Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 11, 1921, WOMEN'S SECTION, Image 14

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THE BEE: OMAHA. SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 11. 1921..
TheOmaha Bee
DAILY (MUKM.Nli) tVtMNU iUNUAK
IHB rH)UHIKQ rOMPAKY
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rMd hs U S M MM ra6u4 ,
IH kel evNieeed Mws H rt at KvMtiM W
Wet SW'Sl WK H WesfH.
Te i Mm mum at IM W Cie-
ICC TEUTHONII
rr.f.( iutw XT lantie 1000
far Ntafct Call Alter I P. M.
C4.tMl Ptin"i .... Tieeu MJ Mil
orricu of thc fee
IM'e imwti til ;".
CM4l lllurt U ""l I - J "'
Out-el.Tea OIIUs
Twt f'ria I " I'll
tie m ' ri. rr.. 44 In M. Hue-
77it? Ztec'., Platform
1. Nw Uaia riir Suilea.
2. Continued lmprtmat of Uia Na
hraika Hifthway. including tka p
meat of Maia Taaraufkfaraa leading
iate Omaka with Brick Surface. .
3. A hor, Iw-rat Waterway fraaa lk
Cera Ball la Ika Allaatlc Ocaaa.
4. rfere Rule Ckartar far Omaka, witk
City Manager ferai ef Gramnt.
I1
( pledged their no operation, and il it hoped
i to do elp program (or protecting the ! ltt
of children thai be o( ue to romniunliict
througliout the nation. Thia undertaking It no
mall one, nor are il mult likely to he of any
oihrr than tin utmott Important, The Fed
C'roj and many oilier rrlirf orgauirailona are
enuring into the effort. -
Front the time of bit tla children are hedged
ahout with p.riW. In the' Ohio city of Akron
$S out r.' every 1,000 children borit die during
the'r rt year, and in Manchester, N. II,, the
ratio is 165. Motheri will have to be instructed
in the proper care of their b.bici. vUiting nurtet
employed, pure milk aitured, and proper food
secured for all growing children. Question ot
child lbor, of housing, aaniiation, garbage di
pokl, aireet cleaning, recreation and of dental
and medical attention will have to be met.
Conlidence in acience ia high enough that few
Mill doubt the beneficial rebuilt of thia experi
ment. Thc people of Mansfield are indeed for
lunate to haie had their community eho.rn as
the center for thii child health experiment.
Certain Virtues in Spending.
'Hut a circus which, Itai been touring the
country all aunitiur, showing in many large
cities, should establish its record for the largest
kttendancc in ore of ths piairie towns of Xc
hrasl.i i. a thing not to be passed by without
t:otice. In Xorfolk last week 17,000 persons
Getting a Flying Start.
How often it is that one who face the neces
aity for undertaking tome task, whether it be
house cleaning, weeding a garden or writing an
editorial, is tempted to put it off because of not,
feeling in the mood. The time comes at lat
when the operation can no longer be avoided,
and usually, as one plunges into the details. what
teemed from a distance extremely distasteful and
onerous completely engrosses the attention and
the work may even seem pleasalit, o easily
doe it go.
Launching the lirt offensixe on a job
that has to be done often is the moat difficult
part. If poatmcn or housewives, who hae to
do more walking than most others, should at
the beginning of each day compute the number
of times they would have to put one foot in
. - t af.t.
i.OUgni liCKeu 10 a kiiibic penormance 01 .1114 . , . .,h,r ,tfli. -...a.a ...
show and th- proprietor expreaari the opinion , di3CouraB;n;j. Breathing is a .simple action, per-
formed unconsciously, yet if persons should pon-
that thereabout thc period of business stagnation
in at an end. It this be a sign of recovery, simi
lar cheer may he obtained front the record-breaking
first day attendance at the state fair at Lin
Some critics may reply that these outpourings
enly indicate that thc people have not learned to
save. They may point to the almost interminable
streams of motor cars tilled with pleasure riders
on a Sunday, to the comfortable and well dressed
appearance of so many of those on the streets
: nd in assemblages and berate this as extrava
gance. Yet one of the dangers of thr present
financial situation lies in undue frugality.
A Rood deal about the workings of economic
laws has ben impressed upon the people in the
hist year. For one thing it has been made ap
parent that a lessening of consumption results in
the curtailment of production and consequent jn
rmployment. The surest way to bring abojt
worse times w ould be for people to stop spending
r.nd to live through ,t!" winter as do thc bears,
on iheir accumulated fat.
Qtarity with its soup line, government con
ferences and official intervention can do little to
relieve the jobless compared with what could be
accomplished by renewed activity among those
who still have their purchasing power.
To say that freer spending by those who have
the means would encourage business and provide
work for the worklcss is not to be read as an
SfcrtTWWvitnt to extravagance, nor can it be used
j as justifying, those who by maintaining high
prices Save impeded trade. Where articles of a
"j permanent and substantial nature arc needed, to
do without,. when one can well afford to purchase
";.- them is noV a virtue, but only another blow at
' 1. the industrial system, more severe than that dealt
' . y any agitator. A certain amount of expenditure
on recreation is not to be criticized, but people
should hold in mind the fact that patronage of
r those lines of business which are really produc
tive is more widely brnelicial, not oiily to them
selves but to sound prosperity.
1.
11
v
11
1
1
' -.
-t
Redistribution of Population; '
Making allowance for obvious exaggeration,
the figures given out as to the number, of un
employed :n the,scveral large cities of the United
States indicate a condition that might have been
anticipated without more than the ordinary gift
of prescience. When the increasing hum of in- J
tlustry, incident to the war, lured away, from
rural vocations thousands of workmen, skilled
and unskilled, much comment was indulged as
to the shift of population. The war itself in
duced a considerable degree of change in resi
dence by draining workmen from interior to sea
board communities. Certain centers of indus
trial activity found life greatly stimulated, and
population unduly 'enlarged because of this.,
Now, the war is- over, the readjustment has
progressed far enough, to have some-effect in
the way of reducing employment by cutting off
thc extra jobs, and so there impends a rearrange
ment of population. Allow that five million men
are now idle, and give some consideration to
the fact that a considerable number of these be
long to - the permanently unemployed class,
which has been re-established in the United
States with the coming of peace, it is equally true
that a considerable number of jobs also are man
less.t These will attract away from the cities
the surplus of population which came with the
war, and which has held on and is now left
stranded by the receding "boom," and it is not
a dangerous venture to suggest that the census
of 1930 will show less of a dispatity between
rural and urban figures.
Workingmen have learned that thc big wages
offered by city jobs do not always compensate
for the cost of living, without regard to the in
conveniences. These are ready to go back to
the smaller town, where some of the attractions
of "life in a large city" are overcome by. re
liability of employment, and the opportunity for
enjoyment that 'does not hold so much of ex
citement, perhaps, but has in it' more of solid
comfort
A Child-Saving Experiment.
Is anything better possible? This ques
tion, applied to all human affairs, is the spur to
progress. What can a typical American com
munity do to increase the health and strength
of the next generation, is the question that is
cow asked by the National Child Health council.
The answer is to be sought in Richland county,
Ohio, and its town of Mansfield. This demon
stration will last five years and will deal with
children of all ages.
The Medical Record announces that Dr.
Walter H. Brown, j former hearth officer of
Bridgeport, Conn., now engaged with the com
mission for the prevention of tuberculosis in
' France, will take charge of the work in this rep
resentative Ohio community. County and state
efcers,busiaess men, physicians and parents
dcr before draw ing each breath it would be pos
sible to make very hard work of what ordinarily
is done without notice,
There are days when energy seems low, yet
the forces arc not absent but only hidden, and
can be brought forth by exercise of the will to
ward making a beginning on the work before
one. TI16 girl who complain all day long of
being tired and then goes to a ball and dances all
night is no different from many of those who
make fan of her. Europe marveled that Luther,
busied in travel and active labor, should have
found the time and energy to translate the
Bible. "Kurlla dies sine vcrsu," was his answer.
Not a day passed, wherever he was, that he did
not translate at least a verse, and this pertinac
ity brought him to thc end in good time.
In spite of the tendency to scoff at . the
maxims pf the old copy books, those who make
a sincere effort toward accomplishing one thing
or another are the ones who succeed. The great
men accomplished their aims by perseverance
i.nd the will power which enabled them to take
up one thing at a time and push it through. They
have thrown themselves heart and soul into their
tasks, striving much as the old Roman astrono
mer and writer of whom Cicero said that when
he sat down to write in the morning, he was sur
prised by the evening, and when he took up his
pen in the evening, was surprised by the appear
ance of the morning sun. AVhen one can dive
thus into his work and submerge, the time passu
so swiftly and pleasantly that the burden is not
felt.- ...... . 1
President as a Human Being.
While Americans are prone to discuss their
chief executive w ith unrestrained freedom, it is ad
mitted that behind all their critical comment, ad
verse or otherwise, lurks an unlimited interest
in and frequently admiration for the man who
occupies the White House. No matter what his
politics or personality, his triumphs or his mis
takes, he is the president of the United States,,
and usually he holds the unalloyed loyalty of all
the citizens because of the human qualities he
exhibits. . Beginning withWashington and com
ing down to Wilson, this has been true. Now
Warren C. Harding is showing those attributes
his countrymen are apt to expect in a president,
and is gaining in public stature as a result. '
One splendid result of this is the Zaccahea
correspondence, lately given out at the White
House. Discussing this the New York Times
says: .
The affair illustrates to a really striking de
gree the president's ability to get tilings done
without giving offense-;io anybody, and .to
; apply pressure without hurting anybody. There
was a chance, and some would have utilized
it, to expatiate on the hardships of raising a
big brood of children on $20 a week, and to
comment harshly on the paying of such a wage
to such a father. The president did neither of
those things. In his letter to Mr. Wanamaker
he admitted the inadequacy of his own knowl
edge for a judgment of the case, and certainly
achieved a very miracle in the way of moderate
statement when he wrote that "quite obviously
so large a family could readily accommodate
itself to a more liberal basis of income." Thus
approached, of course, Mr. Wanamaker investi
gated the matter with no sense of having been,
attacked, and was able easily to justify the
president's assumption that Zaccahea was suf
fering no wrong, that his merits were recog
nized, and that his pay would increase as soon
as his earning power increased.
Other things the president has done his letter
to the boys who sought a subscription to the
swimming hole fund; his assistance at the
launching of the little skiff for the son of Sena
tor Frelinghuysen; his daily contact with. visitors,
all indicate not only the' tactful thought of thc
man, but ' his consideration for everybody de
serving of consideration, no matter what his
walk. While he thus proves himself a regular
fellow, a human being, with none of the ele
ments of the demigod, he has shown with equal
force and power his capacity for dealing with
great questions of. national and international
policy. So far Warren G. Harding has disap
pointed those who hoped be would be a failure.
The musicians who carried banners in the
Labor day parade signifying that differences with
the theaters had been made up provided a praise
worthy example of bearing no grudge.
Those boy traffic cops who will attempt to
maintain safety zones about the schools will at
least grow up with a strong aversion to speed
ing and careless driving.
Skeptics are unpopular, not because they do
not have beliefs of their own," but because they
do not share our illusions.
Another great tenor has died, bnt so far the
celestial choir has not drafted any 'saxophone
artists. :.- '..''.,. - " , V '-
The Husking Bee
Its Your Day
Start It With a Laugh
THE PASSINO IHOW.
I'mlcr the tprrading rhettnut tree
Where once the mithy atood,
And where the anvil nierrily
Rang through the neighborhood
A brick garage aprang up forthwith,.
And in the spot now ttand
W'hm once there toiled the mighty smith
Willi arm like iron bands.
A well dressed man tits in the don
Where automobiles p.
And gather in the iron men
As he dole out the gas;
Where once the anvil rang o clear
' Cart fliwer to and fro,
And all the ringing that we hear
It ringing up the dough.
From every village in the land
1 he village sniiili has passed.
Where he oure nailed, with calloused hand,
Old Dobbin's shoes on fast
We hear no neigh, but just a honk,
We see no forge's lire,
Where once they shod the fractious bronc
They change a flivxer's tire.
PHILO-SOPHY.
Some men can't atand prosperity, but they can
ait in a genuine leather upholstered limousine
enjoy it
a
It is usually the man who has nothing to say
who is loaded with intormation.
A man doesn't worry a be t beauty being only
tkin deep it the girl has money. .
BAD SIGN.
Ouch: I'm afraid the wife is coming dow
will some sort of a sickness.
Grouch: 'At so? What are her symptomsf
Ouch: She hasn t started a quarrsl for three
days.
Occasionally you will run across a dcn;.it of
the old school who will ask you if you want In
tooth to take home with you.
Q'S AND A'S.
Q: I have a dog that has rices. What shall
f dtl-
A: Scratch him.
How to Keep Well
r DR. W. A. (VAN
QvmIIm Miwyi by 1 mm. Mail.
mlll4 ! Or. fcr
TW IM m 4 prMwMy,
ukil la m lualiatiM, wkara
aiaaiaW. 4di4 aavclaM
Im4. Ot. tvaaa HI aa .
4uaala ar ataMi-ika far bUivUval
iiwtM. AaaVata lallar la car al
Tha Baa.
Ciariht, I tUt. ar Dr. W, A. Etaaa.
Unemployment
Conference
Back to Common
Law
Q:
A:
Q:
A:
Is Bryan still living?
If you call residing in Florida living, yes.
Are cigarcts injurious?
Not unless you smoke them.
Q: Are policemen healthy?
A: Yes. They seldom catch anything.
'I had a chicken dinner today," -remarked one
of our co-workers, rcminiscently. "and the gravy
was exceptionally juicy and tender.
a
ISN'T IT THE TRUTH? '
A cat may look upon a king,
E'en stare him in the face
But any man prefers, by jing,
To look upon an ace.
a
Newspaper reporters sometimes miss an im
portant detail in a story, bee where a woman
was injured when the Ford she was driving cof
lided with a calf. ' The item neglected to state
who was driving the calf.
, .
YOUTH I
Do ye know, ye graybeards all,
The world is made for youth?
- Ye scheme and sigh and wag your heads,
: ' . -The world is made for youth.:
War-torn and sad, and frenzied grown,
The wdrld is saved by youth.
With courage' high and vision clear,
. .The world is saved by youth. .
' Forbear to stifle brilliant dreams,
Let us be fair to youth.
Give them their joy of fleeting days,
. Let us be fair to youth.
' The Atlas load of our mistakes
Will wear' awBy their youth. -We
must give love and meed of praise,
The world is made for youth. '
- . . -C. M. .
a a
One argument advanced in favor of govern
ment ownership of railroads is that they can't be
any worse. . ' - -
By the' same token, then, we advocate govern
ment ownership ol newspaper typewriters,
a a a
: a HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
A few drops of ink will effectively remove a
strawberry, onion or other fruit stain- from table
linen. If ink is not available the spot may be
removed with a pair ot sharp scissors.
x A cold pancake tacked to a stick of kindling
makes a durable and inexpensive fly swatter.
To test a cork fill the bathtub full of water.
Push the cork firmly to the- bottom of the tub
and release. If it rises rapidly to the surface it
is a cork. - ,
To remove a chip from the edge of hand
painted china, tap the spot firmly with a hammer.
Small rutabagas boiled in kerosene make a
good substitute for carrots.
. j
Gold fish may be prevented from barking at
night by keeping them submerged in water.
t The maid should be warned against starting
the furnace fire with gasoline unless it is her
day off.
. .. ,
SOMEBODY IS ALWAYS, ETC.
- The daily tasks that face us
Bring joy and we enthuse
- To page our own Pegasus
And woo the timid Muse
We burn the incandescent .
That serves for midnight oil,
- Our eye-shield like a crescent '.
Across a brow of toil; .
; The thoughts that we're inditing .
. To u seem rather good, ;
But even as we're writing
We stop and knock on wood;
Our Remington utensil
Our every thought transmits,
But the editor's blue pencil
- Can, put it on the Fritz.
. .- a
.' One of the principal courses of study at a
young woman's fashionable boarding school, we
take it, is coSmctics.
,
When a man knows a little about law and a
little about medicine, the lawyers call him "doc,"
and the doctors call him "judge."
,
- REALLSM.
They are now making artificial eyes so true
to life that even the wearer cannot see through
the deception.
a a a
An optimist is a guy who will borrow money
to buy a purse.
Men and women have at least one charac
teristic in common. They each prefer thc op
posite sex.
a a a .
Afterthought: A poet may keep busy and
alill have bis idyl moments. PHILO. 1
REAL STUDY AT HOME.
' Miu ilrrtruda j4t'ob of the Ja
mali llish iMhonl, after toachlni
ehvalral training for a number of
taara. bacame a teifher of hysivna,
In Hieh I'olnta for April. !!!. h
tall of her sucr m In tcticninf her
Dunlla.
lnteJ f u'lnc all of her time
rnd that of hr pupil In roverln a
ftrtaln lumbar of pace in a text.
J'uok aha took hr Icasoni from lh
hablia of her puplla na 'hey retnted
lit dreaa, retina, personal hi'glena In
general, and the vanltatlon of their
eurroundlnaa.
The liimruetlon reUted to such
111 tiers as b"d maklna. taking tem
peratures, lining sarbacu cans with
paper, adding oil to tha rlr.ua water
In wohlng woolena, nd ulna kero
ene In cleaning- alnka and bath tubs.
In personal hygiene tha Instruction
was on such aubjei'ts as cor
set, weight and texture of clothes,
eierc-Ue, food, and outing
At the end of a coiii-m in January,
19:0. tha girl (for thia conrve was
given to the girls) were .mked to
writ - what thy hud been mat
helped by, us well a Interested In,
during the course. Thivo hundred
and fifty-four replied: I Si bad been.
most helped by Tllden'a rulea for
i-ombatlng duteaue, 30 had helped in
nursing a-Ji-k people, 30 hud followed
a routine tor atudy, 22 had observed
the rule of health, 19 had formed
the habit of retiring early, li had
got up early and atudled before go
ing to ei-hool In the morning, 14 had
laken more outdoor recreation, nine
cured chronic constipation. 27 had
Interested other people.
In January, a'il, 419 girls an
swered and the answer were
grouped as follow:
I ollowlng the daily routine ad
vised 147
Caring for hair properly 134
Giving up corsets 121
Better care ot teeth 110
Rising earlier 90
Going to bed earlier 143
Learning to dren more Quickly. 80
Taking daily cold bath 81
Following rules for combating
diseare 7
Adding fruit to diet 70
More sensible shoes 103
(ra le IUafcla teale.)
IVrliap nine man out of every I
would rekpoud "r:tihu Kol" If akd
la nam Ida greaiett American
yer. rW forrign court have nomi
nated him for tha world luurt. When
u-h a man protean agalnal I he uv
or American lawniaaerv nni
of Judicial Interpret! of law
In tha t'nltd tiiatr. hi r.let may
be Ir4rd, but may not t Ignored
In hi fipoiilna addrea to lha
American I tar aakoWaiHui al It lih
annual vnnvvntlon In t'lm-liumtl, air.
Itool aound Ih right noi, "iack to
the Common u," II y Uh
tharaciertatlo fore and Iranknrnh:
There are deeUlon on boih
aide of every quektlon you can
imagine. Change In tha ad
nilnUtratlon of law 'in ft,rrM
themnalve even tin th alien.
Hon of the public. Th ii!lri
tlon of luw la o widely dltoreiit
from that of 40 year ago that 1
soma guiding Una im.kl lot
found. W must Keek for th
principle ol common inw which
la being alouly, modified hy
thousand of statute and do
,slolon of courts of Ir-nt retort
. , . We must have a ryttcui
of education requiring iln back
ground of th law which ex
plains th true method and
scop of th law.
Now It Is Imposcibl 10 conceive
, t.w.. mai uie aon 01 anarcny ui uecieiu
llicra r licainijr t , u.klrh Mr Itool norlr,va n i
. i. .. I- I . . -Ill . t.l I . . ...il .ivvivu. v.j
""-"J " " lha unrt or
ne" a
(Ft lha staMlatara Aawearaa.)
Mr. Harding I forvhndi4 In hi
decision to rail a conference' of
eaplul and labor on th unempluy.
men! aituatlon, rrolwbly r.o coun
try in lh world lia suffered o little
thu far from iot-mr idien i
ha thia country, and (h people
generally have shown a commend
bbl pntlenc In awaiting reconnriie
tlon. Th etlmt I that MOe.OOQ
men and women ar out of work,
but th murmuring thu far hav
been few. The people recount th
Inevlublenea of th temporary aitu
atlon and ar demonstrating thalr
practical common n by k'eplng
quiet and keeping hopeful.
Hut th tlm will comlt my
com thia winter when trouble will
iart unl a dennit and prut:al
plan to meet It la forthcoming.
Kmpty pocket a,nd allent tongue
do not keep company, fleaxon and
logic rannot argue with an empty
tomach or a lire lei Move. Th un
employment alttuitlon wa. of count,
Inevitable, I'olltk-, alniont every
body will recognise, ha nothing to
do with It. Rut If actual and wide
spread suffering Is permitted to be
vln, then will com unplaant con
aequenrea not only to the political
admlnUtratlnn but to th social
strmtiir of th country. I
Rmnlovment cannot o full Deed
until world business recover Its'
breath.
already of that recovery
!r l. lief 1 In I il. wrong rtwr I
i lh right And wliara aiilimiil
dltlaiea Ih dleiiiitiitii f ,,"
IMHtf of ronaiiliilHMMl lmill'na,
; 110 nal protection f lha rik'Ms of
i i.,l lv . a
written otaanlu law, i probable or
even (MUkible, '
Tha ihHuciirr of tha ll.tr aliniild
t powerful lo llold Indgra to lute).
Icctu.tl lionetiiy. Itiit It kh.oild ulao
ha of ronxidi ruble weigh' In dis
couraging lh making of Innumer
able pigiuieii -humlrvd or ihniit
anda at each iii nf rjcli t.na
IrgMuture, hutnlreil or IIiuiiiiiI
at each araalon of coniva) Would
we liav worae govcrnnifiit If evurv
klatuie enacted for lu ir. im
llonal or ktate, wrra wiped out?
Might we not have hcieer govern
men!. In ll.'l litwrnaker r.p i lcl
lha common law, and lawyer were
rulded by It. It may he lint thenn
iiuenllnii have only acailemlu Inter
eat, but Mr. Itool' protckt force
litem on lh" mil-He' attention.
TiMib 1 he sinii-h Out ,.f Him.
' A (10 line Imposed on apced'ng
laundry man proliildy look tha
ktitrch out of him. Boston Tian-kcrlpt.
Ilowrr In, time lo nrevent within J
Judge.
term used
'liespoiihive- '
by Theodore
Itooaexelt Is not too infrequent. If
themalvea a aerlnun aituatlon. Mean-
lima wtnicr ia cominn on. - Intalleetual hnnomv ,l,nu,.,lu ..... .
il m noi uie ouainon ui int "v-i .....i-- ,if., , ... , ,.,
Mor outdoor exercise 4!)
Better use of wraps 47
Bating less cake and candv 41
Clothing suspended from
nouiders 80
Helping mother 40
Making superior cold cream .... 22
The Tildcn rules for health which
she teaches are:
1. Never cat unless comfort
able in mind and body since the
previous meal.
2. Never eat without a desire
for the plainest and simplest
kinds of food.
8. Avoid overeating bv (a)
observing rule 4; (b) leaving
the table while still slightly
hungry; (c) not eating between
meals; (d) not having .oo great
variety of food; (e) not washing
.food down with milk, water, tea,
or coffee,
4. Thoroughly masticate your
food.
The rules for combatinz diseunn
which she teaches are as follow:
Step eating. 2. Take a laxative or
enema. 8. Drink a glass of hot wa
ter whenever the stomach feels un
comfortable. 4. When in discomfort
take a hot bath. 5. Have the room
thoroughly ventilated. . Stav in
bed and keep warm. 7. When th
fever has gone and the other bad
symptoms have disappeared eat
oranges or grape fruit ior one or
two days. .1
Miss Jacobs' rules were nlmnerl hv
her for people who are taking cold
or feel some other acute Illness de-
eloping. '
Von Guessed Rlsrht.
M. S. writes: . "What should a-elrl
years and 4 months old. 4 feet tall,
weigh? I have in mind a little girl
of that age and height weighing 53
pounds who. though having been
pronounced perfect at a baby con
test, "is thought by some to be too
fat."
' REPLY.
According' to Wood, a girl 4 feet
tall should weigh 51 pounds. His
statement is that girls S years old
should he 39 to 44 Inches tall and
eigh 34 to 45 pounds. This girl Is
too large for, her age. according y
Wood. : She should not reach 4 feet
In height or 52 pounds In weight tin-,
8 years of age. Maybe she is go
ng to be a giant, it is more liKely
she belongs to a- fast-growing race
or family.! .
Don't Bellcvo All You Hear. ,
G. B.'D. writes: "Do milk and
crackers dry no the blood? T eat
great deal of them and should like
to know."
' i- TwEPLT.
Ko.
Set Brakes On Jaw.
Mrs. P. B. S. writes:' "Can you
kindly tell me why it Is that after
every meal my girl or zo has tne
hiccoughs for at least a half hour?
Is It harmful?"
BEPLY. -1.
I suspect she eats too fast. Make
er put on the brakes.
Z. No, not for the first few hours.
- That May Be Helpful.
W. It. writes: "Is it any good to
lean the face with witch hazel? Can
remove pimples?"
REPLY.
For ordinary folks nothing Is
needed but soap and water or cold
cream. The pimply folks may do a
little better If they clean with witch
hazel or alcohol or alcohol and bor-
acic acid
eminent to support the .'ountry. or
part of It. In time of str- s. The
government ha no ouch constitu
tional function and It is well that
this Is so. But. neverthele. the
people do. as a practical matter, look
to the government to alleviate their
troubles In periods of depression,
and the government which failed to
make an effort to help out would
last only so long a the next election.
It Is very Important for the nd
miniKtratlon to device the bent plan
it can find to tide the country over
the winter. We all hope the winter
will prove more of a scarecrow than
un actuality, so far as hardship la
concerned, but it I wise to make
ready for the actuality, nevertheless.
The administration would be negli
gent and inhumane not to do so. But
In the presidential efforts to avoid
unpleasantness the peola ought not
to get the idea that the administra
tion is in duty bound 10 go any
lengths to prevent hardship.
The present depression la due to
various natural and artificial causes,
for none of which the government is
responsible. The natural causes are
well known. The artlllclal causes lie
largely in the disinclination of some
of the labor bodies to go bncl; to
normalcy. The attitude of clinging
to war wages, or the neareet to war
wages obtainable, is handicapping
employers and throttling business.
Many employers are being put to it
to make the business wheel turn at
all, much less to make it turn faster.
Their resources can scarcely stand
the present strain.
There are two ways In which Ihe
canker can be gotten out ot he busi
ness system. One is by a gradual
wate reduction spread over a com
paratively long period of partial
business paralysis. The other is by
use of the knife. The knife may be
employed either by employers or by
labor itself. Labor can use the knife
either .by. clinging to- the present
costly (system and fofei greater
and greater numbers' of its own
forces Into? idleness or by co-operating
with capital in getting rid of the
present system quickly. If th first
method is used, we shall ' unques
tionably ace a serious time of it this
winter and the government must
keep awake to its responsibilities in
that respect.' But the responsibilities
of the government are limited to a
humanitarian effort only. The gov
ernment cannot be. responsible for a
depressed industrial situation which
it has " no constitutional power to
correct. Suoh correction must come,
in so far as it can come, from the
agreement of capital and, labor to
co-operate in fighting the causes of
depression. It is such an agreement
which the president will seek to
bring about
demand another, th duty of the
Judge to defy public "ntlinenl Is :
bard to deny. But It Is an unplcusLiit
duty, and noclalism aiigg-.-kt thai !)'
also Is a "servant of i)m people"
paid with their money, ind. there-'
fore, paid to do thcir'wlll. lie ar- j
gues himself into a perfectly sin-
BUSINESS fS GOOD THANH YOU
LV. NitHQitt Oil Company
Davis, of the
Confederacy
4-
Pershing Effectiveness.
The meaning of the designation
of General Pershing na chief of staff
becomes clearer with ihe orders
promulgated for the reorganization
of the general staff. That body is to
function as the reorganization act
equlres. It Is not only to direct the
routine peace work of the army It
is to prepare the land forces, the
regular army and reserves and the
National Guard for the emergency ot
war. New York Times. . .
IN MY GARDEN.
Tulip tall and 5ffdll
Up nd down my little hill. ,
I.lttle paths of gray old itone.
Little thought while all alone. ' :
How Ood (mile on eaeh new day, ..' ...
Tcurhin on the only way
To ba happy. In to know
Smllin back will make one 0.'
f
In our carden
Happy hour. ,
Moist warm earth -
i And smell of flowers,
Dron of bees
And butterflies.
Gnat tall lilies. -Tea
blue skies.
Tn our garden
Son of bird.
Happy heart
And gentle words. -children'
laughter
Flowera -to pull.
Tea are here, love, A
Life is fulL
---FJorencp H. Esmonds ia the Toronto
Hail and Empire.
(From tha Toledo Blade.)
On a memorial park laid out
within the county of Todd, in Ken
tucky, the . gray' fragments- of the
confederate army will rally on June'
3, 1922, to see unveiled the 175-foot
cbclisk which is the last, offering of
the south to Jefferson Davis, . On
this site, 114 years ago,, was born
the confederacy, for here was born
the man who for 25 years before
the civil war and 25 years after It
maintained implacably the doctrine
of state rights, the principle of se
cession, the contention that the con
stitution is a voluntary compact of
sovereign states.'
It is a mystery of fato which
brought two Kentucky lads of simi
lar age, born 140 miles apart, to the
forefront in the most romantic of all
wars. It was a double mystery that
one course of life should lead Lin
coln forward as an apostle of na
tionalism and another course of life
made Davis the champion of state
rights. Yet from early manhood
Lincoln always saw the 'inlon above
all, and from early manhood Davis
cherished the state. He cherished
it to the point of sacrifice. When
his wounds and galantry in the Mex
ican war brought him an appoint
ment from President Polk as briga
dier general of volunteers, he re
fused, declaring that ' only a state
could make an officer of state volun- j
teers. . !
Wounds and galantry in the Mexi-
can , war! Who remembers that
Davis shed his blood for the na-1
tlon?- Who remembers, that , he
served in the' Black Hawk war, that
as secretary of war under .Pierce he
created a new artillery and a new
infantry?'. These-were national acts
and Davis desired no fame as a na
tionalist.- He chose his own field of
ervice for danger or : renown he
Was of the confederacy before It was
oorn and after it. was dead, and he
would now rather be dear to a rem
nant of gray veterans than com
mand the world' armies. ,
1 1 , II
bii'f.iHiii'iiiiii'iiiinii i., j
ne raft
1 iifeimvIjainlm JK'
I Pian ' 5
m m 1 Am
E3 n fca ... 1 t
HE Mason & Hamlin is musically the most
beautiful piano the world has ever known
naturally it costs more to build such an in
strument than any other piano. But spread
the cost over the long years of service which
you may confidently expect of it and your invest
ment is one of proved economy.
Yet above every consideration of cost is the supreme
satisfaction of owning thc piano which is the final
choice of the world's greatest rlitts.
Maoa & Hamlin Piano are on
tale only at th wareroom of the
m
ospe (So.
Everything in Art and Music
1513 DOUGLAS ST.
'The Art and Mutic Store"
pgHBEiginnnn
D Could
It Happen to
TKETREAKd
ttLUTttrUet
jJFa"WffLW"J
. Lctovsky, Pianist .
Stialo, Pttnsa aw.. 17th aa Faraaai
Istoalne Attune 414 ..
' Jurenil' and aufter tmolle.- if preferred.
Btrtnony tnehided to vra adraneed pie -ere.
rublie pupil ndtala - Thlrteea ears' experi
ence as uistraotor la Zuiope.
l:i-3t aeusa Sew Or. - ' : ''
Riches had come through a
swift,-. fortunate stroke and
his idea was to conserve his
wealth as well as possible.
So far so good. But,
thinking to "Save" a few
dollars, he drew his own
Will. .,
The time came to probate
this document. It was rec
ognized as a "home-made
Will" and the court figura
tively threw up its hands as
the reading began. It was
hopeless quickly declared
void. The testator's af
fairs were in as bad shape .
as if he died without a
Will;
Several interesting little lifa
torie are narrated ia onr
booklet, "It Could Happen to
You." Could th things d.
scrib! happen to you? Yon
can answer this yourself when
you read th booklet. Your
copy ia waiting.
afl 1
n 1
llttitfi. tafca (Uruat (Enmpatty
. Affiliated With
$kt Knifed eiaftfi Naiianal Sank
Omaha. Nebraska
1612 Fartum Street
t
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