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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1921)
Iowa Jitney and "Fas" Laws Cause Most Interest Jleavy Penalties for Sale of CigareU to Minors; City Council Regulates Operating of Busses. Dcs Moines, July 4. Of eight imDortant laws passed by the thirty ninth genera! assembly and which will become effective July 4, the le galizing of sale of cigarets and the law authorizing city councils to gov' em jitney bus traffic are probably of most interest to persons in the state. The vital statistics law, the blue rky law, the law prescribing a limit for campaign expenditures, the law covering tripg outside the state by state officials, the increase in salaries f county school superintendents. and the law establishing examining boards for hfalers are the other six enacted. Under the provisions of the cigaret law the sale of cigarets to persons over the age of 21 years is made le gal; heavy penalties are provided for sales to minors; dealers must pay li censes and put state revenue stamps on all cigarets sold In the jitney bus law city councils are given power either to allow or prohibit jitney busses to use the same streets on which street cars run. The vital statistics law provides that all births and deaths must be registered with the county recorder. The campaign expense law pro hibits candidates from spending in primary or general elections more than half the annual salary of the of fice for which the candidate runs. Chiropractors, osteopaths and pod itjtnsts are to nave state examining '-boards and all practitioners must ,pass strict examination. Salaries of county school superin , tendents are raised to a minimum of $1,800 and a maximum of $.?,000. State officials must obtain advance ' consent of the executive council be ' fore making trips outside Iowa at state expense. Corporations wishing to sell stock must obtain permits from the sec retary of state, and comply with 're quirements formerly applying only to foreign corporations. The new' law includes Iowa companies. State ; nmXti. u.. .,oi.;c are fixed for all violations of the law and for fraud of any kind in con nection with promotion of corpora tions. Iowa Notes Ottumwa. During the autumn the Bell Cows, a National guard social order, will hold a "branding" in Ot tumwa. The branding ritual is in the nature of initiation exercises. 1 Ottumwa. Contracts approximat ing $15,000 for repair work on the Adams, la., school have been let by the school board. Creston. Creston is among tho cities in Iowa which will close its stores for one-half ; day each week during th& hot weather. Ihursday afternoon is the time selected for the half holiday in Creston. Webster Citv A census of Web ster City's children of school age, or ! between the ages of S and 21 years, shows an increase, of 40 over last year. This year there are 1,286 chil dren of school age, of which K35 are boys and o22 are g'.rls. Mason City. Recruiting is now under way for second battalion head quarters of the 134th infantry of the Iowa National Guard in Mason City This will be among the units which are to go to Camp Dodge for the an rial guard encampment August 10 to 24. - i Des Moines. In the division of household fabrics, quilts, etc, a to ' tal of $88 in premiums is to be of fered at the Iowa state fair this year, Nineteen articles are listed in the classification. Return From England Beaver City. Neb. July 4. (Spe cial.) Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Henry of Hollinger, arrived home from a three-months' trip in England where they visited relativves at London and Stanton Lacy, Downtown Programs Sun Will Rogers in "Boys Will e Boys." to Dorothy Dalton in "The Abu Idol of the North." Strand Wallace Reid in "Too Much Speed." Moon Torn Mix in "The Big Town Round-Up." Empress "Children of Night." v Muse Charles Ray in "The Mil lionaire Vagrant." Neighborhood Houses. Grand Corinne Griffith in "Broad way Bubbles." William Fox announces two more stars just added to his organization. He has promoted Edna Murphy and Johnnie Walker to stellar honors. These two young players were sent recently to California with the inten- . tion of featuring them together in Fox productions. But they have v hnun surh ahilitv in "I .iv Wir " Y their first joint picture, that the pro ducer decided to co-star them. Richard Dix, who is leading man in several recent pictures whi,ch will be seen in the fall, is a graduate of the University of Minnesota. His first part for Goldwyn is in the forth coming "Dangerous Curve Ahead!" with Helene Chad wick. In order to protect their eyes from the glare of the snow film players who went to Lake Louise, Canada, to film "Snowblind," painted black grease squares on their cheek bones rltrertlv hiiath thir vc i'hnevfr -ir were not working. J Vivian Martin, whose second star- J ring picture for Messmore Kendall, Jr ' Pardon My French," has just been released, . is now playing on the . cpeaxing stage m Aew York m a fece called "Jujt Married,' ( Capital Joining Hands With Labor, Says Secretary Davis Predicts Time When Em ployer Will Call for Unionization As Pledge for Ef ficiency. By W. S. MANN. Coprrlght, 1V31, Washington Star. Washington, July 4. For that d;iy when the employer will hail the la bor man and say "Come, unionize my shop," and the two will be con stantly looking out for the interests of each other, Secretary of Labc" James J. Davis is working. He sees it coming in the great readjustment through which the country is now passing, and he observes it coming with the accompaniment of general prosperity, return of buying, better living conditions. But, he points out, labor itself must perform an important function of cleaning out. It has in its hands tc guide and speed the onward move ment to a realization of labor and capital marching hand in hand, each supporting the other. lie is not leaving it to others to work out. He knows the needs. He has that great faculty of foreseeing what should be. and what is best, and to that end he is lending his sturdy weight. Before he came to Washington to become the head of tne great department ol Labor in President Harding's cabinet, he kept ordinary office hours. But now he gets down in the morning before the night watchmen leave, and many times the man finds him there when he returns to work in the night. Al most every morning at 7 o'clock the secretary is at his desk, and many more times he there until 1 o'clock in the morning. No Sympathy for Shirkers. Though he holds a union card he has no sympathy for the labor or ganization that holds protection over the shirker. Every man must work, he asserts, to help bring about prosperity. This is no day for loafers, he said. "The man who doesn't earn his oav should have no nav. T am on- posed to the rich loafer and the poor loafer. The loafer is a thief. He steals just as certainly as if he set out with a jimmy and a gun. I have this to say to my fellow trade unionists: i If vou want to make progress in America you must clean your houses of shirkers. Let us be charitable out right, if we must. If a man is dis abled, mentally, morally or physical ly, it is time to take care of him for what he is and for what he has done.' If a faithful employe he should be cared for in his old age, In other words, give him what we call a pen sion. Let the trade unionists say: 'I will not work with shirkers, who, in robbing their employers, are rob bing all the rest of us. We want to make our trade union badge a sym bol of an honorable man who does an honest day's work. I mean that I badge to be badge of price.' ! "it i,. ...,:., ...... it tut uiiivua nut itivi c tuiijr shot through with that spirit, antag onism to the unions would die a speedy death in the camps of its bitterest enemies. No criticism vis its the man who works. If the unions demanded of every member a certain reasonable measure of daily work, if they fined or fired the shirker, I can see the day when every employer in the land will hail the nearest union leader and say: 'Come, unionize my plant!' the unions have it in their power, and now more than at any other time, in our industrial history, to make every employer eager to employ or ganized labor. I can hear that em ployer say: 'The union card is the guarantee of efficiency. I will em ploy no men without it. I would no more hire a man without it than I would accept a dollar without the government stamp." "The effort to promote industrial peace and prosperity," continued the secretary, "must come from both sides alike, from enlightened em ployer and from awakened worker, union or' nonunion. No group on either side can put itself above the law and maintain its existence. And by law we mean the laws of pros perity as well as the laws of the civil code. The public will not tolerate infraction of either set of laws." More Confidence Needed. The country is not in an unhappy condition, Secretary Davis pointed out. It only thinks it is. There should be more cheerfulness and confidence. Though six months ago men in the strongest positions were shaking their heads, looking back the condition can be better observed. The great body of the public after an orgy of extravagance, when every one was making big money and tossing it broadcast, had a sudden change of heart and refused to buy at all. The public, he said, began to repent of its wild tear. We all passed through a serious period of war, and when it was ended, and the forces came back victorious, the people were in a mood to celebrate. They did. Yet, as is the way with human nature, we overdid the thing, he asserted. "We spent too lavishly and we began to repent of our rash ness. We cased to buy at. all, or at least at the rate of high prices brought about by the war. That stoppage came with a suddenness that frightened the merchant. He saw his store full of goods, but empty of customers. Nothing was left him but to write off his books immense sums representing the shrunken value of the goods on his shelves. He stopped his orders at the factory. "The meaning of that was instant ly clear to the manufacturer. Much as he hated to do so, he was forced to run his plant on part time, or close it altogether. Good men lett his employ. He saw his loyal or ganization broken up. It grieved him to see his men without work, and adding their inability to buy to the paralysis of buying in general. After a period when the shortage of freight cars added to the cost of the goods because of the impossibility to meet the frantic demands of buy ers only half a year before, the rail roads now began to report increas ing numbers of cars as idle. After an orgy of prosperity we found our selves plunged into stagnation and discouragement. "Still, as is natural with our peo ple, we greatly exaggerated our un- happiaess, WG ar? a people, yjioi ft A W v M like to look facts in the face. We demanded to know the number of unemployed, and the number fright ened us. We forgot the fact that at all times in our country, even in the best of good times, there are always about 500,000 men out of work, either from choice or because of shifts in the population. Our plight in that respect was not so bad as we thought. Collapse That Hurt AIL "It was bad enough, nevertheless. Even where men were fortunate enough to hold their jobs, in plants kept running by a thin demand for their product, nearly all were forced to face that most unwelcome of all situations, the prospect of a reduc tion in wages. The balloon of in flated wartime prices had collapse and values had dropped to the earth even the value of labor. It has always seemed to me the saddest fact in life that human labor, the work of human hands, should be sub ject to the laws of the market. Yet it must be so. The value of work and the product of work must rise and fall together. Now that value had shrunk on every hand it was seen that wages had to come down In this the working man was no worse otf than his brother, the man ufacturer, the merchant and all others. Men with their money tied up in stocks or unsold goods won clered how they were to meet thei loans when due. It was a time of anxiety, the harder to bear because it came so soon after the strain of war. Yet it was not to be avoided, Readjustment in Progress. "Now it is possible to sneak of the immediate future with cheerful ness and confidence. Not that the patient is back on his feet, but at least the crisis is past. The proc esses of readjustment are well along. Wholesale prices have fallen. Retail prices are following, not so fast as many of us wish, but as rapidly as sound conditions will allow. On all sides people have taken their losses manfully, as was to be expected of good Americans. The dollar is be coming the good old-fashioned dol lar again and is beginning to buy what it used to buy. And buying has begun. ' The great clock of business has begun to tick forward once more. The secretary said that another lesson that had been learned was that of working together. He said that, the question of a working fel lowship between employers and em ployes had been regarded too much as an ideal never to be attained. "I know better," he continued. "With my own eyes I have seen bet ter. Countless good Americans who employ are puttng into everyday practice a fellowship, or a way of working together in harmony, that brings them not prosperity only not only fatter pay envelopes on one side and better business on the other, but it brings to both sides that con tentment to work which we all want to see made general throughout American history. Wise men, em ployers and employes both, know well that we cannot be a successful business nation without it. Harmony seldom advertises itself. Strife alone does that.. "The great body of American -in dustry does move forward harmoni ously, with concord between those who have saved and prospered and now own factories, and those whose ownership of a clean pair of hands will lead to ownership of factories if they likewise toil and save and use head as well as hands. That har mony we hear little of because of the noise of occasional industrial strife among us. 287,000 Plants Busy. "In the year 1919. on the heels of this most devouring of all wars, we kept 287,000 manufacturing plants m operation, some of them night and day. With the skill of their 8,000,000 employes we turned out a product valued in that year at SoaWJU.UUU.OW. Early in the boom year of 1920 we did even better. And yet at tins moment we dare to be downhearted. A people capable of such endeavor has been almost in despair tor the past six months, doubting its ability to recover from the effects of its own discouragement. "The great volume of wealth, this rapid advance, we have been able to achieve in SO short years by in tense application of a genius for the mechanics of industry. Now 1 be lieve we are to create a new era in the world's progress by applying our national genius to the humanics, the human side of industry. We had been making our country one vast machine. Now has come the realiza tion that all our industrial ills have sprung from lack of a single cog in that machine, a single cog, but the most important of all. The missing cog has been the element of simple humanity. Now, with our character istic energy, we are hastening to supply that element. Greatly- as we have been building, our material re sources have still been only partly recovered. Our human resources have hardly been touched.'' Workmen Deserve the Best. Speaking for the workmen, the secretary said: I he American workman has given of his very best to our amaz ing national development. He de serves the best in return. Every where the jvise among our, employ.- rjs- t i ia m tS3 THE BEE: OMAHA, ers have come to see the full mea sure of the workman's deserts. A living wage, yes. By all means. Even that it not enough. Give the American workman the means to live life according to his well-known standards. We like to boast of those standards of his, the highest in the world. Help him to main tain them. Make him a purchaser. Give him the chance to rear a fam ily. Give him the wherewithal to educate his children. He wants and needs recreation for himself. Yet this, too, is not all. However well we may pay the worker, we are treating him still as an employe. We need to think more of him as a man. as a co-partner in business. The humblest workman likes recog nition. "It is easy to tell of these matters that are out of order, borne ot them look hopeless of remedy. Most of them will take time and patience for their adjustment. As 1 said betore, freight rates need to come down, and can come down, but only as the whole complicated system ot rail road work and wages is adjusted, Yet there are things that we all can do, those who employ, those who work, and those who wait tor houses. We can all cease to be slack ers, all of us. We can all join to push for new banking laws to re lease the needed money. Dealers of State Are Among Best Organized in US. "Butcher, Baker and Candle Stick Maker" All Repre sented in Federation of Nebraska Retailers. Lincoln. Neb., July 4. The "butcher, baker and candlestick maker" are all represented in the Federation of Nebraska Retailers to form one of the most co-operative organizations of its kind in the United States, according to C. W. Watson, secretary of the organiza tion. The federation is in reality formed by the grouping of four distinct bodies under one leadership, with a place provided for those who are not ciassinca. The first of the four groups is formed of retail dry goods firms and clothiers, the second of grocers and meat dealers, the third ot shoe deal ers and the fourth of furniture houses. Each of the organizations has its own officers and the presi dent of each is in turn a vice presi dent of the maior organization. There is also a fifth class provided for in the federation, so that no re tail man may be excluded because he is not a dealer in one of the above branches. This group is termed the miscellaneous class and elects no officers. Its representation comes through the election of directors and a common vote upon any question before the organization. The office of the general secretary is maintained here and Mr. Watson, recently appointed to the post, took office July 1. C. H. freadnen ot Lincoln is president of the federa tion. Omaha-Built Plane Makes Test Flight Speed of 148 Miles an Hour Attained by "Ashmusen Blue Bird." In a test flight of the first 9-cy!- nder airplane built in Omaha, Pilot Louis Bowen of the Ashmusen Air-1 plane Company, West Centex street, attained a speed of 148 miles an hour Sunday, according to a rec-l ord of the airplane company. The plane contains a Salmson French motor and has a wing spread of 44 feet, 10 inches. Pilot Bowen was designer of the plane. Together with J. P. Luce and Elmer Pearson, employes of the Ash musen Airplane company, mot Bowen hopped off Ak-Sar-Ben field at 4:30 Sunday afternoon for Cen ter. Neb.. 200 miles north of Oma ha. The trio attended a celebration at that city. The plane has been trade marked an "Ashmusen Blue Bird." It car ries four passengers besides the pi lot. It is built for speed as well as for comfort. Woman's Arm Fractured Madison, Neb.. July 4. (Special) I Mrs. Carl Demel sustained a double fracture of the forearm while culti vating corn. The double-trees broke, causing the horses to run away. ADVERTISEMENT TIZ FOR TENDER, SORE, TIRED FEET No more sore, burning, swollen. tender, tired feet. No more shoe ghtness. No more sharp, stineinz pains lrom corns, callouses, bunions or raw spots. No matter what you have tried without relief, just use Tiz. Tiz is the only remedy that draws out the poisonous exudations that cause swollen, burning, tender feet Tiz ends your foot troubles. Your shoes will not seem tight and your feet will never hurt or be sore or swollen. Get a small box of Tiz at any drug or department ' store and get instant reliet. Wear smaller shoes. A whole year's foot comfort guar- anttsa Jpi tew cent& TUESDAY, JULY 5, 1921. Hay s Announces Plans to Revise Savings System Postmaster General Says Bil lion Dollars Hoarded in American Stockings Which Should Aid Industry. Sullivan, Ind., July 4. A billion dollars which should be in circa lation to assist the coming industrial revival is being hoarded in Amer ican stockings, Will H. Hays, post master general, declared today, in announcing plans for revision of the postal savings system to make it more attractive to potential deposi tors. The present treatment of deposi tors in the postal savings bank, he said tonight after conferences, amounts almost to fraud, while the government has profiteered at the expense of the depositors to the sum, in the last year alone, of $1,' 720,000. His plan of reorganization, which will be submitted to congress, has been approved by bankers east and middlewest. Mr. Hays assured the bankers that he had no intention of entering into competition with pri vate savings banks, but hoped only to make the postal bank a feeder of established institutions. He pointed out that doubling the present interest rate would still leave it below the average paid by the savings banks. Closed to Private Banks. Private banks cannot hope to reach the vast hoarded wealth which offers a particular field for postal savings expansion, Mr. Hays ex plained. Seventy per cent of the present 508,000 depositors are of foreign extraction, he said, and they will trust no one but the United States government. Mr. Hays plan is as follows: 1. Increase the interest rate from 2 to 3 per cent. 2. Payment ot interest on de posits held less than one year. 3. Removal of the restriction against depositors under 10 years of age. .... 4. Provision tor joint ana irust funds. S Establishment of nostal sav ings banks in 50,000 postoffices in stead of 6,300. . Compensation for tourth-ciass postmasters on the basis of the de posits they handle. 7. Redeoosit of the funds in local banks with more liberal qualification rules for such depositaries. 8. An enlarged board of directors, including a representative of the federal reserve bank and possibly one or more civilians. "There is a lot of business in this country that is really sick, still stag gering under the shell shock of war and the debauch of extravagance," Mr. Havs said, "but there is a good deal more that is merely malinger ing. There is the greatest era ot ex Will You Have A Lift' If you have reason to believe, as maiw have, that a change from coffee or tea would be wise, try Instant Postum , YouH find what thousand of others have fbuTKl complete sat isf action to taste, and freedom from harm to nerves or digestion "When coffee or tea disturbs, It's ... m mm erget up where you belong, V There's a Reason Sold by grocers everywhere Mad by in Ceres! Postum Cereal Co, foe Battle Cmk, You are readv K m jltrstiik time occasion with PREMIUM SODA CRACKERS in the pantry. They make delicious sandwiches; go well with any beverage, and add to every meaL Sold from glass front cans and from the large size QU by the pound; in the new Family Qubox; and in In-er-seal Trade Mark pack ages. Keep a supply in the pantry. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY iPKMWMMCMy pansion and prosperity ahead that the world has ever seen. Everyone. knows this and the only question dis cussed is when it will start. ' Well, it is time to sro out and meet it. This we propose to help to do." 'The postal savings system must be reformed. With $161,000,000 on deposit last vear from 508,000 de positors and with the law pr6viding that 2 per cent interest be paid, the government, because of the system, paid less than lji per cent interest to these depositors and by redenositing at VA per cent interest, made a net profit over all interest payments and expenses of $1,720,000. "This was sheer profiteering. The certificates issued unequivocally oledffe 2 per cent interest and fail to say any thing whatever about no interest being paid, if the deposits are not left for a year. 1 he postal savings has not scratched the sur fare, notwithstanding the magnifi cance cenception of public duly that inspired its ioundmg. "We do not want depositors from savinsrs banks, but there is a tremen dous hoarded wealth in the country, estimated by many well-informed at $1,000,000,000, which the postal sav ings banks alone can oring our. "Thi monev is needed in circula tion now. It will make general bank depositors and ultimate government bond owners out of the timorous, it will give small capital a chance for an honest return the same as large ran tal. it will lurnisn me ionic iu conclude the business convalescence in the country and will help to make economy and thrift a much needed national trait." Oil in Paying Quantities Found Near Nebraska Line Reatrire. Neb.. Tulv 4. (Special.) According to reports from Nemaha county, Kan., about 50 mites soum east of Beatrice, oil in paying quan tities has been found at a depth of between 1 5110 and 1.800 feet. It IS said that there is 100 feet of oil and can1 in the hole, and that resident of that section of Kansas are consid ers hlv excited over the find. ' - , it i it .:t. ine xsemana wen is auuui u. uhkj Koiitheast of Beattie. where a well was put down some time ago. This hole is more than 2,000 feet deep and the red sandstone still present is an indication of underlying oil lorma- tions, . Community Club Improves Fair Ground for Tourists 13 XT.K T..t,r A tSnr. Cial.) The Beaver City Community club is improving the Furnas county fair ground here for a tourist canip ing and picnic ground. , There is s fine grove, water, lights and a camp ers' oven. A large cattle barn can be used to store cars and for protec tion in case of storm. Wheat Makes 47 Bushels To Acre on 12-Acre Field Aurora, Neb., July 4. (Special) Emory Ricker has taken the record here for wheat yield. On a 12-acre field of wheat on new ground, he threshed 564 bushels, or an average of 47 bushels an acre. The wheat tests 62 pounds to the bushel. Instant n U POSTUM A BEYMAOI 1 pmtfm ft inn A totmtaMlCmipV lnitMiiau k ! - md p -w Tr j nil .SODA CRACKERS for anv Kiimmpr- New Farm Crop Inaugurated in State Recently Sudan Grass, Formerly Raised Only in South, Introduced In Nebraska in Last Three Years. Lincoln, Neb., July 4. Nebraska in the last three years has inaugurated a new product heretofore unknown in this state, which is now planted on nearly 35,000 acres of land, according to A. . Anderson, federal statistician of the bureau of crop estimates. This new product is Sudan grass, formerly raised only in the south and is excellent for either grazing or fodder, Mr. Anderson says. He said that in reality the grass is a member of the cane family, having numerous leaves and a stalk which grows to a height of two to four feet with a flower-like head. The seed is sown broadcast over the field and produces one crop a season, although the land may be used for grazing and the stalks will continue to grow all sum mer. When the crop is allowed to grow the full season it reaches its full height with a stalk which is very small, making it better for fodder than sorghum cane. Cattle will eat onil the leaves of sorghum because of the thickness of the stock but they will devour the tender stem of the Sudan crass. Mr. Anderson stated that the yield of Sudan grass this year would prob ably be greater than he predicted as manv farms mav now be raisincr it in counties from which he has nad no report on its cultivation. Resigns as President of Farmers Grain Company Beatrice, Neb., July 4. (Special.) J. T Whalcn, for a number of PHOTOrtATS. DOROTHY D ALTO ft "The Idol of the north" COMEDY NEWS RIALTO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA JULIUS K. JOHNSON at the Organ Now and All Week WALLACE REED in "Too Much Speed" AUUSEHBNTS. EMPRESS TWO SHOWS IN ONE BALDWIN, AUSTIN & GAINES. "A TrWt Alllaae." BENNY HARRISON I C0.,.n Mntlni, 8h Ciru For M.n KANAZAWA JAPS. Jipuiu SymnilU. THE WISE HOUND. Photoplay Attrutloa, "Chlldrta f Nlfht." fMturln Win. RutMll. COOLED BV TYPHOON BREEZES LAKEVIEW PARK TOMORROW PUBLIC MARRIAGE OF 4. M. Skill and Miss Elsie Lindtey Paget, Ring Bearer, Flower Girls and Jail Band Charivari EATTYS' Co-Operative Cafeterias W Appreciate Your Patronage. , No One Need Buy Cuticura Before He Tries Free Samples Write your name and addreaa below mail to Lering Park Sanitorium and re ceive Diet Liat and Menu FREE. Name Street City OB now " now Fistula-Pay A mild eratam of treatment that Pll Ftni , Rectal Dieeaeea in a eratlon. No Chloroform, Ether or other Keneral aneethetie aaed. 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