THE BEE: OMAHA. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 27. 1921. v TheOmahaBee 4 DAILY IMOKMNU) - EVENING SUNDAY THE BE! fUBUAHWQ COW PANT MCUOM B. VrVltLK. ritblleser MMBCK Of THE ASSOCIATED fRUS Wa - ( autre Tae stae ta a SMhir. to at- fhMlwlf aMllis MIMMM mMlU' 4l CM .C4M ria4 le M ef a Mu w4iua W Itu iv. U4 iee Ike mI sees rMiu4 kania, n M ef el Of Syetlal tMUM t 1W NBM TM OmM t W DMbw Ik U VfM it Oiea- ItiuxM. lb NmriiaM siomi m inwUiwa eais BEE TELEPHONES FDitM In lulan tor AT Untie 1000 IM taminsr 1 af rata HimM HIV. svw fee Nlht Cell Alter 10 r. M. IMiurUI PtMitiMM . ATUsti UU m 10il OFFICES OF THE BEC ftiAlB AfflMI lTlS Se4 PMU CoeseU Blurts it kuu K I Mt '. 431 Best Bit ' Outef.Tsws Offlce v tea rink m I vauitta I "Ml (I fir-trr till WMsfcf S4U 1 1 rr S But W- The Bee8 Platform 1. Nw Ualoa Passenger Station. 2. Continued Improvement of the Ne braska Highways, including lb pava. meat ef Main Tborougbfer leading into Omaha with Brick Surfac. 3. A abort, low-rat Waterway from tl Cera Ball to the Atlantic Ocan. r 4. Horn Rul Chartor for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. A Conference of Leaders. Opening the conference on unemployment. President Harding made very plain the scope and purpose of the meeting. It is to .consider the most accessible method of speedily restoring industrial activity to the United States. All real ue the truth of the president's statement that the process will "involve liquidation, reorganization, readjustment, re-establishment, taking account of things done and sober contemplation of things to be done." Equally impressive is his state ment that "he would have little enthusiasm for any proposed relief which seeks either paliation or tonic from the public treasury." It is not an easy task to which these dele gates have been set; nor is there any room for the mere doctrinaire on the program. "Long controverted problems of our social system" are specifically excluded, and to the concrete ques tioL of what is the quickest way to get people back to work attention will be given. We may expect debate and even dispute as to essentir elements of the factoragreement in advance be ing as to the desirability of action. How these debates will terminate can not at this time be foretold. The character of the men and women who are gathered together is a guaranty that the proceedings will be sincere. Two points have been fairly established. One a that th 1trt nf nrln. ar,A io n back to the 1913 standard.. The other is that practices adopted by both capital and labor are wasteful and destructive, and can not endure. "Cost plus" brought in its train a long line of business iniquities, and these must be dispensed with by both sides. It is an economic paradox that "laying down on the job" for the purpose of increasing the chance of employment actually decreases such chance, because limiting produc tion limits the output, and thus by the very process uirougn wmcn ne nopea to mcrease nis wage and compel the employment or others, the worker has cut off his reward by reducing the product in which he was to share. Similar para dox applies to the wasteful "cost-plus" practice. With the fallacy of limited output and the profit-on-profit understood, approach to recovery will be easier. . An honest day s work for an honest day s pay is the winning, rule. However the delegates at Washington finally may answer the question now submitted to them, it is clear that both employer and employe have been taught a sharp lesson by recent experience, and in a willingness to give value for value may be read the reply of those who are most concerned. To quote the presi dent again: '.'Fundamentally sound, financially strong, industrially unimpaired, commercially consistent and politically unafraid, there .ought to be worfc for everybody in the United States who chooses to work." Bothering a Busy Congress. Whether or not any action by congress will be potent to restore a semblance of tranquility to a sadly disturbed nation, it is evident the pro hibitionists and the feminists are not in a mood to permit thoughtful consideration of the eco nomic problems- that must have attention. Mr. Bryan denounces the filibuster . on the pending beer measure in the senate, presumably from the viewpoint of a dry, for the filibuster is chargeable to both sides. Senator Sterling lacks assurance that he can get votes in the senate for the measure as agreed upon by the conference, to which the chief attorney of the dry forces was admitted. However, Mr. Bryan has a controlling notion that if the senators will only accept the Sterling report, then the body may proceed to other business, included in which is the revenue law, the tariff measure, and the ratification of the treaty with Germany. Beer comes first, though, for what shall it profit the country if taxes be lowered, industry be revived and pro tected, and a peace be restored between the United States and the rest of the world, if the question as to whether beer is a medicine be not finally and authoritatively settled by a senatorial dictum that it is not? . : And, when the matter of beer is out of the way, we descry in the 6ffing, all ready to dock at the principal pier the good ship Feminism, loaded till the Plimsoll line is under with things that must be attended to before woman is finally freed from intolerable bondage and recognized as man's equal Industry and business of all kinds may fret and complain because congress is dilatory in attending to a program that materially isirnportant, but the "drys" and the "suffs" are not going to relinquish their aspirations just to. help out a possible move, to normalcy, Soviets Set an Example, -i -i Amid the uncertainties and perplexities that surround the generally muddled condition of the world, one lambent ray of purest light shines out, and, strangely enough, it comes from Rus sia. Having tried out to the ultimate reaction the experiment of paternalism, and even having tested the residuum until almost nothing is. left, 'the soviet control has resolved to decentralize industry. Workers are urged to form corpora tions, set up business for themselves, arid go to it. Private capital again is recognized, and beginning 'at the bottom the v bolsheviks hope to Restore something of the system it so furiously uprooted. Americans may watch with profit the prog re u of the KuhUa people along in pew line, and r.iay from it derive courage to set about on something of the m nature. Wbeo Ruttlant cease flock ing to Moscow In hope of miracle. American i may well give over journeying to Washington, and take up again the once popular habit of helping themselves out of any hole into which their free and easy blundering has plunged them, What (this country needs more than anything eUe is a little old-fashioned self-reliance and not to much remedial legislation. All the laws ever put on the book will be of little avail if self-help is not applied. One of Omahai Young Builders. A deplorable accident hat taken from Omaha vigorous young man whose active life held much of promise for the city s future, J, E George may have reached the lenith of his power, and so become grain ripe for the sickle, yet it is reasonable to conclude that he yet held great and undeveloped capacity for service to a com munity in w hich he already had done great deaf of good. He was a planner with vision, and in his public as well as bis private activities he looked beyond the immediate future and under took to project his thought into years when Omaha will have become a much larger and more important center of life. Many evidences of this foresight abound, and some of them will bear fruit for the city's good for generations here after. Mr. George was a fine type of the real builder in this regard, his enthusiasm for the project he had in hand being at all times well tempered by an experience that had taught him lessons of prudence as well as of zeal and energy in action, and thus his work was done the better for it had a solid foundation. Omaha has not so many men like "Ed" George that it can well af ford to spare any! A City of Real Homes. One of the ways in which the west differs from the east is in home ownership. Iconoclasts have succeeded in breaking down many old- fashioned ideas, but none has yet come forward to question the advantage to the individual, the city or the nation in home ownership. The pos session of a little plot of ground and security under one's own roof are guarantees of thrift and indications of a sturdy character, seeming to call out like a watchman of old, "All's well" The census shows that of the 44,499 homes in Omaha, 21,028, or 57.3 per cent are owned by their occupants. Returns from Kansas City and Minneapolis show a similar proportion of tenants and home owners. In order for westerners to realize how well off they are, it is only neces sary to turn to the reports from New England. While in Omaba almost one out of every two homes are owned and not rented, in Hartford, Conn., about one out of five houses is owned by the occupant. In New Haven, which is also a manufacturing community, in addition to being the seat ot Yale university, the proportion is one out of four. In Omaha slightly more than half the homes are mortgaged, white in Hart ford the figure is 80 per cent and in New Haven, 71 per cent. Rates of interest there are lower than here, it is interesting to note, by fouc one- hundredths of one per cent. Those towns are almost two centuries older than Omaha. The question arises whether in time tenantry will become as common with us as with those others. Among factor that would make home ownership less possible are increases in the cost of construction, greatly enhanced prices lor land and restrictions on credit. Omaha, comparatively speaking, is a city of. home: owners, but it should strive to become more truly so. Questions of taxation also are bound up in this problem, and it may not be many; years until a movement is seen to. lighten the burden on small home owners. The build-" ing loan companies, for which Omaha is a notable center, are doing much to increase home ownership. The instinct is not yet lost, as it may be in many industrial towns among the floating population. ' , V A Red-Hot Advocate of waterways. The fighting blood of the former governor of Iowa, W. L. Harding, has been aroused in the movement for the adoption of the plan for the St. Lawrence waterway. His speech at Cheyenne, in which he lashed out at New York City, Buf falo and Erie canal interests for their desire to keep the products of the middle west bottled up so that they could only pour through the old channels, the neck of the bottle being the port of New York, is interesting and convincing as well. ' : . . . , - Wyoming, Nebraska and their sister states of this region must have cheap transportation' for their surplus products. They can get it by de veloping waterways". The congestion at great terminals is bound to increase rather than de crease in future years. Increased handling" and transportation costs may be expected to follow, unless water routes are opened to take some of the burden off the rail lines. The feeling that unless a channel for ocean freighters is opened up -to Chicago and Duluth the west may be choked off from its markets explains the heat with which Mr. Harding speaks. Lower freight costs; and more speedy trans portation by water than by rail are the induce ments of this waterway project, which is to be discussed Wednesday in Lincoln at a state-wide conference. That the saving in freight charges will result in an added price for grain sold on the world market is a big inducement to farmers, and business men, whose own prosperity depends on that of agriculture, are likewise becoming aroused to the importance of the Great Lakes project 5 Sunday's toll of automobile accidents in Omaha and vicinity was too heavy. More, care ful driving is the only answer. With lobster down to 60 cents at Chicago cabarets, much of the" terror of a threatened hard winter disappears. , v Persons who have traveled recently will be astounded to learn of a deficit in the Pullman balance sheet. ; v ,. The president's talk to the "jobless" confer ence does not mean the delegates are out of work. - A "moonshiners' union" is the latest; prob ably an offshot of the bootlegger's bund. ' v Now for a regular Nebraska autumn. No Rival Maneuvers. The autumn maneuvers of the fleet will be away over in the Pacific ocean where there will be no chance of their distracting attention from deliberations relating to arms limitation. Wash ington Star. i- Economy Is Now Popular Nations Cutting Down Their Budgets After Approved Style. (From the New York Times.) General Dawes, the director of the budget, has as-ain been utiiisr his knife on novrrnment expenditures, and announces a further rutting of Jjo5.oo0.000 lor the next fiscal year. '1 hat um has been lopped otf the previous estimates nude on August 10. The large.t item is $100.000,OU, bring a reduction of that extent in the demands of the shipping board. Whether such a saving can ultimately he made is, unfortunately, at pres ent matter oi gucttworK. i ue case is clearer with the army expenses, pared to the amount of (00,000,000, and with the various department economies, totaling Sj.suu.ooo, The main point is lets the exact figures of curtailed outlay than the new spirit ol severe retrenchment. Government economy is fur the moment popular. It always has been as a gen eral theory, but the rigid application in practice has been resisted. Congressmen have been loud in praise of thrift, but have resorted to every po litical artifice to get through their own appropria tions. Demand economy in the abstract, and you get a cheer: propose to cut out a particular ex pense, and the rule has been that you are greeted with groans. But in the changed times the coun try follows the work of General Dawes with ad miration and applause. Every time he rolls up his sleeves to take a fresh crack at the federal estimates, the response of the country is instan taneous. When the land is filled with citizens compelled to save and pinch, it is good tactics for ine government 10 go into inc economizing Busi ness. The process is not peculiar to the United States. Italy and France and England are cut ting down their budgets resolutely. The most taking political cry in Great Britain today is "anti-waste." All candidates of all parties have to pin that label on their hack. There was re cently, for example, a parliamentary by-election for Westminster. Three men sought the seat One of them described himself as the " constitu te certain horsa flv which abound in that ration a hn tional independent conservative anti-waste" can-! the conveyor to human being. In Mow to Keep Well Bt DR. W. A. tVANS QuMtlM MMlt art. Malta I turn aa4 ) laa allU4 ( Or. Ca hr raaaara at Tb Sm, vIU a rri,lly, Wt t IbalUttaa, kr laiaaaA, 44rw4 ilM t aa ilMti Or. fcvaa UI at auk 4iaaaMi a aririh far iailvlaual 4IMSM. Aairat Utort to car at Ik Ph. Cvyyrmlit, 121, r Or. W, A. E . "JACK RABBIT FEVER." Jt may be contended that nobody la Interested In dear fly fevor except tna people In a rather small aeeUou of I'tah. Nevertheless there are point of Interest which may appeal to a Urg er group A few year ago Pr, Heottle of the 1'uh health department reported drneaaa which occasionally affected men In a certain section of Ma state. Thin dlwaae waa supposed to be du io ina one or a deer ny, and had thererore been given tna name deer fly fever. Since then It hna been studied by urgeone or tn united Htatea pub lie health service, and particularly vy nr. rraneia. Most or the raaen tiul facts have been worked dul It la a dlniana that la oulta nreva, lent among Jurlc rabbits in a rertlun district In I'tah, bulnc spread from rabbit to rabbit by the bites oC the rabbit louse. DlrTorln- from ma laria and yellow fever, thin diacaaa aiso can ne spread by the nose hoc re tlona of alclc animals and bv flea and home flies. However, o far an tne evidence roes, the chief method or apreadinr the disease amonar anl man is oy the bite of the infected loune. Hut In order to act It over to man another agency la reaulred. Jurlc rabbits are not sociable, and their uce nave no special love for man rrancis Unas didate. Another merely represented the Anti. Waste league. The third was independent lib era! anti-waste. In place of saying, "We are all socialists now," today aspiring English politicians say, We are all anti-wasters now. It is not a bad thing to get the idea abroad that economy is a winning issue, hven it a certain amount ot insincerity and humbug is mixed up with it, the reaction against public extravagance will have wholesome effects. We may not hear of many congressmen who go back to their constituents to boast that they did not get an extra dollar out of the treasury for the "deestrict," but we may at least expect that some will recount with pride their vigilance and courage in preventing appro priations wanted elsewhere. The McAdoo Boom Among the cognoscenti if that world will go in politics Mr. McAdoo is regarded as an en trant in the race for the next democratic presi dential nomination. Several straws show the direction of the wind. 1. The organizing at this early day of a Mc Adoo club in Missouri 2. Introducing him as a critic of the Harding administration in the sen ate discussion of the railroad problem. 3. And a manifestation of . interest by him in the coy Scouts. He recently played in a scout base ball game before the camera, and played so awkward ly that his. compliment to the boys in playing at all was emphasized. Air. McAdoo made a remarkable snowing at San Francisco. He was the only man who gave Governor Cox a real run for his money. The others were merely "also rans." But the New. Yorker, from the fall of the flag, was close up, and finished a stirring second. He and Gov ernor Cox made a horse race of it We have to consider, however, that in that contest Mr. McAdoo had the support of all but a fraction of the national administration. The Department of Justice naturally gave its support to Attorney General Palmer. All the other de oartments. with the Treasury at their head, gave their voices for Mr. Wilson's son-in-law. This, of course, cannot be repeated. In 1924 the national administration will be of republican complexion, Mr. McAdoo will have to look elsewhere for "pull" and votes. He is still strong in the money centers, Jriis manaa-ement of the Treasury department met with approval in those quarters; and favor there is not, as a rule, fickle, cut he is not, as gov ernor Cox, strong in wet circles. He is rated there as a dry and his appeal, to be successful, will have to be adroit. Washington Star, A Southern Negro's View The Neerro Advocate, a ' vigorous."" thouuht? fully edited and well printed newspaper, pub lished twice a month at New Orleans, La., dis plays in its issue of August 13 a studious care for the advancement of the negro race along practical lines. The object ot this paper, says Milton a. Hampton, managing editor, in a letter to the Manufacturers' Record, "is to cement friendship between white and black citizens of the south, pointing out that the way of co-operation is a better way than that of antagonism or denuncia tion, which characterizes many northern negro papers. "We are strongly against the migration of our people to the north or to any other section, feeling that the south presents greater oppor tunities and greater possibilities where in a great measure the white people of this section under stand the negro, more so than any other people, hence our future must be worked out right here. "We feel that the solution of the age-old race problem is that of lifting up the masses of our people, having them to become trained workers and to fit into the industrial and economic life of the nation, rather than to look forward to or ganizations of long-range societies and selfish leaders who would stir up hatred between whites and blacks." Manufacturers' Advocate, . The Ku Klux in Business "The reason the Jews' are fighting, us," says Mrs. Elizabeth Tyler, "empress" of the Ku Klux Klan. "is because it is a well known fact that wherever a city is well organized Klansmen al ways spend their money with other -Klansmen. The Klan teaches the wisdom of spending Ameri can money with American men." After a glance at the questionnaire and the list of requirements sent out by the Klan to appli cants for membership there appear to be other reasons why Jews should "fight" the organiza tion, but Mrs. Tyler has at least the honesty to cite openly the economic basis of Ku Klux preju dices. Radicalism is abhorrent to these strictest of all 100 per cent Americans and all aliens, all Catholics, all strangers are abhorrent because the 100 per centers want to keep business in their own hands. ,. The activities of the organizers are rewarded, if not explained, by the profits in membership fees, in copyrights, in the sale of equipment The activities of the members are quite as explicable in any community where terrorization or propa ganda can be used to drive upstart rivals out of business. First and last the new Ku Klux is a business proposition. New York World. Return of Hand-Carried Skirt Those winter skirts ten inches from the ground will give their wearers the discomfort of being at least two inches wet several times if we happen to have a normal "good old- fashioned" winter. Lowell Courier-Citiz the neveral cases of humnn holncm nuuering rrom tularemia, the scien tific name of the disease, he wa able to And the point where the horse fly Tularemia is a fever which lasts ior several montns, which causea death occasionally, but which is of especial interest because It occasions a painful disabling illness, occurring Just at the time when farming com munities can least afford to ' lose help. The glands in the neighborhood of ine one swea up aa much as they u m rac Due rever. They remain as hard, painful, tender, inflamed knots, with no tendency to break down. Careful search tnrn1lv h in closes the necrotic spot where the fly bit when it caused infection. If this duo i.i located in a hairy region it may be overlooked unless carefully a rew or the case die". In most Instances recovery is complete, but luw iimess is long ana disabling. The explanation or the comparatively '" iiuiuuers ot numan cases is that horo fllea do not ordinarily bite either rabbits or humnn hpinc-a Tn this section of Utah at the time of mo investigation there waa a com bination of an established epidemic of some sort, causing the death of Jack, rabbits in numbers, a great prevalence or nores nies, and a num ber of cases of human tularemia. suspicion navmg been aroused, in vestigation disclosed tha taf tm Here we have an illnotrntinti e human disease which has a reservoir among ammais in a small section of the country. It has been miirniiii.1 that such may be the explanation of certain panaemic diseases, which pe riodically sweep over the land, then ebb back, to be lost sight of. for awhile. ' 1 v Xecd' More Exercise. J. J. W. writes: "I am a heavy coffee drinker. I have discovered that unless I drink at least One- cup of coffee at noon I become fatigued and feel drowsy at various times during the afternoon. la; drinking really a harmful habit? If so, how may it be overcome grad ually? I do not use tobacco' in any 4.1 4... f "I have spells of fatigue anS drow. siness in the afternoon even when i ao arinic coiree at noon, and won der whether the fatigue and drowsl nesa are attributable to some other cause. Mjr naoits in general are gooa, ana with few exceptions average seven hours of sound sleep a USUI. , x quite orien nave lor dinner a bowl of soup, rye bread, and a baked apple and cream. Would you rec ommend mat r " y REPLY. ' I', It has -been found that most per. sons stand two cups of coffee a day very well. One of those can come at noon, you need more sleep and mere exercise. If you are an office worker your lunch is about right, unless you eat a lot of rye bread and put a lot of sugar and cream on your appie, ... .. ' Write to New York.' s. n. M. writes: "I am a girl 1 years or age, parentless and friend less since cmianooa. waving no doctor or nurse to turn to, yet earn estly desiring the wonderful story of life, I come to you in the hope that you can recommend to me a pamphlet, mailed in plain wrapper, containing iniormation x seek." ' " REPLY. n ; Send 10 cents to the American Social Hygiene society. 105 West Fortieth street, New York City, for tneir pampniet, "sex in .Lire." Cooties Very Precocious. X Y. Z. writes: "It seems to me that I am troubled with body lice, very limited, perhaps in very early stages. What can I do? REPLY. Sterilize the underclothing with heat That is of the first importance, since the lice go on the body only when they are hungry. Kerosene will kill the lice on the body. Some shave the infested area, then bathe it with kerosene and wash with soap and water. It takes about a quar ter of a minute for the early stage to become the late stage. The bug springs from the head of Mara full panoplied for war. In plain United States the bug is ready to eat. and beget young from the drop of the hat. (Tfc V mttf H cMiumim ttwljr t N mtoi rr to mutim DufclM Ill rU that MIMa fc fMaaMblr brief, i tu Mania. It ilM BUU that lb MM f tb rli aiiaawipaay aacfc) Mtt, Bat ' amy fa aabllrallua. but lnat Ik mIHk aaf kna n.M la aValta. lb lu laa Mt prrtrm4 iKoWaa a are ttaa. aalnbuM r kf rorra HMMMlmlt la Ika IXla ttat.) Troop as an Inauram. Omaha, Uept. !4 To the Editor of tha )! I'o you remembor the mob that burned the Court lu? Taxpayers will have rvwn to r member It for several years to come. Do you recll that there were at fort Omaha and Kort Crook at the time several hundred ldlera who mlitttt have prevented that trouble and destruction of properly, but It waa not pollle to get any m l Ion on account of tho superabundance of red tape? I have at hand a copy of the San Antonio Light of Hi-ptember 1. Thers was a creat flood In Han An tonio on the th and 10th, lauxlns; loss of nrononv and life a lerriM catastrophe. In the ml dm of that flood, when It waa evident help was needed, the police commbmloner rode over to Fort Sam ljni"(on and ankpd the ad utant for help. In a few hours a thousand sol diers were pntrolllmt ihe strict of the devastated iiistriei, lenning am In reneulng citizens from drowning, protecting property exposed to thieves. After the flood soldier patrolled the streets for several dnya. Yes. they did that In Omaha after It was too lute. ' Every now and aaaln tnare 1 (aiK of removing all soldiers from Kort Omaha. Cltlxons protest and the Chamber of Commerce gets Into ac tlon. Why should there be any protest? What good are the soldiers or tho forts in time or sirens r I 1unt wont to contract what hap nencd when San Antonio needed help and what did not Happen in Omaha under similar conditions. Jt. U. WALLACE, litttcr to MIm Alloc. Miss AIIc Robertson, M. C, House Of fire Buldlng, Washington, P. C, Miss Robertson; Your public warning to young women advising them not to follow your example and remain slnglo for the sake of a career has attracted much attention and has been favorably passed upon by many newspapers. The Omaha Bee in particular, under the caption, Dream Babies," refers to your statement, "a husband Is the end of a perfect girlhood and home, and babies, the destiny of womanhood,' with highly complimentary com merits. The real woman and men of the country agree with you fully, re gardless of the socalled "advanced thinkers" who profess that woman's place is everywhere except in the home. No woman filled with the true Instinct of motherhood and wifely devotion believes it. Some young women prate about being efficient in professions and of fice work, placing that above their real mission in life. 'Efficiency in that sense is a disgusting word. It only means these office ladles are never late and that they can smile even when it hurts. It means they can write perfectly typed ' letters, keep the files, wear fine clothes, never have a hair out of place, paint their faces, look nice and be a good pal to the boss. Miss Robertson, the dear ladies are encouraged to forsake their du ties as homemakers by the sterner sex, as you will see if you take a look about the various departments In . Washington, and especially the office butldlngs occupied by your colleagues, who seem to have a pre ference ior young lady clerks and secretaries to the exclusion of young men and heads of families. At least an even break should be given, but instead many 'employ only female help where Jt could be evenly divid ed. These ladies apparently spend all their, earnings on clothes and drift away from the idea of making a home, thus depriving real bread win ners for families of an opportunity to mane a livelihood. Visitors to the capital are given the- impression that the'., business buildings of the government are style and beauty shows instead of a part of our government. If govern ment officials would discourage in stead of encourage the trend of our womanhood away from the home life your warning would not be neces sary, and God help the present members or congress, in a political way, ir present conditions in gener al throughout the country are not relieved. A LOVER OF HOME AND BABIES. "Passing of the Golfing Season." Omaha, Sept.. 23. To the Editor or The Bee: It Is indeed a very sad time when the golf enthusiast lays aside his dearly beloved clubs, the companions of many an afternoons 'ideal pleasure on the links. The familiar "fore" will not be heard to any great extent until the robins chirp their springtime melodies in the clear air of early day. Not un til the meadows will have taken on that marvelous deep green which signifies to the lover of the great outdoors tne coming of the myster ious springtime, when all nature is blossoming into life. Now that the shades of winter are lengthening on the links, the heart is niied with memories of happy days spent in the open, 'mid the environment of goodfellowship and sporting competition. Soon will come dreams of "birdies" and the Inevitable "hazard" which spoiled a perfect score. Soon the poker par ties will have the preference, and the buffet at each popular club will be the scene of many a convivial party and feast. The fall hunting season will soon be at its height, and the royal canvas-back and mal lard will deck the festive board amid the atmosphere of happy friendship. The wily Jack-snipa and prairie chicken will not be strangers In our midst, and will also appease the ap petites of sport lovers at special functions and festivals. - Let us not lament the passing of the golfing season, but rather look forward to the coming of the grand. est time of all, the fall hunting sea' son in the great middle west. RALPH E. JOHNSON. Cold Comofrt. ' Ted So you think I'm wasting my time making love to that rich girl? Ned You have . about as much chance of winning as a landlord run ning for office on a dry ticket New York Sun. ) THE NEW MOON. ; Berausa the stars were watching 8ha veiled herself, tn cloud. i . Jjrnt they should read her secrets She was so shyly proud. Her thoughts were all unknown; . . Her dream-world was her own. Among the starry watchers She passed with steady feet, . Wrapped In her gentle silence, ; So coldly, strangely sweet. ; - With shy, reluctant grace ; : She kept her even pace. ' ' -, We drive our dreams to market; : Our thoughts are all to sell; : In virginal aloofness : She guards her secrets well Before ne eyes are laid The dream-thoughts of a maid. Agnes Mary Lawrence In Hospital Satur Gay jtum journal. jobaou November the Eleventh THE SPICE OF LIFE. "Pa. what Is meant by sclrit control?" "Formerly the butler, now the physician." Boston Globe. The disarmament conference will meet Washington on Armistice day. It is now proposed, and remain In session for months. This will enable the Washing ton hotels to get back the money that Europe .borrowed. Los Angeles Times. Pretty Niece (blushing) Auntie, what would you do If you learned that a young man was secretely Inquiring about your biiity as a cook? wise Aunt I should immediately make secret Inquiries as to his ability to pro vide tnings to cook, my a ear. 5oaton Transcript. A New Tork silk merchant went to the bank to get his note renewed. 1 am sorry," said tne banker, "but will be absolutely impossible for me to renew your note." The silk merchant's face paled. After moment of thought he looked un at the banker and asked: "Were you ever in the silk business V Why. of course not." answered the banker. "Well, you re In It now" said the silk merchant as he picked up his hat and went out. Cincinnati Xaaulrsr, I reat M Hsitesj Trfil. National kenlrsa and notional abstention from eordlil employments on November It Will serve he double purpoe of enirrln the at tention of psirMio Americans upon tha Immortal performance of the wuth and valor of our country tn dsfensa of Amerli-an rights and lib erties and of signalislnc the opening of the Washington conference for ihe limitation of armaments. In Ihe brans and the reasoning of Amer ican, It Is Impossible, as It would be Daily undesirable, that the honor to Hi unknown hero should not come first. This I the great work that v.aa consummated on that memor able day that America was made safe and kept free, that foreign ngrrssn and Insolence were thwarted and rebuked, that the frulm of the work of the fathers ami founders of the republic wr assured and perpetuated. Bunding by the side of the grove of the young soldier who typines in ungrudging and seir-nnnegMtlna arnica of alt, the people could nut do otherwise than put above nil other things the noble sentiment which animated him. The unknown soldier sought no honors when he died. To him, on the field of battle, fell the meed of the unlauretrd grave; his waa tha untrumpeted sac rifice, Jt was tha cordon of dark nesa, It might be of oblivion, that decorated him. In his unrecognised person the American people will rec ognise on November II. on the green hillside at Arlington, the transcend ent service; their homage will he the supreme decoration of tho repre sentative hero. At such a moment the sentiment of the defense of the fatherland cannot be forgotten, or for a moment overlooked. A worthy object Indeed, the for warding of the cause of real and true world amity, will. It Is under stood, on this day be Interwoven with the homage of the nation to the unknown hero. Surely there can be no harm in that. Who la there who does not desire that the nations shall dwell together In pcace7 It was by means of such unselfish heroism as that of the unknown dead sul.tier that (It foundation ef the i'il4's iea' ere surely Uld. Tb ruiisumitmilon of that ir. If It ever came, must arrivo py the ro4 f hla saerini and to aariAea ft al th brave boy who nisrehed wlih him. whether fat 1114 that they should fall unknown and unidenti fied a h did. whether their rnie nd their death or wound wer duly enitiltuMineti on th record snd recog nised on their honored tomb, or whether they returned sf and sound to th welcoming arms of their Itlndrsd. It I sweet and prop er to di for one's country; and a,'t th eter. Imted, must it b if the acrlrtc bring nearer the day whan no mor of urh glorious self-immolations for hum and Ciod and coun try art required I Milord. ksto Crapy. "Why do you object to children tn your aparlmaot husT" ."At a mater of kindness. ropl who are raising famine rant o expected to pay th rental I re quire." Washington Star. Robbing It In. When lie served ertary ef slate. Colonel firyan waa evidently loo busy with other mttr to fully appreciate John Usseeit Moor as a using young diplomat. Washing ton War. W hy Women Talk Mor. Women talk mor than men be cause there ar mor women. liar rlaburg fatrlot. f Twin- 1 ; Eight I CHOCOUTtS y CAN Dlt!f Announcement The Parlor Cafe on the Second Floor at ihe HOTEL CONANT Reopened to Ahe Public September 1 3th ' Noon Luncheon 11:30 A. M. to 2:00 P. M., at 65c Table a" Hole Dinner i 5:30 P. M. to 8:00 P. M., at $1.25 Sunday Dinner . . , 11 :30 A M. to 8:00 P. M., at 451.25 ENTRANCE THROUGH LOBBY, VIA ELEVATOR ajs s - k. sYW ae iojlf and ?f Tom All honctt cigan trej getting better. L Azorat have out-strip- ped all others in qual ity come-back. ROTHENBERG k SCHLOSt CIGAR CO., DISTRIWTOKS Colorado Lump Coal PER TON SMOKELESS SOOTLESS Rescreened at th Yard $10.50 DELIVERED Consumers Coal & Supply Co Doug. 0530 "Dealer, in Good Coal" r Doug. 0830 Phone DOugUg 2793 mt fcWssJerWs OMAHVV rs PRINTINO V If V idr&Sy "I PJ "SI H 7"' . -V! toots kS4r.ocviccs V