The Morning Bee MORNIN G--E V E N I N G—S UNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING CO.. Publisher. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press. cf which The Bee is a member. Is axelualratr entitled to the use fur mublicstion of all news dispatches credited U> it or not otherwise credited in this peper. end aleo *he lo^al news published iveretn. AU rights of republications of our apecia! dispatche# sre also referred. BEE TELEPHONES Private Branch Exchange. Ask for the Department a-j- ■ *• or Person Wanted. For Night Calls After 10 P. M. . ... Editorial Department. AT lantic 1021 or 1042. 10UU OFFICES \ Ms in Office—17th and Famatn Co. Bluffs • - - 15 Scott St, So. Side, N. W\ Cor. 24th and N New York—286 Fifth Avenue Washington - 422 Star Bldg. Chicago - - 1720 Sieger Bid?. WHEN A RACE BEGINS TO CLIMB, Negroes fn Omaha have fixed today as the oc casion for the celebration of the emanicpation of their race from slavery by Abraham Lincoln as presi dent of the United States, In a large sense they are justified in'- this course. President Lincoln’s pre liminary proclamation was issued on {September 22, 1862 following the battle of Antietam. In it ho ordained that on January 1, 1863, all slaves held in states or parts of states then in rebellion against the lawful authority of the United States, should je set free. Accordingly on Junuary 1, 1863, the .(resident issued his proclamation, designating the states and parts of states in rebellion, and ordering ihat slaves held in them he freed. The effect of this generally was a little different from what hud been expected. Planned as purely a war measure, to stimulate the zeal of the people of the north, and to enlist sympathy in the re volted sections, the proclamation brought about prac tically the Immediate liberation of all slaves, no matter where or how held, in the United States. Two more years of hard and bitter fighting were to follow before Lee’s surrander, and much debate in congress and two amendments to the Constitution yf the United States before the liberated slaves actually rose to the stature of freemen. If the American negro has not realized all that uas promised for him by some of his over zealous friends and champions, is has not been his fault. Too much was expected, and too little genuine help was given when help was needed. What the negro has done with his freedom is to his credit. He has raised himself from the darkness of bondage, until he has attained heights that ought to bring pride to the members of any race, achievements that equal the triumphs of the most enlightened. Negroes have attained for themselves a high ,-tanding in learned professions; they have made their way in art, in literature, music, drama; they are in ventors and mechanics; they have become mer chants and farmers. From ignorant chattels of 60 years ago, they have come up to the property owners, holding in their own names billions of wealth In a Spiritual and intellectual way, also, they have pros pered and advanced. A cross section of negro society w ill match fairly veil with one of white; there are unworthy men and comen among both, arid neither has a monopoly on rood citizenship. But a common destiny is approach ’d by common effort, and rommon aspirations will . lead to a triumph for all. Emancipation is important for the whites as well as the negroes in America. WHAT’5 THE MATTER. MAURICE? Maurice Maeterlinck ought not 1o feel so badly I ibout li f perhaps ifl'irtm* that, never were so tnany * books being written, and never were so many books -nttem’ What he refprs to is a symptom, rather tfian i disease. It is n hopeful sign, if all the books get each some readers, not that everybody reads all, for hat is a physical impossibility, but when all read «omer it is a certain indication that somebody is thinking, and if the habit spreads, there Is hope for he world. M.‘ Maeterlinck may never write another “Blue bird.” That was his real masterpiece, no matter how many other works he produced. In it he sounded a note tnat vibrates in every human heart, that of lova and hope, and u great, longing for happiness, which is finally to be found, as was the blue bird, at home. Few authors have stirred the great public ns did thu Belgian genius in this allegory; he has written for the intelligentsia and has gained their approval and plaudits, but he did not reach'the big heart of humanity in any other endeavor so surely as he did in the simple story of Tyltyl and Metyl and their luest. If men and women, too, write for gold, why should that count against them? We do not un duly exalt mere wealth when we admit that its posses sion carries many advantages, and is not to be sneezed at by any. Others besides authors are engaged in the scramble for money, and some even do things less pretty than write an unworthy rjovel. This, to be sure, is no excuse for the offense, yet it may ex plain what Mr. Maeterlinck complains of. Finally, it may be unkind to mention it, but the author of many successful and even lucrative dramas and novels does not appear in the best possible light when lie publicly grieves because somebody else has the spot light and 5s reaping the reward of wealth and fame. He had his chance, and it was a fairly good one, and le should be willing to let another come in for some >f the glory and pelf. ... ONE IS BORN EVERY MINUTE. What's the use? A few years ago tho courts at Omaha and Council Bluffs undertook to make the world saft for simpletons by cleaning up the Mabray gang. These merry freebooters had preyed long and liberally on the citizens within a radius of less than « million miles. Knowing ail the ways of winning mrse races, at poker, at wrestling, boxing, any old form of sport, they were always willing to let a man > ith real money eome in and share the rich proepfds >f their operations. They never lost, they simply . couldn’t lose, and they demonstrated this fart to the..absolute satisfaction of tluir victim. The very |'prst-time hi* pul up a considerable sum of money, the tin expected happened, Ihe machine went wrong tnd the gambler lost. Lost summer out at. Denver another similar gang van cleaned up. Ita methods were exactly the same a* those of May 1)ray. The sucker was given a rom pleta'and jfcffrct demonstration of the plan by which „[iit gamblyr always won, nnd then was let down for whatever cash he ventured. So often has the game been worked that it would seem that, nobody living could' he caught at it Yet the cable news brings word of how an unnamed Hull ship master paid a professional gambler at Paris, of Iho name of War ren', ?Pi0,0fl0 for information that Would make him always a winner. The ship master presented his case to court, only to find out that he held a receipt from Warren for ■SllJO.OOO in hand duly paid, and that he might, ue to recover I hat, but Warren is out of reach. The Wirid is small,,but not small enough for everybody to get, information concerning the wiles of confidence men. Perhaps Barnum was right, after nIL PEACE AND A PRIZE THE GOAL. Edward Bok certainly started something when he hung up $100,000 ns a prize for the best essay on how to end war, or, to be more exact, a plan for bringing the nations together in agreement to avoid conflict. More than 200,000 applications have been made for copies of the rules to govern. Indicating a healthy ambition on part of the puhlic to join in the competition. It may be the money, but a more reasonable view is that these people are animated by a genuine desire to end war. Never in all history has there been such a re vulsion against war as exists among Americans to day. • Nor is this abhorrence exclusive to our people. Everywhere there is growing a sentiment against conflict, and such exhibitions as that of Mussolini but intensifies this feeling. So the Bok competition is getting notice in other lands, and those who are in charge of the affair expect that many foreign thinkers will fake part by submitting manuscripts. The jury of award will shortly be named. Fifty-one national organizations have signified their adherence to the program of the peace award committee, and among those named ns the co-operat ing council of award are: The American Farm Bureau federation, the National Fraternal Congress of America, the United .States Junior Chamber of Commerce, the National Democratic club, the Foresters of America, the Illinois Manufacturers association, the National Boot and Shoe Manufacturers association, the Silk Association of America, the National Federation of Temple Sisterhoods, the Union of American Hebrew* Congregations, tlie United Synagogue of America and the Veterans of Foreign Wars. This ought to answer those skeptics who lifted their eyebrows when the announcement of the Bok prizes was made public. The ultimate plan may nut bo the perfect one, but in much counsel lies wis dom, and in this case the more cooks the better the broth should be. SCHUYLER TURNS DOWN THE I-R PLAN. Citizens of Schuyler, Neb., know what they want, and they also know what they do not want. In the latter category now is included the initiative and referendum. No one is justified in arguing from this that the people of the Colfax county seat are backw'ard in any of the essentials of modern life or political activity, for their decision on the point was reached by vote. This somewhat anomalous result came about in a perfectly natural way. Some of the citizens went to the city council with a petition, asking that a certain matter be submitted to a referendum vote. The council turned down the petition, alleging that the famous T-R method of doing business was out of luck in Schuyler. The petitioners went to court, and Judge Button decided that a fair way to settle the whole matter would be to leave it to the citizens themselves. A vote was accordingly taken on the question as to whether Schuyler would have the initiative and referendum. Surprising as the result may seem to some, the voters decided that the good old way of enacting laws and settling questions through duly elected representatives was good enough to continue. The initiative and referendum was rejected by a vote big enough to astonish a,» well as to disappoint the advocates of the plan. Schuyler will continue to grow and prosper iri the future as in the past, and its example may yet prove a shining light to some other communities that are sufficiently old-fashioned to believe as she does. If the effect of the vote is to fasten responsibility a little firmer on the shoulders of the city council, the .people of Schuyler will not have lost r great deal by their decision. ' c. » _ , - • THE REAL PONY ^XPRESA. In the department contributed by The Omaha Bee's readers a correspondent writes concerning the route of the pony express. As contribution to the real history of that wonderful enterprise it is full of interest right now, because of the recent so-called relgbratiorv of the 63d anniversary of the establish ment of the pony express. Just why the celebration should have been started in August, when the pony express started in April, has not been made clear. Neither has it been explained why the riders of the anniversary hit straight across Kansas to Denver, instead of following the real route, which traversed Nebraska diagonally from a point near the extreme •northwest border. In the vicinity of Lowell, Newark and Kearney, Neb., ate men and women who were children when the pony express riders used to dash into old Fort Kearney, and who easily remember those stirring days. Nebraska can not afford to permit the world to forget that it was within her borders that occurred some of the most stirring incidents of the days of the Oregon trail and the pony express. No point along these Toutes is more replete with historic In terest than old Fort Kearney. It is to be regretted that the old fort was allowed to pass into private hands as a homestead, instead of being preserved ns a landmark in the history of the winning of the west. The same may be said of old Fort Mitchell, located in what is now Scotts Bluff county, and old Fort Laramie, in Wyoming. “Two men in a Cadillac car” cut considerable ice.in Omaha when they grabbed the pay roll destin ed to go to water plant workers. There is another challenge to the police. "Applied physical culture,” thnt. gets the-pupils to clean up the school gTounds ia not a bad idea in teaching. Henry Dunn says he can not stand the excite ment of politics. Took him some time to find it out. Lloyd George is going to visit Los Angeles. He will see a lot of America there, such as it is. Brother High is plain spoken about the matter t __ _ Homespun Verse —Ily Omaha* Own Poe I—• Robert Worthington Datum IN THE ABSENCE OF A TREE. You mnv have a rosy haven with a garden In the rear. Where the fragrant flowers blossom In the halm tints of the year , You may spend your evenings lolling In tits prided piano la make Kceneri more beautiful and dearer for inherent brauty'* sake i You may prise your rosy haven that is girded by tho ^ green Foliage, while hedges paint a truly captivating sheen; You nifty smile With satisfaction for you ran not help hul, know That Hi" gre;iIesl Joy of living llr« within the things that grow, tint with e'en Hi" garde s beauty and the grass of emerald hue There is some essenlinl missing when the sun glares down on you. And you (urn your eves Inwerd heaven ai d ou very plainly sec Nature's brauty scents deserted In the absents of s tr*s. It “The People’s Voice Edilotiali from render* of Tbt Mortlag Be*. P.eaden of The Morning Bn are Invited to ute thle r.olumn freely for tigrtieloa an matter* of pubilt Interest, A Letter to Governor Bryan. St Louis, Mo.—To the Editor of The .Omaha Bee: I have sent the fol lowing letter to Governor C. W. Bryan: I note in a Kt. Louis newspa per today a statement purporting to quote you as blaming President Cool idge for not "taking over” the an thracite mines. The statement quotes you as saying that, "if this were done, the government %vould do much to al lay the politlcA! and social unrest such as manifested in the recent Min nesota election.” It Is my impression that you are a democrat. If this Is true, are you trying to give President C'oolldge ad vice which might assure Ills election to (he presidency in 1921? Now honestly. Brother Bryan—1 call you brother berause I am a native of your slate, and because I admire the state—now honestly, have you given serious consideration to the matter of settltng questions which arise con cerning the operation of coal milieu without any thought of politics what ever? Tour statement indicates that the Minnesota election is unfortunate and that the situation connected therewith should he allayed. The Minnesota sit uation is probably what it appears on the surface to be. "honestly radical.” The people will not be misled by honest, open radicalism because the majority of people will see the fallacy of it and avoid steering our country into it. The non-radical radical in high places who puts up half-baked politi cal solutions for serious economic questions and falls to take up and settle equitably the serious political issues of the day is probably more harmful to the country's welfare than is the outspoken radical. Do you realize that "taking over” the mines is a long step toward na tionalization and that nationalization is next to communism? Are you aware that many so called representatives of workmen are going about, the country preaching radicalism and sovietism. If one industry Is "taken over” on aroount of an emergency created by its workmen is there any reason why any orall other Industries should not be similarly treated? Do you think it In keeping with your high position to urge upon gov ernment this step toward nationaliza tion of the mines Instead of urging equal responsibility under the law for all parties who combine and agree to stop production? 1 would appreciate your giving th,esc questions such serious ihought as their Importance merits and 1 would i*t happy to find that your mind goes along with mine to the effeet that • lass distinction in present anti trust legislation should he removed as a first step toward th» stabilization of industry and eotnerce. V If. GREENLAW. Lark of Civic Manner*. Ilartington. Neb—To Hie Lditor of The Omaha Bee. The nnual meeting of the Anteri- an Bar association was field at Minneapolis the TSth. 3nth and ■list of August. The Minnesota hat treated their visiters rov alls \\> hare no criticism *n pass no faul' to find with them We thought we did some thing for the city of Minneapolis. A conservative estimate of the money left, in Minneapolis bv visiting at torneys would he (47,500. The. city of Minneapolis invited us Several eminent speakers had come on our invitation. Among others the dle Mnguished secretary of stat' Tills wag the firs' time that the foreign policy of Mr. foolidge's administration was to.be declared and defined by his pre mier. To men of the legal profession living throughout the land, it was an Important occasion Mr Hughes was invited bv tie and was to talk to us It was publicly an nounced from the platform that the main body of tbs auditorium would he reserved for the members of ths a* soclatlon. Light o'clock waa the hour at which Mr Hughes waa tp speak Long before that time the whole main body was taken up by people who were laymen and la v women; and It Is a conservative statement to say that tvvo-thlrds of the lawyers were crowd ed out. Some of them had the door slammed In their faces and the key turned by a little, self sufficient, pin feathered deputy Janitor. ft is precisely the same ns though I would invite a man to dinner and slam the door In his f ire, t would recommend to the lav individuals of Minneapolis that tbev take a cor respondence course in derecrev and good manners. The conduct of the lay inhabitants of Minneapolis on this occasion was nothing short of an In suit and an outrage. Jt was some thing that admits of no Justification, no eicusa and no ezplanatlon I foreboro writing this fetter for two or three days, because I never like lo write a letter when T sin In a passion This affair Is something which we can not forget and It leave* In our minds no pleasant recollection of our visit to Minneapolis and no desire lo repeat the visit. WlLHt'R F. RRTAXT. Gloom Chasers "What are you crying for?" "Because Nina won't play with me " "Why won't she play with you? "Renauso I'm crying."—I’nrla Lc Journal. Professor X— Define the word "deft clt." Student T—A deficit Is what vou'vc aot when you haven’t ns much ns If you had nothing—1 larfmouth Jack o’ Lantern. Tactless Tom—Do you know, I’m afraid T passed you the other day. Mias Breen" Immediately aftcrwnj-d 1 realized to my horror that I knew you. —l’unrh. A philosopher doesn't rare whether s thing Is really so or not as long as he can prnvfc It. Daily Prayer Bering then that w* h*\* a great high priest. that la p«a<"*-1 Info the heatane. .!• avig thi ft led, i at ug ho 1 nur )>rftf»*sl'»fi Per w« hg'e nor *n high prlaai which rennet he touc hed with t h» fading nf oui Infirmities. hut »u *n all point* tempted Ilka ea %vc* err, 'a* without •in. I.at u« therefore •'»nt* h-ddly unto • ha thron* *>f grace, that *■ nmy obtain merry, end find gra--e to help in time of na. 1 tla|» III U. O Ooil, oUr loving laiher In Heaven Wo look up to Thea now with ravfi enca anears. One* If wen supported by efforts of tha people, before it mu made a r<*vu lar rharge on the taxpayers In 1876 an Important meeting was held to arrange for a ltctura course, the pro i reeds to so to the association. This was on November 21, 18.6. "OMAHA LIBRARY ASSOCIATION” "Three Excellent Lecture* to Be Delivered for It* Benefit.” "A course of three lecture- has been arranged by the Omaha Library as soelatlon, to be delivered in Clarke Iiall, as follows: "December S, Hon. .1. M. Wood worth. eubject, 'An Afternoon in the Houses of Parliament.' "December 15, Hon. A J Popple ton; subject, 'Edmund Burke.' "December 22, J. I>. Huwe; subject. Frauds.’ "The directors of the Association I have tried the experiment of engaging high-priced lecturers from abroad, and found it a financial failure They now propose to give to our citizens an op portunity—which they have long de sired—of listening to some of our best home thinkers and talkers. "Hon. A. J. Poppleton and Hon. J M. Woodworth stand at the head of the Omaha bar, and are the peers of any lawyers In the country. Their reputation is not confined to a local limit,* but extends far and wide throughout the whole country. Mr Woodworth is a polished scholar, and an Industrious student. We say that he is a student, because lie Is a con stant reader. Hia subject. "An After noon in the Houses of Parliament.'' will prove interesting and instructive. “Hon. A J. Poppleton is a fluent and eloquent speaker, and his subject, “Edmund Burke," is an eloquent tuple. He could not have chosen a better, nr more entertainglng, or more appropri ate subject, “John D. Howe, Esq , Is one of the rising lawyer* not nn|v of th« Omaha bar. but of the west He hgs worked his own wav far up the ladder, hand over hand, by devoting alt his energies to his profession. IT- has overcome obstacles that would have utterly dis hesrtened 99 men out of 109. There are only s few persons who know of his first struggles, hut the public are aware of his splendid legal triumphs of the last *hree years. They have recognized his talent, because they were obliged to. He has won some of the most important and complicated cases ever tried In Omaha, and the consequence is that his pathway is no longer one of uncertainty. The future Is bright, and h« is at last reaping the rew ards of industry and self denial. We say this much for Mr Hows be cause It is all fact—we have not ut tered one word to flatter him. He d» ,ervee greater prats* than we have sc corde-i him Our citizens will no doubt appreciate his lecture on 'Frauds'—a subject that he u in every way com petent to handle. ‘ The proceeds of (he lectures «re Intended for the benefit of the Library association, which is sadly in need of funds "The price of tickets has been placed at $1.00 for the course, and can h« obtained nt the bookstore and at the library rooms " hot Axles Hr "BIGS" BAKU Still slicking to our old American I motto. If you can't make it better. I make it bigger. If you can t do It right, do it quick. If you can't do it at all, do It any way. We make children'* toy a over here so big that they ve got to grow up to handle them. We build autos faster than we ran repair them Only building laws limit height of Kansas corn. It grows 1# feet high In Its stocking feet and I* so big that. II has to ba canned in boiler factories Were building hotels RO stories high er than ronifort. No Americans 'ver catch any fish, but ones they don t catch are never under 3 2 pounds. Our gevsera and grapefruit squirt further than any European diah. Bungalow. homes are built In three days nnd vacated In four. We are a successful nation because we make money fast enough to lend It to Europe. WoolwortH building Is to high that It contains freight, passen gcr and dining elevators. When European couple* get mar ried and promise to grow old anil gray together. It takes them lifetime to make good. Over hero, we accompli ah same thing in two weeks. Wo eat fast, dancs fast and think fast. If we can't figure out right so lotion to any problem, we pick out best mistake and make it. When America went Into the world war, I,lord George knew 1t would fin teh quick because no American fails last over one year if It hadn't been for UK. Europe would be still fighting and better off. Amerlrnn dancing i* cat fits set to music Wo are flying front New York to t'.ilifornla In Jo hour* and getitng galloping indignation from eating mlti tile steaks in ltd seconds. We sre further in front of vest of world tlutn Harry l ander I* ahead of his Imitators \\ e build navies quick er and scrap them sooner than any other nation We get sick quicker nnd better sooner t turn any other people, and pay more for It. — Joshua got famous In •«»» hooks by commanding sun to stand still. Mr trumped Joshua s mall order by nmv Ing sun up one hour. 1'avllght saving enables us to work quicker and get less don* aoonrr. This ls youngest nation In world , But we've caught up to them all In | debts, trouble and navies, and passed them in International complies I ions, divorce* and home hrew recipes. No Wonder M » V You can't imagine bo« much troubled mv husband Is about mv health! Mr Y,—Well, look at the high ftt tiara I expenses nowadays - Exchange “From State and Nation” —Editorials front Other Newspapers— Yen, He \\ .'is There. From the Fatrbury News A real live governor—Charley Bryan —Invaded the sacred precinct* of this city a week ago Satuiday and got out without lieing recognized, and even this proficient purveyor of news foiled to locate him. although wo diligently searched. Advance notices of hie speech were publish'd in all the country papers, two different" lor* of handbills were circulated broadcast announcing that Nebraska's governor would speak at the city park at 3 p. m, the weather was fine and the sun shone a tre menpouB crowd Of Saturday rhoppers was In town, all tlie conditions were auspicious, hut no one seemed to care to hear the governor. At 3:15 a News representative went to the city park. Although it was 15 mlnuteB after the governor's time according to Hie program, the gov ernor was not in sight. There were just 152 people*1n the tabernacle by actual count, and they were being ad dressed by one of the officers of the National Wheat Growers' association. We asked a number if the governor had spoken and they said he had not been at the meeting Feeling some what aggrieved at the loss of a good item, wo returned up town. Now it transpires that the governor was really here, and actually made a speech. There is really nothing to this narra tive. except that it portrays the fading popularity of Brother Charley. As a brother to W. J. he was a I way a popular, but when he is compelled to stand upon his own merits, when he has to have a real honest to goodness personality of his own, his stock de preciates faster than the German mark. The town was crowded with people that afternon and hundreds of. auto mobiles were parked upon the busi ness streets. Had the governor, occu pied th'- same place in tb" hearts of the people that he did during the las* campaign the auditorium would have been full and people would hevr-been packed around it clear beyond the sound of Ins voice, If that meeting was not an unerring barometer of public sentiment, then we fail to fathom its purport. Japan: A Tall for Friendship. From the * hr.Ftlan Selin r Monitor. It was late In December. 1503 The Atlantic fleet of the United States navy, on world tour, had left Colombo for Suez. Ill New York a supply ship, stocked with provisions and command ed by a young lieutenant commander, awaited sailing orders to mee the fleet at flibialtar. On the morning of De ' cember 2*, Ht hia breakfast table, this naval officer read the first account of the Messina earthquake and the de struction that folowed in Its wake. Realizing the need for constructive sympathy au'h as his ship's supplies might convey, he gave orders to bis crew to prepare to get under way, and wen* at nt n !n lie commandant of the New York naw card with hia pro posal. Theodore nosevelt was presi dept. A 'all to the White House and Mr. Ruse\ r it himself came to the phone lie had no authority to uae the jsnn noo wroth of supplies for Shi* purpose, but he raid ‘ I'll take my chances with congress Tell th» lieu tenant commander to sail at once for Messina.'' By 10 o'clock sailing orders were isued. hv ", after the whole force of the naw vard had rushed ad ditional supplies shoard ship, the ves sel was under wav. For two months under the direction of this resourceful nat al office;, refugee* jn Messina wera aided In the task of reconstructing their homes And for many genera ticni the m»morv of the Messina tra gedy of 1905 will be supplemented by an equally potent memory of the hope end help held out hv America and the w>>rld iu the hour of great need It is often In history, that the travertv rf toda- !> 1' -’ tomorrow- in the triumphs which til* traeedv pro duces The Boxer rebellion of l?nn in China swept away In one wild outburst of fanaticism, the lives and property rf many foreigners and mat • more Chinese But today, outside the walls of the city of Pekin, In a great pre paratory school, hundreds of Chinese lad* are preparing thamselves for ad vanced study in the United States; end scattered throughout I him. are other hundreds of young men w ho are taking the educational and Industrial and pullt al i-a • 1 - | I i. new Chinn Ard the rqisf. tune* of HOO have been all but fn-gntten in the good which has come ihrongh America's return f the Boxer indenuui’ It Would b» difficult to exaggerate I the calamity which ha* fallen upon Japan. No one would seek to mini miz** if. But already the forcea of sym pathy and help and hope—construct ive forces—are concentrating upon the two Riest cities of the Island empire. Whatever our opinion of the Japanese whatever barriers there tnav have beep—they are all rwept away, and the Pacific, from an ocean for strategy and maneuvers, has become a highway across which the friend ship of a klndlv world will flow. And rut of destruction a new and be'ter international building rnav ari** Ware, with, greater devastation, mas do less to solve the problem* of v.orld understanding than this apparent catastrophe The City Manager. From the Norfolk New* Norfolk, Va.,' a city of 116,WO peo ple, whore city manager ha* been calhd to Stockton. Cal., is employing another—a epecialilt of nsHonal repu tation—at • Falary of fjQ.090 a ye-».r. The new manager is an engineer a* well as an expert In municipal ad ministration of national repute Such an announcement today is taken a* a matter of course. Yet it is onlv 1« or 16 years since the employ ment of city managers, or pirofesF'on a! mayors, newly discovered in Ger many by our magazine writers, was looked upon as a quaint and absurd custom. The city administrator, as a type, has prove! his worth in this ahort time, and is being employed more and more by wideawake municipalities. This Is one of the few ways In which the Amercan people are gradually in fusing into public business the bruins and skill which have long been suc cessful in private business. K^vied Newton the Apple. Teacher—Newton discovered the law of gravity by an apple falling from a tree upon his head Johnny ig reluctant pupil)—Yes'm: If he -1 been In school he'd never have discovered anything at all—Boston Transcript. Truth WIU OuN The Suitor—I am going to marry your sister, Johnny, but I know I arn not good enough for her. I.ittie Bov-—That a what she says, but ma s been telling her she can't 'to any better—Exchange. Abe Martin l I ____LJ HlrtTMlNF s FKEg J Th’ rule that keeps up th’ price o' flour an' bread without effectin' wheat, must be th’ poor one we hear so much about. ’Squire Marsh Swallow fined a bandit a dollar and costs this mornin’ fer leavin’ h'j engine runnin' in front o’ th’ bank. Copyright, 1P23 N ET AVERAGE , CIRCULATION for Augutt, 1923, of THE OMAHA BEE Daily .72,114 pundav .75,138 * Do#* not include return#. !*ft over*, temples or papers spoled if printing and includes c spec a aelcs. B. BREWER, Gen. Mgr. V. A. BRIDGE, Cir. Mgr. ; Subscribed and s«ora to before m this 4th day of September. 1923 , W. H QL'IVLY, (Seal! Notary Public. , A Widow Speaks: ”!f only I had taken a business course/” Her husband made her executor of his will —and the was not equipped for the job! Ask our Trust Officer how your wife can he saved from such distress. Our booklet, "Tin 20th Century Will,*’ describee the modern wey of disposing of estetes Omaha National Bark Building Clean, complete* combustion and lots df power* are standard results from BALANCED gasoline Like ike proportioned charge of a modern cannon The proper proportion id intrant ignition element# anil plightly plower*hum* ing element# in balutued gatolinc arc like the deto nator anti the plow -burning powder of a cannon charge. iTicv guarantee quick igni tion and prc#turc to the end of the ptrokc. ! —,. SERS know they can always depend on 1 i Red Crown Gasoline for clean Com bus I J tion and plenty of power. Quite as im portant Red Crown assures a lively, quick-starting motor, liberal mileage and depend able uniformity— an array of advantages that only balanced gasoline can provide. Red Crown Gasoline is ha lanced gasoline balanced for quick starts, maximum power and economy perfectly suited to the modem motor. An abundance of instant ignition elements' and a proper proport ion of slight ly slower-burning element s insure quick starts and full power on a lean, eoonom ical, clean-burning mixture of balanced Red Crown Gasoline. i At tilling time, drive in to the nearest Red Crown I Service Station. You are assured prompt, courteous ’ service and honest measure of high quality gasoline F and motor oils that provide protective lubrication, f STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEBRASKA Tl’nlf or ask for RED CROWN iioaJ Map bed crown gasoune