THE BEE: OMAHA, SUNDAY, JUNE 19, 1921. ' P THE TRUTH nniur A-; rifk EMBODIES ALL TRUTH lEOPLE are still gbing about with their eyes eagerly alight, hunting for the honest man and the honest product. When that search is rewarded, nothing but betrayal can break or lessen their allegiance. It has been pathetically true from the be ginning of time that men admire honor in others even when they have smirched it in themselves. Humanity may be a million years old in point of time, but it is as young as this morning's sun in its pursuit of the ideal. After two thousand years of disappoint ment and disillusion the eternal verities and the eternal values still prevail. The elemental truths are still true; the man whose word is good is still the secret hero of our inmost hearts. We smile, perhaps, at the spectacular triumph of the trickster; but while we smile we hate the trick by which he filched that sham success. Even in an era of unbridled extravagance, when, on the surface, men appear -to have lost all sense of proportion, that which is sound, and good, and true, is more ad mired, and more desired, than ever. In such feverish times the mediocre and the meretricious only seem to be admit ted to equality with that which is worthy, , because they fall heir to the overflow which excellence is unable to supply. The process of discrimination between the sham and the solid, the superficial and the substantial, goes on, just as before, with out interruption. - That which is unworthy carries its own punishment, and its own penalty its true character is inevitably disclosed in due time, even though a temporary prosperity comes to it from the caprice of the un thinking. When "the tumult and the shouting" dies down, the strong man, the strong institu tion, the true artist, and the true workman, in any and every vocation, is more solidly entrenched than ever. Even though it be surrounded, and seem ingly obscured by shani and pretense, nothing in this world is discovered so surely as solid merit. Nothing stands out so strikingly, by way of contrast, as genuineness and genius. No special and painstaking effort of hand or heart, or brain or brawn, that goes to the building of something superior, is ever wasted. Cheapness and compromise, substitution and surrender---tjiese, in the long run, are the real sources of waste. The unceasing search of the mass of man kind for that which is good and enduring this is the only law of supply and de mand with which the superior craftsman need concern himself. Let him dedicate his life to the satisfac tion of this restless hunger of the human heart, and he can, if he will, remove him self beyond the reach of rivalry. . This is the truth that embodies all truth; this is the truth that makes men free. (Copyright, 1920, Cdillae Motor Car Company). J. H. Hansen Cadillac Co. New and Rebuilt Cars of KNOWN and PERMANENT Vahe OMAHA LINCOLN HI