The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, October 21, 1923, HOME EDITION, Page 8-A, Image 8

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The Sunday Bee
MORNIN G—E V E N 1 N G—S U N D A Y
THK l»EE Pl'HUSHING CO.. Publisher.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associnled Press. of which The Bee ia a member. Is
-xciasively entitled to the nee for republication of all newa
■lispatchox credited to it or not otherwise credited in this
taper, and also the local new* published herein. All rights of
epublitation of our special dispatches are aleo reserved.
BEE TELEPHONES
Private Branch Exchange. Ask for the Department AT lantie
*r Person Wanted. For Night Calls After 10 P. M.: | on/Y
editorial Department. AT lantic 1021 or 1042. xvUV
OFFICES
Main Office—17th and Farnam
Council Bluffs—15 Scott SL So. Side, N. W. Cor. 24th and N,
Sew York—World Bldg. Detroit—Ford P'dg.
Lhicago—Tribune Bldg Kansas City—Bryant Bldg.
St. Louis—Syndi. Trust Bldg. ,us Angeles—Higgins Bidg.
San Francisco—HoUrook Bldg. Atlanta—Atlanta Trust Bldg.
A LAY SERMON FOR SUNDAY.
“1 said, I will take heed to my ways, that 1
tun nut with my tongue; 1 will keep my mouth
with a I idle, while the wicked is before me.”—
r*g<Ulna otLI.
.-is with the determination of David thp Psalmist,
o let it be with us, all of us, that we take heed
to our ways, sin not with our tongues and keep our
mouths well bridled.
Most of all the suffering and sorrows of the
world have come as a result of einning with the
tongue and failure to keep the mouth bridled. The
gossiping and slanderous tongue has wrecked homes
and driven countless thousands to despair and death.
The unbridled mouth, voicing discontent and arous
ing the worst passions in men, has caused needless
bloody resolutions and left long trails of famine
and wretchedness as their aftermath.
David was given at times to hurl his verbal
javelins against wrong and unrighteousness, and he
himself slipped more than once from the straight
and narrow way. But when fronted by his iniqui
ties he was quick to admit his guilt and plead for
forgiveness. In that readiness to acknodledge his
faults and plead for forgiveness he set a good ex
ample to men and women of today, too many of
whom are too proud or too stubborn to admit their
mistakes and going right ahead with them, to the
ruin of themselves and the injury of society.
There are those about us today who pretend
to be seekers after reformations, but who sin with
their tongues by imputing improper motives to those
not in full agreement with them. Such as these
unbridle their mouths and pour forth vituperations
upon those to whom it is not given to see as these
self-appointed reformers see. Charity is not in
iheir hearts and the forgiving spirit is as foreign
to their natures as cooling waters are to the nether
regions.
Men who seek to advance their selfish purposes
by arousing ill feeling and getting neighbor against
neighbor, unbridle their mouths, they sin with their
tongues, they take no heed of their ways. The
,ongue given to the sin of gossip or the dissemination
of slander is an abomination in the sight of the
Almighty. The unbridled,mouth that spews forth
venom, that arouses passions, that unlooses the
dogs of war, is more dangerous to society than
disease germs and spreading plagues.
That genial philosopher, Abe Martin, preached
a whole sermon on brotherly kindness and human
fellowship when he said: “When you don’t know
nothin’ good to say of a feller, think up some
thin’.’’ Think clean thoughts. Take heed of your
ways. Sin not with the tongue, and above all,
keep the mouth bridled that it run not away with
vain speech nor be given to fostering works of
corruption.
, With the dawning of another Lord’s day morn
ing. let us, each and every one, make a new resolu
tion to take better heed of our ways, that those
following us may not follow to their undoing; that
we sin not with the tongue, lest those who have
confidence in us be misled to their everlasting
orrow; that we bridle our mouths, lest by un
!oosi"g them we foster discontent whereon peace
r.nd happiness should abound.
Thus s-ayeth the preacher.
“May the words of my mouth, and the medita
tions of my heart, be acceptable in Thy sight, O
I ord, mv strength and my redeemer.’’
_•
BORROWING MORE YEARS.
Advances in preventive medicine have per
formed wonders in the past two or three decade*.
The infant mortality death rate has been cut in two,
and, concurrently, the average expectancy of humap
life has been increased almost ten years, according
(o Dr. George E. Vincent of the Rockefeller Founda
tion. People now live longer than did their grand
parents. 'Not even the increased dangers of our in
dustrial society have stemmed the flow of the bene
ficent results of scientific medicine.
This report indicates that there is an even greater
possibility of extending human life. In the past cen
tury the average span of a man's life has increased
by fourteen years. Increased medical knowledge,
economic progress and well organized campaigns
of health education have been the chief causes of
this gain. It has been estimated that continued
progress on the present basis would soon further Te
nure the death rate by c.,c tnird and add ten more
years. There is every likelihood, too, that the fu
ture holds out even more for man in this regard.
CLINGING TO THE YOUTH LINE.
Mary Garden, with her little blue pill, still Is
dispensing sweetness and light out on the Pacific
coast, and is exuding much advice to those of her
sex who have not succeeded in keeping down weight.
Mary does not say that she relies entirely upon her
ns yet imperfect pill, but that it helps. In her latest
interview she admits that she relies on more or less
energetic physical exercise, tennis, swimming, danc
ing and the like, to prevent the accumulation of
fiesh that years wouldL add to her frame. For Mary
is no longer as young as she used to be, and the toll
that nature takes requires constant application to
prevent its becoming heavy.
It is easy to understand the mental attitude of
Miss Garden and other women like her. They dread
the disappearance of the lines of youth, the lissome
•race of th» teens or the early twenties, and so will
make almost any sacrifice when called upon In order
io retain that dainty slenderness that so delights the
eye. Yet there are other women who are too busily
engaged in pursuing the things that keep them busy,
and so have little or no time to worry about the
coming on of the more ample curves that are apt
to follow after tU) and sometimes come before. These
emind us of Aunt Miranda’s comment on the old
maids, who, she said, have more fun than married
women, “after they quit struggling.’’
A woman’s weight is largely a matter of her
i v. n business, just ns Thomas Bracket Reed once
aid, “.Vo gentleman will weigh over 200.’’ The
little blue pill may bring peace of mind to Mary
Garden, and in time may come to be a boon to oth
ers of her sex, but the chances are good that the
ill not entirely vanish because of this.
FROST A SIGN OF PROMISE.
First “killing frost of the season is reported. This
is nature’s notice to mankind to get ready for what Is
to follow. For weeks the early signals have been out.
Little nips in the air, the falling leaf, the ripening
corn crop, ..the apple turning red, the pump
kin taking ohils golden hue, the grass turning brown
along the edges of the walk, and on the ridges, are
all forerunner* of the first swoop of the Frost King.
Birds began their migration toward winter homes long
ago, and everything hut man seems to be ready for
the announcement of-the first killing frost.
Some great impulse has communicated the on
coming of winter’to all animate and inanimate na-*
ture. Just os in the early spring the stirring of life
is felt by the germs that He sleeping in the frozen
earth, and bud and rootlet begin to imperceptibly put
forth those evidences of a growth that soon will
clothe a bare world with verdure, while bird and
beast, and fish and worm feel a new urge passing
through their being, so the day of cold and dreary
wirtter is forecast to them. Springtime, summer
and autumn have rolled around in their turn, and
birth, growth and maturity have followed in order,
and now sleep is coming to complete the cycle.
Not until December 22 does winter begin, ac
cording to the calendar, but the first frost of the
fall is really its curtain raiser, and long before
solstice comes we will have snow and ice and sleet
and the general discomforts of the season. These,
however, are sustainable, because all can sing with
the poet, "If winter comes, spring is not.far be
hind,” realizing the beauty of the true round of life.
Just as nature "draws the drapery of her couch
around her,” so man lies down to ple^mnt dreams,
realizing more and more every day that when the
lights of this world go out, the glory of another will
dawn upon him. The first killing frost of the fall
is really the harbinger of that resurrection that is
to come in the fullness of time, with a new birth
and a wonderful life, and perfectly typifies the faith
that uphold* the devout In his conviction of the life
that lies beyond.
MEDAL OF HONOR FOR AUNT MARY.
From Atlantic, la., cornea a short news story
that is of much more than passing interest. The
story might well have been amplified into a big
feature story instead of confined to 16 or 20 lines.
Mrs. Mary Annspach taught in Iowa schools for
25 years without missing a day in all that time.
The other day she fell ill at her home in Avoca
and was brought to Omaha to undergo an opera
tion for appendicitis.
That record of 25 years of molding the minds
of Iowa youth without missing a single day from
the job, is one that deserves more than passing
recognition. Monuments have been erected to the
memory of men whose record for real service is
not to be compared with that of this veteran
schoolma'm. Who can measure the value of this
good woman's sendee in developing youthful minds
and building for a better citizenship?
While we are handing oat medals to those who
have proved their devotion to their country upon
the field of battle; while we are handing out medals
to those who have rescued their fellows from
death, why not a medal for Mrs. Annspacher of
Avoca, la., who has proved her devotion to her
country by dedicating her life to the splendid task
of developing its citizenship?
“Aunt Mary,” as she is affectionately known to
her students, is occupying a bed in an Omaha hos
pital. Doubtless her students, mindful of her
patience and her devotion to their welfare, are
keeping her room fragrant with the choicest flowers
obtainable. But a few flowers from men and
women who have not yet forgotten their teachers
of the bygone days, and who have some apprecia
tion of the devotion of the teachers to their own
boys and girls, would not be amiss.
May the day be far distant when “Aunt Mary’s”
students of the last quarter of a century are called
upon to dedicate a monument of brony or marble
to her memory. Strong and enduring as that
monument may be, it can not be *s splendid or as
enduring as the monument “Aunt Mary” has already
erected in the hearts of the boys and girls entrusted
to her care during the years of her active work
in their behalf.
The editor of a college paper has been discharged
because he allowed too many puss words to appear
In the publication. Gracious, what would happen if
all the words used by the boys in the composing
room were allowed to appear on the printed page.
Mr. Edison says that the advent of the four-hour
work day would have a bad effect upon the young.
Having passed that age we are prepared to take
chances.
However, efforts to communicate with departed
spirits are not likely to produce the dire results that
follow the experimentation with alleged spirits.
That meeting of the governors at West Baden
only faintly resembled the famous session between
the chief executives of the two Carolinas.
* _________________
Woman leaders say the Nebraska marriage law Is
misunderstood. No doubt sboat It, and maybe that
explains why divorces are so common. .
Now that Papyrus has finished his business on
this side, maybe Mr. Lloyd George can get uninter
rupted attention.
Some men build a bridge and then go about look
* ing for a river to put under it.
-*
Thp Legionnaires know how to stage a conven
tion.
Homespun Verse
—By Omaha's Own Poet—
Robert Worthington Davit
PRtZR FIGHT IN«V
There's > stone %ih trait**Ml lldger* til the blo&l
on<! paadeon swwvs;
It la tho remaining Instinct of remote and primal
days.
Strength and chivalry are dormant, nnrl tremendous
the delight
Of the man who renpa ht* glory from beholding
others fight.
O, the matchless art of flinging padded gloces has
reached a place
Where true glory looks with wonder to the fineness
of the race.
And deepslrs the worthy banner of a noble nausa
and pure
Till It aeetria ancestral virtue Is forsaken and obscure.
And the Patriarch starve us looks upon Hla precious
Isle,
A»d observes the trend of fashion with s strange!
solemn smile
W ar he feels Is unessential, hut 'pl>' aritiii-ci portray *
Popularity for lighting In a truly savagci r. ay.
Out of Today's
Sermons
• "Ik)n't Guess; He Sure,” Is Hie
topic of tonight's sermon liy \V.
F. MacNelll, pastor of (trace Bap
tist church. The text Is “But
they, supposing llfm to have been
of the company, went a day's Jour
ney.” # Luke 3:44. He will say:
The pilgrims, returning to'northern
Palestine after the feast at Jerusa
lem, banded together in great cara
vans, and it was customary for the
men to travel together and the wo
men likewise. The families would
unite at (he end of the day for sup
per and family worship. Mary, miss
ing Jesus during the day, would
naturally suppose that he was witlv
Joseph, and Joseph, noting his ab
sence, would take It for granted
that lie was with his mother. At the
family reunion, therefore, great was
their consternation when they made
the startling discovery that he was
not with the caravan at all. Jesus
assumed the blame, saying that lie
must tie aliout his Father's business.
Tills Incident is rich in valuable
lessons for us, and the most obvious
one Is especially' for parents. Don't
suppose ubuut your children; be sure.
There are many things that cannot
be taken for granted with safety, one
is your children's companionships
They ure probably of the best. But
that element of uncertainty often
sprouts bitter experience*. Be sure.
Another Is you children's reading.
Vision, outlook, high tdealisnj, these
are the natural outgrowth of the
Imagination well fed In youth. The
Importance of right reading cannot
be exaggerated. Other thing* being
equal, a parent underwrites a child’s
success In life who wisely selects his
books. Don't guess; be sure.
Again, the parents cannot be in
Ignorance of the child's whereabouts
In his leisure time and expect any
thing else but sorrow as the result.
To suppose they are all right doesn't
make It so. Don’t guess; be sure.
Finally, parents should nurture the
mind, heart and soul of their chMl
as well as the body. Food, shelter,
clothing Is but the beginning of nur
ture. The snuffing out of a young
life by accident or disease Is a heart
stifling tragedy that Is only exceeded
by the living tragedy of an adult
whoa mind was vitiated, whose heart
was corrupted, whose soul was
blighted by the very Ignorance or un
concern of parents who took for
granted that their child was adequate
ly Informed In these vital matters.
Don’t guess; be sure.
In spiritual matters professed be
lievers may take for granted that
the lA>rd is with them when, for a
matter of fact, He has long ago been
crowded out of their lives. They go
bn doing a few perfunctory religious
duties, maybe, but their hearts are
far front God. They pay engrossing
attention to their own affairs; they
carry out questionable business deals;
they form unholy friendships; they
make entangling alliances; they in
dulge In loose amusements; and yet
they suppose that the Uord Is with
them- Having the form of godliness
but lacking the power, they add the
sin of hypocrisy to their irreligion.
Still they suppose that He Is with
■them. Don’t guess; be sure.
The glory, power and distinction of
Christianity consists In the fact thn*
in spiritual matters we need
guess, we can be sure. And that
tainly does not depend on ln*e*1e :
apprehension alone, but •• - rl
cnce as well. Jesus er with
authority and lived triumphant over
circumstances because of His expert
ence with and His realising sense of
the Father's presence.
The sermon to he preached by
i)r. Arthur A tack at llanscom
Park Methodist Kpiseopal churrh
this Sunday morning nil! be on
"The Social Sanity of Sabbath
Observance, or Docs Omaha Need
a Blue Sundaj?” He will say In
part:
A professor of hygiene In Leipslc
university once said: "If religion
calls the seventh day the Day of the
I/ord, the hygienist will call Monday
the day of man.” This simply affirms
from the human standpoint the dec
laration of God Almighty and those
meaningful words of the Man of Na
zareth, "The Sabbath was mad# for
man.”
Now, It needs but a casual observa
tion of our Omaha life too see that
we need to relearn the lesson of so
cial sanity of Fibbath observance.
I am not pleading for a Puritanic
blue Sunday, but for a sane and re
ligious observance of one of God's
greatest gifts to man. "
The pendulum has swung to the
other extreme and In many lives and
places Instead of being a day of reet
and worship it has leoome a day of
self indulgence, cheapness and unrest.
■Our problem has increased since the
war, and w- need to recall the words
of Henry Van Dyke, who said: "The
preservation of the Lord's' day for the
higher and nobler purposes ct man
is one of the most Important Issues
of the after war work which the
world must face.”
I submit that the day of rest each
weeg Is a great national asset, not
only of rellghous value, but of eco
nomlr value. It Is a well known fact
that If you want to get the most out
of a machine, you must give It pe
riods of rest, and the more delicate
Ihe machine, the more necessary tt
Is for It to have such rest. How
much rpore this ts true of man.
Burke once said: "A nation that
neglects the Sabbath soon sinks Into
barbarism and ruin.^t .!l7#4
■ annot bear the prJkure o
days of work and w-dffjt In ttw
Never was there nr re need
assertion of that great truth "'than
now. Life Is lived at a higher pree
sure than ever before, and, Irrespec
tive of the religious aspect. It be
hooves every sane man to defend and
observe "reel day.”
To put It mildly, that man Is guilty
if great folly who Is so mastered by
his business that he cannoiQIet up
nne day In a week. And that em
ployer of labor who Is guilty of Insist
ing that his employes working seven
days a week Is an enemy of the re
public and doing much to create a
radicalism which will eventually do
stroy our nation.
“But," says the man who refuses
to gather with others for tho worship
Of God: "Cannot a man worship find
In the great out o' doors, those first
I cm pies? etc., etc " The obvious an
•wer to most men who talk that way
Is, "Sure he can. but you don't "
We talk about tbs holy Sabbath,
and we talk wisely, for there Is
rtomelhlng pecullsr anil sacred about
Ihe rest day set apart, but Is not Its
main function the making up of all
life and of all days sacred '
The true lover of Amcrlr.i. what
over his creed, will do nothing to
hurt Ihe rest day of Ihe Lord. Do
we need a Blue Sunday In Omaha?
No, and there Is no danger of It.
Tho groat danger Just-new In this
day of commercialized amus* nvent,
etc , Is tiie yellow Sunday of lawless
ness and seif indulgence.
We need a red. white and bine Sun
lay which shall Is- truly Christian
juid patriotic. As some one e|si has
paid; "Sunday should serve four
oids: Best from labor. spiritual
growth, recreation of vital • nergy arid
family life,"
"Remember the Snhbnili day anil
keep it holy."
"■'ail the Habluith a delight, tho
Holy of lIn. I. id."
Cherub Clouds
-By KIJ5AN0R H IN MAN.
A flock of little cherub clouds
Come fluttering out across the sky;
They skim its deep with gleaming shroud*
Ip lines of linked volancy.
Is God’s high heaven so full of bliss
That cherub clouds must overflow?
Or greening earth so lovely 'tis,
That lightly lured them here below?
Or are they signs that earth may be
So blent with heaven in God’s own heart
That all His wreathed heraldry
Can scarce discern the two apart?
Prairiegraphs
Autumn Days.
t
Shot with the gold of the western
sun.
Or the silvery sheen of the autumn
moon; t
Tinged with colors of ft day that s
done.
Soothed by the sigh of the night
wind’s rune.
The Soft stars peep from the arch
ing blue,
While the swan clouds float in a
dreamy haze—
Then the rising sun paints a rosy hue
in the round of Nebraska's autumn
days.
The sumacs blaze on the sun tinged
hills
In scarlet and gold of the tilting
knights,
And their shadows blend with the
singing rills
TUI the day dies down to a dim
twilight.
Tlie brown leaves croon In a melody
Where the elfin horde In’the forest
plays.
And sun and moon in a silver sea
Mark the round of Nebraska’s au
tumn days.
The garnered grain and the fruited
vine.
Full rich rewards of a summer’s
toll;
The cottage home where the heart
strings twine,
And the far flung span of the
fertile soil.
All grip the soul as the eyes behold
The wonders spread for our mortal
gaze;
And the hours speed on as a tale
that's told
In the round of Nebraska's autumn
days.
Among other unsatisfied ambitions
is the one to visit a» art exhibit and
then return to the office to write a
soulful article about iierspectlve and
atmosphere and technique.
Being on* of the old fashioned kind
of folk I haven't yet been seized with
the seemingly prevalant notion that
to acquire a fortune by honest work
and successful speculation that
doesn’t hurt anybody is a crime.
Ol’ John Sweet of the Nebraska
City Press suggests that this kolm
would better to headed "SugarbeeU
tudes." I might rail It “Driftwood."
by the catching of which same from
the Mlseourl river ol’ John earned
his first honest slmoleon.
We tamely suhmltted when the
Volstead act went across, but to
those who seek now to banis!} the
soothing pipe we say. "Reware, Lest
You Crowd Cs Too Far.”
40VS~0r MINE.
A quiet hour In the old home rest.
A soothing pipe In the firelight's
glow;
The welcome smile of those loved
best.
As the dancing shadows come and
go;
A good night kiss from the lips of
love
As the old clock peals the stroke of
. nine.
Are the memory pearls of my treas
ure trove.
Anr what I count as the Joys o’
mine.
The professional reformer 1* always
ready to do a fin* Job of protecting
everybody from their taullf, except
himself AT '
After many years of eou/fiWHfr
foryi Advice that was never heeded
I have come to that point In life where
I am willing to admit that It was a
blamed good thing It wasn't
I'ncle Mose Suydenham dreamed of
a coming time when Kearney would
he the capitol city of the United
State* Men and women laughed at
him and tapped their forehead* sig
nirtcantly And I'ncle Mose died still
seeing that vision. Hut a lot of
people who called Noah crazy died lie
fore they could admit to Noah that
he was right. Stranger things have
happened than that Uncle Mo^es
Suydenham should some flna morn
ing turn his spirit eyes earthward
and discover that his earthly dream
had com* true.
Speaking out of an experience of
something like 30 years I am pre
pared to say that any husband or
wife of more than one year’s standing
Who declares thnt never has a cross
Word lteen exchanged, really ought
to be thankful that the fate meted
out to Ananias and Kapphlra Is no
longer customary. One of the real
Joys of the marital state Is the mak
ing up after the clouds have rolled
by. And It Is a wise husband who
makes the first advance towards
reconciliation.
The sun is setting for the booster
and the go-getter. More and more
every day Is the world turning to the
steady pluggers who dally saw their
goodly share of the community wood
and draw their goodly share of the
community water. Communities are
not bullded by the boosters, but by
the builders who lay securely the
foundatli-ns upon which they build.
WILL M. MAUPIN.
LISTENING IN*
On the Nebraska Preaa
The J3maha city commission has
removed Dan Butler as head of the
police department and put Henry
W. Dunn In his place. The dispatches
don’t reveal what the commission has
against Dunn.—Norfolk Press.
If Henry Ford perfects the plan to
engage In the manufacture of gaso
line to be supplied through Ford sta
tions for Ford cars at about 15 cents
per gallon, he will simply be complet
ing the circuit of the business—fur
nishing the machine and the power
to operate It. Mr. Ford Is of more
value to the nation as a practical In
dustrialist than ever would be possi
ble as president.—Grand Island Her
ald. _
Had three loads of cinders piled
back Of the office a few days ago
to be used In tilling some holes wash
ed out by the rain. Friend looked at
the pile and said: "you must have
bought some of Governor Bfyan's
cheap coal.”—Clay Center Sun.
Don’t blame an automobile because
it occasionally kicks over the traces,
knocks down a new telephone pole, or
cavorts with the cotv catcher of a
train. Automobiles have no brains—
neither have many people who drive
them.—Nebraska City Press.
There are national forest reserve*
in Nebraska, although this state and
forestry are not readily associated in
our mind* &*rh state received one
fourth of the money received by the
federal government from uses of the
national forests witin its boundaries i
Nebraska recently received $4,329.98
ns her share for this year.—Beatrice
Sun.
We have not studied the matte? |
carefully enough to ssv much for or
against the question of a onehousf
legislature, and yet it seems to us
that many good measures originated
in the house have in the past l*een
blocked by the senate and vice versa,
and putting two and two together
there is always more or less red tape
connected with the present mode of
law making, so it may be a good thing
to get out of the old rut and try
something new and not stay in the
old calf path forever.—Stromsburg
Headlight.
The "Hickory Bhirted Statesman"
was scheduled to take the count in
the state normal melee But he fooled
'em. Tom Majors has been one of
the most picturesque of Nebraska's
statesmen. But all hl« public artivi
Uee have been fraught with bittef
contentions. Nevertheless ^ls service
to the Peril Normal school entitles
hhn to the everlasting gratitude of
the educators of the state, and w e are
glad he has been vindicated.—Fair
bury News.
Those w ho build roads today will
not live to see the time when their
roads are not used. Those who bond
themselves for roads today will
never see the day when those bonds
are outstanding against disused high
ways. The airwave will he increas
ingly used, but not for freight.—Eagle
Beacon.
People should a.-cept things said
In the way they are meant, and not
spur up their imaginations tp find a
construction that, would give offense.
One should get up in the morning
with the idea that the world Is
friendly, and <hat usually the spirit
of good Intention inspires a man to
talk and is present in what Tie says,
even though it may not be the truth.
— Wayne Herald.
SAY “BAYER” when you buy. Insist!
Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets, you are
not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by
physicians over 23 years and proved safe.by millions for
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^
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Handy "Kayer" boxes of 12 tablet* Alao bottle* of 24 and 10(V lxrugglut*
Ajplrla U iu» u*Or mark *1 U*/cr klauuUciui* ’£ 4£oo**itUi*clikJt*r •£ SallcjUcactil
t
What have you seen? Are you
ever attracted by the voice of the
world of nature which surrounds
you? The Omaha Bee welcomes
letters from readers on observa
tions of nature,
MOKE GAME AM) BETTER
SHOOTING.
The most valuable things are avail
able to all mankind—rich and poor
alike If they will reach out and take
them. Air and light belong In com
mon to everybody who breathes and
sees. And so the pleasantest and the
most splendid of our country** re
sources—roads, rivers, forests, libra
ries. museums—belong to everyone.
No rich man possesses a greater share
than the poor man In the playgrounds,
the parks, or the pleasures of the
outdoors. They are more the poor
man's than the rich man’s, for the
poor man uses and enjoys them more
—they are the poor man’s riches.
Passage of the ’’Public Shooting
Ground-Game Refuge Bill” will pro
vide the man of moderate means with
a nearby place to shoot and enjoy
himself It will also create more
game, some of which w-ill spill out
Into the preserves of the wealthy.
The poor, the rich and the game bene
Tlt by this common sense legislation.
The "public shooting grounds game
refuge bill” is the biggest quick ac
tion proposition now before American
sportsmen. And so the 0,000.000
American hunters should be for It,
body, boots and breeches and so you
will be when you clearly understand
what It Is and what it will ao to
produce more game and better shoot
ing. When the American sportsmen
decide to put it over It will be all
over!
The "public shooting grounds-game
refuge bill" comes tip for congres
sional action about Christmaas time.
It Is a federal measure which provides
for a national survetf by government
experts to decide where public shoot
ing grounds and game refuges sha'l
be established in each state fur all
who are willing to co-operate. These
tracts are to he bought by the gov
ernment with funds provided by a II
federal license, to be paid annually
by those who wish to hunt on the
public shooting grounds thus created.
Woe to the breaker of the game laws
or the out of season killer who trifles
with federal game wardens! There
will be no local friends or politics to
prote<-t them if they try to spoil your
shooting
These tracts will Include certain
portions sei aside which will he tsillio
breeding grounds and refuges for all
time. There game will increase and
thrive and so migrate all over the,
country and spill out in the usrround
ing territories. Ask hunters who have
shot near private preserves what luck
they had. On th» the other portions,
shooting by license paying sportsmen
will l>c permit ted at such seasons is
the state and local gante laws pro
vide. The migratory bird treaty law,
which stopped spring shooting, savs
we may not shoot. This bill states
when we ran shoot, and puts I'nele
Sam into the game rearing and pro
tectlng business with a definite con
structive plan for more and better
shooting for all sportsmen who are
not able to Join expensive shooting
clubs. Such action will stop the
growing practice of draining vast
tracts now valuable as food and sport
producing areas, because the govern
ment will buy such land and where
advisable actually restore some
drained Jakes and marshes, scores of
which have proved worthless
agriculture because of their poor i«!l.
The Indirect effort will be to Influence
many whose land Is not bought to
refrain from draining their own prop
erty because of the government's ex
ample. It will strengthen local game
protection by demonstrating the re
sults of real federal methods.
Wild fowl and other migratory birds
liave been \astly increased by he
migratory bird treaty, only to be
starved by lack of food and poisoned
by the natural pollution of restricted
breeding and resting areas.
Migratory birds can't live on air or
In the air. Give them a chance to
rest and feed and breed locally. This
proposed law. then, naturally follows
the great federal migratory bird
statute and Is quite as important, for
it will save the game for sportsmen
and keep it near by. so that long, ex
pensive trips will lie unnecessary. It
is a law that does not rest on theory
—It is a demonstrated success wher
ever Its principles are put into opera
tion. State game refuges and public
shooting grounds have brought back
the game to Pennsylvania until today.
Instead of a shot-out state, she ranks
foremost among the commonwealths
which furnish good, legitimate sport
for their citizens. Other states have
proved conclusively the worth of the
public shooting ground game refuge
principle. Many wealthy ducking
clubs have set aside certain parts of
their holdings on which a shot Is
never fired, and !n doing so they have
improved th«ir seort.
ELTINGE F WARNER,
Field and Stream.
■Start of the Story.
from the Christian Science Monitor.
So Waterbury, Conn., has at last
ferreted out the source whence origin*
ated the charge that child labor dur
ing 1922 Increased within its boun
daries S00 per cent over the previous
year. And it appears that the staid
and conservative Waterbury Clock
company is responsible? This is how
it happened: The company, finding
that a comparatively large number
of boys and girls were so circum
stanoed that they could not afford to
continue their schooling after they
had reached the age of 1*. decided
help them out by arranging half-tln^W
positions to enable them to continue
theeir studies until they graduated.
NET AVERAGE
CIRCULATION
for September, 1923, of
THE OMAHA BEE
Daily .72,518
Sunday.75,942
Does not intrude returns, left
ever*, samples or r»per* spoiled it
printing and iochsdes nr spec in
•a'e* |
B. 'BREWER, Gen. Mgr.
V. A. BRIDGE, Cir. M*r.
Subscribed and sworn to before me
tbi* 5th day of October. 1923.
W. H QUIVEY,
(Sen!) Notary Public
I I
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Inteetlnal tnlUriillo.
Thetw te no» offerd to the public a
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•’After taking Adlenkn fee' better t haS 1
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