1 651 2S. IZ'xi. Cbe plattstnoutb lournal ' PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AT PLATTSKOUTH, NEBRASKA F.btrd t J'Kn-.fTioe. Plattsmouth. NU.. aa eroud-clfcfl mall mattar R. A. BATES, Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $2.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE EMIGRANT BLESSINGS. The flurry raised regarding the emigration wave is dying down. The excited folk who seemed to think th;.t alien residents were Rcli.g to carry Lack to the Old World nearly all our available supply of labor and lui.ney are jrrowinj; calmer. The aliens are emigrating, right ilong. but not in such vast numbers as were prophesied? Neither, so far as calm inquiry can find out, are they takins with them billions of cash., Enough are going to threat en a real labor scarcity, which will be felt keenly enough if other con ditions develop favorably for a big business revival. Their money could be used. too. to advantage. But the country can get along without cith er, if it has to. There are pome compensations. A good many of these homing Euro jwans are people we can lose quite cheerfully, because they were never assimilated. a:id they made harder the tak of Americanization. If they do not appreciate American life and opportunity enough to want to stay here and become real Americans, we are better off without them. "With them gone, we can more eas ily assimilate the rest. The good ones, the sensible ons. the adaptable, teachable ones. are likely to come back. When they yt-e what the old country is like now. in the light of their American experience, they will lie glad to take up their abode permanently in the land of progress, tolerance and op portunity. And if. in the meantime, there 'is a hampering lack of unskilled labor, tii'-r- wiii !' all tlie more incentive to exten'i the i:sc ri lab-jr-s-tv i!ig i World-Herald machinery. It may prove a bl'-.ssing in the nd. :o: Leader Mann was quoted as saying there was no necessity for suspend ing the vacation as "there was nothing but chicken feed on the calendar anyhow." To the public that was a surprising remark from the man in congress charged with the duty of producing and facilitat ing legislation for the country in this crisis. Measures growing out of Secretary Lane's proposals for land for returning soldiers, railroad problems, remedies for price infla tion and profiteering may seem like "chicken feed" to Leader Mann, but they loom rather large in the minds of the general public. -The fact is that the leadership" of the senate, in a desperate effort to defeat the league of nations, has set congress to floundering in a sea of inefficiency. In an obstinate effort "to save their faces," as the New I York World says, after taking the j wrong end of he argument on the league of nations, anti-league sena tors have made that fight the ex clusive contention for dragging weeks while congress is thrown in to confusion and the country suffers. Serious consideration of currency plans impossible and all efforts to meet the problems so vital in American homes today are laggard and indifferent. It would appear that after all the house might just as well have had its holiday. The house has gone slowly in : considering any of the pressing needs outlined by President Wilson j in this session. It has done noth ing to change the transportation system from a war to a peace basis, as suggested by the president some time ago. To the country at large such inaction is inexplicable. r All of which is admirable," pro viding, as suggested- . above that along with the narrow specialist ! t ratting In taught the broader lew and' literature, art and the othe things of the spirit are recormUed as really superior to bread and but ter learning, even though lesn at tenfion Is paid them. -:o: SOME GOOD IN ALL CREEDS. A FLOUNDERING CONGRESS. -:o:- CARNEGIE AND EDUCATION. We heard a great deal of a re construction program jut following the war's end. Efforts of thinkers and "leaders in the large conduct of the nation were combined in pro moting big gatherings in different parts of the country to discuss methods of leading the country back into normal ways In those meet ings was found the warmest advo cacy of the league of nations and the president of the United States Chamber of Commerce in a speech in Omaha strongly urged that this method of permanent peaceable org anization of the world be adopted. Hut other matters were discussed as well, including the transportation question, varied problems of dis tribution, finance and appropria tions, prices and proper treatment of our returning soldiers. What has congress done toward preparing and forwarding a pro gram? Not long ago the house of representatives was largely agitated because the president suggested that there are so many urgent prohlems that it seemed unwise for congre-a to take a summer outing. There were mutterings and 'complaints in the public rrints. Republican INVESTMENTS Public Service Corporation Paying 7 Can be had in amounts of $100 PAUL FITZGERALD, Investment Securities First National Bank Bid's, Omaha, Neb. Nearly all the money given away by Andrew Carnesie. amounting to hundreds of millions, was devoted to educational purposes. He establish ed libraries and educational institu tions, particularly along technical lines. lie was ready to help any plan for public instruction, if it could be shown that the plan was practical. He may have over-emphasized the utilitarian view. Certaintly even this modern life is more than steel machinery and electricity. What old-fashioned people call "liberal education" and "the humanities" and 'general culture are still nee sarv, to be insisted on more tucn ever, perhaps, because the present tendency is so much the other way, toward the severely practical. Eut Mr. Carnegie never placed a ban on the educaiton of the spirit. In the libraries he founded and even in the institutions ne created any one might read as much poetry and study as much philosophy and re ligion and art and history as he lik ed. And he put no fetters on the colleges he befriended; the profess ors were free to continue their cul tural, humanitarian, idealistic work along with the technical work with which the philanthropist was pri marily concerned. Mr. Carnegie's philanthropy might be said to represent the pres ent attitude of the Ainerican people. There is greater stress than ever olaced on education. The bulk of nublic money is always spent on schools. Instruction is being made more practical .than ever before. more closely related to every day life, better calculated to help boys and girls to a mastery of the know ledge and skill required to make their way in this modern industrial world. Vocational and technical training are gaining steadily. Edu eatina Is fceiug mora widely diffus ed. and id beinjr given s mora di Md, ueul relation to life. . Never reek to take any man!? re ligion away from him, no matter how ridiculous it may seem to you or how different it may be from your own convictions unless you have something better to give him In Its place, which you have not. Wo are bere reminded of an old stors-, said to be true, about General Sickles, who was a friend and fre quent companion of Robert J. Ing- ersoll's. At a Xew York hotel one dark and stormy winter's night the general, who walked with a crutch, went to a wjndow and looked out into the storm of 'snow and sleet long and earnestly. Returning to his seat by the side of Ingersoll he said: "nob, 1 Just saw a sad sight out there In the blizzard. An old soldier was hobbling along the ice sidewalk with a cutch, when a big burly man kicked the crutch from under him and the old soldier fell." Ingersoll jumped up and was for rushing out to give punishment to such a brute, but the general de tained him. saying: "Bob. I was speaking in metaphor. I am that old soldier. The good old religion I used to have was my rrutch and only support and comfort in my declin- ng years. "You Kicked it from un der me, leaving me nothing in Its stead." Every man is entitled to His own religion, to hU own creed-and to he privilege' of Worshipping his own god in h'r- own way, and none should seek to rob him of that right. ny religious erred" is' better than none at all, and all are good. It takes different kinds of creeds for different kinds of people, and they all go t make-up th sand stone, the quartz, the marble and the granit, flnd the many other kinds of -rock out of which the Temple of the Lord is builded. -:o: AMERICAN BO-PEEPS. rhorter hours under the r.r&t'ense 0f i meeting the high cost of liv(ng are only making a Lad matter worse for themselves and for everybody else. If they are rvally concerned with reducing the eosr of living they must begin to tako an interest In the matter of production. This warl cannot be liquidated by schemes for doing less work for more pay, and the whole world is bound to be confronted by high priced until rome of the loss and waste' of war has. been, replaced." If thero is any panacea at all for existing economic evils, it is In creased production. The profiteers. of course, must be curbed. Hut that is only half the battle, and possibly less than half. There must be less waste, more efficiency, and a new, constructive attitude toward the situation. The motto of every man and woman, of every occupa tion, should be, "Produce, produce. p-oducel" BOLSHEVIK PIPE DREAMS. There are a number of American P.o-Peeps living in poverty -in Eur ope who have asked for perm fss ion to return to this country and bring their sheep. They are wealthy American wo men who were married to enemy aliens, and whose holdings in this country have been temporarily con fiscated during the war. If the husbands will come with their wives, forego their foreign citizenship and titles and become American citizens, it is quite pos sible that th property will be re stored. Otherwise some other dis position of it will be made. It is no part of Uncle Sam's Intention to finance any enemy uprisings. It may be a little humiliating to a proud German or Austrian sheep to come to this country and become a plain mister, leaving his titled tail behind him, but good American dol lars are worth considering. Crowns and titles are of little value in these days. PRODUCR Level-headed people concerned with the cost of commodities have long been emphasizing the fact that the only sure way to bring down prices and place the necessaries of life within the reach of the masses is to concentrate on increased pro-, duction. Everybody wants to be able to consume more, and in order to do so there are universal demands for higher pay. Often, strangely enough, those demands are coupled with demands for absurdly short hours. That is to say, the . hours asked for are absurd In view of the present situation, though . they might be just in normal times. The New York World ably sums up the situation. In a paragraph: "The labor unions that are de manding new wage Increases and Some society with headquarters at Xew York has been sending out to all the newspapers of the country Russia soviet pamphlets. We have received several and perused them with interest, having not only a nose for news but a hankering to pry nto most anything that is pryable. The headquarters of these Rolshe- vik propagandists has just been raided by government authorities and tons of this literature seized. so maybe, our waste basket will con- inue in the act of yawning for want of any more of the pamphlets. They are like many others of the kind we have seen, promising every- )Ody two or three thousand dol lars a year for four or five hours work a day, on condition, of course. hat the fantastic, fantasies of Eu gene Debs, Carl Marx. Wayland and others of that ilk-are put into prac- ice. The theory as to what ails he patient has some merit, "hut the medieine they propose would kill him. or all such isms we are an Iconoclast, -a breaker "of images and a fighter of shams. The radical error of this .dreamland dop and happy hallucination Is that there is a power in our political society higher- than the individuals of which the political society is com posed. There is no such thing. In dividualism has made this govern ment all that it or this people are today. Communism would tear all that down. All we have or are .is due to individual effort. A major ity of men are doomed to mediocrity. The few succeed; ' many fail. The multitude, -as such, is a failure, a big bag of wind like unto a German Zeppelin, always has been and al ways will be. It is the individual that wins and succeeds. Such is history since the dawn thereof. Bolshevism to the contrary notwith standing. Eighty out of every hund red men die penniless. It is the one who reaches the heights and the eighty which compose the Bolshe vik propaganda. The laws of God and nature can not be abrogated by a conglomeration of theorists etern ally seeking the refuge of those born tired. -:o:- Xow we may see whether the leather trust has a leather hide. ;o:- George Washington manufactured 2000 barrels of whisky every year on his farm. . No wonder he whipped the British! . -:o:- Jf he carries her powder rag in his pocket -when they go out togeth er., that is a sign they are progress ing first rate. . r :o: A. girl is mighty sensitive. As everybody knows And hates above all other things A freckle on her nose. . :o: A mormon, an Indian, an actor and a fool commit bigamy. Also that illustrious American citizen, the Sultan of Sulu. -:o:- A .motion picture show is adver tising 'The Weaker Brother In Two Reels." We've seen weak brothers make more .reels hasthat. , fl JtjStrJrrJfljSasixXir ft i r& fjfrttffsj-iTBf T"JirifrigfcetffciTa tVjjrVraaQ TIIK WORLD-HERALD ANNOUNCES FOR EARLY PUBLICATION. The Most Momentous Newspaper Feature in History of Journalism General LudendorfFs Intimate Authentic Close-up History of the German Effort to Dominate the World, Written by Himself The German side of the war has been shrouded in mystery, and up to the present time no one who knows has spoken. Now, Ludendorff the man who conceived. planned ami carried out the most colossal military campaign and who directed the m .-t tupendous military machine in the world's hiory tell ihe whole storv. . i '. Shortly after signing the armistice, General Ludendorff went to Sweden, taking with him a tremendous mass or records and a large staff of assistant-. From these records and his own knowledge and experi ence he. personally, has produced this amazing document one for which the whole world is waiting. We know so much about our own defeats. Germany was so silent about her's that it seemed at times as if the balance of victory was all on her .side. IWu Lmlendorff discloes the real condition of (lermany jut lie fore the war. and i:ies credit and places blame where he (and Germany) believe it belongs, lie tells also when and where the German plans mis carried and the military crises through which the central powers parsed, all unknown to the allied world. LudendorfFs Story will be Complete the History of Every " Great Battle and Campaign THIS TKF.MF XDOUS FEATURE WILL IiE PUBLISHED ix oni; hundred installments fat-rv day BUT SATURDAY) IN Till-: WORLD-II ERALD. 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