Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1922)
THE OMAHA HEE: WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1922. THE MORNING BEE MORNING EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY NELSON B. U'DIKL, Pablitnar. li. BHEWJlH, Qtn. Ma(er, MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED MESS Tfct imttiri Tim of ttrk la Baa I a mtmtm. I eilalnlr anUtlwt I u m fif r,ial)Urai. of all uv 4t,i4icb erdMt to u of e4 oUicrwlM cMtitMj Hi Hut elr, end ale. u. loral ni iuliiiliMt aetata. Ail lijticj ol r.itbiwiluii of w diuwurliea era elw rwnid. BEE TELEPHONES Private Branrli Earhsnge. A,k for tae Department AT Untie or I'onoo Wanted. Kor Night Call Altar It if, M. 1nnn Mltoml Department. ATlantio 1021 or 1041. Iuuu OFFICES Main Offiee 17th and Fematn Co. Bluffi .... it beoii Bt. Do. Hid, N. W. Cor. lilb and N Now Yurk-28 Fifth At.ou. WKblngtoa 42!l Star Bid. CMrese ... 1720 8tfr Bldf. Feria, i ranee 420 liua lit. Honor THE FARMER'S FUTURE. America feeds the world that'i m boast. Soon America may have all that it can do to feed Its own rapidly growing population. There are still large export of foodstuffs, but the point it overlooked that Imports of agricultural products into the United States from other countries are also large. As a matter of fact, in the year immediately preceding the world war the United States bought $45,000,000 worth of food more than it sold. The war demand from Europe brought better price and encouraged a large increase, in production, but gradually the amount of export food Is (dipping bark. What chance will the farmer have in the years to come? This question, so vital to America's greatest industry, is answered in a striking way by Robert J. McFall in Farm Life. As the head of thi! department of rural economics in Mansachu set.ls Agricultural college he speukx with some au thority. And his reply is that our increasing in dustrial population will require a larger and larger proportion of the domestic food supply until there will be no need of seeking a foreign market for any part of the harvest. In his own words: "The time 1m certainly nt ha ml when this na tion will eut us much noil u It produces. Any further Increase In demand which will surely como with enlarging Industry and expanding city popula tions will give our farmers a better market for their products. It Is very unlikely that the numbers of iiiilc cnai-:c.J in farming will IncrciHe as rapidly as will the national population. We know that the enlargement of our good farming area has Its limitations. The possibilities of imports of food stuffs are fully as limited. Other nations are shend of us in looking for outside food sources, and these outside sources are limited. In other words, tlio ilimriinl for homo-produced food is almost certain to lend to expand foster than the supply. That Is a happier outlook for the. farm ers than for the city people. "No amount of increase of demand will make every farmer prosperous, nor will It make good crops and high prices every year. There will always be some who fail to succeed. Year In and year out, however, the progressive farmers should be Kind Jn thw future that they did not give up the land. Their huHlness chances should be fully as good as the city man's. One thing, however, American agriculture must learn: If this nation Is going to eat more food than It produces, the first Job of our farmers Is to study the home market. The reel demand for our food will not be In foreign trade. Home consumption will be the demand to which the farm will cater and those who study this home demand most carefully will reap the best profits." Fossibly some changes in agriculture will be necessitated by the coming of this condition. More q some products and less of others may have to be raised. The big fact of the farmer's opportunity, however, lies in the increasing home demand. Em ployment in tho cities at good wages may mean a market for the farmer much nearer and better than any he has been able to find abroad. In the past the existence of a surplus which must find an out let in an unfavorable world market has forced prices down to ruinous levels. A balancing of home supply and demand spells profit for the agriculture of the future. WHEN THE BRITISHER GOES TO VOTE. An election is being held in England today, on the turn of which is to depend certain great issues that are vital to the country. Guesses as to the outcome arc a waste of time, unless one is fond of speculating on what sort of verdict the jury will bring in. Some of the features of the election are inter esting to Americans, who have just gone through a rather stimulating election. For example, the in nate gallantry of the Englishman is shown in the way Lady Nancy Astor is being treated. Lady Nancy made a good member for her district, but she has won the disapproval of the liquor interests. So they have dubbed hor 'Pussyfoot,' in derision comparing her to Mr. Johnson, who had an eye knocked out by a playful London mob. Toetic jus tice requires a triumph for Lady Nancy, but jus tice isn't always poetic. Another show that will interest Yankees is the fair play that was accorded Winston Churchill at Dundee. The late minister for colonies got up from a sick bed to address his constituents, but the genial opposition stormed the hall, routed his ad herents and broke up the meeting, refusing to let Mr. Churchill speak. A distinguished triumph for free government. However, the policy in England is to let the oppo sition alwayi go as fsr as it can, and the radicals will be welce-me to any victory they win at the polls. Hooliganism is a fair match for seme of the doing that have subjected Americans to criticism, and en that score matters are 50-50. Should the rontervstivet win in the face of the situation as it has developed, It will be because the people of Eng land want thim In power. will probably be worth a million dollars to the man agementbut will sing when her turn comes. There will be no Ganna Walska, nor any Lucicn Murstore, to cloud the sky for Mary, who admits she is thirty pounds lighter than she used to be, and so should do her stuff with verve. In some glad future time grand opera will be a national institution, and all the people will have a chance to hear it, not by radio, but from the singers in presence. It is expensive now, yet as the art im pulse grows, and it is growing, a way will bo found to bring music and the big singers to the multitude who now read about them. HIGH NOTES FOR AMERICANS. They art off again in both New York and Chi cago, the grand opera sesion having opened on Mondsy in the Metropolitan and Auditorium house, with the customary eclat and all that sort of thing, What will pam the average cititcn, who uua!ly it a sincere lover of muU-, is that the rtju'ru paid first attention t. the t!ax ft ji In the Voxts. When America (' thai tha "diamond fcerwehe Is a matter of secondary consideration, epr will rem raui'ft. lutrtr the pla.-a it shoutt have In wr national life). la New York Jsmia eiraln was the a'rofse. This level Italian org Mrd, a hut w. 14 ta sikif the putdie duwa around Manhattan l-r. f Gra!4 tartar, emphsif .1 her sprewaey ay repeat"1 1t '3 triumph la "TaKa." The rl a eosilfJ .! I "tierry," r-tit vu v personal fpv!ar, gwes with thnt, an I the !'' Ihi ef rsrisf sunt 1 1 the hot tern a!n ' her lie a'alra, eeaM-V.'e wt4 ay ten THt"?, Jsritia we a4 U an I !.' wU e la fi.iHn la lakeft la ? IUe, l" I Omasa ei Me la ttealf a't a ana, inl ha life af Alda M aha has tWaa he f era. Msry (ar ! Is sVsl Jfrti laa eeajfaav la year vaWt NEBRASKA LAWS UPHELD. Tho supreme court of the United States put the teal of its approval on the Nebraska statute which makes the initial carrier respoimible for damages to shipments. In the cose passed upon, which is but one of many that have been heard in thq state courts, the shipment affected was one of live stock, the defendunt railroad company seeking to shift part if not all the responsibility to the terminal company, A decision in favor of tho shipper is sustained by the supreme court, which holds the law to be constitutional, excepting the provision which allowed counsel fees for the plaintiff's attor neys. It is probable the effect of this decision will bo a prompter adjustment of reasonable claims for damage. Live stock shippers have hud tho moat occasion to complain, claims arising from loss in transit having been resisted by the initial carrier on the ground of its assertion of divided responsi bility. Elimination of counsel fees will remove a portion of the penulty imposed on the railroads for failing to move with due speed In settling claims, but the fact that the law is sustained will do away with appeal in cases that have been resisted because of doubt on this point. The "embattled farmers" of Nebraska have won another victory, and will probably reap its benefit in Improved conditions for shipping. The railroads will find it easy to comply with the law, now that the point at dispute is settled, and relations' with the public will be better for the removal of a cause of disagreement TAKE UP THE OLD, OLD PROBLEM. Here we arc aguin, with winter coming on, and very soon Omnha folks will be greeted with the never-ending shower of soot. Smokestacks and chimneys all over town will belch forth huge vol umes of dense black smoke, obscuring the sky, pol luting the air, and wasting money. Every wisp of smoke that makes its way into the atmosphere is a proof of waste, for it carries out some part of the fuel that is combustible. Many big plants are equipped with furnaces that consume the fuel, and produce almost no smoke. The secret of perfect combustion is a simple one merely give the fire sufficient air that the gasscs liberated from the coal may be oxydissed, and they will burn. A properly constructed furnace not only burns the fuel, but it saves money. An average of more than half the heat possibilities of coal goes up the chimney when the ordinary furnace or stove is used. Careful firing may prevent this for it is pos sible to so manage as to prevent much waste, but very few take that trouble. A few years ago Omaha had a smoke ordinance, and it was jealously, enforced. The war disrupted this, as it did a great many other features of city life. Even yet the fuel situation is such that less attention is paid to quality and more to quantity. Yet it might not be a bad Idea to resume the vig ilance that did bring some results in the way of suppressing the smoke nuisance. We know that a smoky town is a busy town, but it may be a busy town and a practically smokeless one. Watch the stacks at the power house of the Nebraska Power company, where close to COO tons of coal a day are turned into electricity, or the stacks of the Minnc Lusa pumping station, an other of the city's biggest coal consumers, and see how little smoke there is along with the great fires there roaring. Smoke is not only a nuisance, it is a costly waste. GOLD STARS FOR THE GIRLS. A belated but commenduble move is under way to provido a memorial for the American girls whose lives went out during the war. One hundred and sixty-one names are on the list compiled by the Women's Overseas Service league at its Chicago hetfdquarters. Miss Helen C. Courtenay, who or iginated the memorial idea and assisted in compiling the liiit, says : "There Is a handsome hronse tablet In the Army and Navy building in Washington, memorializing tho muhs and horses who died In the war, but nowhere in Washington is there to be found a rec ord of the women who died except army nurses until we compiled it.' Under the soil of France, in China, Siberia, Armenia, England and at the bottom of the sea, these girls await the reveille that will sound for them as truly as it will for any boy who wore tho khaki. Not for these girls the glamour of battle, the onthrust of marching armies, the stimulus of the charge over the top. They waited back of the lines, doing the drudgery, sustained the strain, soothing the misery, watching the dying, coaxing the maimed back to life and courage, bearing a burden those who merely battled knew nothing of. Theirs was a glorious contribution to tha vic tory, a work that none but the brave and blithe, tha worth while girls could accomplish. If the recognition of their work has not been accorded, it may be for (he reason that these same girls are now carrying on as they did before the war, a little more earnest, a little more sober, but as true and modest a before they were caught up and twirled in the awful mseNtrom. Those who are living merit a salute frum every cititcn; thot who ar dead at least should have a gold star. A few days at; the Iowa read department iut out a rhapsody written by an Omsha rrporter who had driven ovrr a few mtl f .a highway, Wan der If th will t alongside lhi th JUpaUh from Iwa City telling 4t hundred at ran ilu. k in tha mj en the way to a football matt. a. it From State and Nation" Editorials from other newspapers Central Terihing note tat tha peupU aut aniioaa to etraitiat TuiVr are a'o the tnt fUmuru fur redueiiun ef the aimy. The ! thtnr dj Hot go together ery well. Cttorfe CUmenreatt I ' t America. Htra he u rlnl a weU-e quit a warm hut ery d.nVreM fran aecrd4 M ('.rfei Car. etief Irr the faana 4f 'tH time in ti a.t.ty, SV I i. d lua't I a tt ue. . tt M, Jj.t a ..' la ( the are t t a ioe.ig mil tt iut te ' U'e Umei-tf ' (tter eg at A Memorial Hospital, from lb Nbrika 1. 11 I'ri. Clay Center, Kan., has Solved tha problem of what It should erect as a suitable mi-innrliil to the men who it km I In tint Krcnt war. Out of the Kreat rim km of austceNtlnriH him been evolved one clear cut. workable plan, wnich Is to be carried out. flay Center Is to build tl hospital, through elty ami county aid, this -iint btillilinii nnd equipment to Mland as a monument to exservloe m-n. Inn't that shout as approprltn a memorial ss nny county cool. build for the soldiers who fell in the (treat war, for the soldiers who lout health ami hope In the great war, and for thoim who came lurk only to become poMslirilsls anil cynic? Otoe county could do nothing bet ter, w think, than to ill mti this (.'lay Center plan. It looks mighty Rood. It Is a feiiRlhlu plan, not too expensive, and tha fulfillment of which would be of lusting good to the entire community. The Menace of a New World War. From th Mlnnmoi Star. Among tlin factors contributing to ward the out break of a new world war Is the Turkish situation, I he rlxe of the faeclml In Daly and elsewhere with their Insnns nationalism and lin perlallsm, and Insoluble Herman rep aration question In relation to tho ob durate and plllleas attltudn of France, and the rernorseleas rivalry between France and England. If civilization runs the gnunllet of all these and ether present acute situations, It will bo extremely fortunalo. This Immediate danger recalls the statements mads by t'rofensor Hodrty of Cambridge university, Kngland. about a year ago. l'rofessor Hoddy said that wur Inversions and rilm'ov- erlps since the world war had made war mo potentially destructive that the next world war might wipe) out civili zation. Not only hud there been enormous "advances In the uso of explosives and airplanes, but also In credible discoveries In this use of poison gases and the spreading of dis ease germs. It Is time to begin to develop In America a sentiment abso lutely set against any American con nections whatever with Kuropean troubles. Fewer Horseshoes. From the WnnhlnKtun Hi nr. When tho automobile first came Into practical use some enthusiasts predicted that the "horseless age" was at hand, that soon man's four- footed friend and aid would pass. But motor cars have been In sarvloe Increasingly now for about 25 years since the first practical Introduction, and the home Is still here. lie is at work on the farms, he Is seen often on the country roads and occasionally in town hauling the lighter loads, and rarely drawing the carrlugea of those who have a prejudice against gasoline motive power and a fondness for leis urely transport. Partisans of the horse refuse to admit that there Is any possibility of his complete disap pearance from the service of man. Yet there Is no doubt that tho use of horses Is decreasing. The census bureau has Just furnlHhed evidence. It appears from the official census re ports that from l'Jli to 1'jH the num ber of establishments manufacturing horseshoes In the United Plates do creased from 20 to 12, and the num ber of persons engaged In the plants dropped from 919 to 300, and the value of products turned out fell from $3, 367,000 to $1,931,812. During the past few years there has been a revival of the old game of quoits all through this country, but instead of the old style saucer-shaped disc of Iron with a hole In the center horseshoes are used. Many thou sands of these shoes of standard pat tern and weight aro now being thrown, 'north and south, east and west. They must have como from the big horseshoe mills unles stey were forged by thu village blacksmith. But pitching horst shoes do not. wear out like those worn by the .horses, and so the trade, ones supplied, Is not particularly active. Maybe If It were not for the horseshoe game, however, the industry would show a still fur ther depiction than the census figures reveal. Horses will never disappear. They will always be used for service, and the census figures will never show a complete vanishment of the horse shoe Industry. It may bo concentrated finally in the roadside smlthlep, which of late years have been rapidly turn ing into service stations and motor repair shops. The Community Chest. From th I,on AukH'ii Time. The city of Detroit provides most of Its philanthropies tinder the commu nity chest plan, The fund now being raised for next year is 52,350,000. Sub scribers to ths fund are permitted to pay their donations In regular month ly installments If they wish. The dis tribution Is In the hands of a repre sentative board which accords a tear ing to every charity and makes ap propriation for specific purposes. This does away with practically all the drives and obviates a great deal of duplication In benevolence. If a charity Is genuinely meritorious It Is apt to fare better tinder this plan thnn If dependent upon personal appeal. Somt of the prnfcsalonnl rolectors of philanthrophy do not like the Idea, however. It I sot to cut them out of their Jobs. The mayor cf this city Is subscribing $100,000 to the fund. This Is ths heaviest subscription. This Is easy, however, as he was paid something- like $20,000,000 for his Ford stock. The Haute of lion "Use, rrAin the St. t.ou rt-Plrtrh. Onca more th lurking chemical demons ef the underground hv taken a heavy toll from amort the men who lnhor there to pro Id thnee tthova with fuel. The somber usttedy of fpMiifler ! ol I as the inmltif li duetrv. W'.th sll it .rcsri e eu e ) been utml. In to ere, t tive suft-cusrd ssalnst tha stlrn'. tin en and lt. hrrou en.n.v f the rr.nl miner The aworl i f TVmm lr Mill ban. ominmiKl tiver tl l.' l of the nti who nily ui i'h be.it, tt anl.ii ti Ion, II (M a.1 p-'r Oiiiv a fw ilave tfvi the d'ass lr. a eoeonnite ef tnieei ttt fmni New V.tk rrmtm on the con tnmn ef other IVpiKvlvssUt rl vilnere. , Url that "tva are driven tai l. r I IKaiNj etr an t'i .l ms. .hr...l( .trove j hie " Wnia. (time h. ,. l ll.t ( ililv fioet Iheir h ..e a : Iruialitv e.trrai! e to lh i the et'uut.i th I . . t' .. . -. .. i from Kgypt. Mothers dying from ex posure, children starving In hen houses, wi-rn sketched III a high lights of this dnsolata psttorsnm, Tho connection between, and the conclusions from th two tragic sto ries are obvious. The people of tho United Ht ales simply will not much longer permit such treatment to he meted to peoplo who lunor in tne shallow of ilenth to provide an India pettsable necessity of life. We must have coal. Homebody must Initio It. Certain Individuals are willing to per form that dangerous and dirty ti)K. It follows Inexorably Mint they should receive not poor, but tha very beet treatment, Indeed, snd a rate of com pensation compatible with the risk nnd disadvantages of the Job. , 1'rrs Agent. from tha l.nunvllla r'ourlnr-Jnumal. The nnounecment that the Ronar Law ministry wilt sjrlve to get slong without the aid, consent or advice of i press agent Is a retrocession tluit had hardly b"eu expected even from ths reactionary circles of the Carlton elub. If Dr. Iiepew should now re vise his witticism that some men are born great, some achieve greatness nnd some sre born In Ohio, ha would prolmbly substitute for the last clausn the words "some have a press agent." Without his press agent more than one recent president of these United Htates would have lived and died in the vslley where he was born. Neither has effete Kurope been oulti blind to the very useful ofllces of the Intelligent press agent, (if all men whose personality was most drama tized within tho last 30 years two statesmen, one an American, one a Herman, comes vividly to mind, Wll- helm II owed to press agents what ever reputation ho had us "the all- highest." In America, Theodora Koosevelt was tho most press agented president ever known to the country. Homo statesmen are tneir own press agents, (if these Orover Cleveland and Henjamln Harrison are examples. Mr. Wilson Is perhaps the most strik ing representative of the typs of pub Ho man who neither knows how nor wishes to be press agented. From the outset of his career Wood- row Wilson had nara nicg in ms press agents. First, (leorge Harvey undertook the Job and fell down at It. Then a person named tlule tackled the work, and made an execrable mess of It. Later Mr. Tumulty "carried on" feebly till Mr. Wilson left the Whits House, George Creel name nearest to being an effective press agent for Mr. Wilson. Hay Htannard linker In his "The Peace" Is perhaps the-only sort of press agent Mr. Wil son cares to have. Washington had no press agent. Old John Adams would have had one had he lived 10 years longer than he did, liumlltan failed miserably alike In press agentlng himself and In being press- agented, though sycophants plentifully attempted to dramatize him whllo he was alive as they have since he died. Jefferson was adroit In pressngentlng himself, his only rival In the art of American polities being Samuel J. Tllden. Kaoh took counsel of himself. Jtoth engaged In volumlnnds correspondence. Neither employed tho cheap devices and taw dry tricks of later-day politicians. The only press agentlng Andrew Jack son was cupablo of was to thunder from his own or the cannon's mouth what he wished to say, the detonation In each case being equally effective. Certainly the new prlmo minister Is wlso In not striving to outdo Mr. George In dramatizing his own pur poser and work. In going to the other extreme In seeking to be different from lloyd George well, striving to be different from one's predecessor In office Is not always accompanied with success. If lionar Law doubts this, he has but to look toward Washington to be convinced of his error. "The People's . Voice Editorial treat reader el The Mornlnj, Bee, Reader el The Morales Bae ere Invite) t a this celuma frl for eaieBM ea saatter el eulill In tee t. Think This Over. Tt Is always Interesting to note that whllo American business men lead the world in acumen, astuteness and busi ness ability, American government, from the smallest township to the na tion Itself, Is wasteful, extravrtgant nnd careless. Milwaukee Sentinel. When It Is Wise to Hustle. Advice to applicants for a Job: When the business man says, "I'll take the matter under consideration" you should forget all about It, and hustle for a Job elsewhere. New Orleans State. The Good Old I)a. Omaha. To the Kdltor of Tha Omaha Itee: A quite correctly attlrd gentleman walked on a teeming thor oughfare of one of our largest cltlis, A slight odor of brimstone emanated from hi person as ha passed, snd b Heath the toe of his patent leather shoo might faintly be discerned th Una of a cloven hoof. As he passed through the thronged bnslness district two thugs fell suddenly upon a bank messenger, struck him unconscious, seized tha leather money hug he car ried and, springing into a waiting au tomobile, were off. No pretense of a pursuit was made; it was a common occurrence. Farther on, a squad of police were (dubbing Into submission a pair of strike pickets who had Juet demolished the plate glass window of a building and attacked a strike breaker, A glance at the headlines of a newsboy's paper supplied reading which should have been to th gen tleman's taste. Klot, murder, reeking divorce suits, shrieks of reformers, scorching articles and editorials head td "Whet Is Wrong With Human ity? and so on without end. Hut th gentleman with the cloven hoof was 'not pleased. On ths con trary he seemed strangely annoyed and the odor of brimstone became mo mentarily stronger. Huddenly he made. a dash for the subway and thence on down, where he called a meeting of his henchmen. "Get on th Job," he told them. "The newspapers up there say that things are going to the devil, but they don't know what they are talk ing uboul. It's up to your fellows to work up business. Get the world to palling Itself on the hack again and telling Itself that It Is a pretty good old fellow after all. Don't you know that ths moment an Individual, or a nation, or a world begins to ask Itself what Is tha matter with It, It Is on the mend already? There Isn't a sin gle vice tin there that Isn't being brought out Into th limelight right now, from political corruption to movie scandals at Hollywood. Kven th bootleggers have closed up their back door entrance sine bootlegging Is coming to be an accepted method of earning a living. Nobody Is going to the devil up there because they all think that they are. Put the whole lilac buck where It was 0 years or so ago. Tell th reformer that there Isn t anything to reform: that th wod old days have coma back ppnr and that th devil has shut up shop and taken up truck gardening. It I the only way w shall ever keep up our reputation down here. Now get out and hustle." M. T. OOIIMAN. Hmall Town Sluft". niockhawk, H. JJ. To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: The party with sufficient business of hi own to look after has no time to Investigate his neighbors private affairs, People living In the rural communi ties find themselves obliged to guard against the habits of meddling and gossip. Too often the poison In stilled Into a community by gossip ing tongues kicks buck on the origin ator and does as much damage In that direction as by being spread broad cast. Too many people ar more In clined to close the eyes to the good in an action or deed and turn their at tention toward finding out In what way they can misinterpret It Into something weak or wrong. leather than spread a bad .umor why not try to head it off and start something good? The average rural district or small town Is usually bur dened with too many "Dickens Char acters.' How foolish for grownups to allow childish differences to enter Into the dally life an disrupt an otherwise neighborly friendliness; and yet how often It Is done. Too often lovers' quarrels are al lowed to arouse the parental Ire and cause strife and discord. A fond but foolish mother's misdi rected mutchmaklng schemes causa turmoil and hen ruche. I,et the young folks alone to mako their own mutches. They will do It quick enough when the right time and oc casion comes and very, very often do a much better Job than could be ac complished by parental Interference. If more people' would more often get clown on their prayer bones and eJrietiJIy'Sliop in lie'Xearl of Omaha l Sandwiches f Each 10c Each Our sandwiches are made fresh every hour and in some cases while you wait. They are placed in individual oiled paper bags and made out of the very best of foodstuffs. Try Try Coot Liver (You'll like it) Lettuce (Fresh and crisp) Roatt Beef (Choice cuts) Cheeie (Your Selection) Ham (Real Virginia) Salmon (Jied and tasty) Pork (Loin and tender) Sardin (Real ones) With a drink of fresh sweet milk or Creamed Butter milk, they add to the day's pleasure. ones ItUTTIIHAtlLIO llr.0 I V "-""h,'"' oi rif tvr'kiitrUMisM J' , )(.imii.,. I NET AVERAGE CIRCULATION . OCTCRtlt, tl, ( THE OMAHA DEE tun 7-2,ir..T Simla? ...n.i.v. MIWII, Gee,. Me IIMH ROOD, i t., M. e4 tW4 k ht NiimW, 111 H It V. iWi e r Money to Loan on Omaha Real Estate Preterit Interest Rate Charge li 6 Wotta Life! Wotta Life! h rcN -i Ptl lit WL lit 3D. V II 1 e I fiffll seek divine guidance Instead of trust ing entirely to an Imagination warp ed by pettyism and Jealousy, un doubtedly morn fruitful resulls for good would iic'riio, A lit l more of charity allowed to enter Into our daily lives; a little morn of tho milk of human kindness al lowed to filter Into our hearts; and many of Mm petty grlevences of it n over-wrought mlrfd will dlnappear from our lives ami tho sunshine of good fellowship will appear from be hind the clouds of suspicion and dis trust, What one Is, speaks so loud, that what one says one Is can not be h'-nrd. How true Mils Is, and yet how few of us realize the truth. Fortunate Indeed is the man whoso lives his dally life that his actions and not his words proclaim his char acter. W have had a few such men; w have a few now. Wo do not have to delve into past generation to find thm. In fact wo do not hflvn to go outsldo our own state of Nebraska. We ileslre to site as a striking ex ample of s life so lived that all who canto In contact w'lth It were bene fited; Hi late Hon. Moses P. Klnkafd of (he Hixth congressional district of Nebraska, During his twenty odd year of public; eervlca this man was a l.l.i to show his trim worth to those whom be served without shouting it from the house tops, No more strik ing proof can bo given than the fact that his funeral services wer con ducted by Masonic bodies In a Knights oC Columbus hall. It. U CASK. A Book of Today "HOW TRADK AMD JNVKST I STOCKS AND llOMlS." by Wrrfcoff, 'II, n li,zm at Wall Sir..!, publlnliar. Mr. Wyckoff's new book Is filled with Interesting Information and wise suggestions to Investors who seek In telligent advice on mutters of money. It carries the endorsement of men high In finance and la written by an authority. Let Us Install a o In Your Home You Hear Coneetrt Grand Opera Dancer Muaio Faunoue Band and Orchestra Lectures Samson Stortass Market amid Fine natal Reporta - Newe Items Everything the human ear can receive, without moving out of your easy chair. Von en have no Idea of the great cleaant to be derived from and th wonderful educational valve of a Zenith Long Distance Radio Appsrato nU yon "rune In" aad Ustea to what la going ee bandreds at miles away from yoo. Let a espUla th Zenith to yoa la detail and tali you how cheaply w caa install a coesplet eudh In your bona. Th. Pioneer Mutie Hout Sold end IiutalUd by r&.ljosjjv-Glo. Omaha, Neb. ffiniinmiirnniiiiii!! iiiiiiiimiimiiiii ite lite, , aiaa hi nniiiiiiiiiininiinniinimni W ""eaaaeaaeeeaeiU: and all settled H. a.ly H e.irry nn our l.iiMnesi If nothing htt.l l;Attui , , , tut, Cif rotir-i, in much finer manner than ever I'rfure . , , a jiu Hill note, j'it a soon as tu arrive, that our I ew stu.Un it the ititrtt Jirrfcelly ap ' ltitfJ itndU you have rrr been n Trt pmlnje f '! , , , ) so!4 I. -ns; aiting-, t;.-t;e re.-rary t'tl a wry ( w n.innlr ef jour iun, fa 42 van in Omaha fallow. BUk fitta rur Ilia at Ftrtira liraat i t I' W(.H!iatttaa J i.