Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 10, 1921, Page 4, Image 4

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TIIK BKE! OMAHA. MONDAY, OCTOKKIl in, 19il.
TheOmaha Bee
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Far Nlihl Call Altw 10 P. M.
OFFICES Of THE BEE
u.ia itfiwM 17th and Pamaa
guilt HI W B.WO IIU
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The Bee a Platform
1. N.w Union Passenger Sutioo.
2. Continued improvement ef to. N
hraska Highways, including tit paa
mailt of Mai Thoroufhfaraa Lading
into Omaha with a Brick Surface.
3. A short, lowTato Waterway from tha
Cora Bait to tha Atlantis Ocean.
4. Horn Rulo Chartar for Omaha, with
City Manager form of Government.
A Hole in the Bread Basket.
Set about with farms, gardens and orchards,
Omaha ought to have as low a cost of living as
any city in the land. Food is the largest single
item in the average budget. When one thinks of
liow Omaha lies in the very heart of the greatest
food producing region in the world it seems so
apparent that food ought to be a great deal
cheaper here than in the cities which lie hundreds
or thousands of miles from the main base of
.-apply. Most of those who have lived in other
parts of the country, however, will say that
prices are no better here than elsewhere.
Some encouragement is afforded by federal
statistics showing that retail prices of food in
Omaha have fallen more rapidly than those of
other places, and that the increase over the level
of 1913 is 43 per cent here, SO per cent in St.
Louis and 54 per cent in Boston. Either some
recognition is being taken of the difference i;i
freight charges or the system of distribution is
becoming more efficient and less costly here
abouts. There is no reason why the people of Omaha
should not be able to eat for a great deal less
than the urban dwellers of the east. Here are
packing houses obtaining their stock for slaughter
close at hand, producing meat on which no trans
portation charges are incurred. Mills and cream
eries possess similar advantages. Green stuff
that is sold without passing through any form
of manufacture also might be fairly expected to
reflect the saving in freight charges.
, Yet there has been no rash of population to
Omaha in the search for a lower cost of living.
It is indeed doubtful if any middle western city
has a cost of living appreciably lower than may
b,e found in the east. If the strategic advantage
were only acted upon, what an influx of people
and what a lot of industrial plants would be
drawn here by the magnet of cheap food. ,
. Mr. Driver, Have a Heart!
Omaha has wrestled mightily with its traffic
problem, mostly in good nature, and with a
bias, if any at all, in favor of the automobile.
This is. because such a large percentage of the
citizenry drive cars, as well as for 'the almost
as potent reason that a large percentage of those
who do not are looking ahead to the time when
they will. But there is one point on which all
will agree, that the careless driver does not make
for safety or convenience. One of his chiefest
manifestations has to do with the observance of
rules at street intersections. When the police
man gives a signal to change the current of
traffic at a crossing, almost invariably' he cuts
off the progress of some driver who is in a great
hurry. This fellow, instead of stopping his .car
on , the cjutsidc of the cross-walk, drives over
iar enough to blockade the pedestrians and force
them to walk around his car, while he sits fum
ing at the rule that requires hira to stop at all.
As it is he has gained JO feet or such a mat
ter, and is in that much better, position to start
when he gets the signal, and ten feet is ten feet
when you are in a hurry. No thought is given
the hurrying pedestrians, whose business perhaps
is as important to them, to the women and chil
dren who are forced to detour to get around the
blockade. Their affairs are nothing whatever to
the driver who has pushed his machine forward
as far as he dares. In almost any city but Omaha
that driver would be requested to explain to the
judge the urgency of his case. Now that winter is
coming oa, and the crossings down town are apt
to be sloppy, we suggest the police authorities
give this matter a little attention, and see if
the cause for complaint can not be removed.
Dominions at the Conference.
One open question in connection with the
eotning Washington conference seems to have
been closed; at least the announcement that the
overseas dominions of the British empire will
have representation at the council table. An
other important move on the world chess board
is thus taken. Australia, Canada and New Zea
land are vitally concerned in all matters that
affect the Pacific, so much so that it was earnest
representations on part of their premiers' that
altered the course of the Anglo-Japanese alli
ance when it was up for renewal. Especially
did Premier Hughes of Australia object to a
renewal of the pact unless it contained a specific
clause releasing England from any obligation to
Japan in controversies involving the United
States. .'
India, of course, is included in the subjects
for discussion as part of the Far East, but
Japan's relations to that as well as to other
Asiatic countries is subsidiary in Australia to the
actual menace to white supremacy ia that cohti-.
nent Lord Northcliffe has lately exhorted the
Australians to maintain a "w,h:te man's country,"
and this carries a responsibility far greater than
is generally understood in the United States.
Australia and New Zealand are in direct touch
at all times with the Asiatic races, and know
their danger better than we do. If the Japanese
question is acute in California, what is it in Aus
tralia? Canada, too, has a direct interest, as a coun
try bordering on the Pacific, and also has had
to deal with the question of Asiatic immigration.
The anti-Hindu riots at Vancouver a few years
ago gave the imperial government a practical
demonstration of the spirit prevailing in the
dominion, and brought up (lie question ia
more delicate form than any In which it hi been
presented to us. The presence it Washington of
the dominion representatives will be of value in
deposing of the Pacific and Fr Ea.t problems.
Hire Man, if You Can.
The Dee published a cartoon recently in
which personification of "The Unemployed"
wis pictured as asking for a chance at the job
of rutt.'ng the high cost of living by meant of
increased production. To this a reader replies:
"How can I give the unemployed a chance when
I can't get the cost of production out of the
product?"
The cartoon is right So is the correspond
ent. It all depends on the cae in point.
Like most difficult problems, the cost of living
and unemployment are not simply solved. In
some degree they constitute an endless circle.
But the problem is not helped by sitting still
and doing nothing. The mail who is not mak
ing his cost of production may not be able to
take oh new employes. But not all are in that
situation. Some are making profits. It will be
to their own eventual good, as well as the good
of everyone, if they give employment at this
time to as many as they can use to advantage.
Battles are not won by the craven or the lag
gard. It is equally true that they are not won
by the foolhardy or the reckless. But there is
a courage tempered by good judgment which
wins. The victorious general, other things being
equal, is he who knows when to fight and who
throws his whole might into the fight at that
instant.
In large degree, business is a battle. A busi
ness depression is a crisis. The "Man-Afraid-
of-His-Shadow" can never win. The man of
courage may. The man who backs his courage
with sound judgment, yet does not let his fears
and doubts overcome his daring, is bound to
win. '
Drama and the Fine Arts
Question of Relation Gets an
Official Color la England.
(Prom the New York Time.)
Whether the drama should be reckoned among
the fmc arts has of old been disputed. The ques
tion was recently put to a practical test in Eng
land. A new society, the Academy of Dramatic
Art, applied to the chief registrar of friendly so
How to Keep Well
Bp PR. W A
luatltaw taaearalaf kyilaas, saaitalla a
la Or Eva r raaaara at ! Baa. all
maar limit!.. Mr a lama'
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A EVANS
(V...H-.. uuaia kvalaaa. aaaitaliaa and Bravaatlan at !" Suhmltlrd
aaraaaaa aavalova la ii1sm Dr.
rtacrlba ler Individual SiaMM.
Aaarat laiui la car al lae .
Ceprria-bt, 111. t Dr. w. A. Etaa.
FOR PARENTS TO PONDER.
will
Why blame It on the aehuol
Uu-her? That dote not irC you
ciclies for a certificate of exemnfion from local ' anywlu-rf. lfcmldw, the at'liool
' I ft.
tiwlirr ha a flrat-claM dff-na,
Khn will r able to prove that the
troublo wna thre when tile child
enma into her haml. ThU la true
wlnnlliT the troubla ia a spoei'h da.
feet, mii'li uh atammiTlnff, r baby
J lulK, nr 11 phynU'itl dofoot, aui-h trn
bud toitfilM or runnliK mm. a moral
littffvr, a pocuiI d'Tui-t, or a mental
dfiCt.
I Yu may 1 able to prove In vw-
littttu citMCS that urn learner iit'g-
your child and thut aome ruin-
rtaiiit(i. Hut avrmirlna; chit
tearher will b nbl to bat
'u. Nor will una bi-ir the miemion
Jhooc words, the reuistrar uid. must be ..,... wmu .u..i
III . , lit I v ihsmivm fj iu nvuirv vu
nnu iu nave me meaning which inoy oorc at ,o learnt, un.l not to be imiKlt."
the tune of the pairing ot the act. 1 lie sole in-1 Mio will admit that It la her duty
quiry, then, was what fine art meant in 184J, "at not only to teach facta and impart
taxes. This was on the ground that it came
within the purview of the act of 184J, granting
siuh exemptions to societies formed exclusively
fur the promotion of science, literature and the
fine art. The tw'nt racd was di-clarcd by the
regiairar, Mr. G. Stuart Kobinson, to be "very
novel and inti-reating." Lven more so is the de
cision which he rendered. It was such a de
lightful blend of law, literature, criticism and
quiet humor that the M ercury. the well known
literary monthly, was a lad to rescue it from the lirteil
legal archives and print it in the Sepember isue, fortun rf
Legally, it is obvious, the cae turned ou the lIr''n' ''l0
....:.. .i.. a t .1. . i:... VU. Nor
4HIPIIWII ttnvilltl IIIC UIUIII4 19 UIIG UK UIC III1C
arts.
wusliina the wound with urine
1 destroy tha polaon.
UEl'LY.
Ittatili'snnko antitoxin la ir.w nuil-' thut we nay "pleuaant dreums" when
alio. I'lt-fh urine a it waali bue tti we bid friends good night.
Where Some Nebraska Corn Will Co.
Investigators and relief agents returning
from the Near East bring distressing accounts
of the destitution that prevails in that region,
The barest facts are sufficient to stir the gener
ous impulse; it is or should not be necessary to
go into details as to the suffering that is being
borne over there, almost wholly by women and
children, for the men have fallen victims to the
war that has raged across Armenia and Syria,
around the Caspian, and down into MesopO'
tamia. Four crops have been planted in Arme
nia, only to be trampled under the feet of the
marching hordes; winter has come now for the
seventh time since the World War blazed forth,
and just that often have the helpless of that
region faced starvation, from which they have
been in part at least rescued by American gener
osity. The plea is as earnest now as ever,
because the need is as urgent. Mr. D. Burr Jones
has been directing the work in this state of col
lecting donation of food stuffs, principally corn,
for these victims of man's inhumanity. County
agents have reported to hiin of success in their
efforts, but large quantities still are needed. Ne
braska has a superabundance of corn this season,
and can well afford to send some of it to the
starving women and children who are being
looked after by the Near East Relief. Times
may be hard in this land, but we never have and
never will know the destitution that reigns over
there. That is why the appeal is made, and that
is also why it should be met Some of Ne
braska's corn crop should be eaten in Armenia,
where it is relished, even if the Austrian bol
shevik workers did turn up their noses at the
golden grain. v
"Wanted, Carpenters at Once."
One of the most encouraging of all signs is
that building is under way again. Not the great
rush that attends a genuine boom, but the real
work of construction that is going ahead to meet
current demands, and to open the way for a re
sumption of activity that in time will put Omaha
back into line with the best built of American
cities. Advertisements are appearing in the
papers calling for carpenters, and many of them
add, "Apply on job." The job is under way," and
there is need to get it finished. Other jobs are
opening up, and unemployment is being dimin
ished if not entirely done away with. What is
true in Omaha applies to other centers, and the
predictions of Secretary Hoover and other close
watchers that busy days are ahead seem to be
accurate. All lines show more activity', and the
approach of winter holds less of terror than it
did a few weeks ago because business is picking
p. Costs are not yet fully co-ordinated, and it
may be weeks before the peaks are brought down
to a reasonable relation with the level, yet the
process has gone on far enough to convince most
people that neither 1920 nor 1913 is to be taken
as a gauge. Business nerves are ho longer as
jumpy as in June and July, with corresponding
benefits to all, and the call to the carpenters to
apply on the job is a signal to all, "Let's go I"
The most widely read magazines at the South
Side branch library are announced to be ones
dealing with mechanics. ' While this is not alto
gether bad, reading for ideas may be suggested
as having considerable value also.
If the agricultural bloc gets lower freight
rates, it will have gone far toward justifying
itself. The trouble with most of these states
men ' is, however, that their activity consists
largely of gestures.
The bankers who, voted in opposition to im
proving the postal savings banks may have been
operating under the golden rule, but to an out
sider it seems they were only trying to look
after No. 1. "
Germany will give the quantitative theory of
money a definite test if the printing presses hold
out At present they have emitted a little more
than 84,000,000,000,-and the stream still runs.
Taft carried more than Utah this time, any
how, for he was re-elected president of the
Unitarians by unanimous vote.
Road houses, if we understand the latest
edict, are to stick to the straight and narrow.
These grand jury indictments are getting
more exciting than a serial novel.
Is the problem of China one of long division
or of subtraction? ' ,
the period when Prince Albert was at his best.
or worst" At that time the fine arts were under
stood to mean only "the graphic arts." It was
not, remarked the registrar, "till the exhibition
of loll, which some people regard as a new
artistic rebirth, and others, more correctly in
my opinion, regard as the climax of the hope
less banality of the early Victorian era, that the
other arts received any kind of artistic or official
recognition." Subsequent legislation was in line
with the earlier. Music was held to be a fine
art, within the meaning of the law, by two ju
dicial decisions of 1898. though the registrar
thinks them erroneous. Vet he admits that he is
bound by them. Musical societies are exempt,
but it has-never been held that a dramatic so
ciety is.
Turning to that humble but helpful friend,
the dictionary, the registrar rinds no hope for
the Academy of Dramatic Art. The Oxford
dictionary notes that "tine arts" originally but
translated "beaux arts." Among these the dic
tionary of the French academy includes painting,
sculpture, architecture, music and dancing.
"Sometimes are added eloquence and poetry."
But never the drama. Littre's definitions are
substantially the same. Take the case of the
Burlington or any other fine arts club; is it con
ceivable that they would consider the production
of plays within the scope of their activities? We
must stick to the restricted meaning of the term.
A "fine" art does not mean an" art that is ad
mired or "splendid." De Quincey wrote of
Information, but alno to carry a part
of the loud of nii'titul, moral, ao-ial,
and phyiuVul training, tiho will ad
mit all thin, and ktill boat you in the
argument To prove her point nhe
will rite atudips auch as that made
by Clara II. Town on. Iowa children
S and e years of nee,
In the Ceilar Kaplds school In 19K
mora than om-fourth of the klndar-
irurten puplln, ono-lxth of the B
!'rt, and more than one-nlxth of the
A first pupils full to earn promotion,
Of aonipwhat tha same alvnlflcanre
In the Denver achools In 1918 nearly
one-half of thu firnt (Trade pupils
nnd more than one-hnlf of the sec
ond grade puplla ware retarded. If
pupils In the kindergartens and flret
and Htacond grades are fallinir behind
in their studies thu trouble in nut
have started at least before tho chtld
cot Into school. ThU prompted Miss
Town to make a study of children
C nnd 6 years old. This study led
to thu i-oncluHlon that tho bants of
physical defects and character de
fects which are destined to result In
failure In school and failure in life
are already fixed when tho child be
bins Its school career.
In consequence:, any movement for
the betterment of children as to their
physical condition, their mental hab
its, their morals, and their charac
tern. If it is to be effective, must go
back of the school, must get into
the homes, and must impress the
Murder Considered as a Fine Art," but that
furnished no precedent for a court.
Finally, examine the purposes actually avowed
by the Academy of Dramatic Act. It proposed
to teach not only acting, but languages, fencing,
deportment. "Is fencing science, literature or a
fine art? Is deportment?" Under the charter,
the academy would have power to open a fencing
school, or one for teaching calisthenics to young
women. But, observes the registrar, "there is
nothing to limit it to the sort of fencinar that is
- - I - . n - .. I Kl"
necessary ior piaymg Cyrano oe oergerac or tne . Usl are good, that speech Is dear and
Lorsican Brothers, or the sort ot deportment ; calm, and that there Is no stammer
that is required to sit down safely on a sofa in.
without a bump in the last act of a French ! more important that their
"farce " mental habits are what they should
On all the grounds adduced, therefore, Reg- J'11 JflTS?"
istrar Robinson felt constrained, though with r"
regret, to deny the application of the Academy for the establishment of good habits
of Dramatic Art. He did it, however, with Lord and the thwarting of bad ones. And
Campbell s kindly hope that the society may i all her points are proved by careful
parents. Mothers must learn that
the habits of children are formed In
the first four years of Ufa.
This is true of their physical hab
its. It is almost as true of their
social habits. They must learn what
foods to feed children over 2 years
of ago and why, when to put them
to bed, and how long to keep them
there, to see that they hear well and
see clearly, . that they breathe
through the nose, that they have
good teeth, that their physical hab-
long flourish, paying its poor rates." The de
cision was in essence legal, thoueh embroidered
with literature and at least one bit of criticism.
The registrar believed that, in defining the fine
arts, a distinction ought always to be drawn be
tween "creative and executive art It is a neat
point, and the members of the Acadamy of Dra
matic Art may debate it in the intervals of oavins:
their taxes.
Echoes of the Long Ago
The SSth annual encampment of the G. A. R.
at Indianapolis suggests many reflections to a
relatively small and steadily diminishing part of
our people. The present encampment is a small
one compared with those of 30, 20, even 10 years
ago. . About 10,000 members of this patriotic sol
dier organization have joined the grand army
beyond the skies since the last encampment, and
many members still on the rolls of the G. A. R.
are too infirm to make a journev to a distant citv
and take their place in the marching column or
about those camphres where song and story of
the civil war go round. G. A. R. encampments
at Washington used to be as big and popular as
tne inauguration ot a president, even when an
inauguration ball was part and parcel of the cere
mony.
As man counts time, a eood many vears have
passed since Lincoln's first call for volunteers.
Sixty years have gone by, and since the peace of
Appomattox 56 years have been marked off.
As nearly all the volunteers and others who en
tered the union armies were youm? men. those
that are still among us are no longer young.
in tne popular mind and imagination the civil
war is a long way in the past. Generations have
since then been born. What they know about
the war between the states has been learned from
reading history. Relatively few persons read
history, fewer learn much about it, and still
fewer remember what they learn. The United
States has been a party to two wars and other
periods of great stress since the days of Manas
sas, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville,
Gettysburg, Shiloh, Chickamauga. Wilderness
and Spottsylvania. One of these wars stirred us
very much, and the other, was the most stu
pendous the world has ever known, though our
part in it did not tax our resources and emotions
and entail such losses on us as the civil war.
Let us salute these veterans who are assem
bled at Indianapolis, let our thoughts tco out to
those whose infirmity or cares keep them at home,
and let us pause now and then to think of the
hosts of them that are no more in the flesh.
Washington Star.
examination of a considerable num
ber of children who have never been
in school, because hot yet of school
age.
Get Plenty of Sleep.
Mrs. F. P. writes: "1. I am a
nursing mother and Vejy thin. Can
you suggest a diet to help me gain
weight?
"2. Is it harmful to put a littlo
catnip or fennel in the water for a
baby 3 months old 7
"3. He sometimes sleeps 11 1-2
hours without awakening. Should I
wake him for his feedings?"
REPLY.
1. Sleep at least nine hours. Do
not worry. Eat a bowl of milk and
sugared cereal twice daily.
2. Give him plain boiled water. If
he has colic, there is no objection to
giving a little catnip or fennel tea,
3. Not at night.
Medicine Men Elusive.
M. M. writes: "Is there any way
to stop stammering? If so, how?
f lease do not say that Btammering
is just a habit and can be broken by
trying, because I am sure it. is not."
REPLY.
There is no way except training. I
wish I were a prestidigitator and
could cure you by ma-jic, but I aint
that kind. The long-haired fellows
that sell medicine on tha streets
might suit you, but they move
around so It is hard to find one when
you want him.
Rattlesnake Bites.
L. G. M. sends four accounts of
persons bitten by rattlesnakes during
1921. A farmer died in Colorado, as
did a child in the same state, and
one in Wyoming. A man recovered
from a rattlesnake bite in Wyoming.
L. G. M. says he has heard that
wma virtues as water, but no others,
.letter Quit Worrying,
tv 1), writes: "I am a yourc man
of 1$ And am troubled with divame
almont every night. I Wp well
ulrurwlne, and feel well, but I am
anxious to know If It Is tnythmg se
rious, and whether I nhould m.-o a
doctor ubmit it"
Everybody dreams durlnir sleep,
n ml if court you do. I'leanant
ilrvams add sreatly to ttw Joy of
Nleeiiinir. It is not without reason
Hearing Set for City Suit
Over Irrigation District
Bayard. Neb., Oct. 9. (Special.) -
The .city of Bayard's suit
the Nine Mile irrigation district
luve a hearing before the district
judge in 10 day. If the Cty suc
ceeds in bring set outside the irri
gation district, it will stip the pay
ment of an annual assessi.icut of be
tween Jl 1.000 and $12,000, which is
paid for maintenance of the ditc'i
which runs through this place.
feefMig faith
v aHW sBiBr- mm - m -
with
& .4 '
tne
MOKER
Our lifelong knowledge of choice
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experience and our up-to-date facilities
are concentrated on making CAMELS
the finest cigarette that can be produced.
Into THIS ONE BRAND we put the
UTMOST QUALITY. A better cigarette
cannot be made even for a higher price.
CAMEL is THE QUALITY CIGARETTE
made for men who think for themselves
for folks who appreciate really fine
tobacco. '
ONE BRAND ONE QUALITY ONE
SIZE PACKAGE.
That is the way we keep faith with the
smoker.
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., NamAm
Lfady Astorfs Colleague
The election of Mrs. Margaret Wintrinsham
to the British House of Commons for the Louth
division of Lincolnshire is of more than passing
interest. It is taken to indicate that the sentiment
in England for an increase in the number of
women in the popular branch of Parliament is
growing. Up to now the only woman in the
House of Commons has been Lady Astor, whose
husband is a member of the House of Lords.
Both Lord and Lady Astor are of American birth
and American lineage. Mrs. Wjntringham is a
liberal, while Lady Astor is a conservative. It is
understood that the women voters of England
will make an effort to increase the number of
women in the House of Commons at the next
general election for representatives in Parliament.
and that their efforts will be seconded by some
of the most prominent men m public life in the
country. According to rumor, the general elec
tion may not be far off. It is said that when
he comes to an understanding with Mr. De Va-
lera if be ever does Mr. Lloyd George will ap
peal to the country for the ratification of his pol
icy. Hartford limes.
A little touch of frost merely adds zip to the
weather.
Then, "AvFriend in Need."
General Pershing is always welcome in
France, but there will never be enthusiasm at
tending his later visits equal to -that which
creeted his first. Chicaeo News.
Omaha Free Night Schools
Open Monday, Oct 10, 1921
ENGLISH
For foreign-bom men and women of all ages
AMERICANIZATION
Classes in English, Citizenship, Language,
Arithmetic, History, Geography and Civics
Schools will be neld in the following buildings
Brown Park
Cats
Comcniu
Farnam
Kellom -
South High
Train
We.t Sid.
19th and U Streets
15th and Cat Streets
15th and William Streets
29th and Farnam Streets
23d and- Paul Streets
23d and J Streets
6th and Hickory Street
32d and U Streets
Opportunity for All
Mom., Wed. and Thurs. evenings from 7:30 to 9:30
Free Evening High School
Opens Monday Evening, Oct. 10, 7 P. M.
High School Bldg., 17th and
Leavenworth Sts.
Education For All
Your Opportunity
Organize class in any subject worth
while if twenty-five pupils enroll.
WE TEACH
Business Arithmetic
Business English
Bookkeeping
Shorthand
Radio
Commercial
Telegraphy
Mechanical Drawing
Accounting
Cooking
Sewing
Millinery
Salesmanship
Almost Anything
Business organizations want help that know how
to do thing?.
Be Prepared
Enroll Monday evening at 7:00 P. M. School
three evenings a week.
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