Teds Omaha Sunday Bee OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 14, 1917. Comb Honey By EDWARD BLACK. Don't Get Excited. "If yoa can keep your head, when all about you are losing theirs and blaming it on you" The man who wrote those words lived many miles from Omaha, but his thought was not bounded bv any limitations of time or tide. Don't get excited. What's the use? , An American colloquialism is, "Keep vour shirt tn. which is more expres sive than elegant, but, nevertheless, is worth remembering every morning when we start out on the day s work. Getting excited is inimical to the 1 best interests of our physiological and psychological welfare. It affects ad versely the sensitive nerve centers, .imoedes normal blood circulation, clogs the mental machinery and other wise puts the human system out 01 kilter. So what is the use of getting excited? If cur house is discovered afire, why should we get excited? The thing to do is to walk quietly to the telephone, advise the ODerator that our domicile is being consumed by the element of incineration, then get onto th front porch and tell inquiring neighDors that our house is on fire and that the " fire department is on the way to do its perfect work of fighting the demon which consumes with unrelenting fury all cumbustible materials irl its path, unless checked by deterrents known to modern fire-fighting science. It is not necessary to repeat all of that to the neighbors, but it would indicate a calm temperament and is good prac tice in tbe art of being cool even on heated occasions. If we get excited over trifles or In- consequentials, we will not be equal to the occasion when the crises arise. We must not allow irritations of the day to excite us, because into each day some irritations itnust come, and all dsrs cannot be perfect days. If fir neighbor's pup howls at 5 o'clock of a morning, we should not open a window and yell at the clamor ous canine. We should not We should wait till the rose-tinted morn kisses yon hilltops with the freshness of a new-born day, and then calmly advise our neighbor that his cur mur dered sleep, and suggest that the cur will have an untimely ending unless it ceases to mobilize its vocal strength at unseemly hours. Getting excited at the fifth hour of the morning would pot improve the situation. i . We heard a woman say a cuss word the other day when a flatiron fell on her foot She got excited. Some wo men are excited when they see a mouse. Don't lose your head. Keep your shirt on. , Don't .get excited. Keep cool and calm, count your change and Remember there is another car com mg right behind the one you missed. (Jrcte History of Omaha All flte truth and unlrnfli hate fit to know Voluminous Volubility.. She That man speaks Coesn t her He Yes, he !s book agent She Is he a book worm? He Well, I observe that he turned to go She Do you mean the worm turn? He He may re-turn. rolumes, has By A. R Chapter XXXV Manufacturing. , As this great history now draws toward a triumphant close (only three or four more chapters), it is necessary to devote some space to manufacturing. The name of the first manufacturer is "unhonorcd and unsung," as the great poet, Milton, said. It is not known. But at an early day some pio neer decided that it would be a boost for the town to do some manu facturing here. A party named Winchester started a brickyard back in 1854 down near Fourteenth and Leavenworth. He GROH . 1 ' '. . One of the pioneer m&imfaciurers made a lot of nice bricks and was getting ready to burn them. He had his brickkiln covered with a canvas and some Indians stole the canvas. Then a heavy . rain came up and turned the bricks into mud. Mr. Win chester didn't "try it again," but gave up in disgust. The ext factory was a blacksmith shop, which really isn't a factory ex cept that this party made horseshoes and so it might be called a factory. Next, the city got a sawmill. .Then Andy Simpson started his carriage factory. There were a number of other carriage factories in early days, indicating to the reflecting historian that carriage riding was one of the principal forms of recreation of the pioneers.' I here were machine works, iron works, tinware factories, etc. The smelter is today one of the biggest factories in Omaha. A great deal of smelting, is done there. , In short, manufacturing in Omaha has grown "bvi leaps and bounds" and Omaha stands today on the proud eminence and points with pride to its factories, which are too numerous to mention. They give employment to a JV-VC Only 3 or 1 4- mere cfiapiert ! -S TMialdo yon iAiuk d (tot! large number of c people, providing them with the necessaries of life and luxuries, many of them owning Fords and talking machines and similar things that our forefathers got along without These are days of the full dinner pail in spite of high prices, due to the war. Little did. Mr. Chester, or rather Winchester, think when he started his little brickyard back in 1854. that he was the pioneer of a manufacturing industry in Umaha which totals to the magnificent total of many, many mil lions. ; When' we reflect that the output of putty-alone from Omaha factories last year was worth $6,000, what must we think? Fast manufactured here was valued at $7,0001 Other food products from Omaha factories include bread and bakery goods Valued at nearly $1,000,000; flour and mill products worth nearly iJ.iuy.OUU; candy, $8JZ,UO0; cigars, 39,000; syrups and preserves, $300, 00; ice cream. $422,000. The output of the packing houses of Omaha was worth $150,000,000: smelter oroducts. $47,000,000; roach 'powder, .$4,000; creamery butter, $11,000,000; etc., etc, T-1 , . ; i , a uc iisi is endless. - (The author desires to trive credit for these figures to a folder entitled, "Omaha, the Cityvldeal," put out by the Bureau of Publicity.) We may well point with pride to the magnificence of the progress of the manufacturing interests of the city. : Question's on Chapter XXXV. 1. Why was Mr. Winchester dis gusted with the brick business? ' 2. Did the early pioneers enjoy carriage tiding? Why? 3. What is the value of Omaha's output of ice cream? Putty? Smelter products? - , ittatia Their Hobbies! What's Yours will Heard En Pasftant "J noticed that Cieotte was wearing ft mustache." 1 " , "Say it quick; I've got to leavt in a jiffy. : "Ialttboyor (rlrir "How do yon like mj aw fall fiat?". ' ' -. . "I though, she would look I hole through me. I wonder If aha know me.. Take notice, yon athletic fans. If you ever wish to know who is leading in the list of batting averages or who the big "mucks' in the-wrestling and boxing games are, just inquire of Harry Goldberg; who can always be seen at the Sun theater. Harry is an ardent admirer of all athletics, and his greatest expectation is to see the Omaha base ball team snag the pen nant Day after day, during base ball season, he occupies a seat in the grand stand, rooting for the home team until cough medicine is the only remedy that will help him articulate his words clearly. ' i , : ' . A wrestling match interest Harry greatly, and whether the favorite scis sors hold is brought in play or the half-nelson is used, he can be seen bending forward,, watching with keen interestevery move of the wrestlers. He Is just as interested in the wrest ling game . as a citizen of Dodge county. Now that, the foot ball season has arrived, Harry will be a close ob server of the . games in Omaha, and he says nothing will prevent him from seeing them. ; ; Yes, he has other htsbbies, such as enjoying the art of moving pictures, but athletics play a -very important part in his life. W. F. Baxter is not exactly a "tired business man," he is a busy business man, but not so busy that he can't af ford a hobby. His hobby is single tax, which reminds us of Henry George and the cigar signs of other days reading, "I am for men." In a communique indited bj Mr. Baxter yestereve he confesses that he is a single -taxer, believing that tbe land Should be the source of taxation. GmM ina 7 :.-o-V:V?'V H r - By A. EDWIN LONG. If E. V. Parrish hadn't accidentally tuck his knee through a form in a country print shop in Missouri, and pied all the type in the middle of the floor, he might still be down there sticking type for a country news paper. Small pebbles change the course of streams.- A little slip of the fingers, a little knee stuck through the face of the type all ready for printing, changed the course of this lad's career, and He believes the single tax system is the most equable of all' systems of taxation and is ready to defend his premises. , Just start Mr. Baxter- off on his single tax theory and get a demon stration of what a real hobby is. When the Chicago -White Sox copped the pennant in the American league this year the happiest man in Omaha was Fred Witte. Witte has been aWhite Sox "nut," not fan but "nut," ever since the South Side park was built He was the only man in Omaha who predated a White So victory over tne luds in iyuo ana he s been prophesying Pale Hose victor ies ever since. He stuck it out fot eleven years and finalfy they won again for him. Witte can tell you every game the White Sox ever won, who they won it from and when, the name of every player that ever wore the Pale Hose, his nationality, extent of education, religion and batting average. . Tom Hollister's hobby is the Corn- huskers. Hollister is positive the Huskers could clean up Yale, Har vard and Princeton combined. Three years ago Hollisteiswas the man in the state who believed Nebraska would win pver the Michigan Aggies, and he proved to be the only man in the -atate who was right Hollister never misses a big Nebraska game and he's always the most enthusiastic rooter tn the stand. . .-. i that is one ot tne reasons he is in Omaha today, publicity manager for the cityand convention boss for the metropolis. There were several pebbles that kicked the current of his activities about from channel to channel before he finally began to cut a permanent groove in Omaha. Cafrying notes from the big boys to their girls was his first salaried oc cupation in life. That was down at Queen City, Mo., where he was born. He got a nickel for carrying a note to the girls, and often another nickel to carry the replyvback to the young man. Being ambitious to-own a pony he saved V these nickels until they amounted to $5. He bought the pony and then "began to drag ha cocks to the stack with a rope snubbed to the horn of his saddle. He got the magnificent sum of 25 cents a day for lassoing and dragging tnem to the stacks, tor this" was cheaper to the farmer than to hire a man and team to sweet uo the hav. Thus pony and boy together earned $1.50 week throughout the sum mer. . t v- Later he quit, this and drove cows in and out of town to pasture morn ings and. evenings. He got 25 , cents a week rer cow, and as :'iere were several people in town trying to es cape the tangs of the professional milk man, the lad made as much as $2.50sa week.'. Money was1 rolling in upon him so fast now that he became avaricious for more. He hurried his cows to pasture every morning and galloped back to carry brick in the brick vard at another 25 cents a day. ' Bricks and cows were tiresome though, and he struck out for the big roarinfr heart of Kansas City. He eot a job' peddling books. I starved for a couple of weeks Until got on to how to handle the game," says Parrish. "I finally got j on to the scheme of going in to see I k man a; i sking him to make me a bid on my books. I quit Quoting! prices to him. Soon I was selling a set of books to one man for $10. and to his next door business neighbor for $6. I nearly-got my head shot off that way, and it wasn t healthy to stay around in one localityytpo long. I didn't, ave to stay around, how ever, for business was gor ' and I knocked about all over Missouri, Tex '' and Arkmsas selling these books. Another fellow had to follow me to deliver them. It wouldn't be safe for me i j go back." Having always had .something of a nose for pinters ink, the ladi came back, to Queen City and tool: a job in the office of the Queen City Tran script He swept the office, bossed the cat around, and washed, type for whue until he was promoted to spreading ink on the forms. Soon he was put to setting type. V 'Then came the tragedy. .One day when the type was up, the form was made all locked and ready, he started to carry it across the room to the press. It slipped out ot his ringers. He jerked up his knee in an effort to save the form from a fall. Alas, he punched his knee clear through the form, and the type flew to tpe four corners of the print shop. "That was all the type there was in the little office," says Parrish. "If took them forever to pick that type up, sort it out, and get it back into shape. "I didn't stop to get fired. I blew out of the back door and ran. I never showed up there again, but I watched tor the issue of the paper. It was three weeks before the Queen City Transcript issusd again.". , Well How Did You Come Out on Your Speculation On This Pictorial, Grain Exchange? They All Look Different but Are Operating at the Regular Stand When the lad had gained a good. 1 start on his run for life from this print ' 4ff shop he didn't really stop his course until he came to Kansas City. There he cubbed on 1 the Kansas City Times. That was before the Kansas City Star took over the Times. " ! He drifted about the country 'from Missouri t6 the coast reporting on newspapers, and eventually' worked for years on the St. Louis Republic. Here he interviewed everyone from United States senators to outlaws, for he frequently made trips to the old Samuels homestead to interview the notorious Frank James, and to drive about the place with the oW outlaw's blooded horses. , When he felt his health needed fix ing he started for Colorado. Enroute he stopped in Omaha 'for a fewtfays. It was natural for him to, loaf in a newspaper office, so he got acquainted in the offices of The Omaha Bee and was persuaded to stay here and work. He worked a few months, when an opening carte in the Bureau of Pub licity and he jumped in as manager of the bureau. That was six years ' ago, and since that time Omaha has been hearing from him regularly The cchintry at large has been hearing from Omaha all, the time through his efforts in spreading Omaha's favor able publicity abroad. Every big con vention iii the United States has been, hearing from him also, for he has in the past six years dragged in more national conventions for Omaha than the city ever had before. itf its his tory.; - y '-.', Next in ThU Brrle "How Omaha Got George X. IVUson." The Weekly Bumble Bee OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, 1 OCTOBER 14, 4917. HOW THEY ONCE LOOKED 1 i HOW THEY LOOK NOW TBE BCMBIJS BEE. ' A STINGER, EDITOR. ' Commonlcatloni on any topic received, without postage or la-nature. None returned. NO ACS) AT ANT PRICE. FARMING. Farming would be a Joy It all the farmer had to do were to cart tile produce Into town and haul the money home. Between getting the seed Into the (round and the fruit thereof out of It Ilea a great deal of worry. When the farmer Jan't troubled over ' where to get help, he haa other things to think about, euch aa the Income tax, the advancing coat ot gasoline, the posalbe failure in the supply of rubber, and many little details of a sort the city man knows nothing about Happy city dweller, who only need take thought of how to get hold ot enough money to pay the landlord and the U batcher and the grocer, and the coal dealer, ana wonder ir bis old overcoat will go through an other winter, and whether ahoes will be down to where he can buy a new pair, ' and what the baker does with all the money he is taking from the public and some other Incidental!. The -man in town knows nothing of the farmers' trials! , V TJT1CAL. Tommy" Allen Is new hav ing the federal grand Jury in quire into . who it was criti cised tbe fmtoral diatiit t torney for Nebraska. If he goes deep,, enough, he might ft"d cirtte'a aii'iiirt rf pel lined up In front of the' court j.iuse. However, his . camou flage Is typical. - ''' . COMFORT. No matter what the price on spuds, the man who raised his own la getting a lot of comfort that can't ba bought at a gro cery store. It will do no harm, to keep In mind that husking corn is employment for fuli.-crown men, and not for boys and girls. Sid Omaha do Its duty on the Liberty bonds T Not yet; we have only made a good start. Watch the finishing drive. Travel to St. Jos la not as brisk as It waa earlier in the game, bat the trains stlU are running. The muny eoal yard went off well for a start;, how long can they keep It upr plan your ly ti phig. Chrlstmaa ahopp! Try -our stings; they always work. DIFFER OVER DOGS; LOCAL JiUCiSl'AKING SIDES N QUARREL Argument Waxes Fierce and Shows that 'Neither Side is Entirely Bight tn Position. They're at It again. This time It Is dogs Instead Ot squirrels and sparrows. Tbe Bumble Bee can cheerful ly 'Bay this time, "a plague on both your houses!" Each sidp la right and each Is wrong, and neituer can sen is oil a l ' point at all. That is the cause of most of the real trouble In thla world the Inability or un willingness to aee the ether fel lows side of the case. ".'Tls sweet to hear the hon est watch dog's bark bay deep luouthru wniromu h we u aw near home," wrote Byron, and heMouohee a tender run. J in t e bosom of -many a man. No friend gives you heartier relv come than your dos. None wtil cling to you with more" of un questioning dnvotlon. fVt admit that 'there are dogs and dogs; dogs of high and low degree, as Goldsmith noted, and so.no that !- Biisi hlff iv. :ni repair. But the far better way to control these Is to put a lit tle of the responsibility on their owners. No man should be per mitted to maintain a dog or any) other animal that la a menace to ineV at." l . re. ot our modern mistakes la too often to accept the effect for the cause, and act accordingly. Ip stead of punishing the parents of delinquent children, we punish the -M'd. ad I ster.d rf . . - tlng after the man who owns then irouoiesorae aog,. we gei siier the dog. If the course were turned aroun, maybe the dog no minee m.Kiit be im.v'l. . Finally, we have an Idea that Pudd'nhead Wilson also knew what he waa talking about when he said, "The more X see of some men tbe better I like dogs." PENDING. Omaha has considerable of a docket of unfinished business tiend T The ;! t ia-. ny franchise suit, the question of a kss supply and a few little things like that will be taking up time In spite of he war be fore long. MISSED. 'j. ' Ed Black aays not to get ex cited, for there's snother car coming behind the one you missed. Wonder if Ed ever waa out-aa late aa 1:10 a. m. in Omal)a , ' CRAPES. Wo are with the Commercial club in Its efforts to get vine yards replanted around Omaha. Grapes are mighty fine fruit, even it they are not alwaya put to right use WOMEN SHOW THEY CAN HANDLE WORK THAT PUZZLES MAN 1 ... ' Organize Campaign to Sell ' IJberty Bonds and Make Big Success, of the Job. The Bumble Bee takes off Its hat to the Omaha women. They certainly have shown an example . for their sisters throughout the country in the matter of working for Liberty bonds. -Without getting their wires crossed and tangling the Issue with others of any kind, the women folks have Just got busy on the bond drive, and are making a real success of their share' of It. Maybe later on they will point to this, achievement as an evidence of their general ef ficiency and capacity for doing tfiings, and if they do. It Is sll right with us. They hace es tablished their-right. ,, . REPARTEE. , "Say, Hack,' can you tell me where I can get a drink f'suid a comical friend to Prosecutor- McGuire. "No, I can't," answered .the imperturbable T. i., "but I know a chap who did have some."- ' . And tha regular order ot business Was resumed." TERROR. War's terror has struck home to- at least one young conscript who marched awcy from Onuha with tbe selects. He wrrtes back to the borne folks that he has to, take a ahower bath every afternoon, and oh, gee! the water's cold. He should cheer up. . It , will be colder before spring. . FEAT. A South Dakota ' paper re ferred to a social affair aa "lira, Overlook's Big Feet." Tbr edi tor Is busy now trying to con vince the lady he Intended to cay "fete." Better stick t English after this, and call It feat., SAVING. The revved Bee tells i a t-year-old oh the South Side who has invested in Liberty bonds to the tune of 1100, ''the savings ot a life time." We'll say he'a some saver. It it's his lifetime that is meant. HOPE. The downward slide of the haughty hog has set In, aad maybe, the day is not far oft when tin ordinary man can look a rasher of bacon or a pork chop squarely in tbe face again. .RECALLED. . ' Approbation given the weather. man last ounoay u nereoy -recalled. . -IN OUR TOWN. Roy JIcKelvie was tip from Lincoln. John L. Kennedy expects . make a speech In puhlle s: Bill Murray also walks don town each morning some morn msa. . "Ray" Abbott went to a danee last week with his. nice new uni form on. ; . ' Luther Drake gave a party for some friends from upstats last week. . -r "VJc" Parish says he wishes) somebody could think of some thing for hlrato do this fall. ''Artie" Mullen reports every thing running all right at Lin. coin again, but admits It take a lot of bis time. I George Condra la still telling folks about Nebraaka soli. What Oeorge. doesn't know on this toplo is burled below bedrock, and that' some deep in this atate. " HURRAH. Omaha firemen get tbe raise in pay the legislature granted them two - years ago. Forty thousand dollars . Is quit a chunk toy take out of the city treasury. Just now. The Inci dent la another unpleasant re minder that Omaha does not regulate its own affairs, but has) to go to Lincoln from time to time to find out what may be done, Some day our home folks will go out and take that homo rule the icittslature put within their reach. ' " -WHYf ' Two big Omaha schools Were put out of commission because steamplpea buret when heat wss first turned on. Wonde why these things were not tesU ed during theAoag summer va cation T PCRITV. What shall It profit a paper !f it deodorize Its advertising pages and persist in publishing the pornographic biography of a self-confessed thief end pros titute T Some discrimination, eht 1 1LAG. - Matt Greevey will be out at ' town when his old friend, W. H. Taft comes tn. but the Taft Hag will fly over the Greevey lawn Just the same. ' , - POEM. . She stirred our souls The other night . All went to go , To Franc to fight, V v . " . Her Words wen warns. -- , ' Close ties to weld. , We'll follow on ' -Lead, Ansa Held,