T THE BEE: OMAHA. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3. 1021. TheOmaha Bee DAILY tMUUMNGl - L V N IN G6 UMIAK tub art rCiLisHiwo company humom a. c ruins, rMuM mimbir or the AiwcuTto rus iLi IU uu M MiaM HIM 4 ! MtiH of mm wwt " w SKI TfUfHONU p-HM. wii AT Untie 1000 Ike ImsstumsI - Vtnm Wmu . rr Niikl CsUs After ! f. M. getwelal CllllUr1 STIaaUS I Ml M IMI SU Bettt Ml IMfUal If IS M4 ft giant im rin t 0i-ef-Tova oiikm r The BeeTt Platform 1. New Uatoa rasseafor Static. 2. CbJpJ kprfeeat of the) Ne braska Highways. lacluJiag lh pave at of Mala Thoroughfares leading iato Omaha with Brick Surface. 3. A short, low-rete Waterway from (ha Cora Bait te tha Atlantis Ocean. 4. Horn Rule Charlar for Omaha, with City Manager form ef Goverameat. Com Versus Coal as Fuel. Normal minds revolt at the thought of uing corn ( fuel; especially at a time when there it to much of distress and suffering In the world because of shortage of food in widely scattered regions. The situation is the most direct chal lenge to our civilization that could be presented. A vexatious complication is that in Nebraska, for example, where an abundance of food exists, the price of fuel is so high that farmeri are com pelled to burn corn because they can not afford to buy coal. A distinct appearance of injustice may be noted in the fact that so many in discussing the matter smugly say, "Oh, well, the farmer is In liard luck, but he must, expect to take a loss." It is rather difficult to understand why the farmer should be expected to produce food at a loss, while the coal operator must be assured of a profit on hi output. Waiving that point, how ever, we come again to the remarkable effect of the effort to Insure the railroads a compensatory return on capital invested. This is manifest in the increased cost of what the farmer has to buy, and the lessened price, to him, at least, of all he has to sell. It is impossible for the farmer, or anyone else, to stand up under this double im position. In discussing the price of coal, an important fact must be kept in mind. Coal differs from corn in that it varies both in quality and price. Arbitrary comparisons do not always tell the whole story, and when the price of coal is being discussed consideration must be given to its point of origin and the use to which it is to be put. Taking corn at Chicago and coal in the Pitts burgh (Pa.) district as basic, in October, 1913, two bushels of corn would pay for one ton of Coal at the mine; in October, 1921, the ratio had been advanced. to five bushels of corn for one ton of coal. On the basis of the farm price for corn in Nebraska quoted by the government for October 1, 1921, eight bushels of corn are needed to pay for one ton of coal at the Pennsylvania mine. By the time the coal gets to Nebraska, the ratio has gone up to where three tons of corn are required to buy one ton of coal Ear corn and soft coat are nearly equal in bushels per ton, being 28 of the first and 25 of the latter. . Only a disjointed transportation service could produce such glaring inequalities. ' While it is unreasonable to expect that a ton of Nebraska corn 'can be exchanged for coal in equal quan tity, on the basis of farm and mine valuation, tome adjustment should be made that would give both the farmer and the miner a square deal Such is not the case now, and until the exchange of food for fuel can be made on a more nearly equal basis the producers are at a disadvantage. The Voice of the Legion Through its national delegate assembly at Kansas City, the American Legion has once more addressed itself to the people of the United States. In general terms, it has but reaffirmed ts previously announced principles, in which are unbodied a lofty patriotism, a steadfast and un swerving devotion to American ideals and a firm resolve to uphold its concept of duty to the gov ernment. Of most interest to the membership, and perhaps to the public, is the renewed de mand for the passage of the bonus bill. This is made after due consideration is given to the reasons advanced by the president in his request to the senate that the measure be postponed. Debs will remain in prison till hit sentence hat expired, if the legion has its way; the English language alone will be used in the common schools of the country, and teachers will be asked to take an oath of allegiance'; closer scrutiny of immigrants, that radicals may be ex cluded is asked, and more watchfulness of those already here is recommended. Slackers should be punished, says the legion, and Bergdoll ought to be pursued until brought to book. These are the dominant sentiments of a representative group of young men, whose influence on the course of public affairs is certain to extend as days go on. For this, if for no other reason, the xpressions will compel consideration. ; ... No Place Like Home. 7. Perhaps juvenile delinquency is not increas ing. It may be as the American Prison asso ciation declares, that the new generation is no worse than former ones, A good many mis demeanors and downright crimes never used to get on the court records. Justice in those days cut a switch from the back yard tree, and the woodshed was turned into a, reformatory, . If Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer were boys today half their ventures would have been frustrated by truancy officers. If they persisted hi carrying out the other half of their exploits, they would have been constant attendants in Juvenile court and probsbly would hare been domiciled in a corrective institution until they reached the age of 21. A prison authority announces his firm con viction that there must be an immediate resump tion of parental responsibility if juvenile delin quency is to be reduced. Huck was allowed to rua wild because his father was a reprobate and his mother was dead. Today children are al Ittwed to run the streets, to gather, ia gun nj 19 wander dowa town, not because they art orphaned or their parents art reprobates, but merely from abicnct of all moral and physical control in the home. Too many duties that used to belong to the family art being thrust on the church, the school, and the government. , Roosting and Nesting. Nebraska City it entitled to boast if 60 per cent of its working people own the hornet in which they live. Compart this record with that of New York, where only one family in eight ownt its dwelling, and one of the greatest advantages of living awsy from the congested centers it plain. In Great Britain and other old countries, the land on which the great cities stand is owned by a few families. Wage earners in London or Glasgow have absolutely no opportunity to be come property holders. New York City is like that, and teeing . no way to free itself from tenancy, finds comforters who tay that the con dition It quite natural and really doesn't make any difference. "It it the family which constitute! the home, not the dwelling," tayt the Sun, "and a two room flat on the tenth floor of a tenement house may be termed to at correctly at the old coun try farm house." The editor will find little support for this theory in Nebraska City. A green lawn, a house set back from the street and apart from itt neighbors meant home out here, and not just any place one hangs his hat. The implication that New York loves itt landlords it not borne out by the facts. There is more unrest and rebellion against society in the metropolis to the square foot than there is in all of Nebraska City. Americanization has been give'n many defini tions, but there is one fundamental, that every citizen must have a real stake in the country. Four walls and a roof do not make a home, nor does a title deed alone, that is true. But for security, contentment and the sense of inde pendence which every Americsn likes to feel, there it nothing contributes more than home ownenhlp. Democratic Party's New Pilot. While it it true that nothing tucceedt like success, it it true also that nothing fail tit. failure. When the leader of a forlorn hope sur vivet the wreckage of defeat, he. may expect to face a court-martial, and loss of leadership at least. Thlt fate has overtaken Chairman White, who assumed direction of the democratic na tional committee at a time when its prospects were never so hopeless. The outcome of the general election was made certain by the record ot tne party, and White went to anticipated de feat. Following a precedent old as the ages, his leadership is forfeit, and Judge Cordell Hull of l ennessee is called upon to carry on during the interim. Whether he will survive the next demo cratic national convention is yet to be determined, but the record presupposes that his service will terminate when he has turned the gavel over to tne temporary chairman. Judge Hull is unusually well equipped for" the olace. which came to him only after a little piece of "inside" politics had failed to work. He is a democrat full of en thusiasm for the ideals of his party, experienced on the bench and in congress, where he distin guished himself as a member of the ways and means committee of 4he house. These qualifica tions are enhanced bv a charm of manner that must make of the new chairman a very popular figure nationally as he becomes better known. If all the things done by the committee were as worthy as its selection of a chairman, there would be no ground for the proposal made by "JImham" Lewis that it be disbanded and its' functions turned back to the party at large. From Flanders' Fields. The visit to Omaha of Lieut Gen. Baron Alphonse de Jaques turns thoughts back to those a tuguo. uaa uuw .cicji years pail wnen me German armies sweot into Belgium.' Honetet1v outnumbered, it wat his regiment that clashed with the invadert at Vise. Then holding the rank of colonel, he led hit soldiers in person in a teries of bloody battles. They were at the de fense of Liege and suffered heavily, Everyone remembers how the dikes were opened and the retreat to the Yser carried out, and the glorious defense of Dixmude is far frojn forgotten. Though twice wounded Colonel Jaques re fused to quit his post there and clung to the bridgehead, though the town soon became a heap of shattered and burning ruins. In the drive that ended the war, as leader of the "Iron brigade," he won back Flanders ridge. He comes as no stranger, then, to Omaha. The whirl of the airplanes at the International Aero congress may remind him of the desperate days of the war when enemies scouted overhead and bombs fell from the skiet. He understands no English, but Omaha will make him feel the welcome that is his and the admiration in which his nation is held. The cost of producing winter wheat in 1920 averaged $1.80 a bushel, according to a guess by the Department of Agriculture, whicli finds this only 7 cents cheaper than in 1919. On 216 farms surveyed, the range of costs was found to be from $1.20 to $2.50 per bushel. . If this con dition prevailed in any other line of industry, how many would be able or willing to stick in it? Foch, the Warrior Guest of the Nation and What He Stands For. Apropos of General Foch's pipe, it may be mentioned that the world's championship has been awarded to a Frenchman who smoked a pipeful of tobacco for 58 minutes without re lighting. And a Pole has made the speed record of three minutes one and two-fifths seconds for a cigar. Tobacco consumption, regarded here as habit or vice, appears to be an art over there. aaaaaaaaamaaamaaaaaaaamae If China ia as rich in resources as is claimed, when its people get to work producing on an Occidental scale, the world may be flooded with cheap goods; then the yellow peril will take on new terrors. South Dakota is indeed a young folks' coun try: the census reports more than a third of the people are under 15 years of age, and only a little more than half the population is old enough to vote. Some idea of the productiveness of America is given by the statement that the manufactures of New York City alone are valued at more than $5,000,000,000 annually. Add to the list of light occupations: Being bgptotc to lot iiog si Siam. (Ferdinand Tuoby In New York World.) By one of those fantastic accidents of for tune, America and Americans, when they greet Marshal Fuili, will be acclaiming the one man above all others in Europe most set sgainst what has come, rightly or wrongly, to be regarded as the new doctrine of Internationalism. Jutt what this doctrine it it would be difficult to compress into few words. Let us say that it is a nervous groping ahead and away from the nineteenth cen tury, from frontiers and treaties and all the ret, a desire to try out new schemes for old, a peri lous doctrine, whose protagonists break virgin toil at every step, and one in which mast ignor ance it apt to make distressing inroads upon the idealism dominating the whole. Of course, in a few well-turned phrases, and In which Lafayette and Chateau-Thierry will fig ure prominently, the marshal will be able com pletely to win over hit immediate rcportorial au dience and tubsequently the larger audicence awaiting him in the background. He will talk of the two great pioneer republics of the world and yet it is extremely doubtful if he it a republican at heart he will salute the beau geste of April 6, 1917, "which saved France and civ ilization," and he will express the most fervent hope for the peace of the world and for the suc cess of the Armament conference. And then he will proceed with hit lifc't task of advancing France't frontier to the Rhine. Not a word of thit it written in impertinent disparagement of the greatest figure of glamour and romance which has come out of the east since the foundation of the United States, of the loftiest personage Europe has produced tince Napoleon. Bismarck, Moltke, Cavour, Disraeli, Gari baldi, Hindenburg, Clemenceau, Lloyd George none are quite up to Foch; indeed possibly the only one to compete with him historically may well be the slaving Titan of the Kremlin. It is entirely meet and proper that America should cheer the allied generalissimo to the echo, as it most assuredly will do. But it is equally meet and proper to stress the divergence, the fissure, existing between the world concept of the gallant marshal and that obtaining in myriad American homes. Foch is of the ancient regime. Glorious and triumphant in war, he doesn't believe in turning guns into plowshares in peace. And he may be right. He docs not believe that the world has yet reached the era of tolerance and good will. He believes that a long-drawn-out period of au thority has got to be inserted into the turn of events before man can ever begin to realize his responsibilities toward his neighbor, and he sees as the one means of assuring the rule of that authority the sword. Not being rattled in' its scabbard as in the par', but reposing sharpened within, Damoclian reminder for those who would run wild. Perhaps if we inquire into what man ner of man Foch is, this guiding principle of his may be more readily understood. The first thing that strikes you about him is his devout ness. He goes to mass every morning, and never misses a chance to forward the clerical cause in France. The Catholic renaissance that has set in in France since the armistice is al most entirely of his making. It began with the apparently innocent decision of the government to make the canonization of Joan of Arc a na tional fete day, honored, in particular, by the army. Fierce passions were aroused, but Foch won, and one day in May of last year the French army, to a man, paid tribute to the greatest heroine-martyr of the Catholic church. I was privileged to sec Foch pay his particular tribute, and it will remain among my most vivid memories. There he stood at midnight out in the center of the square at Orleans, while torches burned all around and the "Marseillaise" beat triumph antly; there stood Foch, commander of millions, saluting for five minutes the equestrian statue of a girl in armor who had never had more than 3,000 pikemen under her orders It was a tre mendous moment. One heard again the aircraft humming over the lines, the booming of thou sands of batteries; one pictured the gas clouds and the tramp of millions from Rome and Liver pool and San Diego and then one turned to the leader of it all and beheld him at the salute be fore a girl who had, it is true, outmanoeuvred the drunken Sir John Falstaff, yet who, later, made a sorry mess of the siege of. Paris. All of which is tantamount to saying that Foch takes root in, draws his inspiration from, the very heart and soul of French history and greatness. Kitchener was a totally different proposition; one never saw him thrilling to the bearing of the Black Prince at Crecy. And for that reason Kitchener might have been a more malleable figure today than is Ferdinand Foch. Foch's dreams of a new France hover round the Napoleonic. Not that he would make war here and there, or invade this country or that, but he wants to get every bunce out of the temporary supremacy of France on the continent. And his concept of how that may best be done does not allow for any baby talk about disarmament, or even of the external control of a solitary French mitrailleuse. What Foch wants to see before he dies is France on the Rhine from Crefeld to Shaff hausen, a French Poland, strong and race-conscious, buttressed in between reviving Germany and communist Kussia and modifying by its presence the strategy of both these lands, and a French colonial empire extending practically along the entire African side of the Mediter ranean from Casa Blanca to Tunis. Foch be lieves that, so extended and supported. France can turn to the world without having killed a soul and say: "And now messieurs, I am ready to co-operate with you, provided you will guar antee that what we have we hold." Is he right? Is he wrong? Is he a retro grade influence in the councils of the world, the more retrograde for the very glamor surround ing him? Who will say? He is a hundred per cent French beyond that, each to his or her in dividual judgment. Certain it is Foch has shown precious little faith in democratic ideals and in schemes of international brotherhood and the like. And he laughs at the League of Nations. At the Paris convention he fumed from day to day as the veteran Clemenceau gave way on this and that point to the idealistic Wilson; backed by the Machiavellian Balfour. What he held out for was a peace of victory, not of com promise; the sort of peace which Bismarck had imposed upon France at Versailles half a cen tury previously and from which France recovered in the surprising space of three years. Not that Germany could ever have recovered in a like period. But Foch believed probably foreseeing a lot of the nonsense we are having to put up with today, and whose most serious if as yet largely unappreciated manifestation is the insolence of the German monarchists Foch was unalterably of the view that the Fatherland should be made to eat mud as a lesson and even at the risk of her nursing a war of revenge. She would probably nurse that idea in any case, and in point of fact she is now doing so. Is Foch right? Is Foch wrong? Voila, mes amis, la -question. In a sentence, the man to whom the nation extends its hearty welcome stands for authority in the largest available tvne as against faith in the multitude. He believes that the multitude must be ted and that it can not lead itself. And he believes that the natural leaders of the world are those men who preserve mentally inviolate the color and the glory of their lands. He is a nationalist, the supreme apostle of nationality alive today, loving France as dearly as almost to draw back at the thought of her being con taminated by alien schemes and alien hands, how ever world-healing the intention. None the less, cheer lustily, forgetting that he has not faith in you of the multitude toying with a little knowl edge, that he will consign the Armament con ference to Hades unless America promises to come to the aid of France again if she be at tacked. . , - How to Keep Well r DR. W A. KVANA nii krtW MatUitM aae seeesalioa a! aUsosss, u.llie .tm. akin ium1 liaiilri ee. ! M setleud. Of. QwMttMM .oralis kj to Vf, " ww n WfwBtw WaVI VC MVaaa; WHTf aj pavaaasaaaaa aw mm m m w .-- - tVM IU a auka a umw mm an" til'M Aaarws MUtf la at Tfca Ow. Oarrrtsat, till, by Dr. W. A. gtaat. BLOW NOSE CAREFULLY, gome peopla are born deaf, some achieve dfne. Some of those who achieve deaf nee coul4 prevent tha disability If they knew what to di and would take tha necessary trouble. The Inconvenience and dis ability caused by deafness la con siderable, tnouah to Justify a re- onable amount ot ertort to pre vent It. Dr. F. W. itock Has had years or experience with a cllnlcfur tha pre vention of drafneea. Tha cllnio serves the schoul children ot Itorh- ester. N. Y. I. give some or his methods! "We are known for our effort for the hard of hearing children who have old. suppurating ears. We get together the mother, the nurses and the child and instruct tnm how to clean and car for th die- charglnf ears." he aays, continuing: "Cleanliness ana mora cleanli ness are th meat of tha rules httd down for pus casea. The mother carries out th treatment dally at th home and th child la treated In th clinic twice a week. Dakln's solution and a straight medicine dropper and some absorbent cotton are used to clean. "Ear wax ts removed at th clinic when necessary. Th child sits fac ing th operator, bh puts her head on his knee with th discharg ing eur facing upward. Th ear canal 1 filled with Pakln's fluid with the medicine dropper. Th fluid Is sucked In and out with the prooeiw ir repeated with freh fluid until th fluid sucked out is clear. Then th nr canal Is dried out with a piece or cotton rolled into a wick long enough to reach in an inch or more. "Then the canal is filled with fresh solution and a cotton wick with a bulbous end stops the out side of the canal. . This home treat ment is supplemented by more thor ough treatment at school" In some British clinics the clinic treatment is Ionization with some zinu salt. Dr. Bock thinks there would be less deafness If all children were taught how to blow their noses. In blowing the nose the ears may be infected it one blows hard, as Broth er Briggs would have us. Never blow the noes when both nostril -are constricted. To do so is to run the risk of forcing the germs up the tubes and Into the ears. If the secretion cannot be forced out by mild blowing while one nostril Is wide open, it Is bet ter to soften It before trying to blow it out by the use of some salt solution or other nose wash. - The use of a wash for the purpose can be justified. We would even Justify the. sniffing of a little sneez ing powder, such as one containing a little salicylic acid, or a yttle soap, or a uttie snuir. inhaling through a menthol inhaler loosens the secre tions a little and manes it possible to clean the nose without blowing hard. A paper handkerchief that will be used and destroyed has some advantage over cloth ones that are used after they have become badly Infected. Scales Seem Deranged. D. H. S. wanted to know why her baby ia growing so slowly. At birth he weighed less than two pounds. When t months old he weighed 5 pounds and 12 ounces. When 6 H months old ht weighed 16 pounds. He is breast fed and has no teeth. His appetite is fine. REPLY. Whoever 'weighs your baby is careless about It or else the scales have gone crazy. The weight at. birth certain is wrong. If he1 weighed 5 pounds 12 ounces at 2 months It Is not likely that he has more than doubled his weight in New National Guard (From the WMhlagtoa Pott.) It Is pleasing to learn through an official announcement by the War department that the National Guard has been recruited up to 126,000 offi cers and men, which la more than half its normal strength.. Under the reorganization plan adopted, It Na tional Guard divisions are author ized, with a total Of 215,397 officers and men. The country is divided into nine corps areas, with two militia divisions to the corps. The fact that within less than three years after the armistice was signed voluntary enlistments in the Na tional Guard number metre than half the authorized strength is a matter for congratulation and augurs well for Ailing the ranks in the compara tively neat; future. for some time following tnt close of the war the growth of the' Na tional Guard was very slow, and naturally so. The youth of the coun try had been "fed up" on war and had no desire for further military duty. But as time wore on this aversion passed and the militia units begun to spring up with the satis factory results noted. The federal government and the states co-oper ated to stimulate interest In the guard, for it is well recognized that the militia is not only a reliable force for the preservation of order within the states, but constitutes the chief supporting arm of tho regular army in event of an emergency. During tne world war 382,000 men entered the military service of the United States through the National Guard: This was about 10 per cent of the entire American army. TJie guardsmen In preparing for service abroad showed the advantage of their training in the militia. Con sequently In the reorganization plan provision is maae lor all the auxil iary arms of the service, and in each army corps with two divisions of the National Guard will be a division of regulars. The purpose of the War department eventually Is to have the guard so organized that it can be ready for field service in a few days or a few weeks at most The value of a national guard or ganization to any state was well exemplified recently during the min ers' riots in West Vlrglniu. There the legislature had authorised the reorganization of the militia, but steps to this end had been delayed. and as a consequence when mobs took the law into. their own hands there was no state force adequate to preserve order, and it was neces sary to call on the federal govern mtnt for troops. Had the state militia been available. West - Vir ginia would have had no occasion to Invoke aid from the general govern ment. It Is. such Instances as this that impress upon the public the value to any state of a national guard organ! zr.tion. Just as the record of the world ar shows its value to the nation In time of stress. The fed eral government is thus Justified in making ample appropriation for en couraging the militia of the various states and for training it for prompt and efficient co-ordination with the regular army when necessary. four months. If the flgurss are rtcht ha la growing too fust. J'ut tha brakes on or you will hav a sunt. Try to get him to drink mors water and less milk. II ran tak a little cereal or potato soup; also give him strained tomato or nuug Juice. Varying ltr Will Help. Mrs. II. M. ! writes: 'iiy baby Is 10 months old and has sis teeth. Will you give ma a auliabl diet for htr? eh Is breast-fsd. For th Inst two weks I hav been giving hr rrroal. beef tea. milk and crack ers, and barley water. Hue has bad oralis Juice since sue wsa monma old. Phe Is well and looks the plo ture of health, but ah it very con tiiimed. Her bowel move only every two or three days. I ue a soap sttcH enema, uo you tnina It U th lia'Iey water that Is keep ing her bowels from acting?" HE PLY. You sre handling your baby well. Continue doing as you now are. When she takes a more varied diet Iter bowel hablta will improve. Be gin civlns her strslned vegetahls soup and the mashed vegetables from the soup. Bolter Make 3111k Cold. Mrs. J. L. writes: "It Is necessary for me to travel with my baby for a few hours and I would tike to know If I can warm a bottle and then put contents In a thermos bot tle. Will the milk be the same or will it sour? If I take a bottle off the Ice and put In a thermos will It be'good to give the baby and not sour? My baby Is 1 months old." KEI'LY. Tho place for a S months old baby Is at home. But It you must travel, prepare the milk ready to use, got It les cold, and put it In a thermos bottle. Milk made ire cold can be kept In a thermos bottle In fine shaps. If you warm it, put it In a thermos bottle, and then travel in a rough train, you are liable to And you have a bottle of kumyss, or keflr. or some other foreign drink, provided, of course, the bottle does not explode. Farm Finance What Uncle Sam It Trying to Do to Help. (Followlnc la oaa ot a arrlre f articles In which The Dm la andertiktnc to out line the DtiTDoM and method of operatloa of the federal war finance earporatioa In unking loan, (or in relief ot agricultural production.) VIL Some state banks in Nebraska faced a difficulty i.i taking advan tage of the War Finance corpora tion's plan for advancing money to relieve agricultural conditions De- cause they were already . over- loaned. -. The Nebraska law provides that state banks cannot borrow funds in an amount greater than their capi tal stock and surplus.- "Borrowed money," in this connection, includes either bills payable or re-discounts in other words, money borrowed other than that deposited as de positors' accounts. Many banks were virtually up to this limit. The law, however, had one ex ception. The limit was removed in case further borrowing was neces sary in order to pay depositors who wished to withdraw their deposits. Slate officials have Interpreted this exception as applicable In the present situation. If a bank's re serve is less tnan the amount re quired by law or If the bank has good reason to expect it to drop be low tho legal requirement, the offi cials have ruled that the bank may interpret this as authorizing fur ther borrowing in order to pay de positors. Under this condition, they rule that a bank may re-discount with the War Finance corporation. BUSINESS IS GOOD THANK YOU' LY Nicholas Oil Company Cret ho I NoManiartan. Omaha, Nov. X. To th editor of Th He; My attention has been called to an ltm la th World Herald a fow days ago stating that tha Creche, located at No. 1ISI Tark wild avenua, and directed by Mm. JulU Wsldt. t a horn for Catholic children of poor parent and 1 maintained by contributions of the Caihollo people of Omaha. Th writer ot tht Item evidently confused th Creeh with th Christ Child society, a Catholic institution, which has rscently established a so clal corner at No. 1114 I'arkwild avenue. The Creche (of which Mrs. Weldt la matron) la a nonsectarlan Institution, which has bean main tained since 1117, flrat. as a day nursery, and later aa a boarding home for half-orphaned children. It la auatalned by contributions tit charitably disposed people ot stl re ligious denominations. Its board of director la composed of Catholic and members of various Protestant churchea Will you kindly publish this not for th information of th public? MRS. THOMAS L. KIMBALL. President, Omaha Charity Asso ciation. Froflicrrlng In Money. Omaha. Clot. 14. To th Editor of Th Bees The American people have been wondering for a long time what ia the cause of th present financial depression, which wss th tople of discussion at th Americsn Mining congress In Chicago last week. Th real truth of th situa tion was thorough 'y explained In the reply ot Senator Tasker L. Oddle of Nevada to Secretary of the Treasury Mellon on the question of maintain ing a gold standard. Senator Oddle stated thst the gold holdings and currency of the 50 principal coun tries show the ratio of gold to cur rency In 1)14 to be (t.l per cent and in 1(20, 9.S per cent, snd dur ing this period national debts ex panded from $43,000,000,000 to 1300,000,000,000 and that the annual Interest rate advanced from one and three-quarter billion dollars to 13 billion dollars In 1920. Both the principal and Interest are payable In gold, to t paid out of the meager total cf th world's gold supply of I a blltion dollsrs. Th question wa aaksd of th leading economist present, "How could the countries of the wurld expect to nisei thalr debts T" To which ha replied that It la Impossible under th present gold standard un less th production of new gold was stimulated so ss to lav a balance, over the Industrial demands, for monetary purposes; and In order to protect our present monetary ays torn It would be Imperative that the leading nations of the world adopt a l. metallic standard for the ra sm thol. gold not being allowed to circulate freely, silver would neces sarily ndvsr.ee In prlr within th next II months to far exceed th mark set In th II to 1 ratio. Governor Strong of thu r'edsral Reserve bank ot New York, before the congressional investigation of the agricultural commission, elated that 1100,000 In gold I equivalent to fl, 100.000 in credit In th coua try banks of th nation, and that sine th war I2U.VOO.000 of new gold haa been withdrawn from the United Viaies tressury's reserve for Industrial consumption. Senator Oddle expressed the opinion that had the gold reserve been protuoted against Industrlsl drain, that the treasury could have extended a credit tp country banks of 15,280, 000,000, and he wss firmly con Vlnced that had a moderate defla tion begun within a year after the armistice our present difficulties of depression would not only hsve been minimized, but might never have occurred. Our financial depression Is not remedied by the action of tha Fed eral Reserve bank in permitting certain sections of the country to receive 5 per cent money and others I per cent, while bangs are permitted to exact Interest rates of t and lo per cent, thereby making a profit of from 33 1-3 to 100 per cent on capi tal furnished by the people of th t'nlted State, which has msde the Federal Reserve bank possible. This profiteering on moneys coming through federal reserve channels should be stopped, for it Is helping to pauperize the nation. ROY M. HARROP. mini iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiimi mum The Merchants National Bank of Omaha, Nebraska Capital Stock Paid in $1,000,000.00 Surplus and Undivided Profit .. .$1,000,000.00 Deposit $12,401,173.21 Fred P. Hamilton. B. H. Hell. O. T. Eastman, 8. S. Kent President Vies President Vies President Caihlsr H. D. sBenUey. B. B. Wood, J. P. Lee, Assistant Cashier Assistant Cashle Assistant Cashier DIRECTORS! Fred P. HsmlMon O. 8. Bogsrs Frank W. Jud.on C. W. Hamilton George N. Peek N. B. Updike Chas. L Saunders F. B. Joknsoe B. H. Mails WE SOLICIT YOUR BUSINESS iiiiiui iiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitHiiiiimiimimiiiiiiniiiinmmnminniiniiiiiimiii iiimt A Leather Vest For Outdoor Workers NOTICE We carried Over from last year about ona thousand split horsehide sleeve vests. They have a knit wrist and neck band, 2 pockets and knit waist bands to keep your back warm. This leather, though not pretty, wear off smooth, does not scuff or peel just the thing for rough work and to keep out the wind. THEY WHOLESALE AT MORE THAN THIS TODAY. : SCOTT 15th AND HOWARD STREETS Phono DOuglaa 2793 7. OMAHA TfAJl, - I ja, y PRINTING (7 T T V Ld COMPANY p -vEs sVi . j - r " r IV i " - S7sneii ii l.is".ii"gn imumnini i TtwntamW CmMERCIAL PMNTERS LffltOttAPHtriS STEllDlt fHMSSXS loose tear ocviccs Virginia tobacco pays no import duty ... no ocean freight . . . no marine in surance. It's home grown that's how Piedmonts give you better value. m eVilPmiSL Cigarette j from down where the gtod tobaccc groves LrooRT & Mnu Tobacco Co. i4 on "Utr I