THE BEE.: OMAHA, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 2J. 19 The Omah a Bee ! DAILY (MOICMN'O-KVCMNG-SI'NDAV THE lt( fl'BI ISMlSii COMPANY HImiN b. tibia fbiHr MtMBtB Of THE AiSOCUUB fUSi i tM tMi4 Pnaa at a It tt mmmtf, H fct 4t-l ft l la M IwMtaliW . ft.f 44ti-a f a4ll4 to H m i tMri i4 M t&' !,-. ft 4 ft m iM k-ftt !... at :l , at tavwWal" af It laCaa IM M W a MW at IK ll ft af 4,lRa Tna circulation af TK OmiKi B SUNDAY, FEB. 19, 1922 78,077 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY RRCWtR, Caawal Muuin tlHf S. ROOD, ClrauUtlaa Mum la ) auaaatitoat kalia aa tbi ltd 4f m4 rftkiuwc. ina. (Saal) W.H.QUtVtY. Natar faaU BEE TtUPHONtS Priii Vranrh Eirhan. Ak far Ik , Daaartaiant or faraun Wnt.4. rer Atlantic Nii-hl Calls Attar la f. Mi Lditarial J00O Dawtmani, AT lanli l&il or iM. OFPICIS Mala (iffira Hih and Itrnan, Ca, Blild U tU iiib hula ,! I, Sub St. N.a Yr-J fifth A... Yathlt llll O fit. thiaa 111 Wrll,t tlld fart, franca 1: Kua 8U Honor i The llec'8 Platform . , 1. Naw Union Paitangar Station. 2. Continued improvemant of tha Na bratka Highways, including tha pv .Biant with a Brick Surface of Mala Tboroughfaro leading into Omaha. 3. A abort, low.rata Watarway from tha Cora Bait to tha Atlantic Ocaaa. 4. Homa Rula Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. s US Civc the Army a Rest. If tlie nation i to preserve an efficient mili tary establishment on a peace basin, the result will be accomplished better by giving to the men who are in the army some assurance that their ervice J appreciated. So long as disturbing announcements conic from Washington, emanat ing from congressmen who are looking more for personal than for general benefit, that long the men who wear the uniform will be uneasy and Incapable of giving their best attention to the business they have in hand. If the army is to be disbanded, the approach should be direct. No army in all the world is more efficiently officered than that of the United States. Critics talk glibly of young men having lately entered the service, of rapid promotion, and all that, overlooking the conditions under which these young men took on the duty they have assumed. The great majority of these officers were uni versity men, educated in .most branches on a level with the West Pointer, and lacking only the intensive training in purely military science. This most of them received during two years or longer of service during the war. Mental and physical fitness was made certain by rigid ex amination before the commissions were given them by the president, and they are officers of the army of the United States, in all ways quali fied for thfc. work laid upon them. "XIT'volunteer armies liave railitiolTs'oT rapid advancement. Napoleon's dictum that every soldier carried a field marshal's baton in his knap sack has not been forgotten, and merit always has had its recognition. The suggestion -that congress penalize the young men in the army by reducing their pay below the level for the grade will, it is est'mated, effect a saving of $4,000,000, but how will the American people stand, after employing one of these young men, inducing him to give over his other prospects in life, then to cut his pay because he is not a veteran in the service?. Cheese-paring can be carried too far. Senate and Foreign Relations. ' Just now the controversy over the proposed reservation to the so-called four-power treaty seems to be less over the possibility that the United States may be involved in war without congressional assent than it is to establish the Brandagee theory that the senate must be con sulted with regard to foreign relations at all times. The first point should be regarded as having been effectually settled in the case of the League of Nations. Then it was admitted on all sides that the president can not declare war, nor enter into" a treaty that might by inference induce a declaration of war, without the assent of con gress. A new and novel claim has been set up hy Senator Brandagee, which, simply stated, amounts to a declaration that the senate has a JkvVtt to sit in on any negotiations the president foot. i,e carrying on with a foreign nation. This 1 n.e'".C,t l'ttIe beyond the language of the Consti- E)'He (the president) shall have power, by and with the advice and consent Of the senate, to make treaties, provided two-thirds of the sena- ( tors present concur. ... Just what does that mean? From the time John Jay crossed the Atlantic to negotiate in company with Benjamin Franklin and John Adams the Treaty of Paris, by which the inde pendence of the colonies was established, down until now, the same rule has been followed. High commissioners have represented the president, and 'when their work had been approved and signed, it has been sent to the senate for con firmation; in this latter act is noted the advice and consent. If the Brandagee contention means anything, it is to abandon what has been considered the -. prerogative of the executive from the beginning, and vest the senate with an enlarged power in the handling of treaty or other negotiations with foreign governments. It is not the four-power treaty that is in danger, b'ut the whole treaty making process that is under consideration. "About "What the Doctor Ordered." It is-unsafe to prognosticate weather at any . t'me or place, because its manifestations depend on the most unstable thing man has to deal with. Atmospheric conditions continue to govern weather, and the wind bloweth whence it listeth. just as it always has, and man can only judge " accurately of it when ft hits him. Yet long ex perience and observation have demonstrated one thing.. With the end of winter, as the earth swjtigs back on its equatorial axis, and the sun approaches the north once more, steady currents of warm air, coming up from the tropics, carry high above the earth enormous quantities of water. Thesc'are borne into the higher latitudes, and there, encountering the colder air from the poles, the vapor is condensed and comes down in huge blankets of suw or deluges of rain. i It lit been for count!? ages, and a will continu until the machinery cf nature it worn cut and the solid globe of the earth rWti, dn i cinder in .pace, awaiting the shovk that will tart the evolutionary proce tie of creation anew, "While the earth remainrth, eed lime and har. fst, and fold and Itrat, and lunimrr and winter. tnd day and miiM. khall not rraae." Third Party and Non-Partisans. A aiiu.tion hat ariatn in Xtbratka that might ,eeni involved to the carnal oh.rrvrr, but wbidi rrally i, rliar and limpid as pure water. If the Townlryitr, ae true to their profra.ion, they will unite with no party, but, following the Utter and ,piiit of thvir name, will continue the effort to iiupote their peculiar belief on all puftiea, or at trait to the extent of securing through the at'Kania-aiion of existing pariiea officers and lr Ulators nmim'tted ta the league tenets. On the other hand, the pro.-rrinive party promoter feel that they ahould give open adherence to the proposition on which they find it possible to iMine for common action. Here it a rleavige as diMinet and ohvion a could be wished. What i not to be so highly commended, how- eer, it the parasitic attitude of the Townley group, which proposes to bore from within all of the parties. To gainsay the right of any group to undertake to bend the majority of a party, or the nation, to its way of thinking is to deny the fundamental right on which parties are formed. Vet, if Mr. Townley is correctly quoted, he hai departed from this basic principle. He proposes that the league remain active and virile, tut insubstantial to the extent that it accept credit only for successes and evade responsibil ity for failures, by shifting the latter onto the party through which it it working. This is opportunism raised to the ultimate power. The progressive party in Nebraska has cho.'cn firmly to hold to the middle of the road, naming its own candidates, outlining its own platform of principles, and doing openly the things it believes to be right. Just to this degree it exceeds the Townley doctrine of expediency, by which noth ing ever was or will be settled. Big Business and the Bonus. True to their generous instincts, the American people are insisting on the voting of a bonus to the soldiers of the World War. Not the heart, nor hope, but fear and cold theory, however, ani mate the eastern financiers and international banking corporations. Their view of the bonus, while frequently referred to or denounced, has not been broadcasted over the country. In a circular issued a week or so ago a Baltimore banking house expresses the following view, which a financial publication declares expresses the feeling generally held among eastern financiers: The distribution of a bonus averaging only $300 to each soldier would mean another era of inflation shorter and sharper than before, hut far more serious in its effects. There would at once Jc a decided increase in the cost of living, food, clothing and commodities would advance sharply as the demand for them progressed, and we would have a brief anti climax which would leax'e the commercial world in a more prostrate condition after this second spending period than was the case after the orgy of extravagance which followed the armistice. It is sometimes difficult to distinguish pros- peritvfrom inflation. Our great bankers have dccii wrung uciuic mis, tutu wiiu mc puuwi; warned in advance against encouraging another era of speculation, they may be wrong again. Anyway, congress will vote the bonus. Then we can watch to see if these financial sharps guessed right or wrong again. Signs of Prosperity Extension of Industry Noted Through the Country Ccntaally. Europe Not Down and Out. As good a place as any for finding out what really is going on is the financial columns. Here, for example, on the market page of the Boston Globe is a letter from its business correspondent in New York which says: Recently a decided change has taken place in the feeling of our best posted men regarding Europe. The belief no longer exists here that Europe is down and out. - Wall Street now knows that its views of last year regarding the supposed insolvency of Europe were wrong. This change of views is due to the recovery from last year's low level of 25 per cent for sterling, SO per cent in exchange on Italy and 65 on France. This recovery in foreign exchange is accepted here as unmistakable evidence of important economic recovery abroad. " It may bie that the world of tomorrow is going to pass up the south of Europe, and per haps also the Near East. To put the matter bluntly, final recovery most likely will come through the economic milking of Russia by Ger many and England, utilizing vast supplies of capital from the United States. However, 'the recuperative powers of civilized man have been found to be much stronger than most had sup posed. No one can maintain now that European civilization is menaced. The thrift, industry and common sense of the people, more than the in telligence ,of their rulers, has carried them through the crisis. The president's answer to the request for full data on the four-power treaty is that there were no records kept of the negotiations, nor were any secret understandings or conventions entered into. This ought to be satisfactory to anybody but a senator who is trying, to make political capital out of his opposition to a treaty he ex pects to vote for. Politics is having a great inning at Washing ton just now. This time the row is kicked up because the president did not name a democrat on the foreign debt commission. Remember how Mr. Wilson went out of his way to favor republicans when he was in office? " One society that ought to be popular in Ne braska is Corn Eaters of America. Besides help in other ways, it may lead a lot of folks to learn how delicious hot corn bread really is. A visitor from Russia tells us the soviet gov ernment will be bankrupt inside of ten years. What does he call its present situation? "Jimmie" Reed is not happy unless he is scoring scunebody, but his victims never seem to mind it much. Breaking the drouth is a great midwinter sport hereabouts; also it works during the sum mer months. We hope the crooks will not discover that the local police force is to be reduced. United States citizenship is worth something these days. , Seniority is a good rule if rightly applied. (From the Ntw York Tlmea.) Happily it it posaible (4 terord that (he Juimn ol the problem of pro.nrnty i ttotrtu i"g far fiom the 'homing of the politit-tan who are- making ready ! claim that they did it wiiK their little statute or their taxrt. It i itimulat nig to note that the captami of industry ait doing bnttr than the captain of the politician. Tomorrow mil be auardrd the largest tingle on tract ever made in the state of Nv York that for the vehicular tunnel between New York and New Jeraey, It call lor twenty million to be spent for labor and material. The Port and Terminal Publishing company print lit of $57.hhi,0(iO of contract m port and terminal work awarded throughout the country, with a lonnrr lit of work projected. Mamie KneU neeitng and Shipping Ann ratatoaue IJiWi.UiO of contract placed and pending, 1 hi arford a singular rontrast to the inability of the gov eminent marine to find work for iuelf. Ship t make profii mu.t be made with particular fit res for especial work, wherra our government hip are mostly misfit. There are exception, like, the Levithan, vhoe reconditioning added JX.tXiil.OiH) to the iruperity fund t be disbursed through the Newport .New Shipbuilding com pany. Only a few da further back there were mtch itiMiis a the announcement that the Heth leheni company would put $J5.0tX),0H) into new construction, and more remarkable still, that the Atchison railway had found $4J.,5'MX)0 toward "capital expenditure" in 1022. If only more railway could see their wiy to make such betterments, the industrial out look would grow brighter. Our most depressed industry it the iron and steel trade, and it relies more on railway order than on work for ships and ports. The railway can tpend only as they earn. Last week was published the result of December urt earnings $42,652,.W8. against $10,410,404 in This is better than had been foreshadowed by the decrease of gross earning by 21.7 per cent, and jet not to good as it ap pears. Nevertheless, there is an unsuspected volume of traffice moving, as the carloads of revenue business prove. For the last week re ported they were 75J.R86, against 699.718 in 1921. J and almost as many as in the better year jy.u I-.very week this year has shown more carioarts moving, and the railways need volume of traffic more than thrv need increases of rate. Even the distressed farmers are sharing in the tendency toward better times. Thus the president of the Chicago Live Stock exchange said on his re-election last week: "Live stock roducers arc leading the wav back to prosperity. Hor, sheep and wool bring prices that mean profits to their owners, and cattle hold a strong stateific position." Of those who sold their grain, in many cases e1ow the eost of production, it may be said that he future is left to them with better prospects. Just as they sold larger quantities for lower prices so they may sell smaller quantities for higher prices. They need market judgment more than credit, but there will be no lack of credit for new crops. Cotton planters may be heartened by the census bureau renort that con sumption during January was 526,552 bales, agamst .166,463 in January. A million new houses are needed to relieve scarcity. There is hardly a limit to the-wages that might b earned in this industry if he men would produie at the prewar rate. - They might conceivably retain a considerable measure of their exorbitant rates, if only they would deliver he worlc they easily rmgp.t. rossibly more has been done, or at least attempted, to relieve this industry by laws, than any other, but the chief result has been the demonstration that com pulsory reduction of profits means reduction of wages. However, a heclnning has been made, and Irsfweck a $3,000,000 hotel was started by a hcM' New Yorker. The roots of prosperity lie ftutside the capitals and the exchanges. A Pioneer Bootlegger. In connection with the problems incident to the enforcement of prohibition we are reminded by the historian that in the earlier days of our beloved country one John Hancock was indicted and arrested for smuggling a cargo ot wines from Madeira. John must not have been any ordinary bootlegger, however, as the incident did not impair his standing in the colonies. A short time thereaftci he was able to start off the Declar ation of Independence with his well-known pen manship. Possiblv that was one of the reasons why he wanted a Declaration of Independence. Los Angeles Times. The Surprising Fact. "Who is Jane Addams?" languidly asked Mrs. Asquith between two puffs of a cigaret, when a, phalanx of newspaper men interviewed her on her opinions about America's great men and women. A distinguished fellow countrywoman of Mrs. Asquith's, Mrs. Barnett, once called Miss Addams America's greatest citizen. There is no reason why a woman like Mrs. Asquith should, know anything about Jane Addams, but it is a surprising fact that thousands of Americans should be willing to pay dollars to hear Mrs. Asquith's opinions. Churchman. Fine Results of the Conference. Croakers have come to grief. The results ot the armament conference at Washington are far beyond anything that might reasonably have been anticipated when President Harding issued his invitation to the powers to assemble their representatives at the nation's capital. There has been magnificent achievement. A very long stride has been taken in the direction of perma nent peace. Philadelphia Inquirer. They Must Be Shown. The president is right if he insists that any measure carrying a soldier bonus shall definitely carry also the plan for financing the same, It is one thing to appropriate money. It is more im portant to specify the source of tne supply. On the face of it the people must pay heavy addi tional taxes to provide a soldier bonus. They must be shown exactly where and how this is to be obtained. Los Angeles Times. Property and Civilization. One of the first principles adopted in the be ginning of civilization was the recognition of rights of property the right to possession and enjoyment of the accumulated products of one's toil. Denial of that right is a return to bar barism. That is why Russia is on the verge of ruin. Winston-Salem (N. C.) Union Republican. Wiseacres Out of Employ. Some of the gentlemen who said the Wash ington conference would not amount to anything have relaxed their journalistic industry and are again turning their attention to best sellers. Washington Post. Farmers on Wrong Track. There is nothing to be gained by farmers or any other class in looking to a legislative body for relief which it has no power to give. Columbus (O.) Dispatch. Going Down "Main Street." Galoshes having reached the middle western small towns, Gopher Prairie momentarily has quit talking about the wrongs of the farmer. Chicago News. . Better Than Aldermen. One way to help make Ireland peaceful is to send over a lot of Irish-American baseball enthusiasts and get all the young men to playing ball. Portland Press-Herald. Based on Better Value. We haven't as much money as some of the other nations have, but with respect to the quality o ours, we are several parasangs ahead. Port laud Express. - How to Keep Well a. pa., w. a evars Quaittea fao, arsiaf riaa, aaaiialiaa aaal aaevealiaa of Jiaaaaa, tuaaalitaa) ae Or, goaae ar rataN, at )ke eaaaiwaal aataaaally, auaiaal la awaeae llaMtaiiaa. where a uaa' e44eaa aovelvpe le eclaaa. D,,, I a av lit aal aaaa a xw aae aneMihe lae laaivlalual .aaa. AaaVaaa letter Ma (a at Ik ttaa. tv right, l:t, ar I'r W, A, ttana. WHEN INSANITY BEGINS. ''In dlteuaalllaT tha riu a mil tual friend Mho haa temi a para nolr." X. H, f. II. write, 'my uritf. ... ....... . i . .. fiiiiinno iritrntl anfa 110 menial trouble taiua upon her baiauaa t,f tier UlepoalilMii-arir-aaekiiia. arro. ni. uiireeaunaltle, ItiipoMiUla to get alnne with. nut I rmtnJel that tier die- poatilnn wee only a Par! ot her ah. normality; that we ahoulj llate re tarded her diepoaitiott ae a ali'k one long a en, before alio reactied thia atnye. "NoaT I am lurnuiar l.i v.,n W'h-i la dtanoaliimi It aonielhliiaT thai can te trained? I'urbed? toul.) idle brilliant wuman have made liirrf oor? 'If thera I a way to nreviiil In sanity, why dot-a not Hie bitty utility li more?" ' HE PLY. Wlirthrr thia itartltnliie )ut wmM hava been an trained tluit lnaunlrv would hav been avoided la more ttmn 1 can my, of -oure. and more nn you exported ma to nay. v nar you wanteii to knmy something a limit i ha gem-ral prin- eipl" Involved. A good ninny of mo inxrmn cnulil ba eo trained fc to mnke them unobjectionable to tludr reuowa and anaorltitea, I'ruper train ing would prevent a considerable part of the Inwuiliy. Many nereona who never will be adjudged Insane, hut who get on poorly, who are dimcult and pecu liar, and therefore ftiTomphsh b-xn thnn they ahuiild, could be madn to fit In belter and to accomplieh more for themaelvra and oilier by training. Inannlty in aoinetlinea defined an a mental abnormality, which iimkra It difficult or Impowilblp for the person affected to get on In hie environ. ment without undue Irrliutlon. Note thitt the definition enibrareK two factor the Individual and thoea around him. Ineanlly la not -Inherited. In anv proper ene, but what la Inherited la a quality of mind which cannot withstand the IrrltHtiona of life. Tha raw material In Inherited, but the experience of life do much toward faehlonlng It Into the sad product called Ineanlty. If we were more alert In reeognla- Taxes Elgin Review: The apecla! sesnlon of the Nehraeka. legislature rut the appropriations for the year more than two million dollar and thia menns that the levy for state taxea will be reduced accordingly. This la a good lead for county, townahlp, city, village and school boards to follow. Gentlemen, cut the levy, and cut It until It hurts, and then keep the expenee of running the dif ferent branches of the Rtata within the amount the levy will produce. By doing this you will earn the everlasting gratitude of the taxpay ers. "Lefg get back to earth." McCook Tribune: The defeat of the gasoline measure. In tho, Trib une's view, is Just a bit peanutty. We note the usual excuse for Its doom Is that ancient and wormy chestnut, "unconstitutional," In voked frequently by legislative boneheads who wouldn't recognize a constitutional measure If they met one head-on In mid-highway at high noon. Alliance Herald: Those critics of tho special session railed by Gov ernor McKelvie and which came to a close on February 2, on last Thursday, who have said that a special legislature would only add cost to the irovernment, will have to find something else on which to narp for that string is out of tune, The special session of the legisla ture actually lopped off over two million dollars of taxes, a thing wnicn political Dart es will have a hard time to camouflage in the eyes or tne voters. Accordine to Mr. Mc Kelvie, this is the first time that a governor ever called a special ses sion in order to cut down expenses and Mr. McKelvie attributes the power of doing this to the new code system which has proved a money saver for the state. Before Mr. McKelvie had issued the call for the special legislature, he had had a meeting with the vari ous heads of the code system and other important officials of the state. They had gone carefully over their budget and practically every department had reported that it would be possible for them to cut down their appropriations that they were not using at all. Mr. McKel vie then urged them to "cut until It hurts" and be ready to report this cut to a spcial session of the legis lature which he expected to call. When the legislature met and the governors message was given to them, it proposed a reduction of $2,793,755.85, while the laws passed by the legislature and the appropri ations cut the tax to the extent of $2,051,750, or a little over 700,- 000 dollars less than the gov ernor had asked. In defense or ex planation of the action of the legis lature in seeming not to cut as much as possible. It needs to be explained that the governor's message .and re duction, included the placing of a tax of 1 cent a gallon on gasoline, which he believed would provide the f&l),uuD required to comnlele the road building program adopted by the legislature in 1917. However, the lower house refused to pass the gasoline tax by a vote of more thpn two to one and the senate refuse. " I to abolish the road building pro gram, putting the $750,000 back into the bill. When it came to the time of acting thereon in joint com mittee, a compromise was reached with $750,000 for road building which accounts for the difference in the actual reduction and the reduc tion asked by the governor. inis reduction means that the state's taxes have been out almost one-third as the state taxes mean $3.30 on $1,000 worth of taxable property. It is to be seen that this means a decrease of about one dol lar on every $1,000 worth of di-od- erty and ,1s a decided decrease. which will meet with the approval or people or this town. It Is claimed that none of the needful work of the state has been cut nor hampered and if this be true, the budget sys tem has undoubtedly been a great oenent to Nebraska. Of course, we are also interested In the reduction in our own county of $17,000 made by our own county commissioners. This is again light ening the burden of taxes. How ever, they, too, receive $3.30 on the thousand. The large ItemB of our taxes are $27.50 for other taxes per tnousand. It may be possible yet for school boards and village boards to cut our taxes even more. By students of economics, it Is believed that this reduction in taxes la a rapid eteo back toward nor malcy. The lowering of prices over products that are needed, the slow but stubborn lowering of wages, the decline in taxes, are all indications of the drift toward solid financial footing and is much appreciated by tha general public. In In lii!dho1 the tiualitira tf mitta out r wtip-n tnaaniiy In lairr eara ia an to arrow, u a null be on ma way towarda prevention, f wa iwae.1 t-naratter tramma upon a nearer imnieiiiiiiiii or atirll tiuttll I If) ink una, a, f y(M1 ,'hiiiiaa la call It emit-we would be a lung way mi ilia roan, Tha character tralnlne, to be f rei-ilve, aliould be bigini before IkhiI a a. How ever, ai lioul aaa l a period of areat atraieaia Impor tance in ehnrai-ter tritium ! ore. iit iiia.iniiy, Kieti If Ineanlty la alieadv urea. ent In t liltdliwoil. or If It la luenta bit, iliniieii not actually present, oniaibina in the way of training la nil iiimmhte. T i Jinmif can do aomethina to toe. vent tha Individual from ulvlnc if. feiiM unneceaaanly. or unnet'eaaarlly becoming overeriiotional a a result of onVnae ulven. Many who are realty Insane never t'Ome to be con fined bereum they have learned amiielhlna about not rubbing people the wrung or not permitting lliemKi lves to be rubbed tna wrung way.. The War mi Miliaria. Mr. I. M. It. write: "I read with mut'h Intrreat your article nn 'Fight log MalurM Limn-n.' and would like to know If thia atitte givea any as HlHtaine to rommunitle wanting to tight malaria and If a stale offlcbtl la engnged to It'll how to drain lotal Ittca. "Alao If you know anything about the root (if mu ll an undertaking." riEPI.T. Most atatea In the tnalnrlul aer tlona are now doing Nome work In malaria control. Home are carrying on co-operative campaign. Moat of them have engineering depart ment. The coat of the different lype of antl-mHlarln work ha been reported on by ngencle ena-ugd in these cumpalgna. vvrtre to the state heullh depart ment In your mate to lesrn what It la doing, and whether it will run a co-operative campaign In your dis trict. Ahk also for Information on the cost per unit of the different plana. It May lie I ale. P. X). writes: "I. Would you rec ommend a massage, such as epMini salts, or some of the preparations bought In the department Mtorcs, to reduce the hips? "2. Also, If not inconvenient, ex plain the correct way to stand and the correct way to walk, and if brisk walking will tend to overcome flabblnCKS." REPLY. 1. Boiling is of a little service. Bathing In a solution of epsnm salts docs no good. If It is In the cards for you to be brood hipped and fst legged, nothing you can do will make a whole lot of difference. 2. Stand with the shoulders back, the head erect, and the chin drawn in. To walk, incline the body forward a trifle without curving the backbone. Carry the feet forward with the toes turned inward slighti lv. The forward foot should strike the ground heel first, but thia heel first can be overdone. Victim of Cold Feet. W. A. writes: "I. have frostbitten feet. "1. What causes this? " ran It be cured, and what method would you advise?" . REPLY. 1. Chilling. . People who are sub ject to cold feet arc easily affected. 2. Wear loose, warm, waterproof shoes and warm, loose socks. Keep your feet well greased. Remember how the soldiers in Flanders pre vented it by pouring fish oil into their shoes when they could not otherwise thoroughly grease their feet. To relieve the itching some use alcoholic iodine; some uSe camphor water. GENTLE JOBS AT OMAHA Clay Center Sun: Down. in Omaha scientists are trying to pierce the pall of the future and we'll oet a year's subscription to this humble supporter of the agricultural bloc against a ducat to a Fatty Arbuckle show, that if they succeed In ripping ever so slight a rent in the curtain a rent only large enough to permit of one little spook's escape our metropolis from Packington to Florence will start for the country and at their head will be found In vestigator Abbott. ttra.nd Tsland Independent: Still, none of the candidates have as yet asked that "wonder girl" at Omaha who is going to be elected governor next fall? Gothenberg Independent: A man was brought before the bar -for a grave offense in Omaha. Where is there a bar in Orhaha7 DOW EN'S Value-Giving Store In Your Home no doubt, there is one or more pieces of furniture needing slight repairs, and, by having these slight repairs made now, they will give years of contin ued satisfactory use. Our Repair Dept. . in charge of an efficient fore man and having several capa ble mechanics working under his personalsupervision, will repair your furniture and make it like new again. Our charges are nominal, our work the best, and, if you'll phone, we call, get the pieces and de liver them to you in the least possible time. Before You Move phone us for rates. Owning and operating the Metropoli- tan Van and Storage Co. and, employing experienced furni ture packers and handlers, the work done by us proves both economical and satis factory. It Paya to Read Bowta'a Small A4 jGBowen (d Howard St. Batwaca 15 lb. and ltl ITha Ha aftraa lla aulutana raty Ut Ha e"aaVre aha rara la til au aublu II"". M rraanta that Irtta.a fc aauaaai rW, au aa, ua nw,li. , at Imiftia that h naiaa at lha arllre arreatpanr rara lattrr. nut aarraaarilr ewblintlla, km Dial lb atlioir ait " ana atuMa k U iliwihia ae t. aat pfrlana la raa.Maa tf anH tiawa ae ninainaa eierraaml fcr aaaadaeta la lli latter li. Muirry for llitt llonna. Havld t'ity, Stb Kelt, !. To Ilia Kditor of Tha Ute: In an editnrinl in The lira of February IT, headed, "Between H.mua and Trtaauiv." think uu will n nd tha "thought tin.) gotii-ral t'oiiflualona" voiced lit and running through thlu tiliiuii.il the Mine ua we 't front moat all of tur pininlncii! writer and aliileaiiieii, In. eluding the preaident i.f !,. t niid Klate on lite queatlmi of "aoldii-r lioniia," Now tlirv all acknowledge the tb. Iiaiiiloii the foutitry In anneiul la under to the auldierM and mIno iil-iic that they should bn pitld, but iim the editorial referred in gut' on to kiv; "The aciiice if revenue dn-ruv'i'rcd, the rest of tho problem la nu-v." It la a lo t'liiinted by Iheae minx H'a've- niffl and nu n liiah in the afrntra of Ihla nut Ion Hint thtae auuie men am-. rinced everything dear to any timn and went not and aurfered, fioiulii. were wounded and many govt their litea t hn t t'lvlllntlou might tot per li-.lt frnitt thia earth and lli'il demur racy might continue to grow and floiiriah and thin property inUht bo twciire mid proMierltv continue to smile on the people of theao t'lilted Statea. Were th'xe nu'tt b-iiicet in all that they amid then; did they mean It. and did President llnrdlng mean what lie tmld to thnfe wounded aoldter at Walter Kced bnapltal. WaHhlugron? Ken phoiuartiph ot the prcKlilent talking to the woumieii Noldiers (I'hkp H. Literary Digest, February 1. 191!?.). where he wild. "The soldier who come back wounded deserves tho fullest aid and BMKlstitnca In our power to give, mid I propose to use nil the Influenre and power that I have to see that lie gets it." These are strong word and came from what should be the lilgheKt authority In the 1'nlted States, but so far not all tha disabled aoldlera have been cared for, to ny nothing of tho vast army that have not been considered. It aerins to me that were I presi dent of a company that owned a large manufacturing plant and hud an Insurance company write a mil lion dollars Insurance on Itnnd gave me $0 days to pay the premium, and in the meantime would lose im plant by nre, collect the Insurance and then refuse to pay tho premium, I think I should he classed as dis honest, ungrateful, unworthy of the respect of any one and not a good citizen. The boys went out and with their blood . underwrote or Insured the prosperity of all linea of business and the untold billions of wealth In this country and by reason of that w-e all prospered and made money, during and after the war, but when the boys came back and only asked for the premium, as it were, on the policy they wrote us. what did we do? We paid tho railroads well for what they did for us and we paid as least a good fair price for nil the goods contracted for from all the different companies and corpora tions, good fat nalaries to thousands of people that I suppose was neces sary. But when it comes to paying the boys we just cannot find any thing to tax to raise the money with which to pay. The trouble is we are not honest about it: we don't want to pay. that's all. It's quite likely that every soldier does not need assistance- from the govern ment, but there are too many cases where they and their ramiues are destitute. I say let every citizen of lha I'mfd bititca wliti u woilh over llU.UUU la aaaraaeit at! aijual par "-ut on wltiitrver I he bava prr Hiitt amount until ilia tltbt we pwa the aoldlera t p.nd, and lien wa ran HK.tln btuk tha t'ov in tb lace and ml feel like 4 till" t, O, H. IUV IS, THE HIDDEN FLOWER. Ipia, atrai.tf ft aaa that at .h.Mil. anita? I V tl uik.r ln tulaia l i.a ( ill. l, Our ,n a aaa liU tt,.ia fiiiwara II. at a" III imuta an t Uu.,.1111 tt,.uli UHHam.U, lira fir-t I I. .unit tiup haaria ati'l a"0tf lttt-ie fcat eura! In Iunhii uiiii etia at lluhatui i..un4f ' O it.ara-i fi.ir fuund en nh. Tuo t'lauurul fur lima etui aaih. ,Vi aimaaliii "! i.m Haiti the asith. lla ehly iia alia atinaa tliy arpaia. I '"a 11 Tiamia In ttia Kanaa !'l Tlm. tt" M rwall lha itaa H, r-tiL-l iliat t" lia 'Special Sale on Extra Trousers 465 pair of eitra Trouaer, con. titling of worsted and all wool cathmere, worth $7.50. Now a0;:;': $4.95 J. Helphand Clothing Co. 314 North 16th Street COMING STRAND Cecil B. DeMille's Remarkable "Fool's Paradise" o' w Umm ST! ". jf-a. . - See- the qorqejus ice ballet and marvel cus Skating dancers! This will fix my cold I ALWAYS keep Dr. King's New Discovery handy. It breaks up hard, stubborn colds and stops tha paroxysms of coughing. No harmful drugs, but just good rnecudne. All dniRgists, 60c. Kin New Discovery For Colds and Coughs Stubborn Bowels Tamed. Leav ing the bowels unmoved results in health destruction. Let the gently stimulating Dr. King's Pills bring to you a regular, normal bowel function ing. 25 cents. All druggists. D PROMPT! WON'T GRIPE . rings Pills You must, unless you are willing to put up with an imitation of the genuine French Baumev Bangui is the . . originator's name. They can't copy that. BAUME. BENGUE ( AN ALCES IQUSt ) is a stainless liniment in ointment form whose penetrating glow soothes away pain by stimulating the circulation. Keep atube handy. For sale by all druggists. Tbc Laemmf & Co N. Y, Amer. Ajaaaa Hospe's Has Arranged to Offer at an Extraordinarily Low Price and on Extraordinary Terms Victrolas in This Exquisite Console Model It is a Victrola en cased in charming period Cabinet of Mahogany or Wal nut. All that the name Victrola implies in musical quality and sweetness applies to this new period Model. Outfit consi&ts of Victrola VI in Pe riod Cabinet 3 10-inch Record Album 2 12-inch Record Albums 6 10-inch Double Face Record Complete in every "way for only $150 Iff "w 'OT - H If H a - - 1 H i . ... - v; v and the inviting Terms of $10 Dowa and $8 perx Month You will, of course, appreciate that this is an offer we may not be able to make indefinitely. We assure you that to act quickly is to act wisely. i5io$pe (o The Art and Music Store 1513-15 Douglas Street 1 i (