Rule Charier far Omaha, with City Maaagar form of GeverasaeBt. Farm Prices and the Reserve System. The unemployment conference pointed out ' that the purchasing power of the farmer has Lcen cut two-third and recommended the ad iut:nent of price to give the farmer their fair share. Among the mean suggested were lower freight rates and improvement of credit condi tion, with lower interest rates. In face of this the attitudcof the Federal Ueservc bank of this district ha bec un clianjed. Appeal after appeal has been made, first by Governor McKelvie and later by Ne braska bankers, for a reduction hi the rate of rediscount from 6 per cent to 5JJ per cent. In some eastern district a rate of 5 per cent hat been granted. The reply of L. II. Earhart, . manager of the Omaha branch of the Federal Reserve bank, take no recognition of the feel ving that the farmer has been deflated to the limit and that the agricultural crisis demands emergency treatment. " , Mr. Earhart displays a praiseworthy desire that the monetary system of the United States be kept sound, but it has not been demonstrated that with the huge reserve and the accumulated profits the granting of lower rate's and Tnorc cencrous condition for acceDtanee of agricul tural paper y ou'd endanger the system. Further more, why jhoutd the federal reserve officers feel any repugnance to the idea of helping bring prices' of farm products up to the general level? The reserve system is popularly credited with having forced prices down by the process of liquidation, and at one time was not above claim ing credit for the reduction of the cost of living. There is no more doubt "that it could drive prices up than that it could drive them down. 7 While this power is a dangerous one, yet it . is properly a . part of the function of the reserve system, which was founded to stabilise .Jjnancial, industrial and agricultural conditions. And it would not be misused in giving succor to the basic industry of food production, upon which the' prosperity" of all. lines of business depends The War Finance corporation is do ing what it can to meet the pressing need, and millions, pf dollar have been lent through it to enable farmers to hold immature live, stock, off the market and to adjust the available supply of other products to the demand. But ht Federal Reserve board appears to be working at cross purposes. .' - VThe demand of the 'Nebraska bankers for lower rediscount rates and more liberal credit is to.be endorsed. : Agriculture must be assisted by every, government agency to get on a pay ing basis. The farmer ought not be liquidated ont of their means of livelihood and deflation Iia; already gone too far. ; Reduced Freight Rates Ordered. Some material relief to ' the farmers Is promised by the reduction in freight rate on grain, grain products snd hay, just ordered by the Interstate Commerce commission, to be effective on or before November 20, next The need for this has bten expressed so many times, and rests on fact so familiar to all, that lit tle argument is needed to support its Importance at tht time. The concession comes too late, to be of its greatest possible service, and yet It will have the effect of stimulating a move ment that Is now in abeyance. Within the state it will be of benefit to feeders who must move feed by rail from fields to feed lot, while the out-bound stuff will go to market at a better price, because here is a contribution thst nor malty chould be almost exclusively for the farm ers advantage. Now that the Interstate Commerce commis sion has its hand in, It may well take up the matter of rates on fuel and building material, which still are too high. When schedules on. these materials are brought down to something like a level with other commodities, the whole public wilt share in the benefit. Commissioner Browne of the Nebraska board estimates a saving to the shippers of $3,000,000 a year on the outbound stuff alone. This is a distinct addition, nothing like the loss sustained by the farmer because of the shrinkage in crop values, but an item of salvage not to be ignored. Perhaps with a readjustment of rates, affording even partial relief, a better tone to the general situation may be expected, and the farmer will eventually get something for his crops. At any rate, it is better than burning the corn. f A Magnet for Youth. "Boyhood's love oi rnystery arid longing for . power .find satisfaction today in other ways i8an -hyj. digging - caves, . searching for buried .treasure -or wishing to Jc a pirate pr a police man'.''; Probably more of the rising generation, would like to be an inventor such as Thomas A. Edison, than auything "else; There is both mystery 'and power in -electricity, and the boys :.re naturally drawn to experimenting with it . llaiiy" toys manufactured for the .enjoyment of ch'Jdrsn run by electricity. A ride on the Street j-carr a" call over the telephone, a ring -Sit the doorbell or the turning on of a light , vuts theh in daily contact with one of .the greatest of modern wonders. Their curiosity, early j? aroused, and a juvenile magazine is bcarccly to be considered complete without its corner for amateur electrical engineers. It al most appears that such diversions as stamp col lecting are to be left entirely to old men, while their children devote their attention to more practical matters.. ' 5 Wireless outfits top a large number of homes in Omaha, installed by the sons of, the house hold,' young men and boys. Messages are sent and received by radio telegraph and conversa- 'tions held by radio telephone. A national or ganization, the Amateur Radio League, has been "formed, and a local club has affiliated with it. It is interesting to contemplate the important part taken by the younger generation in popularizing this -method ot communication. Certainly no work of fiction could make a greater appeal to the Imagination than does the actual use of electricity, .' . Rounding Up the Recalcitrants. One of the difficulties encountered by the re publican majority in the senate of late has been the absence of senators from the chamber. This- applies to both parties, but with more force to the republicans, who are charged with responsi bility for the legislative program now pending and some phases of which have been too greatly delayed because of the failure of the membcr to attend to business. On the democratic side a disposition to embarrass if not actually to ob struct has been shown for weeks, and th?s has been encouraged by the action of republican senators in neglecting to attend. Everybody realises that the. sessions of con gress have been long and arduous for years; .members have been In Washington almost con tinuously since 1913; vacations have been short and infrequent, and generally a great deal has been required of the national legislature. After this Is all conceded it still is true hat the public business of the country requires this steady ap plication on part of the lawmakers. Some, part of the blame must rest on the senate, because of its penchant for debate, long-drawn out dis cussions ensuing on matters that might be dis posed of, and frequently are, by a vote the nature of which is absolutely unaffected by all or any part of what was said by the debaters. With the important revenue measure given the right-of-way over tha tariff bill, the leaders of the majority party are not only anxious but in sistent that republican senators give attention to the redemption of the party's platform pledges. This- is imperative, not because of any possible effect it may have on the fortunes of the party, that being a matter of secondary con sideration, but for the paramount reason that the party was entrusted with power because of cer tain definite pledges made, and its members should do all they can to redeem those promises. in spirit, as well as letter. . Leadership in Democracy Senate Vota on Panama Carat Tolls Bill Show Its Nd . Motor Busses to Run on Rails. "There is novelty in the petition of Omaha business men . that motor busses with flanged 'wheels be run on the railroad line which recently has abandoned running two passenger trains on the ground that they did not pay. The Chicago, St.' Paul, Minneapolis fir Omaha railway owes '. proper service to the cities along ki line, and the diseontinusnce of the trains between Omaha and Emerson has worked a hardship at both end. .'Service is all that is asked, and the state rail way commission has the power to compel this. The line was constructed with the intention of linking up Omaha and the Nebraska towns to the iiorth, but at present it serves mainly to carry their trade -to Sioux .Gty. " The, Associated Retailers of Omaha' and the Chamber S Commerce may not know a great deal about railroading but neither did Henry Lenine haa at list said something that the, restKof the world, and America' as much as any, can take to heart "De-centralixe; do it your self.", Russia waited for Moscow to pull it' through,-and America is inclined to look to Washington for the solution of problems that can be handled better by the states or even smaller divisions. , The proposal that the United States guarantee the safety 6f Germany from attack would have had a queer sound during the late war, or even before the war.; Not even our associates in the war have such a pledge, which would amount to nothing less than a treaty of alliance. The senseless arrangement of railroad tariffs is exposed clearly by the complaint that cement shipped from Superior down into Kansas a few miles, and then back to Nebraska has been get ting a lower rate than if' shipped direct without going out of the state. Perhaps, you noticed that Babe Ruth did not suceumb to the call of duty until it was made plain to him that the $1,000 a day he expected as an outlaw was not to be forthcoming any longer. ' Politics in Portugal continues to hold some thing of interest, if only to the officials, who wonder when their turn will come to be assas sinated. ,:! . V ' (From tha Boston Transcript) The passage of the Panama tolls bill, we are told, show the failure of senate leadership. Both the republican and democratic leaders deprecated uch sction by the senate, but were impotent to prevent it Knowing that the alnuui,trtion did not with the bill passed at thii time, and that its nastaae would be a potential cause of em harassment at the conference fur limitation of armament; they should have seen to it that the thing was burked, pigeonholed, denied unani mous consent, or iu some way kept back from the action which the nujurity of the eimte de sired. Obviously the party leaders have lost their grip upon the senate. Such is the facile comment of the thought less, or of the malicious; the comment of those who mutatis mutandis, would be foremost and most vociferous in condemning the "bostism" and "dictatorship", of senate leader for doing the very thing which they now blame them tor not doing. No Ion memory is required to recall all but innumerable case in which senator have been denounced as obstructionists and czar, be cause they prevented some measure from reach ing a vote. It is a perfectly saie assumption that in this case such exercise of "leadership" would have incurred such criticism, from all and we mast concede that they arc many who desired the passage ot the bill. Messrs. uodtfe and un derwood were confronted with Dow' dilemma. You'll ba damned if you do, - , You'll be damned If you don't. Iu that predicament, they chose, apparently. to pursue not merely the coarse of least resist ance, but also that course, which, in the last analy i, is most accordant with the principles of democracy and of republican government In uch a government not only should the majority rule, but also the majority should be free to ex press and to exercise its will. For a leader to thwart or to blockade that will is not so much leadership as dictatorship. It is not democracy. but autocracy. For a few members to obstruct. either by filibustering or by parliamentary sharp practice, the will of the majority is nothing iu the world but minority rule. In the case before us there can be, we fear, no doubt that a considerable majority of the senate wished the Panama tolls bill to be voted upon, and to be adopted. That was regrettable. It was, we believe, a grievous error of judgment. But it was the fact. And since it was the fact, however much w-e may deplore it, we must hold that that majority was entitled to have its wish respected and executed. Doubtless the leaders might have brought "pressure" to bear upon their colleagues, or might have employed some tech nical parliamentary advice, and thus have pre vented the issue from coming to a vote. But we should not envy him who undertook to demon strate their moral right to do so. If we lay down as a foundation of government the prin ciple that the majority shall rule, we can scarcely qualify it with the proviso that the majority shall always be right. Leadership in a democracy is not v an easy thing. It cannot properly assert itself v through coercion or . dictation, any more than (through physical force. It is essentially intellectual and moral in its attributes. Its appeal is to the judg ment, to the patriotism, to the conscience, of the people. Such leadership has happily been often known in both our earlier and our later history. It is known and is effective today. There have been; it is true, some cases in which it was not effective, but in which ignorance or passion or prejudice or some other unworthy injluence moved congress or moved the people to adopt courses, which were not justifiable. In such a case the leader, having made his strongest and most persistent appeal for the right, must be content to stand aside and let the misguided ma jority have its way, confident that in the end the 1 T . ;n 1 I il.. 'II 1- - penauiun,i wui swing oacn ana inc wrgng win uc lighted. . " ' There have, indeed,' been some rare cases in which it seemed not only justifiable for a single leader or for a minority to obstruct, by any available means, the will of the majority, but ac tually incumbent to do so. ' That has been either when some precipitate action has been contem plated, without sufficient deliberation, or when the' prospective evil was so great as to be irre parable and actually menacing to our national in tegrity.-. In the present case it can scarcely be maintained that such circumstances existed, lhe leaders would hot, therefore, have been justified in resorting to those obstructive or dictatorial tactics which would have been in essence revo lutionary. They did their best as leaders. Their hands are clean. Their leadership was not per verted into dictatorship, but that is no cause for saying that it failed. How to Keep Well OK. W, A. EVAM QltMllaM I hit, to , Mil. mm mmd aiiMi al da mm. sa mi) ta Of. mm ay inm ! la , mUt to ' mm tat My, a)t ta 'nir iwiitim, a Hrtm4 ! it aa M Of, ivut vUl M4 BMka 4iaaMl ar arH tm hkilvklw) Uttmm la ml Uwrukt. )!, r D W. , Eva. Young People and Amusements Why wouldn't it be .wise to let the railroad managers and men name a truce, and then pro ceed as Sinn Fein and Lloyd George are doing? The tender regard the anarchists evince for their own lives is only equalled1 by the disre gard they show for other people's. - German chemists say the mixture which caused the explosion at Oppan was wrongly compounded. Evidently. ' Opening of corn husking season has Jiad a marked effect on unemployment in this neck-'o-the-woods. ' Jt was decent in the railroads to wait till the world series was over before setting off the fireworks. Old King Corn may go to market like a monarch yet - v Uncle Sam is a busy old person these days. How hard it is to find the golden meant Just when the more liberal elements in the Methodist church clamor for the lifting of the ban imposed by the Book of Discipline on amusements, 14 Episcopal congregations in Louisville make a simultaneous drive against what are coming to be known as jazz manners, jazz morals, .jazz music and jazz dances. They declare that under no circumstances should they be pemitted in any church or parish house under Episcopal con trol. ' It seems that advantage has been taken of the leniency which tpiscopalian-leaders have al ways exhibited toward relaxations which in some other branches of the church are considered ques tionable and even wrong. But lowered standards in these post-war days all over the world are forcinc Christian churches and homes to con sider whether the youth of today are steady and hish-mmdcd enough to indulge in exciting pleas ures without being harmed thereby. Between wholesale prohibition and judicious participation we declare for the latter. At the same time we are confident that not only in Louisville but in every city and town in the land parents should have a more intimate knowledge of what their children are doing and with whom they are go in. Homes and churches should co-operate in the effort to strengthen the inner lite ot young ceoole so that in matters of dress, amusements and behavior in public they shall for themselves draw the line between liberty and license, between f ( . T .... , T. T a reaiiy gooa time ana me Dogus Kina. inis is the only cure which we see for the laxity of the world. Congregationalism ' 1 Better Stick to Omar. Some of the preachers are complaining be cause an eminent heel-and-toe. artist is doing the twenty-third .Psalm, the Doxology and the Bene diction in interpretive dancing. It might be pos sible for one of these classy posers to lie down in green pastures, but that is about as far as the Biblical interpretation would go according to the ministers. 4 there is no objection to inter pretive dancing", but the fox trot through the Book of Psalms is another matter. It depends upon the spirit in which it is approached. If the Shepherd Psalm is undertaken in a frame of obeisance and devotion it might be wholly wor thy. But the average interpretive dancer would "tetter stick to the Rubaiyat and be freed of any hint pf sacrilege. Lot Angeles Times. ; - Our Paternal Government ' v People of the United States are now required to ask permission from the federal government if the wish to make "non-intoxicating" wines for their home use. Probably by next year s permit will be required for, making biscuits. Florida Times-Union. . v . Women's Rights in New England. Women's rights were vindicated in about a hundred thousand Massachusetts households the other day. The women folk went down cellar and started the furnace firc--Boston Transcript - ' -. "''". : ' f - j XPES RANDOLPH IS DEAD. Enre TUndoIph. prldnt ot motl of tha Southern rarltta ltnrt in the far auucliweM, di4 racenilv at " nn a yuuns inan na was a prominent railroad en1nr In ih !. building brnlirM acrota the Ohio and doing oilier worthwhile tiling. Thar was no mora proinin li s: railroad man of hi age In the country. Thn came consumption. Forty year ao ba waa nt to Arlsona to Utile against hi dlae In tha dry country. )l Uld up un til liia fever had nodded and tha rapid prcgre.t of the diaa had stopped, and then h got bark Into the asm. When about 1 tie litld out tha Southern 1'aclflu nnUn line wt of Kan Antonio. . . Later h build and niuiiaged tha eleutrie tyeiem of the Loa Angeles end of California. Ha wns president a well u bulldwr of practically all the rallronds In Arl soiia except tha 8ant Ft and the KI 1'ato line, lie conceived the Idea of & yteni of railroads down the west const of .Mexico to reach to the City of Mexico and to open up tha great mineral district of tho went coast mountain country. Un fortunately, before the great ayateni was completed President Diss fell, and then began the aeries of revo lution from which Mexico la just now emerging. When the Colorado river had buiat lta bank and waa flooding the Imperial valley "converting: it into the gal ton sea, private corporations and even tha federal government round themselves powerless. Preai dent Roosevelt sent for Xr. Ilarri man and asked him If his men could dam the "break In the river bank "Sure." Harrlman said: "dss Ran dolph can do It." Tha comniisVon was given htm. no built a trestle loop circling across the break and back. He assembled on the sldines from 6an Antonio to San Francisco a multitude of freight train con dinting of flat cars loaded with brok en stone. When tha signal was giv en, a procession of freight trains bogaa moving slowly and continu ously ncross the break, unloading stona Into tna water as they moved. Never for rt second was there a letun in the unloading; of stone from the time tho first train started until the washout was closod. - Epes Han dolnh had Cone what the gods had done in tha making of the world ne naa saved trie imperial valley from the sea. that it might be made into a garden. No great enterprise has been pro jeeted in Arizona for a generation without first getting the views ot Kpes liandoipn. tie was the same typo of Colossus, the same mixture of visions and clenrneaded business sense tho same dreamer of dreams and hardheaded man of decision same all envisaging and all power tui personality for his section, the southwest, that Cecil Rhodes was for South Africa and Jim Hill was for the northwest He never was cured of his con sumption in a proper sense. He had hemorrhages repeatedly, and finally died suddenly as a result of one. He could not live east of San Antonio. and he knew It, When as a young man he left his old Kentucky home and took up the fight on the desert he was not figuring on whether he could return east for six months, nor was he homesick or worrying. He cast his lot with the west for better or for worse. He had no fears, no re pinning, no yearnings. He did the day's work calmly, coolly, and without - words. . He had the temperament" to get well, likewise the . brains, also the courage. His life Is a lesson not only for con sumptlves, but to men with all kinds of ctjrpnio ills. '. : Children's Weights. H. II. writes: "I have at one time seen a table giving the correct weight of children from 10 to 15 years of age. If you have such a table available will you please pub llsh it?'1 . ' REPIiT. ' The weight depends ,on the sex, race and height Boys- 10 years. . .... . 11 years 12 years.'....... 13 years 14 years......... 15 years , Girls 10 years........ 11 years 12 years 18 years........ 14 years. ....... IE years..;.', .53 to 71 pounds .61 to 78 pounds ,.62 to 85 pounds , .87. to 100 pounds .67 to 123 pounds , .79 to 133 pounds .64 to 69 pounds .60 to 75 pounds .63 to 94 pounds .65 to 104 pounds .78 to 114 pounds .8 to 118 pounds : Send for Pamphlet. M. D. writes: "I have great trouble every month owing to painful men struation. . I am 15 years old and have been suffering for the last 15 months. Will you kindly advise me what to do?" :. . - , REPLT. , r Tou can overcome this in all prob ability by regulating your bowels, taking tepid, baths frequently and exerclslne. Send a stamped ad dressed envelope for pamphlet. Dr. C. D. Mosher has a Very good little book on the subject which is sold by the T. W. C. A. Bran Bread Is Good. Mother' writes: "1. What should bo the weight. of a little girl 8 years old? Her height is three and one-third feet. z. sne onen com nlains of her stomach hurting. What foods Would be best for her?" REPLY. 1. About So pounds. ' : 2. About a pint of milk a day. Bread, preferably whole wheat or bran; cooked cereals; fruits except those that are very sour; cooked vegetables except corn and cucum bers: fresn meats ana eggs, simpie desserts, especially those containing fruit; milk and plain cakes or cook- ice. No candy. io xooo Derween meals. Borrowing Habit. Soma neighbors will borrow any thing except the baby. Harrisburg Patriot. THE NEW GODS. Tht eld rede, the sr Sods, Th (ode of Rom nd Greece, ' Foncotten all their oracles. Their tale ot war ana peace. The rods of Egypt and tha Nile, Rtra.na vada ot sand and aea. Oreat Sphinx with thy alluring trolle. save lorsoiien ibmi . I Tha eld dreams, tha say dreamt. Of eourase, Iet and youth; It seems such dreams vera puerile, That sow we know tht truth I Ne soldier in the war was brara. No cause worth flchtlns tor. Not on ke sleeps la forelin srave Knew why be went to war. Oh, little teds w serrt today, ' said, snnvaiea, prematurely Cray, Those gods whom realists deere Must srv-.a gods tor you and me. Tour tribal name la Irony: Hart men surrendered all ws cave. From mountain, temple, atreet or mart. Wis Buddah, with ehy brooding- vase, Touns Jesu with-thy broken heart7 Sliaabeth Newport Hepbura, in tho w I or a jimes. . Also AdiiUrrs Dudley. Omaha. CM. St. To tha Kdltor of Tha lKt I want tu juln A. UO 8tsru In hU praise and wom. mndtlon of Traitlo Officer ludl.-y. What Mr. Sleveus says regarding Mr. Dudley's ability, energy and smcer tty In his work will ba sanctioned and o. K.'d ty thousands of Omaha people. No doubt the must principal and busiest Intersection In tha city of Omaha la at slienth and Karnam street. More itafllc la to be han dled at this pvlni iua a any oilier plae in Omaha. To handle tlila t raffia In a wit! factory manner need an omVtr with a clear and fair mind ami qukk Iu docUlnn and action, and all who have had the pleasure of ateltig Mr. Dudley perform his duty at Klatrenth and rarmtm will say he was the right man in tha right place. Tha work to be don at this cor ner is no bov'a Duty, but an all day's strenuous task and should b com pensated aarcrdlj'gly. V lien ir. Btevfiie says Mr. Oeinpsey should nut XI r. Dudley back at Sixteenth and Karnam with double salary he speaks the truth and voices the sen timents of thousands ot Omaliuns. I am Informed that Omaha has about 100 omcers on the police roroa. This we w ill auy, averaging 1 10 per month, means an expense of 110,000 per month. If Omaha had 100 Dud- Uva tha work of this department would be handled In a mora efficient manner and at a saving or iii.ouu per month, or nio.ouo per year. Givo us more Dudleys. CntCS BAKER. A Former's Balance Khct-t Kdgar. Neb., Oct 20. To the Editor of The Bee: Thirty minus three euusls 27. Certainly. But why the 80 and why the three? Nfneteen hundred snd twenty corn does not require picking. Why dis cus it? New com! Now we're talking! ID A? Oh. lust the cost of plant ing. the cost of cultivating, the cost of seed, tne cost or norse isea, do fore, durinr and after the corn sea on. Kln-hteen-eent feed? Horrors, no; $1.70 about this time last year down to so cents tnis year mi new corn came in. Don't forget tne nay. Then add tha cost of wear on old machinery or the cost of new. Now Hgure 27 cents pronr. we cani. So much for corn. Try wheat, Nebraska's other big crop. One hundred acres of 1921 crop, the average number of acres In the south central part of the state: Plowing-, gang plow, SO days a' ii.io .; Harrowing and disking, 10 days at 17.40 DrUllng. 11.5 per aero 124 bushels wheat at 11.10...... Uorte feed during this work, hay at 116 per ton; corn at ti.'iO per huehel Harvesting, man and team, 7 days at tl Shocking, t"o an acre Binding twin New binder (every year something new) .- Threshing machine at 7o Man : days at tt Home fed. corn 15 bushels at SOc, Men's boArd at Boo Hired hand's board, i weeks at 13. 150.00 71.00 1C0.00 iii.W 12E.00 42,00 10.00 10.00 S50.09 M.00 115.00 4.64 12.50 15.00 Total coat of wheat $1. 124.10 100 acres yield 13 bushels at 80c.ll.OJS.00 One-third off for rent of use ot land 352.60 Crop value to farmer ....... v...t 726.84 Total lots on wheat f 68S.75 Excess profit for rarmer. Try again. .. .' A trip to California: .o time. Too busy scraping up money for rent or interest on -mortgage. Spending money I What is it? Wouldn't it be interesting to know how many farm, mortgages were foreclosed this year?., There have been a few farmers who seemed to -prefer that ' "slar feet of earth" to - their own mortgaged states. see newspapers of the past year: ' "Some farmers would see tho un called for war continued Jut so they could pront by l'" Jutt on the eve of tne wan "The formers ere so greedy they wen t stop their money.makliig to go to war for suf fering humanity." What la the difference between a laboring man and a farmer? Let's uke a guess anyway. A laboring li. an Is one who works sight hour with pay, A fanner Is one who works II hours without pay. "Hay farmers, get out of the ditch, net good books end read them." It's examine tha farmers' and laboring men's libraries. Bsgtn, Mr. Taylor. How many volumes have you? We have 400. A church teaches charity to all men even farmer. Join one, Mr. Taylor. once aiuin. I disagree with Mr. Taylor. I believe a newspaper to be a fine place for tha use of reason. JOHN DOW. CENTER SHOTS. There ran be no sueh thing as the disarmament parley. One for each of her dreadnoughts. Nhvllle Denner. "We serve a piece of cheese with pie upon request," says a sign In the one-armed lunch, but who's going to admit being a piece of chtete Just to get a triangle of pie? rtuffalo Express. Xstions still wish to be judged by their combating average. Ashevllle Times. The school slate Isn't as common as It was In the old days before so many people used anthracite coal. Duitimore bun. Tf women should go back to hoop skirts there would be a howl from some Quarter about the growing im morality of the race. Wichita blc. Same Old Itoy Scouts. One traveler In the Ankole district had rather a pleasant surprise some time ago when he offered a rupee to two boys who had pushed his broken down "plkt (bicycle) along the road, when they turned round and told htm they were Boy Scouts and did not expect to be rewarded for the deed they had done. Uganda (.Central Africa) Herald.) Woman's and Man's Hope, A hat for every month In the year is decreed for wometv It Is a man's unfulfilled longing to have a necktie for every day in the year. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Economics.and Long Shirts Still An Outcast. The cost of living has not yet gone down far enough to permit the ultl mate consumer to feel that he is in on the ground floor. Washington Star, THE SPICE OF LIFE. Bambo "Looky heah, big boy, don' yo all mass wld me. 'caus Ah's hard! Las week Ah falls en a buzz saw an' AH busts It eom-plete-ly." Rambo "Call dat hard?" Ll'itrS. man. Ah scratches d bath, tub." The. Amer ican Legion Weekly. "When do yon intend to make another epeech?" -.Not oerore tne noudays," replied Senator Sorghum. "Things out horn are getting into suolt a etata r agitation mat about the only really discreet remark a statesman can make to his constituents la "Merry Chrlitmaa.'" Washington Star. After Mr. Brown had raked his rard he took tht accumulated rubbish Into the ttreet to burn. A number of neighbors' children came flocking about the ton. tire, among tnem a ntti girl wnom r. Brown did not remember having seen be. for. Wishing, with his usual kindliness, to make the stranger feel at ease, ha ' nesmea upon ner ana sua, nearuiy: i "Hello! Im't this a new facet" A deep red suffused her freckles. "No." eh stammered, "it ain't new. It's jutt been washed." Harper's Siagatlne. irrm Us ftew He (.fit JMraaJ.I Wo have puld little ir no alien tlon to the decree of the Paris drew makers that longer skirts must take the place of tha short skirts thl winter and spring. We have lborl under tha man's notion Unit the were things beyond the ken snd business cf the sterner sx, ami were strictly mattsrs to be deter mined In the sewing room and nt tha tea table. It appears that we ore wrong ami that as a matter of fact It Is of eco. r.omlo Importance whether nt thi time the skirts are to be short or long. The government experts have been studying tha problem and have concluded that If the Paris riec.rr is obeyedfrom which we had sup posed there was no et.-spe IJ.OOO.. 000 yards of cloth will be maoufne tured aud sold over end above the demsnd Of hut season. Twenty thousand additional employes In textllo mills and stores will be re quired to handle this business. In sdditlon to this economic stlniujiit. there will bo an increased demand for low shoes for women together with a big turnover lit trimming, braid and othrr decorations needed In the manufacture of suits and gowns under the new styles. Ex pressed in terms of dollars and cents this runs up into iuuUl.mil llons In trade, and starts things all along tha line, down to the farmer, until the picture conjured up Is one of Joyous contentment and happi ness all over the American lot. Thus mere mun finds his falla cious notions of life corrected at the spigot and bung, and, more than that, lis finds that the short skirt Is not after all evidence of the emancipation of women and the manifestation of their new-found In dependence. Wille men have been wondering where the rising skli-t and the lowering bodice were t" stop, conjuring pictures ot an earlier and simpler Japan, as a sort of study in feminine eccentricity, eco nomic law has been at work upon fashion and subjecting it to roM philosophy. As the years roll by. it will be comforting to Know that high or low skirts will reveal the law of supply and demand at work ss It operates upon the habits of the sweeter sex. Women Expect Too Much. , The tendency of college women not to marry came in for a goodly share of criticism at the eugenics congress. Partial isolation during four years of young womanhood, tho nature of the studies pursued and the close association with unmarried women to the exclusion of men are held to be factors in subordinating marriage to - the ideal of personal culture. Another causa for feminine celibacy remarked is that women net the qualifications of possible mates so high that they cut in two their chances ot marriage. Nsw York Tribune. Garages Come First. Perhaps the reason there are more garages than houses built is due to not. having enough money for a house after the garage is paid for. Imperatives first. Pittsburgh Gazette-Times. De Volera's Greatest Trouble. In spits of liberal remittances from America, Mr. De Valera's greatest trouble in Ireland continues to be to make botn enas meet. Philadelphia North American. Base Ball Fans Human. Tha bass ball fan may appear io some persons as a curious species, but he is intensely human; perhaps more so than some of his critics.- Harrlsburg Patriot One Horror of tho Future. The greatest horror about the next war Is the armistice that will follow. Boonville Mo. Republican. Not a Peck of Ashes to the Ton i-i If You Burn - The Ashless Fuel , ALL HEAT. pETROLEUM CARBON is v the carbon of the crude oil --it is not made from coal as is ;;h the case with all other cokes. The fire is as easily regulated in mild weather as on zero days. - ,-s.;: '- ' J ' - "- " C- If yer sealer caa't snssJr yen, teltaaaae. THE SHERIDAN COAL COMPANY Wholesale Distributon Douglas 2226 a W. O. W. Building vr OMAHA, NEBR. '