The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, January 21, 1923, Page 6-A, Image 6

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    The Sunday Bee
MORNING—EVENING—SUNDAY
THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY
NELSON B. UPDIKE, Publi.b.r, B. BREWER, Gen. Mauser.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tbt AooocloUd PrMi of wblrb Tba Bo# to a member, te axclUlvalj
entitled to the um for repuhilcet«oo of ell mi diepetcbee credited to It at
nn* otherwiea credited in this t'arer. end alto the local newe published berets.
Ail rlfbte of reuubhceiloos of our ipaciaJ disrate hoe are aleo reserved.
BEE TELEPHONES
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or Person Wanted. For Nitrht Calls After 10 P. M.: innn
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--ft
OFFICES
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■■■!- - --- --- _ ■—■
JOBS MESSAGE TO MODERN MAN.
The most insensate of men are appealed to by
some quality of the Book of Job. A mystery sur
rounds its origin; until a very recent date scholars
did not undertake to fix either the time or the origin
of the book. For a long time it was supposed not
and the stern reproof by Elihu, with a brief prologue
some other people and incorporated into the writ
ings from which the Bible has been made up be
cause of its majestic beauty and philosophic worth.
I)r. Jastrow has recently suggested that Job was
not written all at once, but was composed at dif
ferent times by different writers, and whit is now
presented as a connected running debate between
Job and his friends, Bildad, Eliphaz and Zophar,
an dthe sfern reprof by Elihu, with a brief prologue
and epilogue, really was a series of writings, wherein
one writer propounded and another answered cer
tain questions involving religious beliefs and as
pirations.
Eliphaz asks, “Can mortal man be more just
thru God?” and Job turns on him and the others
and retorts, “No doubt, ye arc the people, and wis
dom will die with you.” Afflicted and brought low
in body and mind, Job withstands the tests; he
curses most eloquently the day in which he was
born, but answers the argument of his friends:
"Though He slay me, yet will I trust Him.” And
no passage in the Old Testament more firmly sup
ports the believer's faith than
“I know that my Redeemer liveth, and that in
the latter day He shall stand upon this earth.
And t’lbuBh after my skin worms shall destroy this
body, jet In my flesh shall 1 see God. whom I
shall see for myself, and mine eyes shall behold
and not another's."
“Man that is born of woman,” says JcD, “is of
few days and full of trouble.” Yet he does not
question God’s ways, but accepts what is sent in
prosperity or affliction as the dispensation of a
Creator whose ways arc beyond man's scrutiny.
The philosophy, patience and pathos of Job are
proverbial, and his example is noted by many teach
ers for the instruction of men. For, when Job had
justified himself in his own righteousness, and his
elder friends no longer contended with him, Elihu,
the young man, rebuked him and the voice of God
from the whirlwind brought him to understand and
submit to Divine Providence. And, when Job had
dropped the consolation of his self-righteousness
and justified Jehovah rather than Job, it was pos
sible to write the epilogue.
Here is the argument, then: “Is mortal man
more just than God?” Is man to justify himself,
or to try to justify God and sincerely say: “Yea,
though He slay me, yet will I trust Him,” and say
ing so to strive with all his power to keep the favor
of God, admitting that His ways are not within the
understanding of man? Job answers this question
finally:
“I know that Thou eanst do everything, and
thA no thought can be withholden from Thee.
Wherefore, I abhor myself and repent In
dust and ashes.”
Even as little children must men be, coming in
humbleness of heart and without pride of knowl
edge to learn of God and to accept His ways with
out question. The lesson of Job and the teachings
of Jesus are. in line on this point, and they show the
way clearly and distinctly to the thoughtful. Neither
involves creed or dogma; they show the futility of
human pride, and the consolation of an unswerving
faith.
GOING HOME—A SMALL TOWN REVERY.
All day you have toiled in market or office doing
your part in “the world of )nen,” and now you are
tired with the hurry and struggle. Across the roofs
of the neighboring houses the long slanting rays of
the setting sun fall like paths of gold and the western
sky is tinted with the gorgeous colors of the sunset.
With a weary sigh you close your desk, lock the door
and start for home.
But a sudden change has come; where a few mo
ments before was the hurry or traffic there is now
only the distant rumble of a wagon or the hum of a
motor sounding faintly in the stillness. Peace seems
to have fallen upon the world, and descended into
your heart. Perhaps a neighbor joins you; and you
walk the familiar paths together, happy in the close
companionship that only small town neighbors know.
Lights gleam out from the houses, and you feel
anew the sense of peace and comfort as you catch a
glimpse of the homelike scene within. The children
have left their play in some neighbor’s yard, and in
response to some unnamed impulse, have sought their
own' dooryard as the twilight deepens.
Your companion leaves you with a cheery "good
night” as he reaches his journey’s end. As you
itop for a moment to fill your soul with the beauty
of your surroundings, and watch for a moment the
sunset’s fading splendor, revealed darkly at the end
of the tree bordered street, you realize that the per
fect end of a day is going home.
- GOOD TEETH.
If John D. Rockefeller, at the age of 83,
has a good set of teeth, he is wealthier than has
been generally believed. The Cleveland dentist
who also reveals the fact that President Harding’s
teeth are well preserved has given the world two
eminent examples. Boys who hope to attain wealth
or*be elected presT&ent may now be brought to feel
that caje of the tcetli is a necessary preliminary.
Every conceivable scheme is adopted in the public
schools to\timulate use of the tfioth brush, and one
of the first questions each morning in some class
rooms refers to whether or not this function has
been performed.
There is no doubt that neglect of the teeth ofton
leads to disease. If Rockefeller’s teeth had been
neglected, he might have been dead long ago. Of
course he has" had the money to call in a dentist
frequently, but a good bit of the credit probably
must be assigned to his personal efforts. It was an
infection of the teeth that contributed to the early
death of Theodore Roosevelt, and it is said that
James J. Hill’s refusal to consult a dentist was the
direct cause of his death.
1
-WHEN MOTHER SANG SWEET AND LOW."
The refrain of a popular song conjures up a
vision of mother, crooning softly, swoetly to a baby
sliding gently into slumbcrland. It has a tender
ness of sentiment and stirs soft emotions in the
hearts of present generation men and women, who
know or think they know what it means. Another
generation will hear the words, and casually in
quire: “How do you get that way?”
A music teacher told a group of mothers recent
ly tflat tests made on several classes of youngsters
revealed the startling fact that while most of the
little folks responded quickly enough as to recog
nition of different varieties of music played, none
identified a lullaby. This may surprise, or even
shock, some, but the fact is that mothers seldom if
ever sing lullaby songs. Baby is fed and laid down
to sleep till next feeding time, and this order pro
gresses until babyhood has passed. It is one of the
evidences of the progress we have made, and not
a sign of ^retrogression or lack of love for the off
spring on part of the parent.
Mothers are taught to do the things that are
good for baby’s welfare, and this requires the omis
sion of a great deal that once was a regular pro
gram. One who comes closely into contact with
the rearing of infants can not fail to note the bene
fits that flow from the new process, both to mother
and child. Common sense has prevailed, and what
might have been looked upon as heathenish a gen
eration ago is now part of reasonable routine.
Mother’3 love is not lessened, nor her care re
laxed because she no longer croons her low sweet
song over the infant's trundle bed, and her baby
is the better off because of this.
THE YOUNG GIRL OF TODAY.
\
The young girl of today is better fitted physically,
mentally and morally to meet life’s battles than
the girl of many-previous generations. Yet the very
causes which have brought thisr about give rise to
criticism.
Was there ever a time when she lived, played
and dressed more as God intended she should? Her
ideals are entirely different from hers whose
girlish tendencies were crushed and stilted that
she might come up to the distorted ideal of her age,
making the victim prematurely old. Today the
young girl refuses to read the literature represented
by the cheap novel of thirty years ago. The frail,
fainting heroine no longer represents her ideal, for
she admires the one who is ready to meet danger or
emergency with a courage backed by a clear mind
and a strong body.
It is possible to idealize too much, but ^here
are many wholesome girls 'who, when not helping
with the household tasks, spend their leisure time
out of school in such' simple diversions as long hikes
in the opaji air, which strengthens mind and body
She is frivolous, but who has a better right to be?
This is the reason she brings a ray of sunshine into
the home, and frivolity is just a.i essential to the
growing girl as play is to the younger child. If some
mothers could imbibe a drop of this innocent frivol
ity and become lighthearted girls for a time, daugh
ters would be more ready with their confidences and
many serious mistakes would be avoided.
Many mistakes are made by the young girl of
today, not because of wrong inclination but in order
to obtain some of the joy and happiness which every
healthy young girl craves and which is her rightful
heritage. Why must she be forced to find this out
side the home?
“THEY ALSO SERVE.”
Ever and again, Fame lifts her trumpet and an
nounces a new name to have immortality because of
some deed done for humanity. A new machine has
been devised to speed up production, or something of
the sort, and a name is connected with it perma
nently.
What about the men who silently but faithfully
aid in making the achievement of the leader possible
or practicable? Burbank did some things to fruits
and flowers, and his place in the public mind is fixed.
Can anybody give the name of the professor and
students of the University of Minnesota, who la
loriously crossed one wheat with another, that an im
proved breed might be developed? Who thinks of
these men in the field, miscroscope in hand, pains
takingly lifting the pollen from the stamen of one
wheat blossom to deposit in on the pistil of another,
that more bread may be had from the same ground
area? Likewise, Burbank has shown how the gras3
seed was developed into the ear of corn; but who
gives thought to the succession of farmers who have
carefully selected seed corn year after year, that
generations of the grain may show advance?
A great building goes up, and the architect
proudly points to it as a visible proof of his genius,
his dream come true in stone and steel and glass. Do
you know that back of this architect stood ranks of
draughtsmen and calculators, who prepared the plans,
made the sketches, worked out the measurements,
and set down every detail, before the dream could
dome to realization? The linotype was Otto Mergern
thaler’s idea, but as it stands on the floor of the com
posing room it represents the fruit of study on part
of many men, whose ideas have been embodied in
the machine. Mergenthaler is known, but how many
know anything about the men in the composing room
who have contributed to the development of the idea?
“Thpy also serve who only stand and wait.”
Scores of men in humble station daily add to the
sum of human knowledge or contribute in some way
to the softening of human existence. The man work
ing next to one of these may know about h:s
benefaction, or the foreman, who sees that it is
adapted as an improvement in shop practice, but
Fame never hears of him. Great inventions and
timely discoveries have shaped .the course of human
progress, but these have only been made useful be
cause millions of men have toiled and thought to
make them useful. Here is one place where “Virtue
is its own reward.”
“The American of tomorrow sits in the school
room of today,” said an educator at the teachers’
convention. A thing to be remembered when under
the guise of economy it is(proposed to abrfhdon the
high standards of our schools.
The Nebraska Children’s Home Society has
found homes for 10,000 orphans. This work de
serves every encouragement and the $40,000
sought for a new building should be speedily forth
coming.
The French chamber of deputies is a dignified
parliamentary body on most occasions, but certainly
can get worked up when a political motion comes
to a vote.
Uncle Sam is a nice old party to do business
with, but he has some old-fashioned notions, one
of them is that debts ought to be paid.
Even the French can not dig coal by injunction.
| The Flight of Time
■ From 4Jie London Times.
All measurements of time serve to
impress us with a fact which every
revolution of the fj/rn drives home.
Time iS aways passing from us. AVe
cannot stop it; nor can we hasten it.
Sometimes we feel as if it were hurry
ing past us winfccd with incredible
sw£$nfW<. and thru it seems to stay
ft* course with laggard feet, crawling
like -a slothful child to nn unwelcome
task. Hut we know it goes on stead
ily, certainly, without haste and with
out interruption, never ending until
we leave this life's stage and find it
engulfed in eternity. AVe eoupt time
carefully by seconds, minutes, days,
as well as by weeks and months and
years, and as it shadows the dial of
life we become Increasingly aware of
its strange value. It is so short and
yet charged with such mighty issues.
Tt Is potentially so mighty, yet may
become meaningless. AVe do not fail
through lack of time, but through
our use of It.
A year is a large space In the meas
ure of any life. AVe speak of old ago
at three score years and ton, yet this
is but a small measure of time which
Is reckoned by millenniums, and,
! though men may add to the brief span
j of mortality, they And those later
rears hut a feeble epilogue to man
j hood before all dies down in silence,
j Whether men live long or soon pass
hence, time is our opportunity, and
therefore we cannot think of it but
with solemnity. Some who recognize
the swift passage of unhurrying time
would wish to Ignore it, or banish all
that would remind them of its brev
ity. A wise man, however, will al
ways wish to look the truth in the
face. There is much meaning in Haz
lltt's profession of dislike for a watch
hidden in a metal case, which, like
a footpad with his face muffled. Is un
willing to help us on our journey and
only Imparts his knowledge bv oom
j pulsion. AVe must face time honest
| ly. and like w ise merchants put it to
the best account. AA’e are Ml con
scious of this at the end of a. year
and the beginning of another. Then,
at any rate, we cannot forget that
time is a trust for which we must
give account.
It is a true instinct that makes
most men readier to Welcome the fu
ture than reflect on the past. AVe are
wise to think less of the old year
than of the new. Retrospect has its
value. Memory gathers its treasures,
ami experience has its wisdom, but
these are put to best use only as they
are brought to the service of the
present and the future. The new time
is what wo have to face, what we
have to prepare for and to deal with.
The fortunes of time past are no Jus
tification for hopelessness; rightly ap
prehended they can spur to renewed
energy. Every end Is a beginning.
Time belongs to this world, but it
has its context elsewhere. As It pro
ceeds. the wise man finds in it a new
significance and power. He no longer
measures it by the watch of the calen
dar. hut by the moral discipline It of
fers in the shaping of his character.
Time must bring change of work and
fortune, but it is supremely the op
portunity of progress In the real stuff
lif^ in truth, goodness, beauty, in
the soul's attainment of its goal.
These things are above and beyond
time. They are eternal. AVrought
in ti/h«, they last forever. AVe speak
of the value of time. Tt is more than
money, more than pleasure, more
than success. It Is and may bo the
instrument of moral perfection.
If this Is our estimate of time’s
purpose, we shall know how to meet
the conditions (which confront us.
Have we npt become too ready to
lament the difficulties of our time,
and think ourselves beyond our pred
ecessors weighted with care and mis
fortune? It is well to remember that
this has been the lament of men In
all ages. At every period we find
Daily Prayer
In His love and His plly, He redeemed
them.—Isaiah, 63:9.
Our God. Father of our lord and
Savior Jesus Christ, our Father
through Him, we thank Thee most
heartily for Thy very gracious dispo
sition towards us. In Thy love Thou
hast redeemed us. In the fullness of
Thy grace Thou has given unto us
Thy Holy Spirit, the blessed AVord,
and all things needful for our spirit
ual welfare.
AVe are grateful, our God, for Thy
good providence, whereby we enjoy
the comforts and blessings of the life
that now is. ASre humbly and earnest
ly pray for faith, hop-, and love; for
purity In our lives, for a discernment
of divine leadership, and that trust in
Thee whereby anxiety is banished.
AVe pray for our family happiness,
for Thy presence In our home and in
each of our hearts; and we a.<tk Thee,
most merciful God, to grant us par
don for all our sins which we freely
confess. AVe ask for a rich blessing
upon the household of God upon
earth, upon the nation In which we
live, and upon all people.
AVe present our recognition of Thee,
our thanksgiving, our petitions, and
confession in the Name of Jesus, AVho
taught us to pray, and for His Sake.
Amen.
REAr. ROBERT AV. THOMPSON.
Pittsburg, Kan.
The Boy Who Leaves
the Paper
Tha boy who leaves tha paper every morn
ing at my door
Deserves an honor medal for the faith
fulness he shows.
For 'tlsn’t very pleasant getting up per
haps at four.
And hustling out In weather that Is
hard on cara and no.se,
On fingers on on toes,
Delivering the paper when the north
wind blows!
When I and others like me lie In alum
her. snug and warm.
The lad of whom I’m writing rises man
fully and goes;
He faces every bitter blast and every
swirling storm.
And gets his goods delivered howsoe'er
It halls and snow's
On tingling ears and nose.
On fingers and on toes.
Delivering the paper when the north
wind blows!
And so, when I’m remembering the he
roes of the race,
The men who do the mighty things at
which the spirit glows,
I think about the lad who leaves his
bod the cdM to face.
That I may have iny paper, every
morning, while I doze.
The boy who bravely goes,
With smarting e^rs and nose,
And fingers, too, and toes, ^
Delivering the paper when the north
wind blows!
By Denis A. McCarthy, In the Chris
tian Endeavor World.
N ET AVERAGE
CIRCULATION
for DECEMBER. 1922. oF
THE OMAHA BEE
Daily.71,494
Sunday.78.49G
B. BREWER. Gen. Mgr.
, ELMER S. ROOD, Cir. Mgr. |
Sworn to and subscribed! before me i
| this 4tb day of January. 1923.
j W. H. QUIVEY,
(Seel) Notary Public
- -=.
them complaining that they live In
<laj s of special difficulty, livery age
! has its own trials which test men to
the uttermost. We are not more un
fortunate than our forefathers, and
even If we were, that is all the more
reason why we should bear ourselves
more bravely, recognizing that the
fiercer fire purifies the true metal
more perfectly, that it may be shaped
I to a complete and permanent beauty,
if our trial Is severe our recompense
may be all the more glorious.
There is a cheap cheeriness, a stu
pid optimism of irrefieetive trust in
luck's fortune which does not see how
opportunity is always mated with re
sponsibility. Time never parts them
asunder, hut it always gives us the
chance of facing them afresh. It al
lows us to make new beginnings. The
new is shaped by the old, hut it has
its own powers, its own work, its
own recompense. It offers us a pres
ent and a future to redeem the past,
lo show how we. Have profited by our
blunders and sins, and how success
achieved may lead us to still higher
attainments. Our whole life here
moves towards an end which is a be
ginning. Memory, thought, and hope
assure us of something which is eter
nal. There will l>« an end of time,
hut forms there will remain eternity's
newness of life.
BEE
1
i
"FURY," by Edmund Gouldlng. Dodd,
Mead & (Jo.
Boy Leyton, born and tired on the
pea, cannot hido from his father, Dog
Leyton, hard listed cnptain of “The
T Jidy Spray,” the traits Inherited
from his mother, who left the skipper
for another man and was cast aside.
Dog seeks to beat Boy Into a light
ing man, and the, development of this
youth, in whom is combined the man
hood of his father and the tenderness
of his mother, makes a thrilling tale
of the sea and the famous Limehouse
district of London, written by Ed
mund doubling and published by
Dodd, Mead & Co.
“Fury” -Is Its title and furious is
the story.
“Fury” lias been dramatized for
the screen, but the motion picture
fAils to depict the character grow'tli
of tills manly youth.
Love, which is scorned by the flght
lng captain, wins out and Boy heats
down the obstacles which beset his
path.
"WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND,”
by Zan» drey. Harper & Bros.
A study,into a man’s soul is "Wan
derer of the Wasteland.” latest novel
by Zane Grey, (Harper), and the lure
of. the desert is gripping as Grey un
rolls his descriptions of the silent
places.
In a quarrel over a dark-eyed Mex
ican senorita, Adam I>arey believes
he haas fatally shot his brother, and
(lees to the waste lands to hide from
his crime.
His deeds soon are sung by hardy
prospectors around their camp fires
as they relate the exploits of “Wans
fell tho Wanderer,” protector of wo
men and old men, the “Engle” of In
dian tribes as he ruthlessly slays ban
dits and villains, and "Friend” as he
aids broken and hcart*ore victims of
desert madness.
The development of the character
of this giant youth as he grows Into
the powerful, nature loving man, is
dramatically unfolded by Grey, mas
ter of the novel of the west.
"GENTLEMEN ALT, AND M\ 5RT COM
PANIONS,” by Rilph Bargengren. B.
J. Brimmer company, Boston.
Howard Pyle should accord at least
one bay of his laurel wreath to Ralph
Bergengren. For none of tho real
pirates immortalized by Howard are
more picturesque, and certainly none
were so merry as the group Ralph
has given us. Not since Frank R.
Stockton introduced us to the Pie
Ghost in "The Cruiso of the Merry
Chanter” have we liad anything more
deliciously droll or ludicrously laugh
able than 10 who make up tho com
pany that roved the seas on board
"The Tender Polly,” and dwindled to
nine when one succumbed to the
charms of Mchitabel, tho schoolma’atn
who was kidnaped to teach them to
read. They stole a sdioolm’am to
educate them, and a servant girl to
keep house for them. They were tem
porarily converted to total abstin
ence. 'Their rescue and adoption of a
baby must ever stand to their credit,
and indicates with some exceptions
the spark of goodness that exists,
with some exceptions, in the worst of
men.
Autosuggestion seems to be tho
panacea of the hour, and many ap
pear to find comfort in the various
systems being promoted. "Self-Heal
ing Through Autosuggestion” is the
title of a manual prepared by .Dr.
Charles F. Winbigler. Ph. M., and
published by the American Library
Service. There are many points of
contact between this book and Emile
Coue's recent book, "Self-Mastery
Through Conscious Autosuggestion.”
Dr. Winbigler claims that his book
contains in simple language direct
methods by which one can obtain
Wal. pr« *chers tltay bo preachin' for a
livin’ »* they gay.
An’ figgorin’ cut their sermons *o'» to
cam the biggc&t pay.
An' all that sort o' gossip that from
time to time we heur
19 probably authentic an’ is probably
sincere.
Hut here’s the way the matter fits the
logic that I see —
A preacher's got t«» have his bread an
meat like you an”me.
An’ if ho don't git nothin’ fer all the
time he spends
He’s got to keep a-beggln’ fer• assistance
from hi a* friends.
I alius thought a preacher had an mvful
life ot best
To i lease hia congregation with the vi
sions he expressed,
An’ if he was a lawyer, ere his sermon
he would say:
•Til H*m! ye ail to Hades if ye don t
advance n-.y pay.”
But ho* a a ktruly mortal bent on acndin
folks above.
An elevatin’ livin’ by his godliness an
love: . .
His llf« is wholly squandered an his bliss
is wholly spent
In superhuman effort for the nation s
betterment:
I think m do him Justic, with the ipnlt
fair an' true . , , .
AVe hadn’t nria grumble when Indebted
ness la due.
—Robert AA'orlhlng Davis.
health, happiness nnd self-control
through the application of autosug
gestion!” Warts on the hand arc
amenable .lo suggestion in a very re
markable manner. One on my hand
was thus removed,” the author
writes.
j. S. Fletcher, writer of detective
mystery stories, seldom makes it
necessary for Ids characters to use
violence to gain their objectives, He
uses the melodramatic element spar
ingly. His characters use their beads
more than their feet or lists. "The
Lost Mr. Linthwaite” is the latest in
tho list of Mr. Fletcher's mystery
stories. In tills book, which is pub
lished by Alfred A. Knopf, New York,
the author leads the reader gently by
the hand, through chapter after chap
ter. The author has an effective stylo
of building up bis case in a plausible
manner. In this book Richard Brix
ley, London newspaper man, demon
states Ids ability as a detective while
in search of Ids uncle. John Linth
waite, whose disappearance is the
motif of the story. Another thing in
favor of Mr. Fletcher is: He has a
clear style of expression. It Is a
satisfying mystery story.
The World Almanac is presented
to the American public for the 38th
year of its publication improved in
form, handier to consult, easier to
read, better printed and on better
paper.
New statistical tables present the
latest census figures regarding popu
lation. vital statistics and industries,
which are supplemented by those of
the Departments of Agriculture, Com
merce, Labor and the Interior, all set
ting forth in clear form the material
growth of the republic.
Jn Addition, the World Almanac
presents this year descriptions of the
several states of the union and its
dependencies, ami descriptions of all
tho foreign countries witli their colon
ies and dependencies, carefully pre
pared in most condensed form from
the liest available authorities here and
abroad. Much of this material has
been furnished or revised by tho em
bassies, legations and consulates of
the countries concerned and by the
■World Almanac's correspondents
abroad.
The record of the year 1922 is given
with 'greater fullness than heretofore
The reader will find the carefully com
piled chronology or diary of the year,
the death roll, the benefactions, the
record of scientific progress, the tar
iff law and other new and important
laws, the full election returns, and
the complete sporting events and rec
ords to which he is accustomed. He
will also find new features in authori
tative reviews of the financial world
and bond market, with the range of
prices for stocks on the exchange up
to December 1, 1922; also special re
views of labor and strikes, American
relief work in Europe, the great prog
ress made in aviation, the creation of
'he Irish Free State, the rise of the
fascist!; the platform of the British
labor party, and in another field, re
views of the year in the book world,
art, music and the drama, and In wire
less telegraphy and telephony.
The World Almanac is published by
the New York World. Price 50 cents,
postpaald.
..1 I
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Our Council Bluffs office is located in the Wickham Block.
Phone 1075 for appointment. Dr. Lee W. Davis in charge.
Our Missouri Valley office is located at No. Ill N. 4th St. Drs.
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All adjusting cards issued are good in any one of our three
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Office adjustments are 12 for $10 or 30 for $25
Dr.Burhorn’s Chiropractic Health Service
Suite 414-426 Securities Bldg.
Cor. 16th and Farnam Phone JA ckson 5347
A Complete X-Ray Laboratory
OMAHA, NEB.
AROUND NEBRASKA
Hastings Tribune: Hastings can
boast of being tlie. cleanest «nd most
progressive city in Nebraska- Are
there any votes to tho contrary?
Wayne Herald: News reports tell
of a 16 year-old boy who killed him
self because people made fun of his
attentions to a school teacher older
than himself. Are people becoming
su sensitive and feeble that they can
not stand tho stings and kicks of so
ciety? The way people sometimes !
ridicule youth is cruel and merciless,
but it is lews so than it used to be, as !
we remember. And it is well to be
lews so If many are as thin-skinned
and easily crushed as tho one who
found relief in suicide.
—
Gothenburg Independent: You can't
judge the size and kind of families
any more by what's on tho clothes
tine.
Genoa Leader: What tho country
needs worst is not new law but a bet
ter enforcement of the laws now on
the books.
Hartlngton Herald: Knergy itself
is no guarantee of su cess. A run
away locomotive has got plenty of en
ergy, but it's the biggest kind of a
failure. Just so with people. You
have got to have something besides
mere energy to Insure success. Them
must be purpose—control—direction;
in other words, energy must be cou
pled with ideals before It will produce
results useful and helpful to society.
Fremont Tribune: The year of 10C2
lias left Its mark on the newspaper
industry of Nebraska. The number
of papers in the state has been re
duced by -to, largely- through consoli
dations of competing plants in towns
.---.
The Little Town
Over There in tTIe little town, ami I've
heard the M rangers nay
Things of it that were impolite in a rude
and rakish way:
They laughed at the stores, and they
laugh**,i at the homes, and they
laughod at the likes of me,
Hecause the ways of the little town
were not as they'd have them he.
The little town la a pleasant place where’
the country' people go.
Of course, it Isn't a paradise where never
a fault rati grow,
Itut, the little town is Its own true self,
nor apes what the big town wears;
If the strangers fonie and laugh at ita.
dress, the little town forbears.
The little town is a place to meet, and
the folks of the farms run In
To buy their needs of the friendly stores,
and to ask how the rest have been.
' And if the band comes out to play on
Main street after dark.
The cars that race from the countryside
1 are more than the street can park.
Over there Is the little town, and ne’er
will it pine to be
Up In the place where the strangers strut
In the pride of their pageantry
Heart of the countryside It Is—Now, what I
would the country say
If the little towns of the whole wide
world were patterned the strangers !
way ?
.—Jonathan Johnson. i
where it was deenionstrated that two
papers could not exist at n. profit to
both. Only a few actual suspensions (
have occurred and these were the re
sult of a tendency to cut advertising
and job printing prices below cost of
production.
Hastings Tribune: L'x-tiovernor
McKelvie has returned to the sanc
tum sanctorum. During- Ms four
years of office holding he was always
found working lor what ho deemed
was for the beeat interests of the tax
payers of Nebraska, and bo was con
scientious and sincere la his work.
Hlair Knterprlse; The slogan of ths
present legislature should be "reduc
tion of taxes." We realize that this
is not an empty dream, nor will It he
mere child's play to decide where to
use the pruning shears, but it must
be done. The stnto normal board is
loud in its wail for an appropriation
amounting to $2.250,387, which is
practic ally a million dollar Increase,
while the little town of Chadron Is
to ask for uu additional $75,000 for a
state park. This does not sound Ilka
tax reduction and unless our legis
lators are leal men the pressure
brought to bear on them will win
them over.
Kearney Hub: McKelvie and Rrvan
have each recommended a minimum
of legislation by the present legisla
ture. Hut they may as well hnve
whispered the advice to a policeman.
The weakness for legislating is inher
ent and Is not to be denied to a per
spiring lawmaker.
Nebraska City Press: Marie W.
Woods, Lincoln man, told the rivers
and harbors congress in Washington
that navigation will return to, the
Missouri river. Mr. Woods* dream
will come true. The only regret Is
that it is not true now, thus contrlb
uting usefully to the transportation
muddle. i|
When in Omaha Stopat
Hotel Rome
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The owner of a Mason & Hamlin Piano need,
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1513-15 Douglas Street
Admitted Fact
Growing industries demand more business buildings
in Omaha. Therefore new buildings erected yield
large returns.
•
Home Builders has financed a number of buildings
which are paying annual incomes double the interest
requirements of Home Builders mortgages for money
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sinking funds sufficient to retire bonds at maturity
and meet all interest payments semi-annually.
First Mortgage
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18th and Dodge Omaha, Nebraska