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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (May 29, 1924)
Today McAdoo in Front. T. R. on Reli^wn. A Text for Ford. H hat Prayer, Please? By ARTHUR BRISBANE J The strongest democratic candi date now is McAdoo. .lames D. Phelan of California, well liked by everybody, will put McAdoo in nomination. Glass, who will be Mc Adoo’s heir in the convention, if Al Smith “kills off’ McAdoo, is talking strong conservative talk. Political talk is getting too close to the famous Burchard “R.R.R. tine, foolishness that will make dem ocratic defeat inevitable if it con tinues. The American people do not like religious prejudice in any iiuarter. Frank Greene, writing from San Pedro, Cal., reminds you of this statement made by the real Theo dore Roosevelt at Cardinal Gibbons silver jubilee, June 5, 1911: “Our republic, mighty in its youth, destined to endure for aees, will see many presidents during those ages, and it will see presidents who are Catholics, as well as presi dents who are Protestants, presi dents who are Jews, as well as presidents who are gentiles.” Very likely. In Thomas Jefferson it had a president that believed in no par ticular religion. The senate agricultural commit tee, 11 to 5, voted against Ford’s Muscle Shoals offer and took up Senator Norris’ bill. -> ■ Senators that refused Ford’s of fer are hurting the farmers and hurting themselves. But that doesn’t console Ford, who must find his con solation in the 146th Psalm. This verse is especially recommended: “Put not your trust in princes, nor >n the son of man, in whom there is no help.” The unreliable son of man in this case seems to be Mr. Coolidge. Statesmen that rule New York city will begin their sessions with prayer, but can’t agree on a preayer that would do, in a body of Protes tants, Catholics, and Jews. The humble publican’s prayer, “God be merciful to me a sinner,” would suit most of our public officials. A reader writes “You talk about the Teapot Dome, but that isn’t the trouble. The real trouble is in the public’s dome. It doesn’t think.” That is solemn truth. If it were otherwise, we should have different officials. Something frightened specula tors yesterday. Stocks dropped and scattered minus signs throuf^h the list. Europe frightens Wall street, and the fact that “Commodities," things produced by nature and la bor, are dropping in price. Later something cheerful will come along. Then the speculators will buy back what they sold. The income tax bill which ap parently is going through, with its publicity attachment, seriously dis turbs some of the big pocketbooks. Seven dead, 20 burned in aj Newark hotel fire. Four killed in a New York fire. Thirty-six dead, 70 hurt in tornadoes sweeping through Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana, also one big and 50 lit tle eruptions in the volcano of Kil aueau. The world is a tragedy, as you know from running your eyes over the news headings this morn ing and every morning. But among the dark clouds, here and there is a patch of blue sky. Charles H. Mayo, great surgeon, says cancer will be conquered “with in a few years." Already 70 to 80 per cent of cancers can be cured “if taken in time.” Remember that over-eating is one of the principal causes of cancer. Keep your system light, clear, clean, full of energy, and it will deal with the diseases that await it. Overloaded it Is helpless.__ An unfortunate widow dies in sane, leaving a fortune of abovi $20,000,000. That fortune was in herited from a man who made all o his money selling articles for 6 am 10 cents each. What he got wa profits on the nickle or the dime Those who think it not' “wort] while, to save in dribbles’’ will ob serve thr»t dimes and nickels are im portant, piled together. i The Makers o ( These temples of business around you i We built through the years that are gone;' I The teeming workshops that surround you 1 i Are yours when we have passed on. \ We fought through Ion# years behind us ) The foes of our faith to subdue. •' f Now time draws near to remind us [f Our tasks we must pass on to you.' , U We joyed in the striving and doing, y ' , j And pride in the works we have wrought, / We prayed while feet were pursuing t ' V, The goal that our firm faith has sought | Our labors we mingled with laughter; . vj jj We sang ’neath the clouds or the blue;* / And buifded for those to come after— A For" country, for God and for you. d \ We triumphed o’er doubt and disaster, thy v 4 And smiled through our bitterest \ We toiled while davs flying faster 11 Were merged in the ranks of the years. / Now what we visioned we leave you ( In steel, and in marble and stone; (f )/ In faith, in hope, we believe vou VAtf ( \\ (' will better our work when we’re gone. \ We’ll toil till the last trumo has soundec^ ]\ And joy in the work that we do. /u/ l) We’re proud of the city we founded/ /////jfa Y And builded securelv for you. v ( W A We ask that when the night gathers \b For us who nave struggled and fought,V i You’ll keen firm the faith of your fathers, ? /|&* better the works we have wroughtAKr| um Will p 9 % b> For over thirty-five year. Calumet has been the foundation on which ful. M«de in the World1«linMmdwMt the American housewife has placed sanitary bilriag ponder ficCnrio ebtfi If her faith on bakeday. And never it never touched by hamen hand*. Used r once has it failed her, because it by more hommrfve., lendli* bomb. <■ "?***«■ *n.d r"d" srr, iztzt. ,sd.Tr‘^T pcndahle leavener obtainable. Hlw»ys use it. FVFRY INGREDIENT USED OFFICIALLY APPROVED BY U. S. FOOD AUTHORITIES Sates f/i times as much as that of any other brand t » < ' subtle disapproval In a way many an older woman might envy. "Oh. zes!” Junior's tone was vastly relieved as he ran to his father, with outstretched arms. "Welcome home, daddy!” he caroled. Dicky's face was a study. II# had missed no phase of th# Incident, In cluding my call of the child. I knew that from the furtive, annoyed glance lie shot at me and guessed that he could cheerfully have boied the ears of every relative he had in the room, including for the inatant the child looking up at him. Then, his face clearing as his chivalry and his sense of justice battled with his Irri tation, he caught up hie little son and hugged him tightly, while his eye« twinkled at me. "You win the bet on a foul," ht said tantallzlngly. Adele Garrison “My Husband’* Love” _1-' Why Madge Couldn’t Resist Calling Junior Before Dick.v. There was a cocklly mirthful assur ance In Dicky’s manner as he made his wager on Junior’s running to him first that piqued me. If our mental atmosphere had not been already electric I would have thrown all my good resolutions Into the discard and taken his bet with as much arrogance as he displayed, for I knew that it needed only absolute quiet and noninterference on my part to bring my baby boy to my arms first of all. But. weary and dispirited as X was, I wished to avoid any further cause of friction, so I forced myself to a demure meekness I was very far from feeling and murmured smilingly: ‘‘I never bet against a sure thingf Dicky laughed. “Wise lady,” he said patronizingly, and with the words I drew the car up to the veranda steps. Dicky, 'springing down, helped me out and we went up the etepe together. The door opened before we reached it and Ivatie answered our greeUngs smilingly, but with a reserve betray ing the iron repression which my mother-in-law always puts upon my littls maid In my absence. “Is Junior all right” I asked breath lessly, wondering why neither he nor Lillian’s young daughter, Marion, was racing down the hall to meet us. Katie's lips pursed disapprovingly. “Yah. he all right!” she said. "He in living room by hee’s grandmudder. She say you coom dare.’’ Mother Graham's Plot. Wondering a little, I walked down the hall toward the living room, Dicky lagging behind to hang up his topcoat. As I entered the room I saw the reason for Junior's tardiness in running to greet us. His grand mother, seated In an armchair, held him lightly but closely beside her, and when he joyously exclaimed “Mama!” as he caught sight of me and struggled to get down, I saw her tighten her clasp upon him and heard her whisper: “Wait!" So that was it! 1 did not need the unconscious disapproval written upon Marion’s lovely young face to tell me that my mother-in-law, with one of her occasional spells of mean jealousy, had trained the small boy to greet his father first. When Dicky appeared at ths door I watched closely, saw her release the little lad with a tiny push and a whispered: “Now.” Everything that was jealous and malicious in my own naturs bubbled to the top In the mental caldron that was In my mind st that moment. As if I had noticed nothing. I opened i my arms to the advancing little fig < ure and called aoftly: "Oh. Junior darling!” He ran directly into my arms, with . a glad little cry, and for a second or two I forgot everything else in the sheer delight of cuddling him close to me. When he had kissed me raptur ously, he wriggled uneasily, and an nounced in a conscience-stricken tone: "Oh, I fo'rdol!” "You Win—” I stole a glance at tny mother ln law's crimson face and asked an unc tuous question: "Forgot what, sweetheart?" ”My piece vot Danzie taught me,” He released himself from my aims and turned toward his father. "Dan zie said I was to come first to you, not to mamma.” he announced, as might one reciting a lesson, "and I vas to' say—vot vas it, Danzie? 1 fordot.” "If you’ve forgotten, that's all there is to It,” his grandmother snapped, but Junior was persistent. "Vot vas it, Marion?” he asked. “You know ’ Lillian's daughter cast an oddly apologetic glance at me, and I re alized that young as she was, she understood the ridiculous feminine jealousy underlying the whole ab surd situation. "You were to say, ‘Welcome home, daddy.” she said, managing to convey ADVERTISEMENT. ADVERTISEMENT. Constipation is ruinous to children— keep yours healthy with Kellogg s Bran Constipation undermines a child a health. It saps his energy and makes him listless. It ean lead to more than 40 other serious diseases. Mothers should take immediate steps to remove, safely and surely, the dangerous poisons from his 6ystem. Kellogg 'a Bran—because it is ALL bran—brings permanent relief. Koth ing but ALL bran can be 100 per cent effective. That is why Kellogg’s Bran, cooked and krumbled, is uni versally recommended by doctors. They know it brings results. 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