The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, August 13, 1922, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE SUNDAY BEE: OMAHA. AUGUST 13. 1922.
8 A
The Sunday Bee
MOKNINCtVENlNG SUNDAY
TMI M rCIUJHINO COMPAMV
muon i. vrvtKK, rtkn.kr. a. aiti. c.. .
wcMita or THC AaAOCIATID PlUf
IV 4aalei tmt. e " TM to t M eulailMlt
iu le iaa aa ea Mea"ia 4 all imout 4iS w H at
MwttM WaUWI) B UK HIN. e4 la M HH ei.ei.ea-1
(it elekl 4 eliaem at Ml alel mwH ' I'n M'1
Net slrtalall el Tae Oaiaae . Jwlr J'
Daily 71,623 Sunday.... 76,332
. M' WIN. GeoaraJ MiMftr
tl-Mta . gOOO. llrtulelMa MUW
Una la tmi eiekeiri) ee 11 ' dee el Auguet, IIU
Ileal) , W. H. QUIVgV, N4rf Pukll
discarded a lot ef thing I'eul wrote for thtir edifica
tion, Insisting that ht m a bachelor, anil didn't
know much about women anyhow.
tke ftaea e M t M ml IM 4il af riiiMa, la.
Mxoo4 as Mn.iaiua a!, M4 la M euvaleuae a) fare
Ivlf i4 ef Maw eetealieaa.
IE TtlJtPHONM
Frleat Vraa.t (utiiiii. Ait laf Ike DHnnl T Latla
. WaJ . hj la L I FmUm Aitmm li . U " 1
Ken!! Devartawal, AT leatle Mil JtO. 1000
CfflCM
Man tffi Iffb cae gamea
Ce. gl.fft a a . . II ftoatt IM mii HU . . 43 I. ik t
Ne Yri-Hi ftlik A.eaue
Sakuigta a Ut k'af Wf. CSi.ase . - 171 liefer Slag
ran. rraetlf Rim at. naeei
Tae t'a(a eaul 4He eleeglatlna af Tk Oraeae Dm
far Jus. a. tl.lsl. s ut II.M7 eer Jua f
IS3I. Ika erereae Mia vndr eirealatlea af lha
Oaiake far Juae, IIJl, fl.eu. a gala af I UO
ee Jae af 111 TkU la larser gala than that ma4
kf r alkaf Salle ar Mn4. aasar.
WHY NOT MAKE WORLD BRIGHT t
Thit la a good world wa liva In, Everything nteded
or man'g want, Ma comfort, hi luxury, ia brought
forth In auch profusion that almoat aa much goea to
watta aa la used. In lha United Ktate, when arm,
mill, mine and actorlra ara going full tilt, tha ne
tion produce wraith farter than it can ba counted.
In tha fare of auch facta, why la thcra Buffering
and mliery in tha world T Why ia there dlacontent,
and labor at rife, and tha atruggla of man against
man for maatery over an Inalgniflcant part of tha
whole, when through agreement each may have a
greater ahara without fighting than either expecta to
get even with complete victory?
Who ran anawer these queationi? Teachera and
philosopher have wrought with humanity for count
, let centurlea, atrlvlng to Implant one great truth In
tha mind of all, yet few have embraced ita meaning.
In t world where there la enough for all and to apare,
where each man'a ahara may ba mora than ha pol
bly can ronauma, why ahouJJ there ba the everlaating
effort to overreach and get hold of another' por
tion? Tha anawer to thl laat rjueitlon ia Self. Only
when Self ia forgotten, and Service ia aiaumed, will
tha anawer to tha greater que tion ba given.
That la tha truth tha rcnturlea have labored to
make plain to man. "Bear ya ona another' bur
den," a almpla mandate, and entailing no aipecial
hardihip or aacrlflce, given by the Nazarana to Hia
ditriplea and follower, i tha keynote. ,
In looking around for a aubatitute for war men
have coma to tha concluilon that phytic! force mut
be aupplanted by reasonable aettlement; that juatic
can not ba aitabliahed by killing ona another, but
through a proceaa where the facta ara examined and
fight ia diccovered and applied. Such a proceaa may
ba applied aa well to labor dispute, for thete have
all tha elementa of war, ava potiibly tha coit of
human lifa.
Neither of tha great itrikea that have diiturbed
the nation for ao many week would have occurred
had tha conteilanta com together with a determina
tion to find point on which to agree, rather than
came for dfagreement. Neither would hava been
vailed upon to yield anything of honor or dignity, or
of material value, while tha alight conce!on of ona
to the other would have laved a great deal of trouble.
Covetounei, greed and lelfiahnei mutt ba over
thrown If this world I to ba made tha plcaiant place
it well may be. And thl doe not entail the turren
dor of laudable ambition, nor require tha cemation
of that laudable unreit that bringa real progreei. It
necltate only tha abandonment of "man'a inhu
manity to man." Kach of u can help ome in bring
ing thl about. Why not mako the world bright?
A CHILD'S TWO-FOOT SHELF,
Certain celebrated venc dwell on the poet' joy
at firit reading Homer, It I to ba doubted if hi
plcaure was half ao keen a that of the boy adven
turing for the first time amid the page of the
"Jungle Book." Looking backward almost everyone
can recall with a thrill hi Introduction to tome book or
other and algh with the wish that he might again be
turning ita pagea for the first reading. That ao ew
return to tha classics of their youth may be paMy
due to the fear of discovering that there waa not
muoh, after all, to these works.
Such misgiving may now be diamissed In view of
the selection by librarian and educator of the twen
ty-ilve beat booka for children, Tha itandard waa
taken a the needof a country school library, "Lit
tle Women," by Louisa M. Alcott, lead the list;
"Alice In Wonderland" ia econd, with "Robinson
Crusoe," "Tom Sawyer" and "Tfeaure Wand" fol
lowing In order. The list i thu completed; "Aeop'a
Fable," Pyle'a "Merry Adventurea of Robin Hood,"
Lamb'a "Tale From Shakespeare," Malory'a "Boy
King Arthur," Van Loon' "Story of Mankind," Wig
gln't ""Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm," Burton E.
Steveneon'a "Home Book of Vere for Young Folks,"
Dickens "Chrlatmaa Carol," Irving' "Rip Van Win
kle," "Mother Goose," Dodge'a "Hana Brinker,"
Hawthorne'a "Wonder Book," "Arabian Night,"
Kipling's "Jungle Book," Andersen's "Fairy Tales,"
NU-olay'a "Boy' Life of Abraham Lincoln," Hage
ilorn' "Boy' Life of Theodora Roosevelt," Seton'a
"Wild Animala I Hava Known," and Stevenson'a
"Child'a Garden of Verses.
A few newcomers are to be noticed on thl list,
iter I their presence t be regretted. Good books
ara ttlll being written and it would ba unwlaa to con
fnt recognition to nothing but the old. Thoughtful
parent who v.ih J guide their children' reading
In a helpful way will find the foundation ef a juvenile
library here. It la hanty too much to say that after
a boy or girl ha read these hi fast will be so well
developed that be will thereafter be elite, to pick and
choose hi en literary diet without making any great
mistake.
WHERE 8TRIKES HIT HARDEST.
The president of a great insurance company,
hose funda ara largely, Invested in railroad aecuri
tie, i reported to hava had a private conference
with President Harding. Tha eignlAranre of thia
fact la impressive, It drive home the real meaning
of tha loa that ia Inevitable, and accurately point
out on whom that loaa will finally fall.
Wa deplore tha cost of war, tha enormous ex
penditures that ara Incident to military operationi,
and with good reason. But tha coal strike alone has
already cost mora than tha War of 1112, and tha
Mexican War combined, and tha tale It not ended.
Thia If In loaa of wagea and production, What tha
shop hands' strike has coat ran not yet be accurately
told, but It wlU tlx up well alongside the estimated
expanse of the coal strike, which now haa reached
almost 1325,000,000.
By far tha greater loss fa not shown In these fig
urea, for they do not take into account the damage
don to general businesa. Steel mill ara doting
down or running on short time, big factories are
restricted In output, If not entirely stopped, com
munitiea ara deprived of service because plant can
not b operated, and In all direction tha effect of
enforced fuel shortage ia felt.
Thia naturally touchea on general business, crest
Ing a depression not only apparent but real, and
directly curtailing volume of trade, to tha detriment
of all engaged. Reference already ha been made
to tha ahara tha agricultural Industry ha In the sit
uation. Weaknesa on all market and declining
value In ail line of farm product ara tha reflection
of tha uncertainty Incident to tha interrupted trans
portatlon service,
No matter which side of tha controversy has one'a
sympathy, tha public la paying the price, because tha
enormoua los must-be distributed and shared in by
all. Tha splendid rron prospect, the big demand for
manufactured goods, tha building campaign, every
form of human activity in a land that ahould ba
tremendously engaged In pursuits that mean pros
perity, la discounted, (lowed down or (topped en
tirely, while dlsputca between employer and worker
ara deadlocked.
Tha president ha appealed to the reason and
generosity of tha disputanta, with slight effect; what
else he mar do i at thia writing to ba disclosed. Ha
plainly haa tha support of tha people in his adher
ence to law under tha constitution; It may not ba too
much to promise ha will hava tha aama support if ha
take a little mora power into his own hands. For it
Is the farmer, the merchant, tha householder, who ara
sustaining tha loss and who ara demanding relief.
What Other
Editors Say
"WISE CRACKS."
Pithy sayings always hava abounded In everyday
speech. The American who aucceeded best in catch"
Ing thia aplrit of homely wisdom was Benjamin
Franklin. As tha author of "Poor Richard's Almanac"
ha was tha father of what ia called in tha patter of
today, tha "wise crack."
"God helps them that help themselves," Poor
Richard said, and "Experience keeps a dear school,
but fools will ftarn in no other." There is something
so true and practical in his words that this aga in Ha
confidence and self-sufficiency is prona to scoff at
them. For, ba it known, to refer to a statement as a
"wise crack" ia often to belittle it In a sarcastic way.
Tha comment is equivalent to atopping up one's ears
or announcing that one's mind is closed on tha
subject'.
Today when Norman Hapgood write, "Tha pub
lic usually vote against lomethlng; on hundred
year from now it may vote for omething," thoa
who do not understand it truth will limply call it a
"wia crack" and forget it. Cheaterton' pointed wit
likewise is dulled a we hear him lay, "Wa no longer
lock a man up for doing aomethlng; we lock him up
in the hope of hi doing nothing," without making any
application of hi thought.
"Tha fearful unbelief is unbelief In yourself,"
Carlyle wrote. "Every man ia wanted, and no man
is wanted much," said Emerson. Wise cracks, both
f them nnd yet with a world of meaning. "Hypoc
risy is the homage vice paya to virtue," said Roche
foucauld, and "It is great folly to wish only to ba
wise." -
These thoughts are neatly expressed, each ona
cBDable of being expanded into a volume. In one
car and out the other while the school of experience
lb thronged with unwilling scholars.
A burn I M I nilt1 ncaa,
'lam Ika Talk Trikuaa,
Tha ahsnt-mlii14 profeaaor, fa
vorite of Hi huniorlata, Is familiar
lit ua all. Ilia stranse mlaadvanliiraa,
his lumblaa Info rval hoa, hi loco
motive dimruliiaa as ha walk with
ona font in lha guitar, his ua of hi
can for an umbrella, and ao on
ell lliaae ara the raw material of
lha Jokaamlthe.
Hut real voiia, tioftever anaant-
mimled. wa are t"ll. are navar ao
aberrant. No 7 What shall ha mM,
than, of t'harlaa Kriidali of foal
Kennafty, I'm., who Ih 'other nay
took hla bahy alrl on a trip la Phlla-
drluhla. and whan ha aot off lha
return train li-ft hr hoard? Il
could ha foraatT The child se ob
Vlnualy not dnlna hr vm al duly.
Without atopplna to aiplor
poaailila connection lewen M
KrulHk'e asparlenre and lha f.ic
thai he had Just hran in I'hllaiial
lilila, Irt us onslilrr lha fuaa of
Hnymoiwl tlcntlay, racnlly riorld
from (imiiha, Thl amllaman wa
to ha marrlnd III nthar day, To
suard aaalnat hla weaknraa ha kept
avlnff "wedding, weddlna, lo him
aelf a he prepared for lha cere
mony Hut setting out for Ih
church ha ram lo another rhurc
whare a wanning waa In profraaa.
Mechanically h turned In, look
hla liIhi anions the auaela, wall
hroiiah tha ceremony, cor.aratu
luted ih happy couple and than r
turned home. It la iiiaaaant lo rea
that lila bride, a young woman of
flrnt character, Instead of falnttn
presently arrived with a miniate
ind a aacond marrlaae occurred.
Tha aheent-mlnded prnfeaefir of
fiction eurtly ha hla rival In real
lire,
Ttifl Douhln Ntaudard.
rmm Ika Hotky Mountain Nam.
A young nmn of a noted family
on hot ti aide of Ih house In poll
tu t and fltmnce, hut of little account
hy himself, la In the llmHIaht h
reason of claim made on him on Ih
'a nf hla marrluaa lo a dnushter of
another noted family. The third
party In tha affair balona to a dlf
fnrent order of society, posing aa
dancer. The affairs or trie young
man and tha aacond woman In ih
ens ar of Utile moment. What the
aru-loloftlcal student may he Inter
ested In la tha position of Ih bride
to-be, Nh naa bean told of the
"scandal." It Is of no Interest lo
her. The person of the third parly
i out nr her sphere, Why should
ah bother? It la not har affair. No
doubt Ih yoiinc man will pay up
thl I required of him by (he
uaaaea Of nrlnly.
Jlvrs lha sex evr, plea, and
what would happen T What would
tha male aayT The "douhl stand
ard of morale" would oom to
pmy. The young man would loaa
caste forever If he failed to de
nounce and renounce.
Home aood people Ilk Mr. Bryan
would aoniien in "double standard
by law. Mr. Bryan cam very close
to creating a double standard In
money on a legally denned basis,
us will nnd It much harder to
bring about by law a final standard
of morality ao long a on party to
in nargain appear to he Indifferent
and In many cases willing that the
anubie standard prevail aa a pro
taction to society even though her
ax may nave to bear the greater
part or tne responsibility.
ar alwaya lha ninvir. Hj'k r'lnn
would find tiimeelf a ba. b number'
In a a roup .f oy of Ihia day and
saneration. Tne wonaer is not, mat
no EmiMirlaj bora war found ready
to parade with their dae, but that
a raiinv authority on biUh rliar
attar ahould have Ihoushl iney
would be, ,
A Dream oj The Arctic
BOBBED HAIR AND HOLY WRIT.
"The chief sufferers from the dtwippearance ef
Whbad hair will btha lrgymn. Uefure Kr.g they
may be driven bak t the duuae.l practice af finding
tpu- for tliacttitr in Holy Writ,' tatitentteuoly re
mark the New York T'aiat, And In ll.ily rU tr.tr
will And the tirtgl ef arfumanls ,-iht butted
kir, it, Paul, rmng Ia tha brethren and ntt
at t'anmh, diaveuts t at m length ier4'ni th
tapir, II fartlslaf'y aj'lnd that ew.a d
ua.-er ia fhimK "Nr. If a . be aet
ered.x U edjitred la. "Ut Vf ale be shwrai but if
U ba shame far t wemaa I be hrn or XaH, Ut
ktt U r4. . . Rat If a he lat
balr, It U a fiery t kn M fc K. I g v br
fr tattrtftf . Yh. kw that tb l4t (
4 -
PERILS OF DISORGANIZED ACTION.
A clear note of sanity arises above the ruck of
tha transportation struggle. It Is the voice of W. G.
Lee, president of the Brotherhood of Trainmen, or
dering Santa Fe railroad workers to return to their
duties. He says:
"We are in full sympathy with the shopmen's
strike, but I will not pass authority to strike on to
Individual members or local committees in any case.
I am instating that all walkouts be conducted in an
orderly manner and not picce-meal and that the con
stitution and general rules of our organization be
lived up to."
There is the true spirit of collective action.
Unionism does not propejly consist of isolated groups
acting on their individual initiative, but requires joint
action under the counsel and orders of the chosen
leaders. Responsibility ran not rightfully be shifted
or avoided. Irresponsibility is not only a menace to
the public, but to unionism as well.
If labor organisations were to be destroyed, the
natural outcome would be just such sporadic and
unconsidered deeds as those threatened by local
walkouta of the brotherhood members. It Is for the
beat interests of all employe ra, employes and (he
whole public that Industry should be conducted on an
organised basis and not on the plan of guerilla
warfare.
Spaniards near Barcelona are being driven from
home by locust. In th Philippines th natives ar
being taught to eat them. Shows tha difference in
civilisation,
The Boston Transcript is worried for fear Massa
chusetts will have to burn sft real thl winter. Out
here folks are wondering if they ar to have even
soft coal
A cackling goe saved Rome, and a bleating
sheep betrayed ta alleged thieve. There a ton
bHtion her somehre, but It U iut y to Wat.
Th Urge investor In railway curiti are tak
ing an interval in the situation, whi.h may help ",
Ttt f r today " hat shall It prvftt a man it
ta the world, at4 ! h en mul!
The wr may b over, but U eviwe still .
On Stcond Thought
"- ht m, . ttirin -
kuar at tk himim mta4 ittt
The Auto Honk and the Mon.
Fram tha St. Louis Oloke-Pamoiirat.
There are few part of th world
nere tne automobile') now un
known, but nowhere haa Ita utility
been put to a mora startllna demon
stration than near Kakuru, th lit
or tn now Uaaln Ulshu railroad, In
Africa, Here It wa provtd by a
tew that th toot of an automobile
horn will nut to rout a trouna of
nann-nuniing nons. wnen several
lion attacked th oxen of two na
tive driver, a motorist, turning a
curv in the road, oundel hi horn
Th result, told In a dlaootch from
Nulrobl, Kenya colony, I Interesting
'cmuim in um ini'iii nnuioKics, me
I Inns paused for a moment In amaze
ment, then untied In a roar of Hark
(ear and took to the bush.
It doe not follow that tha llnna
in the vicinity of Kakuru are char
acrerizea by a tlm Id Iv not lo ba
found In other of their apeulei, nor
will lions generally loss their repu
tation or upremacy over the animal
kingdom because of the unbecoming
cowardice of a few of their number.
On the contrary, the Kakuru llona
wero Inspired by a justifiable' trepi
dation, and their abrupt Alan! de
notes a preience of mind tht la
evldenc of exceptional animal Intel
ligence Automobile fatalities have
becom so frequent, and the belief
of automobile driver In the survival
of the fittest o evident, j that the
toot of the automobile horn has
com to have much the aame effect
on the human pedestrian.' At the
sound, which Is often more of a
throat than a warnlnp, those who
prize Ufa highly and ara without anl-
cldnl Intent are seen to Jump, dodge,
catapult and scatter tn every direc
tion. "
And It Is not surorlslnc that tha
sound of the motor horn, often
alHrmlng to the most nervclexa
human being, strike Urror Into th
heart of th king of beasts, though
he la unfearful of the moat terrify
ing cries of wikt creatures that haunt
th African Jungle.
Ileal Republicanism,
rm th Marina Slar.
In a recent letter written for pub
lication President Harding aald: "We
ask no favor, but we do halleva In
American senilis and canai-ltv under
equal opportunity."
inst la good republican doctrine.
It may welt ba lifted out of tha ahln
subsidy connection In which Mr,
Harding used It and annlled to the
tariff policy, HUunoh republicans of
th old school tiled tn make us of
auch phraaea to Justify lha tempo
rary Imposition of high tariff duties.
must protect our Infant tndua-
trie" an Ul they. "Out when lha
tariff hta aerved Its pur no and our
iiiuuairtea ar alie in make their
way, ihn "we ak no f ivora, but we
do believe In American genius and
capacity under equal f nrenvnt "
te'ua if hla prula tn party lr
ditliMia, 1'ieal tent lUrriing ahould b
gratified t have railed l hi alta-
I tin tha fart thai lie haa bhraaed
htlipUy i na of the primary 4.HUtna i
cf rpuhluentm, j
T1m hattc tn tW !
r ia t Mia
ilium Allen hue ha mad lha
dtevuttiV thai there are thm In :
lha rv !! v f th niixlarn bay of
huh h tnriil Ilia Uia.lU
ion riiit iiih Ih Isaac f hi
htan fvr ri-urih t July parad t
hv nh tia at l'iiitt. Kit.
uti a frit l. i4rd ia inir
h h.i ih Uii eanihae d
rutin ,,ia n in lha .H'(ta
ef t iitatmei,het tttut a4
fh!t .tKf, a-M a wnt ea
j- lje I 4t
Hot t th t'teaenl day
any M lnt(ai hX g'1 f'ah. ,
ln lt;ua 1 ei't saint m'xg hi !
4r4 eii flltlHg lvh ds :
hate dliit4 l ta i)il !
r li..ste,. T tt '
!, it I vi nteehahKal IhlKit 1
It !..' at t i 4 Mk- -
ia nh anaieaa lliitrkt, 4 j
ba H-'t ifMiitK', t thi:
A t'elil"N t iim aaC
rraia ika h '! riiy Sue,
Itarly doe thl nipprgo In
for atyla predictions, but II em
likely lhal. unleae rti miner gel
to diaalng coal pretty oon, ihare
going gin b an awful rag In old-
faahtnned flannel nightgown along
about Ih laat .of November.
Pangce In II l Air.
rram lha Tnra Karksns Mllensl Stank,
Turk,
Although Ih calendar annnuneaa
tha preaence of summer, a large aec.
Hon of humanity la Indulging In lha
llm-hnnorei sport nf easting on
thin Ice, Thl I a dangerous epnrl
even In ''ro" weather, but In a
seaann when "hoi air" I being man
ufactured In nullllcal, financial, labor
and social circle, at hih preaaiir
speed. Ih port reslly rnjnie under
Ih caption or "daigrnuf nccupa
Hon," and call for a word of
caution,
Kver since Kamaon of early blbll
ral fame slew hi big bunch of
enemies with the "Jaw bone" be ha
had a host of Imitators with a par
tiality for his weapon of orTenae,
Tbea "Jaw bon" leader eeem lo
hava overlooked lha fact that Ham
ann'g strength wss In tha disorient
prop of "alfalfa" which crowned hla
head, and not In thai auppoaed head
or home of "gray matter," lie did,
It la Iru. hav on "ahort-hnlred"
victory when, pulling down th
temple, h destroyed msny etiemle.
flut Harrison's own esllmal of the
real and continuing value of thl
victory w nvr rernrdad. eceu,
after lha vlclorv, there wa not
enouah left of Hamaon lo espresa
an opinion on any eubjeet tie sim
ply wnan't anything, anywnere.
Modern "Hamnn" have bean work
ing overtime, Abuse of every old In
stituting of every time-proved form
of government, or everv rarseeing,
honest-feeling leader, hv com
from all section of th people
soma heretofore etauncn nrrennera
of law and order and th reaped
dua la legally constituted authority,
I It not lime tn give hot talk a
holiday? Terrible problem ar
presalng for a ssna and sober
minded solution. They ar slowly
hut surely being solved. Can w
not hold Idle end crime-provoking
talk In check!
Idle talk, Intemperate criticism,
dropped fire on an unbalanced mind
In IMS. and Lincoln's Ufa paid th
price: frhllah and abusive talk In
Waahlngton, about patronage, flred
a half-crasad mind and Oarfleld'a
life paid the penalty; anarchistic
and liiwleas talk Inspired another
weakling," and McKlnley was
killed. Such talk nearly cost the
life of Roosevelt, The mayor of on
of our largest cities lost hi llf to
another "wrecker" Inspired to the
act hy th violent talk of men of
Intelligence. '
lan't It time to stop, look and ll-
ten, and glv hot lr treason talk u
holiday T
r rMM I 'a Kew tes Ttmee-
After returning from hia ueca
ful polar teditin. Adniliel I'eary
Iniriaid lilinaelf In aviation and
drew uu Plana for Arctic esplora
Mini by airplane. II showed by
dlagrama how a baaa rould be mad
at hla old winter nuartera for flighta
lo Wransel (aland and North Tape
aa well a I" lha pole. I'eary con
aulted with Itoald Amundaen, and It
aa the a.linlrafa encouragement
that decided lha Norwegian asplorer
in lak an airplane with him on lha
Maud lo make aura or attaining ma
North Tola en hla drift eaat through
the Aiitfc ocean. In lha National
fleoaranhltf Mussina for August
Villi lalmur Kief,.naon make a long
afrld forward In speculation when
ha illsviiaaee the Arctic aa an air
rout of lha future for travelere aa
dlallnaulahed from esplorer. II
predlcta:
Tha Arelln will hecom a favor,
lie air rout' between th conti
nent, at least at certain aeaanns
eater, nior comfortable and
cnneiating of mm h shorter "hopa"
limn any other air rout that He
Mcroaa tha oceans that aeparat
th present -day renter of popul
imn. Htafanseon doe not Aspect to
make many convert at Aral. He
eaya: "As in now rar in in rutur
that period Ilea, our estimate direr
according tn our t. m paramenia."
II haa lived for years at a tlm In
Ih Arc! In Cirri wilh th Eskimos.
anting their food nnd living their
life There la an untenable preju
dice, lie Inalais, againat the far
north. Tha Arctlo region, h save,
has a summer climate aulted to' fly
ing, On I tmpreaeed when re
minded that high temperature have
been recorded In that part of the
world 100 degree In th ahad by
th United Ntalee weather bureau
at Kort Vukon, north of th Arctlo
Circle: ,
No thoughtful person will,
therefor, suppoae that tranapolar
glr Journey will In summer ba
Intei fared with by low tempera
luraa. N!(hr Will It be uncom
fortable herauaa ef eslreme heal,
for that ran alwavo b regulated
by th alrelilp'e rlaing high nough
Into a cooler air.
A skepild ml til euapeel ih writer
of having a roguleh twlnkl In ht
aya, hut ha la quit aarlnua. II doe a
admit lhal Ih polar reglona "are
given lo summer fga,M but they lie
over the a-aan, and the aeronaut
would navigate "In lha clear sun-
light abnv lhm." Of storm h
ay nnthing. but ti enuld put Ih
queallo) by and quota Mai. It. Carr,
Ir acnut of rlliaekleton'e Queat, who,
returning lo London, aaa that "very
few people realne how mild lha Arc
tic and Antarctic eummera really
are." Major Carr teatines: "During
Ih aeeen ka wa were In the
(Antarctic) Ice Ih Inweat tempera
lur recorded wa I degrees r'shren
hall, and lha average waa approsl
melely 1 decrees. Th wind aver
age waa eight lo I a mile an hour,
and Ih lr and aky were wonder
fully clear." About th earn lain
peratur war reported by I'eary el
lha North I'ole. Travelers In furs
could, therefore, endure flights
Ihrough th polar region In lha
most element seaaon of tha year.
Hut could lhav count on halcyon
weather? Wtefinsaon lias no doubt
"In the summer aeaaon, at leaat,"
he says, "It will ba thought an ab
surdity for Ihoee In a hurry tn go
from England to Japan by way nf
either New York or Montreal. They
will fly by way of th North Cape
of Norway and Nnveva Kemlya."
The distance through Montreal and
Vancouver and "by tha northerly
steamer rout along the Aleutian
aland to Japan." I 1 1,000 miles,
'hut the distance from a railway
terminus t til north of Great Brit
ain lo Ih north end of Japan
proper, where railway travel could
b again reiumed. I by air rout
only 4.S40 ml lea." And there would
! so miicti daylight on th Arctic
air rotil! Th explorer naively says:
"If you get Into trouble you would
rather that It happened In daylight
then in darknrae." He telle hie
CENTER SHOTS.
If treat Kuropa a badly It
may not Invite us lo It nest sr.
Muskegon Chronicle,
llaa rould help the mnvlea by
atopping all lha fat people from an
ting In end scale. Jacksonville
Journal,
"Mumorphnie" ie a big word,
but you'll understand It If you read
a novel and then e it at-reen ter
ion of It. Greenville J'ledmont.
William Allen White's next book
may b entitled "The Igal Adven
luree of Henry and Me, "Charles
ton foal.
Our nest step, w auppoaa, will ba
lo aak tlreat Itrltaln lo cine th
bare on He ehlp o that Mr, Iaakr
tin may hav a monopoly. Colum
bia It ord.
"Dream and ambltlona ar seal
lent things to have If you don't
reads thm," safe g writer. Thtn
moat of ii are thrice blessed.
Wheeling Intelligencer.
readere that "there wuld b a re,
aonable certainly" of landing on
"aubelantlal cakes nf lea!"
A map Illustrates th article to
prove how many short rule could be
made by air arm the arciio epaoee
Krom Point Harrow by way of
Wrangel (aland lo nnrtheaatern fl
bene la only l.r4l miles, with no
very long "hops." Hpll.hergan,
wher there la now, or will soon be,
a iinimr hotel, rould be reached
front th mouth of tha Mackentie In
northern Canada hy nighla to I'rlnre
ratrlck Island, tirant Land and
Ureenland; and tn on lo North Cap
and Pelrograd. "A Ih center of
population continue to mov north
In Canada and Hiberla, th Import
ance of the Iransnolar air route will
correapondlngly Inrrea." But
nrat must com th air lravl In
fmlllar and attractive part. Arctlo
flying for business and plessur
aaem rernole.
A Progressive Campaign. '
Nemaha County Itepubllean (Auhurn).
it is a rener to note mat the aver
age American cltlsen Is becoming
much more of an Independent
thinker than he was a few years
ago. We used to pick up a news
paper and read where some politi
cal aspirant had made a direct at
tack on hla opponent, and accusod
mm or many things which he may
have done In either public or pri
vate life, and we said that that man
I not a fit subject for public
ofllc. Th old machine politic
newspapers paddled thl claea of
'dope" auccesafully, but the Ameri
can people have outgrown thle class
of what w might call "political
bunk."
Dtructlv criticism no longer
hs any weight with th thinking
public. What we ar look for to
day la constructive criticism. The
man who can build better than tho
other man I good, but the man who
ear down everything In hi oath
before he start to build might make
good publio official and ha might
not.
Not only In Political line, but In
the every day walk nf life, the
earn thing will apply. Th city and
community which gain th most Is
the city apd community that work
In harmony and unison for tha up- I
nunning ana advancement of the
community a a whole,
The School Bootlegger.
From th 1,0 An(ls Tlmea.
The superintendents of publio In-
tructlon ar starting out after boot.
lnggera who are snld to bo specialis
ing In the sale of Illicit hootch to the
uplls of high schools In the larger
Itieg. Thl I the most-Infamous
typ of offender. Traftlo with old
tlm souses and sports waa to have
been expected, but th outlaws who
would aupply poisonous contraband
to the untrained palate of the young
should hav little mercy shown
them. Th fact that a thing la for
bidden makes It appealing, to cer
tain unfledged souls. Those who
would create a rising generation of
lawbreaker merit tha full pressure
of the law with which they cope.
THC VAtOC Ol VI NO STORK
Open for (Business
onday
M
M
ornmg
Not being able to have our losses adjusted in time, to an
nounce in the Sunday papers, we are unable at this time to
give the date of our CLEARANCE SALE of goods damaged
by fire Thursday.' evening, August 10th.
While our August Furniture Sale is still in progress, we are
filling all orders from our two large warehouses at 8th and
Farnam and 12th and Howard streets, where there was no
fire, and everything is in first-class condition and in perfect
working order. .
r
It fey to Read Bewea's A!.
ITOtB"
Howard St., Bctvecn 1 5th and 16th
Have the Metropolitan Vast k. Storage Co. Move You
FREE! FREE! FREE!
Thursday, August 31, at 8 P. M.
We will give away absolutely free ea eight-piece Italian Walnut Dining Room Suite
and 57 other useful household articles. Come In' and ask about it. No purchase
required.
I : ; :
II 1
on
Pianos
A Run
Kimball
MONDAY,
Aug. Ut
Is Kimball
Day
Following
Real Snaps
Go on Sale
Rl Kimball PUnoa
Re1ud ( MIS
Kimball Product Pianos
4 free JTI
TIN POllAR MONTHLY PAYMENTS
Caaae early 4 l tk tkU ef daalrad. Y
, It U a HliU tat, tag w ae kaaJUel
it ia ?4.
Itlospe (Jo.
$315
$395
ISIS DMlatStre
Th A't Stuiit Shtt
Your Wife and
Your Insurance
It 3 your
ia.ara.ee.
duty te iasure yeur
Te charge year wife wtta ike
kurdest ef kaadliag a large sum
ef aaeaey le la most lasteaaee te
tkrust uinta asattdly, e
duty for wWUe ska k kd little
tralalag. Tkat' a reeaea wky
laserease aaeaey is gaaa le ereul
fa year, la tk ar sat.
frelaet yeee wife ead family ky
Life latvreaee Treil eedae
wki.k we will refelly la.
Ike trie (pel k it iatatt
ead M lasaeaa ead yria
ial if daairad, el fulr iate.
U ! k WaaafUiary,
Aik Owe Ttetl Of (.
?ffWL Wrtfcfc 'FW ML I