tub hke: omaha, mosday, skitemiikh 27, vjix THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BT EDWAi. UOSEWATER. VICTOR HOSEWATE1.. CDITOR. T.a Bee Publishing Camnsny Proprietor. BEB BU1LD1NQ. FARNAM AND gEVr.NTgKNTH. r.ntsred at Omaha oatofflee aa seeood-ctass mattsr. TERMS Or UBSCPirTlOM. Br rsrrler By mall pwmonth. pr r. in? end ?indsr .. H puily without Sunday.... FVenlr.g arxl nundar M..ev It Fvenlng without Bunder. lundav Ba only e 1 " Send nMV of change of addresa Or complaints of irregularity In delivery to Omaha, Bm, Circulation ftepartraent. REMITTANCE. Wn1t h draft express or postal order. Only tw rrvt stahipa received In payment of ama.ll ae nnnta. fervonal cheeks, except en OiMha and eastern eiehsnge, not receptee. or in cis. Omaha The Bw Rwllritng. a Sil N street. ?outh Otnshs- ttoutv-fl Blufts 14 North Main street. L incoln m Little Bulldtnl Hearst Building. nr. Chicago SOI Hearst Bulidln New TorH Room IrM, Fifth avmus. Ht. Iyila-nt New Bsnk of romitrtrm, Wsehlngton 7 Fourteenth Bt N. W. CORRE8PONUINCB. 'Address communications retstlnr to nawa and sdU fortsi matter to Omaha Bee, rdltorlal Dapartmaan. AtCilhT ClitCVIllO. 53,993 Cut of Kei'rsska, County of Douglas, sa: Dwtght Wlllisms, circulation manager of The Bee Fuhllsh.ng company, being duly iworn, aaya that tha ivmjf circulation for tha tuonih of Aufuat, f&U, DM 1QHT YVIUJA.M8, Circulation Manager. Subscribed In my presence and ewora to before Ins. tola l day of rpteinner 1915. ROBERT HLKTKK, Notary Public oubacribers leaving the city temporarily should hate TlM! Bee mailed to them. Ad dress trill be changed a often aa requested. Omaha and th Democrats Convention. If local democrat really want to try to land the democratic national convention tor Omaha, there la Just one way to proceed raise the big gest pot of money and go after U. 8o far at taking care of 'a great presldent-msking conven tion la concerned Omaha la equipped to act the host, for Omaha baa equal, If not better, accom modatlona than had Kansas City in liOO, or Denver la 1908 when they entertained thia democratic conclave and aurely far superior to Dallas which city Is to date tha noisiest ap plicant for im. Unfortunately the democrats Insist on using tlielr convention as capital to replenish their campaign fund, for if It were merely to help pay the legitimate expenses of holding tha meeting la Omaha, republicans as well as democrats aould gladly reapond to the call whereas it will hardly be proper to ask those who are not demo crats to pnt np money to be expended later to defeat their own preferred candidates. , With the democratic committee in the award of the convention location, it is money that talks, so we will soon see if our Omaha demo crats mean buslnesa or are merely playing for a little cheap publicity. Is it Parallel from History? BetrVnabet BT Thought for the Day Stltcfd by An B. reft-ra , " 7ie Lett rMnea ore ntarut; brttk in jeur n t. if, light In your f jm Jlwen at your fctt, dvfHt at your hand, the pwfc of Gad oers yoa; tVn di mot graip at ttf stars, hut do lifs's f 'in, c nimOr eork as it crK, frtf thtf doily ivtltt nml dailj brtad nrt tk urtel : tMngt of lit. .J - Kight weeks to Thanksgiving snd the allies lisv no cinch on Turkey. 'Dr. Cook persists in his element. He en countered a frost on Mount Everest ' . 'T ? The world war has reached a stage where money seems of graver concern than men. Can Field Marshal von Hlndenburg carry tliat message to Tetrograd before anow fllast BMBBBBBasajaMBBBiaBawaxOHaBSVBMSM Warring nations put out billion dollar loans as gaily aa a promoter dumps wateral stock on a r'gged market. Hello, Central! This is South 4-11-44. W cannot come up. Will you come down?" King off Una busy." " If Military Attache von Fapen is to go to Mexico as, reported, "tbose Idiotic Yankees" will regard the punishment as fairly rutin the of 'tense. eaasvBSBaBBBaaBMaaeaaaBnaaBBB If New York had not mentioned It the mail n en who handled that package of dynamite etlckt would never know how narrowly they escaped angelic haloa. , Life In London is on explosion after an other. js"one of the bombs "mada ia Germany" paused as much havoc as the police order for .Vlddlng treating. My word' Your Uncle Sam la a patient and forgiving I . riwo, but If the Mexican raiders Insist on It I hey may be accommodated with a cemetery oa ji-Hr own side ot the river. Those delinquent corporations should re member that It takea real money to supply ntu r.iilons for the typewriter batteries of the stst house. Come across. Do it now; Delinquent corporations will hear something i';op unlCK.i they come across with the stste't 'mi nun I dividend. Secretary Tool Is anxioua to l.o convinced that all corporations have legal tender souls. . According to a Brooklyn minister preaching sod business are nilsmated and will not do team work. Much depends on the driver. The, Brook I.Milte might heed Horace Greeley's advice and mure enouijiu pointers to revise his dictum. Advocates of preparedness view with HI concealed alarm the growing popularity of peace runds and solemnly label 'them aa "slush" funds. The spectsrle of the pot pointing an accusing finger at the kettle Is too good to escape tha jnovles. Dr. Newell Dwight HHUs, a Brooklyn divine, has arrived at the painful conclualon that an honest man cannot lay up treasures in heaven or anywhere else while speculating in mine and t.mber lands. The doctor's conclusion will touch tie sympathetic chorda of a. legion of laymen. rc&lbfuutfJi ni a a 44 mm Trinity cathedral lUtne6 to a sermon by Rev. Mr. Mouth. It bring hla ftrat appearance here aa rector- l t or tha new All Kulma' church to be erected -In Vt Omaha. Rev. Mr. Wllllama of Bt. Rernabaa' went to Un- uln for the Harveat Dome avrvUea. and In lite ab kence RUhop Worthlnaton took hla place, aantled -Kev. Mr. Rreenter of Raltiinore. Mfra. Woodman, Clarke and Roeera took a til un their blcclea to Calhoun- and return. Kd. K. Chlnn la rejolclnr at the advent of t new txy at hla huuae. V. C. liulett of AdrUn. Mirh.. accompenled by V. U Uamont of Niagara Julia, la vUlttnf hla son. C. C HuUrtt, the well known tnahler of the Millard hotel. W. J. AWlHhana A Company, trly mllla, wanta two r three Klrla to make paper uiii. The bti.ut't given for Dan J. RMn, tbo apt Inter, t Hawaii a .i-k, n a pronauiued u:cet.a. Among Hie vtiniwia It I lie i-'ntn(i writ: lulling the aUot J..hu Turitbll r 1 1 Mt ; llouirr K rk. aecoitd: i It-yard, i h. V. A. irg J. M-lr-; tioail Jump, won . J. i HiliM omr t . liitmn , m Itl l Roaa it- me lull.- har.dirap t a puiw of a 4 Eailroadi and the Future. Addressing a gstbering of business men st Dallas, Walter D. lllnes, chairman of the execu tive committee of the Atchison, Topeka U. Santa Fe company, delivered himself of some conclu sions that are impressive for tha amount of be lated wisdom they contain. Flrsl of all. be ac knowledged a great mistake has been made In financing American railroads. By selling bond Instead of stocks the companies had built up a btountaln of securities that Increased fixed charges without producing revenue. The evil effects of this mistake has been felt, and Is being Ifclt, by the railroads. "This basis must be changed," be aaid, "before tha railroads can develop the country as It should be developed." Just bow tha change is to ba brought about Mr. lllneif did not ahow, beyond the statement tiiat the railroads must bav more net income that dividends may ba assured on stocks that will be offered la lieu of bonds. The statement of tbe eminent expert will, however, open up a r.ew line of activity for tha employment of the brains ft the head of tha great transportation industry of tbls country. The railroads have felt the power of the public In laws that regulate traffic; they have also experienced the good will o. the public In tha special privileges and aa ristance granted In innumerable cases. Also, they have learned that cake cannot be eaten and bad at the aame time. With the country full of grain and goods to be moved, with rates declared to be remunerative after exhaustive hearings, the problem of the railroad manager Is how to r.ake his line a profit producer. Kininent examples recently presented show that Wall street is not a good place to establish jprosjierlty for a railroad company. Tbe public In willing that the railroads should have a aquare deal, but asks fair treatment in return." On this basis the companies ought to find read ily tha money needed for development. Taking a Lone Chanoe. The builders of the steamer Eastland took a long chance when they launched a top-heavy craft designed for speed at tbe expense of safety. Through Ignorance or inefficiency the navi gation Inspectors took a chance when they per mitted the steamer to enter the passenger serv ice on the lakes. The company which chartered, the steamer for the fateful day, July 24, though cognizant l cf its perilous defects, took a chance for the I-roflt of the buslnesa offered. The tragic result of taking a chance with Innocent lives la summed up Id tha Red Cross report of disbursements of the various funds subscribed for tha relief of survivors of the vic tims. Eight hundred and thirty-four persons lost their lives; 1T4 wives, with I4 children, were widowed; nineteen children were double orphaned and twenty-two families wholly wiped out. Taking a chance involved a direct money loss of $850,000, the total of all funds disbursed among the surviving fsmllles or heirs of the victims. The public of Chicago subscribed a60.000, the Western Electric company 1 1 00, 000, insurance companies paid $338,000, and the remainder came from mutual benefit socie ties. Tha Isst chapter of the tragedy of taking a' chance remains to be written by the courts. Federal and state grand juries have indicted owners of the Eastland, the men who chartered It. tbe captain and chief engineer and the fed eral Inspectors who certified the steamer's sea worthiness. It is reasonably certain that one or both courts will definitely fix responsibility for a disaster born of official neglect, naviga tion stupidity and individual greed. - Bates to the Small Insurer,. The convention of state insurance commis sioners, In California, voices a complaint that raa frequently been heard and little heeded against the fire Insurance companies of the United States. It is that the rates charged small Insurers for their protection sgalnst fire losss is too high. The nstlonal board of under- v riters is accused of being unreasonable In its requirements, and also of being guilty of giving preferential treatment in the matter of rates to big buyers of Insurance, while holding up the little fellows. The commissioners charge that tbe underwriters have made no response to tha el forts of Insurers to lessen fire risk "by removal of haxard. No community has felt the pressure In this regard more than Omaha, which only re cently had an illustration of tha attitude of tha underwriters combine, la the request that a lurge sum of money ba spent to provide for further protection of tha eompsnies, with, no corresponding benefit to tha premium payers. Juat wtiat may reaaonably be done to remedy tl'ia situation Is not made specifically clear, bat the commissioners warn the companies that un less some material concessions are made radical legislation will be forthcoming. Wall Street Journal. Kvents olnce Germany Inaugurated lta aubmarlne blockade hear a etartllng. not to any prophetic, nlmllar. tr thoee which flnolly led to the war of 112. I-et ua review the International drama In the light of tha early nineteenth century, aa doplrtd by thnt eminent ItlfttorVeJ authority. Dr. Wood row Wlleon. The char acters have somewhat changed. Aa now, the I'nlted fttatee wag the unhappy neutral, the InnoVrnt by stander, getting In the way of two belllgerentu, Kng land and Napoleon the Kaiser Wllhelm of hla Uinx-. There being no Ia Toilette law. the carrying trade of the world fell largely to Yankee shippers, who brought an uninterrupted stream of supplies Into Napoleon's market. England felt about It Juat ss Oermanjr and Austria today feel about the shipment of munitions to the allies: "Those who fought hire seemed defeated by ' neutral trade, hy meana of what seemed to them, at that tremendous crlsla, merely war disguised a Veritable fraud of neutral flaga by winch the laws of war were annulled." As now, "England a only maatery waa on the ae.i.' To stop these supplies It would need to blo kaile all Burope. This It could not do. Po England ."resolved to make a paper blockade, and enforce It as it might by captures st sea," a policy which suggests Its de cidedly more effective blockade of Germany today. Bonaparte, not having the kaiser's submarines, an swered with series of decrees closing every Brit ish port. Kven as now, "America was not tbe special target of these extraordinary measures. Thev were simply un precedented arts of war In a struggle which had at last transcended every rule and standard' What did America do about it? Madison shortly afterward became president. He Was a man after President Wilson's own heart, for ho "loved pence, as Mr. Jefferson did, and was willing to secure It hy any slow process of Isw or negotia tion that promised to keep war at arm's lenjph. Negotiations dragged on, even as In oir day. Finally Napoleon disclosed an unsuspected Teutonic tratt. He' "sent word to Mr. Madison that his drree were In fart revoked, and should cease to have effert after the fjrst of November, if in the meantime the fnlted Htales 'ahould cause their rlgiits to be re spected by England.' " But when the first of November came "the selsure of American ships In continent.! ports did not stop. Other decrees, other restrictions, o'd and new. sufficed for their condemnation, aa well aa the dorrues aald to have been revoked.'1 Just as Mr. Wilson could write of hla own oa., "But after Ambassador von Bernstorff's pledge, tlie torpedoing of liners without warning did not stop. Other eaousea,' other prevarications, old and new, sufficed." Of course. "Napoleon's decree, like the Ensllxh orders-ln-eounrll. had been nothing lesa than acts of war aga'nat the I'nlted States from the first." and would at any time have Justified a declaration of hostilities." Why Oldn't the United States declare hostilities? Because "Mr. Madison did not want war. The United States wore not strong enough, pnrtlrularly now that the partv in power had disbanded its army, dismantled its navy and reduced its revenues to a minimum. ' '' The party in power today has not disbanded what there Is of the army, nor dismantled the navy. But it has clnne nothing to Improve or enlarge them, when tbe war has made the necessity for doing so glaringly apparent . Does Mr. Wilson, too, fear to act because the country Is "not strong enough?" Twice Told Tales A Ready Solwtlow. One day a well-to-do farmer in need of legal advice sought a struggling attorney with reference to a suit he desired to bring against a neighbor. The lawyer looked up the statutes and advised his client what course to pursue. As the latter rose to leave the of floe, ho asked: "What's your fee?" "Oh, say $3." carelessly responded the attorney. Whereupon the client preferred a IS bill. The law yer seemed embarrassed. He carefully searched his pockets and the drawers of his desk without finding the necessary change; Finally he met the exigency by pocketing the bill and observing, as he reached for a digest: "It would seem, sir, that I shsll have to give you U worth mora of advice' New York Times. The Madness e( Haaalet. The lata John B. Herreshoff, the famous blind yacht builder, once said at Bristol: "It la hard to explain how I, being blind, can design yachts hard because the average man la so Ignorant of yacht construction. "When I talk yacht construction to the average man I'm In the position of the crltio to whom a ehs said: " 'I went to sea Hsmlet last night.' " 'U rn. Indeed!" said the critic, wrinkling hla hlgd brew. 'And now tell me, my good fellow, dj you think Hamlet was mad? " 'I know darn well he was,' said the other. There weren't three dosen people in the house.' " Washington Star. ratal KHher Way. ' A rather turgid orator, noted for his verbosity and heaviness, waa once assigned to do some campaigning In a mining camp In the. mountains. Thore were about fifty miners present when he began, but when at the end of a couple of hours he gave no sign jf finishing, his listeners one by one dropped away. Finally, there was only one auditor left, 'a dilapi dated, weary-looking old fellow. Fixing his gase on him, the . orator pulled out a large alx-ahootnr an.l laid it on the table. The old fellow rose slowly an1 drawled out: "Re you going to shoot If I go?" "You bet I am," replied the speaker. "I'm bour.d to- flslsh my speech, even If I have to shoot t keep an audience." The old fellow slgbed In a tired manner and edged slowly away, saying as he did eo: "Well, shoot if you want to. I may Jest as well be shot as talked to death." Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. a With all this peculiar fatality attaching to the Lincoln posmastership, it might be supposed Caere will be difficulty in finding another self tssrlfk'ing doniocrat ready to take a chance on the Job. But have a heart, for there Is no dan ger of the vacancy stating vacant for lack of applicants. People and Events The city solicitor of Philadelphia Is said to have refused M.OU0 in extra fees, regarding his salary as the limit of his moral rights. The solicitor can get a re nominal Ion without asking. Rooty drivers of automobiles caught with the goods in llrpoklyn hereafter wilt win a year In the peniten tiary and a fine of t&a 8obr speeders are promised half the dose, if the court's spine remains perpen dicular. ' ' A mile of private cars lined the sidetracks at A: lsntlr City during a recent meeting of high railroad officials. ' As a result of the comment the collection provoked tha word "Private" painted on the cars Is to give way to the word "Business." A New York member of the National Lee g us of Alimony Jumpers tried to break Into Jail without a court certificate He owed his divorced wife and cheerily moved his traps to the JaQ rather than dig up. The sheriff showed btm the door. Results worth while were.obtalned from the physt, cat examination of restaurant employes In New YorX Out of LSU examined forty cases of tuberculosis were discovered and as many more cases of Infectious blool diseases and a smaller number of typhoid. The British army ofilcer who says ha knows wt.o stole the Jewels of the Order of the Knights of Ht. Patrick from Dublin castle eight years ago Is ready to Wll all "If the telling Is made worth whUe." He is now In Jail for murder, aad seems anxioua to buy his freedom. Hunter Btondy Fergus of Cnlon City, Ind.. while laying oa Ms back trying to get a bead oa a squirrel, wiggled the toe of a pew tan shoe In the grass. An other hunter spotted the wiggle and filled It wlttt bird shot At last accounts the doctors had takea twenty-one shot out of the wounded wiggle. A Ht. Louis woman has sued the Burlington road for IS.OOS damages because, while viewing the sees ry along the route, a locomotive cinder connected with her near eye and stuck there until a doctor probed it If tuo clnCrr evil should bore another personal la Jury hole in tallnad trvaaurirs esretv reiu. t rerd'rg lor.unotlws irotii the fiont to the resr end 7z oa Mght Hchols far Koretsreers. OMAHA, Pept. .-To the Editor of The Bee: A very original and effective Idea has been siiKsested by Mrs. A. M. Kennedy for nlht schools Jliat would meet the cmerRcncy need of foreicners. An Immigrant from (lermany or Sweden does not need S'-hoolIng In ordinary sub jects. The public schools of Sweden and Oermany are not only equal, b it often su perior to our own as for all common studies. What the immigrant needs Is a plain and useful working grssp of our language in this land. The finer literary study will not meet hla (her) needs for a long time. If ever. Someone has aald that to know a iHnguasre well you must have nursed at the bosom of babyhood and nursery rhymes first. If. to follow the suggestion of Mrs. Ken nedy In a rrlvate conversation, our Ronrd of Education could arrange such a prac tical course of every-day English, the Immigrant would feel (it home more quickly than he does. I would also add that a simple explanation of our Ameri can state and Its spirit. In the most ele mentary terms, would tend to mould the character of the coming citlsen. This new movement merits strong sup port. ' It cornea from a woman who has educational experience and can therefore challenge our earnest attention. If this manner of night school becomes a fact, we can fell grateful to tha originator. A crying need has been met. ADOU'H Hl'LT. Pastor of Immanuel Lutheran Church. For tbe I pllft of Humanity. OMAHA, Sept. 2S To the Editor of The Bee: We notice In your Letter Box that John M. Thurston takes this stand and statea what the Saviour did and did not do. without quoting any authority for his statements. We doubt If he has attended more than one of the Sunday meetings, if any. The committee who had this matter In hand, before deciding to send a call to Mr. Sunday, had ample evidence of the permanency of his worH In a large num ber of communities, over a great many years, and It was much above the aver age. No one claims he Is perfect not many endorse all he says and does. It seems as though this united effort of a large majority of the churche for the uplift of humanity, both spiritually and materially, affords an opportunity for "has-beens" to break into public print. Incidentally. 1 have been much pleased with the fair and Impartial reports of The Bee thus far during the campaign. Lest It might seem that I want to get in print. I give you my name, but sign myself ONE INTERESTED. j Knocks on the Knockers. OMAHA, Sept. K. To the Editor of The j Bee: The knockers, wiseacres and I-told- you-sos are gloating over the lacK o( tratl-htttere at the tabernacle. They clalnt that OmAha's people as a class are above Mr. Sunday's teachings and that he will never be successful here. No one can prove such a statement In the pres ent state of perfection In which human ity is I would say that If Mr. Sunday's campaign falls It is because the people as a class are beneath his teachings. Mr. Sunday's critics strain themselves exceedingly to discredit him and his work. As a preacher, Mr Sunday gives people the very force and vim so lacking. In the ordinary minister. His so-called "antics" are the embodiment of grace. Ha la an athlete. Men with red blood In their veins were convinced last Sunday afternoon of hla message Dy nia metnoa of delivering it. Many of his stories cannot be accepted as bona fide truth, yet they are true fic tion. Kmerson has said that the novel ist who pictures a premeditated, well planned murder or crime of his ylllaln, or some aot of virtue or sacrifice on the part of his hero. Is capable of the act he describes. So through Mr. Sunday s stories we see their narrator as ha Is. Whoever Is Incapable of a little Invagi nation or "flow of aoul" his la a dross like existence. C. M. HI a Klgwres that Overwhelm. OMAHA, Sept. 88. To the Editor of The Bee: Anent your editorial in today's Bee regarding taxes in Nebraska and expenses of the state government, it may be of Interest to your readers to csll attention to a portion of the 1W4 mes sage of Oovernor Capper of Kansas, showing a steady regular Increase In appropriations by the legislature there during the Isst twelve years, as against but a negligible Increase In population. These appropriations grew from 5.t47, 040.OT In V.S. to IS.M8.91J43 in 13U, and the Increase under consideration by the legislature of 116, already approved by the senate at that time, will bring the l!tU appropriation up to 110.446,000. He also states that the assessed valuation actually decreased $6,000,O last year. Kansas has always boaatod of superior prosperity and economic conditions as be Ing due to prohibition. It may ajso be of Interest In this con nection to review with the New York Herald In Its recent editorial, the finan cial condition of tho national govern ment, whose ordinary receipts tor the last fiscal year were tH9S.B9S.000. with the receipts of the first two months of this car U&.0U0.W0 leas than the first two months of last year. A similsr evsraga decline during the present year would make a reduction of IM.000.OnO, leaving total receipt, only about $. yeara receipts, however, included W. oyn.tiOO froia the emergency revenue law and S5o.000.OiO from the sugar tax. both of which will end before the close of the fiscal year, and will cut off, '' another .. vn the " m nues nearer IW.WWWB. as ag.ln.t O00 000 last year. Against this, congress msde appropri ations for this fiscal year end authorised contracts with a grand total of ILU3. tnoc, Of this total gMI.W4.WT was tor poatal service to be met by postal re ceipts, i But even ahould there be no postal deficit, as last year, congress has authorised expenditures of IWB.rOO.OOO to be paid out of the treasury which will collect little mora than ISOO.OOO.OOO under existing laws and condltlona. To put the country In a state of dwfense would cost from SWt,ooo,ouO to I5oo.000.000; even the minimum estimated cost equals one-half the national revenue. t Now comes a group of altruists with a contempt for the almighty dollar, saying that the government cannot ia conscience and morals longer accept the HAO0O.00O It receives from liquor taxes. They would Uke away all that Is left in the treasury and Isave It aa empty as eld Mother Hub bard's cupboard, without even a bone to meet the U3S.000.000 authorised expendi tures. And yet to what utter' tnslgnlficenoe fade and shrivel these figures alongside of the fabulous sums and Issues Involved la the Europesn wsr. England alono faces a a expenditures of tT.ii0,o)0.u.e this year1. Alth sn Interest rharge of tM.im,aai more, against aa Income of only 11,600. oic.Oft), meaning a deficit ef fc.SOO.noo.Oi. How pttyfully small and pettifogging sp- par the Issues of prohibition, woman suf-! frsge or eugenics with their specie promises alongside of the millions of live I rncrlilced to tht moloch of war. Are we not like the mountain laboring and bring ing forth not even the proverbial mouse. A. L. METER. oi r.ipnn is Kscfeanaje. OMAHA. Kept. .To the Editor ofi i nn Hee: permit me space In your Let ter Box to take lsue with you wherein ou say In yoar editorial cspped "Wages and Wealth" that production has not been solved. Production has been solved and In proof of thit fact most civilized nations are exnortTi'is'natlons. so does this apply to America, Germany. fp. England and Japan. It la not production of wealth that should worry ua. but Its distribution. Every dollar of weahh producing products that Is now sxported from any country represents un paid labor or surplus value. That is the reason people starve andi are homeless and go naked In the midst of plenty. JESSE T. BRILLHART. 2fil Famam St. flea for (hiirn tnion. PHILLIPS. NVb., Sept 25,-To the Editor of The Bee: I wonder after the "Billy- Sunday meetings how many con verts will be Instructed to let the New Testament be thrtr guide In all matters of dlscipleship? There seems to be a desire on the part of all for unity during the meeting, will, all ministers strive to continue in such harmony, or will they each gather hla little party and strive to show how much unlike the other is his way? Would to Ood we could get away from tie mark of the beast and practice the one baptism as Jesus did it Not until then will the prayer of Jesus bo realizes. I believe that would go a long way toward bringing a divided church together and the lost world to the Kingdom of Ood. E. T A PEACE , LOVER. The Way to Aavlgate. NORTH LOUP. Neb., Sept 2.-To tha Editor of The Bee': If the men urging the improvement of the Missouri river will turn to a very recent issue of Popu lar Mechanics they will notice that the Ohio river Is to be- improved for naviga tion by the building of fifty dams to give the water a proper depth. While the Commercial clubs of Omaha and other central cities are making a plea that an engineer change hla opinion with respect to Missouri river improve ment, the east Is getting in its work by following the advice of engineers. The Ohio river Improvement will effect nav igation from the Mississippi river rates ta ' Pittsburgh. That is the center of eastern manufacturing. Those dams will cost hundreds of million of dollars. The only wsy to Improve the Missouri is by Hie process of damn, as I have suggeslec several years ago. WALTER JOHNSON. GBIJrS AND GR0AXS. "What wms the trouble between ybu and that barber?" "I simrly ssked him what was the dsm sge. I meant the amount du him, hut he took It ss a reflection on his Shaving ability. "Raltiinore American. "A rich woman misses much in life." "As to how?" "sue can't run out to the back fence when ahe geta hold of a choice bit of gossip. She haa to get up a tea or reception, and by that time the new is stale." Louisville Courier-Journal. "Prorperitv has ruined many a man." declared the morallrer. "Well." rejoined the demorallser. "If I wss going to be ruined at all I'd pre fer prosperity to do it" Harper's Msg axine. "All men sre born equal." said the studious patriot. "How perfectlv absurd! replied yotinc Mrs.1 Torklna. "That Is as much h to sav that Maria StlK-lns" baby is Just ss smart and good-looking as ours."-: Washington Btar. STEFAUSS0N. John O Keefe In New Tork World. He hears no roar of cRnnon grlrn Thst marks red sacrifice. He only hears ti-e fog-wraltha dim Rattle the bergs like dice. Only a war with ice for him The merciful, clean Ice I No camp-fires flare; no hummucks drear By maddened men are trod. The onlv trooper reaching here The seahorse, never shod; The only searchlight Is the clear . Aurora waved by God! By no barbed wire lie blocks the chsfi of the gale chargers' fleet He needs no glass so he may trace Where the snow armies meet. How smilingly he turns to face The shrapnel of the sleet! What of the skies' terrific din Of clouds in conflict dread? . Ho does not see the steel motrthei grin When the hot hiss la aped! The Cloud King cries, "I do not win By striking babies dead!" - By open sea and fronting Toe, In some heart-stopping chill, - - He has gone on. as brave men. got But heard no message shrill That kings who wish their lands to grow Must kill and kill and kiill - Man of the age-long Arctic night. Where one gltoat-glow Is shed, Come back from where .tbe sky-gods fight Till wounded stare fall dead! Bring down your se& forever white To wash the lands of red! Are you a good gusssor? TsW CasasrW ssrysrNo aaast lMatg gexa tease tWowatSer- trlTili rif Fnnfing ami ilslw.lna in as kssatdbag. twistuag, taarios, a will last sw tbe roof. The) bast jraej agtsees. Tataltswhw' hyex " an aMsWtel d Roofing k gwaaved by os $, 10 eg IS fears aecordmf to whether the thickness k 1, 3 or S ply. Most roofings look alike, and area trained chemists can Judge roofing quality only by tbe raw natensis that are ftstgsto the roofing and aot fxoca tbelwsbed product Tie resptminity 4 t)M Itn bdiuriewgiarantigatLss Csr-fW RooAW has seeds good cm the taf ttasagW tha entire world, Ak tour local dealer tor farther irtfcsna&tloB. lis wLi qwots yj ressosxtbs prkaa. New Yert Ck nm sign lCiM igg aWMsiM CARPENTER PAPER CO. OMAHA-DISTRIBUTERl ' CERTAIN-TEED ROOFING BUILDINO PAPER P 1TJ To ClnnCfSii Fast trains daily from Omaha arrive La Salle Station and' Englewood Union Station, most convenient locations in Chicago. "Chicago-Hebraska Limited at 6:08 p. m. "Chicago Day Express" - at 6:30 a.m. "Chicago-Colorado Express" at 4:10 p. m. "Rocky Mountain Limited" at 1:09 a. m. Automatic Block Signals Finest Modern All-Steel Equipment Superb Dining Car Service Tickets, reservations and information at Rock Island Travel Bureau. Phone, write or call J. S. McNALLT, Divieiea raaewege AgsaJ 1323 raraaxe St. Ossaka, Net, Pheass DeagUe 428