Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 15, 1921, Page 12, Image 12

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    17
THE REE! OMAHA. SATURDAY, OCTOTlKIt 13. 1921.
THTOWXHA3EE
OaicY (MORNING) EVENING oUNDAY
TBI IU rOBLUntNQ com r AMY
MOWN B, ITOIKE, rsalUaat
MC-Ut OF THC AUOCUTCO fUU
Ta in hw af Tu it a !. ft a
rmif Mwi4 a tha a a m af au aa mm
MM la at m wMniM afat'ia Ma h, m4 im
taa MJ Ma mmm4m4 aama. Art "AM af wiltlliini at
TM Pauas Baa MtH at IM tJHSX Sanaa f On
UUeu, Ik hmnIbI aalaafiw M aliaaianas
CC TEUTHONU
ili' ATUatic 1000
fw NW Case After IS P. M.
CiiturUI Miiiwm . AT ImO ia t tu
orricu or thc cc
iiu una. iris ua hnu
CooooO S!ffi U aMl St I lt l 4f I .eta Ml
Mll'Txl Offte
Km Tok rtflk an. I Waaklaataa 1511 0 it.
k ri. U M R
lilt wmm I l-tn.
The Bee'8 Platform
1. New Union Paangr Station.
X Ceatiamaai inarvramaat ( lk H
hraaka Highway, including IIm pa
maat f Mala Thoroughfare leading
lata Otnaka with a Brick Surf.
3. A ihort, low.rata Waterway from tk
Cora Bait to tka Atlantic Ocaaa.
4. lion ftul Ckartar far Omaha, witk
City Manager form of Government.
How to End Unemployment.
Some practical suggestions came out of' the
unemployment conference, which adjourned
without day on Thursday. Difference of opinion
between the employer and the labor group as to
how to approach a readjustment of production
cost need surprise no one. All will agree, whether
the disputants reach that point together or
separately, that certain factors in the problem
have not been brought to a proper relation with
the others. Contention as to the causes for the
persistence of these peaks and the presentation
of counter-claims, mainly academic in their na
ture, will not materially assist in the arrival at
the level on which industrial activity may freely
move.
Fortunately, this unsettled debate is not the
entire work of the conference. ' Many really
worth while suggestions are returned with the
endorsement of the conferees, and are being
promulgated with the whole-hearted approval of
Secretary Hoover. Chief among these is that
one which relegates to the communities the task
of giving first aid to the jobless. It should be
under the direction of the mayor. How this may
be carried out is outlined by various tentative
proposals, all having to do with temporary or
part time employment. To carry out these
recommendations, the mayor must have the
hearty co-operation of private employers, other
wise the proposed remedy fails. ;
Definite recommendations include one calling
for a repeal of the Adamson law and the aboli
tion of the railway labor board, presented by the
majority or "employers" group, while the minor
ity or "labor" members oppose this. Develop
ments in railway management within the last
decade have shown the necessity of some ma
chinery for the adjustment of general employ
ment questions, and it may be doubted if the
government ever will entirely relinquish its con
trol in this regard. That the Adamson law is
defective in many regards, has long been clear,
but its princinplc has been upheld by the su
preme court of the United States. The labor
board as constituted lacks something tf being
entirely serviceable and modification of the laws
is unquestionably needed. -
Another r. .c .i:nendation will fasten popular
attention on a question long considered by econ
omtsts, agd particularly employment managers,
It has to do with what is commonly defined as
"seasonal employment." Some plan for rear
ranging the operations cf industry to expand the
employment period over a greater number of
days, using fewer workmen but giving each a
longer time on the pay roll each year, is the aim
sought here.
Only those wlio expected too much or too
little from the conference will be disappointed.
No magic formula has come from it, but some
sane and worth while methods for relieving the
present condition are offered. On how. they will
be applied depends the benefit to come.
Re-Married? " ,
From Lincoln conies an account, given the
support of much circumstantial evidence, of ef
forts being made by Senator Hitchcock to bring
about harmony in the democratic ranks in Ne
braska. It is planned, the story goes, to run J.
N. Norton for governor, this as a sop to the
progressive-Bryan wing of the, party, with the
understanding that the Bryanites will accept this
much as enough and will give the senator an un
disputed renomination.
How times do' change. In 1910, when Sena
tor Hitchcock first won his present title, and
when the Hitchcock-Shallenberger machine con
trolled the democratic convention at Grand Is
land, there was no concession to harmony. The
Bryanites and all others who disagreed with the
machine were right royally rolled. In 1916, when
the senator was up for re-election and Mr. Bryan
was seeking one of several places on the Ne
braska delegation to the national convention,
there was no offer of a split of the .spoils. Mr.
Hitchcock insisted and succeeded in annexing the
whole ticket in the primary senator, governor,
national committeeman and national convention
delegates.
But in 1921, preparing for 1922, the watch
word is "harmony." And why this holding out
of the olive branch? Can it be that the old
steam roller is not as sturdy as once it was? Can
it be that the defeat of "King Arthur" Mullen
in last year's race for national committeeman
and the victor of an anti-Hitchcock delegation
to the national convention can these things have
inspired a belief that discretion is the better part
of valor?
"Harmony" in Nebraska democracy! What
wonder will woman suffrage and prohibition next
bring to passl . '
More Interest in Books.
People in Omaha are reading more, reports
from the library show. The! increase in circula
tion of books for home reading this year has
been 30,245 over last year. - It is to be regretted
that figures are not at hand on what was read,
for quality here is more important than quantity.
The assortment of reading at the Omaha
public library is large and representative. One
could go among the stacks blindfolded and be
small danger of picking out a book that eV
woo 14 not be the better for reading. Of courts
trh creeps in, for sores mention hat to be Pi4
lo tn the most ordinary mte. A library nude
p only el masterpieces would hf a (mall one,
indeed, although it could scarcely tt assembled
on five-foot shelf. But after !, there ar few
books that do not contain som hint agahut
which the reader's steel will strike spark.
The evidence of wider uie of the city library,
and the moves toward the extension of tranches
sre encouraging. Winter is an excellent time to
get into the reading habit, and from now on
until spring calls outdoors there should be
itesdy enlargement Ot tht demand for good lit
erature.
Interstate Commerce and Internationalism.
That devoted section of the democratic party
which clings with fatuous fondness to the ex
ploded WiUonian ideal of internationalism sees
only national disgrace in any effort of the repub
lican party to protect the domestic affairs of the
United States. They were willing to violate the
Constitution of the United States that the Treaty
of Yeraailles might be ratified at Woodrow Wil
son's behest, and they are at willing to continue
to violate the constitution in order that his plan
for crippling interstate commerce may be per
petuated.
The Hay-Pauncefote treaty, which superseded
the Clayton-Bulwer treaty, deals with the conv
incrce earried on outside the boundaries of the
United States. It can not, even remotely, affect
commerce between states. This should be clear
to anyone. England and all other nations knew
when that treaty was ratified that the coastwise
water-borne traffic of the United States was
closed to all vessels foreign built or of foreign
registry. A ship of that. description could not
begin a voyage at one port of the United States
and end it at another without incurring a 'pen
alty. Some Nebraskans earned this when they
made a voyage around the world in an English
boat, leaving New York and undertaking
eventually to land at San Francisco.
The Bee already has pointed out that goods
carried by water from New York to San Fran
cisco arc as truly part of interstate commerce as
goods carried by water from Norfolk to Phila
delphia or Baltimore. The president and senate
may negotiate treaties with respect to foreign com
merce; it requires the action of congress, and
this includes the house, to make laws regulating
interstate commerce. Therefore, a treaty with
England that interferes with trade between the
states is ultra vires, without power and can not
stand against our constitution. We may make
laws by treaty, but the constitution can not be
so amended. This ought to be plain to the
group of mourners who are now so cast down
by the senate's action in repealing the; law levy
tolls on coastwise traffic via the Panama canal.
Rediscount Rates a Local Question.
Unexpected support of Governor McKclvie's
drive for lower rediscount rates from the fed
eral reserve bank of this district comes from
Francis H. Sisson, a widely known Wall Street
banker. On his visit to Omaha Mr. Sisson did
not conceal his mystification at the contrast of a
rediscount rate of 5 per cent in the east and of 6
per cent here. The delegates at a farmers' meet
ing which met the day before looked at the sit
uation in much the same way.
However, there is no need for a continuation
of the long-distance controversy with the federal
reserve officials in Washington. This great
banking system, which is usually thought of as
being purely a governmental affair is in reality
no more so than the railroads would be if the
nation should buy them and turn them over to
the railroad workers to run. 'In other words,
the federal reserve bank of each district is con
trolled by a local board of bankers. The cen
tral board in Washington acts in the capacity
of adviser. The New York and Boston districts
lowered their rates on their own initiative, and
the same thing could be done here.
The most direct pressure for lower rates of
rediscount can be exerted, not through Wash
ington, but through the directorate of the Tenth
Federal Reserve district. The financial system
of this country should not be drawn unnecessarily
into politics, and the matter in dispute ought to be
capable of adjustment without going to Washington.
The Husking Bee
Ii's Your Day
Start ItWfhaLaufth
Changes Down on the Farm.
Greater changes may face agriculture than
any other industry unless the parity between
raw materials and manufactured products is soon
restored. Instead of raising crops to sell and
using the money to purchase the necessaries of
life, including many things that he could pro
duce but does not, the individual farmer may
adopt a more nearly self-sustaining system. Al
most any farm can produce more of the food
and other articles for family use. In some parts
of the country the wool clip, instead of being
sold at an unfavorable price, is sent from the
farm to the mill and wqven into cloth and
blankets which become the property of the
farmer without the mediation of any broker or
retail dealer. The practice of home slaughtering
atso is capable of extension.
Production for sale is being discouraged by
the low prices of farm products but production
for home use is being encouraged. The case of
agriculture is exactly what that of an auto-'
mobile factory or other industrial establishment
would be if the demand slackened and prices
fell below the cost of production. Either the
plants would close down or they would turn to
making other articles from which a profit could
be extracted. The prices of farm products
should be higher. This is not only for the sake
of the farmer but in the interest also of business
and labor and of the stability of present com
mercial standards.
CHILLY IN THE FLAT.
We lay sWe the B. V. IV.
We can the old straw hat,
Wc shiver in the autumn Utsee
And flutter like a bat;
We wouldn't mind such things at t!iet-
Such trifling things at that.
But at our esse we hate to freeze,
And, gee, it's chilly in the Hat!
At hustling our days ste spent,
Ti e tun it warm at that.
We fear the cold to small extent
Though we're not over-fat;
But when the landlord boott the rent
We'd kick him in the tlat,
When to the rooms no heat is sent
And, gee, it's chillyjntbe flat I
PHILOSOPHY.
A knocker is usually pessimistic but there
Is a cheerful note to the knocking of a little
steam in the radiators these mornings.
a a
In looking over a volume of the Congres
sional Record we note that it contains a fund
ot humor.
We know this is to became after almost
every paragraph, in brackets, is the word (laugh
ter).
a a
ROOM TO THINK.
Sec where a hotel has added a thinking room,
Darh place for senators and auto speeders.
Cuckoo 1
e a
Look at the skirts and consider that a few
short years ago a man could hide behind one
of 'em.
a a
UNIMPORTANT ITEM.
More than $40 worth of second-hand fliv
vers passed through Elmwood park 'in one
afternoon Uua week.
One can usually tell a man's station in life
by-the way he pronounces depot
a a
"Is prohibition a failure?" sadly wants to
know a thoughtful writer, rrom a bootleg
ger's standpoint it isn't.
a a a
SMILES.
There are laws that need amendment.
There are laws that make us sigh,
There are lavs whose obvious intendment
Is to make: us permanently dry;
There arc laws whose legislative craftsmen
Have bcM quite devoid of legal sense.
But the laws of which we are the draftsmen
Make the rest look like thirty cents.
(Sung at a bar association meet in Cleve
land and piped by E. F.)
www
(Extracts from the Sermon on the Mount.
Adapted to 1921, A. D.)
If anyone smites thee on one cheek, turn
to him the other also. Then will he take thee
for an easy mark and be off his guard, and thou
mayest smite him sorely.
If any man compel thee to go with him a
mile, go with him . twain. Then thou wilt
doubtless be in the suburbs where the police
goeth not, and thou may handle him without
interference.
If any man take away thy coat, give him
thy cloak also. Then whilst he is burdened
with thy clothes, and thou art unincumbered.
thou mayest hand him an upper cut, so that he
sleepeth, and thou canst recover thy garments
in peace and go thy way.
ihis is without any- idea of irreverence.
Tim.
-..
Miniature sign on Judge Foster's desk In
police court: "Don't Park Here." And most
cf those who come up before him wouldn't park
more than 30 minutes if they could help it.
.
LOVE FROM PALM BEACH.
"If the colored girl whose last name is Love,
that came from Palm Beach, Fla., will answer
this she will learn something to her interest.
From our Wantads.
! .
AND GET AWAY WITH JT.
It used to be, a girl who swore
Was awful. And if she"
Would take a drink or show' a limb
Or dare to show a knee
She was considered very bad
. They'd put her in the jug.
But now she does all these.
She'll next be chewing plug.
How to Keep Well
v DR. W K IVANS
Quaatiaa caacaralas arsaa aaalta
tiaa aaa arvataa at a , aue
amta to Or gvaae a raaaare al
laa , will b aawaas a,aaaUv,
ua)act la araaar hailuitaa. hr a
IIMH4 addrcMaa avlae I -rlaaaa.
Or Evaaa will aai maa
ai(el ar araatrlt lar UaWlaml
ataaaaaa. Aaaraaa hilar la aar al
T Im.
Copynsbt, !:. bt Pr. W. A, Evans.
Senator Hitchcock's claim that lower grain
prices are connected with the farm tariff is re
markable for its failure to take into considera
tion any other factor. That is the trouble with
so many theories they would work well in a
vacuum, but where other matters enter in they
go awry. Would the Nebraska statesman be
willing, to affirm the belief that free trade in grain
and wool would result in ' higher prices to
growers?
Dairy farmers who have organized with the
expressed intention of lowering prices of their
products probably are not unselfish, but realize
that the cheaper prices will widen the demand.
When is a jail fike a zoo? When it is filled
with wildcats and blind tigers, of course.
The legal lights seem to find considerable
di&culty in making the, Masse shot.
We'll bet
t
-Brutus.
. .
And imagine this line of thrilling conversa
tion: "Mabel, for heaven's sake why don't you
quit chewing thaf nasty old Mail Pouch and try
Climax plug. It's so much more juicy and
tender." ,
"Well, Alice if you don't like my Mail Pouch,
either chew snuff or buy your Own plug. I
simply won't have the stuff about. It is too
hard to bite off."
GOING SOME.
Happening to be down by the Burlington
station the other day, I saw a fat traveling man
chase a train out of the yard. He didn't catch
it but he sure made it puff.
After being taught as a child that it is rude,
a girl will continue to make up a face.
"Altitude Record Broken." Headline. By
an airplane, gentle reader, and not what you
thought we were going to say.
It seems that the man who shot himself out
of the house during a quarrel with his wife,
.was half shot before the quarrel started.
A man's better half isn't satisfied with that
fraction of his salary.
A supreme court has ruled that a man is
responsible when his wife operates a still in the
house. ' (
Not that this makes him master hi his own
house merely brew-master, as it were.
a a .
HAD TO DO IT.
Though this is fire prevention week,
And while such things concern us,
To loll the chill we had to build
A fire m the furnace.
www
AFTER-THOUGHT. A shiftless man often
shifts his burdens onto others. Philo.
COITSR AMONG CHILDREN.
A s-wut many chlUhen.lt yf
ot line and over have goltur. If
one will watvli tho lines of pupil
In the upper grades of th srrsm
mar schools and the hlh schools
he will be sstonlshed to And so man;
with lilir naeka.
In an Investigation c.f 7.028 achool
chililron In Uitth, Una-land, It was
found that ow boy out of eucn sou
hud roitr and tho condition was
thrte limes s prevalent a men me
RlrlH. Nono wns found In buys tin
dr S and another study showed
none In Infants.
A slintlHr ntudy In Milwaukee,
Cleveland. Petrolt or Chicago would
nhow tho condition mure prevalent
than thut anions- tha older ecnooi
rhlldrvti of those cities.
When It comes to explaining tho
exUtence of these enlargements phy
nlelun are at sea. One explanation
of the crest prevalence or the con
dltlon In adolpKcent children and
children Just below the adolescent
period Is that the very rapid irrowtn
of the body calls on tho thyroid
Kland for a lot of work. In order
to do the great amount of extra
work the ulund cnlaraes. To meet
the requirements of this theory the
Koltcr should fall back to something
like the average size when the child
yets a ltttlo older, and the rate of
growth has slowed up.
This happens almost as a ruif.
but with many exceptions. Also If
this theory in truo the irlrl" and
boys with enlarged thyroids should
not have projecting eyeballs, great
ntrvouaneM, tremors and other bI n
of too much thyroid. As a rule tills
requirement Is met.
All In all thyroid enlargement
among the school hoys and girls Is
not a serious condition. It Is the
rule for enlargements of the thyroid,
however, to exist for several years
before prominence of. the eyeballs,
nervoufiness and other symptoms
make their nppcarnnce.
Dr. I'lummer of Rochester has
worked out the avernge Interval be
tween the appearance of the tumor
nnd the development of other symp
toms In the many thousand cases
that have gone on to development
of symptoms and have finally come
for treatment at the Mayo clinic.
Therefore, It Is not wiso to hold
too lightly even the apparently
harmless though somewhat deform
in? goiters seen in school boys and
school girls.
To prevent the development or
goiters in school children, Mulligan
says the hygiene and sanitation must
be of the best Perhaps it may be
caused from polluted water. There
fore, give the school children water
free from pollution. The same holds
truo of milk. Perhaps there is here
an argument against bad ventilation,
foul dust, hot air In the school room.
There Is some proof that vermin
In the hair may cause it Therefore,
the hair should be kept free from
lice. There is some proof that some
cases are due to intestinal parasites.
Therefore if there are any indica
tions of worms the children should
have worm medicine.
It Is quite certain that many cases
follow in the wake of persistent sore
throats, dlsepged tonsils and enlarged
aoonolds. All such conditions should
be attended to. There is proof that
many thyroid enlargements follow
Infections of various kinds. These
should be guarded aertinst. The di
gestive organs must function prop
erly. One theory is That the gland
needs more lod'ne than it gets from
ordinary food during this period of
rapid growth. Therefore some au
thorities give school children a little
Iodine for two weeks during the
year and others permit a little Iodine
to vaporize in tho air of the school
room.
Sun Treatment Best
Lexington writes: "My baby Is a
boy of 17 months and weighs 31
pounds. He walked at the age of
about 11 months. The results are
that I he is bowloggod and pigeon
toed. Could you please tell me If
he will out"row it or must I lrnve
something done? I am a work'ng
woman and have not much time."
REPLr.
Probably your baby Is somewhat
rickety. Keep him in the sun)iht
as much as possible. To burn hm
as "arown as an Indian is about the
bst treatment. Feed him properly.
There Is a fair chance that his.lptrs
will grow straight. Tf this does not
happen and the deformity warrants
It you can have him operated on a
few years from now.
On Road to Asylum.
Broken Hearted Wife writes:
"What would you think of a man
who has drunk whisky for the last
1 0 years at the rate of a quart a
day, and for the last year about
two quarts a day. He always lets
up enough to work eight hours a
day. From Friday to Monday morn
ing he never stays In the house, but
In the saloon. He never takes a
bit of food from Friday until Mon
day; then he gets hungry and eats
twice as much as any time when he
Is sober. ' He starts talking and one
would think the house was. an asy
lum. He curses and swears at the
rate of two to four hours at a
stretch. I know the whisky now is
not good. I8.lt that or the long
drinking that Is affecting him?"
REPLY.
' Tou will not have to put up with
him much longer. The combination
of poor quality whisky in large quan
tity and no food and alcoholic in
sanity will land him before long.
The hot weather will help. Either
the graveyard or the asylum will
get him.
About Heat Troubles.
J. A. J j. writes: "1. Please ex
plain the physiology of sunstroke or
being overcome with the heat"
"2. What and where are the optic
inaiami : -
P.EPLV.
1. There are three varieties of
heat effects sunstroke, heat ex
haustion and heat cramps. In sun
stroke there is supposed to be a
paralysis of the heat center in the
tee
ZTfoB,
ffi
7 S'A
an
(Ttia Ufa artoa Ha aalamaa fnwly la Mt
Japan in Siberia
itrwm th rkUalBBle Urfsat.)
The reported break In the parleys
between the Japan and th ("litis
government of eastern Plberle sud-
imkIm aa aar ( uiwma any puM Uanly and dramatically ftHUwa
mJti- .,,T!ri' 'v.!. ril2? 'it.world attention on th ftul that 15,-
laa laal.lt thai IIm mm f lha orllrr
araimpaa)' vara kllrr, al w,rrnirili
lor palilVatlua, aut I Hal (ha rdllor atay
kaaw lle trlma ha la rivaling. Tha B
doaa aat prHrnd tu ladara ar amp!
Irwa ar avlnlana atnrraam! by aarra
puadralt la lha Ktur uos.i
Tlio I'rfc of Coal. "
Omaha. Neb., Oct. 13. To the
Kdltor of Tho Ut-e: You have In
your splendid odltorluls outlined In
a way how the unemployed can be
helped, and I am going to ask a few
simple questions you can nnawer:
Why In It coal of all kinds remains
at ths present high prices?
Is there no way that this matter
of coal can be settled without verg
ing on tho lino of socialism or
anarchy? , , ,
I am neither, but we are drifting
In this unwelcome rut. I am not
rxmonal In my crude communica
tion, but simply want to iiscWtlon
the cold fact. Your papr circu
late very largely among the work
Ingmen, and they pay very close at
tension to your editorials along these
helpful lines.
GER1! E. ELLIS.
Answer: Tho price of coal has
not rone down enaterlally because
wages at the mines and freight rates
still are at the peak. When these
recede coal can be delivered at a
lower cost In Omaha, but not until
then. The miners' union at Its re
cent national convention decided to
postpone negotiations for a new
wage scale until February. The rail
roads are talking of a reduction in
freight rates, to become effective
( bout the Drst of tho new year
000,000 whit men and women are
now under the military, poll'lisl and
Industrial control of the yellow men
finni Toklo. Japan has rut the
while race off from the western
shores of th I'acinc.
On the eve of the conference on
the limitation of armsmont and the
problems of th I'srltlo and lar essi
the curtain Is rolled up over tha
old Itumtan far rant, dtaclonlnc any
where from 75.000 to lOU.OOil Jup
anca troops In enstern Siberia.
Siberian Imluntrlrk ar In th grip
of Japan; th railroad, hlvhwsys,
postal service and telegmph lines
ur In Toklo's hands. The white,
population Is diiiarmvit. Vast
amounts of property Iimvo been
questered dulii- th Japanese mili
tary occupation.
If Jupsn has had In mind the rais
ing of the liwu of "racial equality,"
she nnvd go no further, Sli has
raised that Issue beyond the shadow
o( quentlon by this Siberian innm-ii-ver.
Toklo has brought It forth In
the aggravated form of the domina
tion of a whit race by yellow mm.
This will Intensify Ih" apprehen
sions of Australia, New Zealand and
the western coast of America. Tin?
on great issu in Australian foreign
poncy is to keep the common wealth
u "white man's country." Australia
sees In the Japanese-Slberlun move
coming events In Australia cailiig
their shadow over other men of tho
white race. For, has not Japan
actually done In Siberia what Pre
mier Hughes fears that Toklo will do
In the Antipodes of tha future?
ThlH U'ill Mtlr nop ttwn tv.tttt nunut
!whcn It Is understood. It cannot be
I kept out of the conference where
Naturalisation. ! four white powers nnd two yellow
Omaha, Neb., Oct. 13. To the Powers will be represented. And It
Editor of The Be: In looking over; cannot fail to draw the dominions of
the lists of questions that are pro-! uruisn umpire ana the i.nited
pounded to people of foreign birth I
found questions that. In my opinion,
could not be answered by 75 per
cent of the voters of the United
States today. I do not bolleve 60
per cent of the questions could be
Answered correctly by the native
born voters of America.
Then why should we require peo
ple of foreign birth to know more
about our own institutions than we
know about them ourselves-' If we
require people from other lands to
know so much about our own Insti
tutions, It is hih time that we would
know more of our own institutions
ourselves. No boy or girl should
come out of the eighth grade with
out knowing all about our national
constitution. That should be one of
tho requirements before they are
allowed to pass from the eighth
grade In our schools. In passing, I
will say that I do not think it Is
good policy to give what are called
diplomas to pupils comin" out of the
eighth grade, for many of them
think tliey have really graduated,
and do not try to get further knowl
edge at school. No diplomas should
be given until they have finished
the high school course or a three or
four-year course in night s-chools.
A great Ensli'h statesman said
that our national constitution is the
greatest document ever gotten up by
the hand of man. Yet millions of
voters in the United States do not
know much more about the consti
tution of our country than the most
ignorant natives of central Africa.
This may be a severe arraignment
of the people of our country, but it
Is needed. If our people in general
would take a little less time at pic
ture shows and in automobile rid
ing and take a little more time to
know of the institutions 3f our own
country, we as a nation would be
much better off. The constitution
of our nation should be as industri
ously studied in our schools as war
was studied in every school In Ger
many before the world war Tb
National Security league is engaged
in a movement to cruse a study (,'
our national constitution to bo one
of the reouirements of every school
in the land.
In the list of questions submitted
to people of foreign birth for an
swer I noticed at least one error n
the reply. I should think those In
charge of the naturalization burou
would see that no enors are allowed
to creep In.
FRANK A. AQNEW.
States closer,
All summer longr the world bus
been watching .In panose attempts to
rtralghten out Jupanese adventures
In Asia before tha conferein-g meets.
Tokio has failed with I'ekin In the
matter of Shantung and the 21 de
mands On tha Burface of things
she has failed In eastern Sioeria.
In the last days of tho war Amer
ica sent troops In Siberia. Our
troops ram out Ions" . Th JP-
an N remain, Ndd therg or not.
failure of th nao!l,,,
the prearnt .f Jspanvee troops in
MbvrUl rala this Hulnn Mu to
.iil Important' with th Chlnaae
iirubloni. Herniary Unfile naa a
urtl lha Clili otticlal th confer
ence will rp't Itumian territorial
tntrgriiy. Japan shows llttl Indica
lion of n pH tng It. It may be that
Chita wmiuU, laced by some such
fnr-mrhlng demand Toklo
knows so Mt'll how to mak. have
walked out ot th Darirn meeting
and will throw tha whule matter
Into Ilia lap of the six power.
It Is pohsllil that Japan holds
thu Siberian roast for "trailing pur
poK." Toklo la strong for "corn
iitiisaiory t oiiceanlniin," While Japan
holds Siberia eh miy b looking at
Manchuria. Time will tell, und that
time Is not far sway, In III niesn
wlill tha rui-liil issue lias been raised
and racial footings wilt Im stirred
to a point wher that Imuo will be
come undoubtedly a mighty factor
In the parleys at Washington,
THE SPICE OP LIFE.
An honrii luiidlxril Jvrtl. "Ma.
rm ui''imtit al Mn'Uern rent." Ar-
ll, tvitn tiirr ri:iniua litre rdti'-slr! a
mi ii'tt t,i l4 iimi Mf-emly rrrtiurtMl for th
"txaiiinnny" al rrrr nioellMK: "1 thank
lh Uiril tlmt I have thr. lra la
lu-arru. Tlia Kitrth IliTalil.
Kihcl "Tn nn t Judija a man by th
Hay h ilri-aHwM."
Mnry "oh. I don't Know. I ran Irll a
Vntlrtuan liy hi K''t-tt In a t'rowittil
:ur," Juilf I.Nrw Viiik)
(ilorla "Whra am lhnr womUrfu!
rrrvanta of tv year ago, thai milhr
talk of?"
Klavia "Oh, my il-ar. TVin't r" hnoa-T
Why. Thry'r hating rarvanl Iruublaa uf
thnr owii."-!.onilun Mall.
InifliliPv
PIANOS
SL WHKII A!l wW
111 v a -'era
A. Hospe Co.
ISIS noactaa. Tel ! "
Too Much of a Good Thing.
What we need Is a Society for the
Suppression of Advice. Brooklyn
Eagle. :
The Player Piano
Exposition centered he9e. The veribest, the most popular.
Every class In their best form.
Gulbransen Upright Player $495
Pricing down to 395 for the lesser good upright players. Your
old piano will make the first payment, balance easy installments.
J3ospe do
1513 Douglas Street
The Art and Music Store
TO THE
SOUTH AND
CALIFORNIA
WINTER TOURIST FARES
ROUND TRIP FROM OMAHA
a m w
Lot Angeles, Cat ) 114.48
San Diego, Cal
San Franciaco,' Cat . .
Jacksonville, Fla ....
On way via Wash
ton, D. C,...
Miami, Fla. ........
Tampa, Fla. ,
114.48
114.48
84.72
98.39
111.03
99.92
St. Petersburg, Fla. . ..$101.64
Pensaeola, Fla. 72.23
Via Chicago . , . 74.39
Palm Beach, Fla...... 106.86
Key West, Fla 125.40
Havana, Cuba 152.20
Via Chicago 155.18
Mobile, Ala 69.41
Savannah, Ga. 83.76
(War Tax Additional.)
Asheville, N. C
New Orleans, La ... .
Via Chicago
Hot Springs, Ark. . . .
Brownsville. Tex. . . .
Galveston, Tex. . . .
Corpus Christi, Tex..
San Antonio, Tex 64.05
Tucson, Arix 107.05
1
$ 71.04
70.20
47.06
8402
67.31
73.77
What Mr. Meifhen Upholds.
"More than any other country, Canada needs
9 ft". fVltstn diaa ia uaiimx , a '
m.tu ,alir cX. ,tX: 5. " ' y; 1 brain. This causes an excessive pro
rnostly undeveloped. She lies alongside a great . dm.tion or heat and at.the
big country tremendously developed. The United . time a defective elimination of hest.
Mites has every advantage that Canada has and j In consequence the body tempera
tremendous advantages besides. It surely follows, ' tur becomes excessively high. The
to the mind of everv reasonable man. that to 1 pulse Is fast and bounding. There
may no convulsions. xne lace is
fushet. In heat exhaustion there
la paralysis of the nerves which con
trol the size of tho blood vessels
and distribute the blood throughout
the body. The skin may be cool.
The face Is not flushed. In heat
cramps there ar cramps In the
muscles, principally in the lea mus
cles. This develops anions: men
who walk Into the cooler air after
working; for hours in a hot place.
2. Two gray nerve centers, one
located in each side of the case of
tha brain. They help to make- up
the floor of the lateral, ventricles
and In them are Important nerve
centers. ' -
abandon the protective system in Canada would
be simply to invite the absorption of Canadian
industry in the far vaster industries of the United
States. The principles of the protection of Cana
dian .industry have been proclaimed by practicat
ly every statesman who has shouldered the re
sponsibility of government in Canada. They are
sound and they are right and the vast mass of the
people of Canada know that they are sound and
right" Premier Meighen'a Portage Speech.
Greatest "World's Series.'
There will be a world series this year be
tween the Big Navy and the Disarmament teams.
- St. Louis Pott-Dupatch,
The Above Fares Are Illustrative Stopovers Diverse Routes
TO THE SOUTH
BURLINGTON SERVICE THREE GATEWAYS
St. Louis Special Kansas City Trains at
at 4:30 p. m. 9:05 a. m., 4:30 p. in., 11:10 p. m.
Chicago Trains at 7:30 a. m.
3:45 p, m. and 6:30 p. m.
TO CALIFORNIA
BURLINGTON - RIO GRANDE - WESTERN PACIFIC
Daily through standard and compart
ment sleepers to San Francisco.
Connections in Salt Lake with Los An
geles service via Salt Lake Route.
Via Denver. Scenic Colorado by day
light, Salt Lake , Feather River Can yon.
Three trains a day to Kansas City, con
necting with southern routes to California.
Make reservations well in advance.
Let us help you plan your tour.
A. J. PALMQUIST, Passenger Agent,
1004 Farnam St, Douglas 3580.
City Ticket Office, 1416 Dodge Street,
Douglas 1684.
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