l'HE BEE: OMAHA. SATURDAY. JUNE 4, 1921. TheOmaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THE BEB PUBLISHING COM PANT NELSON B. UPDIKE. Poblith.i. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED MESS Tha Auoclattd Pn, of whlek T Km It anbtr. t - c1nitr otiUod to tka nxi for puMleitloo of all Dm tiniaM crUUd ta It or not eikwirtM endilMl In hll paptr, ud 1 tt Inrtl nw vnUtakad kanin. All niau of subUcatla et nmitl Htsatchaa an alas raiamt BEE TELEPHONES ?ttfat Snaab Xxchaiif. At for AT lamtic 1000 U iMputaaU at faraos WantaiL " ww . Far Nlht Call After 10 . a.s MltMUl VapattMt ATlaatia 1M1 ac 1041 OFFICES OF THE BEE fcUta Offlea: lTb and Ftrnim Ooutl Bluff II Seott St. I Baulk Bill a. MSS 8nk Mtk M Ovt-of-Twa Ollltaat m riftk A I Waahlaitaa '2"J m tatat BM. IPana, Vruoa. N In St. BMor Ntw Tort Cblatt ' JAc Itee' Platform 1. New Union Paitnfr Statioa. 2. Continued improvement of tke Ne braska Highway, including taa pave mailt of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha with a Brick Surfac. 3. A abort, low-rate Waterway from tha Cora Bait to tha Atlantic Ocean. 4. Homa Rula Chartor for Omaha, with City Manager form of Coraramaat, . Hoover's Committee Reports. A summing up of conditions in industry, re ported by the American engineering council's committee, discloses some of the basic causes foe stagnation. Fifty per cent of the waste in industrial processes is laid at the door o! manage ment, and less than 25 per cent at the door of labor, by the committee, which was appointed by Herbert Hoover, when he was at the head of the council. Factors of unemployment, of over head expenses, and all the hems that enter into the general problem have been considered in the process of reaching the conclusion. This information will doubtless come as a shock to many employers, individually and asso ciated, who have felt that they had reached, a high plane in efficiency and had their manage ment systematized to such degree that all avoid?, able waste had been eliminated. Experts seem ingly do not agree with this, and are inclined to disturb the complacency of those employers. Locating some of the cause contributing to the result, the committee cites huge investments in idle machinery, the enormous cost of excessive, labor turnover, and the expense of duplication in bids and plans in building operations and the. like. Restriction of output is laid at the door of capital and labor alike. Neither can evade re sponsibility for this count in the charge. Under the mistaken notion that decreased production meant increased opportunity for employment, workmen have let down in their efforts, while the employers have sought to maintain selling prices by keeping up an artificial scarcity. Both of these are wrong, for the reason that the more, there is produced the more there is to -divide, and when nothing is brought forth there i noth ing to share. One other contributing cause has been the practice of "cost plus." In its principle, it is thfe sound way of doing business; in its latter day application it is the most destructive agency, that ever assailed American industry. Once the successful man depended on his faculty for man agement, which includes the several elements of doing business. Now he relies on the combina tion that shuts off competition and controls prices. Any man who can break into the com bine can succeed, no matter what sort of man ager he is. When a competitive basis is re established, and profit on it job depends on the ability of the man in charge to handle men and material, and not on the amount of money spent, something like prosperity will be restored to the country. That day can not be postponed much longer. Owners of idle plants feel the need of operating 'them; idle workmen need employment, and the public needs the output. Not much is gained by fixing responsibility for waste unless with it comes a revival of effort supported by a de termination to correct exposed mistakes, and to give value received in goods and labor. "In the Movies They Do It." Pirate stories, and we commend them to the tired business man as a first-dais '.'brain duster," always present the picture of an evil face, smoke stained and lowering, just above the bulwark' of ' Jkt doomed vessel, with a wicked looking knife oeiwccn ic icciu, m even a jjiiaic s uiuuin is big enough to get a good firm grip on the pistol a pirate is expected to carry, and that is why we : look askance at a tale that comes from Cheyenne. It tells how a deputy sheriff aided in captur ing two desperadoes near Bridgeport He stripped, stuck his pistol between his teeth and swam across the North Platte river to an island, where the criminals, armed with rifles, were standing off a posse on shore. Two points here stimulate. First, we gravely doubt if a pistol that a swimmer might carry any distance in his teeth would be of much service in a frontier melee. Certainly it was not one' of those full-" . grown, robust .45s old-timers out in that neigh borhood were familiar with. .i-)-.' Again, if the deputy were of such stature that he was forced to swim any considerable distance in the North Platte at Bridgeport, where the er rant river meanders aimlessly all over a maze of . sandbars and through such a multitude of chan nels that even the smartest can not tell which is the river-and which the snye, then he couldn't tote a regularly ordained deputy sheriff's six shooter, even in a holster. . Something is wrong somewhere with that story. We are ready to admit that the deputy crossed the river to the island, that he did carry a pVol, and that he did capture the fugitive Mr "cuns. But we are profoundly sceptical as to ' Ty ing a pistol in his teeth, or swimmh . r . reat distance in the North Piatt live- : j po.at Partner of Providence. ,: Rain that was badly needed by the growing Reheat and the sprouting corn hat .Wtr. generally in Nebraska within the last few da?s. Nature is looking after her own. The earth has been well warmed by the sun and now the mois ture will Refresh every growing thing. Just as is the killing of the peach" crr-y .y frost rumored every year, so are premature pre dictions of calamnity from dry weather made for other products.. Between a good harvest and a short one there can be but one choice. The farmer will always take, the big yield, and quite rightly. The full duty of all those engaged in agriculture has been done and the rest remains with nature. Worrying about dry weather or about washouts will not affect the result in the least, nor is there any precaution such as is possible in most other industries by which safety and success can be assured. , The farmer is truly the partner of Providence, and as such has to take more risks than any other business man. A Visit to Radium Land. The illness that has befallen Madame Curie will prevent her visiting one of the principal sources of radium in the world. Her trip to the Grand Canyon of the Colorado remains uncan celled, but will not take her into the isolated dis tricts where the precious carnotite ore is found. To obtain a gram of 'radium, 250 tons of carnotite must be searched through and put through a refining process. One place in which this mineral is found is in narrow seams in the rather aptly named Undark mines of the Paradox valley of Colorado. It has then to be trans ported 60 miles by mule team across desert and mountain trails, and thence by rail to T3rangr, N. J. There are several other similar mines in the southwest, but the total output of all for 1917 was only 26 grams of radium. . , Radium is the most valuable element in the world, made' so by its scarcity and by the diffi culty in isolating It after it has been found. One gram, the product of 250 tons of ore hauled painfully over rough trails, costs $120,000 and in sire is about enough to fill a thimble. An ounce of platinum, which is more precious than gold, is worth only $150. Radium is so powerful that when mixed with other materials even a minute particle will make surfaces self-luminous for years. It is this quality that makes radium luminous material commercially possible. One large use for radium is for the illumination of watch faces. . No doubt Madame Curie would have liked to venture into the country where a great por tion of the supply of the element which she dis covered is mined, but in her visit to the Grand Canyon she will at least be in the neighborhood of the district where radium is.foLt.d. Stepping on State's Rights. Ancient principles and beliefs are coming in for some rather rough treatment these days, es pecially at xhe hands of congress. One of the most substantial of all American doctrines has been that which allows each state sovereign con trol over affairs within its borders, where such control does not actually transcend the Constitu tion of the United States, and is not contrary to good public policy. If a measure offered in the senate by Mr. Kellogg of Minnesota should be come a law, the doctrine will receive a blow that wilt just about end its usefulness. Under the provisions of the bill the president is authorized "to maintain through federal -courts and other wise and irrespective of any state law, the rights of aliens in the United States." Aimed directly at the anti-Japanese law of California, which is to some extent copied in Nebraska, the measure will permit, the invasion of a state at any time by the federal power. Nullifying state control of the interests of its people, the measure opens the door to possible abuses that are so obvious as to require no elaboration, Now a direct chan nel is open for the invocation of the federal power. When local authorities certify to the governor that- the processes of the courts can not be enforced, the state executive is - obliged to call on the president of the United States for assistance to restore order. On a very recent occasion Mr. Harding declined to send federal troops to a scene of disorder, holding it to be the business of the state authorities to put down the trouble. He was right, in this. The Kellogg measure will not aid in settling the Japanese question, nor do much to strengthen popular government. . Clearing the Way for the Came). HoWing that the Volstead act repeals all parts of the internal revenuejaw not consistent with the later statute,' the supreme court is gradually clearing the way for the enforcement of prohibition. Many district attorneys and cir cuit court judges have been perplexed and puz zled by conflicting' passages in the laws, and sometimes in seeking to harmonize them have decided in favor of the older regulations. That these, are definitely superseded is now announced by the higher court, and all actions commenced for violation )f the revenue laws will probably be abandoned in favor of prosecution under the Volstead act." Some offenders may profit by the decision, in that they will be relieved frbm dan ger of punishment for offenses charged, but this merely shifts' them from the Scylla of one to the. Charybdis of the other law. The camel is com ing, all right, and while his way may be a little bit jerky and seemingly uncertain, he is surely mopping up the wet spots. A Farm Unit in Congress. Closer regard add more effective work for the interests of the middle west re to be ex pected from the formation of what is known as the "agrarian bloc" in the senate. A similar or ganization is reported to be under contempla tion in the lower house, and between the two, the needs of agriculture could be much more strongly presented. No one needs have any fear that the farmers are going to obtain any special advantages that will react on the urban population. Agriculture has always been so situated that the farmers have the worst of it They are not seeking o drag other industries down to the present eco nomic condition of agriculture, but only to lift agriculture up to the general level . i The French embassy's aif attache, who re fused to return to Washington in the airplane hich later killed seven passengers, showei nore courage in his refusal than he would jave done if he had merely gone along with the crowd. " ' . Hoover's Housing Inquiry What Causes Stagnation in Building May Be Learned (From the Boston Transcript) The seven engineering experts who have been called upon by the secretary of commerce to aid the department in its search for a solution of the housing problem will nna mat tne snonage is still acute. Notwithstanding readjustment in wages and extensive declines in the cost of build ing materials, there still exists what Mr. Hoover describes as "the appalling anomaly of millions of idle men co-existent with suffering as never before from underhousing." Efforts to put an end to this deplorable condition have not met with that degree of success for which the optim ists hoped. There has probably been ameliora tion of the situation in many cities because of the shifting of population due to business de pression, but, in the main,' the urgent need of more houses and apartments continues. In New York, which, perhaps, has suffered the most of all the great cities in the country because of lack of housing, there is prospect of another winter of acute shortage. Building ma terials dealers, who have been slashing their prices to consumers, have been wondering why there was not more building. . There is stated to be nowhere near the volume of contracts that there should be at this time of the- year in consideration of the vast potential building move ment and the approach of the October renting season. It is to be remembered, in this con nection, .that New York, under the provisions of the state law, has passed an ordinance which exempts new dwellings and apartments from taxation for the term of 10 years. Yet with building materials approachiig. prewar level, and with tax exemption euivalent to a subsidy of at least 25 per cent of the cost of construction, the new houses do not rise in great numbers. It has been claimed, to be sure, that, as the result of the exemption ordinance, there has been an increase in construction as compared with last year, but this increase has been expressed in percentages, and an increase of 100 per cent or more would not mean new dwellings in sufficient numbers to go far in removing the shortage, for a year ago building was practically at a stand still. To bring relief in substantial measure would require a volume of building operations many fold that of the recent past 1 When it comes to the causes of the continued stagnation, there is evidence of a disposition to attribute it largely to the intention of the specu lative builder to see the market for labor and material down to the lowest point before he en ters it That point may have been reached or nearly-approached, but he is suspicious. Prob ably the disclosures in the investigation made by the Lockwood committee increases that sus picion.. There is a natural desire on the part of the man who intends to build to be sure that he is not to be made the victim of crooked labor leaders aftd crooked contractors. The feeling that prices have not yet struck bottom may be regarded as causing delay in the resumption of building even in cities where there have been no accusations of dishonesty in the building trades. This condition suggests one of the many ways in which the committee named by Mr. Hoover may be ot value. Iht public wants to know where to turn for trustworthy information as to what to expect m the matter of both costs and service. It .iieeds authoritative advice from a disinterested source. When the public has the assurance that it is getting a square deal a long step forward will have been taken toward the cure of housing ills. . But supplying information of that kind would be only one of the ways in which Mr. Hoover's committee can come to the aid of the country. With its expert personnel, it Should be able to suggest methods of stimu lating building through the introduction of the new methods and processes. In that way it may accomplish results that will have enduring value aner tne present crisis Has passed. How to Keep Well Br DR. W. A. EVANS Quaattoaa concaminf hjrfiaaa, aanttatioa anal pravaatioa at diaaaaa, ubmltUti ta Dr. Evaaa by raadara af Tha Baa, will ba anawarad paraaaally, anbjact ta prspar limitation, wbara a atampad addraaiad anvalopa ia ancloaad. Dr Evaaa ' will aat Buka diamoaia or praacriba far individual dlaaaaaa. Addraaa lattara ia cara of Tha Baa. Copyright. 1921, by Dr. W. A. Evan Xhe Hired Man's Winnings That there is a disposition on the part of many men wno a year ago would not consider work; outside , the centers of population to take jobs as farm hands is reported by various observ ers. This is an encotrraging development and suggests'an improvement in farm conditions. . . In the .old. days farm work in most parts of the United States was synonymous with drudg ery. From sun-up to dark was the working day for many farm- hands, and. only those who have gone through a spring planting or an autumn harvesting under the old conditions can annre- ciate the strain such toil imposes. Nowadays farm labor has been systematized and made easier in many respects. With changed conditions in the country and a realization that much of the attraction of the cities was artificial, men who were drawn to the towns by war industries are turning to the farms again. Shorter hews and good wages have also gained for the farms recruits from the rank of factory hands on part time, and within the iast two montns many a man, has been grateful for the education acquired on the farm. It has been a satisfaction for him to be able to say the mysteries, of milking or hitching a double team were an open book to him. The rhan who sticks to the soil may never have as large a bank account as some of those wno stay close to the pared sidewalks and streets, but he will have the pleasure of living in the open and if lie is the owner of even the small. est farm, bought with the proceeds of the labor ot nis hands, he will derive from it a satisfaction which only those who have exoerienceH the teen joy of walking on their own land can fathom. JMew York Herald. ( Russia is like -an accordion, collapsing as frequently with a great deal of noise, but straightway filling up on air again to its former proportions. With warm weather, Sunday motoring ac cidents reappear on the front page every Monday morning. At least the governor knows what Senator North secretary thinks of him. "Parting is such sweet sorrow," as the World Herald said to Mr. Bryan. June may have been named for Juno, but Tupiter Pluvius was around. Banks in -Nebraska fail under right conditions. the Worst Doesn't Happen. It i3 estimated by the Department of Asrricul tore at Washington that an army of 6,000,000 men is going back to the farms from the cities, eager to aid in harvesting the nation's crops. At present the supply of farm labor is rated at 95.5 per cent of normal. It is expected that in the wheat belt of the middle west a mobile force of 50,000 will follow the harvest from Oklahoma north to the Dakotas and Montana. One result of this improved labor situation is the encouragement it gives to farmers to plant bumper crops. AH reports indicate that the farmers are putting in larger acreages than were expected. So it is demonstrated again that the worst rarely happens.' Not long ago there; were loud lamentations over the scarcity of farm labor, and a gloomy prospect of inability to produce full crops was presented. Unemployment in the cities, due to a con siderable extent to oversupply of labor, is having the effect that it must always have. It is turning the idle ones who want to work to the farms where their services are in demand. Albany Journal. ' , ' t t Nominations Are in Order. Mother and Daughter week being out of the way, somebody from Traverse City bobs up to propose a potato day. There is still a little open time left, but those desiring to originate new holidays will have to hurry if they get in before the calendar runs out.- Detroit Free Press. ' "Cold Roast Boston. The Boston doctor who in connection with the inheritance of an estate of several million pounds remarks that he "has not paid much at tention to it," leads us to wonder what would cause him to manifest enthusiasm. Pittsburgh Gazette-Times. Let South America Do It. Why not let South America take her turn at being the melting pot of the nations? There is plenty of room down there, and the United State ha a1reai4v tal.-n in mn,- fn..: -- -. ."iiwii aj invtv iiv- ments than she can assimilate in a hundred years. ban Francisco Chronicle- AT BRAIN SWITCHBOARD. Yesterday we published a letter rrom a school teacher who was somewhat discouraged because of the difficulty In teaching a boy 8 years old to read. The boy was bright In other studies.V but after two or three yeara in sohool he knew only six letters and 14 words. The. fault was something of a family characteristic, since his three older brothers had had the same trouble but ia lesser degree. He stammered slightly, which de fect he had grotten from his mother. A psychologist had found him ap proximately normal,' except that he suffered from alexia. Alexia is a condition In which the subject sees no meaning in a printed or written word. There Is no trouble with vision. The eye sees the word, but to his mind, it is noth ing more than a set of straight and curved lines. For example: The word horse does not suggest an ani mal, a horse, but is merely a com bination of marks. Since it means nothing the mind does not hold on to the exact arrangement of the marks necessary to make the word. One sees at once that reading Is rather a complex mental process. The eye sees the characters, they register in the visual center in the brain, thence the impulse travels to other centers, the combination of marks stirs up the Imagination which calls forth the image of a horse. The memory center may be stimulated. If the word is spoken, the impulse travels over to the speech center and the machinery for making the word horse is se in motion. If the reading is continued. the eye and the attention must trav el ahead of the word being read at a properly- adjusted rate and space. All of this is complicated and re quires many different nerve cells and fibers. These telephone ex changes are normally bound to gether by a maze of communication wires. Brains differ in the thor oughness with which they are wired with these intercommunicat ing wires.. Fine brains are well wired. Poor ones are poorly wired. The same brain differs in the grade of wiring in different parts. A fine orator has his speech center. his memory center, his reasoning center, and imagination center well wired together. A" prize fighter has little wiring m the above centers. But he is finely wired in his muscle centers. A boy with alexia is poor ly wired in his secondary eight cen ter. He sees the marks which make the word horse, but no impulse travels to his imagination center or memory center or certain parts of his perception center. Alexia was first written about In 1S77, but not much was added to our knowledge of the subject until Hinshelwood's paper appeared .in 1917. In 1920 Wallin of St. Louis studied 95- cases found in the schools of the city. Of 2,118 diffi cult pupils sent him for study 4.48 per cent had alexia. It was four times as prevalent among boys I 6.71 per cent of boys; 1.47 per cent of girls. Some of the subjects were more than average in intellect, having an I. Q. of 104, although the range o intelligence was from 64 to 104. The average of intelligence was some what low, registering 80.S. In fact, he set down 85 per cent of them being definitely subnormal in Intel lect Among the 95 were 8 that had speech defects and others that had chorea, infantilism, other physical and mental defects and some wh were in difficulty on account of con duct, but Wallln could see no rela tion between these conditions and alexia. ' Hinshelwood tried to make a dts Unction between alexia, dyslexia and word blindness, but Wallin found no difference between the manlfesta tions of word blindness in a moron a border line feeble minded and normal child. The only essential he says, is some trouble in the sec ondary visual center in the brain, The difficulty there may be due to an organic brain trouble or it may be due to faulty development. The faulty development in that center may or may not be a part of a general faulty brain development, As quoted yesterday, wallin con eludes that there is considerable hope that a child with alexia can J educated and can even be taug to read fairly well if the teacher has considerable Ingenuity, ability and Jnsight. Corns and Bunions. Miss TV. M. writes: "What is the best cure ror corns ana bunions; "--. REPLY.. ' You can remove corns with the ordinary corn medicines sold on the market. They will return unless you wear proper shoes. Bunions are a different matter. Unless you submit to an operation you proba bly will submit to your bunions as long as you live. Wearing broad toed shoes and keeping the toes of the foot separated by suitable ap paratus cure a few cases. About Locomotor Ataxia. H. L. W. writes: "1. Will you tt-H me the symptoms of locomotor ataxia and the cause? "2. Also myasthenia gravis and cause? "3. Is 17 blood, pressure high for any one years old? "4. What is the cause of high blood pressure in a thin person? , REPLY. - l.- The cause is syphilis. Among the early symptoms are lightning- pains, in the legs principally, gastric crises, disturbance or gait. .2. The cause of .myasthenia gravis, is not known. The most promininet symptom is profound weakness. Certain electrical tests indicate the presence of the disease in suspected cases. 3.. Yes, about 25 too high. 4. Among the causes are lead poisoning, syphilis, constipation heavy meat diet Nonpartisan Plans. Omaha, June' 1. To the Editor of The Bee: Your editorial on the tionparltsans Js full of partisan poli cies, as now practiced by the poli ticians of the republican party, but never practiced by the founders of that party under the lead of Abra ham Lincoln. Therefore, if there is any unfairness in the common peo ple trying to redeem that party in Nebraska under the lead oof Judge Wray, who has always stood square for that party under its original policies,' I for one cannot see any wrong. Let us have a little clean politics. Our governor invited representa-. fives of labor in a- conference at Lincoln, evidently to find out what kind of legislation they wanted so he could better organize his follow ers, who were in the majority, to legislate union labor out of business. This was done In the anti-picketing bill, which the governor signed. He, pulled over the same stunt in the registration bill for the farmers. Can you imagine that Lincoln would have signed either of those bills? Give . us true republicanism under judge Wray, and there will be no kick,- unless from big business; To what extent is a political party useful to the citizens of a state like Nebraska? Only-insofar as it func tions to the best interests of all the people, no. difference: how humble And when it fails to perform that duty uhder any leader, it is due for a cleaning. Did it ever occur to you that today North Dakota is the only state in the union that ia gov erned bv the true principles of re publtcanism? And that a true bill of rights was granted that state by the vote of every member of the supreme court of this nation? Every hard working - man or woman, whether in shop or on farm, has as many rights guaranteed to them under the constitution as any law yer, editor or millionaire; and we are going to see that they get It A. M. TEMPLIN, 120 . South Thirty-fifth Street CENTER SHOTS. Psychologic World Under Microscope The French writer who professes to be afraid of an "entente divorce probably is more afraid of the way the alimony will be awarded. Nor folk (Neb.) News. A current item says that some sponges gain a diameter of more than three feet, but most of us know sponges that have attained a height of five ana one-nan leet or over. Providence Journal. Short skirts are said to have less ened the number of accidents to women. No decrease is reported in the number of backward-looking mep who, have- been bumped by au tomobiles. unicago isews. x- SPICE OF LIFE. imtl. Hniit th hnlahavlkl fa that thay don't reapeot tha law. Will you Join me in a drink?" 'But l tnoufrnt wniaxy waa inegai c i Im n.tf thn whn tnkM an? notica of tha la'wT" Hvepsen (Chria- uania;. "Wnt'i thla 'era: If mv mlasua wanta a new 'at. an' I tell 'er the old 'at look fine an' ah alinga the kettle at me an' I buya r a new 'at well, that' wot ome rule la!" The Faaain- Show (Lon don). Wanted Accountant; muat be able to read and write. Apply H Laundry. Want ad in the Catakill Mall. Vr. Neuveau Rlche (aelectln- De votional Gift Book) Common Prayer 'avan't you -ot any a bit more clarssy? London Opinion. The only trouble with . 40-horae power otor ia that every darned horae balka t tha en me time. Lameaen vauy Courier. a .ir.nmr renorted to Set. Mlk Mc Lean that he had Ma grip, overcoat and umbrella atoien oeiore ne tmis in njwn two hour. nd he ld, 'There will be an awful reckoning In thi buri when Gabriel blow hla horn over It." Mike replied: uanriei win nv-r oiow hla horn over tbia town; they 11 teal ltj before he cl a chance to blow it." Lackawanna Journal 1 (From the Baltimore American.) In the course of an address at the annual convention of the Pennsyl vania Bankers' ' association, James M. Beck, the newly appointed solic itor -general . of the United States, suggested that the development of machinery is responsible for the "unrest" of the present age and maintained that this "unrest" was not the heritage of the world war, but that the world war was a manl testation of the world "unrest" , We are still too near the war to be quite impartial about it . The passions and prejudices engendered by it have not yet died down. All the evidence about the long chain of causes which led up to it is not yet available,-and when it is it will be conflicting and the wisest and most impartial of men will differ about it It is possibly too much to say that the "unrest" of the last gen era tion is due to the development of macninery. wntch began Jn England at the close of the. 18tlt. century with what Is called the Industrial Revo lution. What is clear enough to any one who .has been, watching the trend of events is that for the last 20 years everywhere, and particularly in Eu rope,-there has been a great deal of tension, political, industrial, eco nomic. . In the political world- of Europe all the elements for an in ternational explosion were accumjat- ing in the few years, before 1914, The industrial countries of Europe all suffered from acute economic dis turbance and there was similar fric tion, though less frequent and wide spread, in the Vnited States. In South Africa and Australia it was no less violent and menacing than in Europe. ' . , There is a great deal to be said for the solicitor general's view that the "unrest," to use a descriptive but vague and not very accurate term, was at least a predisposing cause of or facilitated the waging of the struggle with such intensity. But, even if this View could be upheld, no question would be settled, though a very difficult problem would have been stated. What brought about this "unrest," this condition of men tal strain? No single individual or group of Individuals, no single cause or group of related causes. Contributing to it were the gen eral- speeding-up process (which in many cases produced frayed and irritable nerves); misunderstandings between capital arm labor and some times wrong-headed and obstinate policies, the obstinacy not being con fined to one side; international rival ries and competition . for foreign trade; exaggerated conceatlons of nationalism, from which none or tne more powerful nations was wholly free these are some of the more obvious causes. Others may be al leged according to the taste and fan cy of the individual. . One Of the sanest and most widely read of liv ing historians, speaking on the sub ject of "unrest" two or three yeara before the war, said that feeling, of this kind moved in cycles and came to a head at periodic intervals of about 30 to 40 years. "Another in ternational explosion," he significant ly added, "is about due now." His forecast was only too emphatically verified by the events of the years since 1914. Yet. If the student and psychologist can analyze national states of mind, the hopeful thing is that the next stage will be the pos sibility of providing remedies for dangerous conditions of national and international feeling. She Was Keyed to It Judge Graham, K. C, to a woman at Bow county court: "Can't you stop talking?' Woman "I i-nn, but T don t need much winding-up again." Public Opinion. Harvey's Habit. Whenever Colonel Harvey makes a speech or writes an editorial it sounds as if he were trying to get even with somebody, and we guess he usually is. Ohio State Journal. Does' Drove No. 1 Organized Here Omaha Will Claim Grand Lodge Headquarters of Elks' New Auxiliary. Formal organization of Drove Xo. 1 of the Benevolent and Patriotic Order of Does was effected yester day afternoon at the initial meeting of the drove in the Elks' club rooms. Dispensation for the organization of the first local lodge was granted officially by the grand lodpe at the first annual meeting May 31. Nominations of officers of Drove No. 1 were made at the meeting yes terday. Election will be in two weeks, according to Mrs. E. E. Stanficld, grand patriotic nacinema of the B. P. O. D. Omaha will have the distinction of claiming the grand lodge headquar ters and being the home of Drove No. 1 of the organization. The B. P. O. D. is a women's of ficial auxiliary to the Elks, organ ized with a state charter and cere monial rituals. Organization was effected follow ing a break with the Ladies' Order of the Elks, Mrs. Stanfield lias received queries from many cities throughout the country for information concerning the organization of droves of the B. P. O. D. Statue of Sacred Heart. Presented to Creighton A statue of the Sacred Heart was presented to Creighton univer sity Thursday morning at 9 o'clock by the students of the various de partments. The psentation serv ices included a procession of the acolytes and university students, and the singing of hymns. Brendon Brown, arts senior, made the presenation speech. Father Cas silly accepted the statue in behalf of the faculty and thrustees of the university. The statue was blessed by Rector McCormick. It was ded icated as a thanks-offering for the divine protection afforded the fac ulty and students at the university against the influenza plague which afflicted the country.. Nebraska Deaf School Commencement June 6 Commencement exercises at the Nebraska School for the Deaf will be held the evening of June 6 in the school auditorium. Class colors arc salmon pink and olive green, the class motto, "Keep Smiling," and the class flower, the Ophelia rose. Oral graduates are Archie B. Bab cock, North Loup; Edmund F. Bu mann, Osmond; Vjvian L. Epley, Omaha; Ethel Irene McElroy, Wil bcr; John S. Reed jr., Lincoln, and Viola A. Tikalsky, Verdigris. Man uel graduates are Cassie Fay Dyer,, Bertrand; Joseph L, Kalina, jr., J Friend, and Greely G. Terpenning, Arnold. Brendan Brown Wins Medal For Top Creighton Average Brendan Brown, arts senior at Creighton university, was awarded the gold medal in philosophy. It is the first time the medal, which is donated by the Knights of Columbus, has been awarded. It is awarded to the student in the senior class who has the highest average for the senior year. Governor Revokes Extradition Paperl Mi-Krlvie has revoke .........i;,;,.., nam-rs orantcd earlv las rAimui.iv. .:, , - , ii . J week lor removal ot n. a. ""im r.Hit tnanauer of the Firestone Tirl v - . .... , I & Rubber to. here, to wmcncsici ind.. to answer embezzlcmew charges. . , . 'J r.n...i nnr i f Nf v e saiu incic wi not sufficient . evidence againd Hulke. , , 1 . Several others were indicted wit it. .ii, v.., 9 errand iurv in Winches Aiun.w P ' J . I . .ii..ft mhcTiif mcnt in con nection wnn xnc uai- Marine Tire & Rubber to. Car Drivers Ask Extension Of Downtown Parking Linx pnc9 that the oarkinK limit I 30 minutes for automobiles on dowf town streets be extended, pourea ir the city council yesterday. General sentiment of the counl seemed to be to cut rather than -tend the time. Ulllll II!I!IIIIIIIIIIIIW Vtort cripiratiorC1 for freest and most? sympathetic uiusicaj expression prompts. ie -purchase ctii Jiano -not a desire to the cost oTsuprenf jxiscic quality. JjiaPke' 7 . M Terma if Desired 1513 Douglas Street The Art and Music Sire EXCEPTIONAL CHOCOlICTES INNER-CIRCLE CANDIES' Phone Douglas 2793 tfeffl.fNtferOflk OMAHA PRINTING COMPANY ass oft-m euius au mmuR m3-j ii w M i5h iiiniTiiiiireiiiM CeaitctciAi Printers Lithographers Steel oie embosom Unjustified Credit is given for the successful building of a prosperous business if a successful business were an original invention some ' claim for credit might be made, but with the average successful .growing' busi ness, credit is due wholly to public sup port and to public recognition of a de sire to serve. . . ' " . We nride ourselves on our Dublic sDirit , on our belief that the customer de- serves the best we have service pressedy down and running over.. From office boy. to president, we. love the customer, and our one ambition is ti please him and to make and retain hi lnenasnip nothing payg l)etter divi dends than service. - " A business will be successful just so Ions as tne public is pleased and no man, ni iti. . .. t ; . v ii i jimiwci now Dniiiant. can noia it ore moment longer than the public wills h should have it. " r i President L - f I. V. NICHOLAS OIL CO. "Business Is Good, Thanfy You" (Our gasolene and lubricating oil conform to all U. S. Government (pacification) i