THE BEE: OMAHA. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 14. 1922. The Morning Bee MORNING EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANV . NELSON B, UrWkS. PuklMtar. B. Bkt EH. G. M . MIMBIB or THE ASSOCUTXD PRESS TM AtlUH mm. af MUk TW h Mto, U aialwMial, HW U l 1M ( IIUMIMIJI. W 1 MI twiaa MMMM MUM mi mmwim maiua m lata ,. m ia u ki aaaa 4JI Mftu ianikia.ua af ma mwiI annual w m Nat mn ctralallaa l Tb OaMfca Bm, May, ISU Daily . 72,033 Sunday 78,642 B. IRIWIR, Caaaral MHtW ELMEft B. ROOD, Clraulaua Maaafar m4 eaWcrlb1 kafara aw ilii 4th Sar ml Mir, lU. (Saal) W. H. QUIVCY. Kmt ruaU Tte Oaufca Bm It nto af tk 4lt Iwu af ClnaJuuai. Uw nmim4 .iMMilir m MmtuiiMi audi!, w4 Tb. a, l ilmutwi U taj. Urtr ii4iu4 to Uwr wiuimumi. BEE TELEPHONES Priaata Branca. Kxehanfa. A.k for tha Department 1Ti ., or Pane Want. rr Want Calls After I P. kl.t AT " Editorial Department, ATiantia 1011 or l4t. 1000 orricEs litis Office 17tN aa4 Pamaai Co. Bluff ) Seott St. Bovth Sid 4111 S. Ills St Now York ill rifta Avenue Waehinftoa ... Ill 1 O. Bt. Chieu 17! BUfor Bid. Pari, franca 4 10 Sua Bt. Honor SOFTENING MEMORIES OP, WAR. Down in Hastings this week half a hundred Span lsh War Veterans are reliving- the dsys of '98. - Tha state encampment of the former soldier can not but draw a comparison between the three living feneration of Uncle Sam'a fighting men. The ranks of the blue and the gray are thinning faster and faster each year. The ranks of those who donned the khaki in the war with Spain and Aguinaldo are beginning to ahow effects of time. The Yanks, Gobs, Doughboys and Marines of the world conflict have yet to lose the bad tastes of war. But these will be aoftened by time. ' Already the blood of .Chateau . Thierry ia hal- lowed; the mud of Varennes, once the wallow of dis contented citizen troops, has assumed the cloak of romance; the duckboards of St Nazaire have at- talned their niche in the hall of humor. But still within the breasts of these youngest veterans of America, democratic at heart, rankles ,the memory of the salute, the "shave-tail," inspec tions, passes, reveille, and "K. P." These at best are but petty dislikes and, as Father Time grinds down their edges and prickles on his whetstone, laughter will crinkle the corners of those hero eyes as youth's inventive genius in . getting around these regulations is retold in tale and fable. And, as the years roll by, the horror and hatreds of the war daya of '17 will be turned into romantic memory, even as with the veterans of '61 and '98. ; Twenty-four years from now, their ranks, too, will be thinning as are those of the Spanish War heroes; and fifty-one years hence, thinned as aro the Civil War 'comrades of 22. ' ' Then will the rankles and dislikes of '17 be sub merged in oblivion. . . . . -.:.. ,V FAMOUS HORSES OF OLD. . . . Long ages before the dawn of history, the horse abounded upon the earth and was man's best ally. In the paleolithic age when our cave-men ancestors roamed wild, almost like the animals, the horse lived. But this ancestor of the wonderful speed ma chines now to be seen at the Ak-Sar-Ben race track, and of all horses of today, was a small animal, less than four feet high, with a large head and rough, 'shaggy mane and tail. He was too small to be ridden and was used by man for food. " . - , .The horse's place in human history is right next to man's. Bucephalys was the famed charger of Alexander the Great. Roan Barbary was the favorite horse of Richard II, and White Surrey of Richard III. Incitatus, the horse of the Roman emperor, Caligula, was made a priest and consul. It ate from an ivory manger and drank from a pail of gold. .Legend is full of the horse. Borak, which con veyed, Mahomet to the seventh heaven, had such speed that each pace was equal to the farthest range of human sight, ; 1 Nr-y :.vv' ' ;v The stud books of today go back hundreds of. years. The histories of such horses as Roxana, born in 1718; of Godolphin, of Cade and a host of others are kept as carefully as the histories of human celeb . ritics.' : ' ; :! IN THE HANDS OF PROVIDENCE.. ' There are not so many standard topics of con versation that our serious talkers can afford to ignore the condition of the crops. From one end of the country to the other men who do not. know beans from barley now assume a thoughtful air, impale a victim on a piercing glance, and remark that, the government forecast is for an increased harvest. If they are fortunate enough to fall in with someone from a country town or a farm they can talk of nothing else. : ' f:. ; Charles Lamb, while riding in a coach through the English countryside, was harassed by just such a character. After a number of remarks had failed to draw out the essayist, his fellow traveler pointed to a field and inquired what sort of a turnip crop was to be expected. . ,. ?, "I believe it depends largely on the boiled legs of mutton,". Lamb answered.. , ? There is, of course, nothing more important to Nebraska or to the remainder of the states than the harvest. The Department of Agriculture may make its estimates,' and the volunteer prophets may con sider that it is all settled, until the time comes for them to worry over whether the. corn has enough moisture and if it will mature before frost catches it. Before the contingencies of nature mankind is help less. There isn't much more use talking about the crops than there is in discussing the weather fa,te will decide. DIAGNOSING THE SCHOOLS. Now that the educators of Nebraska are discuss ing means of reducing school expenses, hope begins to bloom. If this matter were to be left solely to -the judgment of those outside the teaching profes sion much harm might come from ill-informed efforts at economy. . " More than a score of tax-saving suggestions have been obtained from a questionnaire sent to 108 Ne braska school superintendents, asking three methods; of reducing school costs. Thirty of the replies favored abolishing special supervisors.. ' Seventeen' favored dropping coaches for athletic contests. Elimination of manual training was suggested by 38, and of domes tice science, by 23. Fifty-four replied that nothing should be dropped, thus lining up with C. Ray Gates, the new superintendent of schools at Grand Island, who asserts doubt that there is anything in the aver age school system that can be abandoned without taking a backward step. . . ' : . t A surprising number of responses to the ques tionnaire proposed an end for special instruction in music; this probably will not find favor with parents, who look to the schools for some cultural activity. Very few of the answers advocated ' discharging school nurses, closing night schools or kindergartens, shortening the school year or ceasing to supply tree text books, and only twelve mentioned readjustment and reorganisation of the educational system. " Discussion should not end her. The fat of the children as well as the largest proportion of th Pop!'s texts is involved in the school prc'Mm. Watt in education mutt be lessened, and efficiency mutt be Increased. Those who are engaged in teach Ing, bs well bs these superintendents, should be heard Irom. Nebraska Notions THE BROWN PAROLE AOAIN. Not all of the blsme for abus of th parol sys tem appears chargeabl to th state parol board, if Warden ronton s statement reflect the record. The new parole law, drafted originally by Attor ney General Davis and passed by th last legislature, provides thst no prisoner shall be paroled until after published notice of his spplicstion and personal no tification to th district judge, th county attomsy and th sheriff of the, county from which th ap plicant was committed. It is made the duty of these officers to meke reeommendstion as to th granting of the application. Warden Fenton ssys that this rule was followed in the case of Fred Brown, whose psrole turned loos upon the community a criminal of desdly 'purpose and fiendish cunning. He says that no objection was offered to Brown's psrole. - On that record, others than the parole board must stand some of th blame for Brown's premature re lease. The purpose of the law was to make certain that the local officers most likely to be well informed should be offered the opportunity end should be re cjuired to advise the parole board. To the extent of supplying such information and making a recom mendation based upon it, the locsl officers have a responsible part in the parole system. The locsl officers, however, simply advise. Re sponsibility for decision rests with the parole board, as does also responsibility for investigation into the criminal's past record as disclosed by the penitentiary records. That the board can not escape. ' HOW TO DROWN. . "Throw up both hands, shout, .'help' and drown." That is the formula for suicide by the water route, according to an ironically worded poster issued by the National Safety Council Having thus dramatized the danger, the bulletin proceeds to 'more positive instruction, defining swim ming as "reaching for shore first with ono hand and then with the other." That is a good thing to re member, when the impulse comes to collapse into helpless floundering off shore. '(Swimming is 99 parts confidence and one part experience, taken in water frequently, the advice continues. Beyond warning against needless risks and bathing too soon after dining, there is not much more that needs be said. , Twelve persons had to be rescued by life guards at the Omaha beaches Sunday. One of the reasons for this accident roll is that the season has just begun and' bathers have not gained the knowledge or the confidence that they will have by autumn. It's a fine thing to know how to swim, for it exercises every muscle. . But don't forget that the chief requisite is keeping a cool head. IV..'. WOOLGATHERING. The- tariff question is not as simple as its op ponents would make it appear. . Thus in condemning the imposition of higher duties on imported woolen goods the critics of a protective policy forget or neglect to mention that a higher tariff also is to be placed on the raw material. . The wool growers of the west are. to receive protection as well as the mill owners and workers of "the east.:... Although the topic might be avoided, stilt if the critic is pinned down he must admit' that wool brought in from abroad would tend to lower the price received for American wool. In April 22,800, 000 pounds of combing wools, valued at $5,827,000, were imported into the' United States. This exceeds the record for any complete years since 1910 except 1917, according to the textile division of the Depart- ment. of Commerce. The Quantity of all classes of wool imported in April was 38,655,000 pounds. According to the argument of the tariff foes, the wool growers are suffering ' from an oversupply of - 1 1 . Tl T-J.' it-, - - T ineir proauct. it seems just possiuie mat a property balanced import tax would bar out some of the for eign competition and encourage the sheep industry. But little things like this seldom are discussed by the democratic spellbinders and organs. . , ,. MAKE IT SNAPPY. ' Brevity is the soul of wit as it is the soul of nearly everything else in the form of language. Yet the human race refuses to learn this simple fact. After-dinner speakers ramble on for an hour or two while their ' auditors inwardly rebel. Con gressional orators debate for many hours, muffling their thoughts deep in a mass of useless verbiage.' ' The creation of the world is described in the Scriptures in less than 600 words. Caesar sent back word of his conquest of Gaul in just three words, "Vendi, vidi, vici." And Sir Sidney Smith probably capped them all as a model of brevity when he sent back word of his capture of the city of Scinde in the one word, "Peccavi," which is Latin for "I have sinned." ; "Invisible Exercise" is a fad that may be expected to grow. Gerald Stanley Lee, the author, defines it as "the act of consciously relaxing one's neck and pulling one's self, soul and body together." For our part, we confess curiosity over the chapter! on the exercise of keeping still, and the art of liking to get up. 4 v - ' ; Say what you will about the republican primaries in Iowa, Indiana and-Pennsylvania, it still must be admitted that whatever readjustment is taking place is within the party ranks. The voters are doing as theyvwish inside the party and have no reason for going outside. .- -i . There are not many poets in America who are as well received in their home state as John G. Nei hardt. His lectures in Nebraska towns will give in spiration to no one knows how many boys and girls, and lead them to look about them on the prairies for their soul's good. ; ' Walter Lippman, in the Yale Review," castigates democracy for being content with the "second best" in political leadership. How many political contests have been won on the theory of choosing the least of two evils? ' '' . It seems tragic that a poor family should be thrown into debt by a thief taking a $12 pay check. It seems tragic, too, the way renj:, food, clothing and the bare necessaries of life eat into larger wages "than that. Small incidents such as the Dutch florists sending cut flowers by airplane to London the same morning they are gathered illustrate the way the world is shrinking. V1 ". . ' Semenoff is on his way to Russia, and no doubt he will soon be raising the lid in Siberia. . Tork Naws-Timet: If It coats as mucn to ft a nomination in Na brsaka as it doaa In Pennsylvania orotDoay is oinf oroK. Grand laland Indepandent: Ban ator Hitchcock nradlcta that tha Unltad Butae will join the leue of nationa oar or isi. it would aam that th former prcaldent of tha country is still haarlnc voices In tha air, that th Nebraaka senator la at ill Wood row's apokaaman and that. Ilka Cos. h aniff another "aoiamn referendum." Let 'er "ref randr Nebraaka City Prcaa: "Can Crime Be Cured by Paycholocy? rada a headline. Perhaps It can. but a aawed'Oft ahotgun In tha handa of police who ara not afraid to do thalr duty will do more. Edgar Howard In the Columbua Telegram: I heard a man any that witnin on year "Ford ror.Freai dent" clubs will b organized In ever state In tha union for th purpose of maklnc Henry Ford a candidal for president of the Unit ed States. Some weeka ao I waa down in Alabama, and dlacovered that the people down there were fsttlnc ready to organise "Ford for freaident" ciuoa. And tha fever haa reached Nebraska. Frank Whe don of Kearney says that on "Ford for Freaident" ' club haa already ben organized In Buffalo county. snd that others will follow aoon. Keep an eye on the "Ford for' Presi dent" cluba. They are already dis turbing the peace of mind of many politicians. Grand laland Independent:' The gentlemen of the district bench at Omaha are advlaing all men to resint the highwayman even though It cost their Uvea, aa a means of eliminat ing crime. May It be respectfully auggeated that, In addition thereto, there be more prompt proaecutlon and conviction generally of the criminals who are caught and not quite so- many technicalities by the defending attorneys or early paroles after conviction? The Tariff. Hasting Tribune: There have been all kinds of heated debates and diacusslona In the upper house of congress In the past three weeks on the tariff bill and it ia doubtful If the people throughout the country flave been giving very much atten tion to what waa said. Party politics and the tariff sro hand in hand. Happy will . be the day when the tariff will not be Considered a party issue it. should be - taken . out, of politics entirely. just ao - long as the tariff is a party issue, we will never have a sclentlfio tariff bill properly con structed and all efforts to bring about such a bill by political debates win rail. The men who are candidates for congress this year should be warned against dragging the tariff issue into the party the tariff must be taken out or pontics it the people or the United States are to be benefited by it. Grand Island Independent: Bank er. Wentx of Aurora, only two years ago looked up to, ' respected, and enjoying the confidence and trust of his fellow men. is now in the state penitentiary as the result of playing false to that trust, and per mitting himself to be tempted by the theory that the traditional pow er of money to talk, could also orate him out of any trouble should his escapades be , discovered. Money does talk; often its pleadings are far too effective. But more often. when the battle encompasses staid principles of right and wrong..1 it pleads ever so eloquently and yet all in vain. 'The old proverb read that wine, women and song took captive many a man. Today it should be changed "to hootch, flapper and poker; but essentially it is the same thing. Each one of these factors, and each combination of them, con tinues to ruin men, reputations and business. And the first chapter al ways reads something like: "Aw, come on, be a good mixer, not an old fogy." Treaties Not Ratified. Mnrfnllr TJowa: Americans learn with surprise that the treaties re sulting from the Washington arms rAnffrrnrA r not vet in effect, and are not likely to be for some time to come. They do not become oper ative until all of the signatory pow- Viaim ratified them and ex changed ratifications, and the Unit ed States Is the only one or me live big powers that has taken the neces sary steps. Tonon Via ratified the Shantune agreement and is expected to ratify the important five-power naval re duction treaty and four-power Pa cific treaty at any time. But when Great Britain, France and Italy will ratify is problematical. wny tne powers snouia ueiay au tinn n nnt ernliiined. They have been busy with the Genoa confer ence, but that hardly accounts lor eA lAnff a rislav Thftv have had time enough to ratify, if they wanted in these four montns. , The Bee's Letter Box to Vshrsibn flrv Preaa. A man Who iio iivaH in ntftA rnnntv for 40 years declares he never saw the time when there was too much rain in this favored section of Nebraska. Thio (o mentioned luat now because there has pome a recent complaint . . ... . . . j . .... tnat rain, sent in ouncnes, is ui m tle value to the hardy agriculturist. The average rainfall In eastern Ne-, braska, if the worm aimanac can be trusted, is 24 inches per annum. saMnm la that amount exceeded. year after year. So far. for the most part, farmers in utoe county have not been driven from - their h finnd: thera have been times when a shortage of moisture has burned up tneir crops, ariea up the streams and made them radicals in thought and example, on tne other hand, this little sermon does not apply to the tanner who lives on the Iowa side of the river, where a wide expanse of "bottom" offers sustenance to the man who tills the stubborn glebe, lowans wno are "neighboring" Nebraska are not keen abott moisture in wholesale quantities. We must temper our desires when we think of them and the hillside Nebraskan at the same time. Tork - News-Times: President Harding, who used to "make up" a country daily paper at Marion, O., is going to make the government employes in Washington work eight hours instead of seven. President Harding is a brave man. His ears must burn fearfully, if there is anything in the old saying. In most offices and in nearly all of the trades the workers put in eight hours. It is true some of the unions are pulling for shorter hours, but they have not made much prog ress. It -seems natural to work eight hours, have eight hours for recreation and eight for sleep. President Harding will get abused roundly for his attempt to make the government employes at Washing ton work eight hours. It ia nothing more than right, but they do not see it that way. They think they should work aeven hours and get eight hours' pay. The "Great father" In'th White House thinks otherwise. , - (Tb BW ffw IU aMiimaa Trif I lu NwlHt wna car aiavuaa aaf pupil auaMlan. II nauMl lhal MUr k fa taaabla ariaf, aot r SSS wmu. ' la laaUt thai h aama at I ha wrlta aeeeateaiia rath tir, aat airirUy far aublla-atiua, ul that I ha 4!of may knaw with wham B Ml aVallna. Tit K Saa aut prrtrad la niUr aoaaat viawa or aptniona aprraaaa pf paadaala la lb latlar ttu.) ' Anyhow, Catch Drown. Lincoln, Jun . To ,he Editor of Th Be: Fred Brown, by grace of tne ponce reporter's . Imagination callad th "manacl man," la report ed to nave again fled to Lincoln, in an automobile atolen In Benson. They say ha drove boldly down, only a few rods back of State Sheriff Gua Hyer. And, aa th rumor flaw, it finally grew Into th story that Brown rod the entire distance perched on tha apare tire at the rear of Ous' automobile. -Tha Brown hunt I rapidly devel oping Into an opera bouff. Officers found a little bag of lollipops, or "all-day suckers. ' in one car be lieved to have ben abandoned by the desperado. Another time It waa dla covered that he had been feeding hi desperate spirit en cinnamon buns. Brown appears to b "playing" Omaha Sundaya to Wedneadaya and Lincoln Thursdays to Saturdays of each week. JULIUS KRANZER. . Poking Fun at Business Women. Omaha, June 12. To the Editor of The Bee: Now that women are full-fledged membera of tha Cham ber of Commerce, one wonders what Is going on in the minds of some of the staldeat male members. . Whether rules will have to be amended with respect to smoking either less for the men or granting carte blanche to the women to puff their own. i Whether a ladies' parlor, rouge and Hp stick will not be added next to the suite of smoking rooms, equipped with cuspidors. Whether attention will not be dis tracted from the eloquent speaker at the public affairs luncheon by the atartling millinery or cosmetic arrangement of the lady to his right And mirrors! Dear commlaaloner, go heavy on the order for more mirrors!' . A GIRL MYSELF. Lincoln County Reduction Meeting. North Platte. Neb.. June 5. To the Editor of The Bee: In spite of the competition of a circus and a commencement exercise comprising several ' hundred people . from the entire county, the tax reduction at the court house at North Platte was a rousing success. J. H. Edmlsten, chairman of the progressive state committee. Introduced ex-Senator Otto Mutz of Lincoln, who for more than an hour addressed the splendid audience on the subject of tax re. duction. The people who heard the ad dress were enthusiastic ror tne lm mediate organization of a county tax reduction club and the vote to effect such an organization was unanimous. W. M. Lyman of North Platte was by unanimous vote elected president. Mrs. Charles Per kins of North Platte was elected secretary and J. W. Shoop, cashier of the Maxwell bank, was eiectea treasurer. ' ; Mr. Mutz address was full of the most startling facts, taken from si lent witnesses in the form of re ports of state1 officers, and the facts as they were written in the laws. He stated that first direct cause of high taxes will be found in the fact that only haif or the property oi tne state is being assessed. He said that Douglas and Lancaster counties hide more merchandise -than is assessed in tlie entire state.v" .He also elated that wVifla wa lanve tn the tate 44 district ludges at salaries of $5,oio,! each rendering for 10 months, m tne year, one of the justice courts of Lancaster county has more live judgments on Its dockets than the entire state assessed in J920. :. He also said that while the banks of the state in their, quarterly state ments returned under oath "depos; its subject to check 'and time de posits, 1513,458,755,' - tne- enure state returned under " "money in banks, trust companies or deposit boxes" only $12,458,736,- and while the banks returned under "loans and discounts" $509,000,000 the en tire state returned for assessment under notes. $4,105,053. He said that while the entire state assessed under "secured . and unsecured notes" only $1,963,432, the records of the county clerks of the state showed new mortgages assessed $1,963,432 and the records of the clerks of the state snowed new mortgages filed during the last 12 months amounting? to S140.000.000, He designated as the crime of Senate File 65 the revenue reform measure passed by the last session" of our legislature that exempts more than $2,000,000,000 of the best property of the people of : Nebraska from taxation. He explained that 75 cents out of every dollar of money, stocks in corporations not assessed in the state, building and loan shares, notes, chattel mort' gages and annuities under this law is exempted from taxation ana that the owner is required to pay tax on only 25 cents. Under this law he complains that the farm worth . ' Opinion of State and Nation drink m Mr Bay Hmoi by tba wt Pbone yym erdr ta Jacfc on 4231, a Maifcal 0900. Aak far Jattsr't al tfia oda fountain and w(l drink atrlor. Jetter Beverage Ct SSytan inOmaha, J 30th trY Streets Say Ben-Gavaf an ,1rtt. I you wiUget a tube of the original rrench Baume Bengutf (Analge stque), then nib Baume on outside of nostrils and squeeze V in. of Baume to n bowl of boiling water -Inhale the steam. Keep a tube nandyfoT RoaeCoIdand HF THOS. LEEMTNO & CO.. NEW YORK THE LAW'S DELAY! BREED COX- , TEMPT, from th BirmiBiktm M Tha other day one of th Alabama papers carried, an ' account of th third reversal of a rasa, snd there was also another trial In which the verdict of th Jury waa st aaid. Four trials In thr yar In a horn!- eld ca each trial a conviction and th aceuaed still his not nn sivn punishment! Is It any won der undr such conditions that thr i a very prevalent feeling that our laws are but labyrinths into wnicn the socuaad ntr under pilotage of criminal lawyers, to emerge finally st some unexpected and concealed ntranc. and than to xprs thalr uttar contempt and defiance at our system 7 . In England a man who Is arrested on a homicide eharse gate a trial Inslda of two wka. Not a mere pre liminary trial; but he faces th gal lows If It is murder, or the peniten tiary if It is a lesser crime. The eas Is triad In leae than a wek; th work la expedited. Ther ar two appeals open to him, and both of the ar usually oleared up Insld of three weeks, and he Is either hanged, freed or sent to begin his sentence- Insld of another two wks. Th result la there are fewer homl- eldaa In all England than ther ar In th Birmingham district In a year's time. Britishers ar noticeable for their rerpect for th law. It la a vital, a living and a sacred thing to them, but the reason It Is thus regarded ta because it has compelled respect for it. It has refused to shackle tta judge and practically turn th court over to the lawyers. It haa set at doing substantial justice, and it accomplishes just that. over there a man knows that if he kills another man without mighty good excuse his neck will pop at the end of a noose, and pretty quickly. THE RADIO LANGUAGE. Fram tb Tolade Bind. Said Mr. Jones to Mr. Smith: "Wasn't the static fierce last night?" "Was it!" said Mr. tsmun to Mr. Jones. "I'll say it was! Between the atmospherics and the harmonics the resultant jamming was ghastly. My super -heterodyne receiver went plumb . to the bad and I fiddled away hours with the non-inductive resistance and a variable Induct ance." . Said Mr. Jones to Mr. Smith: "I think - I'll have to get a new beverage wire. I haven't had a syn chronous spark for a week that was $20,000 must be assessed at $20,000, but if the owner had his farm con verted into $20,000 In money the money would be assessed for Just $5,000. Mr. Mutz presents his argument for revenue reform on the highest plane of patriotism.. He insists that In spite of the fact that every mem ber of the senate was a republican and 26 of them voted for the law of exemption it must not now be treated as a political question. The bill was passed in the house by a majority of 57 votes. It waa signed by a republican speaker and a re publican governor and, . in spite of the fact that the property exempt by the law is the property of the rich men of the state it must not now be treated in a partisan spirit. He says that there is a great army of republicans who. are just aa de serving of a revenue law. that will bring every dollar -of the 'property to the assessment rolls, and compel every tax dodger either to reform or move from' the- state as any citizen of the state,'' and that because their representatives' failed to represent that this is no excuse, for partisan r i . - i : .. . . auuac. f - v," . ; The exemptions under Senate File 65 absolutely exempt; more than $2,000,000,000 from taxation. Seven years ago a law was passed In Ne braska that exempts from taxation real estate mortgages amounting at this time. to $509,000,000 and the supreme court by a recent decision exempted $73,000,000 of county, precinct, village, city, school dis trict, drainage, irrigation and other bonds from taxation and the total of exemptions in the state amount to as much as the entire assessed value of property in the etate. If we will assess this property along with the farms and the homes we will divide every man's tax by two. This is our purpose, It is the de mand of every man who Will ap proach the . subject in a ' spirit ' of fairness. The right to protection of government is support of govern ment, and that support must come through- the payment of a Just share of the taxes of the state. There is no room in Nebraska, where our great seal is "Equality Before the Law," for a tax " dodger, - and it makes little difference whether he dodges the payment of his Just taxi by legal exemption or by refusal to assess it. J. H. EDMISTEN. decent. Quar thing, though, I waa liatenlng for sparks about tl o'clock and switched for continuous wave reception, and who should I plrk up but 7X11. I!svn't caught him in era" Bald Mr. Smith to Mr. Jonas: "I've eome to the notion thst my sntennae aren't reaching high nough. My notion la that with a fundamental of S00, excited with a strait ht gap, I ought to get about anything I want from tl up. Bay, you ain't got an oaeillatlng trane former among your xtra, have you? Nor Well, so long, IGH." Said Mr. Jonas to Mr. Imlth: "8o long. Tl." IXECTIOX DAY FATTER. rr.n tb Ntiltsvlli (Wis) Tree. Election day isn't whst it used to be. Them osyi is gone forever. Since women fot to voting there is no pep in flection day. One can go down the street snd see two or three women stsnding on the corner iwsp ping a line of convtrutioa some thing like this: "Why, hello, dearie. You do look too sweet this morning. And where did you get your new half It U a darling and makes yon look so young." And "Call me up some dsy and I will give you a new recipe for devil's food. It it juit delicious." A great line of talk for election days. In years gone by the topic of conversion wst; "Whst have you got on your hip?" "Have a little nip on me and vote for John Jones. He is a good fellow and a free spender." But those days teem si far in the dim put at the time when Nero tried to play jess on b one-stringed fiddle. Money to Loan on Omaha Real Estate At Loweit Intereit Rate Six Per Cent has been our interest charge since April 1st, 1917,' on all loans. Easy Repayment Plan . $1.05 per month pays principal and interest for each $100.00 borrowed. . Reduced Cost of Obtaining Loan ,. $1.00 for each $100.00 borrowed. Conservative SAVINCS6LQAN ASSOCIATION Gulbransen Players f i " - t .. ' . Community Model : ... . . . .$365 Suburban Model . . . ... ... .$495 : Country Seat Model . . . $600 White House Model ..... $700 A Fool-Proof Player Cash er Terms 1513 Douglas Street The Art and Mask Store Cool breezes, pine forests. lakes and seashore are yours this Summer at prices much less tht for the past several years. Stop over in Chicago, itself a great summer resort of infinite variety. Tell us where you wish to go; or, let our travel representatives suggest a Summer trip and sup ply you with information about fares and train service to the Illinois Central trains arrive in Chicago at Central Station, in the boulevard-hotel-theatre district. Con venient connections with railway and steamship lines for Northern and Eastern Resorts. Hawktye Limited: Leaves Omaha 5:15 p. m arrives Chicago &30 a. m. Sleeping cars (with drawing-room), chair cars, coaches, and dining cars serving unsurpassed meals. ' - Chicago Express, No. 16: Leaves Omaha 7:15 a. to arrives Chicago 9:55 p. m. Personal Service and satisfied passengers are the rule on Illinois Central trains. Clrr Tkkac OfBoa, 1416 Dodaa Streat Phona Doaajat 1604 .C, HajrfaA DfePaw. At, lUam JIJQo Wad I Baafe j'rtffla. 4 .) ( 1 V