THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 1917. The Omaha Bee ? DAILY (M0RNINO-EVEN1NG SUNDAY rOUNPEO BY EDWAKD gOSEWATEH VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR THE BE8 PUBLISHING COM PAN V, PROPRIETOR, EatarH at Omaha poetoffica aa aecond-claas matter. . TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. , B, Carrier. Bt MatL Oatl aeS Bandar paraoata,l3e par fear. W.M ftailr entaeot Bunder " M " (,tala and Kudu " "e " M Ctenlns wiliout Buaoar...... w 1' e.eS Suadar Bee oelr - SH " l Pillr end Bandar Baa, ttm Taan la adreaee lit M Bend attir V ehanae of eddraea of trresularitf ta fejirart te Oauaa Baa, Clnsiletlaa Departawat. REMITTANCE ftranil sr draft eirewe ee poetal erdar. Only f-eeat stanr ukaa la Pinnanl at antall aeaouate. 1'anooaJ Cfceca, swept aa Oaaae tad eaetere eacaaaae. apt accepted. OFFICES. ftmiee Tne Baa Bultdine. Chicato Panrla'a fiu allduil. Boats Ootaaa-ZUS N St. Kew tare :M flflS ire. tnuaeit Bluffa H K. Mate BL BL lul-New B'k. of Ofaaitna. t.acola UUIe Balldlnfa WaaalmK-I3 HtB Bt. N. W. CORRESPONDENCE Addraaj aevauuiteaUMia raiatina la aaaa aad eSilerUJ Battel la Can Baa, Editorial Papartanat, FEBRUARY CIRCULATION 84,592 Daily Sunday, 50,466 aerare eUeoletlna far trie aiaatal eu&earieed aad stem la to DUai Vfllliam. Ctraulatlaa Maaatar. Sukacrlkara laavlaf l)ia lt aa.nld Ban Taa Baa BuVai ta Diea. Addraaa cheated aa ellea aa raauaatad. Quit wsst ig your food Bnd you'll 'hive more to tat and less to buy. The moat unlcindest cut of all: Boosting the alice of pie from 5 cents to 10 cents. Well, here'a to Pa Rourke and the boys; let us hope they trim the Mountaineers four straight, "Soap box" oratory will have to go to the dis card until we have more time to sow to the winds. Prudent economy in the home constitutes ef fective service for the nation as well as the fam ily. ; ' Persistent 'advertising brings results. For proof, look at those steadily-groping enlistment records. " A few shots from a German U-boat along our Atlantic coast will be a big help to the recruiting officers. , v The S. O. S. call to the plow and the spade falls on heedless eara of lawmakers. Are they afraid to go home? . i It is perfectly safe to announce that the mar Vet in this country for German imperial bonds has completely stumped. As a measure of preparedness for the May day drouth, the April rampage of the Missouri is I gross waste of good stuff, , ' ' A partial concession of needed help at the Omaha postoffice promises improvement in in different service. For small favors, thanksl "Slackers" from the other aide lost t haven of safety when Uncle Sam drew the sword. Mili tary ser vice it quite persistent in seeking out the man these days.; ' Wheat, corn, potatoes comprise the conquer ors of the year. Plant more of each and then some more.' The bigger -the crop, the greater" the . tri utnph of humanity. : With ateel prices at present levels, leaving those fallen bridge spans in the river bed is out of the question, to say nothing of the law against blocking navigation. I:.:.- .. ) ,i What a grand thing it would be if . We could go through from now to the end of the war with out a single American citizen, native or Natural ized, being held as a suspect for aiding the enemy. Mobiliiation campa must soon be the order of the day, and for that purpose the government should not disregard the advantages offered by the ready-to-hand quarters and equipment at Fort Crook,. Admiral Jellico tells us how Uncle Sam can aid the allies wilh' his navy. In the meantime, the navy of he allies is rendering invaluable service to Uncle Sam by keeping the German navy bottled tip. ; ' : The enlistment records show boya bearing mint distinguished names rallying to the colors. That's good, ao far as it goes. But when we mix in the real fight we will manufacture some new distinguished names. ' But when alt our 350 more of less thirst ouencheries are shut down by May day dryness, the pressure of demand upon' the Ice supply in Omaha ought to be sufficiently relieved to bring down the price a bit. ' Purchasers of used automobiles are warned to make sure in each case that they get a clear title. The "safety first" way is to deal onty with te- sponsible people. A sacrifice sale of a second hind automobile by an utter stranger in town in vites suspicion.' Nebraska Press Comment 1 York News-Tunes: An Omaha woman lost an Irish potato in a ftreet car and the scramble to find the tuber almost resulted in a riot call Hastings Tribune: The Omaha Bee is right when it says that In mobilizing our resources and turning all our national activities on an efficiency basis the postoffice and the mail service should not be overlooked. t Fort Calhoun Chronicle: Another Nebraska idol has fallen. But if Joe can come up smiling after, defeat, like another famous Nebraskan, whose front name is William, he will be able to command attention for aome time to come. Tlattsmouth Journal (Dem.): We used to talk about a ring in the state house when the republi cans were in control of the state. And there is just as big ring of democrats in the state house as there ever , was under republican rule, if not more prolific. We never had any love for rings, fither in state or county. Spencer Advocate: Hon. Billjennings Bryan, the big noise in the pacifist camp, now says he will enlist: as a private. Unadulterated bunkl W hen Uncle Sam raises a regiment of bald headed, over-fed men in the sear and the yellow of life, Bryan may have a chance to enlist as private along with the rest of us. Beatrice Express: i The Omaha Bee atates that much of the time of the present Nebraska legis lative session has been expended in tinkering with the banking laws. There seems to have been a general desire in the law-making body this year for tinkering with about every line of business it could, and none of the members seems to realize that too much tinkering will invariably put the entire machine out of running order. First 8hot of War With Germany. Germany achieves the distinction of firing the first shot in the war with the United States. One of the kaiser's U-boats launched a torpedo, its target being a torpedo boat destroyer of the American fleet, which was missed. This may be accepted as formally opening ac tive hostilities and need not be looked upon as at all surprising Last year the Deutachland and the V-SS demonstrated the ease with which vessels of their type could reach our shore, and the pres ence of enemy submarines in American waters has been expected from the beginning. Whether it is to establish a blockade of our Atlantic ports or to lurk in wait for a designated victim doesn't matter. Our navy is now to have its chance to guard the home coasts. Elusive and dangerous as the sub marine has proven, it can be combated, and the advice of Sir John Jelli.coe, based on the experi ence of the British navy in dealing with the prob lem, wilt be of great service to our forces, The incident will bring home forcibly that the war we have entered upon is not to be confined to land operations, nor to the exchange of mes sages. It is reality in its sternest sense, waged against a foe that uses every means of destruc tion devised by science. None will fatter because of this, however, and the power of the kaiser wilt be put down in time. The President's Warning. President Wilson's recital of the penalties for treason comes in good season. As he explains, these laws are not intended to check free speech', nor to restrict reasonable criticism of the gov ernment. None of our many privileges, howev.er, is more abused than that of free speech, for the sovereign citizen dearly loves to scold and even berate those he elects to serve him in office. But the ignorant and irresponsible have flagrantly violated this right on many occasions, at times exceeding all decency in their verbal onslaughts on government in general and the government in particular. They have even gone so. far as to burn the flag at a ceremonial dentonstration, an act for which the chief instigator was properly sent to prison. Most of this folly has been pa tiently abided in time of peace, but the situation of the nation is now such that demands a curb on idlrtonguea. Sober speaking is a good, practice for the citizen at alt times, but especially now. Law yet reigns in the United States and punish ment ghould surely follow its infraction. Ameri cans can not and will not put up with traitors at home. - , Put an End to the Discrimination. Omaha shippers have won another point in the long fight to do away with the discrimination practices against this city by railroads, tljis time the Interstate Commerce cofnmission declining to sanction an advance in freight rates on certain building materials. This gain, slight as it is, is gratifying and ought to encourage the Commercial club and its traffic bureau to keepup the fight. Especially is action needed in the glaring discrimi nation in favor of Kansas City on the passenger tariff out of Chicago. According to distance, the charge should be but 60 cents less to Kansas City than to Omaha, but, according to tariff actually charged, the difference is $2.05. The same lines serve both cities. Just why Omaha should suffer to this extent is nrjt plain, but the $1.45 differen tial in favor of our neighbor down the river has stood for some years now and it is almost time the discrimination was being done away with. Health Hint from Switzerland. The regulation of the Swiss government which prohibits the use of fresh bread is a health hint rather than a war measure. When the doctor orders you on a diet the first item in his list of forbidden things is fresh bread. The reason for this is plain; the chemical reaction that comes with baking. Is not complete until time for the evaporation of excess moisture has elapsed, thus making the day-old bread really the more palat able and nutritious; also, the drier the bread, the more thorough, the mastication. All of this con duces t better digestion and consequently to better, health. Finally, less bread is eaten to achieve the same result in nourishment and a saving in quantity it effected. "Stale" bread is actually the bread of good health, a fact long known to dieticians, but overlooked by Ameri cans, who have pampered their teeth at the ex pense of their bodies. Pan-American Unity In Evidence. The solidarity of the nations of the three Americas is emphatically evinced by the attitude of the various governments in the present crisis. Action of the United States in meeting the Ger man challenge ia approved and commended by alt, sava Mexico,, thus assuring us of the moral stu port desired above even the material in our diffi culties. It means, if it means anything, that Americans of all divisions are coming closer to gether. Their interests and their problems are akin, and their dangers are common. This has been recognized since the original declaration of the Monroe Doctrine. The United States has long stood as a leader in the new world, and while our national growth has overshadowed that of the others, our concern has not lessened, till now we have reached a point where we cart be of more service than ever to our smaller neighbors. A third of a century of Pan-American effort is now bearing fruit, and closer sympathy and greater concord of action between the Americas is certain for the future, - - - ' . American war news censorship is to be a mild institution, tending more to gentle persuasion than hammer swings. In the early days of the Paris censorship persuasion won the admiration of the press. On one occasion an editor was per suaded to omit an objectionable article when in answer to the question, "What if I refuse?!' the censor politely replied: "It will be my painful duty to confiscate your very , excellent publica tion." A word to the wise in war time is sufficient Each passing week tightens Omaha's grip on the lucky thirteenth place in the nation's record of bank clearings, Minneapolis and New Orleans are taking our financial dust, and Los Angeles, Milwaukee, St. Paul, Denver and Buffalo trail far behind the corn belt pacemaker. Omaha's speed already menaces Cincinnati's hold on twelfth place. If German emissariea were really trying to atir up a negro revolt in the south, as intimated, they would be making about aa bad a mistake as any they have made to aay nothing of being doomed to dismal disappointment. It has been proved time and again that there is no color line in Americanism. The Department of Agriculture Forests in Wartime. By Frederic J. Haikin Washington, D. C, April 15. One of the un expected little shortages that developed under the enormous demands for war material of the last three years was a lack of wood for gun-stocks. You cannot make a" good rifle-stock out of any kind of wood; there are only a few woods that will do, and the very best of all is American walnut. There was not enough seasoned American wal nut to meet the demand. A rifle only lasts a month on the, war-front, and the modern rifle has the stock running the full length of the barrel. There was a great cry from all the rifle factories for walnut. Plenty of green walnut was to be had, butt very little seasoned. What was needed was a man who could devise a process for season ing walnut in a few days or weeks, instead of waiting on nature to do it in long months. The man was found in the United States forest service. He was loaned to the biggest rifle manufac turer in the country, and he worked out a process for kiln-drying walnut that produced as fine a wood as any that could be seasoned. This man is said to know more about wood for rifle-stocks than any other expert in the world. This is only an incident, a detail of one branch of the munition problem, but it is an important detail and a significant incident. It points to pre paredness in the forest service, and the forest service has important work to do in war. Our forest resources will he a great asset to ourselves and our allies in this emergency. Take the matter of so-called "naval stores," for instance. Naval stores is a term that covers the pine products which are needed in naval work tar, pitch, turpentine and rosin. These products are essential to every navy. In 1799 the American congress appropriated $200,(100 to buy up a timber reserve in the south for purposes of naval construction. The timber bought was live oak, which was then the most valuable material for ship-building: In 1916 Henry S. Graves, chief forester of the United States, remarked that the congress would have done better to locate its timber reserves in the yellow pine forests instead of the live oak, since the naval stores yielded by yellow pine have become of far greater import ance in the navy than timber itself. Today the southern pine forests furnish 90 per cent of the naval stores used in the world. With infinite labor the French government has built up a smaller industry of the same sort on the barren sand duns of southern France. Today such land with mature trees on it sells for $160 an acre in France. Since the French have had to plan and labor for the resources that nature gave to America gratis, they have developed the most efificient methods possible for utilizing what they have built up. The forest service laboratories have studied the French methods, and are introducing into our own south a system of tapping the trees for turpentine which will increase the total yield of a tree four-fold. Another interesting thing in connection with the naval stores industry in war-time is the use of rosin in shrapnel. The space between the bul lets in a shrapnel shell is filled with rosin. The powde7"used in such shells is also a wood prod uctblack powder, made from charcoal. In spite of the universal use of smokeless powder, black powder is still used for the explosive charge in shrapnel. No great explosive force is needed for the purpose, and the cloud of smoke given off by black powder is just what the gunners need to mark the bursting point of their shells to correct their range. . The forest service is one of the most im portant divisions of the Department of Agricul ture. Numberless wood products are needed in modern warfare, and the forest products labora tory is in a position to work out the best meth ods for producing and testing them, as well as to furnish the government with the necessary in spectors to pass on the materials offered. On the other hand, the actual forest administration work of the forest service is of vital importance to the nation's meat supply, through its regulation and conservation of the grazing. Since the grating on national forests has been under departmental supervision, .the number of animals that the range supports has increased over 50 per cent, and the grazing is in better con dition than it was when the service took charge. There are still 280.000,000 acres of public land, used largely for grazing, which tie outside the na tional forests, not under government supervision. These enormous areas are not supporting nearly as many meat animals as they might under a bet ter system, A wise emergency war measure, and one which would benefit the country greatly, would be the placing of the grazing on these pub lic lands under the supervision of the experts of the forest service." Many minor uses are found for wood products in war. Finely ground fresh wood flour is said to make a fine dressing for wounds. On the Rus sian front many of the soldiers are wearing paper shirts, made from wood pulp. They borrow this custom from the Japanese. The shirts have many advantages for war work, notably because they are so cheap that they solve the problem of clean liness, and thus do much, to prevent wound infec tion, A dirty paper shirt can be burned and re placed with a fresh one. The garments are said to he warm and comfortable. In Ahe matter of timber resources, as a source of wood and its numerous products, the United States has an inexhaustible supply. More im portant even than the raw material is the knowl edge and the methods necessary to make use of it. The time has come when the years of, patient work by the scientists of the Department will bear its fruit. ' . p People and Events Princeton, N. J policemen ' take no chance with st crowd of students pulling off a regular hazing stunt. Instead of trying to haul a ring leader to jail they take him aside, administer pun ishment of the paddle style and leave him free to go and commune with his injured feelings. . Similarity of names accounts for Cheboygan, Mich., being included in the anti-war straw votes cast at municipal, elections in -Wisconsin last week. Sheboygan, Wis., on revised returns, cast 10 votes to 1 against putting up a fight. The Michigan town naturally resents being included in the mollycoddle class. William Falconer, when quite a kiddie in Scotch kilts, blew into Chicago and n 1842 settled on a patch of land outside town, when Indians roamed thereabouts. Last week he celebrated his 100th birthday and showed a certified check for $400,000 for the last homestead. The centenarian has one son. He calls him "Willie." Villie is 62. San Francisco is about to stretch its cramped municipal legs through the southern bluffs and into San Mateo county. A tunnel through Twin peaks neara completion, which will, afford easy access to an attractive residence section. Besides, none of the county experienced the last shake down and its comparative immunity from tremors makes it an ideal home section. Postmaster General Burleson advises his happy family that the "Virgin Islands," just transferred from Denmark, are "in the United States" offi cially and get the standard rates and uncertainties of the postal system. For the information of Nasbys op the job the p. m. g. imparts the news that Guam in the Pacific, Gum in the Panama canal zone and Tutuila Islands stand in at regu lar rates. The town of Monroe, Wis,, which piled up a prize stack of itraw votes against going to war, iets the outside world into the secret of its strenu ous pacifist activities. Eastern pacifist i.toney put steam into the campaign and thel voters cheerily helped the donors put the wherewith in circulation. Advertisements for ' votes against war were paid for by Detroit and New York organizations. f taBBr-BBr-SBBtBr- ja ax Proverb for the Day. A now bt,oom sweeps clean-. One Tear Ago Today In the War. French Chamber of Deputies or dered clocks set forward an hour. Trebizond, an Important town on the Black Hba, raptured by Russians in combined land and Be& attack. United States warned Germany that unless submarine attacks on mer chant ships were abandonM diplo matic relations would be severed. In Omaha Thirty Years Ago. Detective Kellgh has four men and a wildcat guarding the Erck buiUllns on North Sixteenth street, over which aerloua trouble has arisen between Err k and Larkln. Drs. Feabody, Galbraith and Henry Homan have returned from a two days' trip to Clarke, where they en Joyed a most successful hunt, coming in loaded down with Mexican ducks, which they distributed with their com pliments among a large circle of ac quaintances. The county commissioners are con sidering how they can make room in the county building for another court room by removing the law library to one of the rooms now occupied by County Superintendent Bruner. Articles of incorporation were filed In the county clerk's office of the Lowe Avenue Building association. The capital stock of the association Is placed at (112,000 and the incor porators are E. S. Rowley, Charles K. Collins. Nat M. Brlgham and H. B. lrey. At a meeting of the republicans of the Sixth ward, at the corner of Saunders and Clark, the following delegates to the state convention were appointed: L. S. Lcifkwood, C. A. Gil lette, B. C. Smith, J. F. Page, Charles Rowles and Joseph V. Fooshee. The election Judges appointed were Carl Axford and Louis LltUffkM and the clerks Edward Anderson and W. R. Matthias. This Day In' History. 1689 People of Boston and vicinity overthrew the government and ar rested' Governor Andros and his adherents. 1775 Paul Revere rode from Charleston, 8. C, with 3,000 fresh patriots. ' 1780 Lord Cornwallis arrived at Charleston, S. C, with 3,000 fresh British troops. 1781 The British evacuated Charleston, S. C, after firing build ings and left their badly wounded be hind them. 1814 Congress authorized the col lection and preservation ' of flags, standards and colors captured by the land or naval forces of the United States. 1847 American army of 8,000, un der General Scott, routed 12,000 Mexicans under 'Santa Ana, at battle of Cerro Gordo. ' 1892 The "first defenders" of Washington in 1861 held a reunion at Reading, Pa. The Day We Celebrate. C. B. Liver, president of the C. B. Liver company, dealing in butcher and bar supplies, was born April 18, 1861, at Same, Switzerland. He came to this country in 1873 and has been in his present business here in Omaha since 1892. H. N. Wood, the insurance man, is Just 68 years old today. He is a grad uate of Tabor college and has spent thirty-two years la the service of the company he Is now with. He also served on the school board. Samuel Burns, Jr., of Burns, Brinker ft Co., brokers, was born April 18, 1876, right here in Omaha. He studied at Dartmouth college and has been dealing in , commercial paper, stocks and bonds since 1903. John Mellen arrived in London, England, by the "Stork Route" Just fifty-five years ago today. Omaha now points him out as general agent of the Northwestern route. Charles M. Schwab, who has offered his mammoth steel plants for the serv ice of the government, born at Wil liamsburg, Fa., fifty-live years ago to day. John R. Hegeman, an eminent leader in New York insurance and financial circles, born in Brooklyn, N. T., seventy-three years ago today. Clarence S. Darrow, Chicago attor ney, prominent for his participation in cases Involving organized labor, born at Kinsman, O., sixty years ago today. Johnny Kllbane, champion ' feather weight pugilist, born at Cleveland, ,0., twenty-eight years ago today. Fred Fulton, wU-known heavy weight pugilist, born at Blue Rapids, Kan., twenty-five years ago today. George, E. (Duffy) Lewis, outfielder of the Boston American league base ball team, born in San Francisco twenty-nine years ago today. Timely Jottings and Reminders. Mayors of leading cities throughout the country have responded to the Invitations extended by the mayors' committee on national defense to set apart today and tomorrow as national recruiting days. The National Academy of Sciences, in annual session at Washington, has decided to devote today to a discus sion of the work of the national re search coancll in relation to the na tional defense. James W,' Gerard, American am bassador to Germany before the sev erance of diplomatic relations, is to tell of some of his experiences in Berlin at a banquet to be given In his honor in Boston tonight. Storyefte of the Day. One of Yale's best foot ball men, who is as, generous in praise -of the work of his fellow-athletes as he la modest concerning his own, was show ing a girl he had known some time about the practice field. "See Harklns, over there?" he asked pointing to one of the substitutes. "In a year he'll be our best man." "Oh, Charlie!" exclaimed the girl, blushing. "This is so sudden!" New York Times. THE BRAVE AT HOME. Philadelphia Ledger. The maid who blnda her warrtor'a aaah -With amlla that well her pain dlseemblea, The while beneath her drooping laah Ona atormy teardrop haitaa and trembles. Though heaven alone rerorda the tear. And fama anal) never know her' atory, Her heart haa shed a drop aa dear Aa e'er bedewed the field of slory. The wire whe slrda her huaband'a aword Mld tittle onea who weep and wonder. And bravely epeaha the checrins word. What thoush her heart be renl'aeunder, . Doomeal nlahtlv In her dreama to hear The bolta of death around him rattle, Haa ahed aa aaered blood aa e'er Waa poured upon the fteld mt battle. The mother who conceala her srtet While la her breaat her eon aha preaaea, Then breathea a few brave worda and brief. Kleelng the patriot brow ahe blceeca. With na one but her eecret God To know the palu that wetgha upon her, Sheda holy bleed aa e'er the aod Received on freedom's field of honor. Snggenu Mexican Labor. Yankton. 8. D., April 14. To the Editor of The Bfe: Our country be In at war with Germany, we will re quire every acre of land to be ptft into cropi to feed our people aa well as the European nations. Travelina- through the country, I find the railroads and the farmers have been short of labor the past three years, and with our farm boys enlisting. It's going; to cause a (rood deal of land to lie Idle and unproduc tive. While traveling along the bor der the past six months, I And thou sands of good Mexicans employed on the farms, doing work It would be most Impossible to get our laborers to do; that Is. clearing land of brush and timber and putting In winter crops. I find them all very law-abiding and good farm laborers, working early and late and never complaining. The win ter crops will be harvested in a few weeks and those people will have very little to do until next December. v Here is where our farmers could secure help until next Docember. The best plan would be for our farmers In a locality where help is. short to band i ether where they need six or more, its the Mexican, same as any other na tionality, likes to see some of his coun trymen occasionally to visit, so they would be more contented. The farmer would have to pay their' transporta tion to points as Kansas City, St. Joe, Omaha and Sioux City, where they could meet them and take them to their farms. I have watched the Mexican laborer the past ten years and find him law abiding honest and sober. In south ern Texas they employ the Mexican labor in preference to the negro. J. M. COLLINS. SUNNY GEMS. HoitMt Willi, your mamma t11 m yott alwsyg mind hr. Touthfut GuMtt Yttf, ma'am, I do. h -told m whrn I cams lo dinner her today not to aak for another pUro of pie. and I ain't nevtr done It, though I want sue awful bad. Bait Imoro American. "Are you In favor of tbla daylight saving chfrne?" "Welt, -yes, you might aay ao," aald th ranaret hue. "You ioe, 1 don't uae mucn of it," Buffalo Express. "There are jut aa good fieh In the sra ever were caught." "So everybody aaya. I often think that one might be able to aell a lot of totk In k fish trum on that hypotheaU." Louiavtlle Courier-Journal. "I think our new bookkeeper muil have been a cirrus performer at one time." "Why aoT" "H makoa every entry with a flourish." Judge. M'hy Malls Are Delayed. Omaha, April 16. To the Editor of The Bee: Much has been said recent ly In regard to the so-called reorgani sation of the railway mall service: I would like to add a few lines of solid truth. I am a postal clerk In the railway mail service with many years experiencA. I entered the railway mall service over twenty years ago. During all of these years, on the Union Psclflc railway1, known in the service as Omaha-Ogden It. P. O. train No. 5, an exclusive mail train, with three 60-foot mail cars and three or more storage cars to carry the go ahead mail, we found from sixteen to eighteen clerks assigned to this par ticular train. This number of clerks was able to complete the distribution of the mail on the train between Omaha and Cheyenne, so that when the train arrived at Cheyenne all mail was worked up for all the connecting lines in the entire west and northwest. In those days the service was such that the paper and package mall made the same time as the first class mall did. Today we find only eleven clerks on this same train; there has been no de crease in the volume of the mail; on the other hand, there has been an ac tual increase. This number of clerks is sufficient to work only the first class mail. Papers and parcels mailed, for example, in Omaha, are sent to the terminal, where they are held up until such time as the force there is able to work them over, then they are dispatched on this train, in a pouch which Is thrown into the next ter minal to be worked in that terminal again, and the same process repeated until they finally reach their destina tion, from three days to a week later than they formerly did. Men trained to the highest type of efficiency in the distribution of the mail have been taken from this train and placed in the terminals to do this work, the de partment thereby 'being able to cut their salary from $1,600 per year to $1,200, but it also cuts the efficiency of the service about 50 per cent. RAILWAY POSTAL CLERK. W IS t FOftQW AMb im HfVvtTO QOTO 0NL-tK Vou "mm HE WlX MMW fcOMEOVlE BSE rrt UE GETS OV)Y? NOT .P "THE Out glES HIM M.MrrV "Tour thesis atrikti me as being a triflt Inconsistent." "As to how?" "In one paragraph you speak of our for bears. In the nest you try to show that we are descended from monkeys." Indianapolis News. 'T was rether rmharrassed," remarkM Senator Sorghum, "when I fortrot my speech and had to make an abrupt finish.'' "What happened?" 'I made the hit of my life. They printed articles about me aa one great statesman who could be depended on not to filibuster." Washington Star. "Jack, dear, which would you rather lose me or my money?" "You. dearest." "Oh, Jack!" "But I would. Because, you see, dear. If I lost you I would have the money to offer a large reward and get you back again." "Tou darling boy." Boston Transcript. W. R. Dutton of Colfax, la., haa bought the Merna Postal Card of C. J. Hall, who has published the paper for number of years. Preparedness Our prescription department is always in a state of prepared ness. We carry full stock of all rare drugs as well as the staples and are prepared at any time to fill any prescription. Because of this state of pre paredness, you are assured of correctly compounded prescrip tions without delay. We never use aubstitutes you get the prescription just as the doctor orders. Sherman & McDonnell Drug Company 5 Good Drug Stores. tS e u naaav-TtaM an Buaaaa Have Your Grafonola Sent Out This Week On Your Own Terms. Make your home a home of MUSIC all the latest rec ords vocal and instrument alare now in stock, Prices, $15, $35, $50, $75, $100 Call at our store, 17th and Howard, end ask to hear some of the new and wonderful in strumental and vocal pieces. "Milwaukee Six" at 6:05 P. M. A Chicago train for Omaha people, which meets the most discriminating demand for good service and equip ment. It leaves Omaha Union station at 6 :05 P.M. via the CHICAGO MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY arriving Chicago 7 ;45 A.M. Equipped with luxurious lounging observation car with smoking compartment, library and buffet, steel sleepers with "longer, higher and wider" berths, dining car service that cannot be excelled, comfortable chair cars and coach es, this is YOUR train especially arranged for your com fort and convenience. Three other good trains' to Chicago daily. - ' ' Telephone us for your reservations and tickets. W. E. Bock, City Passing er Agent 1317 Farnam St., Omaha 'Phonai Douglas 283 J he House of Taylor 400 Baths!fr 600 Rooms 1 1 HOTEL MARTINIQUE Broadway. 32d St., New York Om Block from Ponnsylrania Station Equally Conranieift for Amuitmmti, , Shopping or B minus SH 157 pleasant room 9 a with prirata btith $2.50 PER DAY 257 Mcellcnt rooms with private ball), facing street, southern exposure. $3.00 PER DAY Also Attractive Rooms from $1.60. The Restaurant Prices Are Most Moderate.