Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 06, 1921, Page 8, Image 8

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 6. 1121.
TheOmaha Bee
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IA? Platform
1. New Uaiaa Pataeagar Station.
2. Coatianad lmprvamaat of Ik N
brka Highway, including Ik -Mai
mt Mai Tbareufh'ar Wasting
lata Osaaha with BrUk Surftc.
9. A share., Uvnl WtUrwif frarn tka
Car Ball to tka Atlantic Oca a.
4. Hawe Rata Chartar far Ottahe, with
City Haeagar far af CoraraaMat.
Wood and the Filipinos.
General Wood' retirement from the army,
following confirmation by the senate of hi ap
pointment to be governor-general in the Philip
pine, 1 announced. His long and honorable
career of tervice In the army it terminated with
credit to himself and the government, and he
will tt once aume the mot important assign
ment he yet lias had. Not since Taft wa sent
co the Philippine by McKinley has there been
such tore need for the pretence of a wise and
firm administrator at the head of affair in the
; .archipelago. Reason for this are not far to
i,JCk.
, Within the first doxen year of American
! roteetion, the people of the Philippine mader
greater advance than they had during the een-
' turie they patted under Spanish domination and
neglect. In that time the entire policy of the
island, the relations of tribe to tribe, of indi
vidual and communities, underwent radical
change. Property right a well a personal
tight were ettablihed. Great holding were
broken up, and the control of the land wa re
adjusted. Education wat established on a firm
bad, and communication wa made freer by the
adoption of the English language a the common
tongue of the people. Feud of centuries be
tween group were broken up, warlike barbarian
' were taught the arts of peace, and generally the
islands prospered.
Unfortunately for all concerned, certain in
terested politicians took advantage of the free
dom granted all, and through the easily aroused
national spirit teeured such control of the legis
lature that the measure of self-government
granted to them was turned to a disadvantage
if sot to the actual condition of a curie. The
national treasury was looted, private enterprUea
were supported at public expense, the transpor
tation system was allowed to decay, the schools
to fall away from the high standard set at the
beginning, and generally a drift to old conditions
or even worse prevailed. Instead of being ex
ploited by the.Spanish, the Filipinos were being
exploited by their own race. All this was made,
possible under the Hitchcock-Jone bill, by
which the Wilton administration sought to pave
the way for easting loose the islands to shift a
they might on the disturbed currents of world
. politic). , " '
"'"Nothing in the whole record made tinder
V Woodrow Wilton is, more to be regretted than
the reaction which set in at Manila as a result
Of the policy adopted at Washington. When
Francis Burton Harrison succeeded W. Cameron
Forbes at governor general of the Philippines
the structure of which so much care had been
lavished began to decay. It has been saved
from entirely crumbling, however, and Its res
toration is now in the care of Leonard Wood,
whose record is one that warrants the assump
A Uon that he will prevent further disintegration
' ill the islands', and the belief that the Filipinos
will be immensely benefited by his presence.
Wc have not finished out task over there, and
. sjiould not -withdraw- until it is well done.
; Another Argument for Peace,
i On Friday of this week the ordnance corps
"of the United States army will present another
tremendous argument for peace. It will take the
iorm of an exhibition at the Aberdeen proving
grounds. Exhibit A will be a flashless powder,
by which night firing may be carried on with
out any danger of detection, for the explosive
Will leave neither smoke nor flame by which it
ttiay be traced. Thus the enemy observers will
be baffled in their attempts to "spot" the battery
that is firing. Exhibit 8 will be a new cannon,
almost seventy feet long, sixteen inches in feor,
weighing 340,000 pounds, and firing a projectile
weighing 2,400 pounds a distance of twenty-two
miles. Exhibit C will be a new type of Brown
ing machine gun with a calibre of .50, or one
half inch. Such instruments of destruction are
potent in themselves to induce a higher regard
for perpetual peace, while the further reflection
that our government Is and was in possession of
certain things that were not even tried in the
last time out, such as the secret exptotive, mutt
even increase the hope that they will never be
called for. Sad experience, however, is warrant
for saying that the notion of making war too
horrible to undertake is a fallacy. When men
start fighting they wilt do anything.
' At the Night School.
' A display advertisement, presenting the serv
ice offered at one of the city's high schools, is
an innovation, but deterves better treatment than
usually is afforded a novelty. It calls attention
to one of the most important adjuncts of modern
life. "Those wb know are at work," is a chal
lenge, set up "as a sign-board in a day when
workers are at a disadvantage in seeking em
ployment ' Knowledge still is power, and the
greatest boon of American citisenship is the
privilege and opportunity of obtaining an educa
tion; it is the first duty of the state to train its
dtisens for the responsibilities of citizenship.
Some have succeeded in life who were devoid or
efficient in educational training, but they are so
' it that they are noteworthy among a great
group whose ancceta in life is taken is a matter
.( course for no other reason than that they hare
bees trained in th public school. Omaha has
long afforded the newcomers a full opportunity
to secure the needed cultural training, and now i
supplementing this by adding court of inttruc
tion iu other branches. A goodly return should
be teeured from this, in the way of improved
ability among those who recently have com
among us, for they will gain better ideas of
Americsn wsy of doing thing, practical, and
ueful knowledge to apply to everyday affair.
The night school is but an extension of the great
citizen-factory of which Omaha Is to juitly
proud, and it deserve to be fostered.
Polishing Up the Golden Rule.
"Selfitlines i the great tin of the age." nay
a banker at the national convention In Lot
Angele. "We are now at point where we mutt
follow the golden rule, if not from love, then
from sheer force of necettity." Banker, in spite
of the frequent attertlon that ice water instead
of blood flows through their veins, .are human,
and no more elnih than any other ctat.
Enlightened sclf-interett ha long been praised
at promising most for society as well as for the
individual. There it room for a variety of defi
nitions of this, and it i even possible to include
love of one's fellow nun and devotion to the
general welfare. Without any distortion the
lolicy of enlightened telf-interett can be taken
to signify that the soundest general prosperity
brings most to the individual, and that in the
well-being of the population at a whole is the
best aimrance for each man's comfort and suc
cess. It is understood now, for inttance, that un
employment affectt more than the men deprived
of workf it has entered into general conscious-
nets that this condition reduce the volume of
butinet and dettroyt profitable market. Low
wages alto are seen not to have any Infallible
virtue; v. hat should be sought is to bring them
into adjustment with the cost of living. In
China wage are one-twenty-fifth of what they
are in America, yet China i filled with misery.
Farmer mutt have a profit if the men who' have
manufactured article to tell are to thrive, and
factorie muit give employment to men in the
citie at good wage if the farmer is to have a
market for his produce.
"Selfishness i the tin of the age," say this
banker, and by this he points to the great tru
that the privilege of one class means wrong to
another. Hi call is for a full realization of
the mutual dependence of men. If competition
is going, co-operation is coming. This is the
spirit that promises much.
A Nebraska Soldier.
He is not yet old enough to vote, but on his
breast he may with authority pin a collection of
medalt and decorations that anyone might envy,
for each is. a tangible proof that his manhood
has been put to the utmost test, and found
worthy. He is Nebraska t mott decorated tol
dier, and wat 16 years of age when the alarm
of war awoke the nation in April, 1917. Before
he wat 18 he had won for himself the proud
distinction of the distinguished service cross, the
eroix du guerre, and twice the medaille militaire.
Such honor falls to few men, but this youngster,
still a minor and modest withal, weara his deco
rations deservedly. He has been singled out for
another important assignment, and will repre
sent the state of Nebraska at Washington on the
occasion when the Unknown Soldier is laid to
rest with appropriate ceremony at Arlington.
Nebraska is proud to offer him as an example
of the young men of the state. While he gained
the greatest glory of any, it does not detract
from hit credit in any degree to say that he was
one of 40,000-odd who went out from this state,
on any of whom dependence could be placed.
His name is Carl M, Lange, his home is at Hart
ingten, and he is a true type of the native-born.
Nebraskan.
Unnecessary Waste in Boulevards.
Is Omaha not making a costly mistake in its
methods of handling the boulevards? Commis
sioner Hummel, countering the proposal to turn
over another road to his department stated that
if this were done the street would have to be
closed. No money is available to pay the cost
of upkeep for another foot of boulevard, he de
clared. '
And what has Omaha received in return for
exhausting its - boulevard funds? Mere cinder
paths wathed out by every hard rain, and in con
stant need of repair.
The cost of maintaining these pleasure drives
appears to have eaten tip the boulevard appro
priation. This brings the city face to facewith
the question whether in the interest of true
economy it would not be advisable to proceed
with the permanent paving of the boulevards.
Only in this way can the constant drain for re
pairs be shut off. A cheap roa!, whether in
country or city, is the most expensive in the long
run, since a firmly laid pavement does not re
quire so much patching.
Perhaps the system of financing boulevards
from a city-wide fund also is wrong in some
cities property owners along the route share a
part of the cost This alto is worth looking into.
But the main thing is to lessen the cost of up
keep and begin operating under a plan for per
manent construction.
Not much is heard of the unemployment of
women can it be that more of them are .finding
work in domestic service? Road building, at all
events, would not help them much, nor would
it be adaptable to the needs and abilities of all
men. ' 1
A Wichita man who gave cigarets and
matches to a cage full of monkeys and amused
himself by watching them smoke has been ar
rested for cruelty to animals. Still, he may claim
he was trying to make men of them.
The grand jury made conditions look pretty
black, but the darkest hour is just before dawn,
and better promotion methods may be expected
to follow th exposures.
As if a man out of a job did not always feel
himself at sea, a plan has been urged to house
14,000 of New York's jobless men on the great
liner Leviathan.
Ill II -SSI 1
. The wffe who is charged with using insect
potton to kill her hutband may be said to have
shown a profound contempt for him.
What's It About?
Perhaps, sooner or later, somebody will pre
sent a plain and comprehensive explanation of
the war between Greece and Turkey. The
league of nations hasn't done even that, -Albany
JoaraaL
Americans Jor the Future
Sturdy Male Type, But Hit .
Sister It Falling Bthind.
(Prom the Boston Transcript)
Dr. Met Hrdlicka, who it probably our mott
dittinguithed anthropologic, and who certainty
it a man of profound lr ruing in the tiudy of
the human tpeciet, has discovered a new racial
type, which he calls the Old American, He dit
courted mott Interestingly on this type before
the International Congress of Eugenics at New
York. I he UU American ol Ur. Hrdlicka s dit
covery it not, at tome may tuppote, the Aztec,
or the Indian mound builder. Dr. Hrdlkka it
not an archteologitt; he it a student of the living
man. Hit Old American it the living American
of the old colonial ttovk of that race, oottibly
now relatively declining in numbrrt in this coun
try but not by any means physically or mentally
effete, which is descended from the original tet-
tirrt, of whttever buropean origin. In this rsce
the distinguished anthropologist finds distinctly
a new type developing, and a superior type,
which will be the type of the future American.
After a careful study of 1,700 representatives of
lamiiies ot Americans ol at least three cehrra
tkms, Or. Hrdlicka finds certain physical charac
teristics, demonstrably developed from conditions
ot climate, daily life and other indigenous in
fluencet. appearing predominantly in these oeo
pie. He discovers, indeed, the characteristics
which are gradually being "stamped bv the coun
try on all classes of Americans, regardless of the
race from which they orminally descended.
What are the physical characteristics of this
race which, though now a minority, will, if Dr.
mdlicka is right eventually mark the whole
American population with its type? They are
tne cnaracterutics wiucli we have been accus
tomed to note in vigorous Americani of the old
ttock. They are the tallest of all the larger
groups of whites now in the country. They are
dark rather than light, pure blonds being rare,
The eyes are "mixed," which doubtless means
that they are somewhere between blue and black,
being rarely purely one or the other. The head
varies in shape, with medium length and breadth
The face it long and narrow, but cheekbones
are not high. Body proportions are good. In
short, though the drift in the American type is
toward tallness and darkness, we are not, as some
anthropological quidnuncs have imagined, revert
ing to the American Indian type, nor are we at
taining the lanky and ill-proportioned extension
represented in the current conception of "Brother
Jonathan." We are simply obeying climatic con
ditions, and good influences of nutrition and cir
cumstances of life. Under these influences we
are by no means degenerating as a race, but. in
the view of this anthropologist who is himself a
European by birth and holds no social brief for
our praise, we are advancing toward the forma
tion of a superior type.
In the light of this conclusion, we may, at a
nation, quite cease to worry about the increasing
numerical predominance of the newcomers from
r-urope, as evidenced in the returns of the last
three censuses. Little by little all these newcom
ers, of whatever origin, are being subjected to
this same type-producing influence. AH who en
tered by the gate of Castle Garden or Ellis Island
will eventually be assimilated to this American
type, which itself, according to Dr. Hrdlicka,
has been gradually modified by the New England
type. In other words, Dr. Holmes engaged in
no idle boast when he wrote on the "universal
Yankee nation." Plymouth Rock has annexed
Ellis Island.
There is, however, one fly in the ointment of
Dr. Hrdlicka's researches. He finds the Amer
ican male a better product than the American
female, who is flat-chested and in certain physi
cal respects sub-developed. Anthropologically
speaking, there is something grievously wrong
with any race in which the sexes are not de
veloped pari passu. If women lag behind in de
velopment they hold the race back with them,
for men are the sons of their mothers. The
robust races have robust women. Such were
the Greeks: in the Athenian marble. Electra
stands inch for inch with her brother, Orestes,
his physical match in every respect The condi
tions of life among these "Old Americans" rather'
handicapped the woman. She was a household1
drudge, toiling with bent shoulders over the hot
fire and the washtub. She has to a large extent
been emancipated from those conditions.. Her
emancipation must no doubt in time do away with
the physical inferiority which Dr. Hrdlicka is
compelled to record. In the meantime, it is to be
noted that he finds in the American woman no
mental inferiority. Her standing in the political
partnership into which she has entered by means
of the 19th amendment is not affected by the
Hrdlicka discovery. The American woman
should,, however, seek to make herself the physi
cal match of the American man, to the end that
together they may forward the greatness, the
strength, the beauty of our American race.
How to Keep Vell
y DR. W A. BVAft
ta Or. I mm by r ! Tlx . UI ka
QiihiIim hwI ', fuuuiMa pwafca al 4imm, ,kaliwl
ta Or- IMt k mint al Tlx Ul ha W"
Brim ItaDuliM. vbara a iuwi ladSrMd tmirtuf ta fliit Or.
I ui rUI Mrt iMba a awMM
aOTf Miaal'ri anatwi
Ml MVIM t fll
ASSrat mm ta aare al Tk a.
Casrrisk', t:t. by Pr. W. A.
ADD MARTYRS TO STYLE.
A Udy wishes to know th raaaa
of an eruption somaihlns; Ilk sn
ii'MDii which has boan on her neck
inra the hot WMctier unl. Whan
It was uft4 that It mlcht bs du
to furs, aha rapllad that she wore
the m furs I summf nj fra
queniiy laat winter and they cautad
n trouble, .
Nvrthl sha Mil miiYcrlnt
from a form of dermatitis dua to
waarlng furs. Thera wat a'motl no
hot ! hr In the summer of 1120
and women did not aaat enough to
dliaolve the poison from their furs.
It not Infrequently happens that
woman wilt wear a set of furs In
winter with Impunity, but will de
velop akin trouble a aoon as hot
weather mine.
The rann for the trouble hat
been thoroughly established. Dr. K.
O. Tonney write about kln erup
ttona due to fur In th August num
ber of the Journal of Health and
Sanitation. Analysis shows th
trouble to be dua to the dye, and
practically all fur ar dyed. Kur
thermore, analycts nhows jtitt the
kind of dya used. Soma are well
known to ba capable of produclnc
akin trouble, others wart not. sua
pectad of contributing to the wealth
of the skin apeclaltata until this fur
trouble caused atispioion to lit turnta
their way.
Teat have shown tha dye capable
of produclnr Jut the kind of erup
tion noted In th bodies or rur wear
ers. Even a better proof Is the fat
that the eruption sets wall when the
fur wearer folds her rurs up in motn
ball and takes to more tanltary
rlothtn.
Since nerairtration is a motor, rur
dermatitis la worst among thot who
wear summer furs. However, evsry
ona knows that furs are worn In
winter In places and undar conditions
which make it possible ror a woman
to rt ud a sweat. Dr. Tonney
thinks the fur dealers should ua
barmleia dye.
Ha hardly th nk It fair for a rur
cUaler to dye a fur with a polsonoua
dye beoausa It is cnoap ana men
sell the garment for a few hundred
or a few thousand dollars.
it occasionally haopena mat erup
tions on the lea are due to the dyes
used In stocking. There are people
who are so aenaltlvo to animal hair
and fur that they get up asthma,
hivea or octema when tney are
around such materials., However,
that ia a negligible cause or trouDie
with furs. The oleanlng and treat-
ln to which thev are auwectea in
the making gets rid of that dangor.
The dye Is th trouble.
Try Kerosetin Cure.
G. E. write: "Will you please
tell me a sure way. of getting na
of head lice without Injuring the
hair? I was doing housework ror a
family and did not know tney naa
them. I cannot work now.
REPLY.
antnrate hair with kerosene. Wrap
a towel around head and leave It on
far so minutes. Wash with warm
water and soap. Rinse with hot clear
water several times, then hot vine
gar, and finally with hot water. Dry,
rub in a little vasenne, anu vumu
with a fine tooth comb. Be mora
careful in selecting places to work.
lew Bag No Cure.
n t. writes: "1. What do you
think about an Ice throat bag as
cure for goiter r I have been told
It la a sure cur.
"J. what ahall I do to cur my
foliar? t does not trouble me in
(ha least, but la vary bad looking."
rtEpcv.
1. An tc ba to th throet ia of
eivli'e In relievlis tha ratUl pulte
and mrntal disturbance of certain
cane of goiter. It will not help yu.
2. If you have a almpW srolter
.without symptoms why do anything T
Ooiter ran h" cured by operation,
X-ruy, or radium, ftom ci are
cured by meitlctnea. Home cet alonsr
all rlsht If tha tonails are attended
to and on leads a hyglenlo life.
Can't Bo Answered.
J. B. writes: "Cnn you tetl me
how msny white people In the I'nlled
(tate are over loo year old? What
la th record authentically or the
oldest white mala uroducinc chtl
drenT What la the use of th oldest
whlta person In the t'ntted fttatee to
ba known authentically or by official
record 7" .
nEf'LV.
No on of your qutlnns can be
Accurately answered. Birth ritra
tlon la compulsory in only a limited
portion of the country.. One hun
dred years aao very few stites had
ony -birth registration. In 114
8t person over 10') yearj of ace
niea in m neatn recutraiion are.
This would Indicate that the number
in tha entire I'nlted 8 1 ate wa well
over 1,000. But that statement means
that that wa the nga Riven In th
death certlnrato. According to Glov
er's tables, out of each 100,000 horn
In the doaen state where thiy have
had birth registration for a Ion
time, 40 live to pas 100 year of
age. Those facts bear on your ques
tions somewhat.
Doctor Charges
Chiropractors
Practice Graft
Condemns Alleged Setting Up
Of Prohibitory Legal Stand
ards to Exclude Grad
uates of Schools.
Look After Health.
Mr. f. P. A. write: "I am a
woman 42 year old. I have two
children, the youngest 15, and am
now riretnant again. Do you think
it will go bard with me because of
my age? Is there anything I can
do in the way of diet, etc., during my
pregnancy that will help ms when
the bany comes 7 '
KEPL.T.
1. If you go Into labor in prime
condition and have good treatment
you will come out all right
2. The best opinion is that you
cannot Influence matters materially
by changing your diet. A full diet
during the last month sllchtly In
creases the danger of fever, but it
Increases the probability of a good
supply of breast milk as an crreet.
How to Effect Cure.
Mrs. C. D. A. writes: "I have three
children and all of them wet the bed.
I have tried everything I have heard
of. but to no avail. What shall I
do?"
BEPLV.
There is no remedy in the sense
that "on dose of medicine no more
ted wetting." If your children are
not feeble-minded and have no blad
der trouble you can cure them.
1. Elevate the foot of their bed.
S. Give them no liquids after 4
p. m.
8. Take them up at your bedtime
and have them void the urine.
4. Give them two lesson a day in
bladder training.
J. Beward them for succe.
Widening Frontiers
of Science
HumanWeakness in J ury Box
In Sacramento, Cal., recently two handsome
tcapegracet stole an automobile valued at $2,000.
The facta were established and the jury of six
men and six women found no difficulty in agree
ing to the guilt of the defendants.
But the women stood solidly against a con
viction on the charge of grand larceny, which
was obviously the only correct verdict. They
insisted, and finally prevailed, on finding the pris-.
oners guilty ot petty larceny and a verdict was
accordingly rendered to that effect, much to the
disgust of the court, who gave utterance to some
obiter dicta entirely uncomplimentary to the jury,
its intelligence and its appreciation of the duties
of citizenship.
This incident, it is contended by some com
mentators, serves to prove the' frequent allegation
that women jurors cannot be relied upon to re
turn a verdict which will inflict any particular
pain upon a good looking masculine offender.
The fact that the six women on the jury in ques
tion rushed to congratulate the prisoners after
the verdict was rendered is adduced as additional
proof of this contention and a convincing argu
ment against their fitness to serve as jurors.
But this argument, powerful as it may be, is
somewhat impaired by the well known fact that
it is generally impossible to induce a jury of
men to find a good looking woman guilty of any
thing more than a misdemeanor, even if her in
fraction of the law proceeds to the extent of get
ting rid of an undesirable husband or a formid
able rival by means of a pistol.
.' U would seem to the candid observer that the
ends ot' justice are no more dangerously sub
verted by the acts of women jurors who permit
good4ooking malefactors of the sterner sex to
escape deserved punishment than thev are by the
performlnce of male jurors who insist on giving
attractive feminine defendants considerably more
than the benefit of the reasonable doubt which
the law requires. Milwaukee Sentinel.
A Homily on Golf.
Men take up golf for the exercise as a game
it makes walking most interesting.
An inexperienced player going ever an 18-hole
course will perhaps cover five miles. The more
proficient he becomes at the game the less tie
walks, ergo, the less exercise he gets,
So, if you are taking up golf for the exercise,
what is the sense of becoming expert and thus
reducing the amount of exercise? The answer
is that an American doesn't want to be a "dub"
at anything. St Louis Star. .
From the Baltimore American.
The bounds of human knowledge
and of th potential energy open to
mankind - through that knowledge
are extending with amazing rapidity.
Wednesday's press dispatches report
that after thirty years of experi
mentation the engineers of the Gen
fiml 'Electric comDanv have at length
succeeded in transmitting an elec
trical current of 1,000,000 volts, as
a result of their latest attainment
they- are confident that the world
may now look forward to an ex
tension of long-distance trasjsmls
sion of electrical energy "beyond
limits heretofore believed possible."
If the hopes of the engineers are
justified, th speed or life, wnicn
for the last generation has Increased
beyond anything that would have-
been conceivable 80 years ago, may
bo still further accelerated and our
day appear but a tardy, sluggish
age 'to our successors.
. The scientists assembled at the
meeting at Hdinburgh of the British
Association- for the Advancement of
Science also contributed an array
of startling figures which, though
of let practical import, are no less
interesting. Professor Gregory of
Glasgow, speaking of the antiquity
of the earth, said he had come to
the conclusion (as tha result of pro
longed calculations as to the time
it took for the sea to become salt)
that Darwin's estimate that., the
earth mint be at least 20,000.000
years old wasvno longer tenable.
For the amaller nguro he would
substitute 1,000,000,000 years, a
computation whioh wmriously
enough was confirmed by Professor
Slddlngton of Cambridge, who had
reached the same result by an en
tirely different method. Professor
Eddington had estimated the time
it had taken two stars which orig
inally were fragments of the earth
to recede -as far from the earth as
they are now.
The good Bishop Ussher's calcu
lation, which was accepted for so
The "Baby
Congressmen'
(from tha New York Times.)
It is. hard to keep track of all the
"blocs" formed and forming in this
congress. The farmers have one, the
ex-servioe men have theirs, the irrt
gatlonists are working in a group,
there is a Pacific coast bloc Tha
latest appears to bo the one dubbed
"The Baby Congressmen." This
name, as might be inferred, was
given in contempt. But it has been,
defiantly accented by those to whom
it was applied, as It it were a badge
of honor. They are a body of young
members of congress or, at least, of
members young In service who
have set out to dethrone the ruling
oligarchy. These men, needless to
say. come mostly from western
states. Westward the star of
' blocdom takes its way.
Arrived lh Washington, these im
petuous gentlemen found that they
were not so much a moo as niooKea.
They could do nothing against tha
veteran leaders, particularly or tne
senate. Their, own adjective for
these leaders is senile rather than
veteran. They talk of the "senate
dictatorship," and speak Of it as
"suDerannuated." Hence the propo.
sal. Indian fashion, to knock the old
men on the head and leave them
along the trail by which the pro
gressive Baby Congressmen have
marched to new triumphs.
This new 'revolt Is evidently pat
terned, consciously or unconsciously,
after the one which broke up repub
lioan harmony early in President
Taft's administration. Then "Can
nonlsrri" was overthrown temporar
ilyand great was the rejoicing
thereat But some of the leaders in
that rebellion are now the hoary con
servatives who are rebelled ngalnat
in their turn. So easily does the
lapse of years change a Baby Con
gressman into a lean and slippered
reactionary. But let the good work
go on. "Maxima reverentla puerls
debetur." Out of the mouths of babes
and sucklings In congress we may
yet learn a lot. Anyhow, they will
add to the amusement of a nation
long by pious people, that the earth now somewhat in tha doleful dumps.
dated rrom a rew tnousa.no year
Courtesy to the Color. , , .
In this land of the Stirs and Stripes there
are men who should be made to see the stars
and feel the stripes. Washington Pott
Taking the Joy Out of life.
Mar we modestly toacest to the nplifters a
Pay-your-debts week? Shoe and Leather Reporter.
B. C aeema trivial now when tha
antiquity of the earth is measured
bv oresent-dav scientists in moua
and of millions of years, and Lord
Ravlcieh. commenting favorably on
the calculations of tho two scientists
mentioned, added another of his
own that the crust of the earth
would not be suitable for human
habitation for more than another
billion of years. The widening
bounds of scientific knowledge seem,
in one aspect of them, to diminish
man's stature and to make him but
an insignificant speck In a perpetu
ally extending universe. And yet it
is tha mind of man which continues
to make discovery as to the extent
and potentialities of the system of
which, physically speaking, h is so
Infinitesimal a part and the mind
of man which shows itself constantly
abl to adjust itself to new knowl
edge and new capacities.
- The Voice of Authority.
"Hadn't yon better give Josh some
advice betor he goes away to
school 7". said Mrs. Corntossel.
"I s'pose o," replied her husband.
"By the time ha comes home again
he'll ba so amart he'll want to give
all tha advice himself. I'd better
take my turn right now." Washing
fob Star.
Xot So Pleasing as a V or X.
Parhape the hidden purpose of the
Ku Klux Klan la to popularize th
letter "K."r-cmcago news,
CENTER SHOTS.
Man Dies When Bottle Bursts-
Headline. We've seen strong men
break down and cry in similar cir
cumstances, but this is the worst
yet. Buffalo Express.
Nobody who can remember back
about 25 years will look with any
thing less than heart failure upon
the proposed return of big sleeve
for women. -Chicago ?cws.
Strange that nobody 'has yet
thought to call them "contraban
dlts." Philadelphia Becord.
Let' hope the last world fight will
be that for disarmament Florida
Metropolis.
Germany calls reparations "Wla
bergutmachunsblelstumgen." Nat
urally, it comes hard. Knoxvllle
Journal and Tribune.
Living costs are still tt per cent
above th 114 level and have noth
ing to arbitrate. Pittsburgh Dis
patch. The Chicago young man who
killed two automobile salesmen tells
tha reporters that he never smoked
cr chawed in hla life. Murder, it
aeema was hia only bad habit.
New York Herald.
We trust that Charley Dawes, who
in an amateur musician, will clay
j on the loot Asbeville Times, '
Dr. Jame G. Creggerton, Pitts
burgh, publicity department of the
Vnivrrtal Chiroprtctort attociation,
who attended a conference at the
office of Dr. Lee Edward hi Omaha
yesterday, charged that there hat
leen an inclination on the part of
tome chiropractors in Nebratka to
convert the practice from being a
public good into a private graft.
They do this by putting up pro
hibitory legal standard standards
that would prohibit any graduate of
a decent school practicing chiro
practic in the state." be declared.
"We are opposed to this. The pur
pose of this conference and the pub
licity campaign we are carrying on
in Nebraska is to get the require
ments of Nebraka tchoolt to con
form with the requirement! in other
ttatet and to ttandardt of the pro
fession as a whole."
Describes Iowa Law.
In attendance at the conference
wat Dr. S. E. Julander of Det
Moinet. Dr. Julander i tecretary
of the Iowa ttate board of exam
iners and second vice president of
the national board of examiners.
"In Iowa we succeded iu getting
a law parsed at the last session of
the legislature requiring chiroprac
tors to take a three-year couTse of
six months each year and to furnish
proof of at least 2,000 hours actual
attendance during the course," Dr.
Julander said. "We fed that this
standard it high enough to qualify
men and women to become chiro
practor!. The national board hat
adopted the tame standard as Iowa.
Standardization Sought
"The prevailing opinion in the pro
fession is that there is nothing that
can be of more benefit to humanity
than the proper practice of chiro
....... .I : ..ki: r- t? d
LHailll, 111 JJUUlll, BdlU Xl . X. 4.
Myers, special representative of the
national board of chiropractic exam- ,
iners. "Under present conditions of
chiropractic teaching there exist 54
schools in this country whose cur
riculum and whose courses of study
vary in character and time. For the
purpose of giving to the American
people what public sentiment and the
conventions of our social order de
mand,' we are endeavoring to stand
ardize the chiropractic schools so
l
BUS!NSS is good thank voi
(list theiC can he BO tjuetlion but
that stuJrnU of tlii great prolcsiioii
will be properly qualified lt serve
the titk and the arllirtrd. faithfully
tnd efficiently. With thit end in
virw we are carrying on a campaign
of publicity which .vn will retult
in the unification of chiropractic
tchoolt, '
Free Clinic Held.
"We are frank to appeal o the
reading public for the attietanre of
good favor for our profettion on
the batit of having actually per
formed better dun 64 per cent of
health retultt in the hundredt of
thousands of cit thst have rome
to the chiropractors in the past. Chir
opractic it a health practice that it
lairly natural In rharartrr and con
lequently involvct absolutely no
danger to the tick and artlicUd."
A number of patirntt were treated
at a (ree clinic held by Dr. Gregger-
sou m Dr. tdwardt olticc.
Receiver to Accept Claims
Agaiuet Table Hoik Dank.
Table Rock. Neb., Oct. 5.(Spc-
cial.) A notice placed on the door
of the Community State Dank of
Table Rock statet that the receiver,'"
Dan J: Reitly, will be in the bank,
Wednesday and Thursday, October '
X nA A a ii i1 it tn i acr-iiitct ill ' '
iivi v tw atvvit vS)tiG ea ii " ,
institution.
t r
i r
IV. Nicholas oil Company
achievement inmie
pianoforte creation is
embodied in (hi? bridal
aiftdelu?--(he
Mint
?.ann
vjrive if Wrvflie
satisfying certainty
haf none oheir
will be so acceptable
or so endurinjy
appreciated.
lightest priced ' ,
highest frai?a.
Our Special Sale on
Renewed Pianos and
Player Pianos
Embraces Standard Makes
at Prices from $150 up.
Payment a Easy
a Rental
1513 Deuglaa Street
The Art and Music Store
What Thrift
Accomplishes
In April 1914 savings account No.
12771 was opened by a day laborer
who has put aside a small sum every
week since that date.
Today there U a balance of $418.38
in his account and it is still growing.
week by week.
Regardless of one's income or station
in life, a savings account in the Sav
ings Department of the First, is a
very desirable possession.
I
Jill
First National
IDuikof Omaha
Phone DOuglaa 2793
VA OMAHA A I
tOOIC U4t OKVtCCS