THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 1922. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MUKNING) EVENING SU N DAY 1HR HEE PUBLISHING COMPANY Ntl-SON B Ui'DIKIf, Publl.Ber U, DHtWr.R. General Mur MEMBER Or THE ASSOCIATED FREW Tlx ajeneiaieS Praia. e The B is a -eaaiBar. li e etoattels wuiM h U14 mi for iwukiKxiiia ef (II aa-ea Siweirtwe er-anu-4 M M MSar-vtaa cradlleS It IBU D.eaf. ariS sta, Ike innel am mMii4 a.ia Ail rt.bts at nvvbliMtua ft ear apenel Sis-ercta er sits winil Yb Omaha lam e-aiaea of tha iwttl Hnmt at Orea lettana, U nacniae4 auinoflli oa elKUU ainlli. ' The circulation of The Omaha Bee . SUNDAY. JAN. 1, 1922 71,310 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY B. BREWER. Ceneral Manaier ELMER S. ROOD, Clrculottoa Manaier Swrm to and at-ascribed before ma tail 34 day of January, 1922. (Seal) W. H. QU1VEY, Notary PuaUa BEE TELEPHONES Private Branca Exehan-re Auk (or th Department or Person Wanted. For Night Calla After 10 P M.l Editorial Department, AT Untie 1021 or 10. OFFICES Main Of flea 17 th and Fam.ra Co. Bluffa 15 Scott 6t. South Bld 4985 S. 24th EL New York 286 Fifth Ave. Waahlnfton 1811 G EL Chtrmio UK Wrlfley Bldf. Paria, Franca 420 Bue St. Honora ATIantic 1000 The Bee's Platform 1. New Union Passenger Station. 2. ' Continued improvement of the Ne braska Highways, including the par, ment with a Brick Surface of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha. 3. A ahort, low-rate Waterway from the) Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. 4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. "Federal Reserve" for Europe. Robert L. Owen, United States senator from Oklahoma, is also a student of finance, and any proposal along this line emanating from him is worthy of attention, because it may be accepted as hiving been well considered. Therefore his plan for erecting a federal reserve banking sys tem for the European states, linking it with that of the United States, deserves attention. Details of his plan are lacking, but the broad outline as indicated by the press dispatches from Washing ton suggest that he hopes to solve the question of international credit on a basis that will involve the United States as lightly as possible. In this regard it differs materially from the international banking scheme fostered by Senator Hitchcock, whose institution would rest substantially on the credit of the United States. The Owen bank will have the United States in reserve and not as its prime mover. Pending the outcome of the conference shortly to be held at Cannes, where the economic future of Europe will be considered, any American plan of salvation for bankrupt nations generally may be held in abeyance. Until the Europeans give over their habit of incurring deficits and emitting fiat currency to defray extravagant public ex penses, and mold their financial affairs on a solider core? the United States will do well to hold aloof. An agency for the stabilization of exchange may yet be devised, and should be of great service, but it is not possible under present conditions, short of American assumption of sponsorship for some enormous European debts contracted since the war. Senator Owen's further plan for the extension of the time for payment of , the war loans due the United States is more reasonable." Our gov ernment expects to fund this loan into long-time bonds, and the terms suggested by Senator Owen are not so generous as to endanger any of our home interests. Making a virtue of necessity, it will be easy to absorb interest accruing during the next ten years into the principal of that debt, and then to permit payment over a period of fifty years. Under this plan no hardship will be worked on anybody, debtor nations will be given a full chance to order their affairs and get into condition to meet their external obligations, and , get back to financial health again. Any plan that succeeds, however, must have in it a reversal of the present day practices in Europe. We can not regulate their affairs, but we can decline to finance them, and if they want help from this country it will be secured only by a show of good faith that is not now manifest. Shuffling With the Public Good. Another contract for the important work of collecting and disposing of the city's garbage is about to be let by the commissioners to private contractors. Assuming that these men are re sponsible, and that they will carry out their agreement to the letter, it remains true that they will be doing something the city ought to do for its citizens. Nothing new in this. For longer .than a generation the matter has been before the community in one or another form, at times ex asperating, at other times a positive menace. Scandal has arisen from it, and poor service al ways has marked it progress. Until a properly organized and competently directed force of city employes is put in charge of the work, and the offal collected is disposed of according to modern methods, the question will not be satisfactorily answered. If a contractor can make money by doing the work, the city can save money by doing it; if a contractor's employes are depend able and efficient, so would the same men be if they were working for the city. The Bee is not wedded to any one of a number of plans that are proposed or adopted in various cities throughout the country for taking care of the household ref use that must be handled. What it has long advocated is that the business be taken over and made part of the public sen-ice, under control and direction of the health department, where it properly belongs, to the end that at all times and undef all circumstances the community will know the work is being done. Omaha's Well FiUed High Schools. Reports from the high schools of Omaha are to the effect that all have attendance exceeding in numbers any previous experience. At the Central more than 2,700 students are registered, while at Commerce and South the registration is bigger than ever before. This is a hopeful sign, for it carries proof that the children of Omaha are getting the training they should have before going into the world to take up the big job of earning a living. Another thing shown is the fact that Omaha must steadily increase its facili ties for taking care of boys and girls in school When the new Technical High school is com pleted, some of the congestion bow felt by Cen- trI High will b relieved, yet It will not be a great while before the projected junior highs will have lo bt provide! to take care of the pupils coming on from the gride schools. The steady increase in attendance it the grade schools Is a remit of the city's growth, and a re minder that means to satisfy the demind for seats must be provided there, Omaha can point to its city schools, not only si art evidence of the importsnce of its cultural life, but is proof that its population is growing rapidly. Tax on Official Salaries. A report frony Lincoln to the effect that the governor had in mind asking that an income tax be levied on official salaries paid in Nebraska is interesting. Such t tax, if levied, will finally amount to merely reduction in pay to the extent the salary is lessened by payment of tax. If this be the end sought, well and good. As a mere ex pedient the course will be disappointing. ' Official Salaries fixed by law may not be reduced during a term of office; it may be questioned if the state can attain this end indirectly by levying a special tax against officials. When the law is made gen eral in its operation, all salaried officials may be included with the rest of the community, but they can scarcely be singled out and levied against as a class, solely because the pay they receive from the public is exempt under the federal law. If Nebraska is to consider the adoption of a general income tax law, the issue should be taken up boldly and openly discussed. In simple jus tice to all, the revenue system of the state should be completely overhauled and placed on a more substantial and accurate basis than now exists. We have too many makeshifts and uncertain de vices for trapping dimes and dollars and getting them into the state treasury. The great revenue measure that was before the legislature so long and in so many varying forms last winter con tained schemes for catching the dollar hidden in one place and allowing it to escape if concealed right next door. Such plans are idle. What is needed is a revenue law that will in honesty and decency carry out the original provision of the constitution, that all property be taxed equally on the basis of its actual value. When such a law is adopted, and returns are honestly made, taxes not only will be lighter, but they will be paid with better spirit, for no man will settle with the state in the spirit that now too often prevails, that of envy and discontent be cause he feels his neighbor is evading his share by concealing some of his property, or has an undue and unjust advantage in form of exemp tion. Let us take up the tax matter in a fashion that will settle it, and not continue the delusion that marks the existing unsatisfactory methods of securing money to carry on public business. Cheerfulness as a Cure. One of the speakers before the Home Eco nomics society, now meeting at Lincoln, advises the housewives of the state to adopt a policy of cheerfulness. Sing at your work, laugh a little every day, if not every hour, be charitable,xfor giving, and forbearing, and many of the ills now suffered in vain will disappear, and our women folks will find the real essence of life. Without doubt, for, as the preacher long ago told us, "a merry heart doeth good like unto medicine." A great many of the wives and mothers of Nebraska just now have plenty to laugh at, 'if they only had the time to laugh in. Most of them are so busy, however, from long before the rising of the sun until long after the going down thereof, that if they take time to be merry it must come out of the few hours they have for weary slumber. They are not in any sense un appreciative, they are just victims of the circum stances that require them to give unremitting at tention to the multifarious details that make up the daily round of life for them on the farm or in the city home. The toad beneath the harrow knows Exactly where each toothpoint goes. The butterfly beside the road Preaches patience to that toad. So rhymed Kipling, in touching on a some what similar situation. It is true that some .of the drudgery of home-making has been relieved by inventions, wherein machines of various types take off part of the load, yet new duties have been evolved, new requirements have sprung up, and the average housekeeper of today wonders how her mother ever got through with, all the work she had to do and with none of the mod ern conveniences. ' Surely, cheerfulness is a good thing, and per haps will cure a lot of evils that are more imagin ary than real. It is worth while trying, but it is not easy to laugh at hard times and the h. c. of 1. ' Courts to Meet a Crisis. New York has been aroused, as have other American cities, by the crimes of violence against person and property. Judges who preside over trial courts have agreed to apply a drastic and in some respects a novel remedy. They propose to fix the bail bonds of prisoners having criminal records and who are accused of other crimes suf ficiently high to make it difficult for the culprits to obtain relief on bail. By keeping the known criminals in jail pending trial, they hope to re duce the crime wave at least to that extent. The plan has its attractive features. Courts are human institutions, the same as criminals, existing for the purpose of securing to society protection from the morally delinquent or perverse. For many years the tendency in the administration of the law has been to the more humane applica tion of punishment, with a most discouraging net result of more crime. During the last two years the country from end to end has beeii shocked by a succession of crimes until moralists are in despair and law enforcing officers are desperate. If the New York idea prevails, however, and is generally adopted, some good may come, for an habitual criminal in jail awaiting trial is safe as far as commission of crime is concerned, while the same man, at liberty on bail, may do other devilment, and frequently does. Efforts of the police, too, deserve to be supported by the courts, and with a little team work all around the crime wave may be lessened by sequestration of some known evildoers. In a sane world the suggestion of a war be tween France and Great Britain would be greeted with incredulous laughter. It has not been long since the man-power of these two great neighbors stood shoulder to shoulder in the trenches and less time than that since their statesmen were vowing eternal friendship. The people themselves have no differences today, and will have none tomorrow unless they are de ceived by their leaders. asasaBaaaaaaaaasBBBBajBiaaMaaaaaa The cost of running the state government decreased more than $30,000 from October to November. If this rate is kept up the knockers' dub vCI ban to find a new subject. Under Whirh VinnV rw, i i r tr iV V ! fit jll Shall Forestry B Kept Akin to Agriculture or They Be Divorced? (From the Rocky Mountain News.) At the beginning of the year congress and the executive departments will have on their hands the question of departmental reorganise tlon that his been promised by the pirty In power and which is being insisted upon by the budget commissioner and many public organiza tions outside of politics and government. This state Is deeply interested In two depart ments that are in the reorganization schedule. They are Colorado's landlords. In acreage they control almost half the state. In this connection it is for Colorado people to. make themselves heard and felt at Washington in time; and this Is why we are writing about the matter now. Individuals and societies ought to be tip and doing. Under the present arrangement there Is a dual control, a divided responsibility that often times becomes an overlapping control, requiring so much additional red tape. Partisan politics is responsible for the present hodge-podge in departments. Economy and ef ficiency had little, to say. New offices were created and assigned to set departments purely as a pork barrel proposition and according to the lineup in the particular departments afTected. 11 the congressman or senator who was the author of the new office had a friend at the head of a department, that office was assigned to this particular department, no matter whether or not it belonged there. The main issue to Colorado is what is going ? b done wi,n t,,e frdrraI forestry service and the Department of the Interior. The forestry service is under the Department of Agriculture that is to state, the land useful for forest con servation was loaned by the Interior department to the other department. The Interior depart ment is still the final arbiter; but it is the Agri cultural department that controls and directs the forestry service. Fortccn millions or fifteen milli'nne ,,.. in Colorado are under the exclusive jurisdiction j til? , st service- This Is quite an estate. The forest service was placed under the con- trol of the Agricultural department when the ' Finchot policies were much in vogue, when coik' servation of public lands was a fetish. The con servationist argument was that the lands under the Agricultural department would be safer than under the Interior department, for the reason that the latter for a half century had carried out a policy of disposal, instead of what the Finchot advocates termed "conservation." Since its crea tion, the Interior department has homesteaded the ' west, worked a quiet but nevertheless a most remarkable economic-sociological revolution, un equaled in many respects in history, an achieve- i .--.m muitii mc American people are rather pro'id of. It was argued that if the forests were left under the Interior department they would grad ually disappear, whereas if given to the other de partment they would be conserved for the pur poses of timber cultivation and protection of watersheds. m , The chief complaint from this state and ad joining states for years was that the forest serv ice carried to extremes the Pinchot policies of innervation, or in otner words that prospectors and homesteaders were given to understand their ' absence on reserves was . preferable to their I presence. It is only fair to state that in recent years tne service has been much more liberal and accommodating. Many forest areas have even been made recreation districts. Still and this is the point at issue there is complaint in the public land states that there is a great deal of land in the forest reserves suit able for homestead purposes that should be given over to farms. If this is true and worth while, would a change of landlordism back to the Interior department work a reform? Would the latter department be more inclined to segregate land actually useful for agricultural purnoses and add to the state's population and its crop acreage? The west looks " this question with a dif ferent sentiment to th-t of the east. A strong argument in support of the retention of the forest service with the Agricultural de partment is that the forest lands are used for prazing purposes. After years of dispute between the western live stock assbciations and individ ual grazers on the one part and the forest serv-' ice at Washington on the other, a general un derstanding was reached some time ai?o and since then there has been small complaint from the live stock interests. Another potent argument in favor of forest conservation as practiced bv the forestry service is the assistance afforded to the irrigation inter- I ests, by the protection of the watersheds. A hill side denuded of trees and turned into arable land sheds its snow and water much more rapidly than one covered by trees. The latter afford lodging places, myriads of small reservoirs, to hold water. and furnish shade which makes the snow slow to melt. Without "the forest growth on our watersheds we would have alternations of disastrous floods and ruirous water shortage. It is not for the ooliticia".s or bureaucracy to determine this question. ' Certainly states like Colorado, with so much at stake, should have the chief voice. If the west insists upon a change of landlord, it oujrht to have it as a matter of jus tice to the west and of economy to the federal treasury: if the west is content with the present arnnrement, the change ought not to be made. The nations! budget committee that has been active to good nurpose at Washington proposes the following changes: The Department of the Interior should be abolished and a Department of Public Works established in its place to have jurisdiction over the following services: General land office, geological survey, bureau of mines, war minerals relief commissi, reclamation service, national park service, division of camtol buildings and grounds, Alaskan engineering commission bu reau of ouhlic roads, forest service, supervising architect's office, all national military parks, monuments and memorials, board of engineers for rivers and harbors, board of engineers of New York Citv, office of stinervisor of the har bor of New York, United States engineer of fices, Mississippi river commission, California de bris commission, board of road commissioners for Alaska, office of buplic buildings and grounds and Washington monument. A Denartment of Education and Health should be established, to have jurisdiction over the fol- j lowing services: i-rom tne Deoartment ot tne Interior: Office of Indian affairs. United States Indian service, bureau of pensions, bureau of education. St. Elizabeth's hospital. Howard uni versity, Freedmen's hosoital. board of Indian commissioners. From the Department of the Treasury: Bureau of war risk insurance, office of the surgeon general, public health service. From the Department of Labor: Children's bureau. The western states interested in mining are concerned in the proposed revis:on in depart ments on account of the aid that may be ren dered from the geological survey under the new arrangements. What's Your Brand? Men somehow remind me of 5-cent cigars. What a great number of S-cent cigars there arel How they are advertised as equal to 10-cent cgarsl Ana now notoriously tney arc now . There are millions of S-cent cigar men trying . to prove they are as good as the 10. 20 or 3 for i a half kind, and cannot do it: the first evidence that a man is getting along is that he quits S rent cigars, and demands something better. E. W. Howe's Monthly. How to Keep Well PR. W. A. EVANS Quaetlaas eeaemt srfleaa aaalla Ilea) aa arovaalwa al elieseaa, auk Mittaa (a Or I-vans by raaaWfa el rka Baa. atiU be snewaieel eareer-ally subject le eroe-et lla-ltallaa. arbor i StaaiBaa, aMiaasa envelope la ee) OeeaS. Or tvaaa w 'I aot aaak, Si.f aoii ar arascrtbe fa Individual diaaaaaa. Addraas letlera la car el Tbs Baa. Copyrlsbt. Hit, by Or. W. A. Krone THE WASTE OF A RACE. The story of the Nebraska VVInue bago Indians carrlea more than one health leiiHon for you and me. Vr. M. W. Koenlg studied the live of this group of a thousand souls st the Instance of the State Tuber culoma oleety. The report la pub lished by the Bute HlntoriL-al aoclety. In this division ot the remnants of the Winnebago tribe, there are 1.087 individuals belonging to 291 families. This figures that on the average each family conslnts of S.7 persona mat is, two parents and slightly lens than two children. It ta gen erally agreed that, in ordr to keep up a population Into which there la no migration, there niunt be some thing over three children born Into each family if the health rata In very high, while lour are required If It Is very low. Of course this figure for the Win nebago Indians la the average family else, and not the birth rate. The study shows that the Winne bago mother bore a large number ot children, but most of them died In Infancy. The study showed that the Win nebago population is not quite hold ing its own. I wonder how many groups know whether their group Is holding its own; whether, after allowing for emigration and immi gration, the group Is increasing or decreasing in numbers. There are many enemies trying to wipe the Winnebago Indians off the earth. The wprst of these is the baby death rate. That Is true of your group and mine, althouKh it is not so true as it Is with the Winne bagocs, and as It was with yours and mine SO years ago. Perhaps the next worst enemy of the Wlnnebagoes is consumption. The consumption death rate of the Wlnnebagoes is about 11.7 per 1.000. That is to Bay, about one-ninth of the deaths are due to this disease. The tribute the Winnebago pays is therefore about ten times that of the white man. The Wlnnebagoes drink very .lt tle milk, there being only four cows on the reservation, and very few of their children die of tuberculosis, ac cording to the records. But the way it slaughters the young men and young women is awful to think about. Consumption makes the same kind of an onslaught on negro boys and girls 15 to 25 years old. The reasons ascribed by Dr. Koe nlg for the great prevalence of con sumption among these Indians were several. They were very careless about spitting. They threw spit from con sumptives on the ground. Flies were allowed to crawl into Bpit cups and then crawl over food. The cus tom of visiting those sick with con sumption and other forms of conta gion was almost universally ob served. The visiting, in connection with burying the dead, was a dan gerous custom. The people lived in houses, espe cially in winter time, but had no Idea how to ventilate them or to keep them sanitary. Many had the habit of sleeping with bedding drawn over the head. In other words, while in no way excusing the white man for his con tribution to the wiping out of the Winnebagoes, the bulk of the blame was put squarely up to the customs and habits of the Indian himself. OX Can You Stick to It? Mrs. W. W. W. writes: "1. Would you kindly inform me what effect the following diet would have, con tinued for a week: "8 a. m., glass very hot water and half a lemon. "9:30 a. m., two fairly small cups coffee and cream. ' "12:80 noon, one medium sized baked potato and glass of cold sweet milk. "5:30 p. m., the same as at noon. "9:30 p. m., an orange. "2. Would it make any difference if, instead of baked, the potato should be boiled? "3. (a) Are fresh raw apples fat tening? (b) Are baked apples fat tening? If so, can you tell me why? (c) Also, are tomatoes fattening? (d) Is fish fattening? "4. (a) Could you tell me what I should weigh? I am 32, 5 feet 5 hi inches tall; I weigh 145, and I want to lose 10 pounds, (b) How can I?" REPLY. 1. You would lose considerable weight. If, at the end of three weeks, you should go back to your full diet, you would soon be back to your present weight, the net gain having been one uncomfortable ex perience. 2. No. 3. (a) No. (b) Without sugar or cream, no. (c) No. (d) No. 4. (a) 136 pounds, (b) Work and limit your eating, especially bread, cereals, desserts, pastries and other sweets. It must be a permanent policy. . . Pellagra Symptoms. K. C. writes: "What are the symptoms of pellagra when it first starts?" REPLY. Among the early symptoms are ore mouth, sore tongue, burning in the mouth and throat, sunburn out of season. Endocarditis. H. B. writes: "1. What is endocar ditis? "2. Is it dangerous? "3. How can it be cured?" REPLY. I. Endocarditis is inflammation of the lining of the heart. 2. It is, in many cases. 3. Put yourself under the direc tion of the best physician available, and follow his directions. Not Including Dollars. A scientists finds that 200 different substances are made from petreleum. One must be the xiihctsnr nf tti ellnnr arhn fhinlta he knows V .J . t, ;i Tnm'trill eon'maa from the furniture atora col- Courier-Journal, lock. Way. THE SPICE OF LIFE Visitor How much milk does the oW cow give? Farm Hand About eight quarts a day. mum. - 'Visitor And bow much ot that do you Farm Hand About II, mum! The Passing Show (London). Suggestions of a Doughboy. Being tha suggestions of a doughboy on the mannar of conducting the next war, together with certain reflections oa tha conduct of the last one. 1. That there don't ba any next war. (To Bo Continued.) Tha American Legloa Weekly. Mrs. M. had arrived at tha littla at tlon In Vermont on a cold stormy evening and had hired an old man to drive her to her friend's farm up among tne niiit. Tha rosds were in bad condition trooi the storm, and the rid a was altogether very uncomfortable one. "How much do I owe you?" aha aeked on arriving at her destination. "Wall, ma'am," said tha old man. "my reg'lar price is SI. bat eeein" as It s aech a bad night and ha g-iln' so terrible. I'll call It It e-ents." Th Christian Regiater (Boston). "What's all that noiae gwlne oa avail at you houae lart night?" asked an old colored woman of another. "Sounde-1 Ilka a lot of catamounts dona broke e- DatT Why dat wa noinur oniy - m the rurnitura stora -m-eaay psymsni" The Bl- (The Haa eflera lis eolumna treaty (a Ms readers sha rar la dl"UM any pahlle ejurelk'n. II reqarets that lattere b fMainablj brief, at ever sod werda. II alfto Inalals that the nam al lha wrlle aeeoinpany rack letter, aol neraaaania for puhllratlnn, but llial Ilia eililur mar know l(n whom ha la dtnllng. lha It diws aol pretend la eadiiree or eerept views ar opinions atpreaaed by corre spondenls la lb lxrttr iloi.) A Volue Crying In the WIMcnica-t. Broken Bow, Neb., Jan. . Tu the Editor of The Ueo: We heard the volco of Keith Neville, chair man of the state democratic central committee, crying In the wilderness the other duy: "Itestore the demo cratic parly to power in this state, irsi government ot, xor ana by the people perish within Its borders," or words to that effect Well, that aotinds good. But the writer of these linen remembers well the winter of 1917, when he went to the state rapltol to take up hla duties as state senator from his din trlut. The prospect appeared splen did. We had elected a domocratla governor and had control of both houses of the legislature and a plur ality of votes in the state of some thing like 20.000. The omens were auspicious and we felt sure that if the party administered the state government in the lnturext of the people it would be many years be fore the democratic purty would surrender the reins of government to other hands. But what happened? A "bloc" of state senators came down from Omaha and proceeded to carry out prohibition by electing a brewer to the highest elective position in the senate, twenty-one so-called demo crats, as we remember it, stood for three months a "living wall" to lo feut prohibition, though the people of the state had declared for It by nearly 80,000 majority. These "friends of the people" emasculated the bill to enforce prohibition by attaching about a hundred amend ments thereto whlrh. if they had been passed, would have defeated the will of the people and com pletely nullified prohibition, and this with the active influence and insistence of Governor Seville. Does the ex-governor think the people nave zorgotten now government of, for and by the people was restored in his administration? The splendid opportunity of the democratic party in this state was frittered away and the party was repudiated at the next election bv an overwhelming majority. No, the people want government for, of and by the peoplo, but they know now that they will not get it with Keith Neville at the head of the nartv. They know that they will have what they had before government by Arthur Mullin and big business, with bootleggers plying their voca tion wttn little restraint. C. W. BEAL. On the Workers Side. Omaha, Dec. 27. To the Editor of The Bee: As a laborer myself, allow me to speak In behalf of the laborer, especially those affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. Why is it that the laborer in the building trades whose waees were the lowest were cut more than anyone else connected with the con struction of buildings? In certain parts of the east I understand the going rate of wages Is paid in the construction of school houses and public buildings. A job may not be a closed job, but the wages are right. Here at Thirty-third and Cuming the wages are 40 cents an hour. If Local No. 297 has ever called that at the present time a fair wage, I have never heard of it, It is the same in your other. cif-f work with the exception of. I under stand, Mr. - Hummel's department who slill pays 50 cents. While cut ting the wages of the poorest paid, has any of our city commissioners suggested that their own be cut? Now as to the laborer in the packing houses, your editorial of the other day to which Swift & Co. so hotly replied, in which you stated many of these men were paying for small homes as well as raising fami lies in Omaha, was not only fine, but the truth. Again allow me to quote from your editorial of yesterday: "Prbb ably there are families that can live on $15 or $18 a week. But how much business do they make for the merchants? At a time when busi ness is depressed from lack of buy ing power, who gains from further reducing the ability of a great class to consume?" Again, in another article, you ask, "Why in certain industries are they at this time so anxious to increase the hours? Are one-half who have jobs to support the other who have not?" The editorials in question should be in the hands of everyone in Omaha, for they are fair to all, and I can assure you, coming as they do at this time, they are highly appreciated by all of those who labor. As I understand the Bible, Christ was not a shirker, but a worker. If He. was on earth at this time I do not believe he would preach ser mons on bobbed hair, which con cerns no one but the wearer, but rather would His sympathies be ex tended to those who. at the present time are the most in need, they whose pay envelops are the' slim mest whether man or woman. Can not some of our churches as well as those who occupy their pulpits fol low a little more closely in His foot steps? If nothing else can be done, while we have had tag days for everything else let's have one for the unemployed, the 40-cent man, at the same time stipulating that his wages be closer to 60 than 40 cents. If not deemed proper, how about a tag day for the wives and children of the packing house employes who are now on strike? If both of these are too close to home for to be considered, there are, as I understand the situation, some 6,000 children whose parents have been evicted from their homes and who having but little of this world's goods have been living as best they can along the road sides or other places. In Europe? Not in the least, but in the county of Mingo, ADVERTISEMENT. the state nf Went Virginia, and In our own U. 8. A. CLAl'P F. ELLISON. ItnmliHs. CuiHT-r. Sutton, Nb., Use. 19. To the Editor of The lico: BUnt niyseii rraft Iclnir nhyelclun, I have been much Interested In Dr. Kvans' two articles on "Vltamlnes." Just what they are has not a yet been discov ered. They are delicately held to- tether and always contain n iroseu. ' resembling In that respect to that eloinent In other protion tuibntiHiree. They are easily dissipated and da utroyed by heat, proving that we should eut fruit and vegetables mottly In the raw etate or but slight , ly cooked. The vltamlnes are stored up ID irUlt JUKI unurr tuo anina aim such as apples, plum",, peaches and R runes should be eaten with the . skins on. Before eating such frulte can be first rubbed thoroughly witn a dry clean cloth or one wet with hot water to Insure a sanitary con dition. Having been treating cancer for more than 80 years, I can add some thing to what the doctor saya in an swer to an inquiry from my experi ence and Tong study and observa tion. It is true, as the doctor say, that cancer has been treated with surgical means, radium, the Ex-ray and plaster. All but the last named havo conflicting opinions and advo cates us to failures and auccosscs. Surgery notably has failed to cure, an the knife goes juxt so far and stops, thus allowing the poisonous cancer cells to wander out Into the Mood Btrenm, carrying this dread disease to the liver and other inter nal organs throughout tho body. This bImo Is why radium and the X-ray hus failed to cure. None of these three means have succeeded In curing because they are not seloc tlve in their action. On the contrary plasters are Blectlve and if prop, erly compounded will search out I he diseased cancer germ and destroy thuni without attracting the healthy cells of the body. In 30 years there has been real progress made in discovering the true cause of the disease, which is the arrested development of the em bryonic cell, 1. e.. the cell provided by nature before birth. This la why in the first three days after the birth it is all important that the babe should not get a "back set," but to commence to grow and do well from the very start. The reason the plaster treatment if properly compounded is curative is by a selective action it searches out the poisonous cancer cell and destroys it before it has time to spread its mischievous action to healthy organs of the body. The cancer growth is of a lower organi zation and la easier destroyed than healthy ilasura. If perchance some if in etnhrytinlu cells escape and Swult ilevplnpinetit until Ilia n. t.le. I "cancer uk" 'f about 40 years or more, thuy have htn held in check by the healthy and vig orous friendly cr-lls of the blood stream, Ihus proving cancer to l a constitutional dlrieaae and needs syatem trentmtmt audment the l.ual lrftultnnl 1'h reason SUN emy, radium am! the rix-ray have and will fill la because they treat cancer purely as a local disease. The sf position to lake la ti consider euneer aa a constitutional dlaeuse with a local manifestation. - Pit. M. V. CLAHK. Ail Airo-Olit Truth. You havo to be an old man be fori you believe) Mlow ought to wort and save while young. Kltchbur, Sentinel. Mi! Lots of r'PI'le eeem t regart birth control iccturea as objection able papagandu Life. "BUSINESS IS GOOD THANK YOlf LV Nicholas Oil Company OLD CLOTHES REPAIRED Save the price of new. THE PANTORIUM 1515 Jones Street Doug. OM3 N.W.Cor.Z4th and L. Market 12S3 When in Omaha Hotel Henshaw REDUCED DURING Hospe's Housecleaning BRANDS ON SALE Leasing Golden Oak Werner Golden Oak Jess French St Sons Mahogany Jesse French & Sons Walnut J. French & Sons Dull Oak, Waxed Hospe Mahogany Hospe Walnut Cable & Sons Walnut Martin Bros. Mahogany Storey & Clark Mahogany Singer Golden Oak Hinze Mahogany Lagonda Dark Waxed Oak Kranich & Bach Whitney Mahogany Whitney Oak Hallett & Davis Walnut Dunbar Fumed Oak Dunbar Golden Oak Kimball Player Piano, Mart. Hospe Player, Walnut Gulbransen Walnut Kranich & Bach Mali. Bachman & Son Mali. Cable-Nelson Parlor Grd. Brambach Baby Grand Apollo Small Grand Player Grand The Art and Music Store 1513-15 DOUGLAS STREET 5"S 1114 (l tot ioVt i bia-Baaaar Poo e awi; laiiiM 91 illH (III FIERY, ITCHY SKIN QUICKLY SOOTHED WITH SULPHUR Mentho-Sulphur, a pleasant cream, will soothe and heal skin that is ir ritated or broken out with eczema; that is covered with ugly rash cr pimples, or is rough or dry. Noth ing subdues fiery skin eruptions so quickly, says a noted skin specialist. The moment this sulphur prepara tion is applied the itching stops and after two or three applications, the eczema is gone and the skin is de lightfully clear and smooth. Sulphur is so precious as a skin remedy be cause it destroys the parasites that cause the burning, itching or disfig urement. Mentho-Sulphur always htals eczema right up. A small jar of Mentho-Sulphur may be had at any good dreg store. J 1922 . New Accounts and The Reason Each month shows a constantly increasing number of new accounts in all departments of the First. These range from small savings and check ing accounts to those of corporations doing a national business. This business is naturally gratify ing and comes as a result of our sixty-five years of constant atten tion to "Safety and Service." In times of stress and strain th First is always in position to amply meet all legitimate banking needs and to absolutely safeguard the interests of Us dpositors. pirstNational iBank of Omaha I