■ The Morning Bee^ - __ MORN1N G—E V E N I N G—S U N D A Y I THE BEE PUBLISHING CO- Publisher N. B. UPDIKE, President BALLARD DUNN. JOY M. HACKLER. Editor in Chief. Business Manager. “ MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press, of which The Bee is a member, is exclusively entitled to *he use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of our special dispatches are also reserved. The Omaha Bee fa a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations, the recognized authority on circulation audits, and The Omaha Bee’s circulation is regularly sudited by their organizations. Entered as second-class matter May 28. 1908, at Omaha postoffice under act of March 3, 1879. BEE TELEPHONES Private Branch Exchange. Ask for at I i Ann the Department or Person Wanted. * iRTItlC 1UUU -' OFFICES Main Office—17th and Farnam Co. Bluffs—16 Scott St. So. Side. N. W Cr. 24th N. New York—-World Bldg. Detroit—Ford Bldg. Chicago—Tribune Bldg. Kansas City—B^rant Bldg. St. Louis—Syn. Trust Bldg. Los Angeles—Higg.na Bldg, i San Fran.—Hollrook Bldg. Atlanta—Atlanta Trust Bldg. v_-___y LIGHT ON THE STATE PRIMARY LAW. Efforts made at Lincoln by the late legislature in the direction of straightening out 'Nebraska's pri mary election laws seem only to have put additional kinks into the statute. Part of this came from negligence on part of the lawmakers, who had only the best purpose in view, but who succeeded in pass ing two laws dealing with the same subject, and conflicting in a way that is very annoying. These had to do chiefly with the selection of members of the county committees and the delegates to the county and state conventions. Attorney Gen eral Spillman has just given out an opinion that har monizes the conflict, at least to the extent that it will permit legalized party functioning. The attor ney general holds that the conventions are to meet on the dates fixed by law. At county conventions any deficiency in quota of delegates resulting from the failure or neglect of a precinct to elect a suf ficient number may be remedied by the county com mittee naming the delegates from that precinct to the county convention. This sounds like a common sense view of the sit uation. It is open, of course, to criticism and per haps objection, that in event of a contest of any sort, the county committee will have the duty of de ciding between the contestees, and thus may be ac cused of taking sides in a local factional squabble. However, if the voters themselves do not settle such matters, the committee should. The incident opens for argument again the whole system of primary election laws in Nebraska. Ad- j mittedly cumbersome, every effort to simplify their operation by amendatory legislation has either failed , entirely or produced a new complication. One of the first things on the program at the next session of the legislature should be the naming of a commit tee, on which all parties should be represented, to have for its business the drafting of a comprehensive but simple election law for the state, to govern all functions of active political parties. A law should be enacted that will safeguard not only public but individual interests, leave all political parties free to manage their own affairs within the law, and at the same time be simple enough so that ! its provisions will not be oppressive or restrictive, j This does not mean that the short ballot is to be con sidered, although much time and expense might be saved by adopting the system. The idea is to so clarify the election laws that voters will always have a chance to express their desires and preferences at the polls, for all offices and on all issues. Such a law would crown a legislature with glory. FEDERAL AID FOR COUNTY ROADS. When the voters of Douglas county authorized a bond issuf of $3,000,000 for paving roads in the county outside of Omaha, they overlooked one little point. Uncle Sam was and is extensively engaged in the same line of endeavor. So far the federal gov ernment has dealt with states only, matching dollars generously, and to the end of securing a fair start on what will in time come to be a highly creditable . and in a large measure unified system of highways throughout the country. The Douglas county program was only partly included in this. The people here did not wish to interfere with the work that was going on out in the state, and did not participate very extensively in the good roads movement as cairied on from the state engineer’s office. Much of the highway build ing done here was along routes that jerved the neo- j pie of the county more than the transcontinental tourists, although the great through highways were not neglected. A result is that Douglas county has a mileage of iiard surfaced highway that would be creditable any where, and of which our people are reasonably proud. Not all has been accomplished, however, for there remains $600,000 of the original appropriation and several miles of construction unfinished. This brings us to the proposition that is being considered; the federal government is being asked to unite with the county in carrying on the work, so that the remainder of the local fund may be doubled. The state program has slowed up materially, and ro action by Douglas county will not interfere with anything that is planned elsewhere. Federal aid roads will be as welcome as any other, if they come up to the specifications that have made those in ex istence the best in the west. STORIES IN THE CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING. Romance rubs shoulders with reality in' strange places, and desire meets necessity when least ex pected. Take the swap column of the wunt ad page, for example. Find some very interesting things there, showing in a concrete way some of the work ing* of the human mind. Here is one man who evidently has had enough of the wireless, for he wants to swap a radio outfit for a Ford car. Right after him cornea somebody who is eager to go the other way; he want* to exchange a couple of film features for a radio outfit. Another chap has lost his interest in hunting, for he has a pump gun and a pressure cooker he is willing to exchange for anything. Still another Nimrod wants to get into a lino less strenuous, and will trade his shot gun, waders, etc., “for what have you?” What has come over the spirit of the dreHrn in these cases? Usually when one hen the. tools and the time, it takes something serious to jar him away from the out door life that is symbolized by n good hunting outfit. At least two adventurers in barter and trade have had enough of driving, for they offer to ex changs cars for pianoa or players. One chap Is willing to turn over his equity in e farm for a house and lot Is town, and another weuld like to turn hie horses, wagon, implements and such into anything you have to offer. So it goes. Some of these offers are born of the good old Yankee custom of just trading. David Harums are not all dead yet. Others may represent a desire to get rid of a dead horse or a white ele phant. But all are interesting, and very likely a real story lurks behind each offer. The swap column among the classified advertising helps keep the cur rent of life moving. FAITHFUL UNDERPAID SERVANTS. “Neither rain nor snow or heat of day or gloom of night shall stay these couriers from their duly appointed rounds.’• This inscription from the freize of the general postoffice in New York tells emphatically the story of the mail carrier. In all weather, under all condi tions, he follows his duly appointed round. He carries the commerce of the nation in his sack, the social life, the sorrow and the joy alike of all. His fidelity is such that he is taken as a matter of course, just as the rising and the setting of the sun. These men are especially selected, chosen by competitive test, and not appointed because of poli tical influence. They are servants of the people in the truest sensh of the word, and on their capacity and steadfastness depends the orderly progress of the nation’s life in so great a degree that none can say what would happen if tin mails failed. A measure is pending before congress to secure for the mail men an increase in pay. Admittedly they are underpaid. Living costs have increased as much as 100 per cent since 1913, and now are an average of 65 per cent above the figures of 10 years ago, yet the wages of postal employes have advanced but from 10 to 20 per cent. That is not enough to be fair. Beginning at $1,400 for the first year, the mail carrier can advance to $1,800, his limit. In the railway mail service a few may receive higher pay by special appointment, but only a few. The postal employes are asking that the limit be increased to $2,400, which is little enough for the service given. Such an increase would enable them to keep a little nearer to the increased cost of living. We believe it is just, and we believe the public wants to see justice done these faithful servants. BOOST AND THE WORLD BOOSTS FOR YOU. A creed for a community is a good thing. It should be the embodiment of what the community stands for, what it hopes for, what it aims to be come. No community worthy of existence is lacking in civic spirit that embraces high ideals, lofty pur pose and steadfast determination to accomplish the right. Omaha is now engaged in celebrating its 70th anniversary, not such a long time in the stretch of history, but long enough for the city to come up from nothing in the wilderness to be a metropolis of over 200,000 inhabitants. The “Conant creed/' adopted by Mr. Harley Conant, might well be adopted by everyone in Omaha. “I will guard against all conversation against or criticism or idle talk about our city, its institu tions,” runs the Conant creed. "X will give every opportunity to enoqurage optimism, charity and good will, and will talk to those I meet about good things of Omuha, its splendid growth and prosperity In Nebraska.” Right to the point, and full of meaning, are those words. t Let every Omaha resident take them to heart, imbibe their spirit, and become a persistent booster. That will do away with much of the use less criticism and bickering that is holding back the growth, for no matter how Omaha has grown, it might have grown still more were it not for un fortunate dissensions that have at times seriously hampered the forward effort. Boost for the town, boost for its institutions, for your neighbor and your competitor. It will do you good. In thus boosting you arc really boosting yourself. ^ The federal courts have no power to enforce the decisions of the railroad labor board, according to a ruling just made. Neither has the board, so that puts the question back where it was, between the men and the companies. Know Omaha is bringing out a great many slogans, and some facts that few people have hut slight acquaintance with. In this it is doing a lot of good, for it pays to know your own town as well as your own business. A great cathedral will rear its head over the spot where Woodrow Wilson’s body lies interred, but his most enduring monument is builded in the hearts of mankind. An Omaha policeman went into n warm garage on a cold night and got fired for doing it. The sergeant who caught him wore a fur coat. Witnesses who are running away from the senate oil investigating committee merely confirm what the public believes. Now that the gasoline war is over, and the price is hack at the old notch, didn’t we have a good time while the fight was on? In knowing Omaha, do not forget that the city is just building", and is far from being complete in any regard. Up fo the moment no charge has been made that Atlee Pomeronc was ever attorney for an oil concern. Harry Sinclair knows there will be a reception committee waiting for him. Armed with subpoenas. One thing few of us get excited over is when to wear a white vest and when not to. Cordell Hull now realise* what It is to go off half-cocked. Mr. Groundhog did hia stuff, all right. f-2- ---- Homespun Verse —By Omaha’s Own Poet— Robert Worthington Davie Vj I WONDER. I wonder—don't wo sometimes long To lilo afar where life Is song;— To drift away from weal and woe. Forget the dreary thoughts we know. And leave behind us that which clings Incessantly to common tilings Until our dally thoroughfare Is burdened and enthralled with care? I wonder—don't we sometimes yearn To go where magic beacons hum, Where w» may rest in peace and smile, And live with dream a little while. Where everything Is to our choice: Whore with the worst wo may rejolre. And with the best so happy he That wo are lost in ecstasy? I wonder as I roam the trail, And pause at times amid travail, And see my neighbors strive to wesr The smiles that can sot hide despair— If they don't yearn to glide away To some Utopian realm of play,— Whers days Inspire, where nlghte beguile.— And live with dreams a little while. “The People’s Voice* Editorials from readers of The Morning Bee Readers of The Morning Bee are invitee* to use this column freely for expression on matters of public interest. ^ Queries Dairy Movement. Oipaha.—To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: Our attention has been called to an editorial in last Thurs day’s Bee entitled. “What s Dairy Cow Can Do.” The article was, no doubt, inspired by the efforts of the Omaha Chamber of Commerce to increase the number of cows on Ne braska farms. We feel that a tew comments on this editorial may not be out of place. Figures in this editorial Jstate that two of the cows in the Douglas Coun ty Cow Testing association earned net profits of $145 and $140 on butterfut alone. This was for a period of six months. In this connection we wish to say that the six months’ figures recently released by the Douglas County Cow Testing association are not “net profit” figures. They are figures showing the value of butter fat produced minus the feed cost. No deduction has been made for labor, and everyone will admit that dairying is a year-round job. No deduction has been made for interest on invest ment. cost of raising the cow to pro ducing age, or depreciation. It should also be remembered that a six mouths’ record is not one on which to base any sweeping generali ties. During one or two months of each year cows are dry, but still must be fed and cared for. Again, it should be distinctly remembered that these cows are among the tops of more than 400 cows in the association. Obviously they are not the average, but the very best. In discussing the Chamber of Com merce drive for more milk cows, it might be interesting to sound out the opinions of men who are marketing miik in Omaha. What Is their opin ion? Not the least favorable, espe cially since notices by the miik com panies that the price they are to pay for milk is being slashed, the reason given being too much milk. Wallace's Farmer, in the heart of the corn belt and recognized as a con servative farm paper, says in its is sue of January 28: "There is great danger in this sudden hue and cry after dairying. Dairying is a highly specialized type of farming and. In our opinion, the average farmer in the corn belt receives smaller pay per hour for the time he spends on his milk cows than for the time which he spends taking care of his crops or hogs." Omaha has received considerable notoriety for several slogans, among which are: "Buy Nebraska Potatoes,” "Buy a Thousand BushelR of Wheat.” and now it is "Buy More Cows.” Farmers have been admonished in the past that the hog was a mortgage lifter, and now with low hog prices, hogs are being fed at a loss or very small profit. Hadn't we better be a little conservative in this dairy cam paign? H. HOWARD BIGGAR. A Critic of Fundamentalists. Omaha.—To the Edtitor of The ! Omaha Bee: For the benefit of those who have been so severely criticized because of their nonhelief in the in spirations of the writings of Moses. I would like these critics to answer a few- questions for me, not for argu ment's sake, but for the good of all concerned. Is it faith in Moses that you have or faith In God? and If In God. is your fRlth such that you would insult Him by believing that He created man and woman sinless and then al lowed a serpent (over which He had given the man and woman dominion) to tempt the woman and to succeed in accomplishing her downfall, for you must admit that the serpent could not have spoken to Eve In her own tongue, only when assisted by some supernatural power; and fur ther. can you believe that God, who created Adam and live, had to place two chertiblms with flaming swords to keep them from partaking of the fruit of the tree of life, in which event they would have lived forever In spite of Him? Do you believe that God really did this thing, or do you simply accept it as facts because Moses wrote It, and If you do be lieve. do you consider that you Rre honoring the Great Creator by enter taining such a belief'’ Do you believe that God was respon sible for the sins committed by Pharoah. or was Moses mistaken | when he said God sent him to ' Pharoah to tell him that unless he behaved himself He would bring plagues'upon him and his people,and added: "But He will not harken unto you. for I have hardened His heart." Do you believe that God really acted thus, or do you think Moses made a terrible blunder, and If you do believe God acted thus, do con think He'll appreciate your es teemed opinion of Him? T»o you believe that because God could not cause Sarah to become a mother once more that He had to Ml Abraham in a dream to break one of His commandments, so that hla hand maiden could become a mother Instead of Sarah? Could you f ice your God and say you believed He had a hand in such undertakings as that, or do you believe that Mos*-s was dreaming when he wrote that? When you read shout members of a church reading tho New Testament through, from * a. m. to 11 p. m., do you wonder why they didn't begin on the Old Testament flrat, and read that through—of course you don't. Do you think they'll ever undertake lo do so? Of course they won't. Still If It Is— "Thou God see'st ins, snd 1 see Thee Through all Thy wondrous works, great mystery— The sun, the moon, tl.e stars, this world of ours. SVeet smiling baby faces, scented flowers— And In each mystery, Thy hand 1 see Beckoning me on to Eternity. _C. B. t vkES. For Freedom In Keliglon. Croft on, N>h.—To the Kdltor of The Omaha Bee: Ho Mr. Raastrom think* th*t religion, forcibly applied If necessary, will make us naints, •loe* he? It must he a hit awkward having an article favoring conipul sory religion published Just when the papers have hig headline* featuring a sensational divorce trial In which n noted pastor ngur* s. and especially when one recalls that It 1m not the i first ms# of its kind wherein a preacher, widely known, or a promt nent mender of the choir or engre gatkyi was - ned When pioj lop first came into effect my \\nith\ father said "They can take liquor *way from me, that won't bother me any. They can t:ikc tobacco away from me, I cun live without it. but whan they'll try to force me to attend church, then I'U fight:* Vet he hud said to my mothfi "If the children wish to go to church, don’t forbid them. That is nil right." You ece. be believes in freedom. My husband once knew n man of Whom be said "When the minister w is si- U. or couldn't preach for some other rcu son, Mr. 1 lipokrlt Would fake his place on N unday and pray and preach to the congregation and had inch a ploua demeanor, but you had to watch Sunny side up Comfort, nor forget Jhat Sunrise never failed us vet" Celia Thar ter NKBKASKA. l'ou may search from Athabasca, through Brazil back to Alaska, and you’ll find that old Nebraska has ’em all backed off the board. From where poles give^ Icy rattle, down to equatorial battle, you will never find such cattle as the kind Nebraska scored. From tbo islands of Pacific with their climate soporific, down to Jungles dense, terrific, there’s nought with her can compare. Talk to me of golden treasure, of re wards that bringeth pleasure, none compare In equal measure with Nebraska’s wondrous share. When all hearts we'd set a flutter all w-e have to do Is utter facts about Nebraska butter, and we make 'em give a cheer. Tls a land of milk and honey, nights of rest and days so sunny, that we wouldn't take no money for tho joys of ev'ry year. Ev'ry farmstead, town and city has its girls so goldurned pretty, and so modest and so witty, that wo love ’em 'most to deudh. Talk to us of California! We arise right here to warn ye that we’ll only laugh to scorn ye, so you'd better save your breath. So many railroad people read this department that we must be more careful In future In making state ments pertaining to the railroads. A few loss than 333 watchful readers have written in to correct the state ment that the longest railroad tangent in the world is on the Union Pacific east from Grand Island. We long ago learned not to attempt to quote scripture In a newspaper article without covplng It verbatim, et litera tim, from the Good Baak. The slight est misquotation will result in a flood of corrections. We have added rail road statistics to the list. The office boy will please bring on a copy of the Railway Age. A‘national and state campaign is about to break, and full soon the spell binders and the saviors of the dear pee pul will be turned loose. If you think that the politician as we know him tpday Is' a new species, you are sadly mistaken. They knew how to play the "save the dear pee pul” game thousands of years ago. Absolom had most of our modern political saviors backed off the board when it came right down to softsoaping, handshak ing anil palavering. If you want to get a composite Picture of the whole modern tribe of self-seeking pollti I'ians. get down the old family Bible him closer than a hawk, the other six days nf the week, or he'd lie, cheat! and steal every time he had a I chance." UAU'DEAMUS. The Oil Case in Dialect. Omaha.—To the Editor of The Omaha Bee; [ read In paper* that a fellow name Doheney, "oil man," he say gave another fellow that wanta he 1'. S. President, a cheek or black bag full new L'. K. bills that had not been out before on quarter minions worth, and on top of dat 50 t^usand more every year, for Doheny can use his name as lawyer for him and the other fellows. I never found out dat fellow been lawyer before to amount too much. 'then I landed L’. S. Castle Garden other fellows got job making some kind a tubes under water for traina to run In, and they say he made lot of money out of it. so dem Wall street guys gave him a new Job down Washington counting monev and run ning railroads. I guess dat fellow been plenty good ilnancer. When dem railroad guy* got kind a hard up —the -fellows dat had the roads I mean, they gave him right to make farmers pay so hlg freight rate on U>elr hogs and other tings dey raise, so dey went and got bursted. I mean the farmer -and a lot of honks, too. In country I come from deni law yers don't get so big retain money, but maybe day alnt knowing so much law there. Anyhow, I tank dat was top much retain money for law bust ness. 1 guess r)ey had plenty fltience down Capitol l . S. Ho dem demo crats down there made ,|em Mexicans leave Doheney and d»m oil wells alone. Well. I viil close my letter dis time as editor might tank it so long, but 1 guess pretty tough year for demo crats dls year. OLE OLSON. Education and ITlemployincut. Omaha.- To the Editor or The Omaha Bee; Beading Mr \\ . ,T. Jto das letter. "Educated. What Eor?" (January 2S>. reminded us of what President Butler of Columbia said last year about the present day situation regarding unemployment in spite of the ever increasing diffusion of learn Ing. He opined that never In lilatorv were so many men and women In strutted in the elements of learning and never before were so many men and women walking the streets with starvation and want staring them In th« fare. A Now York editor and *xp*rt to rial economist (O. M. Johnson! offered the following nitmn.il explanation i rwwnt koc1«I arrangement, d!f ferent from feudal so ioty. requires for the proper working of Its avsteni -r production and distribution a f*i wider diffusion r.r Information, the training of a far greater number of people in various aclentlilc and tech nicnl pursuits In order property to carry on It* Industrial and cummer cl.-.l processes. On the other hand present day society continues to (,r g inlre and reorganize these. Industrlii; and commercial processes with the efflcient aid of the very elements of nelllgpnUa' itself |,aa developed. '\ith (ho result that more and ever more of ’hamla' heroine either 'stale.' that Is. unable to learn all the new tricks demanded, or become whole superfluous, the sole purpose of the organization being simplification of the process whirl, makes large mm, tiers supernumerary." '\lth the realization of our eco noinlc adjustment to the new. latlc, day tnaoh"," production. In a spirit "f equity, abundant opportunltlsw will make useful Information ,.n asset of real value_ h. mEi.i, NET AVERAGE PAID CIRCULATION for Drcambor. 1923, of THE OMAHA BEE Daily .76.107 Sunday .80,705 r>o»» not im lint. ratutn., I.ft "V" *• ••mplr. or p.p*t. .poll'd pi inting and ln< tudar no aprrial f or fioa clrculallan of any kind V. A. BRIDGE, Cir. Mgr. .Sukactihad and iwnin to hafota ma thla 7th day of January, |R2» W. H QUIVF.Y. | (Seal) Notary Public ■ and turn to the 15th chapter of Second Samuel and read the first six verses. '.Vhat do you know about Ne braska? Do you know that If all the hay produced In Nebraska in a single year, alfalfa included, were baled and loaded In freight cars, there would he hardly enough engines in the United States to pull It. Those cars would make a train more than 4,500 miles long. That's some hay for a single state to produce. Let us hope that there will be neith er friction nor contention between Dad Rohrer and Bob Hamardlck, hut that there will he a continuance of harmony. We must have some pro tection, and without these two faith ful sleuths there Is an ever Increasing danger that many an innocent by stander will bo killed In the crush as rival bootleggers ply their trade. Now if one political party would nominate Carrie Chapman Catt for president, and another party would nominate Congressman Poynter, and still another would nominate Judge Lyon, and still another would nomi nate Congressman Wolfe, we might start up a pretty lively campaign. But I fear that with the republicans keep ing cool with Coolldge and the demo crats determined to McAdoo with their candidate, that things will be pretty tame. There may be things that improve with age, but not some of the chronic office seekers In Nebraska. My idea of a wasted life is to spend It laying plans to "get even" with somebody. Charley Dawes Insists that when the reparations commission meets the cards he spread face up on the table. All of which is very well, provided several of the commission be search ed for cold decks before they get through the door. And about the saddest thing I know is the average "keynote speech” delivered at one of these primary directed conventions. May it not be true that some men become so awfully progressive that they forget where they start from? Dr. R. G. R„ David City: The clip ping enclosed Is a fine creed indeed. Thanks for the compliment, but I am not the author. About the safest place I know of on a Sunday morning is the inside of a church. Never knew of a man I-e ing knocked galley west by an auto mobile while listening to a good ser mon or helping to sing one of the good old songs of Zion The moral of which is the application thereof. WILL M. MAUPIN. Most Effective. "X suppose, Henry," said the old gentleman to his new son in law, "that you are aware the check for ISO.OOty I put among your wedding present* Was merely for effe. t." 'Oh, yes, sir." responded the cheer ful Henry, "and the effect was ex cl ient. The bank Vashed it this morn ing without a word "—Vanity Fair. A Willing Helper. A burglar who had entered a min ister's house at midnight was dis turbed by the waking of the occupant of the room he was in. Drawing his knife he said "If you stir you are a dead man J'm hunting for money " "Let me get up and strike a light." said the minister, "and I'll hunt with you."—Midland Druggist. “From State and Nation” —Editorials from Other Newspapers— Souvenir# of Childhood. From the I’hllaflelphls Bulletin. It isn’t everybody who is rich enough to buy a school house; even the little red school house in which he learned—or failed to learn—-his three R's. But of course Henry Ford can afford It and that Is Just what he has done. When he was a little lad on his father's farm not far from Detroit he used to trudge two miles to the typical country school of a half century ago. Probably he wore Icath er hoots with finger straps arid copper toes. If he didn’t he should have done so, to make the picture com plete. And now, having put his name on a little slip of paper, he owns the somewhat dilapidated building in which the sorely tried teacher used to make him and others write then names 100 times or more for punish ment. How little he thought then that the time would come when the scrawled letters of that childish signa ture would have a banking value be yond the wealth of many nations. Friends of Lincoln have bought and preserved the log cabin In which tra dition says he was born, and only a little while before his death President Harding purchased the farm and homestead of his childhood, it is a perfectly natural Instinct to want to hold fast (and If possible In material form) to the dearest memories of our lives. Call It sentiment or sentimen tality or what you will, the fact re mains that In most normal people there Is an appeal In the recolle< lions of the days and scenes, now lost for ever, when we think we were happy and free from care. Unfortunately most adults have found It next to Impossible to recap ture the spirit of their childhood by returning visit the old home or the old school or the old church or the old swdmmlng hole or the old lot in which they once played hall. "The old place has changed since I was a child.” thev say; and more than like ly it has. But it hasn’t changed one half as much as they have. If Mr. Ford still possesses enough of the spirit of boyhood so that he can by the purchase of the old school house relive again in memory the happy days of childhood—then he has something that all his millions could not buy. One Hundred Years Ago. Abraham Lincoln, a lad of 15 years, was working on a ferry boat on the Ohio for }6 a month in 1524. The Marquis Of Lafayette visited America, and was received with tre mendous acclaim by crowds of cheer ing people wherever he went Steam ferries were operated for the first time between New York and Brooklyn. An epidemic of yellow fever was raging in Louisiana. The manufacture of flannel by water power was first started at Amesbury, Maas. An English bricklayer named Joseph Aspdin. took out a patent for a material railed Portland cement,” naming It ''Portland'- because when It hardened it resembled a pray stone found in the Isle of Portland off the coast of England. The modern cement Industry has been developed from Aspdin > discovery. The Erie canal, connecting the Great Lakes with New York, was rapidly nearing completion. The first steamboat passed through the canal from Rochester to Albany. Anthracite <-oal was used for the first time in New York. M. Niepco, a Frenchman, working with his countryman Daguerre, die f Abe Martin Sometime3 a feller that s born great gits a pu^ty wife, but th’ fel lers that achieve greatness all seem t’ have married too soon. Mrs. Ike Lark completely collapsed, t'day, an’ her husband talks some o’ git tin’ a doctor if he k:r find one. Copyright, lt"4. covered the nciene* that led to the invention of the daguerrotype in 1*J». Tribute to the American Mercury. From the New Republic. Certainly it would be useful to have, in this profoundly imperfect Amer lea, a journal whose rnief and '.nr function it was to point out. without attempt at or suggestion of remedy, like the barker on a sight-seeing bus. all the atrocities and imperfections. This function the American Mercury seems likely to assume and to per form in the spirit of Flea in the Amer ican Bed. Well, fleas 8re valuable, and we have done a good deal of bit ing ourselves. But it is discouraging to find, no early in the Mercury's career, such a lack of variety, gaiety, humor and discrimination in its at tack. and so strong a tendency to use the same vocabulary whether speak ing of a deep cancer or of surface : garliage. We do not expect Mr. Mencken to understand anything in America (except its language!, but we did expect, though we are now pre pared to admit we had no business te, that not all of the Mercury's com plaint would be uttered in the same tone of voice. On the whole, we ex pect no startling deviation In the fu ture from the two numbers already before us Messrs. Mencken and Nathan will continue shooting at r, stodons with birdshot, and at tar. e skunks with an elephant gun. . When in Omaha __ Hotel Conant “I Will Put My Insurance in Trust” V\7 HEX a certain business v * man died about two years ago, his wife received a considerable sum of insurance money. Knowing little about investments, s h e consulted her brother. He recommended that she purchase stock in the company of which he was president. Last year the business went into the hands of a receiver. The widow’s income has ceased, and her principal is practically lost. Such cases as this point the moral that it is often as essen tial to provide for the future protection of insurance money as it is to pay the premiums. One of the many important services rendered by trust companies is the care of life insurance. Trust companies are today the trustees for many million dollars of insur ance money. Your insurance can be made payable to a trust com pany as trustee. The com pany will invest and distrib ute it according to such in structions as you leave, by which you can provide for many possible contingencies. The trust company will pro tect your insurance fund bv all the safeguards with which it surrounds the administra tion of estates and tnists. Ask a Trust Company for copies of the book lets. "Sifeiair dun Your Family's Future" and 'Your Wife and \ Your Insurance " If \ *■ yJJ. row Intend that tha et money you leave shall * m provide comfort and protection for your family, these booklet* •till be Interesting snd valuable to you Coplea may also be obtained on request to tha addrcsa below. Omaha Trust Co. First Trust Co. Peters Trust Co. U. S. Trust Co. Members American Bankers Association