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Lincoln Nebraska State Journal from Lincoln, Nebraska • 6

Location:
Lincoln, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1919. NEBRASKA STATE JOURNAL. "WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER available for Inspection In his fac Upon the globe playing a harp, of l.state officials did their duty. I refer MORE OR LESS PERSONAL' to the legislature from the governor at the which all the strings but one are broken. The moral of the picture is that hope should be retained until the the good will of the company Increas- lng on the brink of revolution and our ingly valuable.

It is not surprising that own country up to Its neck in labor long-headed business men have adopt- troubles, he is a wild man who would ed this policy. It ia the only way in the whole matter of peace kept Nobody will be surprised strength of the vote cast aga'nst starting condemnation proceedings jag UU1UINU EVEMINO SOKDAT. LINCOLN. NEBRASKA. to take over the traction company.

down. This question is up to the people of this great state of ours as well as all other states in the nation, and no matter whether Governor McKelvie or the people believe it now or not, it is the only solution to the humane man sieht to save for themselves any part in the air for the months necessary geacrest Trapnagen J- c- Estate ef C. H. Un famous portrait "Mona Lisa at' me present time? I am told it was stolen some years ago. E.

S. B. A. liis famous painting disappeared from the Louvre, in Paris, in The opposition to public ownership has increased in recent months to such an extent that it would probably be -beaten decisively if the question for us to frame a new peace with Germany and come to new understandings with our allies in the war. as second class uumw in post oil Ice.

Lincoln. Neb. agement of our fast growing delln were decided on its merits. This time, I August, 1911. The painting was later quent population.

People must live as everybody knows, the people never discovered in Florence, Italy, in the and if they cannot get a living by fai Srt'KRAGE. p-nt inaa onnnirh tn tht? rpfl.1 miPSlinn a.i stale If morning or evenUg edition la desirea. SUBSCRIPTION RATES BT Knout Sunday one year 54; period than one year. 4 cents a moot. possession of the thief, Vincenzo Pe- irugia, it was returned to me uiuvm With the Maine legislature in spe-lto voUj Qn at aU.

xhey had been cial session this week to ratify the-assured that there was a Joker in the suffrage amendment, the ratification proceedings and proceeded to reglst- er suspicion and dissatisfaction on of the money that otherwise would, go into taxes. The same policy is adopted by fairly small 'concerns in not only increased advertising appropriations but in putting on adidtional salesmen and in doing other things to extend the business. All of this shows the difficulty of. increasing taxes beyond a certain figure. If the increase reaches a large amount the tax-paysr will go to a great deal of trouble to circumvent the government.

This has been done and can be done in perfectly i'-t Sunday one year. shorter periods son. I don't believe a teacher worth employing nowadays would practice such archaic and unwholesome methods. Writes Dr. Marcus: "No temperature Is too low, provided the children are properly protected by their clothing and their sleeping bags.

The greatest Increase iu weight is always made during the colder weather. meals a day are not sufficient. preferably of bread and milk, are supplied for mid-fore-, noon and mid-afternoon. "Children whoxe growth and development have been retarded because of physical defects such as adenoids, by-pertrophied tonsils and carious teeth (decayed teeth) respond very quickly after their detects are properly remedied "A poor teacher or one not physically strong Is a great handicap to an open air class. "Observation in the past five years shows that the scholastic work of children in open air classes Improves by greater capacity for application.

Absences on account of illness are diminished. Nervous troubles disappear. Nutrition and weiRht improve." Dr. Marcus concludes his descrip tory near Melbourne samples of twine, light and heavy rope and bagging from which bags for vegetabler, wheat and wool can be made. It is said that every particle of the fiber can be used either in the manufacture of the articles named or as waste for furniture stuffing, fibrous plaster work, pack-far as can be ascertained, etc.

So was as can be ascertained, 'he bark Is first passed thru a softening machine which loosens out the fibers and then thru carding and spinning machines which have been adapted to the purpose. It Is claimed, that in the process the three main essentials in fiber production staple of good length, a strong and durable product and low cost of manufacture have been fully compiled with and demonstrated by the samples produced. If the claims as to low cost of production, quality and utility of articles made from this bark can be substantiated on a large scale of manufacture, the commercial possibilities of the industry would be very great. The supply of raw material is practically inexhaustible and can be had for, the mere cost of gathering and transportation to factory. means, they will get it by foul.

Our public welfare officials need to do something besides investigate and suggest they must act and act quickly and Justly, as human beings, not as brutes, recognizing that passage of scripture which says: "Do unto others as you would have them to do unto you" or yours. Respectfully. T. H. LINE, M.

D. Accounts cannot fie opens ror suhscr p-Uona. Subscribers will please rmit witn hirh should be a-lven lor a specified game culbis upon its orvuu" 'general If the company had until pay- California's ratification last week brought the number of ratifying states tsrnv. Names are not entered Uient received. ordered been prospering and if the voters had been told that the stockholders didn't want- to sell out under any circumstances, the result would probably 1e up to eighteen, Just hair or tne re- in December, 1913, where it is at tne present time.

Q. is' the bite of a banana spider deadly? B. W. A. The bite of this insect, which is a large, hairy spider, is not fatal to human beings.

This insect is often mistaken for a tarantula. Q. What percentage of city people are affiliated with churches? B. E. T.

A. The federal council of churches says that about 70 per cent of city folk are communicants in some the old and the new address must bo also state whether morning or edition Is received. Suhsrrlhers may -hanKe Irom one edition to another, receiv H.a ina on. that HrtH them best i have been entirely different. legitimate ways, one of which Con- The heavy vote against the light The heavy vote against light quired thirty-six.

Maine will be the nineteenth. Can seventeen more be got in time for next year's national election? That is a close question. There are nine full suffrage states which have not yet acted Oklahoma, gressman Reavis has exploited with some thoroness at Washington. luitK BY CAKICIKK I LiNt'OLN. -Morning, evening and Sunday (thirteen papers a week.

10 cents per ee. tvenlng and Sunday. 31 renjs mnntv bonds is a surprise. The people are apparently not against extending The Constitutional Convention. LINCOLN, Nov.

3. To the Editor of the State Journal: It may be true, as some would have us believe, that we should be advised how to vote at the coming election. Many are becoming weary and out of sorts at being so frequently told how to vote, especially when it comes from a the lighting plant, but they mixed the church. PUBLIC AND STRIKK. The last great coal strike in the lutri er Yoa at to The Srtl" atat.

J-urnal information proposition with the traction purchase Washington, South Dakota, Nevada, lurnisoes reaaer bureau at Washintrton in such a way that the defeat of one nd dUtnunuY" United States occurred in ia02 in the Colorado, Arizona, Wyoming, Oregon, tree of cuarfc'e. accurate meant a close shave for the other. It Tacking on the bark with large-headed nails placed one on every tion of the open air class results by suggesting that there Is no better way to effect the Improvement of the physical status of the nation than by ex square foot of surface and painting the answers to questions on any as to wnich Information can be nao. ti oat ihe unprallell-d urc of the van ou federal government department 4 i.he urat library of congress. for return postage must ei inquiry inquiring direct pe iwjljj ter reply.

State clearly the write plainly and addres lh. Nobis. State Journal. Information Bureau was an unsatisfactory election mainly because people didn't care a whoop for any of the things they were called upon to decide. Only a handful of voters turned out in each precinct, and they were so lanquid over their work that the Judges and clerks did nothing heads of the nails to resemble the anthracite industry.

This strike began in May despite the efforts of the national civic federation to bring about a 'settlement. The obstacle to a settlement was about the same as in the present steel strike, the refusal of the employers to submit the dispute to mediation. The anthracite opera- and Idaho. All these will finally ratify, but will they call special sessions to ratify? Four states where women have presidential suffrage have not ratified, North Dakota, Indiana. Tennessee and Rhode Island.

The North Dakota legislature is soon to meet in special session and will ratify. Should tending the use of the open air school color of the bark one recommenda political organization whose chief characteristic, aside from politics, is that of commercialism, and we ask ourselves the questions: WThy this all this expensive advertising, this great loss of time by men of affairs, why this "New Nebraska Federation" whose every financial wish is so easily satisfied, why so much politics in a matter of so much impor Q. Give me a short biography of O. Henry. J.

A. A. O. Henry, whose real name was William Sydney Porter, was born at Greensboro, N. in 1862.

After leaving school he spent a number of years wandering in the southern and southwestern states, and engaged in a varied journalistic career. He finally settled in New York city, where some of his best works were written. For some time he was a fugitive in South America because of financial difficulties in which he became involved. He died June 5, 1910. THE PUBLIC MIND.

rom to every child. X. What do you think of that. Molly? Qt'KoTK'NS AM) ANflWKrtS Uvertutlna; Rhramatls. Should one who Is troubled with rliou- but yawn all day long.

niDiic spirit they were so languid over their work brating the coming of peace by taking a snooze. tors thought they had the whip hand an the full suffrage and presidential tance and where partisanship should be forgotten in the desire to elect the ana rtuuseu to conceue anyuung. The strike ran on a month or more matlsiu rat strawbsrrlso or tomstoss. rat or cooked oaU rnii-lunT A. W.

11. Answrr of tin- ituuiy disease Involving; joint tissues ami therefore called rheumatism" by the dialntereeieii patient, 1 know i-f none so downright mean as to make of the lucloua frulla you mention uutieslr- A coal strike on and nature, with cold waves, rubbing it in; such is our plight to date. Off the league of nations reservations are Turkey, Germany, Austria, Bulgaria, China and the United States. Must we be known by the company we ktep? tion Just made by the Forest products laboratory at Madison, for preventing bark from flaking off logs used In rustic structures. Another recommendation is that instead of tacking on the bark, the timbers should be scored on two sides; that is, the bark should be cut off into narrow strips for the entire length.

Timbers should be cut late in the summer, piled in the shade and seasoned until the following spring of summer, and they may be creosoted. The nailing method has been successful especially in rustic hotels and in rustic buildings erected for exposition purposes. best and most capable men, why impugn the honor and integrity of such men as Flansburg, Snell, Coffey ana aoie. others whose character is above re How Rolls for Fifty roamls. About how majiv aonieraaulte must I Twenty-nine arrests were made last month in Lincoln for gambling.

Nineteen of these were inade in a eingle raid on a soft drink establishment In the old days gambling consisted of playing cards or the roulette wheel in some regular establishment opened for the purpose. It would make John Sheedy's bones wiggle with amusement to hear that practically all of the arrests made for this offense now proach and whose qualifications are beyond question? take every eventnc to reduce my wellu Bfty pounds? MUS. K. Educational Week. CENTRAL CITY, Nov.

1. To the Editor of the State Journal: According to the proclamation of the governor, the coming week is to be observed as "educational week." I am of the oninion that the governor is It is not wrong for the laboring man Answer I should estimate offhand about to have a representative In the con seven thousand. Haven't you ootvfussd Junl fun with sxer.ilse? Homersaults reduce nothing- but groiuhes. blood pressure, swollen veins and such things vention; the farmer' should not be pushed aside without a hearing; the wVit vrhpn hp 9v.4 that "T-Ta ia Ihnr- DR. BRADY'S HEALTH TALKS.

without public notice until anthracite prices were affected. President Roosevelt then had Carrol D. Wright make an investigation. Mr. Wright's report which was not immediately published, was rather favorable to the strikers.

The strike wore on, however, until September before the government took positive steps to bring it to an end. In the face of winter and increasing public suffering the president called a conference for October 3. The miners there offered to submit their case to arbitration while the operators refused. This arbitrary stand of the opera are for shooting craps. Most of these convinced that the changes and suffrage states ratify In time, the favorable action of four out of the remaining sixteen must be secured.

Two of these, Alabama and Georgia, have already refused to ratify. The needed, four must come, accordingly, from these fourteen: Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, New Mexico, North Carolina, Vermont, West Virginia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Virginia, New Jersey and South Carolina. Six of these are "solid south." Three more are middle Bouth. All are tempermentally slow to try new things. But for the political necessities of the case.

Insuring that national party committees will put the screws to the local politicians in the backward states, hope for ratification before the 1920 election would not be burning very bright. offenders are rather young. A mania public welafre and tne school interest should be there with strong representatives and the best constitutional lawyer should have a place well at the front. Now that the constitution is to be reforms which are imminent with reference to xmr educational system and the teaching profession are subjects that should command the immediate With railroads making ready to curtail service to save coal, with the national coal administrator back in harness, with city schools closing in some places for lack of coal, Americans can feel very much at war again. If this continues the armistice day will be celebrated in a double sense coldly.

Lincoln has responded somewhat Open window schoolrooms seem to help along considerably the task of importing to the young mind vital essentials of reading and writing and 'rithmetic. There are 110 open air classes in the New orYk City schools under the hu for this form of gambling seems to have broken out since the war. It affects all classes. The German-Russian boys are said by the police to be particularly addicted to it, and the high school teachers are worried over the re-Twrltten we cannot be too careful in the selection of our-representative, as it is of vital importance and will af number of cases they hear about among the boys in tnelr charge. fect future generations as the present pervision of the department of health and the board of education, some of the rooms being in the public parks, some on the roofs of school buildings, one has affected us.

fours truly, STEFHEN S. BISHOP. One of the teachers remarked the Abeelutely Fearless of A yourijr lady suffering; with a severe cold In hi-r An old friend hu hns been callin on lier for several years Insists on kiraln her, not Just once but dosen times, squarely on the lips. In order to porvs tlmt a cold not contracted bv klsslns. That was a week ao.

and up lo the present the youiif man has not the allrhtnsl symptoms of a cold. How csn you account for thatT I cla.hu a cold Is extremely contagious, and so wanted Mm. but he seems to think now he has iro.n to me that It Is no, l.est you think tlie youna; man silly. I will H.LI that he Is thlr-v years old nnil Is considered a rock of common scnuc. Answer He may he suiraclous.

but he la a reckless young man. Kvldsntly hs lis acquired Immunity thru repented Itmcrulo-tlon. You csn eradlly undfrxisind thnt in hie scientific ln of the suliel ho may have picked up. 1iere and there, atralns of pneuniococcl or streptococci or micrococci or sonii'tlilnir sltiillitr In nil to those harbored hv the sul-jit the present rxpr-iiem-e. In mi-f lili Immunity would sperlflo not only for the strains present In this case but for ail slm-llsr strains to which he may he slmllurly exposed.

However, lh mode of InvealliiM-tlon la dans-erouK. lis will reiillne thai one of these days when It In too late. WII.I.IAM I1KAI-N. I'. some on the roofs of auditoriums.

Af other day that the war left an unfair TALKS ABOUT TIMBER. ter considerable experience in this field -the New York health authorities burden upon the people In charge of the schools. "Besides the failure of salaries to keep up with the cost One billion feet of timber killed by 1.445 fires is the estimate given for tors united public opinion in support of the miners and in indignant opposition to the operators. Backed by this public attitude. President Roosevelt made it clear the mines must be operated.

The operators finally saw that they had overreached themselves and yielded. The strike ended October 23, five and a half DAILY DRIFT. feel that rooms especially placed and equipped in the school building are living," she said "we have a much slowly at first to the drive for the Red Cross memberships. "The war is over," solicitors were told. But there were hopes during the war, that the generous spirit which was then displayed was going to continue into peace times a3 one of the permanent of the war.

The world needs the services of the Red Cross now in only less degree than- during the war. Instead of developing a permanent habit of generosityi during the war, were we mortgaging our future generosity? harder time than ever before because of the sqirit of unrest that has broken out among the students. Specifically most satisfactory. Such rooms may bo provided for in new building plans at least one such room Is now provided for in every new chool build and thoughtful attention of all the people of the state." I wonder if the governor realizes that the state of which he Is the honored head, is wholly to blame for the faulty educational system we have. It is an old saying that "money is the root of all evil." I wish to paraphrase this saying with another, that is, that education is the root of all evil or the root of all progress.

Education is not book reaming, but it is knowledge and knowledge if rightly handled is at the bottom of all progress. We are prone to looTc upon a person who has a glib tongue and the faculty of making the most of a limited education as an educated person, when In fact he is ignorant. Some children "run amuck" you might say, when they enter public school and graduate with honors in half the time it will take others and may attain to the highest degree of scientific and literary knowledge and yet turn out to be a failure or a first class criminal, with the mentality to successfully carry his criminal acts to a successful termination. The idea I want to givo George Bailey: When the liquor interests line up to crush the prohis. It will be a case of boneheads versus bonedrys, and what in the world can.

you expect of we have two things of a very trying nature that come to us directly from ing in New York. boneheads? the war. These are crap shooting and Children admitted to open air schoolrooms are from the following cigaret smoking. The matter is so serious that we need help from every tt it ii i iikii types, as described by Dr. Leopold Marcus, the supervising inspector of parent as we never needed it before." Say what you will, if America fails to help establish the basis of a covenant for the security of mankind against future wars, the victory we helped to win in France and Belgium counts for nothing.

months after its beginning. This, series of facts furnishes a useful basis of comparison with our present experience. In the case of this strike of bituminous miners the government does not wait but acts at the beginning instead of after months, as in the 'anthracite case. The reason is obvious. That strike began in the Lincoln i3 not the only city to make progress In cleaning up in the last de open air classes: 1.

Children exposed to tuberculosis at home. 2. Children who have had tubercu losis which is now arrested. 3. Children suffering from malnu cade.

This was impressed strongly up Montana's tremendous forest fire losses for the season just closed. Half of the fires were' started by human agency and were preventable. The fires burned over 570,000 acrs of land and were suppressed at a cost of according to figures compiled by the forestry ofrice at Missoula. A district logging engineer wlrh headquarters at Missoula reports that he has seen cedar trees more than 2,000 years old, still alive and growing in the Kaniksu forest which is in the extreme northeastern corner of Washington. "These trees," says the engineer, "varied in size from a foot to ten feet in diameter.

I used a boring instrument on them and found that the trees were in all cases 2,000 years old and some of them nearly 3,000. The wood is firm and Is a potential source of high grade timber. I know of no place in the United States, except the redwood forests, where trees of that age may be found." A method of utilizing the bark of a large variety of eucalyptus trees for commercial purposes in Australia on a man who took a walk last Sunday afternoon In the old red light dis Last July the saloons of Cincinnati were for the most part tight closed, and the police record shows a decrease of arrest for drunkenness as compared with the previous July when saloons were running full blast, of exactly ninety per cent. trict of Omaha. He went thru streets that a man could not visit a few years is, that while one child may not be able to keep up with his studies at school, his mentality in another line A department store has been started New York, dealing entirely in secondhand articles.

This is not an ordinr.ry second hand store conducted in a slipshod fashion by a broken-down business man, but is a modern, up-to Jate establishment with regular departments, a definite scale of prices and a hxed business policy. Goods are from many sources and a price is put cn them with as much as in any of the regular stores. One may buy nearly new clothing which has been discarded by wealthy spring, when a coal shortage caused no aicute suffering. This one begins at the closing in of winter when the supply of coal must be kept, coming. The gjvernment takes action now as ago without taking his life in his hands and found the whole neighborhood turned over to Jobbing houses and factories and the homes of decent people.

did not suppose that such Three classes, says the Denver Democrat, composed the overwhelming voting in house and senate over a change was possible. it took action then, when action became necessary to protect the public VVe'a soldier hoy for a hired men. His tmck Is straight and his cheek Is tan. Jn his buttonhole the crols rlc stierro, And he whistles a Jolly marching ulr, Hs spade the gnrden and cu's the r. And washes thu rnr till It shines like itlo.

And wields his broom with a martial As hs sweeps tho walk of our little plitce. open the door when he's working til It, To give him brea-d or a plscs of pie, And hs says "beaucoup'' or "s'll vou plait." With an accent droll and a twinkle g. Or maybe he spins bit of jsrn. To show how the tide wss turned si tli Marns. Oh.

H's wood to have such a hired num. Witti a hack that's straight and a cheek test's lau. C'srtoons Mngalnc. Clncbftnsx Mla Kslrssse, St. Peter looked with wonder at the two rusty coppers which the panBlnr'.

soul had dropped into his hnnd. "Why, my good ruun," he asked, "what is this for?" "War ta," murmured Ihe kouI gloomily as it pwnsed thru the heavenly gates. The Homo Sector. Zulus rsgsrd non-poisonous snskes in- cestors and permit them to sntrr dwelling! unmolested. of work may more than counterbalance his deficiency in school work.

To illustrate: Once I heard one person remark to another that such a person was not worth enough powder and shot to shoot him that he was no good at all. Reference was made to, a young man who was continually haunting a stream where he could fish ride the president's veto of the prohibition Stan and Flowers. measure: "fanatics, pin-head politicians and political opportunists." The editor's Ths primal duties shin aloft like stars; The charities, that apothe, and heal, and welfare. President Roosevelt had intended ir necessary to operate the an-thracite mines by military force. Cer- name is Barkhausen.

trition (that is, children underweight). 4. Children who become tired easily or show languor or fatigue before the end of the day and on this account are unable to keep up class work. 5. Children suffering from nervous disorders.

6. Children who are frequently absent because of alleged "colds." 7. Children Buff ring from heart disease who are recommended by the private physician for these classes. I particularly oommend that list of "indications" to the dead timber in public and parochial schools everywhere tXe teachers and principals who still adhere to that antique custom of keepihg children after school, as tho five hours aday in the usual schoolroom atmosphere were not hard enough on t4 child's health. I have never known a competent teacher to keep children after school for any rea bless, I 1 Are scattered at tns feet of man like flow i arA ins is reported to have been discovered by a local resident.

It is claimed, says the Canadian department of trade and ers, i I I Wordsworth. iut ut taln, nothlng more radical, more sub- may luy furniture, rugs and diamonds I mn- Colonel C. D. Casper recently, developed a weak heart and the doctor required him to go to bed and take life mighty easy for a couple of weeks. He Is reported on the which have passed thru the ordinary commerce, that irom tne Darn, mere FORTY YEARS AGO TODAY.

and catch fish. The other, party replied that he was mistaken, that this young man worked harder than they did and made more money than they did. Because this young man was a fisherman and knew all about fish, can be made a fiber suitable for the manufacture of twine, rope and bag- templated now! The one difference between the two cases is in the placing of the onus. Saunders county, which was then road to recovery. The colonel is getting along in years, but so far has lost nothing in nienbal vigor.

His heart may weaken Kins of a quality equal to, and at known as a greenback stronghold, vicissitudes or a great city. A store of this kind is clearly a social need. The surprising thing Is that it required the earthquake of the war to bring it into being. elected the entire republican ticket. half the cost of the best flax and Indian jute goods.

The Inventor of the a little under the stress or physical activ Lancaster county remained the ban their habits, and did not care for neither could he make progress in book learning, Is no reason for stating that he was mentally It In the former case the mine owners were the arbitrary ones. It was they who needed coercion. In this case it ity, but one thing is dead certain, it is ner republican county in Nebraska by process has been experimenting with the bark for fifteen years and now has always in the right place. Virtually all of th citizens of Great lis the miners' union, that insist on Human slavery is provided for in an IT HAS A STRANGELY FAMILIAR SOUND Britain have seen an increase in street (dictating the slate. Public opinion car fares.

The most conspicuous ex-(was with the anthracite miners. Pub- act of the last legislature, according to a discovery made by Assistant Attorney General Mason Wheeler. The statute for the printing and the sale supplement to the revised statutes says: "Pro lie opinion for the same reason is against the bituminous miners. That merely illustrates the public habit of ception is Glasgow where people are still carried at the rate prevailing before the war. This is due to the fact is true he was not versatile or weu balanced, yet his deficiency was more than made up by his superior knowledge along other lines of education.

This young man was able tb make a living at his chosen work. The work he liked was of economic value to him. Our educational system should be so arranged that it respects the natural characteristics or traits of children of school age. There is no per majorities ranging from 319 to 1,683. THIRTY YEARS AGO TODAY.

Governors were elected as follows: Brackett in Massachusetts; Boies in Iowa; Campbell In Ohio and Stone in Missouri. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY. C. H. Morrill returned from a visit to Colonel Cody's ranch in the Big Horn basin.

As a result the Burlington extended its line into the basin and the town of Cody was established. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY. Some excitement was caused by a vided further that purchasers of the that tor many years Glasgow has been supporting the side, whichever it is, revised statutes for 1913 and the supple which agrees to be ruled by reason ment to the revised statutes for 1813 herein provided for shall be sold for the sum of $5." PUBLIC son who has not some weak point. There is no child no matter how defi It pays to be good. A young man i vwiroi i named Krank Carey, living at Sherburn cient it may be in one way or an BE" other, that cannot be Influenced if we rumor that ex-president Roosevelt ll T- a 'jf i a Minnesota, was recently arrested on the charge of forgery and IS under Jbond to await an Investigation of his case by the can find this weakness in their armor.

had been killed in Africa. a teacher who can do this will be Six hundred teachers were received and does not insist on ruling by force. The bituminous miners are "ia bad" how as the anthracite operators were "in bad" then. The consequence ia pretty sure to be the same, the defeat of the side that puts itself in the wrong. As between miners and operators this may be a "class" clash.

But to the great public which must insist on the last word in such wars it is not a question of labor and capital but of Justice and decency; and the verdict is rendered accordingly. grand Since then it has developed that he has one more wife than the law by Governor; Shallenberger at -the executive mansion. M. M. Graham was able to do more with a defective child than one who cannot.

Education nhniild beKln before the birth of the devoting the earnings of the municipal system to the retirement of bonds and at this time there are no interest charges to be met. In fact the city has a large reserve fund from which any money needed may be drawn for maintenance and improvements. The Glasgow municipal street railway system therefore finds itself in exactly the pofition of the Lincoln water department. The war has had no effect upon the price of water in this city, and it might not have affected street car fares had the traction company been a municipal enterprise from the beginning. I I The public should ask for one "reservation" to Conciliation Commission elected president of the association.

child, and should be continued by-he parents until the child attains schonl QUESTIONS AND AN8WERS. aee. A child snouia oe taugnt ooeui ence and concentration, not by force or harsh means, but In a kindly way. allows. The outlook for Mr.

Carey is anything but encouraging. If sent up for the unlawful use of pen and paper, he will serve his sentence only to a face a bigamy charge, and no telling what the court will hand him In the way of a sentence. And after all that, what will life have to offer that Is worth his acceptance? One month of decent behavior gives more real satisfaction that a lifetime of deviltry. Most of the education a child receives in early life, It receives from its mother, consequently, a mother's school should be a prerequisite to marriage, Just as much as should a nhvsical examination. are Degin THE LAST ALlGSMEJir.

There cannot be serious probability of matters getting into such shape that a rejection of the treaty will be forthcoming next week. Advocates ot the treaty as it stands talk of rejecting the treaty in case it is amended into impotence. A minority of one niiig to require school authorities to look after the physical condition of er Faulkner's proposed coal strike I settlement. His proposed wage increase of 15 to 20 per cent is to be Q. What! is meant by the term "Continental America?" H.

P. H. A. By continental America is meant that part of the United States which is situated on the mainland of the northern hemisphere. This would include Alaska, but would not include the Hawaiian islands, nor the Philippines, nor Forto Rico.

How long does itltake a bill to become a law after it has passed congress? i F. E. B. A. When the law does not provide a date upon which it Is to become effective, it does so upon being signed, by the president, or at the end of ten days after it reaches him, if he does not veto Q.

What Js the weight of the earth and how fast does it move? J. P. A. The mass of the earth is estimated at six thousand billions of bil school children, but in many cases this is left entirely to nurses and the benefits of such an examination greatly lessened. I realize this more since I r-hnrea of tne Indian scnoo at In Cincinnati John Barleycorn dies hard.

Friend3 of a broad, busy and liberal city have fought to the last ditch in favor of Immortal life for liquor. Last Saturday the wet brigade of Hamilton county staged a civic parade in favor of firewater, and as a protest against the narrow policy of government interference in the matter of what on shrill eat, drink and wear. Marshal of the host representing the booze-histers of Hamilton, and the suds-guzzlers of Cincinnati, was Chris Schott. And there was Captain Schorr commanding one division. norma.

last winter PROBABLY SOME FOLKS CAN STILL REMEMBER WHAT HAP- or. I nnxtnrv a rrn more than a third could do this, of course. But the talk Is obviously a part of the process of making up the necessary two-thirds majority at a minimum cost to the treaty. There months and noted the number Iher rrjnrjU i inure ca-es of trachoma and other eye diseases, that I could KuccessfuIIy handle when' taken In their incipiency. -( Of ennrse nurses differ, some know it are not a third or tne senators wno wish the treaty beaten.

More than lets see how, ratified without Uode another; Afiolph A. Uruber, the lions of tons. Its 'velocity in its orbit two-thirds want it all while others refer thf case to a physic'an immediately, even if they do" know a much as the one. But, none of these examinations jgoes fur ertmi trh. The child ha a charac miles per sreond.

third; A. li. Scnmiaiin, the, lirth. Otl.er i i is about nineteen added directly to the price of coal. It is public belief that a fifteen or twenty cents per ton Increase in labor cost of mining coal grows to a dollar or two per ton by the time the' ultimate canfumer pays the bill.

Coal prices 3eem to have been about doubled on the strength of an increase of less than fifty per cent in miners' The minute the miners' case is settled, there should be thoro scanning of the case of the opertators. Public opinion is now sitting down hard on an attempt of the miners to profiteer. The tacts should be established as to the other factors in the coal industry in order that the public opinion may play intelligently upon any profiteering whether of pick or of pen. ruinous amendment. Any course WHKl "A3 I SAVING Q.

Is there any (way to soften rubber which would lead to rejection would svherz anu- pved Schwenck. Sounds hardened from lack that has become but wreak the will of the dOzen or so like an importation from Schleswig-Hol- G. T. of use? nf senators who have no aim but to stein, ain dt it? A. A good way to soften rubber is FREPAREDNES.S.

The woodchuck is an animal with very fair ability It hustles thru the woodland now with to immersej it in a solution consisting of one parti of ammouia and two part3 of water, Q. What states in the union raise the most sheep? N. J. B. The (department of agriculture savs that Wyoming, Montana, Ohio, modemts s.

Brill v. destroy the treaty root and branch. What the treaty advocates are trying to do by their talk of rejection, apparently, ia to make it clear to the mild reservationists that the committee amendments camouflaged as reservations must not pasJ. It Is pretty clear that no serious objection will be made to interpretative reservations such as the mild reservationists have It eats of fat-producing nuta as many as each day a pound. And waddles off at last to find warm Congressman Reavis is stating only a well known fact when he says that a large amount of money is being spent in national advertising cam ter a disposition, an environment anrl oti'Vr 'things that should he inquired into just as much as the physical.

A hungry or poorly nourished child 'cannot keep up with his properly nourished classmate. Nourishment does not apoiy to the physical alone; but the little fellow's mental powers must be nourished and this does not app'y to book learning, either, but to; out-ld influence if a child has a han-kerins- after a saw encourage 4t by practical lessons, etc. Psychology may cover the ground, but it depends more upon acts than traits. Character Is shown by the features, the wav they walk, hold their the shape of chin, mouth, nose, the wat the eves set in the head and all such thlnps. A school child, in fact, every child, should undergo such an examination and I believe if every child normal or deficient in any way was compelled to take such an examination every year at least, there would not hf so many inmates in our reformatories, insane penitentiaries and the like.

Provided our California and i New Mexico have raised the' greatest number of sheep in the pat: fifteen or twenty years. At the present time there are head of sheep in Wyoming, and over 2,000,000 ia each of the other named states. Q. What is the weight of a silver dollar and what percentage of silver does it contain? H. A.

A. By an act of congress of 1837 a dollar consists of 412 1-2 rrains, 9-10th of which is pure silver. There are 480 grains of pure silver In an ounce. Q. Where is Leonardo da Vinci's Q.

What is the moral of the picture "Hope." painted by C. S. A. The picture "Hope" represents a woman with eyes blindfolded seated winter quarters underj ground. And ther It slumbers, well-content, and doesn't do a blessed thins From autumn's cold, forbidding storms untU St feels the breath of spring.

I envy much this littl beast for, while he slumbers iu his hole. Secure and safe, I work, Lykell. to feed the furnace fire with coal. By da.y, in writing prose and rhyme. I do a fairly faithful turn.

Wlille profiteers work overtime to grab up all that I can earn. Comparisons are bad but. friends. It swnis. when all is done and said.

Whatever be man's status, still, the woodchuck is no chucktehcad. stood for. But before the real reservations are reached the committee's nisnamed reservations must be voted tpon. This Is the next test. If there be any such thing as luck, it will be the "mal real test.

There are only a few senators, one vould guess, 90 utterly reckless as to te down the treaty with no more hange in it than the McCumber reservations involve. With Italy shlver- paigns to save It from going. Into the federal treasury in the form of income taxes. Concerns doing a large business find that they must pay tens and sometimes hundreds of thousands dollars to the government in the form of war taxes. A considerable part o' this can be plowed into the bu3lneF in the form of advertising which wil result in increased business and make.

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About Lincoln Nebraska State Journal Archive

Pages Available:
379,736
Years Available:
1867-1951