*:* THE WASHINGTON - DOUGLAS * INVESTMENT CO. ••• BONDS, INVESTMENTS, £ RENTALS AND FARM £ LANDS $ Phone Webster 4206. * 1413 North 24th St. $ »>, m m • • iTR CRAIG MORRIS DENTIST | , 2407 Lake St. Phone Web. 402)] MRS. H. STEELE Scalp Specialist MAGIC SYSTEM Hair Dressing, Scalp Treatment Shampooing and the Dyeing of Hair Goods For Appointment Call Web ster 7034 2202 Clark Street. C. S. JOHNSON 18th and Izard Tel. Douglaa 1702 ALL KINDS OF COAL and COKE at POPULAR PRICES Beat for the Money ... . . Res. Colfax 3831. Douglas 7150 AMOS P. SCRUGGS Attorney-at - Law 13th and Farnam Classified Advertising RATES— 114 cents a word for single in sertions; 1 cent a word for two or more insertions. No advertisement taken for iess than 15 cents. Cash should accom pany advertisement. Colored woman wanted who knows how to clean hog chiterings. Joseph Vomacka, 27th and M streets. Phone S 2469. Wanted—A Colored dressmaker. Call Webster 2177. 1107 North Nine teenth street. Wanted—A middle aged woman as a housekeeper. R. S. Dixon, 2812 Har ney street. DRUG STORES THE PEOPLE’S DRUG STORE_ Douglas 1446. 109 South 14th St. ADAMS HAIGHT DRUG CO., 24th and Lake; 24th and Fort, Omaha, Neb. COLORED NEWSPAPERS AND MAGAZINES FRANK DOUGLASS Shining Parlor. Webster 1388. 2414 North 24th St. furnished rooms for runt. Furnished rooms for rent, 980 North 25th Ave. Douglas 6077. Modern furnished rooms. Gentle men preferred. Webster 1975. 2320 North 28th Ave. Mch 15. First class rooming house, steam heat, bath, electric light. On Dodge and 24th si. car line. Mrs. Ann- Hanks 924 North 20th st. Doug. 4.37.,. First-class modern furnished room*. Mrs. L. M. Bentley Webster, iTo* North Twenty-sixth street. Rhone Webster 4769, For Rent—Unfurnished room for light housekeeping. Hutten Flats, 1107 North 19tb street. Webster 2177. Mrs. T. L. Hawthorne. Furnished rooms in packing house district. 2715 Q street (rear). Mrs. M. Irving. For Rent—Two furnished rooms. Mrs. W. H. Middleton, 2866 Maple street. Webster 1489. Smoke John RuBkln 6c Cigar. Big gest and Best.—Adv. Hun Ships Should Replace Vessels Sunk by U-Boats. MUST PAY AND PAY AND PAY Stolen Machinery Ceing Used by the German Factories, Together With Destroyed Property, Must Be Replaced. By WRIGHT A. PATTERSON. More than two million American sol diers crossed the Atlantic that they might help fight the battle of civiliza tion and defeat the selfish ambitions of the people of the German nation. I crossed the ocean in a convoy which carried some thirty thousand of these men. and for nearly fourteen days it was my privilege to share with them the dangers of the sea and the dan gers of the German submarines. I saw these men crowded into the hold of small ships that they might the more quickly go to the rescue of that civili zation for which we were fighting; I saw them as they were tossed about by the terrific seas driven by gales that reached a maximum of 100 miles an hour; I saw them die of exposure as the seas beat in upon them ; I saw*their bodies consigned to the waters of the broad Atlantic; in the convoy with which I crossed one of the ships went iown in the storm, carrying with it nearly five hundred of these Ameri an soldiers. And these tilings happened because ilie German people had run amuck, driven to it by a ‘elfish ambition for world domination and loot. Arc these people to escape a Just retribution? Are they to escape pay ment? I saw in Europe the mourning rel atives of women and children who had perished in the Irish sea because of the depredations of a German U boat. These women and children were traveling in a merchant ship on peace ful errands, hut they were sent to their deaths without warning, and without any opportunity of being , saved. Must Pay for Many Crimes. Should the people who were respon sible for these deaths of women and children escape without punishment for their crimes? That civilization which defeated the Huns will demand that Germany pay 1 Yankee Doughboys, Mopping Up Ground Captured From Germans in the Forest of Argonne, Pause for Rest Among Shattered Stumps of Once Beautiful Grove. for the crimes committed on sea and land. She must pay for the lives and | the ships lost at sea, and she must pay for the terrible destruction of*lives and property she caused on land. But how slmll Germany pay? She has not the money now with which to replace the ships or rebuild the French i und Belgian cities and towns or re place the machinery nnd other valu- i able property she has stolen. But Germany has ships and prop erty and labor, und with these she can pay a part. Germany's ships should be given to the neutral notions to replace those the German U-boats destroyed. Germany should be forced to recompense these nations ton for ton so fur as her merehnnt marine will accomplish that. Germany’s ship yards and German labor should be forced to build more ships with which to replace the merchant vessels of both neutral and allied nations sunk by German submarines. German labor should be put to work under guard of allied troops In the fields of France and of Belgium that these fields may again be put under cultivation. Germany has fo* genera tions called her youth to the colors for training as soldiers, and with these soldiers she has attempted to destroy the freedom of the world. Let her con tinue to call her youth to the colors, but instead of having guns put In their hands let them be put behind the plow In Belgium and France that they may remove the unexploded shells with which these once fertile fields are sown. Germany is responsible for the condition of these fields, und the Ger man people should be forced to accept the huzards of their reclamation. Let the Germun youth, paid by Ger man money, be assigned the task of rebuilding the destroyed cities anil towns and villages so fur as that can be done. Germany was able to do i without the constructive labor of mil lions of her men while they were tn gaged In destroying these cities, towns and villages, and now let her continue to do without this (constructive labor while her men rebuild that which they have so wantonly <—-troyed. Ger many's men have been satisfied to work at the destructive trade of the soldier for the meager pay of a Ger man soldier, and now let them be em ployed nt constructive work In the sec >tions they hav* destroyed, for lb some meager pay, und tills to be paid by Germany. The German people have stolen from Belgium und France much of the mu chinery and other valuable and port able property they found in the Invad ed districts. Much of the stolen mu chinery is running today in German factories, and with it the German peo pie are earning a livelihood while Un people of Belgium and northern France are idle because of a lack of oppor tunity. German employers are pre pared to reap a trade harvest as soon as they are again allowed to enter tin field of world trade been use they hav( this machinery. With it they can cap ture the markets that have been held by the French and Beltfiun employers, who have been put out of business by the depredations of Germany. The immediate return of this stolen machinery and other propert” should he forced, nnd where its return is not possible it should he replaced with (spilvalent machinery from German factories, and the machinery nnd prop erty destroyed should be replaced In the same way just sc far as that Is possible. Force Payment for /ill Damage. These methods will pay hut a small part of the debt of the Oeramn peo pie to the world, but 'hey will aid In some degree In undoing what the Hun* have so ruthlessly done. Along with these should he n money compensation for the nations that have suffered so cruelly at th« hands of the German nation and the German people. A rnon ey compensation the payment of which should be extended over a period of many, many years, that not only the present, hut future generations of the German people may learn, from the effort thut is needed to pay, that self ish, wanton war Is unprofitable. Judging from the German prisoners with whom I talked in France, I do not believe that the Germans are todaj a repentant people. They feel that they are temporarily a defeated peo pie, but many of them expressed thf thought that there would come a timf of reckoning for the world when Ger many would come into her own and German “kultur” would be forced up on the people of the world. It will take many, many years tt breed out of the German people theli present Ideas of world conquest, and this can only be accomplished by mak j Ing the generations yet to come paj and pay until they, too, hnv* learned that war for selfish purposes, war tt gratify selfish ambitions, can never b« profitable. STEEL DRUM REMOVES BARK Liabor-Saving Device That Does the Work of Many Men, and Does It Hapidly and Well. A new labor-saving device employed ; by a pulp manufacturer Is a big re volving drum In which a number of j logs are placed and tumbled about un | til all the bark ha* been removed, pre I paratory to grinding them up for pulp. This method of handling, says Elec trical Experimenter, does away with the task of removing the bark with knives. The drum is 30 feet long and about 10 feet In diameter, and is com posed of angle-iron strips fastened In side metal hoops, one edge of each strip projecting Inward and throwlug the logs about. Not only does the I drum dispense with the labor of sev j eral men, but It saves n considerable : amount of wood which Is wasted by re moving the bark In the old way. The labor involved in handling the logs is further reduced by using a conveyor which brings them to the drum and carries them away. UNITED STATES STILL FIGHTING DOMINICANS In a letter written to relatives in the United States and published in The Literary Digest for February 22, Private Alvin B. Kemp, a U. S. ma rine, says that the government is still fighting the Santo Dominicans. It appears that the enemy is made up chiefly of natives who resent their tieatment by this country, although the United States regards them as “bandits” in older to cloak their ef fort at native subjection. The present method of fighting is described by Private Kemp in the fol | lowing: “We search the hidden trails out— there are no roads—and search the mountains for bandit camps and stray ■ natives who look suspicious. In sev I oral engagements on finding these j hidden camps we found the Lewis gun I-: came in handy, as these men hide behind the thick brush and fire on us unseen, and the only way to silence them is to sweep the trees with a burst of fire. “So far we have been very lucky and have had few casualties, but have inflicted great damage to the enemy, just l ow many we are not allowed to state; but suffice it to say that to keep up their strength they are now ‘forcibly conscripting’ men, that is, they slip out at night and take peace ful native prisoners and force them to join them. We have two mounted outfits operating with us, but they don't seem to be as successful as the infantry, from the fact that they make too much noise approaching. These natives are very sharp-witted and can easily step aside ten paces in the brush and laugh as we go by. Once in a while the marines outwit them, however, and then they scatter in ev ery direction shouting: “Cuidalo ia carabina loca,” or "The crazy rifle, look out!” PAY FOR YOUR PAPER The really cheap man or woman is the one who takes a paper, reads it and then runs when the collector calls to ask them to pay for it. Do you patronize The Monitor ad vertisers? When you fail to get your paper, don’t holler. It must be that you owe something and haven’t paid. It takes some folks a long time to learn that a newspaper isn’t exist ing upon air. / Smoke John Ruskin cigar. LODGE DIRECTORY Keystone Lodge, No. 4. K. of P.. Omaha, Neb. Meetings first and third Thursday® of each month. M. H. Hazzard, C. C.; J. H. Glover, K. of R. and S. SOI 'TH OMAHA STOCK YARDS Daily *ENT! '» W™"10" t \ .*•••••••• • ••• • • • .... , , n || | The Monitt r il | ' Office I | 304 Crounse Block n *4 X;; 44 ** If Sixteenth Street i| At •• 1 OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE I _|i II ?? I it t? || ::J: v || We have moved our office Down Town |:l || Right Into Heart of Business District iy * ** *