THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1918. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATEJt VICTOR ROSEWATEB, EDITOR THl BIB PUBLISHING COM PANT, PROPRIETOR. Entered at Omaha oatfflea u seeend-claia matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Bi tag. wltaott Sunday..... 10 at Md Sunday,... ...... ... " loo fro tin wlUwet aoodar . " M pw M.nvi iiikihii H I 00 d Mtxw ef abute of eddiese at iiragularlt la Uiitrr to Omeba Bf Mall. too H 4 00 too MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS lk Aeeoctated Fw, of wtik Ttie Rm M a Bern bee, li eiclntltely enUUeS to IM BW tor BuhllcaUoe of til sews Ol.pttshet credited to it r kot othtrwIM credited la Wit paper ead alio the local tm Bubllabad kmia. AU riabie at pubiieeuoa aTaui atwxtl dltpeiobea BMUt t panasai REMITTANCE nvrfm or aotui order. Only 1-eant Manns takea tn wminia. renuaei snsoa. tBcept oa uaaaa aaa OFFICES CORRESPONDENCE AJdnst jMaaontoatlOBi relating to im and editorial nattat is Omaha Bee, Editorial DepenneoL NOVEMBER CIRCULATION 68,715 Daily Sunday, 51,884 i etroalaUoa for tha math, NbsortbeS ead swore to kf I Itareea Willi una, CMoaletloa Maoaiat. Dwlgbt aVikeerlkara laarlaf taa city ahauM kava Tha Baa asailad to Uene. AiaVaaa chaage aa altaa a requested. 1 Back to the job again. Put in your beit licks every day. . . Now ia the time to lay plana for next spring's garden patches. Second day for reaolutiona; how many of them did you keep? Colonel Neville's military ambition ia giving hit political sponsors a lot of worry. " Reduction of noise on New Year's eve haa its compensation in fewer headaches on New Year's day., It is to be hoped that government manage ment will have better effect on the car shortage than it did on the coal shortage. - ( "Over the top" for the, Young Women'a Chris tian association, and Omaha will have a chance to catch a breath before the next drive. Pelting Padua from airplanes is on a par with bombarding Rheims. Cathedrals and churches appear to be especially obnoxious to kultur. Exports of more than six billiona is the country's modest record for the calendar year, showing how busy we have been on other mat ure than war. , Two and a half million tons of Argentine meat will be milled in the United States for con sumption , in Europethe logical answer to "spurlos versenkt." .. General Crowder admonishes draft boards to apply common sense in the administration of the law. Very good advice, and appropriate for others besides the draft boards. 1 One of the inapiring 'pictures of the war is General Allenby's defense of Jerusalem againat the efforts of the kaiser to restore the Turk to control of the Holy City. John Purroy Mitchel plans to enlist as a private in the aviation section of the signal corps. 'His example might be studied by other eminent persons eager to get into' the army. Massacred Greeks are now added to the dread ful toll taken by kultur. Wherever the kaiser's war machine passed, innocent victims fed its maw, all in the name of civilization. The reckon ing for this must come. ; Destruction of Art Treasures. ' Forces of kultur appear to get particular de light from the destruction of art treasures. From the burning of the library at Louvain to the bomb tag of the Basilica of St Anthony at Padua, the record of wanton destruction rnns straight, varied only by the looting of private collections by the Teuton "connoisseur's," who have earried off much that was portable to adorn their own homes. An inexplicable quality of savagery per meates all this. It is unthinkable that the mod ern German has no love for art, nor 'that he does not appreciate and properly value the inestim able works of the masters, who gave the world treasures that can not be replaced. Admitting this, one may see,, even without( understanding, the full terror of the ruthlessness that marks the kaiser's path in war. No work of God or man must be allowed to stand in the way of his ad vancing hordes. History will be Germany's most relentless accuser, and Ha pages will be filled with illustrations of harm done in sheer wanton ness or malice. Shrines of saints, palaces of princes and hovels of peasants, all suffer alike where Vultur passes. No wonder the junkers are willing to accept peace without indemnity, and shy at the words "restoration and reparation." The world has a tremendous bill against them for mischief done and damage wrought in pursuit of "rightfulness." 1 1 American Railroad Men in France. Back from the firing line in France comes word of the service that has been performed by railroad men from America. Now it is known that for months before the arrival of the first "Sammy" on the scene, well equipped bodies of men drawn from the American railroad systems had been helping Haig to win his victories. Canadians and Americans worked side by side, laying track, building bridges, moving trains, handling goods, and generally supporting the army with a service the perfection of which has been the ruination of German military plans. With inexplicable fatuity, German high com mand appears to have relied on its own estimate of the ability of the British to organize transpor tation service, overlooking the most essential factor, that of the adaptability of trained men from America. These have turned the tide of battle on the west front, for they have done what the Germans deemed Impossible, and have given the fighting men support that has helped them to win. Added to these pioneers are the regiments that went over with Pershing, and all the tradi tions of the American railroad man at his best are being upheld where service of the sort he can give counts most for humanity. When the atory finally is told,, the railroad man will deserve a place on the first page, along with the soldier and the sailor. Saed Corn an Important Factor. The meeting of the Corn Improvement asso ciation of Nebraska is one of the really impor tant assemblages of the year, despite what our old friend, Charley Wooster, says to the con trary. This association has for its purpose the encouragement of setection of seed and better methods of planting and cultivating corn, to the end that more corn be gathered from thesame acreage of land. Experience justifies its efforts. Corn has come up to its high state of fecundity and usefulness through cultivation, but it may yet be greatly improved. An Increase of only a few bushels to the acre means millions added to the wealth of the state, and this may be easily obtained through the careful application of approved knowledge. It is not especially com forting to think of men being content with yields of 25 to 30 bushels, when the same land will re turn several times that if well planted and tended. Corn improvement is one of Nebraska's greatest problems, and deserves all. the attention it is given, The solution is essy enough, if the corn growers will only apply . demonstrated methods to their business. Modifying Censorship Rules. The government has announced the removal of certain restrictions on publication of news con cerning movements of troops and vessels in gov ernment service. This extension of the privi lege of publicity is not put forward as graciously as might have properly comported with the dig nity of the government and its relations with its citizens. In the beginning the great newspapers and news-gathering agencies of the country vol untarily submitted to regulations that deprived them of the privilege of handling much real news matter connected with war activities, most of which was quite appropriately due the public. Here and there were noted some violations of the pledge given, but the government admits the loyalty of the newspapers in co-operating with it. Thia did not deprive the enemy of access to the information sought It is impossible to conceal the embarkation and departure of troops, the losding of transports and such moves and while nothing has been said of these things in the news papers the spies have only had to look and they could see, so that Germany has been as well, if not better, informed than the home folks. Repu table newspapers will not now take undue advan tage of the new rules nor at any time do any thing to hamper the government in any of its undertakings. No good reason therefore exists for the innuendo contained in the announcement from Washington that the newspaper is the surest source of information for the enemy. The government still controls the mails, the tele graphs, cables, wireless and all methods of trans mitting Intelligence abroad. Its danger from the spy system is not found in loyal newspaper offices and it will gain very little through keeping its people in the dark as to what is going on. Some years back, when business combinations were the order of the day, publicity bureaus regaled the country with assurances of vast eco nomies to follow and better goods for less money. Except in rare instances did performance come up to the advance promise. Still, with this history known to men, Washington coolly camouflages the country with expectations of great economies and immense savings to flow from government unification and operation of railroads. Old stuff worked overt ' Perplexity haunts the halls of learning in the University of Pennsylvania. Back in the days of peace and international good will the uni versity conferred the degree of doctor of laws on the kaiser and like honors on Count von Bernstorff, the kaiser's ambassador. Both are decidedly unpopular at the present time and may continue so indefinitely. Dead timber lends no strength' to the Institution, and the trustees pro pose cutting it out. Perplexity centers on the manner of applying the ax. What I Have Learned in the Police Court Interesting Experiences and Observations of One of Omaha's Two Police M agistrates By Police Judge Jamea M. Fitzgerald, in Creifhton Chronicle. After nearly seven years in the service of the law enforcing department of out state I have become fully convinced that with very rare exceptions, each man and woman is endeavoring to do what he or she considers right. The innate sense of justice is deeply impressed in our people; it is a part of their nature. We believe that when one com mits a wrong he should be punished, and that the punishment shonld be comensurate with the offense, and to one placed in a position where it is his duty to measure out the punishment to those convicted of law violations this becomes a study of more than ordinary interest. Many provisions of our criminal code are arbitrary and leave no discretion with the police magistrate. Such are the laws that find their way into our statutes during a wave of popular reform; and, as the very essence of popular reforms is evidence of a feeling that public officials sre dishonest or incompetent, the reform legislature fixes the penalty absolutely, eedless to say such legislative enactments to not make for honesty or re spect for the laws. The magistrate is loathe to find a man guilty when the minimum penalty works needless hardship, and once he veers away from the straight and nar row path of strict interpretation and enforcement of the law as it is written, he is in the same position as the man who begins his career of lawlessness by one insignificant breach of the lawthe next offense, is much easier than the first one. On the other hand, the unfortunate who has broken such a law, after he has paid a penalty that he considers entirely too severe, loses respect for that law and his disposition to respect and live up to the commands of the state is naturally weakened. The police magistrade has many officers testify before him besides the regular po liceman. There are great bands of inspectors, federal, state and city; inspectors of weights, foods, oils, and in fact almost everything one consumes. Among this army of inspectors are some who have been appointed on ac:ount of political service ren dered by their friends, and such inspectors know their friends, which is to be expected snd respected, but they also, sad to say, know their enemies. When one of those en emies steps over the lines of strict law observance he is brought before the magistrate, and woe to him if the magistrate condemns his according to the testimony presented. Then, too, there are special agents, representing all of the railroad companies and other large industrial corporations. These men are sometimes not so careful In their testi mony as a sensitive conscience should direct. But the writer can say that in his ex perience on the bench he has suffered from the abuses just referred to. In his capacity as a prosecutor, however, he has seen unmistakable instances of the wronjs that flow from over-zealous witnesses of these classes. It all depends, as with policemen, on the character of the man who is clothed with authority. In the trial of all criminal cases in the district court, the judge Is required to in struct the jury that, in considering the testimony of police officers they must consider the natural and unavoidable tendency of the officer to feret out and remember only the evidence against the accused, and to overlook anything that might be in his favor. The same rule should control the deliberations of the msgistrate and he is confronted with this situation in practically every case that he hears. It is reversible error for the judge of the district court to fail to give this instruction, and the jury is in grave danger of interpreting the words as an instruction that all police officers are un worthy of belief. Such is not the intention of the court; but the popular opinion of police officers needs but a suggestion from so high a dignitary as the judge of the dis trict court to crystallize in the mind a lurking impression that the policeman is not to be believed. Unfortunately the magistrate must consider these same facts that partially justify the instruction given in the district court. He is not hampered by the false im pression conveyed by the instruction, viz: that police officers are not to be credited with telling the truth, but he has learned from experience that some officers are very zeal ous in their efforts to convict everyone they- arrest. This attitude is easy to detect in some but extensive acquaintance is necessary to discover the same human trait in others. I say human trait, for it is human to endeavor to cover up our mistakes, and if an officer has really blundered in making an arrest, he is very slow to admit his error. If he admits it he may be sued for damages, for false imprisonment, even though he has acted in absolutely good faith and in the service of the city; and a jury in the trial of this damage suit may be tainted with the popular prejudice against policemen and may return a substantial verdict against the officer. A good police officer, and the vast ma jority of our Omaha officers are very good, has to know many things besides walking the streets with his club in hand. Knights of the Boundless Sep By Frederic J. Haskin Washington. Dec. 30. A record of .romance and daring, of hazardous travel in far seas, of lives and vessels saved and lost is written every year for the delectation of the secretary of the treasury by the com mandant of the Coast Guard. It is to be hoped the secretary of the treasury enjoys to the best inventions of the fictioneers as Wurzburger is to near beer. The cutters of the Coast Guard go up and down the seas almost from arctic to antarctic, seeking, like knights of chivalry, tor tne cnance io renaer am. cveryming in danger at sea is their business, from capsized canoes and derelict bathers to ocean liners in distress. They also visit the far northern fishing fleets, and bring medical aid to their crews; they are Uncle Sam'a messengers to his farthest icebound possessions, the utmost reach of government power; the seal herds of the Pribilofs are their special care; and of smugglers they are the special terror. Incidentally, they are now playing a secret part in the war game. Here is modern romance for you, a career exotic to your daily grind of dollars. rvnit their ttart in the world conflict the cutters rescued more vessels and crews this year than ever before, and suffered in this work the greatest single disaster in their own history. Dn. f fhf'tr nAAnt achievements was r..i-i.i'i h rr.ui n( tha United rat-a sub marine H-3, which went ashore in a fog, and a'aa a . 1 a. was stranded in tne sun exactly line a iosi whale. The accident occurred near Samoa, Cal. The boat could not be reached from the sea, and the Coast Guard crew had to make a loner trio overland and bring their life boat to the scene in a wagon. They found the unfortunate U-boat rolling back and tortn in a heavy surf, all of her crew locked tightly .'n.wla anil ertuincr tin aio-A fif tif fvetftt An Occasional wild toot on the engine whistle. The Coast Guard men managed to shoot a line over the vessel, but none of the crew came forth to make it fast for a long time. Finally a tew ot them appeared on tne rou- ing aecK en a puucu in mc imc, uui intu iu make it fast to their gear. After a few un aitrrrtstul attemots. they disaooeared and came on deck no more. Seeing that the navy men were not going to do much tor themselves, one of the surfmen of. the Coast r.,.orH miila a flvinor laan frnm the aurf boat to the deck of tne submarine, and made the line fast to the gear, so that the crew might be transfixed along it to the beach. By this time a crowd of about 200 persons had gathered on the beach, and some volunteer bonehead proceeded to make the line fast to a stump. The submarine gave a great roll, and the line snapped. But the whip line re ..'n.ii intirt anAtViar hawir wa earned ashore and the crew of the submarine safely landed, f ive days oi woric oy tnree vessels failed to get the submarine off the beach. One of the orettiest bits of life saving for the year was the taking of 14 fishermen off a burning motor boat in Lake Michigan, l he Coast Guard men who did this job received special commendation for theid skill and coolness. The fishing boat caught fire from a lantern when five miles from shore, and it had neither a life boat nor life preservers on board, the crew had only a choice be tween burning to death and drowning; when the men from a life-saving station happened to pass that way. They were in a much smaller boat than the one in distress, which was now a mass of flames from end to end with the exception of a small space at the bow, where the unfortunatei fishermen with their eyebrows and hair singed off, and their clothing on fire, were huddled in a panic. The life savers faced two problems; how to approach the burning boat without taking fire, and how to prevent the 14 men, wild with fear, from leaping all at once upon their little craft and sinking her. They solved these difficulties by putting the bow of their boat against the bow of the burning vessel, so that the fishermen could come aboard only one at a time, while the contact between the two vessels was as small as possible. The fishermen, fortunately obeying instructions, filed aboard the small boat, which im mediately backed away. A few minutes later a thunderous boom, and a pillar of smoke and debris told them that the gasoline tank of the burning launch had exploded. The most valuable piece of property saved during the year, was the barge Rockland, which was worth $100,000 and had on board a cargo of Scotch boilers worth twice that much. The barge was being towed by a small tug from Newport News to Fore River last February when she ran into a storm accompanied by bitterly cold weather. Seas breaking over barge and tug froze where they struck, so that the tug was soon com pelled to abandon her charge, and made port just in time to save herself from sinking un der the burden of ice which had formed upon her decks. Meaptime the revenue cutter Acushnet rushed to the aid of the barge, now adrift in the storm and helpless. The barge was soon located, but in the meantime the storm had become so severe that the (Acushnet could do nothing but stand by. The force of the wind may be gauged from the fact that it was found impossible to shoot a line from a gun over the distance of 50 feet which separated the two vessels. Nevertheless the cutter stood by until the storm moderated, got a hawser on the barge, and after losing and recovering the prize, finally brought it to port. People and Events Some of the boys of Wisconsin steadily replenish the backfires spreading around Senator LaFollette. The Madison club of the state capital recently struck his name from the roll of membership for "unpatriotic conduct and having given aid and comfort to the enemy." The cold, clammy hand of bankruptcy grips the Kansas City Breweries company. Failure to meet a malt bill precipitated a re ceivership. The concern is mortgaged for $3,500,000, but poor business of a cool sum mer shunted old time prosperity from the roof to the sub-cellar. 1 TODAY One Tear Ajro Today In the War. . Germans were victorious In the pre-, tunicary fighting for possession of the brlitf at Kotcani. Turktr announced Ita independence of the collective gunrdtanshlp of the great power tid eaid it conaldered the treaty f Purls of 185s and the treaty of Berlin of 1878 aa no longer blading. The Day We Celebrate. Dr. John Edward Summers, born list. Major General jeaae M. ie, united State army, retired, born in rutnam county. ladituuk. , yeara ago today, ' Mit M. Carey Thomaa, president of Brya Mvn college, born m Baltimore, ft years m today. Rev. Oerg A. Oordon, recently elected proeMest of the Harvard Alumni Meortatto. born Jn Scotland, II rears ago today. Prof. Willi. Lyoa Phelps, widely kaowa a author aad lecturer, born In New 'Haven. It yeera ago today. Augitet Beztsiger, who ia considered 1st Ute front rut of American por , trait painter bora ia Swltxarland, (1 year " today, litis tay In nistory. X7S The Whitefleld Method lets -observed a day of thanksgiving for the Englitb. rletorlM over the king of Fruaen. " t. 1788 Georgia ratified the Constitu . tioa of tka United States. Just SO Years Ago Today The Young Men's Christian associa tion, celebrated New Year's day in royal style at their rooms on the corner ot Mtteenth and Dodge streets. Prom noon until 4 p. m. reception was given and a pleasant time was spent in social chat, gamea, and singing. Shortly before the commencement of the services at Trinity cathedral, one of the festoons caught fire from one of the gas Jets, but the flames were extinguished before any serious damage could be done. W. C. ITaleey, general superintend ent of the Fremont Elkhorn ft Mis souri Valley railroad, is la the city. A. J. McXalr has returned from An telope county, where he spent several months upon his ranch in that coun try. John flchenk, the leading music ! rf r.vton. O., with his wife, nee Miss WarehamAare guests ot Mr. ana Airs. John A. CreUhton. Here and There It taken TO people to make a ma chine made shoe. The earning value of a ship Is now from M00 to f 500 a day. In New Zealand the men outnum ber the women by many thousands. During the war the trade of Can ada has increased nearly three-fold. New Hampshire was the first state to establish a railroad commission. The German emperor will have oc cupied the throne 30 years this com ing June. Ambulance wasrons were first In troduced in the British army during the Crimean war. The United States has more than si:; times the railroad mllegae ot any other country. The present year marks the semi centennial ot the first introduction of tha dining ear on American railroads. Secretary of the Navy Daniels la said to have received something like 40,000 suggestions for eliminating submarines. Parsons who have been ill a great deal are generally tall, since lying in bed, with the limbs relaxed, inducea growth. Regiments of Infantry, consisting of bodies of foot-soldiers commanded by a colonel, were first formed in France about 1SSS. The world's production of silver amounts to about 172,000,000 ounces a year, and of this the United States produces almost one half. Any man of the British army or navy whose name has appeared in the official casualty lists is entitled '-to wear a srold sleeve strloe for wounds. Twice Told Tales "Germany's claim that It Imports nothing, buys only of itself, and so is growing rich from the war, ia a dreadful fallacy." The speaker was Herbert C. Hoover, chairman of the American food board. "Germany," he went on, "Is like the young man who wisely thought he'd grow his own garden stuff. This young man had, been dignity? for about an hour, when his spade turned up a quarter. Ten minute later he found another quarter. Then he found a dime. Then he found a quarter again. " 'By gosh.' he said, 'I've struck a silver mine,' and, straightening up, he felt something Cold slide down his leg. Another quarter lay at his feet. He grasped the truth: there was a hole In his pocket." Washington Star. The collections had fallen off badly In .the colored church and the pastor made a short address before the box was passed. VAh don't, want any man to give more dan his share, breddren" he said gently, "but we mus all gib ercordln' to what we rightly hab. Ah say rightly hab, breddren, because we don't want no tainted money In de box. Squire Jones tola me dat he done miss soma chickens d'.s week. Now, ef any ob our breddren hab fallen by de wayside In connection wid dose chickens, let him stay, his hand from dat box. "Deacon Smith, please pass de bot an' Ah'll watch de signs an' see ef dare's any one in dla congregation dat needs me ter wrastle In prayer for him." The effect of this brief discnurse was instantaneous and remarkable. Throughout the congregation loud whispers of "Len' me a qua'tah," "let me hab halt a dollah," gib me a nickel "til mawnln'," were heard. Ap parently every one put something in the box. The Rev. Sam Small Smith sur veyed the coins with a satisfied smile as he remarked: "Ah done tole Squire Jones dat none ob my lambs was guilty of seeh diabolical eccentricity." Philadelphia Ledger. Mayor Hylan of New York said at a recent luncheon: "The story about Germany being well nourished now Is as credible as the story ot the Scotch restaurant. "A Scotchman dined In a Broadway restaurant, and was disgusted when the watter brought him a bill for J3.75. " 'Mon, mon,' said the Scotchman. 1 could get a better dinner nor that in Scotland for a ahlllln'.' " 'Ah, come off!" said the waiter. 'What would they give you for a shilling V "'Mon,' aald the Scot, 'they'd give me soup, fish, roast beef, chicken, Ice cream, fruit, cheese, coffee and a cigar.' "'My goodness,' aald the waiter, that's a bargain! Whereabouts in Scotland is it?' . " 'I don't know, mon.' said the Scot, 'but ain't It awful cheap?' "-New York Herald. Two Letters from Cody. Grand Island, Neb., Dec. 18. To th V.rlitnr nf Tha Uppr Tf the renorts that are being circulated regarding camp conditions at coay ana run ton are true, then Immediate action should be taken to remedy tb defect", which under the extraordinary cir cumstance cannot be entirely avoided. I verily believe some statements are far fetched and wide of the mark. The following is an extract from a letter read by Senator Hitchcock from a Cody boy's letter: "We have two base hospitals here with 5,000 to 6,000 In each with practically no attention at all. So I see why there are so many dying off." As I understand it we hav about men In Camp Cody; if 8,000 to S.000 men are in these Vinonit.ilc than naartv 40 ner cent are on the sick list. There surely Is something radically wrong sucn is the case. No sane man can believe that such conditions exist. I have a boy at Cody and In his last letter he says, "everything here runs very smoothly." The enly com plaint he had was with the elements, "wind! Wind! wind! sand! sand! sand! night and day. Cold enough to freeze ice at night, warm -enough in the day to thaw out a refrigerator. We must cough up mud balls and try to keep our throat clear of the .ob structions." "An ounce of prevention is better than a pound of cure," is an oft re peated saying. I believe if our boys are instructed to know how to care for themselves under some Of these trying circumstances and changes of climate, there would be an appreci able diminution of sickness in camps, Other things being equal. CHARLES H. GOOD, i . Jobs for Soldiers' Women Folks. New York, Deo. 29. To the Editor of The Bee: Appreciating the active part The Bee has taken in encourag ing and energising every effort to back up the men now In arms in de fense of our country, might I be per mitted to suggest that you call the at tention of the business men of your community to one service they can render those men, who are now mak ing auch great sacrince, that Is sure to earn their hearty gratitude and give them new courage for the work before them. This is to always give preference when engaging employee (wherever that is practicable), to the 'mothers, the wives, the. slaters or other de pendents of men who have sacrificed their work and their business pros pects, and stand ready to sacrifice their lives to serve the United States or any of its allies in any branch of war service. This has been made an Imperative rule by the Universal Film Manufac turing company in its New York offi ces, in its studios on the Pacific coast, and its 70 offices throughout the coun try, one of which, cs you are aware, Is located in your territory. This rule applies not only to the relatives of the 200 employes of Universal now in the service, but to all women who have made the supreme sacrifice of giving their men to their country. And there Is another thin we can do for those women; Let them feel that when their men do come home again all employers will realize the fact that they have not become dere licts, but that, on the contrary, they are more effective, of more value, be cause of the service they will have rendered. Let them know that this service, with its stern discipline, its severe trials, will have developed and strengthened their manhood and made them of greater worth to them selves, to their families and in the work to which they will return. UNIVERSAL FILM MFG. CO. CARL LAEMMLE, President Roosevelt for the Cabinet. Auburn, Neb., Dec. 31. To the Edi tor of The Bee: I have been a con stant reader of The Bee for many years. I have always found it up-to-date, broad minded and intensely pa triotic. I enjoy most all the letters In your Letter Box, but once in a while some one will rush out in print and show how narrow he la. That seems to me to be the condition of a gentle man from Omaha, who seems to be afraid President Wilson might ap point Mr. Roosevelt for secretary of war. "Sucn men as Roosevelt," ne exclaims, and why not Mr. Roosevelt please 7 Is he not one of the foremost citizens of his time? Has he not shown himself big enough to fill any place in the United States, and has he not offered himself to his country in most any place, and has he not been turned down by party politics? Even democrats say and believe he should have been sent to Franca. Can the democratic party afford to ignore a man like Roosevelt, when it is going to take all parties and they must be united as one man to put down Ger man militarism? I do not believe there would be much difference In President Wilson's and Roosevelt's opinions of fighting the war. Has not the president al ready copied after Mr. Roosevelt in preparedness? Only he was about three yeara too late, wnere wouia this country have been today in pre parednesa if Roosevelt had been listened to? Is it not a fact that Mr. Roosevelt was the first, or among the first men to congratulate the president on his great message to the world ror de mocracy? I believe Mr. Roosevelt is standing with the president today on all the Important matters pertain ing to the war. It would be one of the hardest blows to the kaiser, if Mr. Roosevelt was put at the head of the army as secretary of war, for he knows that would mean something, now let us all be Americans first, and when the war Is over we can turn to politics if we wish to, but nrst let us win this war. J. M. BURRESS. MIRTHFUL REMARKS. "Hava yoa amuacd youf baby brother, Willi, and kept blm quiet while I m ona?" "Trt, ma, and h hann't opened hla mouth line you went away." "What did you flo to amuae him, Willie?" "I save him the mucilage bottla to suck." Baltimore American.' She At last the time la coming when the eexra will be on an equal footing. He That can never be. She-Why hot, air? He There will never be any real equality I between the aexea while a man can't so i through hla wife'a pocketa (or the loone I change he wante. Baltimore American. I SIGNPOSTS OF PROGRESS. Trammlaaion of power by methoel hitherto unknown la tha intereitinf aub jeet ef ait article in the October number of Popular Mechanic magaiine. Tht die eovery ia now being utilised by the British war office and admiralty. After the war IS will be available for general use by all power men, and, it il said, will completely revolutionize prevailing systems. While Europe is retaining nearly all of the cheese that it manufactures for its own pressing needs, Argentina haa turned t) cheese making on a Urge scale, and Is now placing important quantities in tha United Stated. In August, 1917. that country de livered 448,000 pounds in this country, and in September 279,500 pounds. These fig ures do not approach those of imports front Europe before the war, but they are inter esting in view of the fact that during the entire year 1916 not a single pound of cheese came from Argentina. TOYS I USED TO KNOW. John O'Keefe in New York WorWL Within the ahopplng center her I stand, a waif and stray. And watch the thronira of women Sear Who pay and pay and pay. Wlila-eyed, t look about, but ohl ' Where are the toya I used know? Swift an aetttboat goes by, To boyhowl'a marveling. And fascinated eyea rove high To watch the wonder thing. But, heart of mine! across my sight There floats a little home-made kite. My boy dnnanda a 'lectrle train, With fifty feet of track. Hla modern spirit aklms the plain And brooke no holding back. O Chrlsmas when I used to bleas My key-wound fifty-cent expreeal My little girl I -must amuae, And so I buy at view A doll that wears French high-healed shoe And silken stockings, too! Tet lo! a vlnlon from above My sister's aloll. ot rags and love I O dear, dead aya that brought to me My earliest burst of speed, When Santa placed beneath tha tree My first velocipede! Tet my son telle the Chrlstmaa ciar He's got to have a motorcar. O tree, long alnce decayed and dead, What Joya you held apart! Oee! how those mlttena, thick and xe.i Warmid both my handa and heart! nut now my wife I have tobuy A pair ot auto gauntlets high. Hera, where tha Incandescent! gliam Amid tha oostly ahow, t seem to aee, aa in a dream, The penny candles glow. Tree of my youth! my heart, grown new Again hanga on a branch of you! You Get Better Cough : 3 Syrup by Making It at Home trust's nor, ran nve about IS by 4 it. Easily made and eoeta little. ' J You'll never really know what a fine cough syrup you can make until yon prepare this famous home-made remedy. You not only save $2 as compared with the ready-made kind, but you will also hare a mora effective and dependable remedy in every way. It overcomes tha usual coughs, throat and chest colds in 21 hoursrelieves even whooping cough quickly. Get ounces of Plnex 769 cents worth) from any goad dru? store, pour it into a pint bottle and nil the bottla with plain granulated sugar syrup. Here you have a full pint a family supply of the most effective cough syrup that money can buy at a cost of only 65 cents or loss, lb sever spoils. The prompt and positive results given by this pleasant tasting cough syrup have caused it to be used in more homes than any other remedy. It quickly loosens & dry, hoarse or tight cough, heals tha inflamed membranes that line the throat and bronchial tubes, and re lief comes almost immediately. (Splen did for throat tickle, hoarseness, bron chitis, croup and bronchial asthma. Pines is a highly concentrated com pound of genuine Norway pine extract, and has been used for generations foe throat and chest ailments. Avoid disappointment bv asking your druggist for ''2Mi ounces of Plnex1 with full directions, and don't accent any thing else. A guarantee of absolute sat iafaciion or money promptly refunded, goes with this preparation. Jha Pinet Co.. H Wa.vnc lad. Locomotive Auto Oil The Best Oil We Know 55c Per Gallon Tbc.LV. OflCosnpery CRAIN EXCHANGE BLDG. President. The Useful Light Shonld your Gns lamps need attention DAT OB SIGHT Call Douglas 605, or, Maintenance Department only Donglas 4136. Omaha Gas Co. im Howard Street mm & He (nfter a long silence)! Wonder how things are developing in Rticala. She (with an unauppreKsed yawn) If you , only stay a little while longer, you can find ; out by the morning papers. Baltimore American. Jane Willis Kit la hard Up for suitors thia year, Isn't sho? Marie Oillla Tea. Indeed. She has lowered her standard of eligible incomes, advanced bar age limit and let down the b.irs to for eigners. Life. . WrldiBestBev'1,9e A pure, soft drink. Whets the appetite. Helps digestion. Gives strength. At grocers', st druggists', in fact at all places where good drinks are sold. LEMP Manufacturers ST. LOUIS CEF.VA SALES CO., H. A. Sttlnwender, Distributor SJ 1817 Nicholas St.. Douf. 3842, Omaha, Neb. s I You can secure a maid, stenogra pher or bookkeeper by using a Bee Want Ad. THE OMAHA BEE INFORMATION BUREAU j Washington, DC. 1 Enclosed find a 2-cent stamp, for which you will please send me, entirely iree, i.ne iavy calendar. Name. , . Street Address Ve- ...State ,r.vvrr i