THE BEE: OMAhA, VLY 13, 1017. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORN'iN'G-EVENING SUNDAY '" ' FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. PROPRIETOR. Entered at Umihi poalofficc aa second-clais matter. . TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Ity farrier. U WH Oaily end ItwMlaj , lUr tnmilh. per Jr. H.ffJ ' f)il wltbflut Mmlaj v " J .',nln and Ml ' ;, ; Cvtmnf without SunUij ' 4undr 8m ' "' . ,. T km nottw duns (Jdtti iff ifftsglnl to diify is Omaha Sf. Clrr-utaO'Ml IVj'Ttnieul v ' REMITTANCE Smut 65 inn. imn at fuatal prUtr. iHiij 3 wit ituni taken 10 payment of until unmnte. Perxwul duel, ticert 00 tlmaUe 480 ktfn exchange. t aeceiied. OFFICES. lmria-TI Buililws I himio PJ' H Hul!aia, ftnath Omli-4Ka; 8. 54!H Ht. New Vr- ' t'wit Btff-i4 N. Main Si. St. B'k. tf Comnj. Lliwoln Little Uuildmj . nsliintini-725 llta St. .V ... CORRESPONDENCE Add.ru cmamuiticulHioi relating to ne and dlUJfll suite to Omaha Km. Editorial PeiarlnmiL JUNE CIRCULATION 55,982 Daily Sunday, 50,986 awrat dim nation for the nioutu auUcribtd and aworn to si pwib. WUuaaia, OreiilallOB Mtuiaw. ' "subscribers leaving tha city ebould save Tha Bee mailed ta them. Addrtaa changed aa often aa raqueeted. Go it, Brusiloffl Go it, bear! 1 How those detectives do love one another! A cartoonist at Fargo lias been elected to con gress. Going up or down? The world ii just coming to appreciate how will Bismarck' work was done. Some of the political confusion at Berlin may be due to the efficiency of the American crop report A branch of the Federal Reserve bank will put Omaha almost where the city's relative import ance entitles it to be. Unless the big four on the west front pick up more speed the bear may beat them, paws down, to the finish at Berlin. One by one the ogres of decayed royalty are scrapped. The terrors of the Manchu dragon vanish as completely as divine right. Vastly increased quantities of coal are moving fo the fuel storehouses of the country. The chief delay is in moving the price in the right direction. Well, now that it is all over with, Governor Xtville can console himself with the thought that he could have had the commission had he insisted. New York brokers who are selling Liberty bonds at a discount of 20 cents on the thousand dollars are taking long chances of getting a little notoriety real cheap, The, Chicago Herald wastes much precious paper with maps of territory which Get many planned to conquer. A diagram of the earth would have served better and saved valuable space. The federal census bureau concedes Omaha's population to be 203,000, which almost equals the 210,000 home estimators have claimed. Just shows how we have been growing lately, and the end is far ahead, In the debate with Lloyd George, the German chancellor is handicapped. The British premier talks as the spirit and the occasion moves, white Bethmann-Holtweg must adjust his tones to his master's voice. The pulsing pull of war lends fresh vigor to the pick and shovel brigade in the silver camps of the" west. The steady flimb of the metal' to the AO-cent notch in 1917 shows the pull of Mars mightier than the" caloric of 18. . It is barely ten miles from Bucharest, the old, to jassy, the new capital of Serbia; yet American Minister TVopica traveled around the world to reach his new station. The longest way 'round proved safer than negotiating the Turco-Bul-Carian trenches'. ( Tht steel industry of the United States ha taken the lead in coming to an agreement with the government, the whole output, being placed .at the disposal of the authorities, the price to be tixsd latef, This is a good start oil the combina tion of patriotism and business. -' The army information bureau should work the muffler on some features of the French welcome to American troops. Flower showers and hand l.bscs bestowed by French women lends thrill ing local color to the story, but the social side lights are by no means attractive to all. Somewhat disfigured, but in the main sound, ' the cruiser Olympia survived the collision with uncharted rocks. The famous flagship of the battle of Manila bay deserves a long life for its association with Admiral Dewey and as a muffler of the blustering buttinsky, Admiral Diedrichs. Shock-absorbers are the latest thing in Ger man army efficiency on the west front. Composed of picked men, unmarried and without dependents, they head divisions of charging men and set a kilting pace for less Seasoned troops. The chances of shock-absorbers reaching "a ripe old age" are abewt equal to aviators in the same region. , . Lije of the Skyscraper New York World Builders and men of allied interests are dis cussing again the question of the lifetime of the modern skyscraper. When a. symposium on this subject was published along in 1)5, there still were in the foreground some "if of corrosion, vibration and electrolysis as affecting steel frames. Nevertheless, estimates of durability ranged from 5,000 years to a vague "forever." Today sees the old "ifs" happily disposed of. Tall structures torn down after a decade or more - of service have revealed their protected steel work good as new. But the very act through which this reassuring condition has been made known has shown forth the real, lurking enemy of the towering city edifice. The foe of the modern sky scraper is the more modern skyscraper. And the prophet is justified who in the 1905 symposium merely said for the many-storied structure that it would last "as long as we want it to." The builders of the Pyramids in Egypt did their work, saw that it was well after the fashion and let it alone. No questions intruded upon their attention of increasing ground rents, congesting business or the quest for light and air. Jt is dif ferent in New York. If our present skyscrapers never come to rank among earth's major antiquU ties, it will be not because the builders did not build for perpetuity but because the owners may have to rebuild to get higher than the current charges. , Political Upheaval In Germany. Meager and conflicting reports from Berlin admit only one conclusion, and that is that the contest between the Reichstag and the emperor has reached a highly critical stage. If Von Beth-iiiann-Hollweg has placed his resignation as chancellor before the emperor, the action may be taken as the final test of his loyalty. He is will ing to allow himself to be sacrificed to relieve his imperial master of tmbarrassment in dealing with a recalcitrant faction for the time in control of the assembly. It must be understood, though, that the chancellor is responsible to the emperor and not to the Reichstag. Therefore, it is difficult to believe that any of bis acts since the beginning of the war have been taken without full knowl edge and approval of the kaiser, and if his resig nation is now accepted it will be only because the emperor so wills. Ballot reform, no matter how extensive, would be a tub thrown to a whale, so long the funda mental organization of the German confedera tion remains unchanged. William' II has fairly countered this demand by taking the crown art'nee into counsel, saying any proposed change affects not only the present emperor but his successor. Concessions as to the empire will not affect the situation in Prussia, in which kingdom the junk ers are entrenched. The Reichstag's threat to re fuse further war credit may be discounted, as that would lead to such a situation as developed s. few years ago when the credit for the naval program was refused by the assembly and was secured through exercise by the emperor of his authority under the constitution to provide for the defense of the empire. ' A change in ministers and a definite rfatement of policy will very likely quiet the present s torm. In the meantime, none are deluded by any thought that the Germans are. not unified in the prosecution of the war. On the contrary, they were never more united. Omaha and the Federal Reserve Bank. It is now definitely settled that the assurance given Omaha some time ago that a branch of the federal reserve bank for our district would be opened in this city is to be made good, a second branch to be established at the same time in Denver, : . ' While this is gratifying recognition of the financial importance of Omaha, it cannot, and should not, stop Omaha's ambition to have the headquarters reserve bank for this district instead of a mere branch of it, assuming that the nres;nt district organization is maintained. The same considerations that are now bringing about the location of the branch can be urged with in creased force for the conversion of the branch into a main bank, although we may be sure that such a change would evoke a stronger opposition than the competition for one of the reserve banks in the first place. ; There is bound, however, even tually to be a rearrangement of the districts possibly also a reduction of their number, in which event Omaha and Kansas City would both become branches, one of Chicago and the other of St. Louis in which Omaha's position should be still more important. Whatever the developments may be, there fore, the present establishment of the Omaha branch should serve to keep us in line for another move upward at the next term, whenever it may come, and spur us to keep awake for it. t Profit' and Patriotism. President Wilson deftly sugercoats a pill he proposes to have the business concerns of the country j swallow, but underneath the carefully worded phrases of his letter dealing with the gen eral topic of purchases for public uses may be discerned a determination to head off any move to hold up the government on prices. His appeal to patriotism will have a decided moral effect, but in a general way much more than this is to be considered, Patriotism alone will not pay rent nor meet pay rolls, nor discharge any of the many obligations that rest on the management of any extensive enterprise. , The president has enumerated , the principal items in the business budget which largely deter mine selling prices good wages, reasonable profits and a surplus ample t6 take care of needed extensions of the business, which have to be pro vided for. This, of course, contemplates the pay ment of taxes the government levies for its heeds. Fixation of prices, however, may have its reflex in the lowering of collections on incomes and ex cess profits and so necessitate revision of the revenue laws. This will raise the further ques tion of relations between controlled and uncon trolled industries, with all its possibility for com plication and misunderstanding. The-whole situation is novel in our national experience, and, while the president and his boards may succeed in working out a plan that will be equitable and produce results, the one thing certain is that wealth must be more gen erally employed than ever in America, The idle dollar how is as much of a slacker as the idle man. , Morals and Military Service. .Much misunderstanding as to moral conditions in the army seems to arise from the misdirected energy of realous persons who art anxious to have pet schemes for controlling the enlisted youth incorporated in the discipline. Some little local debate has arisen over this point and little enough has been done to properly clean it up. Army officers are required by discipline passively to listen to much they know is wrong in every particular, avoiding all approach to dispute with, civilians, and out of this grows the misconception that prevails. As a matter of fact, the morals of the army are of an unusually high standard. The term "officer and gentleman" is not an empty phrase in the American service, but rtfeans alt it implies. These men have a much deeper interest in the welfare of their men than is understood by the outsider. An officer's own personal career depends on the efficiency of the men under his command and for whom he is responsible. If no other reason existed, his own personal standing urges him to jealously guard the health of his men and to see that they are well taken care of in every way. This requires not only observation, but actual oversight of the personal habits of all, and this control is rigidly enforced; "Single men in bar racks don't grow into plaster saints;" but com petent officers provide means whereby youthful propensities are prudently held in check and are able to produce results that warranted an expe rienced officer who was in service at Llano (Grande last summer in saying the moral tone of the great camp would compare favorably with that of any village in Nebraska. Fathers and mothers may be" sure that boys going out from home will be watched with utmost vigilance as to their behavior in the army and that none of them will come 'under influences more , destructive of good morals than are encountered in their daily walk through a city. A Navy for the Air Machines and Men By Frederic J. Haskin Washington, July 10. Not long ago there was an extended debate in the English House of Com mons over lome phase of the aircraft situation. Finally arose a member who is closely connected with the aircraft industry and the air service and remarked, "Gentlemen, if you will provide for the selection of our best aviator and our best aero plane, and the sending of that man and that ma chine to the United States, you will do more toward winning the war than has been done by all the debates that have been held in this house since August, 1914." This man, who knows the problems of building an immense fleet of aeroplanes and sending them to the front in a hurry, spoke from a realization of what are to be our two principal tasks in prepar ing our aerial navy. The task has two main parts getting the machines and getting the men. The speaker in the House of Commons indicated in a somewhat epigrammatic way that by sending its best battle-planes to America to serve for mod els and some of its best men to serve as instruc tors, England would be paving the way for the return of such aeroplanes and, such aviators in the ratio of a thousand to one. The United States will rftve the benefit of the best English and French experience in building battle-planes. A commission of 12S American ex perts is already in England studying methods and designs. A number of French aviators taken direct from the battle front have been in this country for some time acting in an advisory ca pacity. There is no reason to doubt that we will build as good machines as any that are built in Europe. In certain types, notably the small, very fast and somewhat unsafe machines used for at tack and pursuit, we have never built anything that quite equals the allies' machines. This is due partly to the fact that our manufacturers de liberately keep the factor of safety high at a sac rifice of some speed and quickness of response. Under the circumstances, this is the soundest policy. An aviator can learn his trade in a ma chine making 110 miles an hpur sufficiently well to give battle effectively in one that makes 130 miles. In the slower machine he is only about half as likely to be accidentally killed, and each aviator represents a national asset worth some thousands of dollars, taking six or. eight months of expert training to replace. On the other hand, in the manufacture of cer tain types of machines we already equal, if we do not excel, any nation on earth. Our heavy bomb ing planes, our seaplanes and our training planes are recognized as equal to the best. There is no reason to doubt that we will produce the machines for our air navy in sufficient quantity of the best types. The Aircraft Production board, which planned first to construct only 3,500 aeroplanes the first year, now feels confident that we can produce many times that number. In the very im portant matter of engines, indications are not lacking that we will develop a better type than either the English or the French. At the bureau of standards they are working on the perfection of an aeroplane engine to be known as the "AH America," which will be standardized for large scale production. Naturally no details are to be given out concerning the engine, but there have been enthusiastic unofficial reports concerning the performance of the model on which the standard type is said to be based. - Some of the more enthusiastic supporters of the aeroplane program speak of 100,000 aeroplanes flying over Germany. Eventually we could come to that, but it is a long way off. It .would mean at least 300,000 aeroplanes all in all, and our pend insr bill only calls for 42,000 engines. Moreover, 100,000 machines are probably more than we need. Ten thousand aviators can turn the scale, accord ing to many of the experts. In this nation of 100.000,000 there are surely 10,000 men to be found for the work as Rood as any on earth. They will need 'some 40,000 ma chines, and the entire strength of the aerial branch of the military service will need not far from 100,000 men if we are to have an actual flying service of 10,000 strong. This is about two-thirds of the war strength of the navy. The United States is making excellent prog ress toward building up the personnel of its air service. It is probable that some 1,400 men' will be graduated into active service by the beginning of September. After that time, of course, the output of aviators should increase from month to month. Some time ago it was decided to open technical training courses for aviation cadets in six of the leading American technical colleges. The Universities of California, Michigan, Illinois and Ohio, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Cornell university , sent representatives to Canada's great aviation training camp Camp Borden. American methods are modeled on the experience of Canada. These cadet courses are confined to theoretical and "ground" work; after two months those who qualify will be sent to aviation training grounds for training in the air. We will probably have twenty-four such training grounds erected at the cost of $1,000,000 each, in addition to four aviation grounds already exist ing belonging to the army and the navy and a du plicate American training ground in France. One of the leading features of the training situation is the need for expert instructors, whom we naturally cannot supply in great numbers. For such men we may call on the allies. Shafts Aimed at Omaha ,Franklin News: The tax-dodgers of Omaha are bu$y explaining that "it isn't so" and that Assessor Fitzgerald got his wires crossed when he hiked their assessments to so high a point. However, when the last complaint is heard it is more than likely that Omaha's assessment will be a good many thousand dollars more this year than it ever has been before. Friend Telegraph: ; Omaha is not feeling very jolly over the cantonment for this district going to Des Moines. Oh, well, Des Moines is but a suburb of Greater Omaha. Some complaints have been entered because Senator Hitchcock did not rush in and fill the breach. When Omaha turned down David Mercer it announced that it had received everything that ifwanted, and Sena tor Hitchcock and the government are evidently taking Omaha at its word. Lincoln Star: An Omaha dispatch the other day quoted "Billy" Sunday's joyful exclamation when, upon landing at the station in that city, he saw no smoke from a nearby brewery; but i visitor to Omaha next day was summed to find smoke rolling out of two or three big smoke stacks of the brewery that is within sight of the station. Was "Billy" trying to give the .me tropolis a doctored certificate of good character, or is near-beer smoke nq smoke at all? Nebraska Press Comment , Kearney Hub: The Lincoln Journal wonders whether this newspaper talk of Senator Hitch cock s aspirations is a joke or has some mean hie. It is not a joke. Nothing touching the Hitch cockian ambition is a joke. No man in public life today takes himself more seriously than Sena tor Hitchcock, and few of them as much so. The presidential gossip is a feeler and can be taken with absolute seriousness, ' r Tekamah Journal: State Auditor Smith has raised a storm of disapproval over his course in having a young woman discharged from the em ploy of the state in his office because she was un willing to buy a Liberty bond because she could not afford to spend the money at the time. The strange part of the attitude of Auditor Smith is that he is a son of a veteran and the young woman is the daughter of a veteran of the civil war. He has let his idea of patriotism warp his good judgment. The young woman was the best judge of her ability to buy a bond. He should have given her credit for being just as patriotic as he dared himself to be. He should right his error at once and reinstate her in her former position. Proverb for the day. Extreme eometimts meet. One Year Ago Today In the War. Eriusn captured wameu vvoous. Austrian dropped bombs on Padua, Italy. Russiana captured important heights southeast of "Slamakhtun in Armenia. In Omaha Thirty Years Ago. The Ladies' Aid society of Hanecom Park Methodist Episcopal church held a lawn social at the residence of Mr. Koons on Virginia avenue. A petition was presented to Mayor Broatch by the citizens whose domi ciles environ Jefferson park, praying that the Salvation Army be compelled to discontinue evening convocations in the square. Mr. and Mrs. D. W.' Hill announce the arrival of a bouncing daughter nine and a half pounds. J Im M. Benett has sent In his resig nation as superintendent of the Pullman-Pacific line and will indulge in a trip to Europe. While Jerry O'Brien was engaged in removing false portions of the bridge which is in course of construction on the Union Pacific road at Seventh street, one of the beams fell on his right foot and inflicted a serious bruise. The Metropolitan Gun emu held its initial shoot in which the following took part: Charles Farrer, James Borland, Chris Christiansen, John Umpherson, Carl McManus, Tom Mc Grane, Lou Webb, William Rate, Will Umpherson, Anton Christian, Mike McCarthy, Mathew Holmes, Lester Finley, Peter McCann. This Day In History. 1842 The duke of Orleans, eldest son of King Louis Philippe of France, was killed by a fall from his carriage. 1163 Capture of Yazoo City, Miss., by the federals. 1874 Attempt on the life of Prince Bismarck by Kullmann. 1878 Close of the Berlin congress for the settlement of the eastern ques tion. 1894 Patrick E. PrendergaEt exe cuted for the assassination of Mayor Carter Harrison of Chicago. 1895 Porflrio Diaz was re-eleeted president of Mexico without opposi tion. ' 1898 A mild type of yellow fever appeared among the American troops in Cuba. 1900 Bombardment of Tien Tsin by the allies, who lost 775 killed and wounded in eighteen hours' fighting. 1915 Martial law was proclaimed throughout Spain because of the rail road strikes. Hie Day We Celebrate. Richard M. Laverty is Just 43 today. He Is actively identified with the live stock commission business in Omaha. Dr. H. M. Allwine, the dentist, was born July 18, 1885, at Gainsburp, Pa. He graduated from Maryland univer sity at Baltimore. W. C. Langdon. veterinarian, is 65 today, He was born at Mt. Pleasant, N. J., and was located at Fargo, N. D., before cominsr to Omaha. Dr. Franklin H. Martin, Chicago surgeon, head of the department of medicine and surgery of the Council of National Defense, born at Ocono mowoc, Wis., sixty years ago today, Rt Hon. Walter Hume Long, sec retary of state for the colonies in the British cabinet, born at Bath, England, sixty-three years ago today. Orion M. Barber, associate judge of the United States court of customs appeals, born at Jamaica, Vt, sixty years ago today. ' Sidney Webb, eminent English economist and writer on social and in dustrial problems, born in London fifty-eight years ago today. Mary E. Woolley, president of Mt. Holyoke college, born at South Nor walk, Conn., flf ty-four years ago today. Timely Jottings and Reminders. "Friday, the thirteenth." The grand lodge of the order of Elks concludes its meeting in Boston today.- - Representatives of the motion pic ture industry throughout the country will assemble in Chicago today for the annual convention and exhibition of the Motion Picture Exhibitors' League of America. Another special meeting of the board of dlreotors of the National Base Ball league is to be held in New York City today to reopen the con troversy between J.ohn K. Tener, presi dent of the league, and John J. Mc Graw, manager of tha New York club. An auction sale of the furnishings of the St. Denis hotel today will mark the passing of the last of the famous old hotels that onoe flourished on lower Broadway, south of Fourteenth street, in New York City., A third American conference on de mocracy and terms of peace, similar to the meetings held recently in New York City and Chicago, has been called to meet today in San Francisco. Storyette of the Day. S A man was very sick. He had a good doctor, but the doctor was pua aled about his case, so he held a con sultation. Four other doctors came, looked wise, shook their heads and went away, Then the original doctor summoned the patient's wife. "I must tell you that your husband is in a serious condition," he said. "If he is religiously inclined, I should ad vise that you send for a minister with out delay." "Yes, doctor," answered the wife. "Shall I Just get the family minister or will he need a consultation?" Cleveland Plain Dealer. SAND. Caxton'a Marailna. -1 obaerwd a locomotive in tha railroad yarda ona day. It was waiting- In tha roundhouse, whera tha locomotives atay; It wa panting- for the journey, it waa coaled and fully manned, And It had a box the fireman aa fllllns full of aand. It appeara that toeomotlvei cannot alwaya set a trip On their alender Iron pavement 'cause the wheela are apt to alip. And when they reach the allppery apot their tactica they command. And to sat srtp upon the rail they sprinkle it with aar.4. If your track ta ateep and hilly and you have e, heavy trade, And If thoae who've t"ne before you have the ralla quite allppery made; It you ever reach the summit of the upper tahleland, Tou'll find you'll have to do It with a liberal use of aand. If you atrlke eoma fritld weather and dli-. cover to your coat That you rs liable to allp on a heavy-coat of frost. Then aome prompt, decided action wiU be called Into demand; And you'll slide clear to tha bottom tf you haven't any aand. Tou can tet to any station that la on lift's schedule seen, - It there'a fire beneath the boiler of ambi tion's front machine. And you'll reach the place called Richtows at a rate of apeed that's trend If for all the allppery places you've a ood aupply of aand. .-'eX How to Check Disloyally. Omaha, July 13. To the Editor of The Bee: The findings of the State Council for National Defense will be accepted by the majority as true, but its conclusions as to the remedy being in a campaign of education are de cidedly lame. The glaring defect in the report is the omission of the names of German sympathizers, the effect of which is to cast suspicion upon many innocent men, including the most of the university professors. The time has come to name the tra'.tors or near-traitors and make ex amples of them. If the council will do its duty in that regard a campaign of ducation would take care of itself. The nation is at war, Let us aban don feather-duster methods. Scotch the snakes. LOYALIST. Too Much Leniency Shown. North Platfe, Neb., July 11. To the Editor of The Bee: A special dispatch from San Francisco says President Wilson has requested leniency be shown Henry Ruhl, the hotel man who shouted "hypocrite" when the presi dent's photograph was flashed on a screen In a moving picture house, and the case was dismissed accordingly. I some times feel that too much leniency is given to this class of people, and in this connection I wish to say that in this international struggle of democracy against autocracy Amer icans should hold to the thought that whether a foreign-born citizen be a German, Belgian, Frenchman, Span iard or Englishman he should be called upon to prove his Americanism. JOHN P. COADY. Cultivate Moral Couraee., Omaha, July 12. To the Editor of The Bee: It is at least as necessary for the people who remain at home in this hour of the nation's peril to cul tivate moral courage as It is for our splendid young men who go to the front to cultivate physical courage. While commending your sound edi torial referring to the Nebraska de fense council's report, as well as that report itself, I make this observation with special reference to the council's rtport. Now if there are business firms in this state who have threatened bank ers on account of the latter's interest in Liberty bond sales; if there are professors In our university who are disloyal or unpatriotic; if "most in fluential members of the Lutheran church" are pro-German at a time when our nation is at war with Ger many, then it is the right of the peo ple to know who are these business firms that would withdraw deposits from banks; it is their right to know who are the unpatriotic professors; It is their right to have pointed out to them the disloyal Lutherans. My protest is simply this, Mr. Edi tor: Neither the council nor bank ers should place all business interests, or even all German business men, un der suspicion. It Should not leave the matter in such light that every professor in the university must either be left under a cloud or come out in public and say, "Is it I to whom you refer?" It should not leave the peo ple in the dark so that they will look upon all "influential Lutherans" with distrust. It is the duty of the council to point out the things it has pointed out. It is still more its duty to name the disloyal people it has in mind. I admit that it requires moral courage to do this, but a defense council, with out moral courage is worse than no council at all. I sincerely trust that Nebraska's defense council is not of that character. Perhaps our council only published its statement as a warn ing. If that was its purpose I cannot approve of the publicity. Its first warning should have been private. If that should fail names should be fur nished, to the public. L. J. QUINBY. What Is Democracy? Omaha, July 11. To the Editor of The Bee: I have been reading with a goqd deal of interest mixed with curiosity of the way in which the word "democracy" is so freely used by the people of the United States, In cluding nearly all publications, I do not think the term democracy applies at all to the present fight throughout the world for the destruction of autoc racy. I think it should be called a fight for republicanism, and I will try to be as brief as the subject will per mit in elucidating my ideas on the subject, for it is a subject that inter ests all the people of the world today. The general definition of democracy that I find is: That government in which the people rule. A form of government in which the supreme, power is lodged in the hands of the people collectively, or in which the people exercise the powers of legisla tion. The basis of democracy is equal ity, as that of aristocracy is privilege. But equality of itself is no guarantee for liberty. Absolute democracies existed in antiquity and the middle ages. They never have endured for any length of time. History shows that absolute democracy is anything rather than a convertible term for lib erty. The definition of a democrat that I find is that rerson or party who adheres to the government of tre people and favors the extension of the right of suffrage to all classes of men. With such a definition before us I think it sounds very inconsistent for the press of tho United States to talk so glibly about democracy when it is well known that millions of men are kept from voting In this nation to day. We should show a little con sistency before thinking of democratiz ing the whole world. The United States is not a democ racy in any sense of the word. It is a republic. The definition of a repub lic is that of a commonwealth. A state in which the exercise of sov ereign power is lodged in representa-. Uvea elected by the people, rn modern usage it differs from a democracy or democratic state, in which the people exercise the powers of sovereignty in person. A republican government is de scribed as a government in the repub lican form, a government of the peo ple. It is usually put in opposition to a monarchical or aristocratic gov ernment. The fourth section of the fourth ar ticle .of the Constitution of the United States directs that "the United State? shall guarantee to every state in the union a republican form of govern ment." The form of government is guaranteed, which supposes a form al ready established, and this is the re publican form of government tie. United States has undertaker to pro tect. The heathen Chinee, as wc usU to call them, are more advanced to day than we are, for they do not claim to be what so many without knowing what they are talking about pall a de mocracy. The Chinese speak of the republic and of the republican army. The French people speak of the re public and of the republicans and the republican army of France. There is no democracy in the world today, and cannot be with sucn tre mendous populations. The only con sistent form of government is that of a republic and of republican instil u tiot:s. I think it is time a halt was called on the glib and free use of the word democracy, for it is not a consistent term to use at this time. The word democracy has been used so much of late that it causes a suspicion on the part of a great many people that there is something back of all of the use. of the term. When ithe United States constitution guarantees a republican form of government to. all the states of the union it Is time the twatidle about democracy was stopped and ta'!; of the republican form of government of the United States of America in stead. FRANK A. AGNEW. Preparation We have anticipated the drug needs of everyone. Not only have we every item usually found in first class drug stores, but we have made shopping easy for you by the convenient location of our five big stores. Safety, Satisfaction and Service Sherman & McConnell Drug Co. Five Good Drug Store. PETOSKEY THE NAPLES OF AMERICA Situated on Little Traveraa Bay on Mala Boat and Railroad lines. The Ideal Summer Resort Region x Perfect Climate, Pure Artesian Curative Waters, Invigorating Air, Scores of Small Inland Lakes, Excellent fishing and Motor floating. Golfing, Miles of Stone Hoadsl Many Picturesque Motor Trips. NO HAY FEVER. NO infantile paralyais. 1 BRING YOUR FAMILY For particulars and booklet, writs Joi. E. Niles, City Clerk. THE CUSHMAN HOTEL PETOSKEY Central to all this region; leading, most modern Hotel; Am. Plan. Write for Booklet W. L. McManua, Jr., Propr. HOTEL PURITM CommonwealfhAo8ton The Distinctive Boston House The Puritan is one of the Dost homelike hotels In the world. CI 1 t vt I It V I L Bee Want Ads Bring Best Kesulta. IllKvS" CHICAGO - gJ MIIWAUICEE g r r Ajfo st. paul 'H A Quick and Pleasant Journey "on "The Pacific Limited" l " Leave Omaha ' p. m. jTs' Arrives Chicago &50 a. m. (h, Allows the business man a full day at his office and l- jjcznili.ri i the opportunity to dins at horns. Arrival in Chicago it pf-u -rify ; timely for business or eastern connect ions. Another 'Zf.ZZiL ,1Jz: if ,9 convenience is an axchuiv Omaha-Chi ago tltev i'Msi0A. " cor in Uni0B s100 l 7:30 p- Wmi'ikl'm 4" wrer train leaves Omaha at 6:05 p. in, arrives WMWsjpi Chicago 7:45 a.m. WCfM04'Wte$k Sfl Care-DMHeTncfcAtma.BbckSlnab THE OMAHA BEE INFORMATION BUREAU Washington, D. C 1 Enclosed find a two-cent stamp, for which you will please send ma, entirely free, a copy of The Canning Book. Name , Street Address......... City i State.