Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 23, 1922, WOMEN'S SECTION, Image 18

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    , THE BEE: OMAHA. SUNDAY. APRIL 23. 1922.
The Omaha Bee
MORNING EVENING SUNDAY.
7118 KfB fl'fl !HIN rOHPANY
shjmin h. kruikr, feu.
t. JMt.t-ft. lMal MM4
MEMIf.ll OF THE ASSOCIATE PtUI
Th tM !. -.
miiM miawN w,.n..ii- u
...Co M H W M "- S -. -
im m . rwu.ata - .i u at nrt4iMM f
IM talM Mill "
la". ! n.xiwd omi aa ttmwfm Im
tua dmniM I IM-Ui't 4in4 t U
Tne ntl eirtulatlew f Tke Omsk Be
for March, 122
Daily Average 71.775
Sunday Average . ..78305
THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY
R. ttRtWlft. Ciwtl Maaeiar
" LtMLR . H)l), CmuUlm. Maui
3 a a, a I aa uMilkt befwe as l Ul stay
A..U. im s() ou,vty, MaUry ftt
BLC TtLXPHONCS
Privaia Praark t.irhani. A.lt fur ha .. ,
Iwaarim.nt r I'.r.on Wealed, far AJ
N.ahl tells Afir I T. M i fc4ilnal 000
tiepartment. ATlanna Kit or 141.
orricu
Main Offira Hi and rarnem
la. Bluffs U Seait til. Houlh Hid 4J . tits Bk
N' York t r'Hih Ave.
ttaablatten till 0. KU ihleage U Bt.f.r Bld.
Pari, rreae 43 Hua nX IUra
Common Decency and the Movies.
A protest if nude by manager, c moving
licture theaters that the order of Director Gen
eral Hays, forbidding tlie exhibition of film, in
which Kotcoe (Fatty) Arbutkle ii shown, de
prives the public of amusement it crave. Such
protestor, overlook the main point entirely.
While the jury at San Francisco, on the third
trial, decided that Arb'urkle was not criminally
guilty of causing the death of Virginia Rappe, it
did not dear him of having been the host at a
digraceful orgy, a result of which was the death
of one of the participants. Nor does the verdict
of the third jury do away with the action of two
previous juries, each of which contained some
members who believed, on the evidence submit
ted, that Arbutkle is guilty.
A far greater point than Arbucklc's guilt or
innocence is at stake, and the issue involves the
entire moving picture industry. One effect of
the trial was to establish that Arbuckle belonged
to a group of so-called "artists" whose private
lives were a reproach to decent society. Not a
manager would dare to put alongside the an
nouncement, of an Arbuckle comedy a detailed
account of how he behaved himself at his "par
ties." Does his ability to cut up and perform
amusing antics serve to excuse his debauchery?
Art may cover a multitude of sins, but Ameri
can notions of decency insist that public exhibi
tions be not reminders of unsavory scenes that
ire not shown openly. When the Arbuckle and
Taylor scandals were frei, many pledges of
reformation were made; now is a good time to
redeem them. If the moving picture industry is
to be cleansed, the work will best be done froai
within. Managers who have Arbuckle films in
stock wrill serve themselves well by charging the
same to profit and loss, and will gain in the end
by blessing Will H. Hays and obeying his orders.
Play for Parsons and Others.
A Presbyterian church in a small town in
Illinois has just settled a momentous question.
Its members have decided, after much prayerful
consideration, that their pastor may play billiards.
This may seem an odd point on which a congre
gation could become agitated, but many a schism
has rested on a smaller issue. Involved in it is
the greater question of the pastor's relation to
his flock, his character as an intermediary or in
tercessor, his responsibility for the moral as well
as material welfare of his congregation. He is
not only to guide them by precept, but also by
example, and thus is required at all times to be'
duly circumspect in his walk and conversation.
Once much more was looked for in the man
who assumed the garb and duties of a minister.
He must eschew and avoid many things that
might be permitted the layman, and consequently
was deprived of not a little pleasure of an earthly
character in order that he might be the better
equipped to minister unto those who came seek
ing for spiritual consolation and guidance. The
fountain head must be kept clean and sweet, no
matter how disturbed and muddied the waters
became below.
Other times, other manners. Humanity has
come to know that a long face is not always a
sure sign of a clean heart, nor does a sanctimon
ious aspect inevitably betoken rectitude and
probity in a man. But greater than this, even,
the congregation has learned that, indeed "a merry
heart doe'th good like medicine," and that a
preacher's "capacity for innocent enjoyment - is
quite as great as any other man's." It is not a
letting down, then, when the minister engages
with his fellow-men ill healthy sport and games
of skill. 1 .
Billiards is a fine game. It calls for excellent
, judgment and control of the physical and mental
faculties. Eye and hand must co-ordinate in
action, and nerve and muscle be in perfect har
mony to get results. Herbert Spencer is credited
with having once said that "moderate proficiency
at the game is proof of good breeding," and that
remark may stand. It is not in billiards alone
that a parson may iifdulge, for the golf links at
tract him, he can also play baseball, while some
have of late taken up the practice of boxing.
Other avenues of innocent, occupation are yet
open to him, .and he will in time come to be
reckoned as a regular fellow, fully entitled to all
the privileges of the human race.
Music in the Court Room.
"Music, heavenly maid," is not to be aban
doned entirely as an adjunct to other activities
than worship or 'entertainment. Shakespeare
may have had its newest application in mind
when he wrote that "Music hath charm to sooth
the savage breast." At any rate, a police judge
in San Francisco is said to have adopted a
phonograph as part of his court room equipment,
and administers justice to the playing of ap
propriate airs. For example, a lone auto speeder
is reported to have met his fate while the record
was grinding out "All by Myself." Other selec
tions pat were employed as culprits filed past
the bar of justice and were acquainted with the
, "bad news."
Advantage certainly docs reside in this. Under
the spell of a soothing or inspiring air, the mis-,
doer will get the more fitting mood, and wrill
view his deed and its consequent doom in a
light he could not otherwise attain, and recon
ciliation to punishment be temporarily a matter
of easy accomplishment. Also, the phonograph
may aid in selecting the sheep from the goats,
tfec hardened from those who have not become
intturattd, Uomi "lit that bath no umtle ta
his iauI it fit (or treasons, strat f ems and spoilt,"
nl, therefore, it follow quite naturally that a
prisoner who does not, while at the bar, show
an Inclination t sureumb to the melody that ae
companies i arraignment may t itl at
among ho whose "tolj heart to ruin turn
darkly the while."
With all that psychology Itai done, bailed up
by the sphygmomanometer and the phonograph,
the old offender it not going to find it raty to
convince hi honor that thii it the firt time he
ever was arrested. Knowledge if power, ttn in
police court.
a .n. -i
Omaha and Religion.
I'tw of us art as good as we might be, but
that admission does not back up the assertion oj
a clrrgvman that Omaha is turning from religion.
It it well, no doubt, to be troubled over the
state of one's tout, but it it unwite to attempt
to indict a whole city.
Some remarks made by' Bishop Homer C
Stunt, in a sermon at hit old home iu Waterloo,
la., touch this question. Teople in Iowa, Ne
bra.ka, Kansas, the Dakotat and Minnesota have
the privilege of living in an area which hat more
religion to the square mile than any similar area
on the globe," this Methodist divine declared.
"Religion in these states findt iti highest ex
preition from the viewpoint of church member
thip and at an active force in business, politics,
and all other mundane relationships," be con
tinued. Omaha, which it berated jn the farewell ser
mon of another preacher, it made up of people
from the region outlined by the bi.hop. The let
tons of a life-time are not cast aside by new
arrivals in the city, and if they bring with them
faith, there it naught here that can rob them of
if! I'osibly there are temptations stronger than
in the outlying communities, but it can not be
proved that they are any greater than those of
other large cities. These temptations may be,
and often are, overcome, this to the strengthen
ing of character.
Geographically speaking, Omaha seems to be
just as near the kingdom as any .of its lesser
neighbors and just as far from Sodom and
Gomorrah.
Putting Nature in the Limelight.
In jest, even more than in fact, among the
mysteries of nature none has been darker than
the underground caverns such as are found in
Kentucky's Mammoth cave and in the Cave of
the Winds, alonsr the border of Nebraska, and
South Dakota. Geologists are now able to clear
up the unhasting yet unresting manner in which
these were formed and electric lights strung
through some of these are revealing new won
ders as well as extinguishing the darkness that
has .filled them for ages.
A labyrinth of 30 subterranean rooms known
as the Endless Caverns only recently has been
opened near 'New Market, Va., although their
existence has been known since 1879. Many
more rooms will be accessible to tourists as
soon as passages are cleared and light wires are
extended.
The streams that once rushed through this
channel have dug deeper outlets and today the
floor of the cave is dry. The roof is studded
with stalactites, the smallest consisting of single
stone icicles no longer than a finger; the largest
clusters resemble huge pipe organs or the fluted
folds of rich drapery. Countless stalagmites rise
from the ground to suggest grotesque gnomes
of the underworld.
The blaze of light shows one chamber like
a ballroom, another, an oriental palace. Par
ticularly beautiful it is with' roof and walls cov
ered with a filigree-like network bf limestone
formation that is said weirdly to suggest bands
of fairies dancing in the moonlight Far in the
interior lies Diamond lake, a shallow pool
stretching farther than the eye can reach under
a roof scarce two feet high. Visitors are lined
up before this pool in total darkness, and then
suddenly the cleft is flooded with light from
concealed electric bulbs, the crystals of the roof
blazing and sparkling like gems. The illumina
tion then is shifted so that the scene shows
only the crystal studded roof reflected in the still
water of he pool. 1
' Science says that these wonderful Shenandoah
valley caverns were eaten out in past ages by
water from rain and snow that found its way
through . sinkholes into the rocks. Each drop
dissolves some of the limestone, but it cannot car
ry off all that it dissolves. This excess is deposited
on the roof,' forming the icicle-like stalacities,
while similarly pointed stalagmites arise from
the drip on the floor. The present dryness is
explained' either by a lift in the land, or by a
lowering of the beds of the surface streams.
One can hardly regard these wonders of na
ture vwithout awe, even in the presence of a
science that disperses thcirmysterious shadows
and explains their history.
The ex-kaiser, it is rumored, is to forsake his
widowerhood and wed the Baroness Gabrielle v.on
Rpchow next month Certainly she is not mar
rying him for his rank, and except for the fact
that she is more than 60 years old, the affair
might be dismissed as a love match.
President Harding's approval of the pending
McNarray bill which provides a $350,000,000 re
volving fund for land development means much
to the irrigation districts of western Nebraska.
The retiring police chief of Los Angeles" who
remarked that the public' is a bunch of saps was
perhaps only looking at his own reflection. At
all events he has joined the bunch.
No gentleman would contradict a lady, so the
statement of Lady Astor that there is nothing
remarkable about her will have to be agreed to,
politefully but, regretfully.
Some facts are being brought out in the road
inquiry that were not referred to by the letter
writers. Maybe the investigation will not be
fruitless after all.
Lloyd George's hair is said to have turned
white in the last six months, but he can turn it
black in less time than that. Hope is never dead
till it falls out.
"Jimmy" Reed is the latest deserving democrat
to find out that Woodrow Wilson doesn't pro
pose to remember things that didn't happen.
The American standard of living may be
defined as what everyone wants and few get,
if they lay up anything for old age.
The Husking Bee
Its Your Datj
Start ltWithaLau$h
THE WINNER.
who lakes hit daily
load
You may not be able to get blood from a
turnip, but one can put up quite an argument,
A
The man
With all the ttrrngth be hath.
And kerpt in the middle of the road.
Nor needt the way.ide pain.
Who doet not paue of eae to dream,
Although the way is long.
Will find hit burdent lighter teem,
For courage maket him strong.
The man who plant hit daily work
And ttarti it with a tmile,
Will find no subtle enviet lurk
Hit courage to beguile;
Who ftghit hit battles without fear
When he it in the right.
With ttep triumphant, heart of cheer,
It sure to win the fight.
Who beept di.houor from hit name
And keeps hit own faith true.
Will reach a goal far more than fame
And more than fortune, too;
For though he be of humble lot
T hat man alone it great,
Who bravely ttrives and murmurs not,
Heroic conquers fate.
PHILO-SOPHY.
It Is better to have little and want lets than
to have much and want more,
Said Judge W. G. Sears: Character is what
you are and reputation it what people think you
are.
The children are now begging to go I arefoot
"just for fun." Father, we opine, it the one who
would enjoy it most.
Pride has but two seasons a forward spring
and an early fall
Quoth the landlady; "Will you have a little
of this hash, or
Here the new boarder looked up expectantly.
"Or not?" she finished.
You never know
What you can do,
Until it's passed
Right up to you.
Hastings (Neb.) Tribune
And even then
Some folks are stuck,
And right away
Will pass the buck.
I
n a ctrt liana In he a annA imnersonator."
inquires an ambitious young lady reader, "to get
into that flapper oancu
Well, yes, Inayne, 6he must be able to take
off.
a a
rinrli ! ti rlnren't rar In cr to the movies
u .- nf ha clmur lioraiii lie think the
actors put it over better after they have been
through it a few times.
a
TODAY'S IDLE THOUGHT,
finm nannl that the rain makes roses.
while all other folks can see is the mud.
a
PATH OF ROMANCE. ,
Last night I held a little hand,
So dainty and so neat.
I thought my heart would urst its band
So wildly did it beat; v
No other hand could greater joy
Or intense gladness bring
Than that hand which I held oh, boy!
Four aces and a kingl
FINANCIAL NEWS.
tt,,i, r5..v muiU a rnnt $1,000 one dav last
a mun ..tvj s. - t - " -
week and his method is so good that I am pass
ing it aloqg for the benefit of our readers.
Frank breezed into ms nome at cxacuy o.i
.. liia hot anrl mat rtcht into the cloSCt
himself, went out to the kitchen and kissed "Ma"
Carey, took out a clear Havana, and announced:
"Well, mother, 1 made a clear i,wu loaay.
M C. was verv much delighted, although
somewhat surprised, and exclaimed:
"How on earth did you ao tnai: - -
ri, .oM KVanL- i '1 t.. "I iust raised the
price on that house and lot up on Fortieth street."
About the time most men get within shouting
listance of success, their voice fails.
MODERN KING COLE.
. CA V.nn Cn .vac 3 fiantW olH SOIll. 3. Gfen-
erous old soul was he; he called for his pipe and
he called for his bowl but' at that propitious
n. ,,, n( tha L-iner'c pile cert friptids droDoed
Iliuiliciil wui v. ."v. " e w e - ' .
in and in a very few minutes those friends had
consumed all of the hne old rum m tne dowi.
A shabby trick, anyone would say, but what
could the king do about it? Nothing, to be sure.
He hadn't even had a drink, but the king was so
amiable! So he said: "So long, , boys, call
again." and he taHed for his fiddlers three.
VV. VV. X-.
a a
A BANE. ;
There was a young lady named Jane
Who looked on all slang with disdain,
When people used slang
She'd say with a pang,
"Can that! You give me a pain."
a
THE SIGN LANGUAGE.
In Scnise Omaha:
"Let us tan your hides."
In a local printery: -
"A cordial reception is not an invitation to
stay all day." Scout Frank Carey.
w
It doesn't helo a guy much to have automo
biles selling for a song if they won't recognize
his notes.
If you can't take a joke don't get funny.
Hastings (Neb.) Tribune.
We have known many editors of humorous
magazines who refuse to take a joke, and yet
they try to be funny.
'
Mannerisms are moulded but character must
be chisled.
UNIMPORTANT ITEM.
Demosthenes, the great Greek orator, used to
talk to thewaves, but he never broadcasted his
voice by radio.
a
See where a barrel of hand-painted china was
hauled away from a store, mistaken for rubbish.
Well, we've seen1 a lot of hand-painted china
that could easily be mistaken for rubbish,
a a
Dear Philo: I've joined Ak-Sar-Ben and
bought an Elk bond and find I have a $1 Wm.
left. What to do? Omahan.
Dear Oma: You came to the right place. Join
the City Concert club movement for good
music. It is a "sound" investment.
a a
ISN'T IT THE STUFF?
A man will deride
The good 10-cent cigar, .
That is given to him
As a prize;
But never a murmur
From him can you jar, (
Of the nickle cigar
That he buys.
a a a
AFTtiR-THOUGHT: Laughter drowns more
sorrows than drink, ; PIHLO.
How to Keep Well
r PR, V, A. CVAMS
QiM.liaa. fMiaraiaf h(iaa. aa.la
iaa aa4 pravaatiaa at Ciaaaaa, au.
a.in.4 I t. C.aaa r raaaWa at
laa fcaa, aill k wwiraj aaraaaaUy
uajatt l aaar liauiaiM. kaa
alaa., a4mas aavalaa la a,
claaaa. D. tv.aa il mm..
at..a.ia ar aariaa lap ialivMual
AAaVaas 1.11m la ,. .(
laa Baa.
Ceribti Ji:i
Practical Observance
of Arbor Day
D1UU Tt AXD VT FOLK.
Ill A dlaouuilon nt tUh.ia. v.
tha Kumhern M.t.-l .wUiton at.
11 Of ilmhciea for far
I r. Marker aret with vr. Jain
that fat loopl beyond the uiiJa
Kr !' ''"" '""I
v'lop aiabrte. r the thin an4
PRinnyi
r"i mng aeo a phy.Ulan mI.I that
we knew nothing atxtut the brain
ntii of dlatwiaa. The rule waa that
no maraa waa rrvealeij by an In
aunt lira examination or an
Imiilofi by raon nf earbunelre. an1,
non revealed, waa some hut ad-
vanrctl,
Ir, llamiiian aurrrr.lo.l ihut Khan
Jliihotea waa piift-t1 by rraaon of
vuua, nr onrmiy, or loaa or weight,
an.t a routine urine examination re
vejtleil no auBHr, that a nvlmin
i'otH'ii about two hours after itin
ner, the heavy meal, would allow
iiaiir prnlmbly th beclnnlng of
nmiici-a. hpanxer arter apaukrr sutid
(hut diabetes waa a (Iiwiiho to he
nnred for 'In tha houna and by the
inmiiy pny.icittn and the patient
hlniiM'ir.
lnny could so to thn hoapltala. at
io an tne examlnatlona. tent
Intra and atartlnir-oiit Inatrnrtlona
but after that, for the ions: pull of
the yonra, the home, the patient, the
iHiiuiy ana tno rumlly doctor muat
carry on.
Therefor. Dr. Ptern entntiaHlzait
the Hlniplklty of the tout on ausar
and even the.tenta for aeldoala. The
family phyalrlan onn carry them out
and even the patient hlmaelf can
eanily sret a working- knowledge of
the simpler methods for testing
urine.
During the first stay in the hoa
pltnl dlrtliiir la not aa hard as It waa
In the dnya of the starvation treat
ment. The use of whlnkv durlnir
inn reduction period has been done
away wnn. w
Dr. Jon:lnriAS a. act of rl In hat if
diets printed on a alnsle chart, de
vlned for une by the patient under
me direction or the family phyal
clan. live are called diets with
which to become ausar free and 12
are called maintenance diets.
Diet No. 1 conslmg of 10 ouncea
of 5 per cent vegetables: 10 ounces
oranno, 1 shredded wheat biscuit. 8
ounce, potatoes, S ounces bread, S
ounces meat. 4 ounces fish, and 1
ounces skim milk. This Is given one
any. ,
The diet for the second dav con
sists of the same allowance of veg
etables, orange and biscuit. 4 ounces
potato, 6 ounces fish and 10 ounces
skim milk.
Third day: Ten ounces 5 per cent
vegetnDies (three moderate por
tions): 10 ounces orange (one and a
half large oranges); 2 ounces potato
tone-nair a medium sized potato); 3
ounces fish (one good sized por
tion); 8 ounces skim milk.
rourtn day: Same amount 5 per
cent vegetables; 6 ounces orange
(one largo orange): 3 ounces fish
and 4 ounces skim milk.
f iren day: same allowance 5 per
cent vegetables; one and a half
ounces orange (one auarter of a
large orange).
ir on the rirth day the urine la
sugar free, go to maintenance diet
No. 1 10 ounces 5 per cent veg
etables and one egg. If the urine
remains sugar free, go the next day
to maintenance diet No. 2 10
ounces 5 per cent vegetables, 3
ounces orange; 1 egg and 2 ounces
20 per cent cream.
The next day to No. 3 20 ounces
vegetables; 3 ounces orange, 2 eggs
and 2 ounces 20 per cent cream.
The next day to No. 4 20 ounces
vegetables; 8 ounces orange, 2 eggs.
2 ounces cream and 1 ounce bacon.
Then to No. 5 20 ounces veg
etables: 6 ounces orange; 1 ounce
oatmeal, 2 eggs, 3 ounces cream, 1
ounce bacon, 1 ounce meat and H
ounce butter.
Sixth day: Twenty ounces veg
etables; 6 ounces orange, 1 ounce
oatmeal, 2 eggs, 3 ounces cream, 1
ounce beacon, 1 -ounce meat and Yi
ounce butter.
Seventh day: Twenty ounces veg
etables; 10 ounces orange. 1 ounce
oatmeal, 2 eggs, 3 ounces cream, 1
ounce bacon, 2 ounces meat and y2
ounce butter.
Eighth day: Same quantity veg
etables, orange, oatmeal, egg, cream
and 2 soda biscuit, 1 ounce butter
and 3 ounces meat.
Ninth day: Only change from
eighth, day is the addition of lA
shredded wheat biscuit and increase
of cream to 4 ounces.
Tenth day: Increase to 1 shredded
wheat All others same as ninth
day.
Eleventh day: Same as tenth ex
cept that 4 ounces of potato are
added.
Twelfth day: Same ' as eleventh
except that the allowance of potato
Is doubled.
If on any day sugar appears in
the urine, the allowance of food is
to go back to the schedule of the
day before and then the climb be
gins again. .
ARare Specimen.
Poor Folks writes: "Am middle
aged and am passing flat worms
about one inch long, brown on one
side and white on the other.- Have
been passing them for three months
last night about one dozen alive.
"Was taking sulphur and mo
lasses."
REPLY.
Tour description tits no intestinal
parasite known to me.
Perhaps you are narponng soma
rare specimen.
If so. whv not catch a few. put
them in a 1 per cent formalin solu
tion and send them to the local or
state health department.
If they are stumped they can can
on' the state university for help.
Ton do not cive vour state. Prof.
Ward of the University of Illinois is
always on the lookout for new
worms.
Unfortunately, the medicine wrilcn
kills one kind of worms may not
harm another kind.
CENTER SHOTS.
Civilization may totter, but it
totters forward. Boston Transcript.
Yrmm la Wa.la Traaaariirf,
In tha J irara that have elap.ed
iiii-e ilia (ii. t Arbor day waa m-
rUiiiied by lite N-t,iak Hoard ft
Ari-uiure, k me iiuitaaiiun Pf
J. tiivrliiig Morion, the rmmiry a
Whole lua oua iq a belter Uiidrr.
standing of tha value tf ireoa. nil
In Ilia ! five year our national
Indu.irlve have actually be, mi to
feci Hie plnih rr the limber abort
age tlmt r4rrins; men like Morion
In their day knew la be inevuatl.
Tha areda of lliouslit that iliry
owed m Die puhliu mind have been
slowly nrtiiitttiiiir, and proiui.in
Krom iva been roiniii forth
here and there IhroiiBhoiit the land
In the form of lei.tutiun fiwirrrd by
a siemlilv strrnatliening puMm n
llnient. Twenty yearn mho ihoae who
advocated publlo method of run
tri and cimairtirllon In foreal mai
lers were liatenrd to with ill-eon
cenWil liiiprnre by b'gLlMtur at
Waahlncton and at lb aiate cap
ital. Today many of the measure
at that time ear neatly urued, and
vlsorouaty roinbitttcd and even ridi
culed, have been enacted Into law
and are recognized a working ad-vanUBf-ounlv.
nut only to Hip public
at In rue. but to the lumbermen
tbeniaelveii.
The lime Im Indeed arrived when
Arbor day need to be observed ''y
practical and ronalrurtlv art
alsned to Insure a rHny-to.im .tip
ply of grnwlntr timber fur the u
of thoae who will be li"re to cele
brate the ratitanary of the N
braakitn proclamation. It I gratify
ing to note the mam-liuoN of tho
defence of the fedi-ral foreat service
and Its pollilr that has ariarn In
eongreas to meet tho recent tin
merited attempts to dlw-redlt this
government enterprlae. That nnd
the senate' aetlon of the pant week
in providing fund for the continu
ation of the Appalac hian forest pur
chase, In spite of A determined
antl-eourvNtlon group, and for the
control of that scourge of our pine
forests, 1he hliater ruat, are a
token that the natlnn'a lawmaker
wilt commemorate this Arbor day
Jubilee constructively.
More than 80 years ago Masim
chusetts began Inylng Its plans for
future forests. Trlzea wero at that
time offered here to stimulate an
Interest In the planting of the cut
over and waste places. Although
there were virgin forests then stand
ing in this state, there were those
who saw what the future had In
store. Mr. Baicley, our commlsn
sinner of of conservation, lately call
ed attention to the fact that so re
cently as 40 years ago our woodlands
provided all the timber required by
the local industries. Today more
than 80 per cent of the lumber need,
ari in hl state has to come from
beyond its borders, much of It from
the Pacific coast and the gulf. Not
only has the local supply dwindled
but the industries needing that
timber have greatly expanded. That
the state can again be entirely self
tmrmnwinir In this line is not to be
expected, but there can be no doubt
that it Is in duty bound to allow no
acre to lie waste that can profitably
produce the trees that are so greatly
needed in the general economic de
velopment As a state. Massachusetts la now
rOavIno- a COnStrUCtiVC Vdilt tOWSrd
the reclamation of its forest lands.
it ha confidently anticipated
that its well-considered program for
the development or state ioresw.
o nniincr about 50.000 acres.
will receive the continued support of
Its legislature. Its forest fire pro
tective service is recognized as one
of the best in the country. Nor are
private owners of woodland lacKlng
In a marked show of zeal for the im
nn.oan nf their own property.
The demand for planting stock is al
ready beyond tno amiuy ai mo
state's nurseries to meet, and inter
est in better cutting methods is also
apparent. If the present legislature
enacts tne simpiuieu juici "4V."
as introduced Dy io ai."
Forestry, association, ana win pro
vide adequately for the efficient con
trol of the pine rust, further evi
rf.n.. nriii he elven of a determina
tion to meet the obligations owed to
future generations, and Arbor day s
golden anniversary will be fittingly
observed.
SAID TO BE FUNNY.
a ... m .hnw by wireiesa nil
thla advantage: If It ? tra"J 'J?
actora don't have to warn Jj""?"d
miles to get back to New York. Charles
ton News and Courier.
"Can you flgnt?"
"Coma on then, you acoundrel." Kaa-
per (Stockholm.)
Tnn't foraet that the advertisements
often contain the most Important news
In tha paper. me '"""i
Colo.) .
Some one in America claims to have
seen a blue caierpinar. i.
to be these troubles ao long i"""'
bltton drives people to homemade whis
ky. London opinion.
I asked you to send ma young let
tuce." . .,,
"Yes, ma'am, wasn i u youim j. t"'-
"Young? It's almost old enougir to
wash and dress ltselt." Boston trans
cript.
Housewife "I'll not give you anything.
Do you know who I am?
Tramp"No, mum. -
Housewife "Well. I'm a policeman a
wife, and If my husband were nera ne
would take you, and quickly, too.
Tramp "I Deueve yer, !"""
husband 'ud take anybody." The Bulletin,
(Sydney.) "
Professor (attempting to ba witty tn
geometry class) "And can any of you
gentlemen tell ma whera has my poly
gon?" Wlsecracker (In the rear) "Up the
geometree, sir." Tiger. ,
Visitor (In editorial rooms) "What do
you use that blue pencil for?"
Editor "Well, to make a long story
short. It's to-er-make a long story short."
Boston Transcript.
"What were your father's last words?"
"Father had no last words. Mother was
with him to the. end." Wag Jag.
Doorkeeper (to late-comer at village
concert) "No, madam, I dare not open the
door during the singing. Half the audience
would rush out!" London Opinion.
After a time the small boy begins
to understand that it is wrong to
tell lies unless you are a parent
talking to a - small boy. Akron
Beacon-Journal.
A movie star sends her hubby a
weeklv check for a million kisses.
Wonder who cashes it for him?
Flint (Mich.) Journal.
"ITsnallv dark-haired women mar
ry first." announces an earnest stu
dent of matrimony, in ttaiy or
Sweden? Tacoma Ledger.
April has five pay days, but there
is Easter. Next month with five Is
July, but there is the Fourth. What's
the use? Nashville Tennessean;
Whv Is it that the treating cus
tom has never become so general at
the soda fountain as it used to be at
the bar? Columbus Dispatch,
ADVERTISEMENT.
Radium Halts
"Old Age" Bogey
When You Feel Stale aa If Getting
Old, Tune Up With
Nuradium.
The ' rays of radium caught in sugar
of milk and made up into tablets, taken
nternally seem to work miracles, said
a noted scientist recently. "Thejr results."
be continued, 'especially among old peo
ple? are nothing short of marvelous." One
of the principal causes of old age is the
hardening of the arteries due to increased
blood pressure. This the Nuradium tablets
prevent. Their effect on the human sys
tem is startling. The invalidism charac
teristic of advancing years vanishes, jaded
appetites become keen again, red blood
corpuscles have increased by 250,000 with
in forty-eight hours, acute pains disap
pear as if by magic.
A number of leading druggists nave
already put these marvelous Nuradium
tablets in stock.
They are put up in vials of 210 tablets
and the price Is SI. SO per vial. Reports
from a large number oT -professional and
business people wbo have used the Nu
radium tablets Indicate that a veritable
fairyland of science baa been revealed.
Their possibilities are atill undreanled of.
Vou ran get Nuradium tablets at the fol
lowing drug stores: Haines Drug Co
Sherman A McConnell, Beaton Drug Co.,
Green's Pharmacy.
THE ONE-MAN FARM.
rsaaa 1st Uallaa A.aa.
A tank m M,iiook. Oil, hat un
uriuwrn una and employ a man
who putmeM it ktii be 14 id as a
sort pf deputy (arm county tent
will! a view to aiding l.'inrrs ud
lo pertuadinaT the fanners to cut
dawn the n tl their linns, rorty
to M) acres shoulj be the average
ie tl tlie TuUa county lanus, it is
sug.eateil, instead of I Hi acres, which
U the present average sue. Una
man farms -rati be made a success
around Miatook, it is rtaiined, be-
fau Pi the fact that there le
good roa into Tula, where a
steady market should be attainable,
The State Department ol AsiKulture
nukes report of the bank punt.
evidently .wiiii approval ot the ot
ieri aimed at.
There dpen't seem to lie much
room for doubt that the one-man
farm in counties where there ia a
Urge city is the farm wlikli it the
mokt practical solution for much of
what ia troubling the individual
uriuer of today. 1 lie oncman farm
simplifies the labor problem. Jt rut
down the amount of capital invrttrd,
leaving; more room for improvement
i.nd for machinery and for protection
for mat hitiery. It reduces very con
siderably the isolation of farm life,
makes rural school districts more
thickly populated ami permitt better
farm supervision and more scientific
management on the part of the in
dividual farmer. All these and many
other advantage occur to mind.
Hut taking a InO arre farmer and
cutting his farm in half or fourths
will not make him a successful one
man farmer. He has to change hi
methods, and. frequently, hit prod
ucts, to suit the size of Ins farm
plant. Thit it where the demon-atX
atratioit mart employed by the ka
took bank come in. It will bt h'
Uk to show hour it it done. Natural.
y the matter of maikelmg will b
it supreme importance, Willi from
4i to fcd acre t cultivate, cvrrr
acre mutt turn in a crop that will
rouut in the net iucome of the farm.
There cn be wo wasted eliort or
wasted land. The one-man farmer
u.et hi back and Iti rgt lets, per.
bap, than the quarter-trction or
hall-trcliun man, but he bat to ut
it brains more. If he raises trutk,
t-vrn, hit !4ik an rgt will scarcely
stiller fur the lack of exeicUe. One
man farming in't alwayt ty, Uut
it oua-lit to be more of a btuinrtt
and lest of a gamble than the mote
extensive venture.
1
When In Omaha
STOP WITH US
Hotel Conant
Hotel Sanford
Hotel Henshaw
Owr reputatlesj of 20 years fair
dealing It beak of tbase betels.
Cacti snay stop at any one of than
wrilt) the atiwraace) of roceiriag hew
at value a sal courteous treatment.
HotelConant Company
State Furniture
Home of Low Prices -
Before- you purchu yonr new gpringr furniture, come in and
tee the many bargaini we have to offer. -
laving Room
Furnitura
psaaaliral S-aee
asusa and aelaw Uf
lag raaaa Salle
$97.50
Porch Furniture
Oar rompUte Una af sarah
furniture, while It laela, Is ba
log placed aa sale at
40 Off
Be
Refrigerators
Come In and aee our line
of refrigerators and take
advantage of thla effr.
i 35 Off'
Baby
Carriages
We have m ymry
choir, line to eelert
Tram, and u
be able la nnd Jost
what row bare la
mind
S9.1J, SIS.1S. fts.se
Bedroom Suite,
Butlfu walnut tthithttlt
u.yroom suite, epecfaj
during thla aale enly
$76.50
Dining Boom Suite
8-plece dining room aulte,
finished In either walnut
or mahogany, special
11212
Our
Exchange
Dept.
Enables you
to trade your
o I d furniture
In as.part pay
ment for their
new. Take ad
vantage of thla
when you pur-
cnise.
y
Phonograph
Special f i
FREE OFFER f ITtS
Beautiful floor lamp 1 X
and 25 records with 1 I
special eablnVt V 'K I
phonographs
New Records For
merly 75e and $1.00
at 29e
State Furniture Co.
Cor. 14th and Dodge Phone Jackson 1317.
mm
ADVERTISEMENT.
ADVERTISEMENT,
LV11WT
WRECKS HAPPINESS AND HOME
After Suffering Indescribable Tortures for Years
A WIFE'S TERRIBLE CONFESSION "
"Mr marriage, four years ago, waa a
'love marriage,' if ever there was one. I
had known my intended husband for sev
eral years and there had never been a
quarrel nor a cross word between us. We
had a wonderful honeymoon and the first
two yeir3 of our married life were the
happiest years of my life. I adored my
husband and he thought I was the most
wonderful and beautiful woman in the
world. Then a dozen little things began
to fret and annoy ma. everything seemed
to go wrong. It seemed to me that every
remark my husband made was critical
or irritating and I caught myself making
sharp and sarcastic replies.
"Finally it got ao that life seemed- made
up of just a series of petty squabbles.
Often we would quarrel and not speak to
each other for days at a time, t dreaded
in the evening to hear the step that I
had so often waited for with joy and long
ing. My nerves were completely exhausted
and worn out: my face became sallow and
haggard. I began to have frequent pains
in my back and after 2 had eaten, my
meals felt like a lump of lead. If the
door slammed or some one 'startled' me I
almost jumped out of my skin. Finally,
I went to the Doctor and told him my
story. I told him that my husband no
longer loved me and that his awful tem
per and terrible scoldings were making
me almost an Invalid. You can imagine
how indignant I was when the Doctor told
me it was all my fault.
"He ssid that on account of my own
highly nervous condition I had subjected
my husband to a constant nervous strain
and that the only trouble with either of
us waa that we were nervous and all run
down. Later all this I found out to' be
true, bersuae after I regained my health
and revitalised my own worn-out exhausted
pervt centers, and the same was don lor
my husbaiVd, I found him to be agaH ,
the dearest husband In the world hit
whole disposition entirely changed."
The above is a hypothetical case, which
a physicisn says may well Illustrate thou
sands which exist today. Homes ar
wrecked, children ruined, all through ex
hausted nerve force. Very few peopio
realise the terrible physical and mental
tortures often caused by a depletion of
the nervo-vital fluid.
In such cases it ia worse than footish
to waste your time taking stimulating
medicines or narcotic drugs. Your starving
nerve oells must have more nerve force,
the same as a starving person must have
food. This is best accomplished by in
creasing the activity and power of the
nerve-foree-making organs, the principal
one of which is the blood. This can be
quickly and most effectively accomplished
by the free use of Muxated Iron which not
only increases the activity of tha blood
making organs, but K feeda true, red blood
food directly to the blood itself, thereby
helping to create millions of new red blood
cells. This wonderfully increases the
power of th blood to help manufacture
new nerve force, th earn as enriching
th soil increase its power to grow mora
wheat, corn or oats.
If you are suffering from nerve forca
exhaustion you can quickly and easily
prove to yourself tha power of Nuxated
Iron to help overcome your condition and
make you strong and vigorous again br
the following simple test: Make a not
of all your symptoms before you start
take Nuxated Iron for two weeks, then go
through your list of symptoms again and!
you can at one see how they hav dis
appeared and wKat it has done for you.
If you have not obtained the most sur
prising results, all and even more thai
you expect, the manufacturer will i-roms."
If refund your psoaty,
V
7