TheOmahaBee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THE BEK PUBLISHING COMPANT NELSON B. UPDIKE. Fublishsr. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The associated FnH, of whlct Tse ftse Is a BMiabSf tl tliuitslt multltd Um um lor fmblirttlon of (11 esws aisfSMbsS cMdltxi la It r eat oiktrvIM ersdiisd IB Ibis HDV. sss mm the leeal news mibllahnl hsrsin. All rlhti ef HoUcMig tl OUT sasMel Uutc& irt also ntsmd. BEE TELEPHONES I'nrlt Branch Biooinss. As far Tvlr 1000 Us IMpentMat o I'trm Wsatsd. - sjrer awv Fee Nlfht Calls AlUr 10 f. m.t . Rdltorlst Dtpartaieat .........." TrUt JMJJ. ftreulsitna topsrtment Tries leWJ. AdrwtUlttf Djftient Tjler 1MM OFFICES OF THE BEE Him tltKm: 7th snS hnilD ' IS 8eou at I South Bid. SJ Seutk SMS It Council Bluffs Ktw Tort Vaicsje Out-ef-Tswa Off'cesi tt firth I Wttkiairtoa nil O St. ItNU Bids. I Puis. Fruo. IM tut Bt. Soaort The Bees Platform 1. New Uaioa Paaeaafsr Statioa. 2. Contiau) improvement of tti N brsska Hifhwajra, isclndinf tho maat of Main Thoroughfare Uadiaf ' into Omaka wllk a Brick Surface. 3. A short, low-rate Waterway from tka Cera Bait to the Atlantic Ocean. 4. Homo Rule Charter v for Omaka, witb City Manager form of GoTaramaat. "Mother o' Mint." It is not given to every man to be "hanied cn a wind-swept bill," nor is such an ending at all attractive; but if that were the fate in store, we may be very certain that the mothers of men would be there to soothe the last moments of the condemned, to 'weep 0vr his dishonored head, and to comfort him by all the tender means that only mothers may command. And men know this. They accept it as one of the things in life not to be Questioned, just as they accept the immortality of the soul, the existence of God, fundamental supports of their faith in higher and better things than sordid life affords, and therefore incentives to the up ward striving Of the soul. It was motherhood that gave man bis first inkling of creation and the Creator; to motherhood in the first place was ascribed all the wonders that surpassed man's understanding, and to this may be traced tbe origin of the symbols now held ihOst sacred among all religions. What man is there who dots not honor his mother? Who has not felt the influence of her love, reaching out to him through the darkness of the troubled hour, across the abyss of time, enfolding him with grace and mercy akin to the divine? And, as mother recedes into the past, there remain precious memories of her gentle patience, her unfailing sympathy, her understand ing appreciation of the difficulties, the trials, the dangers of babyhood, childhood, youth and ma turity; her readiness to help, her anticipatory sacrifices, ' the abnegation she .uncomplainingly practiced, her faith, her hope, and her love for the children she bore; attributes beyond human ken, the boundless possession of mother. A day for mother? She is satisfied with a moment now and then, or content with lest than that. She toils and loves and sorrows and plans and finds in thai her compensation. From the moment nature whispers so softly to-her than none else can hear the great secret till her tired hands arc folded in that last long slumber, she gives all and would give more if she might to the little one, because she can not do otherwise. One day to remember mother? Every day should be devoted to that. Mother ddts not exact the tribute, but men and women should joyously pay it. for in honoring mother they are simply acknowledging that they realize the finest thing in life. . ' Mother! No other word in the language means as much, i. No other love is like hers. There is no substitute for mother. Thank God for mother! Next Door to Paradise. Who 1b the happy warrior? Who I he . That every man In arms would like to be? ' " Wordsworth' query is given a new answer by those organizations in Honolulu that are fostering a plan for an immense home for dis abled floldiers on one of the Hawaiian islands. The isles of the blest, the heritage of every warrior when the fire ,that won victory burns low, are now definitely charted. , ' ' A "The nation needs right now a building that will cost millions, to house the disabled veter ans," J. H. Pierce, himself a soldier in the Civil warj said to the Ad club of Honolulu a short time ago. - "Where should this building be erect ed? Is the best any too good for Our dear boy who crushed kaiserism, placed the cross above the crejcent.iand America first among the na tions of the world? . "And, where is the best? Is it not in these islands with which God furnished the world, the true Garden of Eden? The isles of the blest, wheie every brcer.e is laden with the otone of the sea. where night rivals the day in the revela tions of beauty and where nature is lavish with peace and plenty of a land that knows only the sweetest of summer bowers, fruit and flowers.' The skeptical mainland may suspect that the orator lias been reading some of the South sea fiction that is now so popular, but with his funda mental thought, that America, having fed the starving world, nursed the wounded and financed so many foreign nations, should not leave its own heroes to suffer without the best of care and 'comfort. The hospital and rehabilitation methods of the United States are now being im proved and recognition has been taken of the fact that disabled service men have been in more than a few cases left in dire straits. A home for veterans on the Pacific islands, however, is some thing that has never occurred to official minds, which run more to the practical than the roman tic. ' Too Much Stunt Flying. Always on the alert fbr a "thrill, the Ameri can public is just now giving close attention to airplane exhibitions. Chances are always much in favor of an accident, wherein a venturesome flyer loses his life, or at best is badly crippled. A few years ago automobile racing afforded much the same, sort of attraction. Spectators were reasonably assured in advance that some of the participants in the contest would Suffer much and maybe be killed. It Was i gamble with death, and the morbid crowd is always eager to watch such a contest Aviation is not yet a secure occupation, however serviceable it hasl come to be. Its ordinary hazard is quite enough to meet requirements, but these have been greatly enhanced by the stunt flyers, who are pressing ever closer and closer to the impossible, and the death of one merely serves to induce others t6 make the attempt in which the victim failed. There is no moral to this, any ritore than there is a moral to the old tales of the Roman populace, who thronged the amphitheater to watch the gladiators kill one another in the arena. The Romans were only looking for a thrill. i A Very Reno of Marriage. In South Dakota is a judge who ties the matrimonial knot to stay. Of all the couples who have stood before him and said, "I do," not one has afterward said, "I won't." This almost fabulous record ought to make the town , of Miller, S. D., a place of pilgrimage. , It is not to be believed that many people marry with the idea of anything but a permanent union, and when it gets about that no couple married by this judge has even engaged in divorce proceed ings, his town is likely to become even more popular than Reno. ' So many weddings are only slipknots in the last 20 years there have been almost 2,000, 000 divorces. Instead of the court being the last resort in family differences, it now seems to have became the first, and a certain class of lawyers make a comfortable living off the business of separation. There is very efficient machinery for removing unwanted husbands or wives, but little provision for attempting conciliation. In some cases the trifling nature of disputes that lead to divorce is proved by the fact of remarriage be tween the two parties. In Nebraska there is one divorce to every 7.33 weddings. This is not a good showing, although 20 other states make a worse one. Nevada, where many estranged persons from other states go to obtain an easy decree, has one divorce to every 1.54 weddings, and Oregon has a divorce for every 2.52 marriages, The rate of divorce per 100,000 population in Nebraska is 144, which puts our state in 25th place. Whether it is owing to the worthy influence of the marrying judge of South Dakota or not, figures show that in that state nine couples out of every 10 who marry there do so for keeps. It is one of the few places where the people can read one of those old-fashioned novels which end, "And they lived happily ever after," without laughing themselves into hysterics at the ri diculousness of it. For the eountry as a whole the divorce rate is said to be increasing three times as fast as the population. It is time people thought twice before accepting separation as the only way out of matrimonial rnisundcrsandings, some of which are rather slight and might be cured by delay. But the beginning is a time for deep considera tion as well. If the seriousness of getting mar ried were better realized, if young couples would pause for a moment in the midst of their romance, many bad matches might be avoided. Bearing the "White Man's Burden." Elsewhere on this page will be found a short account of the efforts of an Omaha man at establishing civilization among wild people. For over three centuries the Spaniards had dealt with the Filipinos and with little or no effect. In truth, we found the Moros more fanatically in tractable than theV were when the Spaniards first went among them. All attempts at spreading Christian ways among them had failed; they were pirates by tradition, and scorned the peace ful ways of the European. In seven years this Omaha man accomplished what had been deemed impossible. He induced the sultan of Sulu to abdicate; he established self-government among the natives; has brought education and enlight enment into the land, set up industry, especially organized agriculture, and has taught Moham medan and Christian to sit side by side in coun cil, and Hot cut off one another's heads. This is part of what Uncle Sam has been do ing for those islands. It has not been an easy task. The workers have been interfered with by politicians, both at home and over there. Steadily they have plodded on with the wfork of bringing that backward and savage people up to a stand ard that will mean political independence, to be maintained by an enlightened citizenship. In setting forward the task as far as it has pro ceeded, the United States has accomplished One of the greatest jobs yet undertaken by a civil ized nation. Jus as in Cuba a backward and Oppressed people was set up on a responsible, self-governing basis, and with no thought of reward, other than comes from transforming a neighborhood source of trouble into a peaceful community, so have we done in the Philippines, The more the matter is studied, and some day the tale will be told in full, the more is it made certain that the United States has been Carrying a full share of "the white man's bur den," and doing its job in a most thorough manner. ' .,, '- . Tempting the Devil. It is not a pleasant thing to think Of, the story of the finding of a woman of 30 who has been confined in a darkened room of her moth er's home for 16 years. Even if her mental state had been of the best before having been con fined to her cell, she could not emerge from it row" without being weakened both physically and mentally.' Companionship and the Stimulation that comes from bodily and mental activity are necessary to the full development of human beings. Even though this girl -had been feeble-minded at the start, she might have developed her power through finding useful and productive occupa tion. An idle mind and an idle body, tempt the devil and all his ills. 1 This movement on the part of the ship own ers to cut djown the number of sailors required in each crew might be all right if no accidents and emergencies ever befell in which passengers need every protection. The New Jersey police woman who was. badly beaten in arresting- a man criminal will perhaps get a lot of credit when she ought to be given a few lessons in common sense. For a place 1,000 miles from nowhere, with a population of 2,700 and an area of 70 square miles, Yap is getting more than its share of pub It begins to appear that the war was lost not only by the Central powers, but by the whole world. In the old romances people used to die for love, but itow they only kill. A good place to start disarmament would be with Senator Borah. Frank W. Carpenter: Hero Wonderful Work Omaha Man Has Accomplshed Among Moros Omaha shortly will have an opportunity to entertain a former resident who really has a claim to distinction, and yet who has so modestly and unassumingly done his share of a great work that few have heard of him. Frank W. Carpenter, who succeeded John J.' Pershing as governor of Mindanao and Sulu, has just retired and is about to take a vacation after more than 20 years of uninterrupted service in the Philippines. That announcement might wind up the story of Mr. Carpenter's career, so far as publicity in the United States generally is concerned, but over there it is different. Filipino newspapers and public men tell a different story. For example, the Mindanao Herald, published at Zamboango, says: ' Carpenter is the biggest man that has ever served in the Philippine government, and he if, without a shadow of a doubt, the best friend that the Filipino people ever had or may hope to have, irrespective of race, and including their own patriots. ' Who is this man, of whom such seemingly extravagant statements may be- made? It is pretty hard to tell in a few words. Many years ago. back in the early 90s, a young man enlisted in the Second infantry at Fort Omaha, serving his "hitch" with that regiment, and getting his first real lessons in business life? Between the date of his enlistment and now extends a con tinued record of hard work, 30 years on the gov ernment pay roll, 20 of them in the Philippines. What has he done to merit the praise so lavishly bestowed on him in the islands, where he seems to be leaving more friends than any American who ever served there ? C. W. Farwell wrote in Current History las't October: In the closing of the term of Frank W. Carpenter as department governor of Mindanao and Sulu we have another such record. The story of Mindanao is more wonderful than that of Cuba, for it is the story of a wild, uncon querable people brought at last, by patient understanding and helpfulness, to submission, and, paradoxically, to self-government. ; . Carpenter went to the Philippines, with Law ton, a civilian clerk, having completed his enlist ment with the Second infantry and entered into the staff service. After General Lawton's death Mr. Carpenter was made chief clerk to General Bates, and through a series of well-earned pro motions came to. be in J906 executive secretary to the governor general. While he was thus working up in the service of the island govern ment. Captain Pershing was winning his "star" in Mindanao; followed by General Wood, then by Bliss, and he in turn by General Pershing, and the military problem Of Moro pacification was being worked out. In 1913 Pershing was ordered to home station and assigned to the Mexican border, and then it was Frank W. Carpenter began the real work of setting up the government of the department. He1 was confronted with the most stupendous task ever assigned a man. Four hundred thousand fierce, implacable natives had to be brought into submission; the sultan of Sulu had to be induced to abdicate his arbitrary rule, the "juramentado" custom had to be broken up; in general, the lives of these fanatic Moham medans were lo be turned into a new channel. The military had overawed, but had not subdued them. After a little more than seven years Gov ernor Carpenter leaves his post with the loving respect of natives who have learned to appreciate his kindly interest, his unfailing patience, and his persistence for justice and the right. It was he who persuaded the sultan to accept the "Bates treaty," to give up his rule, and it was he also who showed the natives a better way of, doing things; who did not disturb their religion, but did turn their lives from idleness to comparative industry, who made the byways free and (safe, set ,up schools, established regard for property, and made law the rule rather than the jest of the islands under his sway, and made it possible for the Manila Free Press to write of him: . The brightest page in Governor Carpenter's career, his magnum opus, his supreme achieve ment, is found written in the records of the Department of Mindanao and Sulu. For years it had been recognized that the greatest inter nal problem of the Philippines, the chief in herent obstacle to political independence, was the so-called Moro problem, the winning of the 400.000 more or less hostile and reputedly ir reconcilable Mohammedan population of Min danao and Sulu, to the full acknowledgement of United States sovereignty, to the abandon ment of warlike customs, and the acceptance of a reign of peace, to the introduction of a civil government in which they themselves should take part, and to relations of amity and harmony and fraternity with their Filipino brethren who religiously own the sway of the Cross instead of the Crescent. . When then Executive Secretary Carpenter was asked to undertake such a. mission, he was warned by his friends that failure awaited him; that all his past record would be blotted out in inglorious disaster; that peace between the fierce warriors . of the south and their more civilized brothers of the north was an "ire descent dfeam," and that the end thereof would be ignominy and discredit and disgrace. His answer to all such dire forebodings might be found surrtmed up in the motto on the crest of the Prince of Wales: "Ich dien!" (I serve). As a soldier he had learned to do his duty, to obey, and, from the beginning, such has been his creed of service; his "not to reason why," his "not to make reply." And such was the spirit in which he accepted the task he was called npon to perform, . ; How the. "patently impossible and vain" has been accomplished; how the miracle has been wrought; how "in Uie teeth of all the schools," the skepticism of the army, the scoff ings of old associates in the government, the jeremiads of his friendshow in the face of all and in spite of all, the foolish dream has been realized is now a matter of recorded history; , Today, behold the Moro and his Christian brother mingling in harmony and associating in council; behold the "kmapilong" and the "barong" and the "kris" replaced by the plow and other implements of industry; behold the schoolhouses dotting the land; behold perma nent plantings of six and seven and eight-year fruition, which, better than anything else, give pacific pledge, scattered throughout that vast area of 36.000 square miles. Now, having wrought, and "weary and old .with service," Governor Carpenter startds at the parting of the ways. He lays down the burden of the cares of state, borne, lo. these many years. In it there is both joy and sad ness. In it there is something of the sugges tion of that scene many years ago, when a former governor, addressing his bureau chiefs on the eve of his departure, quoted from Kip ling's "Galley Slave": ; But today I leave the- galley, and another ' takes my place; . There'a my name Upon the deckbeam let It stand a little space. I am free to watch my messmates beating out to open main; ,. Free of all that life ean offer save to handle sweep again. It is interesting to read of how Governor Carpenter accomplished b'p miracle; how he pa tiently wore down an obdurate sultan, conquered his ambitious and unreconciled mother; how he induced the suspicious Moros to become trustful, and how he introduced into the islands the arts and ways of peace to supplant those of war. Some day he may tell them, a bit more fully than they are set out in official reports, and with more of .real st than they are given in news paper reports. For the present ,it must suffice that this man, who began in Omaha 30 years ago as a private soldier, comes back to his native land a conqueror as full of honors as though he had won on field of battle the victories he accom plished in the quiet of au executive office How to Keep Well By DR. W. A. EVANS Questions concerning hygiene, sanita tion and prevention of disease, tub milted to Dr. Evan, by reader of The Bee, will bo answered personally, subject to proper limitation, where a stamped, addressed envelope is en . closed. Dr. Evans will not nsho diafnosls or prescribe for individual diseases. Address letters ia cars of The Bee. Copyright. 1921. by Dr. W. A. Evans. ABOUT SNAKE POISON. A correspondent invites me to read an account of a study of the poison ous Qualities of -certain serpents and other animals written by members of the Phtsalix family. As translated and abstracted this account appears in several American periodicals. I thought the letter had a ha ha ring and the title of the article, "All Ser pents Are Venomous." confirmed the impression. As a scientific contribution the I'hlsallx study was all right, but it did not change my position at all. I hold that the common wild fear of snakes is unjustified: that there are very few snakes of any American speclps which carry a deadly dose of poison. The French study showed that 15 minims of blood serum of a common wild grass snake injected into the veins will. kill a frog, a sparrow, or a guinea pig. That a)l lower verte brates are more or less poisonous. This includes fish, eels and frogs. The poison was extracted from these animals and injected hypodermically into certain test animals, killing them when the dose was sufficiently large. In all Instances the poison ous animals did not poison when taken ns food. To get the poison ous effect it was necessary to . get around the liver by injecting the poison into the tissues or into the blood. So endeth the story. Am I con verted? No. Shall our people re fuse to walk forth for fear of the deadly rattle unless equipped with a gallon of wild red eye? Again, no! The trouble about the French sci entists is that they did not go far enough. They did not prove a third of what everybody knows or what has been proved many times before. Mosquito saliva is poisonous when hypodermirally injected. So is the saliva of ants, wasps, bees and so on. The most harmless substances of eertain kinds are poiaonous in a certain sense when injected under thfi skin or into the blood. Dr. "V. C. Vaughan, dean of the University of Michigan, wrote a largo volume on this subject several years ago. The injection of different pro teins and often of harmless vaccines is in common .use as a means of causing a fever and generally stir ring up an indifferent system and making it fight back on the same principle that setons and blisters were used in the olden times. Btit what has all this to do with the danger of life from a snake bite? Nothing? This is a good place to thank the kind friends who send me newspaper clippings about cases of fatal snake bite. I have received more than twenty clippings, taken from more than ten different papers, reporting the same fatality. I have come to the conclusion that there are two or three fatalities due to-rattlesnake bite in Texas each year. There are one or two occur ring yearly in the far northwest, prin cipally Oregon and Washington, and' somewhere about one more on the average in" other portions of the west: There are 100,000,000 people here, and the number dying each year is about 1,500,000. Of these 1,500,000 deaths, let-us say five are due to snake bite. The only snake havingf a large , doss of poison in his bag is the rat- l tier, very few rattlers carry a fata" dose. There should be a specific for rattlesnake bite,: but manufacturing houses to which' I have written, say it would not pay to make it, as the demand is too small. I think the state health, department of Texas should make it as a public service for the citizens of that state. , Perhaps the same opinion holds as to- Washington, Oregon, and a few other states. It would not rt quire much of research work to de vise such a remedy, in the mean time there are- ordinary preventives, but they are of little use. I imagine most of them depend on the virtues of permanganate of potash. This drug has a little virtue, perhaps, it used freely and promptly. Difficult to Diagnose. McD. writes: "In your article, 'For Nervous Women, you mention nerve syphilis as an important fac tor in nervous breakdown. "1. To' what extent, if any Is it hereditary? "2. What are its symptoms? "3. Is it generally recognized by physicians or is it probable that a doctor might overlook It ire his diag nosis? "4. Is it curable? If so, how? "6. Is it widespread?" REPLY. 1. To a moderate but not great extent. ' Even approximate valuation is manifestly impossible. 2. The symptoms of nerve syphi lis vary. The two outstanding forms sre paresis and locqmotor ataxia. The first is a form of insanity. . The last is a disease of the spinal cord which starts with ; sharp shooting pains. i 3. The existence of nerve syphilis is often overlooked for .a. consider able time. 4. To a very limited extent. - 5. Yes. ' ' ' Deportment at the Play GO'kI for Light Cases. , Interested writes: "I km inclos ing an old prescription for ring worm. ' It also is fine for itch. It was tried on a stubborn case with wonderful results. If applied as soon is a spot appears that's the last' of t. Here it is: Salicylic acid,. 80 grains; alcohol, 1 ounce." . REPLY. Y ' ' ' This will cure many simple cases. It will fall to cure the difficult ones. Thanks, From tlio New York Times. Audiences come in for a scolding in a recent Issue of the London Times. Mr. A. B. Walkley, whose veteran service as a . flrst-nlghter would would have. cHse-hardcned a less sensitive spirit, finds that they applaud too much, and most Inop portunely. "If you think of It, "striking one palm against another with a resounding smack is a queer way of expressing your deltght. It suggests the monkey tricks of prime val man." It is onrt of the worst "nuisances of the theater." The Joy of the playhouse is that it casts a "spell of illusion," creates for the time "an imaginary world." Yet the friends of this and that actor ap plaud his entrance, applaud each telling moment, applaud his exit and positively clamor that he come on again to acknowledge their applause. The spell of illusion collapses in dull reality, in a mess of insistent per sonalities. "The true artist." says Mr. Walkley. "would be disconcerted by what is a sign that his imagina tive hold on the spectator has mo mentarily broken down." The de portment of audiences, in short, "is one of the failures of our civilisa tion." Would the true artist be discon certed, or rather Is he? The failure of civilisation, alas, is more wide spread and devastating than Mr. Walkley seems to know. So dear to the heart is this resounding smack, this monkey trick even to the hearts of great actors that life on the stage would be inconceivable without it. The histrionic devices for enforcing applause are countless, and the only complaint is that so many of them fall to work upon mod ern audiences. Time was when Lady Gay Spanker, in "London Assur ance," could step right out of the picture, lean over the footlights, de liver her description of the chase at the very noses of the audience and reap a whirlwind of applause. Time was and time has been. The brazen head cl Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay spo!?e no more fate fully than the audiences of our real istic theater, to which such appeals are taboo. When Shaw wrote "Ma jor Barbara"- he intended that the Cannon Maker should employ this trick with his long speech in the last act. But 'that, as it proved, was be yond even Shaw's audacity. When the play was produced here, Louis Calvert repeating his performance as the Cannon Maker, the idea was again discussed. At the thought of such an opportunity the actor's eye glistened; but his courage faltered 8nd he remained "in the picture." Elsewhere as in London, assurance for this sort of thing is now lacking. Another and more subtle device is well known to all Shakespearean actors of the good old school. AVhen any showy speech was to be deliv ered, such as the monologue of Jaques on the seven ages of man, the actor "took the center" as far down stage as he could and still be in the picture, rpoke as fully as he dared to the audience and with the last line "took the corner." That Is to say, as he rolled upon his tongue ! Sins teeth, suns eyes, sans taste, sans every thing bis gestures became rhythmic, floating, and he wafted himself to a leg of the proscenium arch with something like a waltz step. Having thus' considerately made way for another to "come center" and take up the dialogue, he stood with head bowed in pretended modesty. Such splendid eloquence married to such self- effacement The audience never failed to rise in a tempest of re sounding smacks that quite "killed" the entrance of the hero. Orlando, bearing - the faithful Adam. The luckless twain stood foolishly by "up center," gritting their teeth with rage, while the house resounded in acclaim of the melancholy modesty of Jaques down by the footlights happy, perfidious Jaques! But all that is nO more. Your cold-blooded modern audience still reward the 'sleight with a monkey trick or so; but In their hearts they are instinc tively against an actor , who takes the corner. Year by year a grimmer fnte encompasses the artist whose life breetf is p.pplauee. Something ought really to he done about it. Acting is the most per sonal of the arts, more personal even than dancing, for it employs as its executive instrument not only the body but the face, the voice the Very mind itself, which kindles to every word, every mood of the dra matist. No idea is moro absurdly overworked than that it Is the busi ness of the actor to merge his per sonality In each successive part One actor of the present generation does this Consummately, the Hollander de Vries and how many In the wide world ever heard of him? But who can ever forget the outstanding, in variable personalities of Irving and Terry, of Bernhardt, Duse, Forbes Robertson, Mansfield? If. they created a variety of characters, it was with their minds. But it was their physical selves, the radiant en ergy of blood, nerve and sinew, that filled the playhouse and made it rise to them. If that failed to register m an instinctive acclaim, their little hour, was done. In the theater personality and il lusion interpenetrate and blend. Now, as among the ancients,- the word dearest ip th heart of the ector is plaudit. Even in the time of Plautus monkey tricks were a tradition. Follow your ancient custom and applaud! Ultimata in Sinecures. It would bo Interesting to know what, the 363 employes of the league of nations at the headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, find to do, aside from admiring the scenery. Spring field Union. Palms and Sweet Words Bettor Men for Congress. If, the Sheppard-Towner "Better Baby" bill ia passed, we shall expect to see a vast improvement In the personnel of congress beginninc 'about 1950. St. Paul Pioneer-Press. A B Making Institution that Meets with Your Ideas of Service and that Possesses the Element of Security Essential to Confidence. ' Deposits Protected by Depositor's Guar anty Fond of the State of 5ebraka 4 Interest Paid , on Savings Accounts Compounded Quarterly. Deposits made on or belore the 10th of the month draw interest for entire month. Funds subject to with drawal without notice. American State Bank Eighteenth and Farnam Sts. D, W. Geiselman, President. D. C. Geiselman. Cashier H. M. Krogh, Asst. Cashier. . (From tlie Philadelphia Lodger.) Around Washington seethes and swirls a score of little groups bent and determined upon disbanding the army, scrapping the navy, melting American guns into medals to hang upon themselves and forging the sword of America into gilded halos to place upon their own misguided brows. These are the limelight hunt ers, the seekers after the spotlight. Of such are many of the most vocif erous of the disarmament folk. These would go tripping forth wfth sweet words Jn their mouths and palms in their hands to argue matters of national life and death with an enemy armed to the teeth. We may recall that it was this ilk that busied itself with honeyed mes sages of goodwill, what time the Hun w-ns ramping on iron hoofs through Belgium. They have their own little patter as to the causes of wars, gleaned from the arch-pacifists of the ages. It merely pains and bores them to recall the great surges of humanity that have run through the centuries, the urges that have sent whole races moving as the salmon move to the soa. They believe that the long courses of ages, of time and of his tory can be changed by a resolution. It seems to be their hope ' that somehow America can be prevailed upon to stand up with naked hands and bared breast In the midst of a world that is now armed as never the world was armed before. They would hold aggressive ambitions in cheek by an appeal to the better na tures of a whole people that be lieves in its destiny and that destiny Is not a pacifist destiny. They would stop the Red armies of Sovietdom by the gesture, palm outward, f "Peace be with you. Peace be unto you!" Such folk follow their wishes and hopes and sentiments rather than reason and experience. They ignore the fact that there is a slow, steady, grinding movement of people against people, of race against race, that has a habit of ending In war. Ostrich-like, they stick their heads in the sands of their Illusions and what they wish to believe becomes what they do believe. ' Norman Angell and many another moved that war could not come. ' . - nr.a jjuttno great war came. iivn, rocking in the ground swell from the terrible storm, we are told that all storms are over; that skies of all the world will brood peacefully over humanity throughout the untroubled centuries If we will only disarm. ; If and when other nations dis arm so will we. The president 1i making that plain. The sane frlendi of disarmament know that the pro cess must be gradual; that it must come, slowly if it is to come at all. Time must, pass, and the slow spread of the idea must be taken into ac count. ... The genuine friends of disarma ment know that a congressional resolution will not change the heart of mnn; that it will not take out of him his hatreds, envies, greeds, pas sions and the urge of growth and of change. Here is a' place to make haste with exceeding great slowness. The world is the world, and men are men after all. Also men wanted swords and forged them before they used them. Where Einstein' Is Lacking. ' One reason why Professor Ein stein's theory appears so opaque. to the average American la because ho does not use the same sort of lan guage employed by Colonel House.- Galveston Tribune. MOTHER'S DAY. AH hll to ur "Mothsrs" and ."Fathers" as well: To them a owe tribute, so many can tell. Of the. . pleasures and sorrows together they've borne; Let us make them both happy en this special morn. ' Tney nave lannren io-einer inrnvgn sun-. shin and showers. So why not sand both a baeltct of flowers? Mrs. W.. F. P.. Cm diffravrr. is He ' constraction oPthe matchless as co: Ml area trith other tin nlannrnrfc' (j Ihis difference accounts for he most ebuisite piano tone ever created, and for a longevity not equaled by any ofher X piano irv he -world wihout exception. H. . . FT uignest priced Uiqhest praised Artistic Demonstrations Daily 1513 Douglas Street New Telephone Number, Douglas 5588 . "i Phone Douglas 2793 WeWBipiaferOffict OMAHA PRINTING fe .steak a &tlV CUHKANT r vPSSa sS m ui esanxT S MMAN bsyssawsiaBissgs" M T" III TrtHiiiantintrammwwiLt isT!"j.i it ii- Commercial Printcrs-Lithographcrs skelOieCmbosscxs loose lcap devices She Protected Her Daughter As a widow she had grown ac customed to facing business problems. Her daughter was seriously interested in a young man with pronounced spend ing propensities. In her anx iety about the future " the? widow consulted a Trust Of ficer about the disposition rof her Estate. ' - ;" As a result of his advice her attorney drew her .Will di recting that , her : Estate be managed s a whole by the Trust Company, the, income only to be paid her daughter,, except in case of dire neces sity. This provision had as its basis the eternal foundation of mother love and forethought. Have you alto visualiied the future for your children's take? This task will be light nee through a reading of our Trust booklet for - women. Your aete will brlag it to your home. llttiteh tafra 5fatat fflampatuj Affiliated With Httifel. &tat0 National Hank U 1612 Fa mam Street v Dmhi M.hMU w a. 'V's I