The Omaha Bee 1 w ltw G—E VEW1W G—S U N D A Y ; THE'BEE PUBLISHING CO. Publisher N. B. UPDIKE, President R ALLA HD DUNN. JOY M. NACKLEB. Editor in Chief Business Msnarer MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The A (seriated Press, of which The Bet 1* e member, eseluaivtlr entitled to the use foe republlcetion of ell news dispatches oredited to tt or not otherwise credited m this neper, and alao tha local news published herein. All rights of rapublicatipn at our special dispatches are also reserved. The Omaha Rea Is a member of tha Audit Bureau ef “Circulations, tha reeoimiaed authority on circulation audits, and Tha Omaha Rea's circulation la regularly • edited by their erganUatlcm. Entered at aeeond-elasa matter May It, ISO*, at Omaha postoffica under act of March A, 1*79. BEE TELEPHONES Private Branch Exchange. Aak for i T |..tia 1 /W1 tha Department or Person Wanted. Jh 1 KI1IIC 1WU OFFICES Mein Office—17th and Farnam Co. Bluffs —It Scott SL So. Side.N. W. Cor. 14th N. New York—World Bldg. Detroit—Ford Bldg. I Chicago—Tribune Bldg. Kensae City—Bryant Bldg. I St. Louis—Syn. Trust Bldg. Los Angelas—Higgins Bldg. 1 San Fran.—Hollrook Bldg. Atlanta—Atlanta Trust Bldg. >■ -/ OmahaVhefe the^st is at its Best ONE COUNTRY, ONE FLAG. Not a great many ypars before he died, Knute Nelson, United States senator from Minnesota, took a group of distinguished friends through bis home. •He showed them all his treasures, until he came to a chest which he said contained hia most highly prized possession. Opening, he disclosed the old army blouse he had worn when he marched as a private in Grant’s army. It was carefully preserved, its buttons were bright, and the old senator gath ered it lovingly in his arms, as he spoke sentences that betokened the depth of his emotions. In this was something typical of the spirit of the men who wore the uniform in those, days, whether it was of blue or of gray. It must be re membered that brave men apd true marched under either flag, and died for what they thought was right. Yet Knute Nelson typified something else in his own person. It was the spirit of forgiveness and mutual jinderstanding. With the* acerbities of the struggle mellowed or dissipated by the passing of the years that had flown. Senator Nelson had for his closest friend in Washington a Confederate soldier who had been his bitterest enemy during the four dreadful vears of fraternal struggle. | a a a | Many another reunion of the Blue and the Gray has taken place on the same basis. Long ago the Grand Army of the Republic and the United Con federate Veterans buried the hatchet. They have exchanged between themselves so many evidences of fraternal regard and mutual esteem it is difficult for many of the youngsters of today to comprehend it pH. But those men know. They tasted the acrid tang of powder smoke, they saw the devastation spread by war, and In the severeat school known to man they learned lessona that took deep root. At brave man Yespects another equally brave. There is,' a feeling that thrills “when two strong men stand lace to face,” that cements the bond that will bold 1hem while life endures. Political issues that surged so high as to over whelm the nation with a wave of war have softened where they have not disappeared. In very truth, the song bird has builded her nest in the cannon’s mouth so far as these men are concerned. Now we hear from Washington that the last vestige of dis crimination born of interstate strife is about to van ish. The law that forbade the appointment of a southern soldier to a soldiers’ home board is to be repealed. When this is gone th*re will be left no trace of the conflict, so far as laws go that draw a ■ distinction between men of the North and the South. What a fine thing it will be if that art of congress is sealed before Memorial Day dawns this year. Then indeed can the veterans in solemn ceremony decorate the graves of comrades who have passed on, thank ing God that, the last evidence of animosity has gone, and in the whole land there is one spirit of concorn and harmony of purpose. A second and a third gen eration of Americans are coming on since the day at, Appomattox. Their admiration for the armies of that day includes both sides. Just as the issues then considered so big have faded into b past that takes on a softer hue as the perspective lengthens, so has the rancor that divided the nation changed with a clearer understanding. All honor is for the men who fought to save the union, with gentle forgiveness for those who were mistaken in their conception of the right. And the sooner the last shred of legal disqualification of th^ latter disappears from (he nation’s statute hooks, the better it will be for every one. Columbia’s sons and daughters are united and as one family th'ey salute the flag, and Home land and far land and half ttie world around. Old Glory hears the glad salute, and ripples In the sound." CAL GOES TO THE CIRCUS. The pregident of the United States wasn't at the circus when it showed in Washington the other day, but C«1 Coolidge was there. Sitting right along side John Ringling, Cal laughed at the clowns, gasped ■ with amazement when the flying trapeze performers made their daring leaps, and watched with bated breath while the snere drummer gave the long roll thet preceded the daring dive from the top of the tent to the net apreed far below. The tent wei bigger, the performance more elaborate, the Beat a little better end Cal a little older, otherwise things were about the same as when on a former occasion Cal sat under the canvas up in Rutland. Nobody paid any attention to Cal when he went to tha circus In Rutland, and very little tnore was paid to Cal when he went to the circue in Washington with John Ringling. The band played when the president esme in, end the huge crowd stood up and cheered him, but when Cal sat down he was just a plain American citizen bent on renew ing hie youth by being dazzled by circus doings, just as he had been dazzled yeare before up in Vermont. • If he did not munch peanuts, imbibe red lemon ade, whoop with delight when aome toy balloon broke looee, applafld the young lady In outstanding tarlatan skirts when she turned flip-flops on the back of the padded horee, end etay for the concert, then we are mistaken in Cal, that's all. Tha president of tha United States may go to tha eircus, all right.; but the minute he gets under tha big top there i* a sudden shedding of presidential dignity and thera and then emerges the sound, wholesome, red-hlooded American hoy. It simply couldn't happen In any country whose heredi tary monarch* rule. It just couldn’t happen in any J other country thin this good old U. S. A. And when we read about Cal going to the eircuc, every bloom ing one of us, regardless of politics or partisan bias, hopes that Cal had as good a time as we have when we lie to ourselves by saying we only want to see the animals and then burry out to where the flags and pennants are waving. It’s mighty little time we spend under the ani mal top. We hurry on into the big top, grab tire I best available seat, get ready to become cross-eyed so we can watch all three rings at once, and then become boys and girls again. It must have been a great day for Cal. It cer tainly was a great day for all us when the presi dent of our beloved country could lay aside the cares and onerous duties of his high office and for an hour nr two be just plain Cal along with John and Tom and Dick and Harry and all the rest of the bunch. DOLLAR A-YEAR "DICKS.’* We believe the public service will suffer little because of the action of Attorney General Stone in abolishing the detective bureau of the Department of Justice. This does not mean, we take it, that the department is to be left without proper Yneans of carrying on investigations. William .1. Burns, whose, chief service to the United States has been to pro vide from time to time those gentle little thrills that George Creel furnished during Wilson’s term, has been retired to private life. He will continue his de tective business, as of yore, but his stories in the future will savor more of service to private patrons than to the public. It is not hard to understand why Mr. Bums, as chief of the secret service, declined to furnish the names of his “dollar-a-year" detectives to the sen ate committee. He did not want to humiliate any of the men who were in the service. Attorney Gen eral Stone has no such compunctions, nor any rea son for withholding the list, so he has made public the names. Several of them are men of great promi nence, concerning whose character there is no ques tion. Just why they should be interested in serving as "operatives” of the Burns bureau is not clear. While the war was on a great service was per formed by a volunteer secret service organization. Its members as a rule were, prudent, well balanced men, who carried on inquiries without attracting undue notice from anybody. They served the gov ernment well, furnishing useful information whereby some guilty were punished who otherwise might have escaped, and in several cases saving innocent men from unjust accusations. In a sense the Burns plan may be regarded as a continuation of this organiza tion. Behind it all, however, was the “red” scare. Many people were apprehensive of the spread of rad icalism. "Parlor boleshvism” was a popular thing for a time, and even yet there are some wealthy per sons who contribute to support causes and propa ganda they have not sufficiently investigated. Mainly, howevgr, the services of the Volunteer detective must have been to report conversations more or less private in their character. Such espionage is pe culiarly distasteful to the United States. In a land where free speech is the right of all, where no man is amenable for his opinion, and where the very safety of all our institutions depends upon open ex pression of views, spies have no place. A govern ment that depends upon them is poorly founded. The attorney general says in the future he will do his own detecting. Let him stick to this, and se cure his Information through means that do not smack of customs popular with despots. In free America the spy is an unnecessary adjunct to the federal government. WHILE TEMPUS FUGITS. The Lincoln Journal charges that 50 years ago an Omaha paper was attacking the state university in furtherance of a scheme then hatching to remove that institution from Lincoln to Omaha. The charge is probably true. Those were the days when the chief aim of one municipality was not to build some new industry, hut to grab off something another municipality had secured. Those were the days of county seat fights, as many old pioneers will recall. Those, too, were the days when voters elected | to office the men who could denounce the other fel lows in the most vituperative terms; when partisan ship divided families and neighbors; when long horned rattle roamed the open ranges, and pass holders were in the majority on all passenger trains. We do things differently, and in most instances, better these days. Omaha is just as proud of the University of Nebraska as Lincoln, or any other part of the commonwealth. Party ties rest lightly, the old-time political orator is a forgotten back number, the white-faced steer has displaced the longhorn, and the political pass is as dead as the late Julius Caesar. County seat wars, once waged with rifles and shotguns and stuffed ballot boxes, are almost unknown, and when one does bob up It is as quiet as a summer sea. A vast amount of history has been made In Ne braska during the last 50 years. Satisfactory his tory, too, in the main. The great question before Nebraskans today is whether we shall profit during the next 50 years by the experience of the 50 years just past. If congress Is going to adjourn June 7, It Is also going to work a lot more and talk a lot less, or leave something undone that ought to he done. A weitern exchange says Jim Reed of Missouri is no longer a candidate, “having been shown." Shown; he was shoved. Now the secret is out. Magnus Johnson used to be a glassblower. Thus he qualified as a blowhard. Oscar Underwood backs out of Kentucky in favor of McAdoo. He must feel his race is about run. Those Germans did not display any flags at half staff when Poincare went down, either. At that we think Rudy Nebb played his partner a mean trick. ----—— -\ Homespun Verse —By Omaha’* Own Poet— Robert Worthington Davie __—-—mJ DEAR LITTLE URCHINS. Dear little nrrlilns with sparkling eyaa, Mud bespattered and gay; Clothed In tha rags, of a thousand algha, Buoyant end free are they. Treading the atreet In Oi* noonday haat, Wading In mud and nilr*. Dancing along with their little feet Blistered and red aa flra. Dear little urchins! Money can’t give Tha jov of their wholesome da vs - Tha ecstasy of the dreams they live. Doing Ihelr carefree way*. Dear lit lie urchins with faces round, ''heck* that are dimpled and sweet Hall to them with contentment crowned - JBarefooted kings of the etr«cf. Why Nicholas! The Idea of Your Driving Right ■■ , Up to the Front Door With It! .. . _. .___/ Letters From Our Readers All lottoro mu*t bo niirnnd. but mm» will b* withhold upon rrquo*t. Commnnf* ration* of 2H0 word* and loo* will l»o firm proforenr#*. ------S Against fhe Crow. Jansen. Neh—To the Kdltor of The Omaha Ree; We have carefully read tour editorial, “Crows end the Cut Worms.'' It would seem by this artl He you would almost have tis believe the crow coming to the farmer's res cue saves the Nebraska corn crop from destruction by rut worms. Any observing farmer will tell you the crow destroys more corn than the rut worms he eats would have de stroyed: and. while the cut worm Is a pest, the crow Is a much greater enemy to the fat meg Tha rrow Is not only "accused" nf destroying other birds' eggs and killing their young, byt he has been raught In the art time and again and proven guilty beyond a doubt. Quite true, nature has her own way of preserving the balance and if left alone will usually do the right thing. Nature also has her way of curing disease, and yet. the timely Interference of a skilled physician or snregon can assist na ture wonderfully In "getting results." The coyote apd rattlesnake form a part of nature's great plan, still It Is probably wise and best for man to keep on fooling with her plans and do as he has been doing In the past when he encounters ei'her of the shove creatures. We hope tha infer enre is plain. Certainly, most birds are the farmer's best fVlends. Py destruction nf Insect pests they do much more good than harm; hut the crow Is not one of these. We are well acquainted w'ith the crow, hut fail to see where he conics in for any perceptible part in thia beneficial economy. We be lleve that one robin (whose eggs anil young tho crow will destroy) Is of more worth to the farmer and horti culturist than 100 crows. Personally. It g'vcs us far more pleasure to act one robin (though he he eating a few f Abe Martin V_ J I I Of all th’ foolish questions, askin' ft>r William Jennin's Bryan's per manent address is th’ limit. Oppo sition makes th’ mare go. (I’opyrlght, mi ) « of our cherries, to which he is always welcome) than the above number of crows. Anri when in the field we would ra'her listen to the song of one meadow lark than the discordant caw ing of a whole flock of crows. Just because the crow' may destroy a Jew cut worms, must we preserve him to prey upon the nests ard young of bur song ami game birds (not to mention our domestic fowl) when almost any bird in the Hat would destroy more Insects In a season than a dozen crows ? We hope this will be understood and the watchword of both farmer snd sportsman should be: "Swat the Crow.” R. M. Ml HR AY. Meat and Dally Diet. Chicago.—To the Kditor of The Omaha Bee: Your issue of May .1 t arried a report of a lecture by Dr. Turner given at the exhibition held tinder the auspices of your paper and the Brandeis store. Dr. Turner make* the statement that the time will come when red meat will not la* used, for it poisons the nerves quicker than any other food We must take exception to this state Dodge Brothers Four Passenger Coupe & -• _•_ iiftf TO-NIGHT Yomorrow Alright KEEPING WELL-An ff? Tablet l a vegetable aperient) taken at j night will help keep you welt, by toning end strengthening your 41* gaetion and elimination. Uttdfororor lOWar* Gel • aVBox Chipioff ilw Old Block W» JUNIORS-Litll* Nto On* third the regular dr»a*. Mad# of the earn* ingredient*, then candy I coated. For children and adulta. — •OLD BY YOUR DRUQOIBTmJ ment. Modern science end medicine has shown that the old distinction he twecn red meat and other mra’s no longer holds. According to Dr. P. R. Hawk, s recognized authority: "An accurate chemical analysis of the various meats fails to show any material difference in the extractives which are present in the meats of differen' hues." Dr. Hawk was a professor of phystolngj cal chemistry at the Jefferson Medi cal college In Philadelphia. Similar quotations might he made from other authorities to bear out what I have snid. Meat used in a mixed liet contain ing green vegetables, fruits and other good foods is conducive to good health and need not be feared by any one, because of the Action that red meat should be shunned, which some phy sicians still cling to. May we have room In your paper for our letter? Bl'RKAU OK NUTRITION, C. Robert Mouiion, Director. _ t* t In making ^BALANCE that COUNTS • Sulphur, zinc, lead and other ingredient* • compounded with raw, gum rubber deter mine a tire'* wearing qualities. In gaso line. properly balanced proportions of low and higher boiling point fractions govern its worth as motor fuel. > * RED CROWN is made by the most modern and accurate processes of refining, to rigid specifications which insure uniform gasoline per fectly suited to modern motors. It contains an abundance of low boiling point fractions to assure quick starts, and plenty of higher boiling point fraction* for power to the end of the stroke and big mileage per gallon. So well balanced is Red Crown that altering it in any way gives a less thoroughly satisfactory year nround fuel. To get the most out of your car, drive up to any Red Crown Service Station. You will be promptly and courteously served with full measure of ^ - balanced gasoline which will operate your motor REO CROWN on a lean, clean-burning economical mixture. Road Map Buy Polarine motor oil there and give your motor protective lubrication. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEBRASKA Crown cIhe Balanced Gasoline *' - • — . [sunny Side up clake Comfort, nor forget _ Hhat sunrise nei/er failed us yet n J Ctha IkiLtltr —.—— _ i 1 — ■-— — ----■ — - Tt'RNINO' T1M15 BACK. In a few days we expert to he down in old Missouri, a component part of the flood Will Excursion of the Omaha Chamber of Commerce. When the spee.al train strike* Tarkio we will he in our element, for then we strike Rnokport, Fair fax, Corning, Craig, Bigelow, Mound City, Maitland and Skid more, with every one of w-hlrh we w ere once as familtar as we are with the palm of our hand. The only regret we shall I feel on the trip is that we will not he permitted to parade at ■he head of Han Deadlines' band through the streets of Oregon, ths county scat of Holt. It was In Oregon that we finished what little public school lng we had and became 'devil” in the oftlre of the old Holt • 'ounty Sentinel. Tom Curry and Deacon Dobyns owned and published the Sentinel when we started In as an apprentice. And Tom and the Deacon are still publishing the old sheet. We remember that, they called David Porter Dobyns ’ Deacon” be cause he locked the part and acted anything but. If we can sneak away from the train at Maitland we are going to Jump to Oregon and say “Hello” to the old bunch. j , We shall he greatly disappointed if at Oregon we are not permitted to meet John Marshall Nicholas Welton Dobyns furry Croley, the muscular gentleman of color who swung the lever of the old Washington press while we manipulated the inking roller. And at Maitland we hope to meet up with Elliott, the long and attenuated city marshal who once arrested us for shooting within tho city limits*. The victim of our marks manship on that particular occasion was a cat that disturbed our slumbers, we at that time being foreman, pressman, make up man. job printer, ad man and janitor of the Maitland Mes senger, Will C. Charles, editor and publisher. The visit to Rockport will be tinged with regret, for Dad Turney will not be there. Dad was the sheriff who escorted us lo jail one day because we Were In contempt of rourt for rs fusing to answer a question Boss Miles put to us while we were upon the witness stand. Boss was the county attorney, and Judge Kelley was on the bench. Then, too, Uncle John end Aunt Hanna AVrighf, with whom we boarded while printing on th* old Atchison County Mail, will not be there. --- At Fairfax we hope to see the upstairs room In which w» printed the Fairfax Comet, and at Craig we hope to meet up with some old-timer who remembers the flood of IASI, when we helped to print the Craig Meteor on wall paper because the ready print couldn't reach us over the wild expanse of Mis souri river water. And If so he we meet up with a lot of gray hatred men and women with whom we danced and sung more ye*--* ago than we like to recall, then our Joy will he complete AVe are going to insist that Dan Deadlines allow ns to play drum major for his dusky musician* while parading through the old Missouri home towns. Incidentally, If any of the old-timers m»»t the train at th# various points named wo are trusting to them not to t»II *11 ih.y know about the old days. AA'e have managed to live down quite a few thing* during the 40 year* or more since we ca vorted around In thn*« part*. AVICI, M. MAUPIN'. ■ run * - — ■ ■ ■ - - Spice of Life "Our party would have been a great success." said the temperance leader, “it only our leading speaker had not forgotten himself ' "Why, what did he do?” "Well, before he drank the glass of water he tried to blow the foam off the top.-'—City' College Mercury. A cat may look at a king, they sav. An old-time proverb whieh never fails. But the cat must blush If he knows today What a horse can do to the prince of Wales. —Detroit Free Press. — "You look so pleased, old rr.sn. the fortune teller must have predicted something good. * "You bet! She predicted that 1 would have a financial reverse *i don't see anything Joyoua In that." "You would If yoq know anything1 about my finances. I tell you that if ---- they don't reverse pretty quick I’ll be busted.'—Boston Transcript. ' Somebody says be is never alone who is accompanied by noble thoughts. '* ‘ Or an umbrella."—Louiavlll# Cou* rler-Journal. I hired a car and I bought some seats Where the violins were whining. I bought «ome orchids and enme eat* Where wealthy folks were dining. I got In return a good night kiss, Just a tiny little caress. O! And the question I ask m' *e!f !« thie Was it worth all that? I gesso. —Louisville Courier-Journal. When in Omaha Hotel Conant 250 Rooms— 250 Baths— Rates $2 to $.3