A WEEKLY JOURNAL OF CHEERFULNESS Printed primarily for people who look upon life cheerfully and hopefully. Also for people who ought to do so. The promote of all good things and good people, of whkh. first Nebraska is chief and of which second Nebraskans are mostly. - - DOLLAR A YEAR I u A MERRY HEART DOETH GOOD LIKE MEDICTNE Bat a broken spirit drieta the bones. That's what the Good Book says, and veil bank on it. sore. Wax. Macp'3 Weekly works to make cheerful the hearts of its readers, and thus do medi cal duty. Fifty-two consecutive weekly doses for a dollar. GUARANTEED VOLUME 8 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, DECEMBER 22, 1911 NUMBER 39 A HAPPY CHRISTMAS To the Children of Men everywhere, without regard to race, creed, color or previous condition of servitude, Win Ma up in s Weekly wishes a Happy Christmas! Any why should we not all be happy? Good, things have been given to every one of us, and to none of us has the worst yet ever happened. We are alive yet, and while there is life there is hope. We who live in the today have every right to be glad of it, for this is the best year of all the ages. Not so good as next year will be, but infinitely better than the year before. To no other people has been given the opportunities that are ours today. Therefore cheer up and be glad. And particularly favored are we who live in Nebraska. It is the favored one of all the states. Of all good things it produces the most, of things evil it has the least. Its fer tile soil laughs into golden harvests, her climate is for the healing of the nations. She produces more wealth per capita than any other state, more corn and wheat and oats per acre than any other state, has fewer illiterates per thousand of population than any other state; a larger school fund per capita than any other state; more home owners per thousand of population than almost any other state; her cities are without slums and breadlines, and her children are never forced breakfastless to school. Let us, then, make merry on this happy Christmas day. Not selfish in our merriment, but rather rejoicing because of our great opportunities to be of service to others. Let the new year dawn upon us able to say that nowhere in all the broad expanse" of Nebraska was any child allowed to sorrow because Christmas brought nothing of joy. May the anniver sary bring more clearly to our minds the duty we owe to hu manity. May it implant more firmly upon our minds the fact that we should all be neighbors and not near-dwellers. Nearly 2,000 years ago there was born in Bethlehem of Judea a babe, manger born and manger cradled, who was des tined to live and exert upon the world an influence for good that no other has ever exerted. Above that lowly manger shone a star, and this star guided the wise men of the east to where the child Jesus lay. As that Bethlehem star guided the wise men of the east to where the Messiah lay, so let the star of our beloved state guide the children of men westward, here to make their homes among us, to help us develop the country, to help us build a greater prosperity, to help us be come more and more the great storehouse of the world. And as the babe over whom that bright star shone lived to bless mankind through all the ages, so let us make Nebraska live to bless mankind because of what it gives to the world for its physical and mental and moral uplift. A Happy Christmas to everybody, and so wishing- let us all join with Tiny Tim in saying: "God bless us every one!"