Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 01, 1914, Image 6

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    TlfH HKK: OMAHA, THURSDAY, OCTOBEK 1, 1914.
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THE. OMAHA DAILY ,DEE
FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER.
VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR.
Tho B Publishing Company. Proprietor.
PES BUILDING, FARNAM AND FKVKNTEENTH.
Kntfif d at Omaha postorflce sccoad-clesa matter.
TEHMS OF SrUSCniPTION.
Hjr carrier Tt mail
per month. pr yrar.
and Sunday W rt
TallV without Hundajr....'. o 00
fN-anln end "undsv r.... .on
Kvenlns; without Sunday -o 4.00
Pundav Be only .
find potlre of rhar.a of srtHws or complaint of
Irregularity in drllvcry to Omaha lee, Circulation
Department.
K KM ITT A NCR.
Remit hr draft. press.nr postal order. Only two
"nt stamps received In. payment of amall ac
counts. Persons! checks, except on Omaha and eaatern
exchange, not accepted.
OFFICES.
Omaha The Be Building.
Pouth Omaha XK N street.
Council Hluffs 14 North Main street.
Lincoln Little Building.
Chicago Ml Hearat Hiillillng
New York Room 11. 6 Fifth avenue.
Ft. Ixiila--503 New Hank of Commerce.
Washington 725 Fourteenth Bt., N. W.
. CORRESPONDENCE).
Address rommunlcatlona relattnir to tiewa and edi
torial matter to Omaha Bee, "editorial Department.
AUGUST cntcixATios."
56,554
Plata of NehraaVa. County of Pouglss, ss
Dwlirht Williams, circulation mnr of The Bee
Publishing company, being duly sworn, ssys that
the average dally circulation for the month of Auiuit,
mi. waa
TVK.HT WILLIAMS. Circulation Manager.
Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before
me. this td day of Reptember, 10M.
" ROBERT HUNTER, Notary Public.
Bubwcrlbera leaving the city temporarily
should have The life mailed to tbem. Ad
drM will lx changed aa often a requested.
"Bombi bursting In air" li more than mere
music in Europe today.
;j J
This is the day King Ak-Sar-Ben begins his
twentieth triumphal entry.
Looks as If Bulzer had been lost In the pri
mary. Still, no great loss.
! - . -
But the real battle is now impending be
tween Boston and .Philadelphia.
The hope of the hour Is. however, that bell
will not break loose again in Mexico,
If the weather man wants to be good to Ak-Sar-Ben.
all he need do is to keep It up.
Paradoxical as it may appear, the tightness
of money makes for loose pocket change.
Indeed, that s tough after the World-Herald
has been blowing that horn alt these years.
. "Just Before the Bat-tul, Mother," may yet
come back as on of the popular songs of the
day.
What would by now have happened to fair
France unaided by Johnny Bull one hates to
contemplate.
Nothing but eternal vigilance will keep the
fee grabber from putting bis bands into the
public pocket.
JL j.a
Of course, it is always the part of Omahans,
young and old, to act the host to the visitors
daring Ak-Sar-Ben time.
Why is it kinder to say of a crusty old bach
elor that he "chose" a single life than to aay
It of a mature bachelor maid
South Paying the Penalty.
The Roe recently railed attention to the
need of greater crop diversification In the south
as a safeguard against such contingencies as
have arisen In cotton as a result of the war shut
ting off the foreign demand. It Is Interesting to
find this identical thought exploited to the ex
tent of several columns in the Atlanta Constitu
tion by an Atlanta man with years of experience
in the farm loan business, whose authority to
speak Is, according to the Constitution, unques
tionable," although that paper does not endorse
ell he says.
This writer even goes so far as to say that
"the south is In the grip of a cotton growing
oligarchy, more powerful than the ante-bellum
slave-owning oligarchy," that 70 per cent of the
south's farm lands are under the control of land
lords, largely absentee; that So per cent of its
agricultural activities are influenced by this oli
garchy, which will not permit "any large crop
other than cotton," which means.lt Is. against
diversification.
If this Is a correct sensing of the situation,
then, of courne, the first thing for the south to
do, Is not to diversify Its crops, but free Itself.
The Constitution thinks "the tremendous im
petus given to corn growing and stock raising"
challenges this statement of the case In some de
gree, yet the urgency of the need of greater
diversification is generally admitted.
This buy-a-bale-of-cotton plan to relieve the
situation is only a temporary expedient; the cot
ton problem is more permanent. The buy-a-bale
plan, now reaching to other sections, may'serve
to raise the money required for harvesting and
holding this year's crop, but what about next
year's? ' The Constitution advocates the drastic'
measure of cutting down the acreage and output
of the next crop at least one-half, better two
thirds or three-fourths.
It says:
In flptmbcr of 1915 there will be on hand. In
all probability, almost enough cotton to run the fac
tories of the world, those of thla country Included -thla
regardless of a single hale of next year's crop.
If the south plies on that condition anything approach
ing a normal crop, Imagination la not required to
prefigure the result.
But aside from this or any other remedy, the
fact Is the south Is paying the penalty that other
sections in the past have paid of failure to
diversify crops on a large and well-balanced
scale. And this is a national, not a sectional
question.
Down to Common Seme,
The new attorney general la to be com
mended for taking the common sense view of
'the Mann White Slave act, and for inaugurat
ing a plan of dealing with cases brought under
that law that will prevent the abuse of the
prosecuting machinery of the government for
blackmailing purposes.
The trouble with this Mann law Is that while
it was enacted primarily to put a stop to com
mercial traffic in women between the states, it
has been construed to apply to immorality in
general, regardless of the commercial features
of the transactions. As a consequence, accord
ing to a high Department of Justice official, 99
per cent of the men accused have been deliber
ately inveigled into violation of the law Just to
make them buy oft their pursuers. To fore
stall the blackmail element, which is so appar
ent, Attorney General Gregory has decided to
Instruct all his subordinates to have every Mann
act case carefully investigated, 1 and to prose
cute only those which they are satisfied have
had no blackmailing purpose behind them.
Now, If the district attorneys will exercise
the same degree of common sense, the law will
be made to get the white slavers without feed
ing a horde of holdups and their onhangers.
A pretty gooa selection of candidates on the
cltlsens' committee's School board slate. Some
good ones also not on the alate.
The "Same old Bill" Sulxer got It in the
same old way at the first New York state pri
maries, which is that much to be thankful for.
With war absorbing the public interest, the
congressmen may after all .count themselvss
lucky to be detained in Washington by the pro
longed extra session.
1 L . ,
Governor Morebead la coming to the Ak-Sar-
Ben ball with eighty gold-laced colonels. Oh
my! He wants to make us think we are over
on the firing line in the European war." .
Seventy croBsmarks to vote individually for
every office and measure on the ballot at tn
coming election In this county. What further
argument is required for the shdrt ballot?
It must be plain by now. from the lessons
of Luxemburg and Belgium, to those dear, good
souls who thought it so foolish to fortify the
Panama canal, that mere treaties do hot always
protect. 1
'The first duty of an ambassador is to main
tain the friendliest relations between hla own
government and the one to which he is accred
ited, says W. O. bharp, our new ambassador to
France. At which one can almost hear the Hon.
A. Ruatem Bey snicker in hla sleeve. ,
9n2A
San StephenV Speech.
One of the early guns of the democratic
congressional campaign is a speech by the Hon.
Dan V. Stephens, Nebraska's Third district rep
resentative, fired as "part of Congressional Rec
ord" in order, of course, to frank it through the
mall. The speech is entitled "Record of Achlev
inents of This Congress," and it consumes six
teen closely printed pages and how many tons
of it are to be Imposed upon the malls we do not
know. Perhaps some may read it, but for those
who do not, let us note this second paragraph
of the great utterance; 1
I have no patience th partisanship when It
romes to the transaction of the people's business,
and I would not refer to the record of the demo
cratic .party as such, alnce It has been In control of
the government, were It not for the fact that It must
now answer) to the people In the coming general elec
tion for Its conduct.
President Wilson has told us that "The old
order chaQgeth," and in many, respects it does,
but obviously not In respect to the blown-in-the-
bottle campaign speech, the "canned" goods put
up on the floor of congress or in the columns
of the Congressional Record for free distribu
tion and public consumption in the interest of
"the party." Glimpses here and there at the
Dan Bteprens speech show it to be a very fa
miliar and stereotyped party shibboleth, heard
in many a campaign before. Those who under
stand the great statesman's keen sense of hu
mor will, of course, know how to take the state
ment that ho has "no patience with partisan
ship in the transaction of the people's business."
The only really pertinent conclusion is that
If partisanship has nothlng to do with it, demo
crats in the Third Nebraska district will do well
to take the noble "Dan" at his word, and vote
for tola republican opponent, Mr. Spillraan, who
is an energetic and well qualified young man of
high character and fine promise.
Redmond-Irish Leader
alsiaadef W. Samuel aa vew Tor Worl.
Leadership) rownrd wltfc Darren.
The last few days have proved the right of John
K. Redmond to the great titles of etatnemaa an'!
patriot. For thejr have witnessed the placing of the
home rule hill upon the statute book, and John E
Redmond appealing to his fellow-countrymen In the
rapacity of a recruiting agent for Irish volunteers to
fight under the Vnlon Jack. He has won his long
political fight In the completes! way and stopped for
ever the mouths of those who have accused him sn-.I
his followers of disloyalty to the British crown, it la
true that the home rule act will hot gv Into force for
twelve months, or until the, end of the war. but by
that time the whole united British people will hand
It to him on a silver platter. Ireland's leader has be
come an acclaimed English patriot.
To one familiar with British politics for the last
generation, It la almost Incredible that home rule Is
an accomplished fact, that Ha opponents are today
without a hearing or an argument, and that Briton's
most loyal eons are of Erin, fighting as only they can
fight for the Union Jack and the triumph of British
arms. And It Is to John E. Redmond that .history
must accord the praise. For he It la who has changed
public sentiment In England vo that It waa Impossible
for longer delay In granting freedom to Ireland.
When one recalls the phrases of the opponents of
home rule, of which Mr. Chamberlain's "they arc
marching through rapine and rebellion to the dismem
berment of the British empire" was a conspicuous ex
ample. It seems a long way from the recent scene In
the House of Commons when ringing cheers from
every part of the house greeted Redmond's promise
of support: "I say deliberately to the government
that you may withdraw every one of your troops from
Ireland and still her sons will defend her shores 1'
need be against the common foe.' And not merely
has that been done, but, accompanied by his old foe,
William O'Brien, to whom Oermany has at last united
him, he la calling for volunteers from among the civil
ian followers to swell the great army Kitchener la
raising to fight the Germans. I
Ilea Urrmt Personal Charm.
John E. Redmond la an aristocrat In blrih and
thought, lie Is a very cultured gentleman of great
personal charm. He Is one of the three or four ora
tors left In Parliament and has at hla command those '
rolling, swelling, periods which, delivered In his mag
nificent tones and accompanied by hla commanding
bearing and gesture, proclaim his authority and secure
for him at times an almost overwhelming effect.
It la entirely due to him that the Irish question
came, during the last decade especially, to obtain a
hearing from British' public opinion on Its merits.
Passion had played a big part In Irirfh political life,
passion which too often has exploded In crime and
outrage, tor the British people to say whether It was
politically Just or expedient for Ireland to have self
government. But Ireland has suffered no outrages,
and the publla conscience no effronts by crime for
many years now, as John E. Redmond flas patiently
tolled for his country's rebirth as a natron, and mado
It one of the nvost stalwart of the imperial units.
He Is regarded as the greatest authority upon-the
House of Commons procedure, and has blotted out of
present memory those scenes of Irish disorder that
disgraced Parliament In the early '90's. Indeed, he
has granted a monopoly in public and Parliamentary
disorder to the tory party, the gentlemen or r,iigmn.,
and greedily Ijave they seised It. Several times In the
last three or four years has the House of Commons
sitting been suspended by reason of deliberately or
ganized and artificially fomented disorder, but John
13. Redmond and hla followers have been the re
strained and restraining section of the House.
Di)n!fled Srlf-Reatralnia, feather iThai Re.
prlaala..
By a chance arrangement, the Irish party has been
sitting side by side In the House of Commons fur
the last nine years with their old enemy, the tory
party ana the Ulaterltes. Within reach of their fists
have the Ulster men Insulted them to their faces,
sneered at their religion, contemptuously guffawed
t their loyalty, mocked their governing capacity, and
promised death and destruction In the .- land should
they dare to attempt to rule it. Never a reprisal has
come, only the dignified replies of John K. Red
mond, who has pleaded for his cause, and that out
of his cause's triumph might grow such sympathy
and comprehension as should make a peaceful,
united and prosperous Ireland. Today that hope ta
within' reach of fruition.
lie lias Constantly Refased Honors.
Redmond has constantly refused title, honors.
emoluments of place. He might have been a privy
councillor years ago. He might have had a seat l-i
the cabinet at the end of 1906. But he cared not for
any of these things. He faithfully pushed toward his
great goal, the ultimate and precious triumph that u
his today.
Ills party has been under the strictest discipline
from the beginning. The members have each been
In receipt of $.1,500 per year from the Irish partv
funds for many yeara and have been loyal and de
pendable Parliamentarians. When In 1911 the House
of Commons decided upon the payment of members
at the rate of $2,000 per year the Irish still received
the tl.MO from the party fund and paid in the IXOCO
to .the fund eichequer, their personal rights being
subordinated to their country's cause.
The striking appearance of John E. Redmond, his
large eyes that even In repose seem waiting to flash
Or to melt with equal swiftness, hla rich and movinff
voice, his ample figure and his confident mien make
him as familiar at Westminster aa either of the
leaders of the two great parties of the state. He la
familiar to the people of the United States and Can
ada, through which ha has toured again and again.
In pleading hla country's cause. And now that his
cause is trlumpant and Ireland free and vindicated,
he has become a world figure of attention for what
he .has done and has yet to do as her prime minister
for Ireland, the land of new hopes and splendid
beckoning days. '
"in rmoH msg ULU
The marriage of Mr. E. Bennett Cole,' for many
years bookkeeper for C. 8. Goodrich, and Miss Llxsle
Meallo took place at the home of the bride on Harney
street with Rev. Father O'Connor officiating Th
bride was attended by Miss Josle Pendergaat and the
groom by Mr. W. U Walsh.
Mr. O. H. Krr of the Union Paclflo freight ac
countant's office has resigned and will go to Kansas
City. He will be succeeded by Oeorge Lyndon.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Madlaoa. Twenty-fourth and
Decatur streets, were pleasantly surprised last even
ing en the occasion of their wedding anniversary.
select audience listened to Dr. John P. Newman
tellver bis lecture at the First Congregational church
ta 'The Typical American."
Fred Mets. who baa been vial ting la Europe, ar-
"1vd borne with his wife.
Denmaa Thompson waa putting oa "Josh Whlt-
:omb" at the opera house.
Mr. and Mrs. E. V. Smith of Los Angeles arrived
In Omaha to visit with friends, an4 will remain five
weeks-
A. V. Carpenter, formerly of the firm of Kennard
brothers, waa married last month In Jamestown,
N. Y.. to Mlas VHUe Lowe. Mr. Carpenter has Just
retumtd to Omaha with bia bride to ma,ke their per-
muiicnt home here.
Speaking about those supreme court de
cisions scotching the jail feeding graft of Sher
iff McShane and the insanity fee grab of Dis
trict Court Clerk Robert Smith, what a fear
fully dense silence on the part of the other
Omaha newspapers that are so loud for reform
only when they know it is out of reach.
English agents are buying up Missouri mules,
presumably for war purpoxes. The recent exploit
of a French bull In charging on the enemy was
thrilling aa a spectacle, but bulls lack initiative
and discretion. A battery of one Mussourl mule,
properly masked, can do more execution than
100 bulls.
rresiaeat uson has appointed a compro
mise candidate for the Red Cloud poatmaster-
shlp for which his first nomination waa rejected
in the senate at the instance of our democratic
United States senator. What about Itr Is It
a knockout or only a draw?
People and Events
The grandstands of El Paso and Juares, Browns
ville and Matamoras are considered fairly sate for
the new world's championship series of Mexico.
Mrs. Pankhurst cheerily announcea that militant
hostilities will remain suspended until the war ta
over. Then the militant host witl show Britons what
real war la. s
In honor of the silver anniversary of her w'dow
hood a Chicago woman gave a dinner to twenty-live
widows, and all drank the toast" "To our future hus
bands." Jolly girls, eh?
Secretary Daniels sets an example for the cotton
patriots of the south. Henceforth he will wear noth
ing but cotton suits. That puts one bale ef cotton
where It will do the moat good.
The irrepressible Lady Cook of London breaks into
print with an offer to raise an army of 1SO.O0O women,
and to drill and train them to act aa a home guard.
The guards are to be dressed In khaki. Just like men.
Returns of the examiners of the assets of twenty,
three Claflin dry good stores In New York City show
a trifle over Slft.OiO.mOi, AgaJnat this sum the parent
house Uaued notes aggregating VTl.&OO.rott. Pretty good
sample of merchandising high finance.
Tobacco smoking, tobacco chawing and gum chew
ing are to be prohibited In Milwaukee railroad offices
after January I. The word cornea from the main of
fice In Chicago, and when Chicago speaks In Mil
wauKjg tones a kick Is a waste of energy.
Mtcajat Weiss. aged114, of Beaver Brook, Sullivan
county New York, has Joined the grand army on the
other shore. He was American born, fought througa
the civil war In a Pennsylvania regiment, and was
the patriarch of pensioners on t'ncle Bain's roll of
honor.
General Sir John Vrench ta the youngest of the
army commandrrs battling for supremacy on the
frontier of France. He Is M, General von Kluck and
Central Karl von But-low of the German forces are
In their sixty-eighth year. General Joffra, comroand-cr-ln-chlet
of the French army, is tt, and General
Paul Pau. the one-armed Veteran of the war of
leTO-71. la IT.
nlesslac-la-DlsstaUe" Yaaarr.
OMAHA, Sept. . To the EUltor of The
Bee: Your editorial In last Sunday's
Insue under the heading "Tho 'Blesslng-ln-Dlsguisf
Vagary" Is worthy of tba care
ful consideration of all lovers of "peace,
good will to men." The editorial expresses
a great truth.
And on the same page the poem by
Captain Jack Crawford, veteran soldier,
on "A Veteran Soldier's Prayer" Is In
deed appropriate. Who but a man that
has tasted of the misery and suffering of
war-time could send oat a prayer that
so expressed the sincere petition for
peace of those who had actual partici
pation and therefore In position to "pray
arlghh" ant with authority. I. J. C
Votes for Women Wet or Dryt
OMAHA, Sept. 30.-To the Editor of
The Bee: As the granddaughter of a
Methodist clergyman who preached pro
hibition In Virginia and West Virginia,
It Is naturally gratifying to me to have
both these states go "dry." While speak
ing on the chautSuqua this summer
against woman suffrage I addressed a
large audience. In behalf of temperance
at Woodstock. Va , where my grand
father had spoken (on the same subject)
fifty years .before. Not only In Wood
stock, . but throughout the entire koutb.
the antl-saloon sentiment Is strong.; So,
also. Is the anti-suffrage sentiment most
marked.
It is a cold, hard fact, and one which
my fellow Women'r Christian Temperance
union members somet'mes flinch from
faring, that evy dry state on our Wo
men's Christian Temperance union map
has been put there by the votes of men.
We seem to accomplish God's work best
In these states where women are special
ists in molding the character of the men
Who make the .laws. No state la any
greater than the character of Its men.
Colorado, like dry West Virginia, Is a
mining state. Women vote In Colorado,
but do not vote In West Virginia. On
November 6, 1912, after nineteen years of
women In politics, Colorado voted on
statewide prohibition, both .men and wo
men going to the polls. One hundred and
sixteen thousand, seven hundred and seventy-four
votes were cast for a wet state;
76,877 votes for a dry state. According
to the census there were In Colorsdo at
the time 213,125 women over 21 years of
age.. If only 58 per cent of the woman
hood of the state had voted for prohibi
tion the state would have gone dry by
6,012 majority without the help of a single
male vote.
Those of us who deal In facts, not the
ories, want to know why Wyoming Is
still a wet state, after forty-three years
of women In politics. Why Colorado Is
wet, with women voting? Why Idaho
and Utah are wet after seventeen years
of the women at the polls? And Illinois
after the April election added twelve dry
counties to the thirty 'already dry, leav
ing fifty-eight counties out of the ICQ In
the state ' still wet. That was a mere
"drop In the bucket" compared to what
Kentucky accomplished by male suffrage
two days ago. We want to know, why
Lansing, Michigan's capital, went ' dry
this spring under male suffrage, while
Springfield, the capital of Illinois, with
203 more women than men, voted wet?
Will some suffragist please explain this?
MARJORIE DOR MAN.
Armlnar for Peace."
OMAHA, Sept. 30, To the Editor of Th'
Bce: In Roosevelt's last plea for the per
fection of the Implements of war,- he
makes the ridiculous statement that the
war In Europe haa taught us tho neces
sity for preparedness. Now, I submit
that if there la any one thing above every
other consideration In the world that the
war in Europe has taugjit It Is the utter
useleasneea of preparedness.. Not one of
the nations now engaged In that war but
was armed to the teeth, and as for Oer
many, she had so perfected her engine
of death as to make seem childish what
ever we In America might see fit to do,
Roosevelt, Incapable pf that vision given
to the world by the Incomparable Nai-
arene sneers at 'the Idea of peace treaties,
"mere bits of paper," "unless behind the
treaty lay both force and the readiness
to use force." I submit that such a dec
laration la Infamous, but listen to the
great Charles Sumner. '
In our age there can be no peace that
la not honorable; there can be ao war
that is not dishonorable. The true honor
of a nation lies only in deeds 01 Justloe
and In the happiness of its people, all of
which are Inconsistent with war. In the
clear eye of Christian Judgment, vain are
Its victories; tntamoua are its spons.
1 am In these days struck, by the ad
mlsaion, even from Roosevelt admirers,
that had he been president during the last
year we would how be at war with
Mexico, In a contest the end of which
no man could foresee. His Impetuous
manner and his apparent Innate thlrat
for blood would now be forcing us Into
some compromises leading directly to our
mixln In that fratricidal contest across
tho seas.
In that horrible example of "prepared
ness for war" which Roosevelt desires
America to emulate, we see truly what
Sumner said that "War " crushes Wljh
bloody heel all Justice, all happiness, all
that Is God-like In man."
In the words of Charles Sumner: :
As the ocean washes every shore and
c'asps with all-embracing arms every
land, while it bears on Ha heaving bosom
the products of various climes, so peace
surrounds, protects and upholds all other
bleaHlngs.
Yes, the message that Charles tfumner
gave to America In that splendid oration
on "The True Grandeur of Nations." for
the good of civilisation and the advance
ment of America overreaches anything
within the grap of a RooBevelt.
L. J. QUINBY.
A Vote Getter.
OMAHA, Sept. ?. To the Editor of
The Bee: I overheard a man say today:
"Yes, there's no question but what Blank's
the best man for the office, but he's not
a vote getter." And there you are. Good
men are put up for office right along,
very often over their protest; men who
couM administer-the office' intelligently,
and would do so honestly, but they are
generally defeated because the people
prefer "vote getters." There are the
good, straight, reputable citlsens, Robert
Cowell and others, who ara permltt'n'g
the use of their names for the school
board. Are they all going to be chosen
Just because they happen to be thor
oughly fitted by character, education and
ability for the position? Watch and see.
Vote getting seems to be a sort of
trade. A man must be a mlxtr, a good
fallow, a talker, to get votes. But a
rnlxer. a good fellow, a talker. Isn't gen
erally the best man to drag an office
out of the rut.' In fact, the chances are
rather In favor of the man who lacks
these qualifications, and It does seem a
little short-sighted In the people If it Is
true that the man who Is clearly the
best man for an office can't get elected
to that office.
Why wouldn't It be a good plan to
reason It out this way: The msn who
wants an office bad enough to spend
months of valuable time "runnlnr". for
It can't have much else to do. On the
other hand, the man who haa a business
of hla own that takes his time and has
no time to mix is pretty apt to make a
good public servant. There have ttea a
number of cases In Omaha where the
very best cltliens have been beaten by
(rcompetents, to any nothing worse. Is
that what Is coming to Robert Cowell
and h'a associates?
H. W. MORROW.
Handwrltlne; on the Wall."
OMAHA, Sept. !W.-To the Editor of
The Bee: - Like Belshazzar of old the
nations of Europe failed to change con
ditions that were lead'ng them down to
certain destruction until too late. The
handwriting biased upon the wall.
For years the people of, these countries
have been taxed beyond reason to sup
port enormous armies of Idle men. Ger
many In all Its wonderful glory of learn
ing, with all Its Instincts of ' scientific
research, with all Its marvelous medical
triumphs, made one unpardonable mis
takethe mistake of wanting to be' feared
by the nations of the world. This fear
among the other nations will eventually
culminate In the cfuahlng defeat of Ger
many's pride Its army and navy. What
It considered Its protection will be Its
undoing.
Let the United States heed the hand
writing on the wall and refrain from
heavy armament and large armlea. Let
us be feared as merchants, farmers and
traders not as warriors.
1022 Park Avenue. MRS. C. WALSH.
WITH THE J0KEES.
with a
speecb-
"It's all wrong'" said the man
red nose and a doleful manner of speech-1
"All wrong! '
'-What's the trouble?"
"The music in my neighborhood ha
driven me to drink. And now they're
going to put additional taxes on t'e
drink and let the corhet. the piano and
the bass drum that did the damage go
free! "Washington Star.
"Ill call on your father first thing In
the morning to ask his consent to otr
wedding, dearest." ,
"L-ive, I think you'd better call hint in
the 'phone."
"Just ss you sav. darling.
"And, honey, you might make U a
long-d'stance call while you are at It.
Philadelphia Ledger.
First Yegg-Handsoiii Hal has broken
away from many a copper, . but they ve
ianaea mm a last. .
Second Yegg Overpowered him, efT
First Tegg-Not exactly. The depart
ment sent a handsome r-olieewoman after
him, and he couldn't resist her, Judge.
INDIAN SUMMER.
Lurena Sheldon In New Tork Times.
Poor summer lingers by the sea
In sad. despairing agony!
So fair the days that flitted by.
So flowered the earth, so bright the sky,
That to her modest heart Is borne
Self-censuring breath, of gladness shorn
Late penanoe for past ecstacy.
The ocean's sheen so long beguiled
So witching were the stars that smiled.
Her heart forgot Its reticence, .
And, reveling in Joy intense.
Flung back gay merriment to all
The meadow's charm, the blue sky s
thrall . . .,.
Like soma unthinking, roysterlng child.
Now a'utumn waits to take her hand
And lead her to another land,
, Where light In shadow Is confined;
Alas! her breast is unreslgnedl
Still sitting sadly by the aea
She struggles with the mastery
In this now ruler's strong . command.
When You
Want Highest
Quality and
Absolute Purity
say "CEDAR BROOK, to be sure."
No need to stop to consider when th
cheerful question is asked. The an
swer is quick and certain "CEDAR
BROOK, to be sure." Cedar Brook
quality has been sure since 1847.
Same today as it was sixty-seven
years ago. Same unvarying superior
. quality. That's why it is the largest
. selling brand of high-grade Kentucky
whiskey in the world. Be sure to
say, "CEDAR BROOK, to be sure."
At all leading Dealers, Clubs,
Bars, Restaurants and ' Hotels
ill!
I
h w iweruw-
l0 !'
Bottled '
In Bond
For Sale Everywhere
1
Selling Office Space
is the same as selling anything else. It is
Dot a sale unless all concerned are satisfied.
Our tenants are better satisfied .because we give
them the best there, is in service, location; attention,
cleanliness fresh air and plenty'of light.
A TRIAL IS ALWAYS A SALE IN THE . j
BEE BUILDING
Tkm building that fa atwooya nm
OFFICE BOOM 103.
an
America's Favorite Beverage
Aoheujer-BuKQ Company of Nebraska
OMAHA
Roieofeld Liqnor Company
Council Blufff. Iowa
DISTRIBUTORS
Family Trade Supplied by C H.
Hiatea, Dea'er Hume Dong. 2SCS