THE OMAHA BEE: SATURDAY. JUNE 24. The Morning Bee MORNING EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE rtBLISHINO COMPANY MIJOW . fl-DIKK. Publisher. B. BHtWEH, Cen. Manatee, MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ft aaawlsu' fraas. el vkl'k ni In U I Mater. I. eulwlMlr aaUllas MiumN iiraiikuw t4 all Ml aiaeairea endua v at Mnli. rrnu4 la uu saw, ft4 alas im Ural a. pukiiMua aetata. AU nii of twmiiWM at uu Ncil dJuka ar ales nwi4 Nal averse circulatta ef Tha Oauke Bm, May, IM Daily 72,038 Sunday 78,642 B. BREWER. General MtMw ELMER S. ROOD, Circulation Ma(er Sworn is and subscribed betare ma this M slap af Jun, I9Z2. ISeat) W. M. QUIVEY. Notary Futile Tka Oatas IU l. a amnkM af ie a4il atme of rirraluinai, tka tafiao4 emharltr on ein-uleinia sudiis. ana Too Ho.' clrtaleiiu la raw lrv auaiwl bi Uiair wiiaiwtiaa. handicapped by tht theory that if political control could be maintained economic control need not be dealt with, were in turn cast out by the riee of the Nonpartisan leajrue, which grew from the aeeds of hit wrontri. Not even then was the strange and ainiater influ ence of McKenzie eliminated. He rejoiced to ee the downfall of the progressives and even made over ture to the leaderhip of the league. It waa ponL ble for the opponent! of the organized farmers to charge that he was throwing his support to this radical movement in return for various favors and exemptions. With him pauses one of the last of the boases of the old school. A new public conscience Is springing up which challenges both this economic and political control. The Bee's LETTER BOX BEE TELEPHONES Private Branrh Kirhanic Ask for tka Department T ,. Night falls After IS P. M i " r ParasB Wanted, for Editorial Department, ATlentle 1021 or 10:. 1000 OFFICES Main Office 17th and Fames Ca. Bluff .... IS Bcott St. South Did . 493J S. !.lh St. New York 2HS Flftk Aeenu Washington 41!2 Star Hide Chieaas . 1728 Sieger Bld(, Pari., France iit Kua lit. lienora SHALL THE KAISER COME BACK? The Germans arc producing, arc working, are sav ing. Tourists report that the chops and cafes are filled with people who seem as prosperous and as con tented as those of the allied countries, if not more 60. Why, then, this amazing rumor of the restora tion of the kaiser? Refusal of a British cabinet representative to express any government policy in advance of a coup by Wilhelm or the crown prince is equally startling. The chaotic instability of European affairs could not better be illustrated. When the Hohenzollcrn dynasty was overthrown a semblance of a republic replaced it. What really happened seems to have been that the industrial- in terests that ruled through the kaiser made a switch and began to rule through the republican regime. As far as the people are concerned, except for the abolition of compulsory military training which was forced by the victorious .powers their subservience to the machinery of the state has been changed little. Though the re-establishment of the monarchy might affect internal affairs to a very small degree, yet it would represent an open revival of the spirit jf militarism and imperialism. Were it to be coun tenanced by the people of Germany it would evidence a clear lack of repentance and stir dreams of re venge. The traditions of the German monarchy should not be allowed to revive. Surely, when the proper moment comes, or even now under the cloak of secret diplomacy, Great Britain and France may be counted on to checkmate this return from Doom. GOVERNOR SMALL AT THE BAR. When William Sulzer was impeached as governor of New York his trial attracted wide attention. Dur ing the last several weeks the governor of Illinois has been on trial, not by impeachment but under con ditions fully as serious, and his case has attracted little attention outside his state. The reason presum ably is the complicated nature of the testimony, the presentation day after day of dry and dusty records which can hardly be termed exciting or even inter esting midsummer reading. Governor Len Small is charged with technical em bezzlement. If convicted, he might be sentenced to the penitentiary. It is charged that, in co-operation with others while he was state treasurer a few years ago, he deposited state funds in banks in which he was a stockholder or from which he drew interest in amounts larger than that which he turned over to the state. In particular, it is charged that, large amounts of state money were loaned eventually to Chicago meat packers, the then state treasurer pocketing a good many thousands of dlars which the packers paid in excess of what the state received. The transaction is not entirely novel. Other treasurers, of states and of minor governmental sub divisions, have done likewise. Many have been prose cuted any many found guilty. The amount involved in Illinois was sufficient to make the total allegedly embezzled run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars. Termination of the case means victory or defeat for the Small-Thompson-Lundeen political machine in Illinois. LIVING LQNGER. Almost everyone knows that the span of human life is lengthening gradually. Nevertheless a reitera tion of the fact stirs one's interest. There are few who do not cling to their years of earthly existence and thrill at every prospect of adding to the hereto fore allotted number. Dr. Royal S. Copeland, health commissioner of New York City, is authority for the statement that there are 3,500 men and women in the United States who are past 100 years of age. Furthermore he de clares that the average person should live to be a hundred "with eye undimmed and natural force un abated," provided he practice right living and right thinking. He says: Go back fifty years ago in New York City. The average duration of life then was 42 years. It is now 6S years. A greater knowledge of our bodily ills and how to cure them is partly responsible for this showing. More important is the knowledge of how to avoid dis ease, to which both preventative medicine and such beliefs as Christian Science have contributed their part. At the rate we are going, it will be quite some time before any one attains Methuselah's record of 969 years, but we are headed that way. AN ERA DIES. Readers of Rex Beach's novel, "The Spoilers," will have some understanding of the career of Alex McKenzie, for this figure in the politics and exploita tion of the northwest is said to have appeared in that piece of fiction as one of the main characters in the plundering of natural resources in Alaska. Alex McKenzie lies dead in St. Paul, his home for many years even while he dictated the course of political and industrial events in North Dakota. At his room in the Ryan hotel men who were counted as leading citizens in the life of North Dakota reported for orders and advice. There governors, senators nd congressmen were made and the faithful put in the way of fortune by speculation in land, railroads and other utilities. North Dakota under him as pro consul was simply a province of the Twin Cities. Before that time McKenzie had established him self at the end of the railroad in Bismarck, where today a splendid hotel bears his name and the citi zens are struggling to lower the rates of the water plant owned by him. The roots of his power, dating back to the crude pioneer days, were never entirely plucked out. During the progressive uprising the followers of Theodore Roosevelt defeated his machine, but even though they filled the state offices and legislative halls, they were unable to steer affairs with as strong a hand as the people demanded. These progressives, THE VOICE OVER THE WIRE. iou call a business houte on the telephone, and your first Impression of the concern depends, not on the manager or clerk whom you seek, but on the private operator who connects you with the desired department. No invention can do away with the need for courtesy and intelligence in business life. A curt or indifferent response or an unpleasant tone of voice over the telephone can contribute much needless fric tion, estrange customers and affect the fate of im portant deals. In the London Times recently appeared an ad vertisement seeking a "gentlewoman to answer tele phone; imt be courteous, even-tempered and patient." Porsonality, enthusiasm and intelligence were stated to mean everything, and either univer sity or high school education was made requisite. "I wanted a trained brain," the manager ex plained later. "Answering telephones is a job that es sentially requires judgment and tact." And he en gaged a young woman university graduate, at a sal ary compatible with her responsibility. The patience and willingness of telephone oper ators generally is not appreciated as much as is de served. These are not a part of the mechanism, but could be made increasingly important once the possi bility were recognized. NOT ON THE AGENDA. "Bring me my liar," a French king was wont to say when he wished to consult his history. Napoleon later referred to history as a fiction agreed upon. What then of the men who make history the states men and politicians? "I said in my haste, all men are liars," sang the psalmist. This is far from parliamentary language, and at those times when it degenerates from a philosophical generality to particulars, never fails to produce a great sputtering, very often ending in phy sical encounter. The code of honor of the old south, which called upon one whose veracity is questioned to make a fool of himself by engaging in battle with his accuser quite properly was violated by Senators Glass and Heflin after each had passed the fighting word. They may both have been mistaken or both may have been right; the point is public affairs were not advanced an inch by their colloquy. The absence of violence in the senate chamber is the only encouraging part of the occurrence. The public is bored by the con troversy of the gentleman from Virginia and his equally gentlemanly colleague from Alabama. There are more important matters to be discussed than this, and the sooner personalities are dropped the better. PRIDE IN OMAHA'S PARKS. Omaha has several beautiful parks, the product of the foresight and public spirit of its civic leaders. Even the smallest of these green breathing spots fur nishes grateful shade and relaxation. Picnickers, golfers, swimmers, children and nature lovers each find joy in them. Even though in these hot days when the streets of the city are so oppressive the parks are filled with outers, it is a fact that they are accepted as a matter of course rather than as the boon they are. That so many flowering plants should have been stripped in the spring by those who visited the parks speaks of a lack of pride in them. If the parks were really appreciated, people would not litter them with refuse from their lunches or in jure their beauty in any way. Kansas City has just devoted a week to the celebration of its handsome park system that may be either the outgrowth or the start of more civic pride. Band concerts, dinners, decorations and ceremonies of many kinds were held at which citizens dropped their business affairs to consider the progress of twenty-five years of effort at upbuilding the city's recreation facilities. Omaha's playgrounds help make life worth living here. They, too, are worthy of celebration and de serving of more consideration than they customarily receive. LEARNING HOW TO LEARN. Congratulations to Domminick Manoli, the only Central High school pupil to receive the highest pos sible grade in six courses. This is not so much because of the knowledge he has assimilated, for he will for get a good deal of that as the years pass by, but for the evident ability to concentrate his attention on the tasks assigned him. By the time he reaches man hood, unless he becomes an engineer or a teacher, he will lose his ability to work out problems of algebra, become a stranger to chemical formulae, to historical dates and many other facts that now seem so im portant. What will stick by him is the habit of persistent application, the ability to expand mentally an,d absorb new information. Those others, girls and boys, on-the honor list, have a similar advantage. Learning how to study is the chief thing to be gained from school after the fundamentals have been acquired. Yet who ever heard of a school where the technique of study was actually taught? The story of Queen Isabella pawning her jewels to aid Columbus in his discovery of America has given an exaggerated idea of the expense of the voyage. A historian's investigation indicates that the total cost of the expedition was $7,250, and that the salary of Christopher was $320, and that of his sailors $29.25 per man for the .round trip. The fever for standardization has taken hold of the police chiefs, who have voted in their interna tional convention for standard uniforms for all of ficers. Which would all be very nice except for the difference in temperature and climate. Surely some thing may still be left to local judgment. The longest day of the year having just passed, we are now heading for the longest night, and soon people will begin to' say, "How short the days are getting." A referendum election in Minneapolis returned a heavy vote against military training in the high schools. Compulsory pacifism, as 'twere. There'll be about one more trip for the prince of Wales, and that will be to the altar. Twrke Grruivat Women. Oman, Juna r:.Tu tha Kdlior of Tha Ilea; The greateat American uman. without a juetion of doubt l lleh n Keller. Her hmidnap., hr Mlrnta. her grnlua for the iliacvrn nient of truth, her gentle UiIi, hi-r gi'neroiia uttltuda towitnt Iut fi-llow rreaturea all qualify her for Ihu hlglirvt honor w run luaenw, I mihiuit the following hiinit.s to complete the "Jury" of her lur for the coiialderHi"ii ' the South American woman nm the 12 areata! women of thu Imied BtHtea. Ji.naAil.Lm. Jeann-ii llanklii. 'eraldine rarrar. Maia.rrt . hanger. Susan llaakell. (.. ,.,r w,ok r lrtie Hal ey. Lillian li U'.m Winifred Ba.-llle8trM.r. Thea women are (treat hecuimo luy are sound on the aorlnl prob-l-nm of tha generation. Thoy mc progressive the only people) his tory notice.. Nobody remembers a eactloimry: the people who de i IS" Mr Kreat 11'" I" 'lie verdict ... iMill.MA.N 1)1 KK. Ilrtmn's I'roMi'utor IU-hmU Career f Crime. I'ilKer. Neb., June 22. To the Kd Itor of The Il.e: I have reread my Niimmlnir up as county attorney In Pundy county l the wherein r.rnent HunIi nnw L-n ...... OPINION- What Editors Elsewhere Are Saying Miiiilay tahull, from iha Harvard Cuuri'r. Cecil Matthews of tha Ulna Hill lender hit undertaken to live hi views of the tjunduy bitaeball ques tion In anawer to the announce ment of a lied I'lniid newapuper that It will refuse to writ up the bull names that take pine there on Kun diiy. Cecil naka If the Jted Cloud pit per refuses peraomil mention of any church member found "Joyrld lim" on Sunday uml aayn that he considers himself atrictly within the confines of an orthodox religion that epuriiN liaachall on Sunday, when he crank up old Lis and leave n cloud of amokn and gas behind us he wal lua forth Into the country, honking at crona roads ami with a cut-out wide open. "Hundreds of people," lie nrgucH, "eunnot afford cum. They can only find the opportunity of witnessing a truly Aniericun sport as their Sun day portion, labor dnya mid labor hours denying them this privilege on other days." Then he clinches Ills argument by saying: "Ank the preachers 1n America. They know t lint Sunday busebnll iHn't themen- Ing the church half as much us some other kinds of amusement. Wlutt Im n I'l-ogrcKohc? From the HI. Lnula !lohe.mnt,rat. What Is a progressive? Does anybody know? Ten years ago it Harmony in Religion. Omaha. June 21. To the Editor of The Bee: There is much division in the churches today. I think It would be wise for the churches to meet in conference and discuss and settle their differences, even if it should necessitate consolidation of churches, as was attempted in the late interchurch movement. All de nominations are saying that they are right in their particular form of worship. Of course, all are entitled to worship God as they understand, but why the difference of opinion? It is not necessary, according to the teachings of our Lord. After all, there is only one way to heaven. As we are all supposedly traveling that way, then why don't we try to agree? FLOYD LOGAN. Seven cities claimed Homer, but four counties are claiming Fred Brown. 'The Old. Old Story." Omaha. June 23. To the Editor of The Bee: I wonder if the time will ever come when the police au thorities of our land will cease to accus the criminal who for the time being is in the public limelight with all the unaccounted-for crimes of the past. It sure gives one a pain to read these accusation periodically. QUERY. supported the progressive party. Hut that party was created by ItooHevelt and when he returned to the repuhllcnn party In 1916 It per ished. Heforo tho purty was cre uted, however, the term progressive republicans began to be applied to certain political leaders who were opposed to the high tariff rates of the Payne-Aldrlch measure, were hopllle to large corporations, espe- clitlly tho railroads, and were more or less Insurgent against party or ganizations. Senators La Follette of Wisconsin, Cummins of Iowa and Beverldge of Indiana were among these leaders. This movement was an Internal revolt against the repub lican party of that day. inaugurated largely by party leaders. The term "progressive" Is now be inir annlled to candidates for Im portant republican nominations who have won their fights against the party organization. In discussing the primary elections in Indiana and Pennsylvania we said that "these two victories may indicate a strong trend toward progressiyism, but we think that both are mainly the result of a growing spirit of in dependence among voters and a growing antagonism to party ma chines and machine methods." To the extent that it appears to be a revolt against party organization this movement is in line with that which developed in 1909 and 1910, but whether it can be called "pro gressive" in the sense of opposition to party policies is yet to be seen. The nomination of Pinchot was uurely a state affair. National poli tics did not figure in it at all. In the same primary Pepper, a con servative candidate for the senate, received a very large majority. Op position to the national adminis tration did not develop In the elec tion. Feeling against congress may have caused the defeat of a number of republican members of the pres ent house who were seeking renomi nation, but there was no evidence of antagonism to Harding. Ing Silas. Hullev in ism i .....'1! wa d'nnltely applied to unyone who "Mercy but munier ' those who kill." I ulso'sald In clos Ing my argument to Ihe irv r- member that the greatest, best and deepest morcv is avei-v uh,,,., to the greutcst number and the'most deserving when complete Justice Is meted out. In one of mv leiinea i n. . Mickey I said: "Hush hna throat- ened to kill others If ho gets out. . iercy is a grand principle of life out let it be shown tn , v.A a ", to those who are injured or Hume io oe. ana nor in ihnn i,. desire It morely to repeat their uuuiuua crimes. I also said to Governor Mickey Aiy judgment rests nnnn fh of the nubile having nwt ,h...k its chosen reDrenentativea the rc cuting officers, the court including Bwum juage ana sworn Jury, and ... nuiFicme eouri or our common wealth, all of whom have declared unanimously that Bush Is a cold blooded murderer, and have agreed that life Imprisonment is a mltlcnteii sentence, the supreme court declar ing . . .. i . . , ... ii nay nnsiaxe nas been made it was when the Jury did not find for canital minlshmnni i i. lawyers to examine court dr.iiiUn. " "ee " ever in any other case a stronger statement has been made. I think that those who worked to get him out through perverted sym- pamy snould apologize tS all that Brown has injured since, for he is the finished nrodurt of their o,rm pathy. krnest Bush was horn tn TW.- mark, and when 6 years old is said to have stolen 300 Danish dollarR. His parents soon after came to America, settling at Loveland. Ia., and later moving to Omaha, where they lived when Bush killed Silas Bailey. They never lived in Red Willow county, that being another Bush family. His parents and sister, who then lived at Florence, and all his friends refrained from coming to Benkelman. during his eight months in Jail and during the trial of the boy for murder. He said he did not want them to "bawl around me." He had been in Wyoming before that. He had also been chased out of Omaha by the police for throwing of coal off of trains for people to gather up. He stopped in Rock county, where he stole a gun, watch, etc., from a Swede, and the authori ties put him on a train headed for Omaha, but he got off at Norfolk, worked for a farmer, bought a horse and went southwest, turning up in Dundy county, later using his horse to drag Bailey's body to the river. Hence his telling of burglary in Rock county when covering up his incarceration for murder when ques tioned by the pardoning board last July. He told a German for whom he first worked in Dundy county that he saw cowboys kill a young man in Wyoming, throw his body in a well and divide his herd. He hid under the sheriffs house one day while shackled and before the county had a cell, and crept far back on the undug gronnd. praying for night to come, when he would get out and crawl to a blacksmith's shop and file off the shackles. When first apprehended, when he was trying to leave before Bailey 's body was found, he hid in a pigpen. He swore on the stand that he had been in every town in Nebraska on a railroad. He was an adept at that age, playing good to his keepers, but watching and waiting for the one good chance to escape. I do not particularly blame the present pardoning board, but I do believe that no one should be par doned against the wishes of those who were instrumental in sending him up. There must be greater care in these matters. The law needs amendment. If there are those who claim that undue means have been used by the prosecution let them establish that fact. There is too much of a soft, sappy kind of sym pathy that turns criminals loose to prey on the innocent and unsuspect ing and not enough for those who are menaced or injured by them. The Brown-Bush case shows that much, at least. In the Bush case neither court nor jury asked for his release. Not one juryman has ever questioned his de cision and consequent verdict. Sen ator Norris, who was the judge in the case, declared it very wrong. James McParland, the head detective at Denver, the man who ran down the Molly Maguires in Pennsylvania, said that Bush would make one of the worst criminals in the country. He said Bush had it in him. I think he knew better than some of us of leES experience. And surely he knew better than those who boast of getting Bush out of the peni tentiary. B. F. J3BERHART. The Cluttered Dashboard. From the Scientific American. One of our Tlrltlsh contempo raries is responsible for the sugges tion that the ex-aviator is respon sible for the extraordinary multipli cation of instruments which is to be seen on comparison of the dash of a current automobile with a car of five or six years ago. re think the idea is a sound one, both as regards the origin of the practice and in its implication of the utter folly thereof. Instruments on the dash are. of course, inevitable, xsonoay waius io drive without a speedonffeter, an am meter, and an oil gage. But why a clock? Why an assorted collection of dials that make the inner eleva tion of one's petroleum-buggy re semble the control board of a cen tral power station, or an over- Here is a Very Unusual Opportunity for a nuinmer home at Lake Okoboji. See my ad in this paper tinder classified column: Furnished Homes. crowded pawimhop window ? Why the present mad race f'ov n mulli plliliy of ulckellej protuberance in the cockpit of the roud cruiser? I'erhapa the answer la to ha found in n recent ndveitUenieiit which coiislilerHlily tickled our rial billilea. The better part of an ex pensive page uhh devoted to pictur ing the supreme delight with which an owner might took upon the niilo. mat In cigar-lighter that exclusively features the advert Iser'a machine how from his proud station In this car he might look down with nmimrd contempt upon the unfortunate driver whose machine leaves him at thai mercy of the match. box when he wants a smoke. Now nil sorls of reasons dictate the choice of a car. We know a man whose wife was of such ex traordinary hulk that only one American car possessed a door that would admit her: but we have no doubt that somewhere there exists a mnn who would buy the X Y car to get tho clgur"-llghter. Hut are there enough of him to advor Use to? We hnve no doubt that some folk will prefer the car with 1S knnha and dials to the one with only 14. Two Kinds of leadership. Ktnm th I'hlraga Ially Nowa. I'nlon labor has been getting two widely different kinds of advice from Its lenders at the t'tnclnnatl conven tion. On the one hand Is Samuel (tampers, president of the American Federation of Labor, declaring that rather than see suth antagonistic conditions us now prevail among the building trade unions In Chicago he "would prefer that the unions repu diate their agreements." On the other hand Is John Donlln, president of the building trade de partment of the American Federation of Labor, asserting tnat "not oniy must the rights of the workers ne recoenlzed. but the rights of every other element should be equally protected." Retween those two platforms is exactly the difference that exists be tween repudiation and the square deal. Mr. Donlln realizes as com pletely as does Mr. Gompers the po sition of the building trade unions in Chicago, but he sees a more honor able way out. "For years," says Donlln, "we nave allowed the hired disturber to lead us into strikes that were preventable and were unjustifiable. . . . Put an end to Jurisdictional strikes. The pub lic is tired of strikes and lockouts and the Institutions that make them possible. Give an honest day's work for a just day's pay and regain the confidence of the public, which has been lost because of the many un necessary strikes." Following the Gompers platform of repudiation of agreements would make the loss of public confidence in union labor complete. The Donlln program would restore that confi dence. To the opinions of the straightforward representative of union labor the Daily News has had occasion to refer on numerous for mer occasions. Those opinions, while not the least lacking in sympathy with the full rights of labor, have not ignored labor's duties and re- pnibililir That lua polit y of (he square deal io all would obviaia (ha uaeleaa ami Ineacuaahla klrikea that I interfere nh iha prosperity of Ihe nation there can be no re.i son aide doubt. rcrforiithiif A ill nut la, K i nm iha l.iun Inn. Tha evidence lakeu by iha aelact committee on performing animals disposed of aoiue minor allegailona. us, for example, that the condition of traveling and caplUily hit det rimental to the Kll'ial health of the animals, Hut it established the ex ist e of cruelly, both in training and III ixlilliltliin. so definitely ih.it the committee might well huvu gone farther than the recommendation, ii summary of which wn print In au nt Io r column. They do not recom mend prohibition of all exhibition of performing animals. Put propoe the establishment of a central com. mitten of supervision with very full powers, the registration of trainers, right of access of representative of local uiillioritle. officer of the Koyul Society for tho Prevention of Cruelly to Animals, mid of the police to n uce of training or of exnini tlon, snd greatly increased penalties for crue lv to uu mills, iney ree ommend complete prohibition of the train nu imd performance or cnim pnnzees ami other anthropoid apes. a measure fully justified iy ine uis position of these creatures, tho la mentulile history of those already subjected to exploitation, and (ne grotesque Infelicity of the tricks which huve usually been forced on them. Thev direct sneclul attention to the cruelty often associated with the mechanical appliances employed where animals have been the victims of conjurers. They commend tho lnrger comlvora to the special at tention of tho proposed committee of supervision. Doubtless the growing sensitive ness of the public, the evidence as to the present conditions brought to light by tho committee, and tho reg ulations they propose, if embodied In a statute, will bring about a con siderable amelioration In the lot of captive animals. But we regret a general distinction made by the committee. They divide animals Into two groups, the one containing the larger, more powerful and fiercer creatures, the other those of a gentler disposition, less armed to resist Interference. They suggest that the former group requires the more diligent attention of the su pervising committee. But tnis ap pears to subordinate the interests of the animals to those of the trainers and of the public. In actual fact the most daring trainer would waste his efforts were he to attempt to break in an adult chimpanzee. Hon, or bear, by kindness or by cruelty, and the young of such beasts are at least as affectionate and docile as the young of domesticated or of de fenseless animals. Wild animals without natural powers of retalia tion and domesticated creatures, out of which the natural spirit has been One Hour Ho few the imura 'r Hr4ti) . '- on eti Tiuil by wiill shuffling feel im I neer i'ii Hut brings u hug of dual. Not run (ait i a I.I Ihiie 'i spaikl when a gil'f la dolt And we re any once niyie, not avail l hose Pomeiiiiii-a but only dull con tent, Ilk lead, Abandoned, disappointed hopes that grow To lluck despair and the rold toiles t'f dread, Theae, only, does lime aend. Then, ailil'lc Illy, He finals a flaming hour down the si III. Gray morning, illuming brightly sky mid sea. Iliiiiiiiing with color tveiy distant hill And waking the world to singing Joy at I'lM' Hut. oh, the d.irknca when that hour hna passed' loUlse iSaundeia in U'slle'a Weekly. bred, are the most likely victims of cruelty In training. If, ss we hope, the labor of th committee result In a charter for onlmiil. those most In need of protection should not be given lesser right. Growing Numbcra .Migratory lUnls. From Worlil'a Work. Five years ugo the mlgrutory bird treuty was ratified by -Canada and the Culled State In order to pro tect those bird thut winter in the t'nited Stales and breed In Canada. I'p to tho time the treuty wa signed the birds were playing a losing game, nnd gradually their numbers were shrinking some almost to tho verge of extinction. But the five years of protection thut has been given them has nl reuily brought about the results that were hoped for by the bird lovers of Canada and the t'nited States who urged the vasssgc of the treaty. On one 10-acre preserve In Kssex county, Ontario, a few years ago, seven geese and ducks came to so journ with the generous owner of the property. The next year tho seven returned and brought with them 11 more. Kach year the flock contlned to grow until this last spring between 3.000 and 4.000 appeared. The owner of this preserve, on which the terms of the treaty are carefully enforced, attributes the In crease In the number of birds en tirely to the protection given by the treaty. By this treaty the open sea sons for game bird! were made the same In all tne states ana provinces, and spring shooting waa prohibited. Insect-eating birds, which are of particular value In keeping down the insect pests, are granted continual protection. Very apparently the treaty Is a success, for the birds it was designed to protect are increasing in number. r,ULBRANSEN PLAYER PIANO ationalhlVriwL -Branded in uicrau I II 1 I I 1 1 1 1 1 . u 700 600 495 The Art and Music Store 1513-15 Douglas Street X Special Week of June 19 to 25 Inclusive! OLD FASHIONED (CHURNED) BUTTERMILK ALL YOU CAN DRINK FREE WITH ANY ORDER ALL SIX RESTAURANTS iimiiiiBiiiiaiMiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiwiiim mil I Announcing the Opening Rogers Newest Refreshment Parlors AT 411 So. 16th St. The distinctive feature of booths on our mezzanine floor, where delicious iced drinks and confections are served, makes Rogers' the most up-to-date parlor In which you may partake of refreshments. Make Rogers' mezzanine booths the place to meet your friends. Come in for that tasty bite while down town shopping. In ad dition to light lunches, a full line of boxed candies are to be had. On our opening day, Saturday, June 24, flowers will be given the ladies. Late Introducing the Latest Parisienne Modes Summer and Early Fall Footwear for Women In order to give our customers the benefits of our large purchasing power and still maintain our supremacy in both quality and style, we will place these 40 styles of shoes on sale Satur day, at 750 You wear the or iginal model when you wear a Drandeis Shoe. These creations have been designed in Paris and manufactured in New York city exclusively for J. L. Brandeis & Sons. The highest grade of materials and workmanship are embodied in these shoes. You are cordially invited to inspect these models, and prompt and courteous salesmen will be ready to serve you. Third Floor East Quality, style and fit are assured in a Drandeis Shoe.