THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1917. The Omaha bee PMLYjMORNINQ-EVSNINQ-STWDAT fOWDED Y EDWARD BOSEWATER. VICTOR RQSEWATER, EDITOR THE BEE FPBUSUmO COMfAWY. PBOP&lETOa. Bntand at Omaha toatoff iei ts Batona-elaai Mtm. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. Br Cartai DaRr m tar.. ....- aaata. u. Bil wtUMat tumla.... B no aa- rasr. n.H t.f I.M nhl Wtloat tW " VTT StSMhtf Sell, p.. ... - Sad bmi it chum T KMrai of Itmuunv M taUiaiT t OMaSa Be. ClKUlaUoft DapartaHal. HFMITTANCE bM kr . mn Mil iMkr. Oal 1 mi cxtjui. sot anfUd. I a! Mini taati OFFICES. I In Bnlldlnf. rhtrato Paiflrt On BMMU. (Ml Omha-ni n St. KMf Tori- jina.am Ooaartl KaffB-14 . Urn It. St IBM Njw B. of GMBjaMa. lala lltm Boltdtag. WaAiarUa 7:5 I4IB St. W. W. rWREe.PONDENCE. adtfvai fMURimWtlaia muting to am aad adnartal Matter la i aaa, Kaiumai uvparrawni. DECEMBER CIRCULATION 53,368 Daily Sunday 50,005 Sama aral.aVai far Of amath mrrH4 i Wiuua. Ctrculattoa Maottaf. I raora la by Dwllit Sajkacrlbara UaTtnf the elly aheakj have Tha Baa . aaalliit Is am. KMr cnaasat aa atas a raqnaatad. The next preparedness muit be for the id vent of Mr. Groundhog. What this country needs most urgently is a League to Suppress Pork in Congress. The rising cost of living lends effective first aid to those who contend we" are living too high. But why should anyone attempt to kill the king of Spain, the most inoffensive of all the European royalty? , Thrift is a good principle to Instill into youth" fui minds, but hasty action on the poor farm deal is not needed to carry the lesson to elders. : Four short weeks to the finish of the emigres and business piled high. Overtime work without extra pay presses annoyingly on eight-hour de fenders. The two Nebraska boys who have made a canoe trip all the way to New Orleans hare doubt less had a fine time of it. It will be different pad dling back I Not much timber remains on the county poor farm to shelter a speculative coon, but specula tive moles burrow beneath the surface and "get there just the same." When it comes to regal international courtesy expense doesn't count. The allied salutes in honor of the kaiser's birthday far exceeded the regula tion number of guns. Time and weariness qf will induced the New York hunger striker to take some nourishment. This gives the sob squad a welcome opening for more sleep and fewer screams. ' Another large allied steamer has gone to the bottom of the sea off the Irish coast. The score of war wrecks in that locality promises large busi ness in treasure salvage in the coming years of peace."' ' ' With all that money available for improve ments, it should not be hard for the Union Pa cific to find the million or two needed to give Omaha an up-to-date and adequate Union pas senger depot. Measured by results and expense, the homeward-bound "punitive expedition" constitutes a living exhibition of the "watchful waiting" policy. Reduced to figures the account stands: Results, 0: expense, $70,000,000. It it surely tough on Edgar Howard to hava to choose again between Wilson and Bryan as his "apostle of peace." Edgar must be saying to himself: "How happy I could be with either were t'other dear charmer away!" While the Omaha police team rolled in the dust of humiliation at Denver, the police of Coun cil Bluffs stuck to the home job and won a pack' age of 336 pints,. The lesson of this it that home opportunities rarely miss delivering the goods. The first month of the legislative session has been unusually tame and peculiarly devoid of sensations. It is up to somebody to start a fist fight on the floor or charge a colleague with crookedness, or at least denounce some poor lob byist for offensive attentions. S The corn belt is short more than five inches ' of moisture, as compared with this time a year ' ago, which means that we are due for several i heavy snows yet and copious spring rains if we i are to catch up to the mark where we ought to be. At any rate, keep your rubber shoes handy. The Gift of Enthusiasm -J. Osdsa Anaw A wonderful thing is this quality which we call enthusiasm. It is too often underrated as so much surplus and useless display of feeling, lacking in real substantiality. This is an enormous mistake. You can't go wrong in applying all the genuine . enthusiasm that you can stir up within you; for it is the power that moves the world. There is nothing comparable to it, in the things which it can accomplish. We can cut through the hardest rocks with a diamond drill and melt steel rails with a flame. We can tunnel through mountains and make our way through any sort of physical obstruction. We can checkmate and divert the very laws of nature, uy our science. But there is no power in the world than can cut through another man's mental opposition, ex cept persuasion. And persuasion is reason plus ntnusiasm, witn tne empnasis on enthusiasm. Enthusiasm is the art of high persuasion. And did you ever stop to think that your oroi ress is commensurate with your ability to move the minds of other neoDle? If vnu are a aaleaman this is pre-eminently so. t, Even if you are a clerk it is tne zest which you put into your work that ciiriiiuicb an appreciation in inc minu 01 your em plover. You have a good idea don't think that other people will recognize it at once. Columbus had a good idea, but he didn't get "across" with it '..without much of this high persuasion. If you would like to be a power among men cultivate enthusiasm. People will like you better for it: you will escape the dull routine of a me chanical existence and you wilt make headway " wherever you are. it cannot be otherwise, for this is the law of human life. Put your soul into uur work and not only will you find it pleasanter tvrry hour of the day, but people will believe in you just as they believe in electricity when they gel into touch with a dynamo. And remember this there is no secret about this "gift" of enthusiasm. It is the sure reward of deep, honest thought and hard, persistent labor, County Hospital Conditions. The periodic disclosures of intolerable condi tions at our county hospital and poor farm are again being made, but, unfortunately, there is nothing new in the situation which for years, with slight variations, has been equally bad. What we mean to say is that with the accommodations and the increasing pressure upon them the hos pital authorities are probably doing the best they can and that no one else could be expected to do much better. The county hospital problem, however, is not to be solved by mere outcry, but calls for a con structive policy based on the best modern hospital and charity experience. The basic defect lies in the fact that we attempt to do in one institution and under one management social work that should be wholly separated and for public wards calling for entirely different treatment. As The Bee has more than once said, what Douglas county needs is segregation of hospital, infirmary and detention place for insane and, perhaps, still further differentiation between men and women. We should, in truth, maintain a home for aged men and a home for aged women, a general hos pital for the indigent poor, a lying-in hospital, a tuberculosis hospital and a detention station for insane. We already have a detention home for children, but a distinction there should be made between children who are merely destitute and children who are wayward or incorrigible, be tween mere child unfortunates and the bad boys and girls who need discipline. No program for the county will be complete, either, without a workhouse or workfarm for the petty offenders now maintained in comfortable idleness at the countv iail. This is a pretentious prospectus not to be I fulfilled in a month or a year, but nothing short of it will answer requirements for a great, pro gressive and humane community like ours. Record Foreign Trade Naw Yard Jaoraal at Caainira How to Get Home Rule. One of the main things that brought about the adoption of the home rule amendment to the constitution of Nebraska was the prospect held out that it would relieve the legislature of its regular time-wasting performance of charter tink ering for Omaha and Lincoln yet, here ii the legislature still at it. If the lawmakers would imply refuse to do a thing and issue the ultima tum that these two cities look after their own af fairs the job would be finished. Suits Between Sovereign States. The United States is asked to issue a writ of mandamus ordering the sovereign state of West Virginia tp pay a huge judgment held by its sister state of Virginia. This is an entirely novel pro ceeding and will be watched with much interest by all who art interested in our form of govern ment. It involves the compulsory power of the nation over a state. This power has been estab lished in other ways, but never in its suggested form. Suits between states are not novel, as over boundary lines, water and other rights, and points that may be thus adjudicated. Some years ago South Dakota acted at an agency through which' to compel the state of Tennessee to settle with the holder of disputed bonds. This subterfuge was not retorted to in the tuit between the two Vir ginias, the issue being a division of the state debt as it Mood in 1861, when the separation took place. Old Virginia holdt the judgment of the supreme court of the United States, but cannot collect, as the legislature of West Virginia declines to levy the tax for payment. It may well be doubted if the supreme court, itself the guardian of constitu tional liberty, will undertake to order a state to perform tn act the doing of which it entirely within the discretion of the state. Such an order would entirely overturn not only the doctrine of state rights, but the balance between the three branches of our government If West Virginia is willing tp assnme whatever of obloquy attaches to declining to pay a juagment aeot, mat wouia seem to be within its choice, and not to be disturbed "by even he highest court in the land. . Peace Through the 8 word. ' Emperor William's address to his people on his birthday, when he laid Germany is seeking peace through the sword, squares well with Presw dent Wilson I message, delivered a few days ear lier. , Peace of the world for the future must de pend on sufficient force to support the righteous determinations of the council of nations. Present day expressions may emanate from different sources, and for divergent reasons, hut they tend to the same end. The principle enunciated has the support of all, but the method of its appli cation presents many difficulties. Harmony must be established between two opposed fundamentals whether the state or the individual is the unit. This is not impossible, since harmony consists not in unanimity, but in balance. Adjustment is a matter of accommodation, details of which must be carefully considered and thoughtfully worked out. The peace of the world will be established and maintained through the sword in proper control. Trousers Not Yet for Woman. . Mere man will feel some glow of gratitude to the authorities of Munich, who have forbidden woman to assume male habiliments till necessity requires. This restores in some measure a right that has been man's since the days of Moses at least. To be sure, a twilight zone between the garb of the sexes has always existed, in which masculine women and feminine men might, find opportunity for indulgence of personal taste or idiosyncracy in dress, but the women generally have conceded to man the right to wear the breeches. One of the odd effects of the world war has been a stimulus to feminism, which, curi ously enough, hat found expression in the inva sion of man's dressing room, where the dear ones have taken over his socks, his pants, his neckties and other external coverings and decorations, thus doing much to obliterate outward and visible signs that distinguish between the sexes. The order from Munich may not have come in time to save the loot, but it shows at least one spot in which man is assured of protection if not respect in his distinctive garb.. Someone complains that the electric lighting company charges a higher rate for service to in habitants of the strip lying between Omaha and Benson than to the Inhabitants of either of these incorporated cities. That's easily remedied! Just come in and be annexed to us and pay city taxes like the rest of us with the same right to enjoy the same public utility benefits. ' A federal recall on the mayor of Seattle insures deeper agitation than the original recall and re election. An indictment charging bribery and violation of revenue laws seriously impairs the usefulness of t promising reformer. The foreign trade of this country for 1916 rose far above the record of any preceding year and there it little probability that it will be exceeded for some time to come, though the present year is full of uncertainty. It is a familiar fact that the large rise in export values was due to the ab normal condition produced by the war in Europe, which did not have its full effect upon the trade of this country before the end of 1915. What are classed as war exports exceeded $2,500,000,000, which is more than the entire value of exports in any year prior to 1915. That value exceeded $2, 000,000,000 for the first time in 1911. It reached more than $3,550,000,000 in 1915 and last year amounted to $5,481,000,000. Much of what are classed as war exports, less than $1,000,000,000 of which consisted of munitions of war in the strict sense, were such supplies as would probably have shown some increase under the demands of peaceful times, consisting of various materials for machinery, and implements and meaqs of trans portation available for either war or peace. In cluded are horses and mules, automobiles, boots and shoes and certain chemicals. The figures are also affected by abnormal prices for many articles. In the last year there was an unexampled in crease in imports. The value of these reached $1, 000,000,000 for the first time in 1904. The maxi mum before the war in Europe was $1,800,000,000 in 1912. After this there was a slight falling off until and including 1915, when the total was $1, 772,000,000. Last year it reached $2,392,000,000. Even that left a phenomenal balance, or excess of exports, amounting to $3,000,000,000, or much more than the total value of the imports. Thit balance compares with $1,778,000,000 the preceding year, which was far above any previous excess of exports, the highest having been $692,000,000 in 1913. The intermediate year of 1914, shortly after the middle of which the war broke out, this excess was only a little above $325,000,000. In some months of that year the balance was on the other side. With an excess of over $3,000,000,000 in value of exports over imports last year there was a net inward movement of gold amounting to $530, 000,000. This exceeded by more than $100,000,000 that of the preceding year, which was far above all previous records, and yet it was little more than one-sixth ot the exports to be paid for in excess of merchandise imports. The rest of the payment, to a large but unrecorded extent, came from a re turn of American securities held abroad, and to another large extent from foreign borrowing in this country in government loans and banking credits, The situation is utterly abnormal and calls for caution and foresight in commercial and financial calculation for some time to come. How long it will last no man can tell, but it is certain to be followed by a period of reaction which will have to be dealt with skillfully and cautiously to avoid trouble. February as a Bluffer BalHaaara AmmIibm February it the prime lackey of winter. It it the month that ttirs up the clouds to an angry pitch of blizzardt and of polar temperatures that race through the days, as the defiance by winter of advance agents of spring. For there are ad vance agents seen in the lengthening days and in an occasional puff of spring air through the stratas of cold. It falls to February to seek to distract attention from the shortening of the term of the grisly monarch. It falls to the month that is almost at hand to throw out a big blanket of snow against the sun and to cause the noonday orb to glow with a chill and forbidding light. It falls to February to cover up the fields and the lence rails with the ermine substance and then to point to its work and claim that the reign of win ter shall be unchallenged And it really do appear to be the case some times during February. So cold does it become and so desolate and dreary that one has to em ploy the imagination to its full effect to realize how a rare day of spring can feet. And there comes over the spirit the disturbing thought that perhaps there never will be a thaw and perhaps winter will wield the wand perpetually and the snowbird be the last vocalist of the air. This is all part of the stage play of winter, the grandiloquent, the lusty and louty braggart, the spoiler and the splurger. Winter delights in noth ing so much as in terrorism. Terror is the stock in trade of February. It carries with it a full list of the ills that man is heir to; it carries with it the full outfit -of weather horrors; it carries along with it a calendar that shortens the month to twenty-eight days aa if in mockery, for fact is that February is the longest of the months in ex perience. Yet, it is alt a blind; February is a bluff. Win ter perpetuates its fraud during the month of February. For close following the old fighter against all that is lovely and mild and pleasing is found March, with its broom to brush the snow of February from the portals of spring. But this is advancing too far. The only purpose at present being to serve notice in advance that nv matter how fierce may be the manifestations of winter in February, it is but the last big effort of the king to hold to his icicle throne. People and Events ' Richard Wagner accomplished more after the age of fifty than before. "Parsifal" was written when he was 64 years old. The English city of Bradford now derives a revenue of $300,000 a year from what was for merly the unutilized refuse of the city sewers. A rope of 258 large pearls, formerly worn by Queen Victoria and bequeathed . by her to the duchess of Albany, was sold in London recently for $13,500. . It hat been computed that the average indi vidual in the civilized world uses eight matches a day. I hree millions of them are struck every minute of the year. An Oregon judge, evidently a live member of the gas wagon host, advocates a return to the whipping post for automobile thieves. Why not revive the methods by which the pioneers dis couraged horse-thieving? Ocean traffic yields handsome profits these stirring times. A Philadelphia schooner bought for $35,000 a year ago and engaged in the Bra zillian trade already has netted its owners $68,000 ana is now valued at J,ouo. A phantom taxi and a phantom chauffeur, to gether dipped into Chicago's treasury for $104 ii payment of phantom rides certified by a city em ploye. The incident is considered a live example ot malting tne gnost walk. Less than a year ago Philadelohia voted SI 14. 500,000 for public improvements. The bonds re ceived a great popular majority, which induced the administration to extend the improvement plan, necessitating more bonds. A special elec tion is called tor April to vote $9,000,000 more. louncnmen are waist high in clover. The dry lawmakers of Tennessee plan to show 'em all how to hammer the wets good and nlentv. Last week four new laws were enacted dealing with wholesalers and bootleggers, prohibiting locker clubs, making bootlegging a felony and forbidding soliciting whisky orders. A "bone drv" bill is booked to go through the chute this week. I he laurels ot Kansas are in danger. Billy Sunday is now billed ahead for eighteen months. The salvation of Buffalo has just begun and will continue eight weeks, and New York gets in the Sunday whirl beginning April 7. The invasion of Chicago starts September 24, and Washington, December 31. St. Louis and Los Angeles are the big sinners booked for successive ounches during: the first half of 1918. Rnatnn'a farewell collection netted $53,000, passing Phila delphia by $1,000 and setting a hot pace for subse quent sinnoids. ptaBBTTsarTpe-y Health Hint For the Day. Do not allow the temperature of the room In which you are working to rite higher than sixty-live or sev enty degrees Fahrenheit, as more heat lessens the comfort ana emciency in work. One Tear Aago Today in the Wtr. United States note asking specific disavowal of sinking of Lusitania reached Berlin. Official recort rave twenty-tnree killed and twenty-nine Injured at re sult of two Zeppelin raids on Paris. Turks aald to have fled from Er zerum, which city was now surrounded by Russians. Berlin reported Germans had Tt tained all ground gained In their drive near Neuvllle and south of the Somme. In Omaha Thirty Yrars Ago. The Omaha Odd Fellows' trustees held a meeting and elected officers for the ensuing year at followa: Henry Jackson, president; P. Olson, secre tary; F. B. Bryant, treasurer. W. A. Kelley, the retiring secretary, on the conclusion of the meeting, entertained the newly elected gentlemen at an ex cellent oyster and wine tupper, gotten up In Hlggin't best style. Dr. Oalbraith, the Union Pacific urgeon, who was Injured at Valley a few daya ago. It a Die to ot arouna on crutches and It la expected that he will be able to attend to business In a few days, A number of the members or tne Loyal Legion, -among whom were Meaira. Becbel, ewooe, wyman ana Curtis, left on the B. and M. train to attend the monthly meeting of the or der at Lincoln. Augustus Konntse. head of the great banking firm of Kountte Broth ers, New York, and the founder of the First National bank at Omaha, It in the city on a brief visit. It It becoming well known that Armour to me time ago made all hit arrangements for building immense packing houtet in South Omaha the coming season. Burglars broke into the house of F. W. Wettels, of the Omaha Bavings bank, on North Twenty-second. The Omaha Barbed Wire company hat prospered in such a manner In (he last year, that the stockholders have decided to Increase their plant and working capacity by Increasing the capital stock to il 00,000. This Day In History. 1(41 King Charles I ot England was beheaded at Whitehall. 1754 John Lansing, chancellor of New York, who opposed the Federal Constitution, born at Albany. Died In New York City, December 12, 1829. 1797 John Fairfield, governor of Maine during the celebrated Aroo ttook dltturbance, born at Saco, Me. Died In Washington, D. C, December 14, 1847. 181 Nathaniel P. Banks, civil war commander, governor of Massachus etts and speaker of the national house, born at Waltham, Matt. Died there, September 1, 1894. IMS Attempted assassination of President Jackson at the Capitol by Richard Lawrence. 1147 The earl of Ebrttr took oath at governor-general ot Canada. 1867 The Evangelical Alliance ot the United Statet waa organised In New York City. 1889 Crown Prince Rudolph of Austria-Hungary, died under myster ious circumstances at Meyerltng. 1894 The United Btatee flag waa fired on In the harbor of Rio de Janeiro, by the inaurgenta engaged In the Brazilian war. 1S00 William Ooebel waa thot by an assassin at .Frankfort, Ky.: legislative boards declared him elected governor. 1801 Representative! of the royal houses of Europe arrived in England to attend the funeral ot Queen Vic toria. 1905 Warsaw, Poland, was re ported under mob rule. 1901 King Frederick VIII, acceded to the throne of Denmark. The Day We Celebrate. Right Rev. Arthur L. Williams, Episcopal bishop of Nebraska, born at Owen Sound, Ontario, tizty-one years ago today. Most Rev. William J. Walsh, Catho lic archbishop of Dublin and Primate of Ireland, born In Dublin, seventy years ago today. Franklin D. Roosevelt, anrtstanj secretary of the United Statet navy, born at Hyde Park, N. T., thirty-five years ago today. General J. Warren Keifer, former speaker of the national house of rep resentatives, born in Clark county, Ohio, eighty-one years ago today. Very Rev. Daniel Gordon, who re cently resigned aa principal of Queens university, Kingston, Ontario, born at Pictou, N, S seventy-two years ago today. Jacob M. Dickinson, former secre tary of war of the United States, born at Columbus, Mist., tixty-tlx years ago today. Walter J. Damrotch, celebrated musical composer and conductor, born at Breslau, Prussia, fifty-five years ago today. Timely Jottings and Reminders. The annual convention of the In ternational Welfare association, com monly known as the hoboes' conven tion, it scheduled to meet today at Buffalo. A meeting of the executive council of the Chamber of Commerce of the United Statet it to be held in Wash ington today, preliminary to the open ing ot the general convention of the organisation In that city tomorrow. A notable Shorthorn tale, to In clude a dispersion ot the famous herd from the farm of the late James J. Hill at Northcote, Minn., it to begin in Chicago today and will continue over tomorrow. The adoption of the daylight saving plan by setting the clock forward one hour in' the United Statet, through publio concurrence, from May 1 to September SO, will be considered by the National Daylight Saving conven tion, which begtna its session today at the Hotel Attor, in New York City. Storyette of the Day. A golfer who waa very anxious to tail everybody what fine score he had made met another member of the club whom he knew only casually and told him of hit fine round. "Do you know," I said, "I have ac complished an eighty-five today, tome thing I never hoped to do." "Good," said the listener, "I am awfully glad to hear that. You know who I am, don't you? I am the new member of the handicap committee." "Oh, you are?" said the player with the wonderful score. "You know whom I am, don't you T Well, I am the big gest liar In tha world." Oolfert' Mag-aaina Stop BcTK-rae to 8etl Poor Farm. Omaha, Jan. 29. To the Editor of The Bee: Douglas county needt and thould have a new hospital building of aufUclent tlze and modern equipment to humanely care for all indigents and Insane who are compelled to seek its shelter, but to provide the funde for Its erection by telling the "county farm" would be a grievous mistake. This land (160 acres), If held an other generation will be in the heart of a city of 600,000 people and It could be made to produce income sufficient to support every public dependent In the county. One reason given for asking the legislature to past a special act au thorizing the county commissioners to sell the land without submitting the proposition to a vote of the people It not a sincere one, namely, the cost of holding a special election. The real reason Is that the people would never vote to make the sale. Experience shows that seldom, if ever, the people vote to tell public land owned by a city or county, and, at usual, the peo ple are right. They can hold it tree from all taxes and its increase In value benefits all, Vote bonds to build the hospital, either on the present site or, It best, buy another more suitable, but keep the land. Let ua bequeath tomething of value to the next generation In re turn for the "bonded indebtedness which they will Inherit. C. F. M'GREW. Why Not Omaha for the Capital. Omaha, Jan. 29. To the Editor of The Bee: The question of erecting a new state capitol la again being agi tated and thould receive the serious consideration of the people of the state. The capital of a state, unlike a county seat where people go to pay taxes, etc., need not necessarily be anywhere near the center ot the state, but Its location thould be near the main arterial of the state, sightly, ele vated, commanding and where the nat ural surroundings, scenery and acces. sibllity are of the best the state can afford. While Lincoln is a nice, quiet city and very suitable for many of the state institutions now located there, It does not possess any natural features typical of the west, except the open prairie. It has neither lake, bluff or river, It miles away from one of the createst railways in the world, which runs through the entire length of the state, and thousands of people pass through Nebraska every year who never tee itt capital. The new buildlnir should be located in Omaha, or near It, on one of the solendid bluffs or elevations command lng a view of America's greatest river, the Missouri, with Its wonderful isl ands, bars, bluffs, lakes and foliage, scenery unsurpassed In the world. Minnesota placed Its capitol on'the bluffs of the Mississippi, Massachu setts, Maryland and many other of the statet placed thelra on the shores of the ocean or close to a magnificent stream and why should not Nebraska have Its capital at Omaha, the indus trial wonder of the great west. J. J. B. Appreciative of Omaha Art. Omaha, Jan. 27. To the Editor of The Bee: I note with pleasure the space given to the pictures on exhibi tion by the Omaha Art Gild, an organ ization ot which this city may well be proud, for Its growth since itt very In ception hat been steadily upward. The hard-working members deserve from us the most generous praise, the high est appreciation, the warmest encour agement and loyal support for thelc splendid efforts In our behalf. The artists ot the Gild have made good. The four fine reproductions in The Bee prove this fact But why, in com mon fairness, should not the honors be divided? Why give prominence only to the efforts of the men. As I understand It the Omaha Art Gild is not exclusively a man's organization or a "stag" coterie. There are some women connected with It and they know how to paint In fact after an Impartial survey ot the pictures In the gallery I fail to see that in any respect the feminine members have fallen be low the men in conforming to the standard Mr. Wallace sets. I have no wish to decry the work of those special artists whom The Bee has delighted to honor. Mr. Wallace cer tainly deserves first place, for all his portraits are full of power, expression and life, and in my opinion "Pensive Awhile She Dreams Awake!" is the loveliest thing in the collection. But In whkt essential attribute, quality or attraction is Doane Powell's "Jocelyn" or Charles M. Fuchs' "Portrait of My Sister" superior to the picture entitled "Reverie" by Cordelia Johnson? Not In faithfulness of outline, harmony of pose, trueness of coloring and expres sion, surety and most emphatically not in strength or In atmosphere. "Reverie" Is a living canvass worthy of Mr. Wallace himself. And wherefore eliminate the land scapes, many of which, painted though they are by mere women, are deserv ing of a place in the very best Omaha collection that has been painstakingly and expensively acquired by either the indefatigable "Frienda of Art" or the exclusively up-to-date ' Society of Fine Arts." "The Sunlit Path," by Augusta Knight for example, breathes of poetry and Inspiration; "Evening" is an exquisite little study. And there are many others, such aa Jennie Lich novsky's "Sketch Near Bellevue," "Sand Dunes," by Gertrude M. Young; "Golden October," by Pamela Sylves ter; "The Beach," by Rosa Harris, all charming and full of merit. In the distribution ot honors they should not be forgotten. Oh, well, what in the name of all the old masters does the art editor of The Bee know about true art anyway? If I had Fortunatus' purse I'd buy every picture in that exhibit at prices that would float every artist among them full sail on the sea of prosperity and fame, and then I'd present them to Omaha at a nucleus for the splendid collection we mean to have one of these days when we build our own are gallery and become a real "art cen- . . . . ti 1 1 tyi herns ler. Anu m mo - wlehlng the Gild all the prosper ty, a the satisfaction In ambitious work, well achieved, all tne joy in man ment that can possibly be crowded into one brief year for 191J- 2150 South Thirty-third Street Democracy Founded on Religious Freedotn. . aa Tn tha VMitor of The Bee: I congratulate Archbishop Harty on tne aeciurnuuu i v.k... so pleasing and fundamental, an opinion ordinary in conception, but most extraordinary in declaration. Bishop Harty on a recent occasion declared tor Christian democracy, a principle so altruistic and fundamental to the very life of the nation. kh nn vesterdav. con tinues today and will endure on tomor row, because itt political democracy is made possiDie Dy mufi . it ... Mi A,miftA.nc to the Bianup nan . , truest Americanism and the principle most elemental to human life and the destiny of a nation. Because the po litical capacity and all the other ele ments of human progress of nations will be, at in the past history of the human race, in exact proportion to the wisdom and grandeur of their concep tion Ol Aimigniy uuu n, . t r .ukMHrni aa an in- terpretatlve formula, reveals the evo lutionary cause of the formation of the great American republic to be the ref ormation. I hope I have expressed underatanaingiy my . Tst.hnn TTnrtv'a declaration of individ ual religious freedom. SAID IN FUN. "Too claim to !. lM& nl lot.M "Yet you go around with a perpetual grin on your face. When you have loved and lost deference to the lady makes It proper not to appear to be too cheerful a loaer. ' LouiivUle Courier-Journal, Teacher, Jim Brown It tlcain hli feet aoroiti the floor, and he'a chewing gum." "Jim, you disobedient boy, take that nasty stuff oat of your mouth and pat your feet In."- Baltimore American. The Wife Playing bridge. "Did you win?" "No. I loat." "You ought to be aahamed of youmelf. Tou should have been at home looking after your children." Tonkers Statesman. l&VY WW MILUOVtMREd ABE 'Tou girls are all alike," he said. "What do you mean?" she asked. "Oh, you're all like Eve." "How so?" "Why, Eve took the first man that cam along, didn't she ?" Tonkers Statesman. ".Sharper was a vlctfm of the eard-lndec scheme." "How's that?" "He was caught marking the deck in a little mining town out west. M Puck. "Tour boy licked my Johnny. Tou should lecture him for hitting a boy smaller than himself." "Is that so! Well, you just go hack and lecture your kid on the imprudence of talking easay to a boy bigger than he is." -Boston Transcript. Mra. Blgby (relating her experience with a burglar) I heard a sort of noise and saw a pair of feet sticking out from under the bed. Caller Gracious I Burglar's? Mrs. Blgby No, my husband's. He had heard the noise, too. Judge. " "Do you think the word 'obey' ought to be dropped from the marriage ceremonial ?" "No. Let It stay. It doesn't make any more difference in the actual result than the eleotoral college." Washington Star. The Baby Grand for Your Home BrambachB'fcd 4 feat S iche. WiH tit in your favorite earner of your room. No matter how restricted the space area, this wonderful little grand piano re quires no more than an upright Renowned artists and musical conteTTatoriea have enthusias tically commended the remark able rich and full tone of this beautiful small grand. Pric $465 aad $485. A. HOSPECO. Krcrasrve distributors. 1511-1515 Oooclas Street Omaha, Nb. 200 ROOMS I ioo with bath IJsbNtJJ M'nSArTTf. SERVICE 1 ioo with toii.t n.oo wr-l' AND ECONOMY Bee Want-Ads at lc a Word When you stop to consider the quick, sore results are surely to be classed as a direct competitor of the High Cost of Living. waiiBiMiiiiiiiiinaiiMiiM