The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, March 10, 1923, Page 4, Image 4

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    The Morning Bee
MORNING—EVENING—SUNDAY
THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY
NELSON B. UPDIKE, Publisher. II. BREWER, Gen. Manager.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Pros*. '>f which The p.ee is a member, la exclusively
entitled to the use for republicatton of all new* d at a tehee credited to it or
cot otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news published
hereto. All rights cf republtrstions nf our special dlapatcbea are ala * reserved.
BEE TELEPHONES
Private Branch Exchartgr. A*k for tTig Department {antic
or Person Wanted. For Nipht Calls After 10 P. M.: 1 nnn
Editorial Department. AT lantic 1021 or 1042. IUUU
OFFICES
Main Office—17th and Farnam
Co, Bluffs - - - 15 Scott St. So. Side. N. W. Cor. 24th and N
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BRYAN'S TANGLED WEB
In advocating his new code law Governor Bryan
attempts to outlaw all other plans designed to sim
plify the form and lessen the cost of government in
Nebraska, his weapon is not calm reason, but wild
propaganda. How little reliance is to be placed upon
his claims is indicated iri his recent appeal in which
he states that if any other plan except his is adopted
sinister special interests will take control of the
state.
He refers particularly to the tri-department plan
drawn up by Representative Dysart and a group of
republican legislators. Under this proposal the gov
ernor would appoint the heads of the departments
of finance, trade and commerce and public welfare,
in which latter would be combined the labor, agri
cultural and inspection forces of the state. Con
fin mation by the senate would be necessary, although
the governor would have a free hand to discharge the
head of any department at any time.
The difference between this system and the Bryan
code plan is that under the governor's outline he
would make 'himself head all the departments and
make every appointment, without the advice or con
sent of the senate. Under the tri-department plan,
however, the governor wmuld appoint the depart
ment chiefs ami these would choose their own assist
ants. The governor maintains that he should have
the power to name all these state employes, down to
the les't stenographer. The other view is that the
men directly in charge of the work should be able
best to judge of the qualifications of their assistants.
Whereas a governor's appointments might be purely
on political grounds, the men wrho actually con
ducted the departments would be more keenly in
terested in getting the work done. The governor s
charge that these would be free to add any now ac
tivities that they saw fit, at great cost to the tax
payers, is not valid, because each department is ac
quired by law to live within the limits of its appro
priation.
Yet here is where the governor gets in his propa
ganda. In spite of the fact that he would be em
powered to remove any department head, he makes
the assertion that the bill would allow “outside special
interests to deal with the employes of the govern
ment without any person who is responsible to the
taxpayers knowing anything about such dealings. ’
What is the matter here? Does the governor feel
that he could not trust his own appointees?
Under the tri-department system, if the conduct
of banking affairs or of any inspection force did
not suit the governor, he would have a free hand
to dismiss the head of the department and start
now. There is no more chance of corruption under
one plan than under the other.
The facts about these rival proposals, when they
are made known, confound the governor's propa
ganda. His declaration that under the tri-depart
ment plan there would be four governors instead of
one is made in the face of the fact that these three
department heads would be men who received tljeir
jobs from him, and whom he could dismiss at will.
Another statement from the governor is due. explain
ing how he arrived at hir, remarkable misconception.
SPOTLIGHT ON NATION’S HEAD
“The fierce white iigiit that beats upon the !
throne" is not missing in republics, cither. Demo- ,
( ratic folks may pretend a lofty indifference as to j
the manners or doings of any save their own, but
just the same they do like to keep track of their
neighbors. And when it comes to the president of
ihe United States, then they want to know all about
him every moment of the day. His home at the
White House is a shrine, for there is the gathering
place of all the majesty, the might, the power and
the dignity of 110,000,000 people, centered in one
man and one household. Patriotic Americans rever
ence it, and accordingly they love to wander through
it, prying into each nook and corner, peering into
each closet and cupboard, and scrutinizing every
detail of domestic economy connected with the
president's home.
•lust now Mr. Harding is away on a vacation
taking a sadly needed rest from official routine and
vexations. His good wife, recovering from a se
rious illness, is with him, out of the house for the
first time in six months. Only a few intimate friends
and about a million press reporters and photograph
ers accompany them. Each time the houseboat
stops to let the president off for a round of golf
he runs the gauntlet of cameras and note books;
Mrs. Harding graciously poses for new photos, and
day by day the American people is kept posted on
the doings of the simple couple who have b*en ex
alted to the high position of first lady and gentle
man of the land.
When Roosevelt went into the canebrake to hunt
bears, he was well attended by a corps of reporters;
when Grovtr Cleveland wed with Frankie Folsom
and they went to stay in the mountains of Vir
ginia for a honeymoon, a reporter lurked behind ^
every tree, to keep the world informed of the doings
of the lovers. Ami so it was with Taft nnd with
Wilson, and will be with every president They will
bo followed in all their downsitting and uprisings
by the curious interest of their fellow countrymen.
It is not that our people mean to be impudent
or impertinent. They have a reverence for the high
office and for the man who fills it. Their desire to
know about him in every possible way grows out of
the fact that he is their representative, their serv
ant, their president, and the president who is l(,ft
to enjoy privacy, undisturbed by public or personal
inspection, will do so realizing that he :s a dead
one, forgotten while yet olive.
Pitiless publicity is all right, until there >* some
thing to publish; then the inquiry takes place behind
dosed doors at Lincoln.
The Seattle bear that smashed a phonograph pluy
fng a jazz record showed both human intelligence nnd
justifiable resentment.
As far as thRt goes, the capitol might be built
without either Johnson or Goodhue.
Nebraska pt^ts sing all the year tour '
(
IF WARS ARE TO CEASE.
Intense national fears, ha much as any other one ,
thing, are responsible for the chaos that exists in
the world today. It is to this dangerous, disquiet- '
ing spirit that Senator Hiram Johnson directs his
criticism of President Harding’s proposal that the
United States enter the permanent court of inter
national justice at The Hague.
There does not seem to be much logic in his nu
merous objections. Certainly America will not
enter any entangling alliances, and his claim that |
membership in this arbitral court is but a step to- j
ward joining the League of Nations is without basis.
In his speech in New York Senator Johnson first
declared that the international court is little more
than now exists in our arbitration treaties. If it
be so small a change, why object? Then he points
out that the tribunal has no power to force nations
to submit their disputes, and that only those ques
tions which the parties themselves agree to submit
can be heard. In other words, it is not equipped
with arbitrary, mandatory powers. Though the
California senator objects to these qualities in the
League of Nations, he now puts himself in the posi
tion of objecting to their absence in the interna
tional court.
To many Americans it seems that the court of
justice lacks all the disadvantages of the League
of Nations proper. While the league is a political
device to carry out and maintain the arrangements
made In the Treaty of Versailles, the court is purely
nonpolitical, designed to examine into disputes be
tween nations and announce its findings so that the
people of the world can have more than prejudice
and propaganda on which to base their judgment.
This court stands for the modern conception that
force should not be the first resort of nations whose
interests clash. If this principle of deciding dis
putes according to the law and justice of the case is
upheld by popular opinion, a great step toward peace
will have been taken. If, however, any large sec
tion of American opinion inclines toward the sus
picious views of Senator Johnson, no possible good
could come from any grudg:ng entry into the in
ternational court. The support of the organized,
informed opinion of the people of the world, de
termined on preventing war and maintaining a
peace of justice, is necessary to the success of this
court plan. #
"AN HONEST MAN’S ABOON HIS MIGHT.”
Labor leaders in parliament have sat down to
dine with the king of England, and other great ones
of the realm, which reminds one of the perturbation
expressed by the Kansas City Star, when “Sockless
Jerry Simpson took part in
‘a plutocratic feast.
And that Jerry ordered sherry.
And was erstwhile gay ami men >
While the poor oppress'd were very
.Much perturbed tr> say the Jeast .”
Lady Nancy Astor had some amusement, poking
fun at Clynes and Thomas and the others about their
unaccustomed knee breeches and stockings, and teach- j
ing them when to say “Yes, sir,” and “Yes, your ma
jesty.” But the affair has a more serious side.
Democracy in England is working out the effects
of the leaven. Top and bottom are getting a little
closer together, and the middle class is being ab
sorbed almost to the point of extinction. The Bonar
Law tory government is falling to pieces because
it does not truly represent the new life of England,
which is full of a spirit which breathes more and
more of brotherhood and less of class distinction ail ,
the time.
The king's dinner party denotes, if anything,
the broader aspect of British politics, no longer
controlled exclusively by the intelligentsia, but par
taking of a truly national representative form, in
which all the people have a voice, reminding us of
“Bobby” Burns’ famous statement:
A prince may make a belted knight,
A marquis, duke, and a' that.
But an honest man's aboon his might.
Gude faith, he maun a fa that '
A few more such dinner gatherings, and the j
Jacobites of England will Rgain be driven to cover,
as they were when they passed the wine glass over
i the water when they drank the king's health.
.
Wp trust that when that murderer now held in
j Cleveland is returned to Omaha for trial twelve men
I can he secured for the jury who will take him at
his word and give him the fall benefit of the law.
What a lot of us lowbrows would like to know
i is how the Russians proceeded when they set about
I ‘‘jazzing up” French and Italian operas to make a
Russian potpouri for Chicago.
I No more pinochle, no more pitch; no more high
dice or any sich wicked games for the seegar* in
Omaha. Wc certainly are day by day in every way
getting better and better.
The legislature may not seem to he doing much,
and perhaps will yet win medals for what it docs
1 not do, yet judgment should be reserved till after
final adjournment.
Returning from a winter in the south, Mr. ami
Mrs. C. Robin are now looking about for summer
accommodations.
Have you planned your little garden yet?
Homespun Verse j
By Robert Worthington Davie
IN THE VALLEY OF' ADAIR
There's a little streamlet flowing through the valley nf
Adair,
With a constant, rhymlc ripple like a song;
There's a oozy lane heslde It, maples twist It and the
air
Nod a welcome to the folk who come along.
(). what happy dreams I treasure of that, singing rivu
let.
And the maple*, and the lane that winds to town.
There a little maid named Nancy and a bashful lovst*
met
When the hide red sun of summer hail unne dow n.
There they dreamed and listened deeply to the ripple*
and the breeze
Heard the whippoorwill a calling for his mate.
Watched the star* In beauty twinkling f,ir above the
me pie trees.
Walked along the lane and parted at her gate.
There tile bashful lover lingered to behold her till th*
Inst,
Hence tn silence and In happiness to roirm—
Fondly fashioning tin future on the meetings if ths
past—
Down the lane heeld" the rivulet—and horns.
o, the lane remains as ever ami the stream ami maple*
croon;
other Nancies, other lover* come and go;
rtmrs enhance the distant heaven* and a *mde Is on
the moon,
And the gloaming with contentment I* aglow.
The history of this poem is the history of Neilif tit's spiritual life.
Since 1- years old he hits l>een haunted with tho sense of a Presence that
speaks through him In his poetry. This alter ego. this ghostly brother, is
the artist in Nelhardt. his poetic holy ghost.
THE GHOSTLY BROTHER.
Brother, Brother, railing me
Like a distant surfy sea,
Like a wind that moans and grieves
All night long about the' eaves;
Let me rest a little span;
Long I’ve followed, followed fast;
-Vow 1 wish to be a man.
Disconnected from the Vast!
Let me stop a little while,
Keel this snug world’s pulses beat,
Glory in a baby’s smile,
Hear it prattle round my feel;
Knt and sleep and love and live,
Thankful ever for the dawn;
Wanting what the world can give—
With the cosmic curtains drawn!
Brother, Brother, break the gyves!
Burst the prison. Son of Tower!
Product of forgotten lives.
Seedling of the final flower!
What to you are nights and days,
Drifting snow’ or rainy flaw.
Love or hate or blame or praise—
Heir unto the Outer Awe!
I am breathless from the flight
Through the speed-deft, awful night!
Pnnting. let me rest a while
In this pleasant aether isle.
Here, content with transient things.
How the witle’sa dweller sings!
Rears Ilia brood and steers his plow,
Nursing at the breasts of Now.
Herp the meatiest, yea. the slave
Claims the heirloom of a grave!
Oh, this little world is blest—
Brother, Brother, let me rest!
I am you and you are I!
When the world Is rheriahed most, l
You shall hear my haunting cry,
See me rising like a ghost.
I am all that you have been,
Are not now, hut soon shall be!
Thralled awhile by dust and din—
Brother, Brother, follow me!
'Tis a lonesome, endless quest;
I am weary; I would rest.
’though I seek to fly from you,
.".ike a shadow, you pursue.
Be I love? You share the kiss,
I raving only half the blise.
Bo I conquer? You are there,
Claiming half the victor's share.
When the night shades fray and lift,
Tis your veiled face lights the rift.
In the sighing of the rain.
Your voice goads me like a psin.
Happy in a narrow trust,
Bet me serve the lesser will
One brief hour—and then, to dust!
Oh. the dead are very still!
Brother, Brother, follow hence!
Ours the wild, unflagging speed!
Through the outer wails of sense,
Follow, follow, where I lead!
Hove and hate and grief and fear—
'Tis the geocentric dream!
Only shadows linger here,
Cast by the eternal Gleam!
Follow, follow, follow fast —
Somewhere nu* of Time and Place,
You shall lift the veil at last,
You shall look upon my face;
IjOOk upon my fa« e and die,
Solver of the Mystery!
I am jou and you are I—
Brother, Brother, follow me!
“The People’s
Voice”
Cdttoricti from re*tftra sf Tht MornlAf Boo.
floaters of The Morale® Bee are Inrltet te
use this eelemn freoljr fer eifrcsilea ®n
mattsrs cf eubl's Interest.
—
Commissions on Farm Loans.
Wisner Neb.—To the Editor of The
Omaha Bee: I saw an article In The
Omaha Bee recently about how the
bonkf-rs were renewing farmers' mort
gages March 1, when so many of |
them come due. But I wonder how 1
many people realise how many of
the*- companies bleed the poor farmer
on their charges for making these
loans. I am speaking of reputable
trust companies and not about loan
sharks.
During February I tried to get a
mortgage of IT.Qftft renewed on my
place here. I wrote to a loan com- 1
pany of Omaha and got hack an an- \
swer In a very short time saying they
would be very glad to make the loan '
and the commission would he 7*4 -
per ent. Think of it' They wanted
to charge me $"25 just to negotiate
this five-year loan. This in addition
to the yearly Interest, you understand.
That In the way loan coiv>i>anies are
gouging the farmers, although the
latter are so hard put to it nowadays
that they are on the verge of bank
ruptcy.
I v is fortunate enough to find a
man who renewed m.V loan at s
charge of 1 per cent. $70. But many
farmers especially the poorer ones
and the more ignorant, can't do this. |
They are at the mercy of these gen
tlemen who blersl them for 5 and T'-j
per tent commissions
DIRT FARMER.
Where Wat the Lassie?
- Omaha.—To the Editor of The
Omalm Bee- T note ft question In the
"People s V Ice ' In regard to "Com
log Thro' the Rye " Tradition has
it that the "Rye'' Is a small river in
.Scotland. There is n foot hridge over
the river that is only wide enough
for one to cross at a time. If a gen
tleman meet* a lady on the hridge,
the tale save that the gentleman may
collect a kiss from the ladv.
CLYDE RATBKIN.
Keep the Party Circle.
I lanunond, Neb.—To the Editor of
The Omaha Bee: Some people advo
cate the nbollshment of the party cir
cle, which certainly would he a great
mistake. Nearly every one wishes to
vote for most of the candidates of
one or Iho other of the political pnr
Daily Prayer \
Th* Lord la good to tha aou! that ■ ••k
oth Him.— Um. 3:26.
Infinite Father, Thou art our life
and light, our hope and redemption.
We have tried the world and found
it h igreat emptiness, we come back
to Thee Who art eager to till our
soule with everlasting truth and
mercy.
We come with a song In our hearts,
for the list of Thy benefits Is beyond
our counting. We thank Thee for
the stirring, stimulating days of th» i
present, with their opportunities for
Improvement and servlcs, their con
cern for the poor and Ignorant. We
thank Thee fnr the mysterious, Invtt
Ing days which are to come, laden
with secret stores for our replenish
ing. hidden delights, and dark expert
en.es for our training
We thank Thee for the ellcnt hero
isms of the home: for the hallowed
driidgerli.* of hospital and sick ehnm
ts>r. We thank Thee that, dseplte the
cleverness of wicked men and the
foolishness of good men, the Kingdom
makes steady advance. Thy tiuunty
unto us Is without boundaries. And
yet we ha file Thy plans, thwart Thy
love, nnd wander wretchedly from
the way of .Ti sue. We return unto
Thee this morning to have our stains
removed, our petty shams stripped
away, and our hearts fortified. Have
compassion upon u*. and tiling us all
by and by to our Fsther's home,
through the riches of grace in Christ
Jesus. Amen.
hbv. mum KLMrit nnoWN,
rest Hr. Wash.
NET AVERAGE
CIRCULATION
for JANUARY, 1923, of
THE OMAHA BEE
! Daily .71,655
i Sunday.78,845 i
B. BREWER. Gonoral Mgr.
VERN A. BRIDGE, Clr. Mgr.
Sworn In an«l cubatrlhad hafoto m«
thta Id la, of Fnkrunry, I a? i
W H. QUIVEY,
' (Snail Notary Public 1
I _:
tics, so it is a great convenience and
time saver to make a cross in the
party circle, after which the voter
can make a cross before the names
of the candidates of any other party
for whom he or she may wish to vote.
It is also a money saver to the
taxpayers, as it takes less time for
the boards to count the ballots. Any
one can vote without using the circle
if they so prefer, but as a very large
majority do use it, It should not he
discarded. Let us hope that the leg.
islature will not take up any of its
time in trying to change the form of
the ballot, which would he hard to
Improve. J. Ft, A M MON.
Evidently a Bachelor.
Omaha—To the Editor of The
Omaha Bee: This is in answer to j
"Married Man." Most bachelors do
net want any sympathy. Married
Man' has got that turned around. A
poor man who raises a family is a
hero, but he gets no credit for it.
Bachelors consider married bliss next
to heaVenly bliss and they do not
want to spoil the illusion by getting
married. As for being freaks or wo
man haters, the percentage troubled
that way Is very small. They are
bigger-hearted than married men, and
if i damsel is In distress they are the
first to extend a helping hand.
TIMOTHV MCLU8KET,
Common Sense j
You < an'I Hide in lit* Hark—Turn
1 our Fare io Ihe Sun.
Ton have done a dirty, dishonest
thing and It refuses to slay under
cover.
Just when you nr* almost able te
forget It, the thing spring* up again
In another guise, from another source,
in an unexpected manner.
You are not willing to come out in
the open and admit your mistake.
So vnu carry In your heart, sleep
ing and waking, a guilty knowledge
which some day tnay get so strong
that It will be your ruination
Why are you so unwilling to
acknowledge your error?
Why are you so anxious to cover
up what I* hound to he found out and1
be your undoing Juat when you leaet
expect it?
Are you falling short of being tlie
really hlg man you waut to be Just
because you have allows,I yourself to
he drawn Into a dishonest transac
tion?
Do you ever realise that your face
Is gradually developing Into an open
Isink to th, *" who study such things*
That the little, deceitful, tricky, evil
genius which you have permitted to
actuate your motive* and your ac
tions is every day and night of your
life photographing your dishonesty on
your face.
It la not too lata to turn >opr face
to the gun and he honest.
i ■ 'ofyrlght till >
4‘ t rom State and
-Nation”
Editorials from other
newspapers.
\ isit the Schools.
Fram the Shelton Flipper
How much better it would be if
i people who ere continually finding
i fault with the manner in which the
. public schools are conducted Would
- visit the schools, thereby leerning
first hand w hat Is being accomplished.
| On the occasion of such visits you
; should explain to the teachers that
I you are interested In the welfare of
the children and tlmt you are anx
1 ious to l>e of any assistance you can
| to the school. The children like to
have people call while they are at
work, and the^ especially like to have
;thcm see how welf they can do ihe
tacks that sre before them. The
teachers sre always glad to have par
ents and patrons call and see the
work that their children ar* doing.
06 not get the idea that you will be
In the way. It Is a public institution
and you should be (here occasionally
and see how everything is progress
ing If there is any way you can bet
ter conditions, It will be an hour well
spent. If the School is not progressing
as it should, the neopie ought to know
it, and if it is making advancement,
the public lias a right to know It.
1 However, statements made regarding
i the schools should be founded on facta
and not mere hearsay.
Jailed for Poverty.
Krom *he St. Louts Po*l-DI»palch.
Walter Forsbee is out of luck. He
cause he was unable to dig up 1500
he must go to the workhouse and
“work out" a fine of that amount at
the rate of It a day. Had he pus
sessed or been able to raise the
miount of the fine and costs, he would
have gone free, despite the face that
be was convicted of reckless automo
bile driving that cost the death of a
baby.
If this were the only case of the
kind it would prove the Injustice of
the fine system as a preventive of
reckless driving. Most owners of au
tomobiles can beg or borrow 1500 or
1500 if need be. to pay Aries for reck
lessly running down men, women or
children. Therefore moat owners of
automobiles ran escape the dreadful
penalty of spending months in the
workhouse. The poorest man. who
can And no one to lend him the
amount of the Ane. cannot escape.
Is he not. then. In effect, jailed for !
hid poverty? What sort of Justice Is
that which la based on dollars and
certs?
The Country Newspaper
From the Ohio Stats Journal.
Dr. Percy .Stlckcev ttrant is r»r
talnJy a little heretical on the subject
of country newspapers. He warns
them that the time msv come when
the city newspapers will be delivered
by airplane to every country town.
Inferring that that time will mark the
---------
You Can’t
Do Better
By Paying the 5maA
Sum of $25
«• initial payment you get a new,
fully guaranteed
Hospe Piano
Th»n $10 per month until he
en'ire turn of IfTI it patd
Should you decide at the end of
It month* to change to a higher
priced Upright Tiano or a Grand
Piano or a
Player Piano
evary dollar you have paid i» al
lowed theteon.
If you now have a used piano
and wi»h to buy a new one. we will
‘aka your old piano at a t>tg market
value and the ium will be applied
a* initial payment.
Our Grand Pianos
ronttitute following make*: Sohmer,
Kramch A Haeh. Ye»» A Son*. Kim
ball. Cable-Nelson and the Pramba^h
Baby Grand. Price* range from
and up.
Upright Pianos
m*de by the abo\ e named Grand
Piano factories as well a* Push
I.ane. Hospe, Durbar. Hinae and
other*. Price* from $275 up. lid
per month pay* for one
Uaed Piano* frpm $6S up
&J§ospcOTo.
IRIS Dougina Staoet
Visit Our Radio Department
In honor of the mem
ory of Mrs. J. H.
Hansen o u r service
station will be closed
all day Saturday
March 10.
J. H. Hansen Cadillac Co.
Lincoln Omaha Sioux City
Pop Tells 'Em_
**HM MV f
Ztur* rso*.
TMC**OC
COME
MiGhTA KNOWN
I& KANt r'
\MAKC anotho
T*Jp OUT
N run
COLO!
MAKf* ME 6C0D M
>o«r
Po a wow down
Taw* and n»e* wet.*
*>WE »"fP
peuvf*
' M'*
<n/fF
I*OT
H*LPTUL
4'au.
I nezotv
tm **
f»*Z\
ON IWT our TOO_
Bad wr*t hakosp
Yocuy r **f> "Mt
fc*Mt to **>"* sfck
Y0OC- ^-TjJ
O! Y^Yfls
(>RPrR
C-ERK
end of the country paper. The city
papers now are delivered with nota
ble promptness not only to the coun
try towns, but to the individual coun
try homes, but they do not undermine
tiie prosperity of the intelligently con
ducted country papers. The missions
of the city newspaper and the country
newspaper are different, ss the wise
country editor well knows. He does
not try to compete with the city news
paner. He aims in hilt paper to pro
vide the news of the community and
the surrounding countryside, leaving
it to the city paper to record im
portant happenings in the city where
it Is published and in the world at
large. No city newspaper can print
all the m.nor news of every village
and rural community where It circu
lates. and yet this news, relating
largely to personal activities. Is of
keen interest to those who know the
people mentioned. The wide-awake
resident and his family need the city
paper, but they need their own par
ticular country paper, too. The more
diligent the country paper is in col
lecting strictly local news and pre
senting it in interesting form, the l».-s
it has to fear from th» wide circula
tion of ths city paper in its territory.
Starving Rnwia.
Russia i« sending Hemmny 1'>.000
<arloads of grain. Which is doing
very well indeed, for a country that
a short time since was reported on
the verge of starvation.—Washing’on
iitar.
Suggestive Headline.
Ree headline says '‘Nebraska
.-olons to Visit Feeble-Minded.'' The
laws of affinity are interesting —
York News-Times.
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