The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, July 27, 1922, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE OMAHA BEE: THURSDAY. JULY 27. 1922.
The Morning Bee
MORNING KVENINC SUNDAY
tmi see rimusHiNO company
ntlM I. lirPIIK. tNaluaer. B. PRgWI R. C.a. Menaser,
MEMBER OW THE USOCIATID PRUf
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MWI M 14 M ff MUWU. ST .1 IMUN mtll M H M
a. mirHii envuS at sue paj. 44 sue IM swal ase avkiuka soma
441 IUM af wwuty at m stasia! ewavaas ee ais mm(
NH averete airculatlea ( Tin Oauaa In, June, IS2S
Daily 71.731 Sunday. .. .77,034
ft. BREWER, Gmnl Muiih
ELMtft fl. ROOD. Circuleiioa Miu
vera l aad subscribed bfer m this Sth day el J air. 1S2J.
tSeal) W. H. QUIVEY. Nolan Puslis
TW Ositke Sue to a auaikw af IM as4il Harass af (tree'siltes, Dm
in.wlMd uiaarii. aa tiirai.uoa eadiie. aad The Bast alfral.ilea It fan
UtJ ttMIM tr lkM ersaalisuea.
BtC TELEPHONES
Private Bren.k Esehante. A.k for the Department ,.
ar r.raaa Wealed. Pat Mint Call. After P. M.I .J" 6
Editorial Department. AT lantia 1021 ar 142.
1000
orpicEs
Main Offlee Uth and Fames.
Ca. Bluff It ott 81 South 8ida . . 43t 8. 141b St.
N.w York 2 K.fLh Avenue
Wa.binflao 421 Star Bids. Chieaso . . 1720 SUttr Dldf
Pari., franca 420 Hua Bt. Honora
The average paid daily circulation of Tha Omaha Bn
for Jun. 1922, 71,7111. a nam of U.97 over June of
1921. Tha averase raid Sunday circulation of Tht
Omaha Bca for Juna. Wit, m 77.034. a sain of 20,120
ever Juna of 1121. Thi. i. a larger (ain than that madt
by any othtr daily ar Sunday paper.
PRESIDENT'S POLICY IN OPERATION.
The policy of the president of the United Statei
for dealing with the industrial situation created by
the coal and railroad strikes is being developed. The
Interstate Commerce commission has declared an
emergency to exist, and under that has issued specific
orders for the movement of traffic which should have
the effect of so co-ordinating the available trans
portation as to prevent suffering in any part of the
country. Included in this are provisions for giving
priority to shipments of food and fuel, as well as re
quiring the use of the most available routes.
The machinery for the emergency control will
be formed by the president, and will consist of rep
resentatives of the Interstate Commerce commission,
the Department of Commerce and the Department of
Justice, with Secretary Hoover as chairman, and
these will be assisted by expert coal and railroad
men. This board will direct the operation of pro
ducers and the distribution of fuel and food.
A most important development of the day was
the announcement from operators of the so-called
competitive field, including Ohio and western Penn
sylvania, of willingness to confer with the miners
with a view to terminating the strike. President
Lewis of the miners is at Philadelphia, in conference
with district presidents covering the anthracite field.
His reply to the Pittsburgh Vein Operators' asso
ciation will have almost a decisive bearing on the sit
uation. Such an offer, the first made by this power
ful group of operators, gives reason for a more hope
ful view of the situation.
Settlement between the clerks and the manage
ment of the Southern railroad, on a basis of mutual
concessions, and the continued negotiations between
the Viaintenance of way men and the Labor board
are the encouraging features of the railroad situa
tion. Several roads report accessions to their shop
forces, and prospective conferences are in several in
stances referred to. Presence of troops at points
where disorder threatened has quieted apprehension.
Omaha coal men met with a special committee of
the Chamber of Commerce, of which John L. Ken
nedy is chairman, and an authorized statement is
made that Omaha people have no immediate cause
for worry.
Generally the signs are such as to warrant the
belief that matters are moving more definitely to
the settlement of the disturbances. That end is
probably not just around the corner, but it is nob as
far way as it was before the president adopted the
course he has taken. There is nothing to justify the
radicals on either side in expectancy that the full
power of the government will be exerted to crush
the other fellow, nor can either feel that it will be left
to pursue" its own course unhampered by considera
tions of public safety.
GUARDING OMAHA'S INTERESTS.
The mere fact that Nebraska is distant from the'
sources of fuel supply must not be taken as any
indication that Omaha will not get its full share of
the coal that, is mined. The Interstate Commerce
commission, with its priority orders, may be trusted
o rsulata the distribution of coal fairly.
There is no wisdom in a general stampede to buy
coal. Nothing should be done by any consumer that
would result in running up the price of next winter's
fuel. The assurances of John L. Kennedy, former
coal administrator, that there is no need for im
mediate uneasiness is reassuring.
Signs multiply that if the president and his ad
ministration are given popular support no one will
have to suffer for lack of coal. The proper way to
give Mr. Harding this backing is not by an attempt at
hoarding, but by insisting on conciliation of the -dispute.
The movement of coal cars is under government
control, and the conference between Mr. Kennedy
and the local coal dealers is evidence that Omaha's
needs will be given full and fair consideration in the
distribution of fuel.
THAT BEFORE BREAKFAST GROUCH.
The advice sometimes is given, "Keep smiling
until 10 o'clock and the rest of the day will take care
of itself." This is in recognition, no doubt, of the
prevalence of what may be called the "morning
blues."
A good many persons wake up with a grouch.
The idyllic picture of domestic life in which husband
nd wife sit down happily to a leisurely morning meal
is unfortunately not always realized. Some men, and
some women, are absolutely uncompanionable until
they have had breakfast. For one thing, the man
may be in a hurry to get to his work. As a result
this is often the most hasty meal of the day.
There are men who make a practice of taking
breakfast in a downtown restaurant. There no doubt
re some women who have their tea and toast in bed.
Many ways exist in which trouble may be avoided
and' the day saved for good humor. Once the break
fast is done, the world looks more fair and the ordi
nary relations of life can be assumed without
growling.
MOTOR AGAINST MAN.
The coming of the horse to America, brought by
the Spanish explorers, changed the whole course of
life. Thus were rest distances overcome and so was
civilization spread. Tht Indians, also, who before
were earthbound, acquired ponies and became more
formidable antagonists as well as more effective
hunters.
Similar changes, reaching far into the habits of
the Orient, are promised by the advent of the auto
mobile. Hand drawn carts and jinrikishas still con
stitnts a Lege part of tht means of transportation
in Japan. It is estimated that one in tvtry twenty
tight Japanest Is engsged in transportation. In all
of Japan there art only 252,000 horse-drawn car
nages and vehicles and 41,000 ox carts. The chief
ebitablt to the use of motor cart it said to bo tht
hand-drawn vehicles. These, however, art now rap
idly decreasing. Although tht number of automo
biles and trucks Is only 12,117, yet this is enough to
havt displaced a great many primitive vehicles.
The effect of freeing coolie labor for the produc
tion of food or other goods instead of hauling will
be revolutionary. The change to the motor car came
with less of a shock in America because it replaced
the horse, not a whole class of men.
Bee Readers'
Opinions
" HENRY AND ME " AND THE LAW.
In ona regard Governor Allen hat the better of
Editor White, in tht controversy over the placard.
Conceding every claim that may bt made for freedom
of speech and publication, and tht governor is quite
as fsmiliar with all this as is his adversary, it re
mains trut there it a place where personal rights
must come second. No man has a right to set him
self above the law at any time, to take the law into
his own hands, or to flout the law or twist it to his
own whim or fancy.
If the governor of the state of Kansas, acting on
the advice of his 'attorney general, declares that a
certain course of action is inimical to the welfare
of the people of Kansas, or contrary to the law of
Kansas decent regard to the law and for the executive
requires that all good citizens obey the governor.
Such as do not become law breakers and to that ex
tent forfeit the estate of good citizenship.
Hero is just where William Allen White stepped
back in time. He submitted to arrest, after having
made his point, and then removed the offending
placard. His sympathy for the striking shopmen
need have undergone no diminution, and may be as
efficacious as ever it was, but he is in a stronger posi
tion than before, because in holding that sympathy
and perhaps giving it practical form, he is no longer
defying a law of his state nor interfering with the
goverrlor's efforts to enforce the law.
Governor Allen is right in saying: "What we
need in this country now more than anything else is
a feeling of obligation to our government, to our
laws, and obedience to authority. It is the duty of
every citizen to obey the laws."
IT'S ALL IN THE FAMILY.
Nebraskans, who have become accustomed to the
antics of the democrats in their effort to secure office
in the state, will not be at all surprised at the in
dignation of "Prince Arthur," who finds his prestige
about to be challenged by William A. Kavan.
Mr. Kavan, it appears, has gone to the extent of
organizing a democratic club, admission to which is
set at $1 per, while Mr. Mullen is the chief engineer
and pilot of another club composed of democrats
who pay $10 each for the privilege. As to the real
actual value of membership in a democratic club in
Nebraska at this time, most folks will probably insist
it can be better expressed in roubles than in dollars
and cents.
That is beside the question. Mr. Mullen, relying
on his $10 fee as well as priority in the field, regards
Mr. Kavan and his $1 proposition as an interloper.
In fact, Mr. Mullen so expressed himself at a meeting
of the democratic state committee. Mr. Kavan is of
further offense because he was secretary or some
thing like it to Dean Ringer when the latter was
superintendent of police in Omaha.
From which family fuss it is not at all difficult
to draw the conclusion that while the Hitchcocks and
the Bryans may indulge in "neutrality," and lay
aside the wet and dry disagreement in hope of getting
votes, the Mullens and the Kavans are not inclined
to do so. The unholy alliance is bearing its natural
fruit, and, while the row is all in the family so far, it
may not be confined to that limitation.
SCHILLER'S BUST IN PARK.
Schiller's bust is again on the pedestal in River
view park, where it was placed fifteen years ago by
patriotic German citizens, in whose hearts dwelt a
great love for art, for literature and for music, all of
which were embodied in the great poet they honored.
It is good to note this fact, for it shows a com
plete subsidence of the stein-smashing spirit that
characterized some portion of our country's share in
the war. The bust was not removed because the City
of Omaha mistook the spirit that gave it, but because
to expose it was to invite an outburst that might
damage a work of art, destroy a monument, and do
nothing towards aiding the victory all sought.
Wounds left by the war are slowly healing; memories
will survive for generations, and it is well they
should, but Schiller had no part in the events so de
plored. Read Schiller's life, and you will discover that
he, too, was a victim of the very system that led to
the awful four years from August, 1;914, to Novem
ber, 1918. He hated war; he was forced to serve as
a military surgeon, and was arrested and forbidden
to write because he fled from Wurtemburg to witness a
production of his first play, in which war is denounced,
Schiller and Goethe were Germans, but their work
is for all the world. Art knows neither country nor
creed; we speak of the German school, -the Italian,
French, English, Russian schools, and listen in pa
tience vhen told we have no American school, be
cause we adapt from" all the others. In the melting
pot of America the arts of all the world have more
nearly amalgamated than anywhere else on earth.
Thus, the bust of Schiller, now restored to its
place in the park, is not a monument to any nation
or any citizen of a particular nation, but an ap
preciative tribute to that universal thing that more
nearly marks man as of divine origin than any of his
other attributes. Let it stand, as it was intended, an
inspiration to all who love the better things of life.
Applied democracy, if we understand the local
interpretation, rates a member who pays a $10 fee
as being ten times the account of one who pays only
$1. Maybe there's something in that.
Walter Head wants to bring the next Boy Scout
convention to the United States. Why not go one
step farther, and bring it to Omaha?
Band concerts at Fort Omaha awaken memories
of a day when guard mount tljere was a function.
Stowaways on airplane are novel enough to
notice, there being no trucks or brakerods to ride.
When bandits begin toteal raspberries canned
for the winter, it is time to call a halt.
Now, if J. Pluvius will just let op for a week or
ten days, much will bt forgiven him.
Loud talk will dig no coal.
On Second Thought
Br . M. STAKSITEB. """"
Braaa. scientists tell us, is shunted gold. Are you
pure gold or just brass I
(Thl. defwteaess la Seats aa I
eraadca.tlas atatloa Ihrouah hkh raid
ere af Tha Omaha Baa mi aaaak ta aa
audita aamharins aba Ito.eoe
aa auhjarta of publle totem. Lattara
stiauld ba nhort not more than SIM word.
Karh teller mast ba aeeanauaaled by tha
Rama ar ma writer, even Ihaaefe ha re
quest mat ii nui sa pubiisnea.)
llt Is Not for Per.
Omaha. July !, To the Editor
of Tha Omaha Ree: As a reader of
your paper 1 feel I am Jiiellfled In
(Ulna your attention to an article
In your Letter Box In tonight's
Paper. Tha article la headed ."lie
Have In Debs." Commenting on
this article, I am curious to under
aland why In the name of moral
decency you will allow propaganda
of this kind to enter the columns of
a republican rarer, as you hsvs the
right to reject any article that Is
writtan purposely and with Intent
to Influence the minds of anarchists
nnr! I. v. We., encourage further
(llNturhnnreft and unrest among our
people. A letter like this one signed
by J. If. AlliHon, In place of
nllnwing It epiire In a decent news
paper, should ha placed In the hands
of the federal Jury, for I think there
la enoiiRti i. w, v. propaganda in
that article to Justify a court If this
(lam not Justified In saying" It. hut I
will) man had an ounce of Ameri
can blood In his shameful carcass he
would not Insult a president as he
does. He says "I live In a southern
state." He don't need to say that,
for any common eighth grade pupil
could tell by his wording. The only
regret that sane people can have 'Is
that he don't live far enough south.
He ought to find his friend. Debs,
and both go on a vacation and wind
up at Leavenworth and stay there
indefinitely. There is enough news
of an interesting nature to make
The Bee double in size without using
up valuable space with this anar
chistic I. W. W. propaganda.
T. J. TATWE.
3817 Q St.
"Families" and "Broods."
Boone County, Neb., July 24. To
the Editor of The Omaha Bee: In
the Sunday Bee of July 2S, on page
4. I noticed a picture of six very
bright-looking children. The large
type headline above the picture Is
"Oldest Girl Praised for Mothering
Brood of Five Orphaned Children."
Oh, what a compliment you give
this fine-looking group of a family
to call it a "brood." .
In some years gone by the word
brood was applied to animal erourjs
and a family of children was called,
not a brood, but. respectfully and
beflttingly, as is due to the human
race, a family. Why pull down the
mother and the father of a large
family to the level of animal life?
Who does honor belong to? Is it
not the mothers that raise the fami
lies, are they not the true founda
tion of our great country? Or is
the present generation, where we
find large families, the cause that
fills up the prisons of our country?
Look up the statistics and the per
centage of the criminals that we
harbor behind prison walls and you
will. And that the percentage of the
inmates is not made up of members
of large families. Yet the learned
editor of a metropolitan paper
terms a family of six children a
"brood." Whereas he politely speaks
in his society columns, as brothers
or sisters, or uses the noblest of
words, family when his pen pic
tures the family life of the idle rich,
with no more than one, two or three
children, or often only a poodle dog.
to make the family complete.
O, what a contrast. I pick up the
daily American Tribune of Dubuque,
turn to the editorial page of its is
sue of July 23, and, under the head
ing of "Fewer. Not Better." it com
ments on a letter written in a daily
Detroit paper, and mentions or ap
plies the word of words "farhily"
to the groups of children. It com
ments on Horace Walpole, who was
one of a family of 18; Benjamin
Franklin, 14; Napoleon Bonaparte,
12; Samuel Adams, Sir Walter
Scott, James Cooper, Alfred Tenny
son, of families of 12; Lord Nelson,
Irving, Clay, Carlyle and Henry
George, of families of 10! Grover
Cleveland's mother had nine chil
dren and so on. Most of the great
men sprung from large families, ana
a look back Into history will con
vince us that the mother of a large
family could still be a queen in so
ciety, for in years gone by she was
considered the very foundation on
which our great commonwealth is
built.
What a contrast, when one de
fines the words family and brood.
MRS. J. X. SEVENICH.
OPINION-
What Editors Elsewhere An Saymg
Freedom for the Filipinos.
Omaha, July 22. Te the Editor of
The Omaha Bee: I am very appre
ciative of the interest which The
Omaha Bee is taking in regard to
Filipino freedom as manifested by
letters and editorials that appear in
its columns every now and then. It
is on yesterday's editorial on "Agui
naldo and Filipino Freedom" that I
desire to make the following com
ment and discussion.
It is very much to my regret that
Gen. Aguinaldo is unable to attend
the convention of the Spanish
American War Veterans in the
United States due to financial rea
sons. You were right, Mr. Editor,
in referring to him as a bit of effec
tive living propaganda for our in
dependence movement. Giving con
sideration to the high type of pa
triotism he possesses he will always
remain to be so whether he may be
in America or elsewhere. He was
surely an enemy of the United
States for a short while because of
his leadership in the "insurrection
of 1899." Can you blame him for
the insurrection? As a patriot he
could not bear to see his country fall
in another master's hand after he
had already succeeded in overthrow
ing that tyrannical rule of Spain and
had accordingly begun preparations
for the organization of a republican
form of government. In spite of
that occurrence, after he had sworn
allegiance to the United States, can
you find a man more peaceful than
he has been during the years of
American sovereignty in his home
country? "On Second Thought," in
the same paper as that editorial
previously referred to, read: "The
enemies you may make today are
the friends you may need tomor
row." There, Mr. Editor, you can
take Gen. Aguinaldo as exemplifying
this worthy thought.
Another point I wish to consider
is your 'statement that freedom will
not be secured by the machinations
of a group of "island schemers" who
are pushing the present attempt to
influence the government at Wash
ington. That is a very sane opinion,
I admit, but I am at a loss to know
who those "Island schemers" are.
I take my chances in assuming that
you referred to the present Philip
pine Independence commission in
the United States. Indeed, this com
mission Is asking for our indepen
dence but as authorised representa
tives of the Filipino people. "Knock
and the door shall be opened to you,"
but who should knock for a country
with a representative form of gov
ernment? Evidently the representa
tives who are chosen by the people.
This is exactly what we did in send
ing the present commission to
America. The members do not
represent only a small group of Fili
pinos, but they represent the peo
ple from whom they got their au
thority by the process ef popular
America's I-k of Control,
from tha Mlnnaapollt Journal,
"ss Sinclair Lewis: "We don't
need more pep In America; we nfd
control." It is a true saying. One
need only turn to the day's news to
learn what we are paying for our
speedy, complex life with Its lack
of control sutomohlltt killings,
broken homes, Increase In Juvenile
crime, strikes, disrespect for laws,
fodderol in schools, and so on.
To be sure, America has the pep
and Is using it, but the sorry truth
Is It is getting nowhere. As Sinclair
Lewis says, it lacks the control to
get anywhere. Look at the pep our
legislators have displayed In pass
ing laws the last 10 years. But who
can maintain that this is a better
governed country because of the
myriad of new laws, or that there Is
any more respect for laws?
In the mad chase of the newer
day, we have turned our homes into
mere roosting places, and then are
shocked when our children show bv
offenses against the law and against
right principles that they lack home
training. We have been so busy
that we have neglected church, and
then are surprised at the violation
of Oolden Rule principles In every
day life. We wax indignant over the
misconduct of government, but when
the day dawns for us to participate
in the government by voting, we
shun the polls.
We are racing about and getting
all pepped up over this, that and
the other thing. We are wasting our
energy on nonessentials. The evils
we -a today are evils of our owni
making, and th-y will be shatad only
as we ralaa our aiandtrda and
Ichanga our cour of romlurl.
Hmh a step alanine i-uiitroi. It
denntrs no wicrilW, for It is th
mad pars that ekacta sucrlflce.
Control gives premiums In trua hap.
PIiiimn, in belter f.imily conditions.
In lusher and better aisndartla of
life fur everyone. It does not lie
over In the next l oiinty. or In special
enactment. It Is within the reach
of all.
But If America Is in get under
control, It mimt turn bock to the
home and to tha practice of moral
training.
We neMirt a Fistic Event
from tha Pnubl.-rnl.r.
Nothing is more amusing than a
literary prize fight. Mr. H. L.
Mencken and Mr. Waller Llppman
are singing a hot one in the pages
of the Kmart Set and tha New Ite
public respectively. Taking the pub
lication of I.lppmun's "Public Opin
ion" as a camiH belli. Mr. M., after
the customary preliminary hand
shake, leads off with a Jab to the
solar plexus. He calls Walter a
liberal and throws him In with the
ante bellum democrats. The taste
of blood makes him prance. He kids
Walt about his trust in the mob, his
pathetic faith In barbers and green
grocers. The gong sounds. It Is
Mencken's round. With a flourish
election. These men have always
been conspicuous in the indepen
dence movement and most, if not
all of them, have been elected and
re-elected without much opposition
because they stand before the people
and express themselves unequivo
eably for the movement. And the
fact is that all the political parties
are represented in the commission.
Call the commission whatever name
you prefer, Mr. Editor, they did
not come here to promote their own
personal Interests; Instead they
came here mindful of the responsi
bilities placed upon them by
10,000, poo souls who are ever look
ing forward for the fulfillment of
that worthy doctrine that Just gov
ernments rest upon the consent of
the governed; that every people has
the right to determine its own in
stitutions and form of government
for itself, and the right to dissolve at
will the political connection that
binds it to another people, and to
seek by its own paths its safety and
happiness. B. C. GUERRERO.
Crisp Crusted, Fresh
Green Apple Pie
5 with any order all
this week. . i
BBBBBBBBSBBBBSBBBMBSaBSSBBSBBBBBSIS,
PRICES REDUCED!
Wa Clean and Prt.a Mtn'a C1 CA
Two or Thraa-Pi.ca Suits for
W. pay raturn ehtrret on out-of-town
txpre.i or parcel po.t .hlpment..
DRESHER BROS.
Dy.rfc Clon.ri. H.ttwi. furrlar., T.llori.
Sut CImiw. .id Oil SMr.N ' fan
Kit f ARNAM ST. AT LANTIC 0341
When in Omaha Stop at
Hotel Rome
ha tails In tha Intermltslnn of his
proposed snide to govarnors, para
phrasing AIJous Huxley's Scot an in
"Crome Yellow," whose words are
remarkably fresh In his mind. He
would pick a fw select man ta gov
ern the world and thay would lord
it over tha others by kidding them
lo death, tailing them what big boys
they ate, and then make them be.
have hy making a horrid fact at
them.
Clans! Walter Llppman steps nut.
He culls H. L M. a good philulnglst,
a one-eyed critical bull In a literary
chin emporium, an Innocent little
hoy In knickers who rails names
from behind a fence, "Who are the
elect?" says Mr. L. with little Jabs,
"not the professors, nnr the polltl
clans, nor the liberals. We know
whst Mr. Mencken thinks of them
. . . That leaves (hare a terrific
rioubia uppercut) Mr. Mencken, Mr.
Nathan and (a body blow) Mr.
Knopf, their publisher. Also a few
thousand readers of the Smart Pet."
Henry toes to the ropes, but does not
quite fall. And then Walter dances
around unsble to follow up Ms ad
vantage. I had to leave, unable to
await the third round, to write up
my report. I left them clinched
with the ceowd yelling to tha ref.
eree "Break, ent break 'em'"
What Mao Has Yrt lo larn.
It seems to take a lot of demon,
atratlng to convince penpla that the
snfmt way to cross a railroad track
is after the train hss pusaed. Mil
waukee Sentinel.
PMfJ
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worn.
f first National
Bank of Omaha
in
fifteen (15)
Better
cigarettes
for
A highly pleasing blend
of choice Turkish
with Virginia and Ken
tucky Barley tobaccos of
superior character and
quality.
Every cigarette full
weight and full size.
You're going to say
"That's more like it!"
Coptucht 1922, LiGcrrr k Mrtai Tosacco Co
better Turkish
better Virginia
better Burley