Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 04, 1917, Page 6, Image 6

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    ' I , ' V THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, urn. '
BMB1IIIII aim. IN II
The Omaha Bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
FOUNDED BY EDWARD RQSEWATEst
VICTOR ROSEWATTErTeDITOR
THE BEK PUBLISHING COMPAXT. PROPRIETOR.
Entered at Omaha pewtofflce aa second-clan matter.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION
Bt Csrrler. My Malt.
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be OrraUtha Depaimenl
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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entitled to tbe m tor republication 0 all tea dispatches rtltI
10 tt at Bin othwvlM emilud In this paper and also tM local atws
imbuthad aereia. All aia o( poUcaiua ef eat special dispeubat
an also mmi
" REMITTANCE
Besrit sy drn. express or soetsl erder. Only I-eent sUbis) UU to
1tmX t aaull Ksnntt. Persoeal aback, trap ae Oaaba ana
uun SMBsnsn. not aoaamed.
OFFICES
Omaas Tae Re Bui Hint. ("titeaso F"Kr!e's 0s BolMlol.
SouiA 0fca ail N Bt- Kta Tk-ls riftk -
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Uneola Uule Ballduw. WaaalmtOB 1311 0 St.
CORRESPONDENCE
KMrmm enaiimnteitloBS ilun ta aawa and editorial Battar la
Upiaaa Baa. Editorial PeparunaM.
OCTOBER CIRCULATION
58,059 Daily Sunday, 51,752
armta eifcaltflon tm the naatfe subserlbsd and sworn to H Uwlttt
WiUiana. OicuiaUoa ataaaset.
Subscriber leebif tha city akould have Tea Baa sailed'
ta tfcesa. Address chanted aa ten aa reejoeeted.
From pigskin to books is bat a tep, but, oh J
what a weariness.
Count that day lost whose low descending sun
sees no early Christmas shopping done.
A bulging national treasury greets congress,
but does not encourage pork chops of the usual
brand.
The new wage schedule of train operatives maps
a significant point. Its size affords ample room
for compromise.
General Pershing proclaims the issue and the
outcome In nine words: "Germany can be, must
be, and will be, beaten."
Merely coincidence, probably, but it is sug
gestive that congress starts with the opening of
the indoor sports season. r
Unable to break into the war game abroad the
Chinese threaten a row among themselves. The
scrapping epidemic virtually belts the world.
Anthracite barons cheerfully 'grant wage boosts
so long as they do not diminish their fat dividends.
It cannot be said the barons are alone in that
respect '
Drives on purse strings crowd ' upon each
other's heels. Two beneficial results follow im
proved circulation and worthy welfare work
energized. - '
The fusion end of the' municipal campaign in
New York cost $1,000,000. Money put up a stiff
drive in the right direction, but fell painfully short
at the ballot box. j
Ten of the 206 millionaire incomes In this
country top $5,000,000 and over. A stiff income
tax to that quarter dispenses the benefits of sue
cessArf anti-fat treatment , . ..
Remember yoor newsboy by swelling his sales
of The Bee. You can help him earn a pair of good
thick mittens or a warm cap to keep- him com
fortable through the winter. ' '
The contributor to our letter box demanding
stoppage of food waste from keeping dogs should
have known what a hornets' nest he was stirring
up. "Love me, love my dog." .
Oratory and resolutions may be useful as a
local expression, but vigorous work on the spot ia
needed to stage a comeback in Russia and resto-e
the hobbled giant to a semblance of life.
Demands on the output of shorthand schools
exceeds the supply. A call for 5,000 members
of the stenographic profession for government
work foreshadows a war draft in a new direction.
The state supreme court strongly supports
the general conviction in asserting that stairs are
dangerous necessaries of living. Still, some un
reasonable critics maintain that courts are not
responsive to public Opinion.
If the government means business in holding
the packers down to 9 per cent war profits,
copious doses of the same medicine would pro
duce equally good results in other regulated di
rections. Pass a good thing around! ,
Closing up the business of German insurance
companies in Nebraska and throughout the coun
try maps another painful drive into,enemy vitals.
William the mighty did not dream when he
launched his thunderbolts, August 1, 1914, that the
subsequent crash would scuttle the business in
terests of his subjects throughout the world.
Husbands Going Up
1 Philadelphia Ledger
War plays havoc with men. Deep thinkers
are already discussing the effect of a shortage
upon the institution of matrimony, and are even
suggesting polygamy as a solution of the problem.
One aspect of it which just now seems ta concern
many girls who have sweethearts at the 'front is
whether love demands that they should marry
these if they come home crippled. Qerman effi
ciency is already engaged in a practical effort to
meet this issue. An advertisement in a German
newspaper, described as "typical," offers a wife
and home to an injured soldier on easy terms.
The advertiser, who is 22, modestly says that she
is "not bad looking." She lays greater emphasis
on other attractions. She has 14 fowls on her
arm, a large number in these days of food
scarcity, to say nothing of a pony, pigs, cows,
"two hams and some sausages now in process of
curing." These attractions should be sufficient;
but there are besides a piano and a flute, to make
pleasant evenings for a music loving German
household. Even life in war time should be
agreeable in these circumstances.
Nor is this all. This sensible girl, with all The
materials of a successful hausfrau at hand, does
- rot seek to bind a prospective husband by any
liard and fast promise. She has "no objection
to a separation if after six months of married life
incompatibility of character should manifest itself
m either side." It would be cynical to suggest
rliat the large number of injured soldiers and the
small number of girls who can offer them such
vantages gives her the best end of the bargain.
She is doubtless moved simply by the generous
desire to leave the man a loophole of freedom.
'Why don't the men propose, mamma?" The
writer of that once familiar song lived in times
when the women didn't propose at least direct
ly. Is not this frank method of asking for what
you want really the more excellent war? Aftef
tne war nusDanas are sure to go up like other
iniPV . a a ' -' -
Big Work Awaiting Congress.
The' present session for wtich congress has
just reconvened will probably sot be as epochal
as the extra session with which it started, but it
will have a full program of legislative business
to be transacted. Without needing to devote any
time to organization, both houses can buckle
down to the job which is big enough to taVe the
best thought and most strenuous endeavors of
every conscientious member.
One of the first and perhaps the most pressing
questions to be decided will be whether the decla
ration that a state of war exists shall be enlarged
to include Germany's allies Austria, Turkey and
Bulgaria. What was done by the last session was
to push the button and set the wheels in motion
for the prosecution of our part in the great world
war. None of this machinery, so far set up, can
be expected to turn out its work without further
strengthening by improvements or repairs. The
biggest supply of bills ever presented to a law
making body are in prospect and further revenue
raising and bond-issue provisions to make sure
that the money is forthcoming to pay the bills.
The current events in the war arena are also
likely to be reflected in the proceedings of con
gressto say nothing of the ever present incen
tive to the peace makers to start something pre
maturely. The great body of the members of both houses
will without question be found unwavering in the
support of a vigorous war policy as it may be out
lined from time to time by the president. It is
fair to assume also that after feeling pppular sen
timent at home the majority will be less tolerant
of backfiring and obstruction although we may
expect some great debates upon questions which
offer room for honest difference of opinion.
What Next for the Suffragists?
What shall be the next move on the suffrage
chess board in Nebraska? This is the question
expected to consume most of the time and atten
tion of our equal suffrage friends in their state
convention for which they are assembling here.
The Bee knows that its advice has not been
solicited and perhaps is not wanted, but we ven
ture none the less to recall the fact that we
pointed out in advance the complication which
the suffrage adv6cates were bringing down upon
themselves when they insisted last winter upon
pushing their limited suffrage bill through the
legislature. At that time we warned them in
these columns that the initiative and referendum
is a double acting device which may be used by
both sides. We told them then that their limited
suffrage law was a challenge to the antis to in
voke the referendum and that such a referendum
on the ballot in 1918 would make it dangerous
to resubmit at the same time with constitutional
amendment for complete suffrage. What The Bee
then forecasted is precisely what-has happened.
So what the suffrage conference must now
consider js whether it is more promising of suc
cess for the cause to fight it out on the line of the
limited suffrage referendum or by initiating a
constitutional amendment with the attending con'
fusion and divided effort, run the risk of losing
out on the one they want most, if not on both.
In practical politics, as in war, one fight at a
time is usually enough for most folks. There is
one way out for our suffrage friends If they are
ready to cut the Gordian knot suggested by the
recent Indiana decision declaring unconstitutional
a limited suffrage' law , similar to that passed in
Nebraska. If, bravely admitting their mistake,
the equal suffragists would go into court 'right
away and kock out the half measure foolishly
put through the legislature, they could then get
busy with initiative petitions for complete suf
frake by constitutional amendment and have them
filed in time to be voted on at the next election.
It goes without saying that if they' can carry
limited suffrage, they can just as easily with the
same effort carry unlimited suffrage. On the
other hand, another defeat occasioned by trying
to pack a double-header means another four years'
wait to say nothing of the effect on the national
movement 1 ; 1
" Away With Quarreling Pedagogues.
We have the word of 4 candidate for the
presidency of the Nebraska State Teach
ers' association, that the association intends to
elect its president and other officers and to select
a place of meeting in its own way, despite the at
tempts of marplots to prejudice the minds of
members. JOt those who are creating dissension;
we are told by Mr. Dixon: "These men are of
narrow educational vision and of small educa
tional calibre." He makes further observations
which are entitled to consideration by the teachers
as well as by the press and public of the state.
He can see no reason why the teachers should be
called upon to take sides as between the warring
factions of the two competing state, normal
schools. He admonishes the state teachers to
take action "uninfluenced by outside agencies,"
and to run their association affairs in their own
way.
The chief significance of this pronouncement
is that the time has come to rebuke the quarreling
factions within the association, and to clear the
atmosphere for the important work of education
which must ever be its chief concern. These
strictures reveal a state of things within the asso
ciation which calls for the serious consideration of
its leaders whosi duty it is to adopt measures to
promote harmony among the members.
It is difficult to see why the selection of a
meeting place should control the choice of offi
cers. The one hinges upon the question of ade
quate hotel and transportation facilities; the other,
upon the qualifications of men and women as
educators. Is it not patent that the bestowal of
official honors should b,t kept wholly separate
from the rivalries incident to the selection of a
meeting place? Certainly there are men in the
association broad enough to see this, and strong
enough to convince the members of the wisdom
of divorcing the issues.
The reference to "outside influences" no doubt
relates to the underground currents which in the
past have had something to do with the elevation
of men to the chief offices of the association.
However that may be, all Nebraska "will bail
the day when petty quarreling in the association
shall be eliminated to the end that its whole,
energies may be directed j toward the goal of
higher efficiency in school administration. This
is all the more to be desired because the war is
imposing new responsibilities upon our school
authorities and teachers whih must be met if the
youth of the nation is to bej equipped for the se
rious work ahead. ' J
The War and Civil Hospitals
By Frederic J Haskin
Within two days after Ahe declaration of war,
France ordered all alien enemies out of the coun
try and gave them. 48 hots to make the getaway.
Great Britain hesitated lor a week and then re
quired all aliens to rerister. The United States
at war with Germany or seven months, has just
reached the crossroad of registration.
Washington, D. C, Dec. 1. American hos
pitals are now in danger of being undermanned,
undernursed and undernourished as a result of
the war. Thousands of physicians and nurses
have left to join the army and the Red Cross
and more are leaving every day. The Red Cross
is enrolling nurses on the average of 1,000 a
month. Hospital supplies are becoming scarce
owing to the fact that enormous quantities are
being snipped out of the country. Moreover, hos
pital funds never too abundant are threatened
with reduction this year in order that more money
may be released for the sick and wounded of
Europe.
In short, the hospitals are hard hit by the war,
but they are not complaining. On the contrary
the hospital hoards of the country are trying to
figure out how they can possibly release more
men, more nurses and more money to the govern
ment. Perhaps this is because the hospitals know
what war is. They are used to fighting germs,
which is not so much easier than fighting Ger
mans. .
At any rate, trained nurses in many hospitals
are accepting extra duties without a murmur.
When you consider that the trained nurse in times
of peace is always an overworked individual, her
war activities appear all the more remarkable,
junior nurses have suddenly had to take over the
duties of senior nurses while the latter rushed off
to pack their trunks for Europe. Others have had
to become anesthetists, in the place of men who
are now in the medical corps. Still others have
worked straight shifts of 24 hours.
The government has announced that it does
not intend to use the civil hospitals for military
hospitals, unless some unexpected emergency
makes such a step necessary. Under the present
plan the majority of our war hospitals will be in
France, since the return of wounded to this
country entails too many hazards. If a man is
only slightly wounded he will be taken care of
in an American base hospital in France and as
soort as he is recovered, will be sent back to the
front. If his wound is so serious as to prevent
him from being of any further military use he will
be kept in France until he is able to stand the
trip home. Only cases requiring a long period of
convalescence or re-education are, therefore, apt
to be sent back to this country. ,
1 Nevertheless the hospitals are preparing for
the unexpected. Some of the larger institutions
of 200 or more beds have offered their services
to the medical department of the army and are
prepared to receive wounded soldiers at any time.
In this event, the entire hospital, if necessary,
or that section of it devoted to wounded, would
automatically pass under military control
' In the meantime, however, serious problems
must be faced. Many hospitals supported by pri
vate subscription are hav'ng a hard time Retting
along for the reason that the subscribers are show
ing a tendency to withdraw their usual contribu
tions and put them into the more spectacular ac
tivities of the war. The high cost of food reacts
upon hospitals the same as upon other consumers.
Moreover, linen, cotton, steel instruments, acids,
drugs all the articles that go to make up the
equipment of the hospital are not only expensive
but hard to get. European orders are given pre
cedence bv t'e manufacturers, a"H ho- ie or'Ws
are slow in delivery owing to traffic congestion.
The medical department of the army, it is true,
has been as considerate as possible. In accepting
physicians in the medical corps the surgeon gen
eral and his assistants have made every effort to
work as little hardship as possible on the hospitals
of the country. They have exempted men who
were especially necessary to certain hospital
staffs as well as teachers in medical schools.
The importance of keeping up the nation s
medical schools in spite of the war ha9 been
realized by the government. Many physicians
will be killed, it is cheerfully predicted, and others
must be trained to take their places. The prog
ress of science, all authorities agree, must be in
terfered with as little as possible by the war. And
the quicker students are graduated from the medi
cal schools the quicker other physicians may be
released. .. , ,
It is equally important that nurses schools
should be kept open and at a maximum capacity.
There is really an alarming shortage of nurses.
The majority of those who are joining the Red
Cross are those who have, been doing private
nursing, but hospital nurses in great numbers
have been taken, too; especially, head nurses and
superintendents women with years of experience
and training. To add to the difficulties, a much
smaller percentage of young women appear to
be taking up the study of nursing this year. The
probation classes in the hospitals are greatly re
duced, due, it has been pointed out by some. to
the large number of opportunities now opening
up for women in munition factories, offices, banks,
railroad yards and other places that were formerly
occupied by men.
'The fact of the matter is that nursing is one
of the hardest occupations that women can pos
sibly undertake. True, it is transfigured by a
high ideal, but the hard practical work is there
just the same. The first six months a nurse is
on probation she must perform te mnst men al
tasks. Scrubbing bath tubs, mopping floors, car
rying trays and running errands are rarely men-t
tioned as conspicuous features in the nursinst
curriculum, but in many hospital they are. Of
course, during this time the TroMt:oner is beinR
paid for her services by the hospital, but the sum
is one that a husky domestic would scorn.
Manv hospitals are all that any nurse could
wish. They run as smoothly as it is possible for
a hospital to run; there are plenty of nurses;
plenty of accommodations for them and plenty
of servants to do the housekeeping end of the
job, But anyone who has ever been unfortunate
enough to have to spend any length of time in
a hospital can tell you that these instances are
comnarativelv rare.
During the past two years a great deal of
energy and time have been consumed in teach
ing young society women how to make bandages
and to administer first aid to the injured. Such
instruction was too meager, of course, to make
them eligible for the battle front, but they could
be of service now in the present shortage of
nurses in civil hospitals. They are not, however,
applying in any overwhelming numbers for the
chance to become nurses. On the battle front it
is different there exists a certain glamour. But
at home the nursing profession appears to have
lost its glamour for a large number of women.
Thus the hospitals of the country are now
facing a grave danger which threatens to react
upon the whole population. They are meeting it
cheerfully, with the help of patriotic Americans
who realize that the civil hospitals at the present
time also constitute a war problem.
TODAYi
Right In the Spotlight
General Julian S. Carr, who has
been reported seriously ill in Washing
ton, is on of the eminent leaders in
southern finance and Industry. A na
tive of North Carolina. General Carr
graduated from the state university in
time to Join the confederate army, and
aa an officer of the famous Hampton's
corps he made a fine war record. After
the conclusion of peace he turned to
business, became a manufacturer, a
builder of railroads, a bank director, a
trustee of educational and religious
institutions, and a promoter of re
gional reconstruction on broad lines,
For many years he has been regarded
as one of the great lay leaders of the
Methodist Episcopal church, south,
and only recently he was named to
head the food conservation committee
of the denomination. General Carr
has been a lifelong democrat and in
1900 he was prominently mentioned
for the vice presidential nomination.
One Year Ago Today In the War.
Dr. Van Dyke, American minister
to the Netherlands, resigned.
Germans attacked the defenses of
Bucharest from all directions.
Serbians reported a great victory
over the Bulgarians north of Monastlr.
In Omaha Thirty Years Ago.
Joseph Meinrath has returned from
Boston with his bride and taken tem
porary quarters at the Millard.
The frog pond, known as Lake
Pavonka, waa frozen over for the first
7fie&
lees
0Jd
7 ir,v c
time and about 20 Juvenile candidates
for drowning were practicing on
skates.
John Beatty, Jr., western agent for
Klrkendall, Jones & Co., located at
Ogden, Utah, has arrived in this city.
One hundred and thirty-three com
mercial travelers appended their sig
natures to the Millard register during
Saturday night and Sunday.
A slight blaze occurred at about
11 o'clock at the corner of Twenty
fourth and Harney streets. The dam
age amounted to about $100.
Between 25 and 30 cars of hogs and
five or six cars of cattle arrived at the
South Omaha market
Frank 8. Selee, the new manager of
the Omaha base ball club, was seen at
the rotunda of the Millatd and talked
Interestingly on the local outlook of
the new team and base ball in general.
Rev. W. J Harsha is preaching a
series of Sunday evening discourses on
the labor problem. ;
Tliis Day In History.
1682 The first general assembly In
Pennsylvania convened at Chester.
1783 Washington bade farewell to
the officers who had served under him
in the revolution.
1814 A party of British from the
warship "Dragon" attacked the Amer
icans posted at Farnham church, near
Rappahannock, Va.
18C3 Siege of Knoxvllle aban
doned by the confederate troops.
1867 National Grange, Patrons of
Husbandry, first organized in Wash
ington, D. C.
1870 French city of Orleans, to
oscape bombardment, surrendered to
the Germans.
1897 Treaty of peace between Tur
key and Greece signed at Constanti
nople. 1914 First news of the sinking of
the British battleship Audacious pub
lished In London.
1915 Henry Ford and his "peace"
party galled from New York to "get
the boys out of the trenches before
Christmas."
People and Events
Brigadier General Eli D. Hoyle, U. S. A., com
mands all the military forces which control New
York harbor and the water front zones wherein
aliens are not permitted. Police co-operate with
the military on the piers and shipping and to
gether promise effective work asrainst firebugs,
bombers and plotters. All activities necessarily
are according to Hoyle.
A polittico-legal battle involving $100,000 in al
leged fee graft is going the rounds of the Phila
delphia courts. Four years ago the legislature
passed a law abolishing fee offices. The register
of wills, drawing a salary of $10,000, saw a hole
in the act through which to lraw collateral in
heritance fees and he went for the "velvet" with
both hands. The amount involved naturally
makes the battle a fierce one and it goes to the
state supreme court for the final word.
A chapter of the "People's Peace council,"
composed of brothers of the "Good morning,
judge," type, held forth in-St. Lou's last week and
vociferated until exhausted. "Why don't serfs
shake off the shackles that bind you?" thundered
one spieler. "Give me the price and watch me do
it," came back from one of the oppressed. But
there was nothing doing. The authorities iz;d
up the crowd 'and remained on the , sidelines
quietly, watching for larger Bamc
The Day We Celebrate. '
Burke Sinclair Is 39 years old today.
Frank J. Carey, manager of the
Carey Cleaning company, is celebrat
ing his thirty-fifth birthday today.
Bear Admiral R. R. Ingersoll, U. S.
N., retired, who has returned to active
duty as head of a special board on
naval ordnance, born at Niles, Mich.,
70 years ago today.
Lillian Russell, who has returned to
the stage after a retirement of several
years, born at Clinton, la., 56 years
ago today.
Percy R. Todd, president of the
Bangor & Aroostook railroad, born
at Toronto, Ont., 58 years ago today.
Frank J. Gould, youngest son of the
late Jay Gould, born in New York City
40 years ago today.
John F. Collins, outfielder of the
Chicago American, league base ball
team, born at Charlcstown, Mass., 31
years ago today.
Timely Jottings and Reminders.
President Wilson will deliver his
second war message to congress today.
The convention of the American
Public Health association, which was
to have met today at New Orleans, has
been called oft.
Insurance commissioners and actu
aries from all parts of the country are
to meet in New York today to confer
on uniform laws and regulations to
govern the insurance business.
A notable military wedding at San
Antonio today will be that of Miss
Mary Tignor Holmes, daughter of
Commander Urban T. Holmes, U. S.
N., and Lieutenant John Thornton
Knight, jr., Twentieth field artillery,
U. S. A. The bridegroom Is a grand
Ron of Lieutenant i General S. B. M.
Young, former commanding general
of the army.
Storyette of the Day.
A policeman found four little girls
charging with sticks down the base
ment stairs of a house on West One
' Hundredth street, two doors from the
police station, recently. At the root
of the stairs a little negro girl was
lying flat on her back and kicking her
feet angrily.
Those involved in the charge wore
feather dusters in their coiffures and
were sopranos. The dark mite at the
foot of the stairs wore a partially
wiped oft kaiser's mustache made of
starch or whiting and was decidedly
an alto complainer.
"What are you kids doin' here?"
asked the policeman. I.
"We're Russian women soldiers," ex
plained the four, "an' Viola down there
is Germany. She don't want t' be Ger
many. It's her that's makin' all the
noise." New York Herald.
WHERE IS THE NOISE?
Where ia the nolae of yesterday
Tha patter of little feet
The laughlns nolxa
Of the little boya.
The music, oh, ao aweet
Drifts through tha corridore ot time.
And the echo from the stair
Rings like a minstrel' sweetest tuna
Upon the silent air 7
Where Is the noise of yesterday
The patter of truant feet
The rowdy noise
Of the wayward boys.
Tha muaic, wild and aweet.
Drifting over the paths of time.
Resound with bounding Joy.
So like the lost of tha ninety and nine
The return of the wandering boy?
Where Is the noise of yesterday
The treading of ateady feet
The daring noise
Ot the sturdy boys.
The music, sad but sweet.
Floats on tha breese with the Stars and
8 tripes.
To hold our hearts entrance
Till the despot's crown lay at the feet
Of tha boys somewhere In France.
Omaha. MRS. MAUD KELLET.
A Word for the Railroad.
Genoa, Neb., Dec. 3. To the Edi
tor of the Bee: A few days ago I no
ticed where some cheap ink "slinger"
endeavored to get a cheap advertise
ment for Chappell, Neb., by running
under big head lines "car shortage
may ruin town," almost to the word.
The whole article is misrepresenta
tions in order to boost their town and
gently use the Union Pacific as the
goat. We will admit the car situation
is an acute proposition, but it's not the
Union Pacifiic Railroad company's
fault or any one else. It is merely a
condition caused by our present war.
No railroad is doing more to handle
the freight transportation problems
than the Union Pacific. Then to have
a cheap editor take a slam at a rail
road in order to say something for his
town is disgusting to say the least
Chappell is just a small hamlet up in
Deuel county. The Union Pacific has
done more for this village than they
ever can repay for service rendered
and if Chappell has their elevators full
of wheat they should be thankful and
wait their turn for cars. The great
trouble with Chappell is that when
Mr. Hoover said S2 wheat, they took it
for a Joke and expected to hoard up
their wheat to get an exorbiant
price, but now they realize Mr. Hoover
meant what he said, and now want
to take their spite out on the Union
Pacific because cars are scarce.
V. A. BRADSHAW.
Liberty Bonds as Collateral.
Norfolk, Neb., Dec 1. To. the edi
tor of The Bee: The writer received a
circular letter and descriptive
pamphlet from a syndicate promoting
oil wells in Wyoming in which it ad
vised that people could send Liberty
bonds in payment for stock. Also a
store m town advertises it accepts Lib
erty bonds in payment for purchases.
One can deposit the bond, and as pur
chases are made, the various amounts
are deducted irom the face value of
the bond. It appears to me that if
Home restriction is not placed on the
concentration of purchases of these
bonus that their main talking-point,
viz: ownership by the great masses o
the people, will be destroyed. If car
ried to a logical conclusion which is
possible, they can gradually be con
centrated in a few nanus of big banks,
big insurance companies, etc., and it
would place these bame companies in
a position to dictate tuture methods of
the liquidation of tnese bonus. 1 know
you can see tne point I am driving at
Don't you think some action to avert
the possibility I mention is necessary
and ao you not think there is some
feasible plan whereby people may use
these bonus mucn as an insurance pol
icy is used in borrowing money, yet
tne onsiual owner retaining posses
sion? E. L. M'CASLIN.
SIGNPOSTS OF PROGRESS.
Pressing lever at the driver's seat
throwa new anti-skidtiing chains under the
rear wheel of an automobile.
Tha German Roman Catholic Central ve
rein of St. Louis has decided to drop tha
word German Irom its title.
Massachusetts is said to be the birthplace
of the tanum- and boot and enoe industries
of the tinned buttes, which are now ncany
300 years old. I
The Central railroad of Georgia employs 19
women agents, wnoae duty it is to solicit '
and huncne ail freignt and olher matters per- '
taming to this end of the business.
Fruit pits, systematically gathered by Ger
many's scnool chuuren, are turned over to !
cnemists, wno are converting tnem into rich
lubricating oils. Cherry and pium stuies are
said to be tne best for this purpose. ,
A weather station waa recently established
in Puerto fiaia by the United States weather
bureau of nasmngton, D. U N. L. Urme is
the local representative. The station is "one
of a system of 20 maintained by the weather
bureau in the Caribbean sea.
The moat recent and accurate reports ob
tainable are to the ertect that tne apple crop
is aoout equal to that of last year, wnen ap
proximately 6811,0(10 barren were produced.
Due, however, to the British embargo, some-
tnnig like tvO.uou barrels which last year
were shipped to English ports wiU have to be
marketed this year in Canada and possibly
in the United State.
fFxt
Indies)
Lonf.
Essential for
"The Home Beautiful"
No home today is quite
complete that is not equip
ped with a Baby Grand
piano.
The Upright piano was de
signed to save space. Now.
you can secure a beautiful
little Grand that practically
occupies no more space than
the Upright.
The Brambach
Baby Grand
is a marvel in tone, and a
model of architectural
beauty.
It will add distinction to
your home.
Ask us to mail you paper
pattern showing exact space
it will occupy on your floor.
pce $485
Hear it today at our store.
A. Hospe Co.
1513-15 Douglas St.
Dandruff on Head
Itched Dreadfully.
Could Not Sleep. Hair
Thin. Cuticura Healed.
"A mass of raised-up dandruff which
formed a hard-like crust about the sire
of a dime started on the back of my
neaawitn itching, it itched
dreadfully and more so
when the scales became
warm, and when I
scratched bits of crust
dropped off and was very
unpleasant. Sometimes I
could not slfpn anrl th
1 hair became thin, lifeless,
' and drv.
"The trouble lasted two years. I
decided to try Cuticura Soap and Oint
ment. After I had used one box of
Cuticura Ointment and one cake of Soap
I was healed." (Signed) Mrs. Belie
Fox, 4751 N. Paulina St., Chicago, 111.,
Jan. 16, 1917.
Nothing better to clear the skin of
pimples, blotches, redness and rough
ness, the scalp of dandruff and itching
and the hands of chapping and soreness.
Cuticura Soap used daily for all toilet
purposes with touches of Ointment now
and then to soothe and heal tends to
prevent skin troubles.
For Free Sample Each by Return
Mail address post-card: "Cuticurav
Dept. H, Boston." Sold everywhere.
Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c.
0
MIRTH UL REMARKS.
Wilson I see the railroads are arranglns
to empioy women.
Ross Ifea.
Wiidon tjut what do women know about
railroad work?
Hoes Oh, I guess they will set along
all right. Did you ever see your wife handle
a switch? Brooklyn Standard.
A farmer wished to Insure his barn and
a few stacks.
"What liualltles have you for extinguish
ing a fire in your village?" Inquired tne su
perintendent of the otiice.
The man pondered a little while. Finally
he answered;
"Well, Bometlmes It rains." Christian
Register. . ,
"I am irtfa begUii..,. to understand about
senatonal procedure."
Huh?"
"If It's a poker game It's a meeting. A
request for a smail loan Is an Interview.
If a few senators gather to sample some
prime old stuff it's a conference." Louis
ville Courier-Journal. !
Your Rheumatism
The twists and aches of rheumatic
sufferers usually yield to the rich
oil-food treatment in
when everything else fails. Besides
helping to purify and enrich the
blood Scoff's strengthens the func
tions to throw off injurious acids
and is especially beneficial durins
changing seasons. Many
doctors themselves take
Scott's, You Try It.
Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. 17.34
Persistent Advertising Is the Road
to Success.
''I ' 1
GULF COAST
"The Riviera of America'
Pass Christian, Biloxi, Ocean Springs, Gulfport,'
Mississippi City, Bay St Louis, Pascogoula,
Pensacola, New Orleans, Mobile.
Trie mild, tquable climate makes this an ideal location for a
winter sojourn. Good hotels at moderate rates. Gcif, boating,
fishing, hunting, motoring and other outdoor sports.
Modem steel trains from Chicago and St tods
via LmisriHe & Nashville R. R. reach (Lis en-
cbaD&g vacation land in a Utile over 24 hoars.
Attractive Tours to Central America, Cub er FloriJe
"Jis the Gulf Coast. Ask for illustrated folders, schedules,
or information.
P. W. MORROW, N. W. P.A..L.&N. R.R.
441 Marquette Bids., Chicago. IlL
s CEO. E. HERRING, D.P.A., L.&N.R.R.
304 Worth Broadway, St. Louts, Mo,
leawiMBiv
7W
ml
hx V!T i.il
THE OMAHA BEE INFORMATION BUREAU
Washington, O. C '
Enclosed find a 2-cent stamp, for which you will please send me,
entirely free, a copy of the book: "How to Remove Stains."
Name.
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Street Address.
City
.State.
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