THK KEK; OMAHA, SATURPAV. AUGUST 15, 1UH. THE OMAliA DAILV DEE KOt'NDF.D nY KDWARD ROaKVVATKR. VICTOR ROSK WATER. KD1T1 )R. The, Bee, Publishing Company. Proprietor. 1M-.R Bt;lMINU. KARN.AM AND FEVF.J .TLKNTH. J'ntered at Omaha postoft'lce as second-cU-ss matter. Tl.It.M3 OK SCllSCni.TinN. TtV carrier Py niail p month. prjur al!y snd Sunday . T'nllv without Sunday....'.. c 4 no lining and !iinlav . c. .' T.rnlng without Sunday.... 2o. 4.00 Sunday Bee only 2.01 Swl notice of cnatire of jxliire or complaints of Irregularity In drllvery to Omaha IW, Circulation riepartmcnt. nRMITTAJV C K. Remit hv draft, expreas or px""' order Onlv (o ont stump received In payment of entail se- ounta Personal check, except on Omaha and eastern exchange, not accepted. OK KICKS. Omaha The FW T?nlllln Pnuth Omaha 2N N street. Council muffs 14 North Mai street. T Inc-oln-Js Little HulMlnr. Chlrsso 9n Hearst HulMlng. Nw York-rioom 11". 2'i fifth avenue. Ht. Ixul MKJ New Hank of Vnimen-e. ' Washington 726 Fourteenth ... N. W. COR K KSI'ON DKNCR. Address eommonlratlona relating to news Mnil edi torial matter to Omaha B.t. r.d!torlel Lap.rtmrnt. J I I.Y circulation. 52,328 Ktate rif NVlirnikrt. Cmuity of DougUs. t. I'atght William, iinrulatlc-n rmunufr oC The Flea Publishing oompaoy. bolng duly ae-urn. aja thai the a voi axe dally circulation for thr inojilli of July, I'Jli, wax .'CK OWI'iHV WILLIAMS, riivtdntlun Jlanager. Subscribed In my prewwue and twuin to bifurs me, this 4th dv of Aiiatint, iSMt, UOUKHT HUN'TiIl. Notary Public. Subscribers leaving tho city trirporarlly should have The Re mailed to Ifxjm. Ad dress will Iks changed as often as r educated. Peace In Mexico at least for the next twenry-fouf hours. The returned voyagers will nor bo kept busy telling all about It. For up-to-the-minute war ni readably presented look to The Bee. Only three more days before the primary election. Do your vote-chasing now. Prosit! Yea, and before the tax on beer la doubled as a connequence of the war. SsaBBBBSBBBaBalaeWBSaBBSSSa ' That "sound of revelry by night" you hear cornea from Nebraska' cornfields, not Belgium's gay capital. If you wlh to start something on asniall scale, ask a' German shoemaker for a pair of Trench heels. Rifling Pun, Ind., baa reached lta tefilth In the anniversary of Its centenary, which it Is now celebrating. The experienced political campaigner, like the experienced military campaigner, crosses one bridge at a time. A Kansas man haa wisely observed that when a book "la very suitable aa a gift," It la rarely worth reading. Benatora hopeful of peace are said to see a bright light ahead. Can It be the mirage of JImhamlewIa' pink 'una? SOU, war to Justify itself ought to hare aome larger effect than merely making people brush up on their geography. i If the president aucceeds in catching the rascals who are raising food prices without cause he ought to "Bkln 'em alive." ! The prince of Wales' relief fund la nearly H.500.000. Looka aa If our British friends ex pected to have some relieving to do. j Our senator Is keeping out of the democratic rumpus at home, but he la represented by a proxy "who cannot tell where he la at. i , The candidate'a picture must have something compelling about It these daya to draw even a glance from eyea riveted on big war news. A tornado has blown down a Chautauqua tent in Missouri. And to think of the tent aue Wimblng after wltbatanding all those oratorical air blasts? t Everyone can understand how Young Amer. lea grlevea for hla dear teacher In danger of being marooned In Europe until after the time for school to open. If the A. D. C. mediators had all they could do to patch up our dlfferencea with Mexico, it ill take a whole alphabet of diplomat to fix things over the way. Those Mexican rebela delaying tuelr tri umphal entry of the capital until they can go arrayed In new uniforms should remember that clothes make a soldier of peace no more than of war. unit. tMAL UlUM Si. fUtJ The aenaation of the day la the marrlase of ilr John Rr4 and Mia Waid. the lady who flure iromlaeatly In the Uunner-Ward acaodal whUh dla upusd a churh and started eevaral sutta In court r.ev. J. a. Det.eiirr. aitor ef the &,llh Ith.ran thunh. tied the kmt. and Mr, Will Ward, a aon of the bride, tried to stop the ceremony, but unaueae fully. Rev. T. it. Dlmli k. formerly pastor of the Conere tlonal church of Oils city, and hla wlf.. are on a Helt to Mr. and Mrs. Foraythe. They hate resided in California aince 1671 ' William M. Buhrrutn has gone to New Toi k City lo buy food for fall trade, A fisherman. Abet Hammond, captured a larse cat fl.h la which, when cut open, he found the thumb of a man. Colonel 0. C. Cfcaaa, ae has been confined to hla Ud for elht week, has so far rerovered aa to be about The I nion f'a ifio Use ball teum lft for St. Louis where they w ill play , Hrons end ft. louts I'muns. Those ho went tew; Handle, runkhuueer. luKau. Cavauauch. Kockaell, Salisbury. Ijwr' U KeWey. WUtney. Wei. h, Taylor and ("need. mr'. .onipanied by Manager (iurneau and Charlie tJood ri' li foi the Ua,d of dlrttors. t The Hope of Peace. While public Interest bangs upon every bul letin from the front bearing upon the Impend ing "great battle," the object toward which anxiety muFt be directed la the flrnt vital open ing for the wedge of mediation or arbitration. For it is unthinkable that a war involving all of Europe directly, and other parU of the world Indirectly, should be Indefinitely prolonged. It in conceded that peace Is not possible until there has been more significant fighting. The powera must really feel the force f oppos ing arms before they are apt to turn favorably to any peacemaker's plan. If, however, all the protestations by the crowned heads of Europe deploring war are to be taken at their face value, then we may hopn for an early turn in affairs. A the-progress of events thus fsr hss made pacificists out of many militants in neu tn lands, so we mAy look for a corresponding effect upon some of the Influential onea In volved as the terrible drama moves on to its cli max. The Issues la the present utrugfle are dally multiplying and the ramifications incrtnalng with each change that occurs. Old compacts no longer hold, even blood relationship Is not a safe gauge of alliance and so many or the smaller nations ar yet to declare themselves. It Is now believed Switzerland and Fpaln may. of all the continental powers, remain outside the ranks of war. If so, Turkey will be soon flghttog its old allies. England and France, but for its same cherished prUe, the Aegean Islands, and Greece, Roumanla and Bulgaria line up. each to satlBfy its own ambition. One glimpse of this terrible entanglement aurely suggests the task of peace. The present meaning of the war, Its loss of life and property, liaralysis of business, financial cost of mainte nance with cousetjuent and incidental pain and suffering, must eventually outweigh other con siderations in the pursuit of peace. A Lesion in Efficiency. The completion of the Panama canal montba ahead of scheduled time la an object lesson in maximum efficiency which all our publle servanta may well take home to themselves. It shows what tan be done when the, business methods of private Industry are applied to pub lic enterprise. Former President Taft predicted the com pletion of the canal by January 1, 1115. It Is completed and ready for use now. Some work remains to be done before the largest vessels may pasa through without difficulty, but It la ready for tiee by all -ships that now use the Sue. Incidentally, that may mean more than even the builders of the Panani.i realized. Should tho European war be long continued there Is no telling about the freedom of the Suei. and should it be closed, much larger traf fic would go to the Panama. , In any event, peace, war or what not, the achievement wrought by the builders of our own. canal standa forth aa a lasting tribute to ther genius and patriotism and an everlasting illus tration of what might be accomplished all along the line of efficient public service, from the low liest municipal Job up to the highest federal office with the same intelligent direction. The War and the Farmer. In another column of this page The Bee prtnta a letter in which the writer Intimates that for the American farmer to take advantage of war prlcoa for the producta he has to aell marks him "aa the incarnation of selfishness." For the farmer we answer that he la no more selfish in taking advantage of market condt tiona In war time, or any other time, than is the average bualneea man selling hla wares or work-lngman Belling hi labor. The only place whtre the farmer geta the better of it on thia occasion is that the rise of prices has taken Place whllo his wheat, corn and other food producta are still in his own hands instead of in the banda of the middlemen who would other wise have taken all the extra profit. Because the money Is to accrue to the farmer Instead of to the speculator will not alter the situation so far as It concerns either the consumer at home or the customer abroad. So long, therefore, aa the farmer doea not resort to unfair methoda to Influence the market, what profits be may reap through war prlcea will be his by rights, and present no good ground for charging him. with either selfishness or lack of sympathy for the unfortunate burden-bearers of the war. Censored and Uncensored Newt. Those who, aot only in times of war, but of peace as well, think they would prefer an offi cial news censorship may now have an oppor tunity to see how such a scheme worka out in practice. All pwa from Europe la rigidly cen sored today, yet is it more satisfactory because of that? Large volumes of war news are being received which may be more nearly accurate than some are disposed to think, but the fact that the news filters through Interested official channels makes people skeptical. The point to be emphasized Is that the way to get accurata news la not to have it censored, for no matter who or what the censorship may be, it colors or suppresses the news, otherwise there would bs no occasloa for censoring. Per fection may not be found in our usual processes of publicity any more than etaewhere. yet aurely with accuracy Its vital asset everyone knows that the reputable newspaper prefers to print the truth, and all the truth, and, of course, can get at the truth best when untrammelled by censorship. Getting After Price Boosters. All power to the president in reaching those using the war aa a pretext for raising prlcea and making it harder to live. He is evidently not proceeding on surmise, for he declares that "The rapid and unwarranted Increase in the prices of foodstuffs in thia country on the pre text of the conditions existing in Europe la so serious and vital a matter that I take the lib erty," addressing the attorney general, "of call ing your attention to It." That sounda like a call to the attorney gen eral to Institute criminal prosecution if neces sary to stop the abuse, and if he cannot find a law to fit the case, the president will ask con gress to enact one. Such a situation calls for prompt and vig orous action, and the president's activity will be hailed with general satisfaction. It la not a time for impassioned outcries so much as preventive measures. If natural conditions of supply sad demand do not warrant price In creases, artificial conditions should not be per mitted to. Brief eosrtalawMeae ea taaaely topics laTtted. rhe Bee asewaaee as reepoaaisUrty fee opialoae ef eerreeveadeats. ail Is rests siW jeot te eeadeaaattoa f edlto. Pnlltlre la Rate Making- NORTH LOrp, Neb., Au. U.-To the Editor of The Bee: I had Intended saying no more on political subjects this year. T would not have said so mih had the Impetuous political machine of Lincoln not rearranged Ha plans so often. Each arrensement called for another answer. The primary election belna; at hand, a, new stunt waa to be performed, which. Ihey gay, required seven years to unfold. Had they said seven weeks, the aaaertlon should mora etrnntiy appeal to the public. Politicians are Inclined to be foxy. Tho people are to be surprised by the form of an order Isaned by the railway commission reducing railway ratea 1 per rent. The objection to much of this rats fixing- business Is that much, of the farts ere kept from the people. The oommlwilon has entered upon the policy of selecting a half dosen cities of the state as Jobbing centers and those centers are favored above every other part of the state. Suppose that freight might be shipped from Tork to all parts of the stats at a CO per cent lower rate than from any other point In the state; York would soon become the commercial center of the state. The commission has not made York the center, but It has given that monopoly to about a half dosen cities. There Is no hindrance to the Job bers of those cities In setting- the profits on their goods aa they have valuable protection la freight rats. The large cities have good railway facilities and why la addition to that give them the advantage of ratesT Are we legalizing real estate value? If the people will take a little time to look Into this subject they may find polities In It. To what extent will the new rate schedule affect the primary election? These methods of making rates should be thoroughly alfted. WALTER JOHNSON. OliserVatlons of a Mere Man. HIOUX CITT. la., Aug. 1S.-TO the Editor of Ths Bee: I heve watched with the glee of an Impartial and unprejudiced observer ths travail of tho auffraglats end anll-suffraglsts In this column not quite Impartial perhaps for I am not yet pcrauaded that the more charming sex should be . allowed to soil Its pretty fingers In the mire of politics, but the controversy Is Interesting and amusing and the most amusing part cf It Is this "feminism" free love agony. Have the fair charmers taken the pre caution to look up the definition of "feminism" before making their charge and their denials? It would appear not but here U la aa given In the standard, dictionary: "Feminism, the doctrlno of the equality of women with men." Where IS your-free love there, dear antls? Tou will have to try again and find another epithet If you want to be really oppro brious; thia Is to innocuoua As to "free love" I have not yet done chortling over the pictures presented to my vision of Dr. Shaw. Jane Addama and the other excellent ladles who are at the head of. state and national suf frage organlzatlone, beckoning their fol ic wers to mysterious and secret confer ences on "The Best Method ef Teaching Free I-ove to tho Masses," or "How t Destroy the Home," aU this at the behest of the two or three Irresponsible privates In their ranks. Help! Don't make me laugh again I Let us seel Mrs. Belmont and Miss Mil hotland have, so It Is said, dons a vast amount of good work in trying to amel iorate the conditions of the poor working women of the East Side of New York all honor to them but surely no one takes their writings seriously, rather weak stuff I found' them and not likely to have an Influence oa ths sans, level headed Amer ican woman. Mrs. Oilman and Mrs. Ken ton are cleverer, but rather ridiculous. Does anyone seriously suppose that the wemen of this country, suffragettes or antla, are going to put their babies In a municipal Institution to be raised so that mamma can so cut to work? Not while papa holds hla Job. As to Ellen Key. Margaret Dolaad, Catherine Oalll chei (see "The Truth About Women") these three are "feminists," to use the distorted sense of the word, they are e'everer and stronger and also mors ex treme than the rather wishy-washy peo ple I have Just enumerated, but they are antl-suffrsglats, one and all; they admit It themselves. And, since we are on the subject, whst about Emma Goldman, than whom there Is no more violent opponent of woman suffrage? There's a "free lover" for you she not only preaches free love, but openly acknowledges that she practloes It. Here sre the snti-sulfraglsts and their paid leader, herself, writing besutlful, long letters to the papers, telling ua how Immoral are the suffragists, all aorts of other terrible things sbout them, snd they never answer. Do you think It's fsir, dear surfs, to put your enemy to ail this trouble to start something all for no re sult, not to mention the disappointment to onlookers like myself, who want to see o nice, evenly mstehed scrap, with the victory to the best man wonian-4 mean? . H. MOORS. The War aa the Faraaer. HOCTH OMAHA. Aug. lS.-To the Editor of The Be; The American farmer. If we are to credit the cartoon In today's Bee, la the Inoarsatlon ef aeinahnesa. Complacently he ainokea his pipe and smiles with a self-satisfied air while tbe god of war pounds p the price of pro visions. Ja the language of the cartoon ist. "He Should Worry" that thousands, pei haps millions, of foreign fanners wilt be unable to harvest or market their crops, and that the people of their country will in consequence suffer severely for the necessities of life. "He should worry" that the poor of his own country Will also suffer In a greater or less de gree by their Inability to meet the ad vanced prices. Let us hope that this is not a true characterisation, and that there are many farmers who do not consider the high prices they will receive for their produce as sufficient to offset the weal and woe of r. E. S. McMAXCS. 1011 North Tweaty-etghth street. Around the World an Americas shoe Vruguey new hss store. Americana sre successfully drilling for oil in Chins. rifty Hungarian aervant girls went on a alienee strike IS Budapest, vowing not to speak a oM until their employers allowed them two caUiug nights weekly. In Other Lands London's II east a a: Frebleus. London continues to struggle with the difficulties of housing Its working classes. The charrman of the London County Council Housing commutes shows very clearly that, while old structures no longer sani tary, are being denrished, they are not being re placed as rsrldly as the demands multiply. The re sult Is congestion and Incressed rente. Irul not this slone Increases the rents. Many and far-reaching are the causes, ome world-wide. It Is lntenuting te note how this very Iocs! situation Is affected by world events, or. as the official referred to anting In The National Ft o view of London states ft. how "pow erless Is the Individual In the face f world events." He goes or. to show that the chief difficulty Is that "the renting capacity of the working clasa has not In crraaed with the recent rather sudden rise In the cost of hulhting, with the Incresse In the rats of Interest on loan capital and with the rise In ratrn and taxes." After declaring that the politicians are wrong tn charging up the situation merely on trie ground that land owners sre holding up land values, since land all round Ijomkm Is begging to be bought for build ing, he concludes; "World-wide and a4 local cauaes have to do wtlh the phenomena, causes such as ths output of African gold, with Its effect upon prices, ths development of Canada, Argentina, and other lands, with their consequent pull by high offers upon British capital, and the resulting rise in Interest on loan capital In England Itself; the ambition of Oe- msny and the consequent sinking of capital In ths British fleet, (evidently while proud et their fleet, aome Britons seem to regard It as a costly necessity), social legislation by Parliament, which Increases rates snd taxes, and therefore makes economlo rents rise; threatened land legislation of a socialist character (a slap at Lloyd George), which makes men unwilling to lend money to builder except at high rates of Inter est; and Increased pressure of both local and Imperial taxation." These and other reasons explain, to this writer's mind, why the poor cannot easily get cot tsges enough to live In. Christianity la Kerea. Evidently the Christian church has nothing to eomplala of as a result of ths so-called Japanese per secution of native Christians at a Korean mission sta tion a few years ago. For today, according to official records, there ere COO missionaries actively at work In Korea, with 1.000 native pastors, large numbers ef students and others. Japan Is given credit by Chris tian church authorities with helping on the forward movement by the establishment and maintenance of 23 elementary schools, beside high schools, normal schools, schools of laW, medicine, civil service, busi ness. Industry, egrloulture and forestry." Korea, hss a population of 13,000,009 and the religious forces are endeavoring to brings as majiy as possible speedily within the bounds of modern faith. ttalalae by Parcel Poet, Siamese, In a section of that fareff country in fected with a malaria fever epidemic, ere finding the parcel post Of the western world a great boon. They are receiving from England, Oermany an4 Canada or were before the war targe supplies of quinine pills and tablets by this means of transportation and are successfully combatting the dlsesse. Heretofore they had to wait from six to nine months to receive goods by freight front the United State, so that they are tn a position thoroughly to appreciate the value of the parcel post. And the experience may contain a val uable suggestion to our own country, whlott was all too late In coming to this system. Streets Paved with Rebher. The story of how streets may be paved with rub ber may stretch the feots a little, and yet It was freely predicted at the recent Fourth International Rubber exhibition In London that before long we Should be having rubber as the surface of our thor oughfares. It would give us noiseless streets, for one thing, and. scientists say, afford aa durable a pavement as asphalt. This seems to bs another evi dence of a rapidly bouncing age. Twice Told Tales Oae Calls for te. Senator J. T. Robinson said ef a proposed bill In which he disbelieved: "Such a bill Would land ua from the frying pan Into the fire. Such a bill, in fact, rarnlaae m ef Abbas Bey. , "Abbas Bey, and oriental potentate, wsa giving a fate, and before hlra, oa a Louie Q ulnae table lay a superb watch, the gift ef the German smperor. "Suddenly the electrte lights failed. For a full snlaute Abbas Bey and his guest were la darkness. Then tb lights went up again, and. alaa the splen did Jeweled watch had disappeared. " 'My good friends,' said Abbas Bey Is suave dlplematla toses, 'the lights will now be lowered afresh and I will expect that the person who took any watch In order to look at It-"-will put It back ea the table again.' "In a profound silence ths lights one more went out There was a slight sound as of metal against wood. Then the lights went up again, and Abbas Bey discovered thst Instead of the watch being re turned, a gold cigarette case, the gift of Queen Vic toria, had disappeared ss well." Detroit Free Press. Let Her Seb. Innocently the two old farmers looked at each other as they chatted In the busy marketplace, talk ing on -titers, turplps, and all other old farm claptrap. And then, as If it had Just occurred te him. old Pontln asked Farmer Steele if he still felt Inclines to sell that Bhorthorn cow. "Will you! take twelve pounds for her?" he sug gested offhandedly. "No, no," murmuied Steele stolidly, as be lovingly fingered his watch chain. "Couldn't part wi" er for that, by a long way." "Oh, but I thought you said last market day as how you might let ber go for that!" suggested Pontln. "Maybe. But something's 'appened to r since then." "Che buin't dead?" said the prospective buyer, looking up quickly. "No; but the missus, she's dead set on that coo. Wouldn t pari wl' 'ef for anythlnM, and quite loves her. tfhe'd sob 'er eyes out If I parted wr That coo." "I'ua. Suppose that ends It, then?" said , the farmer, as h prepared to move along. "Welt. I don't know. . Look .here, Pont, mske It twelve-pound-ten. and let .the, missus sob!" Aarwsra People and Events Francois Cite Jules Lemaiue, tbe Frwwh dra matic critic, playwright, poet and itovellst, died Thursday of lest week at bis home in Paris Me was bora la 1C1 Maurice Frauds l'gan. the American minister to Denmark, who has te covered from a serious opera tloa, received a telegram of congratulation from the king and qusen of DciwaarB. Prof. George G. Heye of tbe University of Penn sylvania has appealed to tbe ureme court te set aside his cenvlctloe .oa . a charge of eeeec rating graves. He was fined tie) for remsvtng skeletons of Indians from the burying grounds at Mlalsink. Returns from Missouri shew thst Senator William 2. Stone has tee renominated oa tbe deroocrstle ticket by aa evera helming tnajority. 8. G. Luts of Chicago hka been appointed general trafile manager ef the Chicago at Alton railway. Prof, llotfrt F. Harper. Instructor of Semitic lan guages snd Meratura St the University of Oilcego, died in London. President Wilson nominated Representative . An drew J. Peters of Bottee te be assistant secretary ef the treasury. SUNiTY SMILES. "What's Clancy rtVlr? now, M.ke" "He's got aome kind o' political Job. flame warden In Madison Square or some thin '."-Life. "What's the tnatt-r Ith our morose friend?" "Political ladigeatlon." replied Senator Sorgum. --The pork barrel and pie coun ter were, too much for him. "Washington t-'tar. Oolf Professional (giving a lron Tou know. sir. you lift your elbow too much to play golf properly. New M,-mbr-How dare you! I'll re port yn to the rommittee: I'm a lile h)Dg teetotaler! London (Sketch. Deacon (to vicar la veatryl Are vou suffering from a cold, sir? Vicar No. why do you ask? Ieacon Well, therea about a dozen lroengea la the collection platal-London Opinion. Thy freolom to hoid. Thy "-tuirag" as Iron. Thj g'Xid f:lih as gold T.iiough fire. nlr. and water Thv dial rn'ist b. R'it thv that love life t et Die gladly for thie. Tho love of their mother la stiorg t command. Tl"e tarn' of their nthei Is liiiaht la their rand. .Mm h. snffrriiiR Miall "leanee thee P it thou throuch the fiooil Shalt win to salvation. T. beauty through blood. I'p. carnlc.a. Awake! Ye peacemak-r. fight! Lneland stand for honor. Ocd defen-l the right. POET LAUREATE'S CALL Photographer Making plain-lookina 8irl and her escort 1 Now. trv not to thir k of yourselves st all-think of something pleasant. London Opinion. Robert Bridges, the poet laureate, con trtnutea the following verses to the Lon don Times: Thou careless, awake! Thou peacemaker, fight! Stand, Kngland, for honor. And God guard the right. Thy mirth luy aside. Thy cavil and piny. The foe is upon tliee And giavo la the. day. The monarch Ambition Has harnr-sici Ma slave. But the folk of the ocean Are free as the waves. For peace, thou art armed. The following porn Is bv Ptephet. Phlirw: He said: "Thiu ptty people, let mt peas. What candt thou do but bow to m and fennel ?" But audden a dry land caught fire like grass. And answer hurtled but from shell and steel. He looked for silence, bill a thunder came 1'pon him. from Liege a leaden hall All Helsrliitn (lew up at hin throat in flame Till at her gates amazed his legions qjal!. 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