The Omaha Bee] M O R N I N G—E V E N I N G—S U N P A Y THE BEE PUBLISHING CO., Publisher N. B. UPDIKE, President BALLARD DUNN. JOY M. HACKLER. _Editor in Chief Business Manager ! MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Th# Associated Press, of which The Bee is a member. Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of nil news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper, and also the local news published herein. * AU rights of republication of our special dispatches are also reserved. The Omaha Bee Is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations, the recognized authority on circulation audits, and The Omaha Bee’s circulation is regularly audited by their organizations. Entered as second-class matter May 28, 1908, at Omaha postoffice, undei act of March 8, 1879. > " BEE TELEPHONES Private Branch Exchange. Ask for » nr i._*» 1 AAA the Department or Person Wanted, A 1 laiUtC 1UUU OFFICES | Main Office—-17th and Farnara Chicago—-Steger Bldg. Boston—Globe- Bldg. Los Angeles—Fred L. Hall, San Fernando Bldg. San Francisco—Fred L. Hall, Sharon Bldg. I New York City—270 Madison, Avenue Seattle—A. L. Nietz, 614 Leary Bldg. MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES DAILY AND SUNDAY 1 year $8.00, 6 months $3.00, 8 months $1.76, 1 month 75e DAILY ONLX 1 year $4.60, 6 months $2.75, 3 months $1.50, 1 month 75c SUNDAY ONLY i 1 year $3.00, 6 months $1 75, ‘3 months $1.00, 1 month 50c Subscriptions outside the Fourth postal zone, or 600 miles from Omaha: Daily and Sunday, $1.00 per month; daily only, 75c per month; Sunday only, 50c per month. CITY SUBSCRIPTION RATES Morning and Sunday. 1 month 85c, 1 week 20c Evening and Sunday.1 month 66c, 1 week 15e Sunday Only .1 month 20c, 1 week Be ---' Omaha'Vhefe foe^fest is at Ms Best • - WORLD IS FULL OF THEM. A short time ago the Norfolk Press said it knew a poor woman who was sadly in need of a sewing machine. With it she could earn a living and keep her little family together. The next day the Press tu notified that the sewing machine was ready. Now the widow is happy, the donor of the machine is happy and the Press editor is happy. So is every body else who knows of the pleasing incident. “What a lot of dandy good folks there are In Norfolk!” exclaims the Norfolk Press. Norfolk has a lot of dandy good folks. So has every other city and town and village. The old world is full of them. Now and then some confirmed old grouch comes along with the wail that the world is going bad and that human love and sympathy and kindness are disappearing. But it is not so, and every day thousands of incidents like the one in Norfolk prove it to be so. The world never was so full of love and kindness. There never w’as so much of charity when needed. Miilibns of women and children in Europe and Asia rescued from starva tion testify to that fact. Here at home a case of destitution needs only to be called to attention, and relief comes quickly and cheerily. Scores of agen cies, founded on human sympathy and a desire to be helpful to humanity, are at work day and night to exemplify that true religion and undefiled so well defined by James in his epistle as being “To visit the fatherless and the widows in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world.” Good folks everywhere, not only waiting for a chance to help, but looking for a chance to help. Good folks who not only hasten to relieve distress, but are working night and day to remove the causes that bring about distress. Good folks by the thou ^ sands and tens of thousands who are proving the falsity of the few but vociferous folks who are try J ing to spread gloom and doubt and dread. What appears to some to be a selfish world is really a world pulsating with love and kindness. It only needs to know, and then it acts with a unanim ity unknown when any other cause than charity is before it. The great heart of America has never failed to respond when worth while appeal has been made to it. It responded with a golden flood when starving Belgium called. It did not waste time ques tioning good faith when Russia called, but gave re lief first and questioned afterwards. America’s charity covered stricken Europe like a blanket. Like sentinels on outpost men and women are watching for an opportunity to help, and when opportunity offers the word goes forth and money and food and clothing and medicine come immediately and in such volume ap to testify to the fact that there is “a dandy lot of good folks” everywhere. There never was a time in all history when ther were so many agencies for good, never a time when ao many men and women were eager to help their fellows, never a time when the charity that means love was working so freely and so cheerfully. So let the pessimists rave and the prophets of •vil rant. While they are engaged in the task they love so well and for which they are admittedly fitted by mentality and temperament, millions of “dandy good folks” are quietly going about the splendid work of proving by example that the world is better today than it ever was before, and fitting itself to be a far better world tomorrow. The “dandy good folks” are a vast majority. WHAT’S IN A NAME? A whole lot, if you know a thing or two about the long battle that has been waged over the name of a mountain in Washington. It has been a bloodless battle so far, but death-dealing adjectives have been scattered like grapeshot and shrapnel and friendships have been wounded to the death. Seattle insists that Rainier is the proper cognomen, but Tacoma awears by the great horn spoon that no mountain in the good old U. S. A. should be known by the name of a British sea captain so obscure that his name does not appear in any British history, not even in the Encyclopedia Brittanica as applied to himself. So Tacoma is insistent that the big pimple on the face of Mother Nature be called Tacoma. Tacoiha’s insistence has become so strenuous and emphatic that congress will be asked to Fabs a Law about it. Congress will bs asked to discard the name of Rainier as applied to the mountain, the national park and the national forest, and substitute therefor the name of Tacoma. We are in favor of the change, although not for the chief reason advanced by the good people of Tacoma. We are little concerned about the fact that Rainier was a British sea captain. We are concerned, and therefore interested, in the preservation of rythmic Indian names. The Indians called the mountain Takhoma, since modernised into Tacoma, and Takhoma, or Tacoma, it should be, even if the name does somehow or other remind us of a certain brand of edible crackers. Far be it for us to thrust ourselves into a neigh borhood quarrel, however. We may, and do, freely express our opinion, but it is from the sidelines. If Seattle wants to retain the name Rainier, all right for Seattle. Small blame to Seattleites, who will never be satelites, for objecting to what would prove geed advertising for a rival city. Small blame to Tacomg for working overtime to secure a bit of fa vorable publicity. We’re for ’em both. Tacoma appeals to us as the proper name for that mountain, and also for the liational park and national forest. But from the sidelines permit us to suggest a com promise. Call the mountain Tacoma, the national park Seattle and the national forest Tacattle. First, however, let it be made known of all men that Ta coma is an Indian name, not the name of a biscuit. DESTROYING OUR ILLUSIONS. The realists continue to pierce illusions with a heartlessness that is not at all to .pur liking. Really, something should be done about it. Perhaps we should Pass a Law. The latest illusion to go by the boards concerns Captain Kidd, supposed to he a pirate bold, sailing the seven .seas with the skull and crossbones emblazoned conspicuously on a standard as black as Nero's heart. Investigators finding them selves with nothing better to do, have thumbed over faded court volumes of the American colonies and England, only to find that Kidd was a respectable, middle-aged sea captain, whose immortal treasure, taken from an enemy French ship, would not set up a haberdashery In business today Long ago the freebooter, Henry Morgan, was dis covered to have been not a bad egg at all, but a British skipper knighted by his king for his glorious deeds against the Spaniards. In due course of time we will learn that Ali Babi was an honest fish monger; Tiberius the leader of a Rortan Boy Scout troop; Catherine de Medici the kindest of mothers and mothers-in-law; Madame Pompadour a chaste lady; Sitting Bull a mere blanket maker, and Attila the secretary of a Bible study class., Only in fiction, apparently, will pirates and ty rants live on. Sabatini has given us Captain Blood, and Dumas has done his bit with D’Artagnan's “man of Meung." The Rover Boys have their Daniel Bax ter, and Sax Rohmer, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Ar thur B. Reeve, Mary Roberts Rinehart, E. Phillips Oppenheini and other chroniclers of crime and mys tery have furnished a commendable quota of villains. Every American boy goes through the curricu lum of wishing to be, at various stages of flamboyant youth, • pirate, a cop, a locomotive engineer, a cowboy, an Indian hunter, a circus clown and a seeker after hidden gold. And because of that, all the realists In the world will not be able to shake the faith of the youngsters in Ali Babi and Morgan and Kidd. It is only the grown-ups, who still cherish piratical visions and dreams of vagrant days under the hot sun of the tropics, who are to be pitied. The person who shat ters a fond illusion, such as the one about Captain Kidd, ought to be fed on canned cucumbers and molasses on Thanksgiving Day and Christmas. WOMEN IN POLITICS. They are, and to stay. Nothing could be plainer than that. Not merely as women, however; but as citizens. Long before full equal suffrage existed in Nebraska the women had partial suffrage. They were permitted to vote at school elections under cer tain conditions, and that carr^d' with it the right to hold office as school executives. The result was that within a few years a majority of counties in Ne braska had women school superintendents. Other states had similar conditions. Scarcely more than a decade ago, however, such a thing as a woman mem ber of congress, or a woman legislator, or a woman governor, was unthinkable. Now two women are governors-elect, two women have served in con gress, one has served as a United States senator, one is now a congresswoman-elect, the next secretary of the state of New York will be a woman, and three women will sit in the next Nebraska legislature. That’s going some, even for the new woman. Sev eral states had equal suffrage before it became the law of the land, but the women did not seem to profit to it to the extent of seeking high office. When the suffrage became equal in all the states by consti tutional amendment, women took instant notice. They have simply turned the well known couplet around until it reads something like this: "When a woman won’t, she won’t, depend on’t. But when she will, she will, and that’s the end on’t." W'oman in politics is neither a fad nor an experi ment. She is a fact—rand facts are stubborn things. BLAME IT ON'THE RADIO. Dwindling attendance at the theaters and mo tion picture houses is blamed upon the radio. Dwindling church attendance is blamed upon the radio. That is far easier than making efforts to provide better attractions at theaters and motion picture houses. Easier than making church services more interesting and more spiritually uplifting. In fact, blaming the radio is the easiest thing to do. But that does not mean that the radio is blamable. “The poor workman blames his tools.” So' rifns the old adage. That is subject to many changes to make it applicable to other conditions, and men. The radio will not have a deterrent effect upon dramas that are worth while, nor upon motion pic tures that are worth while. Nor will it ever be able to supplant the minister who has a message, plus personality. Listening in to another congregation, hundreds of miles away, singing the old songs of Zion, will never satisfy souls that are hungry for spiritual food. It may entertain, but there is no up lift about it to be compared with the uplift that comes from joining in the singing of those old songs. But it is much easier to blame the radio than it is to provide something better. So it is becoming a sort of stock excuse. The radio may be blessed in the end for accomplishing something, it was not, at first expected to accomplish; it may improve both the theater and the sermons. Speaking of “The Mule, 19‘24 Model," as has been done by a democratic exchange, it will be ob served that it started out with the sHnie old ob stinacy, kicked all four ways as usual, brayed as meaninglessly and, as always, wound up in a condi tion that defies the skill of the most expert veterin arian. Uncle Sum never lost anything by-being prepared for a war for the simple reason that he was never prepared. That is why he has lost so much by find ing himself unprepared when war did come. Henry Ford says he is going to make synthetic milk. He is late. We've eHten butter made from it on numerous occasions, nor had all the chemical taste been strained out. Despite all claims to the contrary, the weather is saving the coal buyers of the state more money than any governor ever inaugurated. It is said that single women prefer fiction more than married women do. They’ll got, a-plenty after they are married. Notwithstanding the fact that Manager Leisen is softening the city water a few old 'uns will find It hard to drink. Why worry about how old Methuselah really was? He lived long, hut he didn't live much. The gun-toters should ho heavily loaded and fired into the nearest penitentiaries. Boy, pat* Mr. Hoyl* and get * n*w r*d deckl t “From State and Nation” —Editorials from Other Newspapers— L____y Hope Springe Eternal. From th# Scottsbluff (Neb.) fitsr-Htrslf. AA'e suppose that the legislature of Nebraska for 1925 will lie in no re spects particularly different front most of the legislature* that have come and gone in this great common wealth, save when some very funda mental proposal has arisen, such as the passage of the anti-pass law and the enactment of tlie primary law, as in the 1907 session. But where there are no .outstanding features to he dealt with the session resolves itself into a matter of the* introduction of more laws and still more laws, when the real necessities of a long-suffer ing populace demand that about half of the useless dead wood now on the statute books be repealed out and out, and half of what is left so amended and revised that it be made to lit with present day conditions. Instead of tinkering with the pri mary and school and other laws which are alive and working, we wonder why the soions do not take some of the antiquated statutes passed back in the early ’70s and bring them up to date, or a£ least make them fit with the needs of the people as they exist today. Truth to tell, there has been, en tirely too much of attempt to legis late good into folks in the past few years. True, there should be atten tion given to our criminal code, with the purpose in view to ke.ep it up to the requirements that are arising in this day of reckless driving of ear* and the other danger? brought about by the workings of progress, but when it comes to what Is considered '‘good" and what is considered "had" there is a wide divergence of opinion, and much time wasted that should be given In matters of more practical need. The legislature of the state of Nebraska should be considered in a more important light than that of a wet nurse, a policeman, a reformer, and the like, when such, matter* should be part of the training in every home. AA'e often wonder how th* parents used to get along when they were held responsible for the raiflng and morals of their own children and be fore they had an opportunity to pass > the huek to the schools, state legis latures and the national congress. That they did a fair Job of it is evi denced by the fact of the nation full of men and women of middle age and past, who seem to realize to the full their obligations to their church, their state, their families and their fellow men, even though their early lives were prescribed by no laws save that given and enforced by good common sense parents who believed that the raising of a family was a responsibil ity and not a mere Incident, and en deavored to inculcate sound principles of right and wrong in the minds of their ct^Wren. Movie censorship, press censorship, censoring music, censoring drama, censoring this and censoring that: tilling the statute books with a bunch of stii(T that is entirely th* province of the home and of home training and is useless, after all. For th* truth re mains that no matter how heavily the "law" is overloaded, the respect for the laws is something that cannot he taught save by precept and example In the homes. If the law goes to such foolish extremes as to cause a loss of respect and a feeling of dis gust on the part of the parents, then conditions are worse than they were before and we have legislated our seltes Into moral chaos. The Nebraska legislature Is repub lican, Bet it then take the slogan of their republican president—that of "common sense" in legislation, end throwing the freak and useless pro posals into the discard, devote its at tention to substantial, worth-while and needful work. I-essnn of the Election. From the Toledo Blade. During the period when congress was most energetically cars^'lng on its guerilla warfare against the ad ministration, a private citizen visit ing In AVashlngton expressed his Irri tation over the clatter and hang and twaddle and folly of the affair. "That shows how little you know about politics." explained a AATaahlngton press correspondent. “Congress is doing all this because It know* It 1* the popular thing to do." There Is no doubt that congress thought it was heaping up great stores of beneficent and profitable popularity by the simple process of Imitating a boiler factory. There I* no more douht that great numbers of people In the national capital were under the delusion that the more antics congress cut. the more Indian whoops it let out, the more pot shots it took at the occupant of the AVhlfe House, then the more strength the senators and representative# were gathering out in the provinces. AA'ashington has this effect upon peo ple who go I Here to serve as the peo tile's agents. They get to thinking that the capital is the whole I’nited States. They acquire the belief that what is whispered there Is inside In formation as to the state of opinion in the country. The truth is that a man In Wash ington may become as isolated from hia fellow countrymen as a patient In the infection ward of a hospital. If congressmen did not learn the fact during th* campaign they have been taught by the election that th* main tenance of an open shouting season against President Coolldg# w'as not iwipular. More sympathy was created for him than enmity was manufac tured against him by republican In surgency and democratio unreason nlileness. A resumption of anll-ad minlstrntlon tactics in congress in December will mean that congress men Itav# failed utterly to learn the leeson of the election. It will be plain notice to the country that a number of Its senators and representatives should tie called home for a spanking. The Ballot Slacker*. From fh* Kmrh*y (N*b) Hub, Analysis of ©lection return* by the National Olvlc Federation show* that lee* than 50 per cent of th© voter* of the United State* cant a ballot at the recent national election) th* percent age of gain being only 3\ pet cent over the totals of 1920, in Greater New York, where th* vote w«» con cent rated and th© greatest effort wa* made to get men and women to th© polls. Th© League of Women Voter* mad© a nation-wide effort to get out the vote nod other national orgnnizatIon© did the Mattie, while th© newspaper* and magazine* gave the subject great ©r ©pace than ever before, >©t the ©f furl was negligible a© th© result allow*. Apparently one half of the citizens of this country will not exarct** this ail preme function of citizenship, uni©'* driven to th* poll* at the point of th© bayonet. In 1920 there wet*© 52,000.000 voter* and 27,000,000 vote* wet© cast, or a ©hade over 50 per cant. In 1924 the estimated number of voter* wa* «0. 000,000, ©f whom 20.000,000 went lo th* poll* Th© percentage I* there fore slightly 1©** In 1921 than for 1920 Th© only Increase, and that very ©light, was allown In Greater New York, where a political battle of on usual magnitude was waning. hot even In New York the woman vole wa* !©«* than in 1920. These figure© Ml© well worth pondering ©\*r I Before seeking a solu^on of the problem a further analysis is needed to show where the slackers were lo cated, who they were, and what their environment. Were the slackers in city, town or country? A survey should indicate the reason for this In difference. Conference should seek to find the way to cure this great na tional defect. Refusal or willful neglect to vote should be construed as akin to felony or to disloyalty, it may be that compulsory voting will become as important as compulsory school attendance. Roll fall of the Old Una. From the Nation's Business. Age has its victories no lees re nowned than youth. Three score and ten of this day is up and doing. He is no slippered pantaloon to make a fireside grandsire. And at 70 doesn’t a man Just begin to get the full flavor of life; to get an inkling of how to get on with his fellows; to know some thing of the great business of living and doing, so that at 80, 90 and 100 ha draws a sort of compound interest on the faith and good work? of ear lier years? To make a case would be easy, but a friend makes il easier by sending a roster of names in point. In the 70s—mere younglings^—are Andrew Mellon, Senator Albert B. Cummins, John G. Shedd, Samuel Gompers, Frederick H. Gillet, Elthu Root, Leslie M. Shaw and Thomas A. Edison. In the 80s—middle aged, so to say —are Oliver Wendell Holmes. Senator Francis E. Warren, Joseph McKenna, ‘Andrew J. Fame and Lyman J. Gage. In the 90s—“still achieving, still pursuing"—are Charles W. Eliot, Chauncey M. Depew and George Shlras. And that conspicuous centenarian, John A. Stewart, chairman of the board of the United States Trust com pany. Three score and ten the end of life or Its usefulness? Pish, posh! Like as not, a man keeps going Just as long as he keeps Interested In the world and its work. We’re Getting Wiser. From th* Falrbury (Nab.) News. There Is one thing this country ha? learned within the past century or so, and that is that no matter who Is elected president the nation isn't go ing to the dogs, property is not going to be used for bonfires and anarchy is not going to leave its bloody foot print? on our doorsteps. In fact, the wise old gentlemen who laid the foundation for this country did such a good Job of it that It would con tinue to function and be a great coun try even of Charlie Chaplin should be elected president. We have also learned that "getting oil het up" over the outcome of an election doesn't get us anywhere, and doesn’t make us richer, either in money or friends. The recent presi dential election did not go to suit everyone, and yet that Is no reason why the ones on the losing side should lose still more by moping over some thing they cannot control. We've lived under presidents of both of the old line parties, and we've seen the country keep right on growing great er and better. And so it is going to b# in this case. The one thing that Is doing more to promote prosperity In this country than anything else is the refusal of a vast majority of our people to take politics too seriously. It is now hard to find one of those old hide-bound citizens who once thought that every thing was going to smash if his party wasn't in power. By refusing to take politics too seriously they are making prosperity as they go along. Just as we hope they will continue to do. Will Tax Billboard*. From the Good Hoads Magaslns. Massachusetts will hereafter put a tax on the highway sign even though erected on private property. The con tention is that the value of the sign i» derived from the public highway, not from the private property on which it is located, and that the first obligation is to the public who earns the highway and gives the s!gn an advertising value. Permission from the land owners is a secondary mat ter. It would be well for other legis latures to establish the Massachusetts Idea and give the highway authorities some control over nil signs erected on private property that in any way de rive their value from their location a* regards a public highway. This Is the only way that the highway of ficials can keep any control over the sign and bill board nuisance along t the public highways. Tlisy've Had Their Lesson. From th* Detroit Fr** Pren. The report that the outcome of the national election has given the plan of certain American Federation of 1 -abor leaders to fountt a labor party In the United States Is a had setback. Is quite credible. The lesson these stratsglsta hate received Is both sharp and painful. They went out on a ADVRRTISVCMKXT. HED PEPPER FOR COLDS III CHEST Ease your tight, aching chest, Stop the pain. Break up the congestion. Keel a. had cold loosen up in Just a short time. ‘^Red Pepper Ruh'’ la the cold rein edy that brings quickest relief. II cannot hurt you and It certainly seeine to end the tightness and drive tha congestion and soreness right out. Nothing has such concentrated, pen el rating heat sa red peppers, and when heat penetrates right down Into voids, congestion, aching muscles and sore, stiff Joints relief comes at once. The moment you apply Ited Pepper Ruh you feel the tingling heat. In three minutes the congested spot Is warmed through and through. When you are suffering from a cold, rheu inatlam, backache, stiff neck or sore muscles. Just get a Jar of Rowles Red Pepper Rub, made from red peppers, at any drug store. You will have the quickest relief known. NET AVERAGE PAID CIRCULATION for S*pt., 1924, of THE OMAHA BEE | Daily ..73,340 Sunday .73,865 i Dooa not fiuludr raturna, loft ovora, aamplaa or papara apoilrd In printing and includaa no apodal aaloa oi fraa circulation of any Wind. { V. A. BRIDGE, Cir. Mfr. .1ubu lihvil and iworn to Nfort m« j tWia 4lb day of Oefobar, 1924. W. H. QUIVEY. j (Saal) Notary Public j f Volunteer V^ree ) y -j THE NIGHT WATCHMAN. While you are secure and happy. With your wife and children dear. The night watchman Is silently guard ing The wealth of our city here. His days, how shall he count them? He scarcely knows when they come, For Ids work is Just beginning When the glorious day is done. Watching, silently watching; Plenty of time to pray. Watching, silently watching, Nigkt is his darksome day. The Irours are slowly passing For those who have this care: For many are silently guarding The wealth of our city fair. —»A Night Watchman's AVife. MY MATH. We passed on the street—just a glance— But my heart is not the same. Did you or cupid throw a lance— 1 do not eveu know your name. •>ut every day I walk the street,^ Reason says “No," but my heart says "Wait," Hoping against hope that we will meet. For what is life but fate? For in that passing glanre t read, As plain as if a printed page, A “I am your mate,” it clearly said. “Copie, loose my heart from out its cage." My heart and soul that were so cold. Are burning now with love's sweet glow. . Dove and desire have made me bold— My mate, my fate, where didst thou go?—H. F. Gilbert. very small Hnib In espousing the cause of Mr. l.ut Follette, and when the limb broke they found themselves a long way from the ground, and their prestige as a political power has been pretty badly smashed up. The labor party Idea never did have the support of the wiser and better balanced trades union heads, and It Is a really pitiful thing that Samuel P Oompet* should have been persuaded Into espousing the scheme In the clos ing years of his career after a long lifetime of opposition to apy such de parture. That is one chapter In his history over which charity should throw a mantle. - A Woman's Viewpoint. From the Seward Independent-Democrat. The Omaha Bee says It Is up to Ma Ferguson and Mis. Roes, the first women to be elected to the high office of governor, to make good on the job for "they will he cited as witnesses either for or against the ability of women to occupy high political place." In the case of Ma Ferguson she will have not much trouble to surpass the record of Pa Ferguson, who preceded her in office and was Impeached because of some Irregulari ties which he was unable to explain. As for Mrs. Ross, she has already publicly stated that it Is her Inten tion to follow the policies of her illus trious hus'leind, who died while In office So there Is really no occasion to view with alarm the election of two women as governors. They will no doubt measure up to the standards as set by the masculine of the species. Bad Advertising, From the Nebraska City Pres*. "Furdermore, for the last three or four years they have been knocking their own state by showing everybody how Impossible It is for a farmer fo make a living for himself without he should have maybe a -still on his place and cook up a littw white mule for his ne ghbors. They sold every body the idea that their state is on the bum. It ain't so good for credit out here that they should talk the way they have done.” In those words a New Turk ‘'drum mer" explains the psychology of Ne braska business to his pul. In the cur rent Issue of Collier's. Every Nebraskan knows how much truth theie is In ^ this cosveraatlon which smacks of Potash and Peruuut ter. It is true that it isn’t necessary to go outside the state*to prove it. We have had nifn—many of them engaged In financial undertakings— knocking the state to outsiders for months. In our own community we have been "blessed" with the same sort of men, deeming It advisable, ac cording to their own misguided no tions of patriotism, to preach the gos pel of unrest and then, when the words have sunk home, to stand I I I.OOK FOR THE ROUES. Don’t Spend all your time In looking For a chance to sit in woe. Stead of crying, keep on trying To make roses bloom and blow. Don't spend all your time in groaning, V But take time to sing and smile. Love o’ living, true lpve giving. Beats the groaning more’n a mile. Don’t waste time in vain repining For the yesterdays you lost. All your sighing, moaning, crying. Never were worth what they cost. ’Stead of looking for excuses For mistakes of yesterday. I\"ep on smiling, hours beguiling, As you plod along your way. Don’t spend all your time in searching For the noxious weeds that grow. Life's made sweeter and completer Watching roses bloom and blow. 'Stead of grouching over failures. Buckle <1oken word and in their correspondence. No wonder the Atlantic seaboard is will ing to believe anything It hears about Nebraska credit' Party Responsibility. From the Tcrtland Oregonian, Restoration of party responsibility can be accomplished only by a renewal of party discipline, and this will be possible only when each party is able to iist those who are true member*. > to exclude ail who have no right to use its name, to nominate it* candi dates. to ho’d them responsible to it and to be responsible for them to the people. Then the number of voter? res stered a* republicans will be i fairly close Indication of the numbe of republicans, so also with the den.' cratSs and it will not be possible fo any man to run for president as t third party candidate and at the sanv time to pretend that he is a membe of some other party. W hen in Omaha Hotel Conant 250 Rooms—250 Baths—Rates |2 tc 93 Choose Yowup Mortician CareMly When the hour of need arrives, there are many things you should know about your mortician—his responsi bility; the quality and scope of service; the character j and skill of attendants and operators; the equipment v and the charge. Stack Service is founded upon sound business princi ples. It is the criterion of Mortuary Service in Omaha. Only the most skilful operators are employed; attend ants are efficient, thoughtful and courteous; the Stack Funeral Home is the most beautiful and elaborately furnished n*>rtuary in this territory. Yet with all these things. Stack Service is available at any price you wish to pay and we will, if requested, furnish a complete funeral for as low a price as $85. Day and Night Cadillac Ambulance Service Stack Fumemll Hem© “Omaha’a Moat Beautiful Funeral Home’’ f 3224 Farnam Street HA rney 0064 %