THE ItEK: OMAHA. MONDAY. MARCH 13. ISii. T.heOmaha Bee MORNING, EVENING AND SUNDAY. THE KK PL'IUSHINO COMPANY UO B. LTOIKK, fubli.i.r . SRLMIR, C.a.ral fcUaai.r i! tapir, thf armsdilto, tha fant i!oih. iht poi, and a number of other Iptereiiinf hold overs. The iii lo rtion!a may t be wholly ism. Let Us lh Kid oj This Fear MEMBER OP THC ASSOCIATED ML34 . Ta aieiwi.ia turn, a a tit T. . la a aMaikw, la ta Iiiu.e wullat W IM mm fw maUulK 9t aU aaaa !lt4UM t4 :u4 H II M nuniit e4'u4 I lila Mw. u te in vai ev aaDiieaaei rta. All tfaat m ri M ttwal HU.e 11 at. TM nm e It mnbM e IM 4 I Hunt af CU laiiaaa, ua iwwum eataonvi M amiauea eJia. Tha Bat circulatioa af The Omaha Baa far February, 1922 Daily Average ....71.306 Sunday Average ...78.325 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY . RRFWr.lt. Gaaanl Mwiir ELMER 3. POOD, Clttulettaa MuiW aaari to aad eukacriboa' b.lero thla 14 d.v .f Muck, 1(21. (Seal) W. H. QU1VCY, Natary Fuhll. ATlaalia 1000 BEE TELEPHONED Pi-Wat Pr.ofS Kirhtng. A.k far th Pwartm.nl or P.r.on Waatad. For Mrnt Cain After ) P. M i rditon.l Department, ATltntla 1021 or 10(1. orricES Main Offiea 17th anil Pama Co. Bluff. U Scott St. South ida 413 S. Kta It. N York 2tf Firth A.a. wa.hlnitoa lilt G St. Chinao I'tt Stager Bldr. rrii, rraoca 4St Sua SU Honor Omaha's Automobile Show. More than elrvru million automobiles were icgistcrcd in the United States in 1921; 238,000 of these were registered in Nebraska, and 25,000 in Douglas county. Here is a graphic illustra tion of the importance of the machine; one for each nine inhabitants of the country, one for each five citizens of Nebraska, and one for each eight residents of Douglas county. It may be inferred from this that the saturation point lias been leached, and that extension of the use of the self propelled vehicle is therefore precluded. That ar gument lias been presented each succeeding year as the automobile industry developed to its pres ent commanding position, and has had little ef lect on the progress of the trade. What the figures do show is that Americans in this as in other thing, are quick to see the utility of a practical machine, and to put it into service without waste of time. Not since the telephone was invented has there come such an adaptable aid to man, useful for so many and varied purposes as the automobile. It serves everywhere and serves well, and whoever under lakes to set the point at which its usefulness is lo terminate is taking a long chance. Omaha has been an important factor in the industry from the very beginning. Not only have the people of the surrounding territory tak en up the automobile with greater appreciation of its value than is shown in other parts of the country, but we have had enterprising, far-sighted men in control of the trade. These have made this city the center of a tremendous business, its lamifications extending far and wide, and its power expressed in dollars and cents reaching a most impressive total. These are some of the reasons why the auto mobile show, which gets under headway today, is of importance. It is-ttie answer of the dealers to the call of reviving business, their signal to the world that they are up and coming, and that what they have done in the past is but a sign of what the future is to be. The automobile show is presage of what is coming in other lines of ac tivity, a rebirth of enterprise, and so deserves all the attention it is certain to receive. For John Kroupa, a Salaam. The Bee metaphorically lifts its hat to John, Kroupa. He was in the back room of his drug store, when his young son notified him that hold up men were at work in the main store. Kroupa did not hesitate, call for police, or shout fire. He ran into the front room, and was shooting s he ran. The thieves fired and fled. Only one point is left to deplore. Kroupa's pistol practice is lamentably poor. He should train until his aim is as deadly as his courage is clear. Such men as he are sorely needed in a commun ity bedeviled by thugs and robbers, who have terrorized property owners, looted homes and stores, safes and strong boxes at will, made a short walk even on a well lighted street at night an uncertain adventure, and have not hesitated to fire when resisted and even have fired without waiting for objection on part of the victim. One of the bullets fired by John Kroupa found a billet in the body of the holdup man the moral effect of which is many times greater than .ny amount ot preaching or police warning. Kroupa should have all credit for his courage, and deserves high compliment because he did re st the robbers. One of these gentry in a hos pital or at the morgue is of great public service, and the householder or storekeeper who succeeds in bagging a burglar or a robber of any sort will be a benefactor to the community. Underwood Exposes' Treaty Opposition. Oicar W, Underwood, democrat and en of the if niton lu voted for ratification of the treaty of Veruillrt, look the diaiuiic off (he op ponenti of the foiir-poa.fr treaty, and If ft them exposed at advocates of a aytttm that through many centuries hat proved in failure the ute of force for (fttlfment of International disputes, He would not admit that the pending treaty con template! in alliance, but "if it were an alliance intended to letp the peace through arbitration rather than through fore I should support it." Senator Underwood put into a few pregnant sentences the gitt of the opposition to the treaty, and the atrongnt possible answer to the objec Hons raned against It: The foreign relations committee has moved a reservation to the treaty, which beyond a doubt will be accepted by the senate, which is as follows: "The United States understands that under the statement in the preamble, or under the terma of this treaty, there is no commitment to armed force, no alliance, no obligation to join in any defense." When the treaty is ratified with this under standing on the part of our government, what ground ia left to those who contend the treaty is an offensive and defensive alliance to stand upon? None that I can see. On the other hand, it i asserted that, as the treaty does not bind the high contracting parties to use force in carrying out its terms. and because they cannot in trie tuture te oouna to any action until their free consent is first obtained, that it means nothing; that it is worse than useless to sign it, and therefore it should be defeated. To my mind this argu ment is the last stand of the men of the old school, the school of thought that has been dominant in the government of this world for the last 4.000 years; the philosophy that be lieve that the world can and must be gov erned only by force, and that agreements, to be binding, must have the power of force be hind them. If this were true it would destroy all the faith of tbe Christian rations of tha world in their efforts to obtain peace by mutual understanding. Fortunately for mankind, it is possible for nations to agree on matters between them, and to settle issues without resort to arms. More than one hundred years of amicable intercourse between the United States and Great Britain, during which many important questions have been disposed of to the satisfaction of both by conciliation or arbitration, amply provei that war is unnecessary and can be avoided when justice is seriously sought. America is trying to show the world a better way of living, and the four-cower treaty is in that direction. It contains no secret bargains, looks to no em ployment of force, merely provides for consulta tion and conciliation. Partisans of whatever stripe or persuasion who are striving to undo the work of the arm9 conference, among whom is to be numbered the democratic senator from Nebraska, show little regard for the sanity of the present or the safety of the future. If they seek chaos, they are travel ing in the right direction. . FKOM THT CONTINENT. Th Kentucky anti-s-vulutiun bill failed. And American Chti.uaniiy iherrby escaped a historic di.grace. But it was a narrow crape, 1 he t Uent nu Jonty was stim. The call lr th law was undeniably a church agnation, Mini.trr ora-anird it. iVgiaUtori voted yea to plcae the churches. Moreover, hosts of church pcuple rUcwhrre hopfd the propo! would win. They wanted it for a precedent in their own states. With all this faced, it it ohviou.ly no time for liberal-minded and fair-playing Chrutun lo c'i.nmi the nutter with nine cuni;rtuUlion that a foolish bit of bigotry has been frustrated. Worse abrrratimii ate bound to recur, to the cicep discredit of the ChrUiuin name, if Chris tain leaders da not exert themselves to make plain that ("hrit' spirit in these matter is a spirit of liberty, liberality, fairncs and fearless ness. Thf situation is another illustration of what The Continent lias recently remarked on this Mge that it is strangely hard for modern i'rotestants to get higher than the level of the middle skm.oii the subject ol religious liberty. Then everybody va in favor of full liberty for teaching and preaching what he believed. And there is jixt where a tot of folks stand today, ManlfMlv the lull framed m Kentucky framed and supported, we underhand, by 1 rotest ants exclusively was not a monument to any conviction that men have a right to bear tin- trammeled witness to the fact of things as they see it. Indeed, the sponsors of this legislation seem deliberately to have put themselves hack to the time when it was held to be the duty of the state to require the whole mast of citizens to believe what the church said was safe to believe. The bill was mad enough at first forbidding teachers to teach "evolution" in any state-sun- ported school, because presumably church peo ple hate the idea. Dut when a stronar fight against this developed, it was either ignorantly or purposely amended into a form unspeakably worse. In this second edition the measure was so worded as to enjoin all state-paid teachers from teaching anything: whatever that would "under mine" the religious faith of their students. That would not only enslave state education to dogmatic theology, but would leave it to be forever trampled by conflicting theologies, of which the silliest would in such conditions count most. One or two Christian denominations in this country still declare as a religious dogma that the world is flat. Imagine a school teacher having to hide the geography globe for fear a child belonging to luch a sect might learn that bigoted ignorance in his church was making a fool of him. How to Keep Wei! tf PS, W, A. EVAS! Qua. liwia lwwi. trS'M. aaaila. Sim a4 aaata al Siwaaa, k. il.4 la Or. k.aaa y . af la Maa, ill fc Mlly akat la . luaiialiaa, ! s aua 4, aaa.aa4 alaa ta c!m4. Or, S.aaa il Ml mI ai.faa.ia aw 'aarifca Imr t4itaiul Aaaiaaa kita.a ia f Iht In. Ofrriakii is.'i Nebraska Politics Pursuit of the Plesiosaurus. The news that a scientific expedition is about to set out for Patagonia to search for a monster reported to be roaming the wilds of that little known land excites the imagination. We have become accustomed to the pictures of antedilu vian reptiles, beasts, birds and the like, as they emanated from artistic minds stimulated by speculation based on bones and other fossil re mains. s We of Nebraska know that such things once did exist, for our fair state supplies sub stantial evidence of them in form of remains. Moreover, our neighbors have likewise contri buted to the collection, and plesiosaurs, dinosaurs, titanosaurs, icthyosaurs and other saurians, brontotheriums, megatheriums, titanotheriums, triceroptcra, and a host of dead and gone but not forgotten creatures of a day long swallowed up in the Tertiary, linger with us in all but flesh and life. Wrc know that once these and many smaller beasts, birds and reptiles roamed the sedgy shores of the prehistoric ocean whose waters washed a beach far north of the Canadian lme, or fed to the full in the lush grasses of the savannahs of what is now the Wyoming Montana plateau. South America affords ample proof that the experience of the northern con tinent has not long since been undergone there, and in flora and fauna alike goes back to a time more remote than any we can show in living substance. So, if a plesiosaurus or anything f the kind is to be found today, it may well come from the land that has given the world Rich and Poor; War and Bonus. The cheapest of demagogy is that quality now exhibited by certain unscrupulous persons in connection with the bonus bill. They are re tailing unctuously a sinister phrase "It was a rich man's war, but a poor man's fight." Some thing like this was heard while the war was. on, coming mostly from the enemies of the govern ment, as it now comes from enemies of society. American manhood and womanhood, side by side, battled to win in the war. No question was made of social status, of wealth or honor; h was our war, and all shared alike in it. No, not all. A few skulked, but for. every rich man caught dodging the draft or evading his service in any way, an idle pauper could be discovered, doing the same thing. The pretext was the same in each case, a selfish desire to shift the burden to some one' else.. Not every one who stayed at home was a profiteer, nor did all get rich from high wages. Sacrifices were made and hardship' endured by those who did not wear the uniform or get into the fight. That war extended from the front line trenches to the humblest home, and had it not been for the backing of the homes, the front line wouldn't have amounted to much. Ameri cans should resent as an insult the imputation that the war was for the benefit of the richj and that the fighting was all done by the poorl If the former service men are to be granted a bonus, it will be on a basis of adjusted com-. pensation for service not wholly recompensed, and not to exact from the rich a donation to the poor. The discussion is taking a wide range, and not, always creditable to the good sense of the American people. The bonus measure must be determined finally on its merits, and not on prejudice aroused by sneers from designing politicians. Will and Deed at Hastings. Out at Hastings they believe the truth of the old adage that deeds speak louder than wrords. Citizens, of Hastings got together a few weeks ago and decided that the town needed additional houses. They canvassed various sources of in vestment funds and the result was that they gathered an even million dollars and had it de posited in local banks for U3e by buildtrs. In surance companies, mortgage loan agencies and others contributed their quota. Hastings then organized a building show, at which special stress was laid upon the economi cal building of average homes. The result is that, before the show is over, 22 dwellings are under way in Hastings and $150,000 of the million has been loaned to finance these undertakings. Me chanics are at work and Hastings has its head up, rarin to go. , February is reported as having recorded the largest list of building permits in the history of the month. Somebody is coming back. , Democrats in Michigan have turned from Henry Ford to EdseL This will also be good news to the ex-service men. ' Situation in Limerick is reported "quiet but critical." Sounds like a prelude to Donnybrook. Next Monday is 'legion employment day," an event that should be made perpetual Omaha's bank clearings also are a pretty good sign of what is going on. Getting all set for the coal strike? More deplorable, however, than mere re version to mediaeval church control over the state, is the picture which this performance gives to the world of Christians afraid to meet new truth. It has been far and wide the boast of Protest ants of 'Presbyterians rather particularly that education flourishes where Protestant churches are strone. Historical! v it is true. Schools, col leges, universities have always developed quickly in Protestant settlements. But what a oaradox this is that right out of this Protestant heritage there have now arisen men and women afraid to have their children go to school unless they can be kept from hearing that an overwhelming majority ot scientists to day think this earth and its forms of life were developed by processes ot evolution. The hubbub thus made in the church can have on an observing public outside the church only one effect. . What that effect must be, let history tell. Refer to the time when the popes forbade peo ple to believe the earth was moving. How simple the verdict was. Thoughtful men judged the scientists knew what they were aiuino- ahnut and the church had not even tried . .. 1 1:1 U to learn. So they disregarded me cnur(.u. Tt,a Unman church never recovered the ground it lost with intelligent humanity by giv- . a. j- j i;t ing the lie to Copernicus ana uiutu. And this miSWKC lay nui smiyiy iu iigiui" - truth. .... .... It would have been as Dad a Diunocr to ugui an error that way. . . . The harm was done when the assumed tiead of Christendom betrayed a fear that there might be somewhere in the universe a truth which, it discovered, would destroy Christianity. A man who for sake of his faith protests against hearing what is said to be a new fact .iloffMt inevitably that down in his heart he doubts whether his religion is a fact. If he were dead sure 01 ms rengum, nc v. certainly say! . . . . "Bring on whatever you uunn. covered. If it's truth, it can t conn ii w.ut ..,- thing else that's true. And that ccrtainiy pu n beyond any possibility o spoiling my faith. On the other hand, if the claim is not true, let examination and comparison and discussion PrHow thisrUaege does need to learn that won derful saying of Milton: ."Let truth and falsehood grapple. Vfho evef kneWh put to the worse? Truth 'is strong nextjp the Almighty." And in this particular care, now iooumi .s E-Siution could be quite true in its primary scientific conception with hurting faith in God, Christ and Bible one whit. , Unless one insists that the first chapter of Genesis is what it does not itself in any way sug gest what no inspired writer ever remotely inti mated that it was intended to be-unless one malces it a literal history rather than a mora and religious picture of creation then there is plenty of room there for the evolutionary develop ment of the whole physical universe. Indeed, read in modern light, with its graphic illustrations of a world being progressively fitted for man, it almost seems as if the story was pre pared for evolutionary scientists to explain. When it comes to man, Genesis obviously intends to tell how man became "a living soul" conscious of responsibility to his Creator. In asmuch as on that evolution says nothing at all, there certainly can't be contradiction there. Of course there are evolutionists who think they can get along without God. But none of them get along well. In contrast thousands who take God as the great worker in whose hands evolution has been a master tool, find such substantial standing ground that there would seem to be little doubt where evolutionary philosophy will finally resort. Even Darwin, the father of evolution, was at pains to deny that the "variations" of which he wrote so much could be thought of as "due to chance." If he spoke of "chance variations" it was only, he said, to acknowledge his ignorance of the cause of them. Say the cause is God and where's the heresy? Truth in evolution or anywhere else will never destroy God. And all that in not truth he will destroy. So the answer is, "Have faith in God!" "THAT DREADFUL SCOURGE." Ir. Millard, tha tiralili itfri.-fr of iitr.!.tr. r.iiKiaiKi, ia mtm a liai l-ffved at vairinatiun asalnm small (. I(a Mia anitiswhat a'nfml .. In. Iluil ia i-otivritrtl aiiMllh. una) a very mil.! dliwaaa. m. In fact. I hat people ar no longer afraid of If. anJ, in conaauant-a, mil not taka tha iimraaary prerauiiona Id piavant ta prfd. Tha aiata nt mind Ineraaaaa th work and tiullifiea tha rftmia i.r health iiffuera, whermipun sooi friend Milhir.l. tha health officer Of Len'tater, Knamnd. la peevrd .Maybe ha la riK lit. and iiiavba t)tne who hold that tln're are rea son fop tha ordinarily nUM nature i'f amallpoK ra riant, but whoever la risht, lack of a wholeanine fear of th rtiaeaa ia una fur-tor that make the work of alainplnesJt out diffi cult. It wa not alwaya thii". U'ltne llieaa extract from Tharkerava 'Henry Kmuond " In till book Thackeray ttearribeil Urn Uvea ot tha people, priii' lpully tha court in, lord and Indue of that period, embracing th lal quar ter of the aeventeenth eemury and the flrat of the eighteenth. In tha earlier part of the nerlint the reigning king waa that King Jame I who ma do the Illtile avail-, ablet for people of middle tin edu-1 cation and menna. 1 nuote from Tlimkernv'a "Henry I r.monrt:" "Hlneo Montagu Ilka Km erirta He falaaiaa fraalj la Ha "' fca la ii.ria r audlia -.-I k.M. I.U.M1. IL..I l-J... . 1 nauMaklf b,lf, , ,,, aw) mmitm. II .aa.a li.. I lh. aaiM ml Iba dire rMtMiai rat Mi.,, - t-tarnaaine l .uhliialiaa, bwi n,ai ia nlu-i av a ) a la awiina. lb Ur H"t w.lnui I- .!.. . Ll'V. " ""a etraaal Sf tMfi. - ia la Iba l-Mirf tb.) ..ir.ul..in of ruionsj ItMi. lim..tm, XvU., Mar'h To ih .ilur of Tha ji: an editorml - . ... rumm)' laatta of uur apT -..- ,.i.i,. i, a, anpenr art article wii'icr ma l...a,lii11( pf ju,, am in-- rtim l iilirr-reiire." lull Mine llmt iiinl.T that aurfaca of tha aeteral treaiira there nego- anii now i.croie th aenate, , " m nuiium ion pr the el i-w niMi prown men tf ai. and alHioai aouwlly. tha hut, k men of "" i"ii lurtner at mo that they are not denied th opimrt unity to develop; Hint they are promuM-d iiam-, tutelage, aiifrmrt and a pUio In tha room. Von alan mnte that they want more, nm that they n"i wiiun- williflraw lie for wratern clvllumlon without a ilwl lve taij that ihey will adopt nur ruiiixiiiiiin or chniiriige it after a Itiniiner which will be moat derive. Mr. ilia yellow, drown and blm k peoi-la of thla world lm "want more- tiiiui awiatanee, aupport, tu iriMBw una -puce in the tun M.( . . I liny want inn r k lit to nunmia ami determine their own atTnlr roraitisr to their Idea c.f life. with. out being forced to accept tha Idea or tuner people wiioan conception of life I radically different from their own. Their aiiinitlnn are Mot thime of I'Oiinueat. Whateeae or weaicrn civilization i Jielpful In inn nevciopment of their reapeetlvo rni-iai ana nntinnal exigences that win tney Hporonr Ate. Tha ni.lv my Tidy Mary, worthy i niieng w mm they arc- lamilng lo brought home thla rutoui I '"t I the right of Kuropa or innocuiation rrom Turkey "' vriierica, 10 enter ineir coun nerllmia nntcilr manv deem It ami I trie and annroiirlalo anil evnlolt only a uelea rtmhtng Into the Jaw ' wuurai resource or the eanie. or danger), I think the everty or "r nimerini iienent ami advan the amallpox that dreadful acourgo t"g T the went. And you apeak of the world ha abated In one truthfully when you declare that part of It: and remember. In my inero win he mode at leant one de time, hundred of tha vnunr and J delve; tent before ncerutance or re. beautiful who bavo been carried toT jectlon of weetern Ideula 1 made final the grave or have only risen from "Backward." indeed, may be these their pillows frlKhtfully acarred and pellow. brown nnd blnck people. oui incy are juatined In their hem- tnnoy m accepting a rivillzstlon which permits an average of 9,000 murdora annually: a civilization where immorality, graft, robbers'. raping and murder atalk boldly and brazenly In broad dayllKht. uncheck ed ami, in many iiiNiance, with the connivance or many who are sworn to uphold Btatutory law; a civiliza tion where 5.000,000 unemployed disfigured by thia malady. Many a aweet face hath left it roe on the. bed on which this dreadful ami. withering blight hn laid them. In my early daya thia pestilence would enter a village nnd destroy half it nhabitant. At Its approach, It may well be imagined, not only the beau iful but the strongest were alarm ed, and those fled who could. The story proceeds to tell how the Clark l.iite.priw: Though not ob taining It null pul.lii'liy at tha plf en i, ilia new political party in N t'rni.a ia gaining In tonvvraion to It belief, unit rriiicUm lv either of lh old pin lie only terse o nr. ei IcImuU' Hoi movement. It remind! u of tha iilneiiea when the alliance W oigtitilitliig nnd Ihn popuhat pattv wtta fnnneil which niilckly up aeiihe well. laid filim of I he old and. evcnlii.tllv bringing reuniattutitiitm and lliuny good political I clot inn. Kearney Hub: A Lincoln diaptiti h lule llmt a capital printing houae h.t received an order fur printing bl.ink i-rtiiliuie (ailing for the re peat of tha i-oiiMiiiuitoiiiil amend ment .creating tha rlakn atute laiKvjty t'flinmlajilon. The arc ia or new third party I commit ted to the abolition ot the coioinl" bion. t'hurlc W. Hryan of Lincoln voice a sentiment which la tint yet large hut might lneree pretty rap. Idly under some t'Oiulltlona, to the r-nvrt that lh people will ahnllM! the coitwiilfwnii 'iiulriM It mend it way nmi reduce rate." This state metit, of coure, Iv-norc the fact that the state hit been ahum of It pow er very largely aa to rate by the inlemtat commlnelon, but there I iii'venheleha a growing sentiment that the alula cotnmliotion la travel ing In the same general direction a the itiierstato conimloslon, and similar coinnilN.iion have traveled, viz.. Into h pulley of sympathetic ac. cord with the corporation rather than with tho people. Hunt I nun Tribune: Time and again Kdgar Howard hm denied over hi own signature tlmt he waa a candi date for foiled State enator on the progresHlvn ticket, and still there are many editor In this slut who luslut thflt .Mr. Howard Is In the race but wants the people to force him on the tlt.ket. Kdgnr Howard la a fighter In the Journalistic field and he ha made many enemies n well as friends, so he should at all time be prepared to look for brickbats with hln bouquet. York News-Times: Hitchcock any he was 'umazed" when he found there was no record of the confer ence proceedings regarding the four-power treaty. The treaty is before tho senate committee and all the gentleman from Nebraska ha to do is to read It. It is like nny other contract; what Is In it is what counts. 1 1..- ijii!, (ttit up, f(, aa ha 1 1 1 Uli , l i.).lri mat 1 l'(t lld eltlrt ie-.cnH4 i on) fi roil I (in ii ihi iiruii'ia; iiui i f Ilia afaira having alniie i,a pttmtity eleill for their ouit n.e. Ami 'l.iko It.-Kul.tilv, A drop In food 'il.' I i ,1'. le.l. That' jiit ill" liii iliiliie wu in i . iliup iH'fitrn eyi iy liii.it - Ht. I'.uil I ocrr l'iea Miiikopcart I i In Mali'. 'Ilni.t with tit i'n in. i i.r I. a dU-,n.li.. phlil.c, "llloUII Ui bv In Mill" sucic.'il ii oik, !! laid. Is That Cold and Cough Hanging On? YOU will I convinced that Dr. King' Nef Discovery dor juat what it is me.int to do nhe cough raw ilitiuti, eorkeXion-tuenirnied cheat, looaent the phlrKin p4ik and lur.ik the olrttiiute cold and ftripi attaik, rrlievrs the congestion in th Itead. No h.utulul dr tiic. therefor good for thildien as will aa grtmnui. Kight aay ou .ill notice the chantfe fvr ihe better. Ho a con vincing, healing tate that you will apirrnute, Huy a tut lie ot any drii guts on the way home to-n glit, 6c. Dr. Kind's New Discovery r si - j ror i,oias ana LQitgns I-ary People, Lazy liowels. Ikm t neglect rcNutipation. Ic undermine the health, lakes all vim out of vou. !r. King's i'illa will invigorate the fvitcm, atir up the liver, move th bowels. All druevists. 25e. . D PROMPT! WON T GRIPE Y r. King's Pills disease appeared In the village of men are forced to roam from place Castle wood and how Henry carnca the contae on to Castlewood castle, had it himself, and gave it to Laay Castlewood and her son. frank. "The smallpox spared the hall no more than it did the cottage." As Henry was convalescing. "Dr. Tusher broueht the news ot this ca lamitv about which Henry Ksmond loneed to ask. but did not like. Tie said almost the whole village had been stricken with the pestilence; 17 persons were dead of It, among them, mentioning the names of poor Nancv and her little brother." This description antedated Jenner and vaccination by almost a cen tury. At that time the disease was not as terrifying as it had been though it was much more so than it is now. Thackeray's description of the ep idemic is excellent and of the dis ease is sood. thouch he made, the aches come on within a day after exposure, whereas they do not come on until 13 or 14 days after contact with the cource of contagion. He had smallpox carried to Cas tlewood by a tramp. Thanks to the annerior Intelligence of tramps, that fraternity rarely spreads smallpox the middle class; and four-fifths of Kearney Hub: The attorney gen eral of Nebraska. ' Clarence Davis, has been doing good work in bring ing blue sky sharpers and fraud pro moters to the bar of Justice. Let the good work proceed. to pluoe with no prospects of help. A civilization which permits lynch ing and burnings of human beings without due process of law: a clvili. Ization which permits organized bands of robed and masked maraud ers to usurp the functions of or ganized government and to terrorize whole communities. Is not one, I calculate, to inspire any people. nowever Backward they may be. with any yearning desire for that particular brand. What has Kurope to offer these same yellow, brown and black peoples? Much less than has America. No. sir, these yellow, brown and black peoples are not burning with the fires of conquest, but with the desire of self-determination," and that they are going to have, with out let or hindrance from any out side interference. JOHN" C. PARKER. 2911 Lake street. Kxpcnsc of (Government. Omaha, March 7. To the Editor of The Bee: The officers of a city are the servants of the taxpayers. Usually they are working' men of now. Why, Tou're AU Right! G-. M. W. writes: "I am 73 years old or voune. I have been accus. tomed to call it. I have always been blessed with health and strength and have only lately begun to feel any loss of 'pep.' My blood pres sure is sllsrhtly subnormal (140) Does that account for this, and also the fact that my left leg sometimes foola urnoHpn? Tf n. rsn I do any thing to restore normal conditions?" the slogan frequently heard REPLY, A blood pressure of 140 at age 73 is an asset and not a liability. You are lucky. Many elderly people complain of numbness. It is almost normal wun them, you might say. It does not thoso who pay the taxes expended by these officers are working peo ple, trying to pay for or own a lit tle home some time in which to raise their family. Any wrongful or unnecessary diversion of these taxes is a crime against these home owners. Tho present wrangle over the wages of the policemen has not re flected an oversupply of business methods on the part of our city of ficials. Back to normalcy has been Only a few weeks ago over 9,000 men in our South Side packing houses had their wages cut from 20 to 40 per cent, and almost ail of our business firms have also reduced their em ployes' wages, so that the average pay is less than $100 per month. All are getting back to normalcy and Seottshluff Star-Herald: The atti tude of the chief executive of the United States toward the primary election system, will prove of no dis turbance in Nebraska, where every two years since 1907 there has been a more or less open attempt on the part of the old stylo politicians to return the state to the old conven tion system. It is not denied that the convention system has its advantages over the primary system in that it is less cumbersome, and mayhap less expensive, although in view or some of the state conventions tne latter statement is subject to revision. The convention system gives the po litical manager a chance to run things to suit himself (it he is a real manager) and thus relieve tne peo nle of thinking or acting for them selves. On the other hand the Amer ican people have of lata years be come more possessed of the idea that they themselves have a voice in matters of government, and al though they "pull terrible bone heads" through the use of the ori mary power, to hear the political managers tell it, still they feel as though they are getting some chance at saying whom they desire as pub- When In Omaha STOP WITH US Hotel Conant Hotel Sanford Hotel Hcnshaw Our reputation of 20 years fair dealing is back of theie hoteU. Gueats may stop at any one of them with the aisurance of receiving lion eat value and courteous treatment. Conant Hotel Company forebode disaster as a rule, nor Is 'paying: income taxes If they get there anything you can do about it that is not more trouble than the disease. Has Fun for Election Day. Human nature, we have often observed as election day approaches, generally would rather vote against somebody than for somebody, and we suggest that the next time a middleman be nominated to run against a landlord, thus assur ing everybody of a good time. Ohio State Journal. Not so Easy to Make Munitions of War. Let us hope the disarmament settlement will not be enforced a la prohibition. Shoe and Leather Reporter, .1 But Isn't That the Style? Mrs. B. G. writes: "I. I walk great deal and am very slim. the walkinir made me so? '2. what are the advantages ana disadvantages of walking?" REPLT. 1. I doubt it. .You probably do not. walk as far as 10 miles a day. 2. It increases your leg and trunk muscles especially. It does not exercise the arm muscles much. It improves the wind and endurance. It improves nutrition and raises re sistance, it keeps one in tne open air as a rule. - -'"753 Yes, When Promptly Treated. F. R. C. writes: "1. Is there ever recovery from abscess of the brain? 2. Ruptured blooa'vessel on the brain? " "3. Blood clot on the brain? REPLY. 1. Yes. abscess of the brain Is quite likely to occur with a few symptoms and few after effects, when it can be promptly diagnosed, located and drained. 2. Yes. 3. Yes. Most cases of two and three recover, so far as immediate ffects are concerned. CENTER SHOTS. Modern science has succeeded in reducing blindness among humans and domestic animals, but the poor tigers seem still to be sadly neg lected. Kansas City Star. That girl candidate for governor of Kansas is described as "auburn haired." If defeated, she'll be red headed. Greenville- Piedmont, E. F. Sands, William Desmond Taylor's butler, has been arrested ai?ain, this time in North Carolina. The fellow must he some relation to the "sands of the sea." Cincinnati Times-Star. "You can always have a host of friends if you are willing to pay the price," observes a nearby contem porary. The price has been particu larly high for a conple of years. The Battleboro Reformer. enough except the city and county officials who do neither. Why not cut the wages of the po liceman and of scores of the other city and county employes around the court house and the city hall, including the commissioners, in a degree to conform with the salary of nine-tenths of those who support them? Why should the monthly pay of a policeman be from J140 to S175, the mayor $416; the commissioners each $375; chairman of the water board $833, including all vacations, when just a3 competent men with equal ability would do the work as well for from 50 to 75 per cent of the above? Two of the city officials are also receiving additional com pensation from the city in a sub stantial manner. The riot in high salaries of city, county, school and state officials, and their reckless and wanton ex penditures, and their crushing de mands, is fast taking all the hope and manhood out of the little home owner. To own a little home now with a mortgage, makes you simply a tenant of the city and the mort gagee. It is creating doubt; distrust and causing broken and dissatisfied home life, filling the courts with di vorce cases, and every orphan home and jail to the doors. Strange indeed that men holding a brief Dower cannot rise above self interest and soften the burdens of, those who are weary ana heavy laden, and do these things to enable our men to be home owners and not tenants of a few who were more fortunate. It is time for someone to wake up. VERITAS. Diili) I 9 felfCv I II TUNED AND REPAIRED All Work Guaranteed A. HOSPE CO. 1513 Douglaa. Tel. Doug. 558. sit the When You Visi Auto Sh stop at HOTEL ROME Just Across the Street CAFETERIA Open Day and Night ROME MILLER Corns? If all the world's a stage, a call for a new show is in order. Colo rado Springs Telegraph. Merrltt Starr, a well known Chi cago lawyer, has offered a prizo of $5 to each undergraduate of Oberlin college who memorizes the Sermon on the Mount. We may now expect .Tawn Dee to offer $10 to anybody who practices it. Peoria Transcript, j Bluejay to your druggist Stopt Pain Instantly The simplest way to end a corn is Blue-jay. A touch stops the pain in stantly. Then the corn loosens and comes out. Made in two forms a colorless, clear liquid (one drop does it!) and in extra thin plasters. Use whichever form you prefer, plasters or the liquid the action is the same. Safe, gentle. Made in a world-famed laboratory. Sold by all druggists. Fret: Writt Bauer Back, Ckicago. Dtft. rrt for valwMt book. "Cornet Cart of Oi4 Ft," Red Feather Poultry Feeds p. scientific p, 0 Feeding 0 a a , Babv Chicks need special feeds "". C t) PETERS' RED FEATHER FEEDS are bal- II 7N ' I anced rations, scientifically prepared and I vtpF" I , 1 j , . T . 1 1 1 . E " a guaranteea 10 seep your auy viucus a I strong, vigorous and healthy. Beware of 1 l "just any kind of feeds" they will not get i V I you the splendid and certain results to be I I had by feeding Jtcd Teather Feeds. I ' m Gel S,ck Today of IGvl RED FEATHER BUTTERMILK N I I r.DnwiMf macu I aa.a r a rcu rtAincK tmi,ri. slra i en 1 They are : The Finest Feeds on Earth' Jfcj) T I Write forFreeBabyChiek I I Booklet "B" on the care of chick. I V Vl BUY FROM THESE DEALERS: f VVfl H. H. Andre.. on. 2520 Lake St. I ! H. Arorin, 2330 S. 20th St. 1 w B D f a .nin v - A ... I I Chriatopberton Coal and Feed Co., 3505 N. 30th I - J I L. H. Cinek, 5215 S. 24th St. 1 1 ( . I Ford Feed Store, 820 N. 16th St. I I W I J. S. Handelman, 6620 S. 36th St. I V J Tlr I Murphy Coal and Feed Store, 4602 S. 28th St. I tf . as, rnseijr, e ani iuii. nr. Peltx Bro, 3005 Haakell St. V 1 J. H. Price. Florence. f V . 1 Saratora Groceriea and Meats. 2404 Fort St. V J Stoltenberf Elevator Co, 6136 Military Ave. V y The Red Feather Store, 1236 S. 13th St. Walnut Hill Feed Store. 1425 Military Ave. I M r PI lit MS M II I I II I I ITla Va A USaakS iiaaajaj vw. I I 29th and B Street, Omaha rS