TJIK BEK: UMAIIA. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 25). 1021. TheOmahaBee PAILY (MOUXI.G)-EVENIXG-JUMMV THE BtK I'UBI.lrilllNQ COMPANY fiELoUN B. UflIht, rutll.k.r II. BREWER, Central Manager MEMBER Of THE ASSOCIATED PRESS THe SMealalad PlMt, ef ehlrh T6. Vw ll MaM, It e. atuilreiy miiii) u Uu w l niAeiu.tioa ef U an. t n.u-tue en4!d l It e i"H aiaarwia. eredil4 U toi. paper, end alal Ike lucal civ. MUi.hd a-eeia, Ail riaat ef nautlitatioe at or e.eeeial diipetc&ea axa alaa raeerfed, Ta Oaahe Bee It eiemhtr at (ha Audit Burnt ef Orea ittlana, Ua raoooitaa euuwniy aa atical.tioa Mailt, ' Tke) (circulation of Tke Omaha Bee SUNDAY, DEC. 25, 1921 74,052 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY ELMER S. ROOD, Clrtul.llea Meneger fta-era to and eubecrlbee' We fere ma thla Zaia day af December, 121. (Seal) W. H. QUIVEY, N alary PuWIie BEE TELEPHONES Private Branch Fichange. A.k for th Department or Peraon Wanted, for NiKht Calla After It P. M.i Kdltori.l Department, ATIantlo 1021 or J0J. OFFICES Main Offiee 17th and Farnam C. Bluffa 1 Scott St. South Side 49Si S. !4U St. New York 2K Fifth Ava. Wsahlagton 1111 0 St. Chicago 1216 Wrtgley BMg. Pari., Franca 420 Rut St. Honort AT Untie 1000 The Bee's Platform 1. Naw Union Patiener Station. 2. Continued improvement of lb No- braaka Highwaye, including the pave ment with a Brick Surface of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha. 3. A abort, low-rate Waterway from the Cora Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. 4. - Home Rale Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. Fate of Section 15-A. Robert Marion LaFolicttc may be relied upon to explode a bomb at any time he thinks the country needs a shock. Too frequently he makes mountain out of a mole hill, and almost as often his' detonator makes all the noise and the , main explosion is merely a fizzle. Until the issue is determined nc must wait to see whether his present sensation has in it any of the elements he pretends to discover. Ostensibly, he is working for the benefit of the farmer, although really he is espousing the cause of a single group of farm ers. The unfortunate fact is that agriculture as - an industry is no better organized or repre sented than any of the other great industrial di visions, and in some respects not so well as oth ers, pivisioiof sentiment and diversity of opin ion is more marked, perhaps, among the men who manage the farms than it is in any other class.- . Section 15-A of the Esch-Cummins act, against which Senator LaFollete is directing his fire, will partially expire by limitation in March, and may be wiped out entirely. It ought to be. As a matter , of fact, the strongest argument against the section, with its provisions for guar anteed returns, was made by Judge Robert S. Lovett, head of the Union Pacific, who showed the fallacy of tying the strong roads to the weak, that the latter might obtain sustenance to which they had no claim. However, the ordinary ob server will not worry so much about this as over the broader aspects of the case. Just now the government is assisting the farmers to tide over a time of serious depression. Many of them arc being saved from actually los- . ing all their possessions by the intervention of the War Finance corporation. . If it is right and just as -well as expedient to do this, why may not a financially embarrassed railroad approach the government with a similar request for as- ; sislance? It is being done, but the time is not far ahead when each tub will have to stand on its own bottom once more. -" "Priming the pump," as the present process of loaning government funds to sustain crippled industries is called, can not go on indefinitely. The necessity is a hang-over from the reckless administration of the democratic party', whose statesmen adopted the fallacy of price fixing and price control, the most dangerous experiment on which the government ever embarked. Sec tion 15-A is but an extension of the agreement i made when the roads were taken over four years ago; it is only a modification of the wicked cost plus system applied by the government in its dealings with contractors of all kinds during the . war. When it is repealed, as it should be, the business of running a railroad will be back on its own. In the meantime, there is no betrayal of the farmer in a consultation with the heads of great industries, except that as a citizen the farmer is certain to suffer along with the rest -when any monopolistic combination aspires to ' take tribute from all. Corn-Tassel Currency . Abroad. Once before we heard in discussions of the monetary question about mankind being crucified.- ' Then upon a cross of gold, now, accord ing to Francis V. Hirst, noted English economist, mankind is being crucified upon a cross of paper. ; While the statesmen of the world met -in Washington to discuss the limitation of arma ments, the printing presses of the new countries and the old kingdom's- of Europe were turning out billions of dollars-of paper money, worfuiess except for the fiat of the . government which issued them. Nothing in the shape of metal re 'strves or natural resources backs up this ever running spring of paper money. Even in their homeland the beautifully engraved but practically valueless currency is depreciated to such an ex lent that, with the quotations of several being given in thousandths of a cent, the governments are being hard put to devise means of continuing. Mr. Hirst, who recently spoke in Lincoln, re lated many interesting stones of the effect of the depreciated currencjv Russian 10,000-rouble notes are being given away in London with the purchase of a $35 suit of clothes. He also spoke of the devastating effect upon the economic life of the world which such a situation has caused. Xot only is the whole world being cheated by the issuance of these corn-tassel currencies, but the o-orernmenta are rTetraudinc- their Own nationals on a gigarttic scale. . The governments of a Balkaniied Europe which can pay neither the interest on their debts Vr any part of their principal seem to invite isaster by their policy of wildcat financing. The l-eparation for wars Mr. Hirst blamed in part this situation. Bat, above all, he criticized a nation which allows the rulers of the various i ions to escape the payments of their debts by issuance of inconvertible currency, which l-des them to continue their wasteful and activities. his question will be one of the most pressing which will face the economic conference which are being planned. As long at the governments hate the free ue of printing proses for creating their support, they are going to be put to 'it to muddle through. j Judicial Reform Once More. Some words ol sage advice from the chief justice of the supreme court of the United States deserve attention. Mr. Tai't has noted, as any oberver might, the tendency to resort to the federal courts more and more for the settlement of nutters that are subject for litigation. Two reasons may be ascribed for this. One Ss the growth of interstate commerce, which brings into contact residents of separated states, either of whom may prefer the federal trial court to that ofjiis own or his opponent's state. This condi tion permits transfer to federal courts of many cases that might well be adjudicated muler state administration, having an advantage only in that it avoids the divergence of state laws or prac tices. A more dangerous trend indicated by the condition the chief justice refers to is the steadily increasing substitution of federal for state au thority in matters that arc subject to regulation by statute. This is not a suddenly reached con clusion, for it has been noted by publicists these many months, and particularly since the birth of the Wilsonian policy of inviting the states to conic to Washington to secure things they ought to provide for themselves. The road aid law was the first noteworthy manifestation of this encroachment of federal on state power; not power alone, but responsibility. Steadily this has been extended, the latest addition to the swelling load of federal control imposed on the sovereign states being the Shepard-Towner maternity law. Out of it all proceeds a gradual weakening of state and enhancement of federal prestige. Power and authority is being centralized, the states parting with their birthright for a mess of pot tage disguised as federal aid for local enter prises. Additional judges are imperatively needed for the transaction of the present business in the United States trial courts, and as they come more and more of the litigation of the land will pass under their control, until the state court will fall into a minor and perhaps negligible po sition. However, if we are going to have a na tion, it may be well to spell it with the biggest possible "N." Security for Small Savers. The saver of small sums is perpetually per plexed as to the disposition of his accumulations, seeking always for the highest possible return consistent with absolute safety. While the sav ings banks and the building and'loan associations offer attractive inducements to these, a great many prefer to trust the federal government, feeling that it is in the long run the only safe place to leave the money not needed for im mediate use. For the accommodation of these the postal savings bank was instituted. It has been of great service to many, but has not met its opportunity, because of the undue safeguards with which it was surrounded, and the paucity of return made to the depositor. Postmaster General Hays called attention to the fact that in this regard the United States government had been one of the most flagrant of profiteers. Was" savings stamps provided a very satisfactory method of investment for the small savers who could not purchase Liberty bonds or Victory notes. Sale of these securities is not to be dis continued, but they will be replaced by an even more attractive form of 'security, that of the treasury certificate, which will be available in denominations as low as $50. The rate of inter est is high, the money goes directly into gov ernment service, and the end of safe investment with ample guaranty for the principal is served as nearly perfectly as anything can be. As the people become acquainted with the treasury cer tificate, the flow of money from source to user and return will be greatly facilitated. A Gold Star of Peace. Peace seldom brings forth the same en thusiasm for the ideals of an advancing civiliza tion as does war. This is doubly a pity, because the same spirit of devotion to human progress cbuld do so much more in a constructive -way during peace than during conflict. A hero of peace has died in Mexico, yet no one can conceive of making a public ceremony over his bones. He was Dr. Howard B. Cross, a scientist who had gone into the Mexican jun gle to study the yellow fever, and died of it. His laboratory at Vera Cruz was supported by the Rockefeller institute, and no doubt will be con ducted by. another physician who will step for ward as did Dr. Cross, a volunteer on dangerous service. Human nature is naturally pugnacious. The . struggle ot nation against nation and army against army as an outlet for these instincts can be and must be supplanted by new forms of con test. A foot ball game or almost any other sporting event calls up similar emotions to. those of battle. So also may the fight against disease, against misery, ignorance, poverty and deprav ity be made one day to hold all the thrilling and dramatic appeal that today is found mainly in warfare. It is to be wished that more public interest might be turned to such splendid sacrifices as this of Dr. Cross; that young men and women would have impressed upon their minds the splendor of a life of service, and tefc accent the great truth that the struggle for existence is not now that of man against man, but of man against unfavorable conditions of nature. A speaker on business efficiency claims that S5 per cent of possible' saes are lost through the inefficiency of clerks Yet it is to be doubted if aynone ever gives up buying an article he needs or wants merely because the first clerk he comes to is incompetent. That is. to say, only so much is available to be spent, and any efficiency which induces customers to buy more than they needed or could pay for could hardly be called by that name. Colombia is reported to have ratified the treaty with the United States, by which it gets $25,000,000 for its shadowy claims on Panama. That is one expense that might be charged to good nature on part of our government Colonel House is now descanting on the mistakes the Washington conference is making. He is well posted on the topic, his Paris ex perience qualifying him to speak with authority. About this time of year folks used to hunt for the water wagon. Now they are running from it "Big Jim" McDonald deserves everything the community can do for him. Reasons for the Submarine Its Service as a Weapon of , Defense Justifies Existence. (From the Boston Transcript.) Americans will be the first to appreciate the force of the plea lor the abolition of the sub marine which Lord Lee of Fareham has just presented to the Washington conference. That plea rested on a double foundation. In (lie first place, the chief of the British admiralty argued tor the elimination of the submarine on the grounds that its retention as an instrument of naval Warfare might at any moment put in jeopardy the national life of the British Isles through cutting off the food supply upon which the very continuance of that lite depends. The trade routes of the empire, in short, must always remain vulnerable to submarine attack, even from an enemy weak in every other element of of tensive warfare. In the second place, argued Lord Lee, considerations of humanity alone should cause the powers now assembled in con ference at Washington to bar. lor all time, the use of that naval weapon which, in the hands of German sailors, caused the massacre on the high seas of 20.000 or more noncombatants. Without question, Lord Lee has made out a strong case against the use of tinder-seas craft in future warfare. From the British point of view it is unanswerable, Y et other countries, notably France, Italy and Japan, arc pleading with as much force for the retention of the sub marine as an accepted wepon of naval warfare. In the present instance, Great Britain stands vir tually alone; other countries, with one voice, are united in its defense. The submarine, they point out, is par excellence the defensive weapon of the lesser powers against attack iy sea at tne hands of their more powertui neighbors, it is weapon of which small and poor countries can avail themselves, and in the case of those na tions which have overseas possessions, the sub marine is invaluable in assuring the defense of their out! vine oossessions. Such considerations apply ' with especial strength to the United States, and it is these considerations which have impelled the members of the American delegation Secretary Hughes, Senator Lodge, Senator Underwood and Air. Root to oppose the British in their request for the elimination of tindcrscas cratt. ihe united States has a coast line, many thousands of miles in extent, in the defense of which a fleet of sub marines is as valuable as several squadrons of superdreadnoughts. Our insular possessions are peculiarly exposed to attack by sea, and here aeain an adequate fleet of sciegoing submarines, with a sufficiently wide cruising radius, is indis- nensable. We have a merchant marine steadily growing in size and in value, and in the policing of our trade routes the submarine has a wide sphere of usefulness. The Monroe doctrine, moreover, puts upon our navy heavy obligations, and in meeting these obligations, and in pro tecting South and Central America from foreign aggression, the underseas boat will be a weapon of tremendous value. Clearly the submarine has come to stay, and the naval powers of the world must continue to maintain a quota of submarines as long as they maintain naval establishments. But a curb must be put upon submarine warfare, in order that mankind may never again witness the horrors that characterized Germany's under-sea cam paign, in which women ana children and other noncombatants went to their deaths by the thou sands. The powers must ptt a curb on such warfare along the lines recommended by the American government. As intimated in a recent Washington dispatch to the Transcript, the American government is ready to recom mend that the five naval powers repre sented at Washington shall agree by treaty to outlaw unlimited submarine warfare on com merce, and shall agree that submarines be com pelled to obey the same rules as surface vessels with respect to the rules of visit and search; and that they ( shall furthermore agree by treaty to hmtt the submarine tonnage to an amount no larger than is necessary for the defensive needs of the small as well as the larger powers. Ihe enforcement of such restrictions, as the American government is prepared to recommend will'do much to "humanize" submarine warfare should another war occur. The objections to- the submarine are of the same nature as those directed agains the airplane. Abuses in the use of both have occurred. The bombing airplane has destroyed the lives of thousands of helpless noncombatants in the last war, and uiiless the powers of the world agree to prohibit the bomb ing of cities, another conflict would witness the slaughter of many thousands more. Yet the air plane, like the submarine, has a legitimate use in the defensive armament of all powers, both large ancLsmall. This fact the Washington conference cairnot fail to realize. When War Is Not Sin It is a fact that the churches do not dare to teach that all and every war is sin, but the rea son why they do not dare is simply because it is not true. Churches everywhere and unanimously do teach that the man or men, the nation or people, by whom war is begun, com mit the most heinous sin conceivable in human imagination. But they also must always teach so long as the danger of such wicked war re mains to menr.ee the world that the sin next to that in shame is for honorable men to be such cowards that they will not give themselves, life and all, to dtfeat and punish such unjust wars by means of just and righteous war. The churches are in little danger of blessing the wicked kind of war. But if they listened to such voices as this of The- Churchman, they might on some unhappy occasion be in danger of crucif'ing their Lord afresh by refusing to bear His cross for the redemption of the inno cent, prostrate beneath the foot of the oppressor. Let us not then permit vague and labyrinthine sentiment to lead us away from the leesson that the American churches learned right well when Germany rose against the liberties of mankind that the sword of the Lord and Gideon still avails to smite the arrogant to the ground and clear a path for the coming of the kingdom of heaven on earth. American Christianity is for disarmament mightily, persistently, indubitably for it. But it has won the right to be for disarmament because by the power of God it helped so magnificently to disarm the militant evil of the world's latest anti-Christ the German kaiser. Continent (Prebyterian.) How to Keep Well By DR. W. A. EVANS. Quotient cencernlng hygiene, aanita tlaa ana1 ereveatnta et diaeeae, eub. milted te Or. Event ay reader el Ihe Bea, will he anevered aereenelly aubject e eeoper limitation, where etaaieed, eddieeeed envelope It an. cleead. Or, Event w 'I net make aliagnetil or ereecrlhe for Individual di.ea.ee. Aeeroee letters la care el The Baa. Copyright, 1C1, by Dr. W. A. Emit ON FEEDING BABIES. A lady once wrote me, ami not ho long ago, that she would throw her baby In the river before she would feed It a more liberal diet, as recom mended by me. I hope the lady did not throw her baby in the river. Indeed, I not only hope that she decided to keep It, but that she also decided to have aome more balnea, und that one of them Is old enoiiKh to profit by the results of a clinical trial of tho question that lias been carried out for a period of seven years in a Stockholm baby hospital. The theory of the experiment was that, Just as breast milk la neces sary for baby welfare In the first two quarters of the flrat year of life, so breads, cereals, vegetables and fruits are necessary In the last quar ter of that year. With some of the babies under experiment the mixed feeding began at 6 months of rk. With others it was not begun until later, but In all it was fully under way at 9 months. The babies were fed five times in the 24 hours. Tho only milk they received was from 10 to 18 ounces a day, and that was cooked in with the other foods. So milk was given us a beverage, to be taken from a bottle or cup. The diet of these 9 to 12 months old bablea was selected from the following: Porridge groats, rye meal porridge, gcuel, beef tea, fruit Juice, soups, cocoa, scrambled egKS, minced meats, minced nsh, rufks, vegetables and potato pureon, stewed fruits and potatoes, carrots, cauli flower and spinach. Some of the formulas were: Por ridge Groats Water, 500, milk, sfiO; 10 per cent cream, 150; groats, 60. Hye Meal Porridge water, 1,000; rye meal, 120. Gruel Water, 350; milk, 650; sugar, 15; powdered rusk, 60. Keef Tea Ueer tea with mashed vegetables, 1,000: sugar, 10; groats. 60.- Fruit Juice Soups Fruit soup, 1,000; sugar, 40;, potato flour, 10; groats, 60. Cocoa Water, 70; milk, 250; sugar, 40; cocoa, 30. Pulp of stewed apple with 4 to 6 per cent sugar. Pulp of stewed pear with 1 to 3 per cent sugar. Pulp of plums with 5 to per cent sugar. Our friends or Scandinavian descent will know.about these foods. Others will want to substitute kindred articles better known and more readily available in this country. The observations made by Dr. I. Jundell covered the rate of growth, general health and freedom from in fections of these babies under trial compared with babies fed on more? restricted diet. He concludes that some babies thrive much better when fed this way. As to whether it is a better routine diet for any and all, babies, he expresses no opinion. That It is a safe diet, he is cer tain. Grease Those Cold Feet. Mrs. J. M. C. C. writes: "Will you kindly tell me how to prevent chil blains? As 1 have to be out In the bad weather a great deal, my feet freeze immediately." REPLY. AVear loose, warm stockings and loose, warm, waterproof shoes. Grease your feet well and fre quently. When the soldiers in the trenches in Flanders could do no better they pulled open the shoe top and poured fish oil down the inside of the shoe. Majfoo It Is Gout. A Reader writes: VI. Why do the finger joints enlarge and at the same time have little bumps on them, the joir.ts being quite painful at times? Z. is there any cure?' Was told by a New York doctor there was not. '3. If it is kidney trouble, how. is the best way to handle the case?" REPLY. l.vThis may be due to gout. How ever, the probability is that it is a variety of arthritis which most peo ple over 70 years of age have. That variety is due to a very mild, very slowly progressive and comparative ly harmless Infection. 2. If it is due to gout, eat and drink like a poor man. If it is the other kind, it is not worth while trying to do anything. i. It is not kidney trouble. Trachoma Is Contagious. P. K. writes: "For the last eight years-1 have been troubled with a disease called trachoma, and have been doctoring for some time, but do not seem to get any cure. Kind ly advise me if it is possible to get this permanently cured." REPLY. It is possible to cure trachoma. It may be Tiecessary to scrape the granulations and to apply strong solutions. This should be. done by some one experienced in treating trachoma. The disease is conta gious. ' American History in the Schools. The board of education of New York has re ceived repeated complaints that the text books in American history in use in the schools are pro-British or anti-British. A committee has gone over four text books against which objec tions were made and has made recommendations, which are not made public, doubtless because the committee does not want a new shower of objections, founded more upon racial prejudice than upon the desire to ge the facts straight for the minds of pupils. The rule for writing American history for schools and colleges and for the reading of pa triotic Americans and unreconciled aliens is sim ple, although it is not always easy to follow. The rule is to tell the truth, without unfair em phasis or exaggeration. Syracuse Post-Standard. An Answer to Anxious Ones. t A contemporary anxiously inquires what has happened to Col. George Harvey, who has made no speeches for several days. To which it may be replied that when necessity arises Colonel Harvey will be found on the job with a rattling good speech on whatever subject may require his attention. Milwaukee Sentinel. Must Protect Ears. "W. E. A. writes: "Will you tell me if there has yet been found any remedy for inner ear diseases, such as otosclerosis and Meniere's disease, which are supposed to begin in childhood or early youth? "Are there are preventive meas ures that can be taken by children whose mother, uncle, aunt and sev eral first cousins are deaf from these inner ear diseases?" - . ' REPLY. I know of nothing. People who ave an inherited tendency that way should protect their ears well. CENTER SHOTS. "Tempestuous emotions, beauty, bestiality, fine writing, unrefined situations," a critic writes of a cer tain new novel. The line of buyers forms on the right. Don't shove. Nashville Tennessean. Marshal Foch. American observ ers have discovered, is never tardy. Now the school teachers can put added ardor into their descriptions of his achievements. Worcester Gazette. It is rumored that the ex-kaiser will remarry. Perhaps he will add "kale" to the three "Ks" on which he once insisted. Indianapolis Star. No cigar-shaped blimp will ever go as high as cigars have. Detroit News. Kismet Give 'era trousers and suspenders and any thing else that will satisfy the national woman's party. Might's well clear the slate of all de mands, for we'll have to do it sooner or later. God bless 'eml Cincinnati Enquirer. - 'An Oklahoma man hj een his wile for the first time in 10 years. frhe must be a movie fan. Chatta nooga News. The minister who says women's freedom in dress Is sanctioned by the Bible probably took his tent from "Re-relations." Pittsburgh l'ress. (The He altera He ealumna freely la Ha renuVre xbn rare M oWiwa l nubile uunlkm. II reiimla that lei Ire. h -eoaanably Brief, no aaer SuO Hard.. II aim Inal.la that the name of Ihe rll.e arromienr eneh 1-tter, axil neeMrilv foe puhllrallnn, hat that the edlle may know with nhum be w dealing. The lte lea ant pretend te) idirae or aeeent towa ne nifntna etprre-ed by cerrv ponilenla In Ihe Itler Itoi.) What lleally In Wrong. York. Nb Iec. 82. To the Kdltor of The Bee: What must we do to bo saved T There is so much wrong everywhere and ao many doc tors each with a different dope and theirs the only cure for what alls iin that we are reminded of an old proverb which runa: "When the doctors disagree dismiss the whole bunch." Many of the Ills that some aay all us are not there, and some that dx all us are not the result of the tEures given, but the remedies offered would be worse than tho (iisentie. Ttre cry. "What is the nutter with business?" Is answered in a trinity of ways, some say it is stagnntion caused by high freight ratea; some say it's high wages, ete., etc. Some say the only remedy is nn International hanking system, with tho United States furnishing the rnpltal and credit for the rest of the world to do bualness with; others, that we should rancel the nllled war debts ao the others could buy of us, and "the great pacifist" says the only way to. Insure peace is to cancel thone war debts. Of all HC-ft stuff that is sure the limit. Ho they can prepare for the next war with a notion that they can Htay another one. with us furnlsh irg the money and part of the boys, then let them annex territory and people lo half that of the United States and we get nothing but a vote of thanks after we forgave them another war debt. It looks to a mere layman aa though it would be not only better business, but wafer for them and lis to say with all kindness, but with tho firmness of the everlaKtlng bills that we ex pect full and complete payment of what we loaned them. I think that would have quite an influence to keep them from going at it again. Then the cry of high taxes is only partly to blame, but what caused the taxes to be so high; the war paused nearly all the increase, and dollar paid in the wi.ne In Uk" fc-ora io I lie state ana tne tuner t i-cniB goes for local rkpenara. Now, why In the name of reason hae they not cut down Ihe taa at home, ao we could are bow they would reduce thoae of tho elate lut the mi Ik In the pumpkin romvs from Ihe done for office, and la veil aa a bait (a catch votes with. Hut you know what IWuuin bald, and I hey win one mm la wny tney nn. FltANKI.l.N rot'K. Spots Unchanged (rYoni lh riilladclpliltt Ixnlger.) Purine the Mat few days we event to have had an epldrmiu of ears pea rroiu prl.cn by notorious criminal, The whole country has eome to know and talk about tlieae episodes been una most of them were accom panied by acts of bloodshed and vio lence. In Chicago a uunman sen fenced to be hungrd In a few dnys broke, in broad day light, from the exercise pen of the county prison with four others, scaled the prUnn wans, ana nude away in a seized automobile, leaving a trait of wounded and battered prison guards In hla woke. At Marquette, audi., a group or convicts took ad vantage of the ditrknens Incidental to a moving-picture exhibition in tho reformatory to precipitate an attack on the warden. The con victa had stolen knives from tht prison kitchen. The onVlnla had no weapons, since a rule whose origin Ih left in obscurity forbade hem l be armed within' the walls of the in stitution. The outcome was that the warden was stubbed nlno times. he deputy warden bndiy beatet. and the son of the latter, visiting at the inntitutlnn, was stabbed in the lungs and is likely to die. These incidents, com In? as items of one day's news in climax to a series of similar events, suiteest at least one Idea with unescapnble em phasis. That is that in every prison there are violent criminals who will not stop at endangering the life of anyone who gets in their way when they are on a rumpage. They have, In other words, remained unregen erate. That is an idea we ore threat ening to lose sight of nowadays. A number of us have somehow got ourselves twisted around Into the eoneeption that a man in prison Is it victim of society who Is more to bo pitied than cenmired. Under this conception, more flattering to their hearts than to their heads, these excellent people bestir themselves to mnke his lot more comfortable in prison than it would be if he were out in the world making an honest a great deal of that costs could and ! living. As a mutter of fact, how would have been saved could we ever, the great majority of men in have been allowed an auditing board I prison are there because they tried during the war. instead of the cost ' to cheat or injure their fellow man plus plan and many other things and were found out. They deserve that lacked proper control. So that , a decent environment, but they do A liussiathPlottcd Crime the debts are large and the taxes are therefore necessarily large and will be for years to come regardless of who is at the helm unless they repudiate the debt. But to stop the mouths that have nothing above them and nothing below but the thirst for the loaves and fishes to be picked up along the ofHce route ought to require nothing more than to point out the trimming down of the former administrations plans by a billion and a half for the first year and the pruning of the pay roll of the thousands of surplus not deserve coddling. Welfare sys tems and "honor" organizations In prisons that recognize that fact may be. doubtless re, good enough in their way. If they offer an oppor tunity for improvement to that per centage of the prisoners which is rabble of rivalling itself of the op portunity they are performing a valuable function. The day in which a convict need be sentimentalized over Just because he is a convict, however, has not yet come. It is to be noted that in both the instances n.cntioned above the prisoners took help. And when it comes to state . advantage of conditions created matters, there is the wail of woerwhen the usual discipline of the in- proviue about the high taxes, some claiming it is extravagance, others it is the code law that causes it. Now the new party gets up and yells for sweeping reductions in' state ex penses. Now, why did they not tell just where and how they would do it, whether they would begin by half feeding the inmates of state in stitutions or cut the coal- supply or where. They complain of all these things costing them so much more then formerly, but the state is no different jfrom a family in that re spect. And yet only 15 cents out of every stitution was relaxed to them iwith recreation and relief. The Floor Held. "Did your watch stop when it .dropped on the floor?" asked one man of his friend. "Sure," was the answer. "Did you think it would go through?" Western Christian Advocate. (I'rtmi Iho Waaltlngoin Mar., Kver since Hfplanibtfr 1. iKO, whan a bomb was eipluileil in Walt street cguemc many deaths and much destruction tf properly, era re h baa been prosecuted forlhuxa guilty (if thla atrocious crime. Many i lure have been followed and sev eral at rents have been made, but mull now no definite results have hern dhtained. Until the announce, merit that lias JunI come from War saw of the arrest there of a man tor complicity in the outrage It hue seemed liopeleaa to expect a solu tion. Iiug ago the theory ot an ac lilcnt.il enplimlon wna discarded on the around that there wua no con ceivable ream m for the exiatence of a large quantity of high explosive at that particular point. The affair bore unmistakable evidence of a de liberately plunned crime. The man -nrrretet! nt Waraaw, it la said, haa confessed to having been a member of a group acting under instructions of the third interna tlonale at Moscow, which had prom ised 130.000 to be divided among four or live persons. Thla money, Ihe dispatch states, was received by New York rtunniunlHts from Russia. In on respect the confession, a re ported from Warsaw, is not clear. Thla is the statement that one of the persons Impllcnted was a woman who had for several (lays been watching front a window opposite the oltlce of J. P. Morgan to observe his movements and to give a signal to the planters of the bomb, which wna intended to destroy him. Mr. Morgan was in London at the time of the explosion, anil must conse quently have been absent from New 1 ork for at least a week prior to the exploalon. It Is. of course, to be hoped that all of those connected with the out- rase will be caught. If this man la telling the truth it should be pos sible to round up his associates, un less perhaps they are now in Russia, where they cannot be renched st present. Announcement of the ar rest of I.lndenfeld and his confession suggests that steps have been taken to capture these others, unless the rtatement is premature. The nat ural result of a proclamation of Tilndenfeld's exposure of the crime find of his associates in it would be lo drive them Into hiding. Association of the Russian com munist center with the crime is not fiurprlslng. It has been known foV it long time that from that center lias come much of the radical propa ganda that has been active in the Vnlted States. Most of the trouble- nome radicals in this country are known to be identified with groups that are in turn affiliated with the third Internationale. While the so viet government has no direct of ficial connection with that center, the association is known to be close. The third Internationale, in short, is the missionary agency of the soviet. Or li perha'lv may be stated thus, that the soviet is the Russian politi cal manifestation of the third Inter nationale. Whichever may be cause s.nd which effect, these two are linked in vile identification, as this crime of September, 1S20, the truth of which is now coming- to light, has shown. Doesn't Need Any Help. A smart woman may be able to make a fool of any man, lSut more often she doesn't. Philadelphia Inquirer. She Could Use Him. , "Rastus." said the Judge sternly, "you're plain no-account and shift less, and for this fight I'm going to send you away for a year at hard labor." "Please, jedge," interrupted Mrs. Rastus from the rear of tho court room, "will yo' honah Jes' kinder split dat sentence? Don't send him away from home, but let dat hard labor stand." The American Le gion Weekly. Why the Hen Cackles. liens cackle after laying eggs be-; cause they know the price we pay. Harrisburg Patriot. Met the Test During the Recent Cold Spell There's nothing like it to deliver the heat and not a peck of ashes in a ton. It's All Heat No Waste The Ideal Fuel Ask Your Coal Dealer IF HE CAN'T SUPPLY YOU, TELEPHONE THE SHERIDAN COAL COMPANY W.O.W. Bldf. Exclusive Wholesale Distributors Douzla 2226 Omaha