THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1917. The Om'aha Bee DAILY tlORNING)-VEKING SUNDAY FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROgEWATEW VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR THK BEB PUBLISHING COMPANY. PROPRIETOR. Entered at Omaha poitofflee a eocoBd-clssa matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. By Carrier. Hj MiiL jtltf ted ttondw par awou. ee pMfMt, fe oo rtilla Without BundM " 4ta " 4.00 twin tad Buodir., 40o 10 ttenlaj wiibow Sunday "I'M 4 00 sundw Bet onlr 20a " 100 Stud dmm ef obtuse of sddrew or irregularity lo deiiteff to Ouki REMITTANCE MBit V drift, nprm or postal order. Onlr I-wot fUmr UMo U parmenl of nall accounts. I' snoot) onset, aicspt on Oowb tad Mtttni mthmi act scented. . . OFFICES. OnUsft Bm BaHdlm. rblcj-Peorl. u Building, null Omth S3U N Bt. fctw York IM Fifth at. Couarll Bluffs H N. kUto Bfc. St. I.ouls Ni B'k. of Commerot, baooaV-Uule Building. Utshliiftaa-Ta lit BC N. W. CORRESPONDENCE " Addrew mtmiunmttoni relatitu i mm a tdltoilai mMm to. Omtba Bm. Miwrial DspensMoL MAY CIRCULATION 56,469 Daily Sunday, 51,308 4T.ru. Hmlattn In tit. m"nthj MttulMS ... iwora to to Dwlfhl William Ortwjlrtlo. Mmiw. . Satacrikm lartai Hi. city haul, bar. Tin Bm aalM w tkm. AMim ckus.. . oft m nmuui. ' Now, if Old Sol stick, to hi job, much of past wickedness will he forgiven. ' Pulling off a six-hour work day in Petrograd disposes of th !, complaint that Russians lack speed. , '' As to the war's finish, one guess is as good as another. The way to make it short is to get into the push. . It might help some to center control of the police force in one man, and hold him strictly accountable. ' ' Writing silly letters to convicts may assist some women to . kill time, but they'd better be sewing sox for soldiers. The submarine put out of- action by an oil tanker; must have felt like' trolley car knocked off the track by a flivver. Simon and Leonard are not so lonely, now that they have Benson, Spargo, Walling, Russell and a few others for company. Aside from its cheery, confident quality the official crop report indicates a resumption of dip lomatic relations with the bears. The answer to "what is so rare as a day ,in June" has been discovered. It is a "bright, sun shiny day in the present month, . According fto.."Mayor. Jim,' the trouble with the police force now is it has too many bosses, and so he proposes to remedy this by adding six more. .,; , - 1 -,-. - Stockholm' is getting a pretty lively prelude to the "peace" convention called by the social ists, who are willing enough to fight when oppos ing the police. ' War's new tax on automobiles Is expected to yield $40,000,000 a year from pleasure cars alone. Even, at that additional price joy-riding beats wearing out shoe leather. "' : ,$yi , 1 1 I I. 1 H . .'"'!''.' ''i'-j.'. Shelling the life boats after sinking the ship is new trick of the submarine terrors not likely to heighten the estimation in which that branch of the kaiser's service is "held. , Confederate soldiers marched up Pennsyl vania avenue just fifty years late, according to their own schedule. But the old boys were cheer ing for Old Glory-this time. .... Much of the chatter and all the killing might be dispensed with and not raise a doubt of the cy clonic primacy of Kansas and Missouri. Empha sizing the home coming is irritating, to say the least , . i . Our , registered roll of honor, inspiring in its magnitude, should infuse a stronger spirit of service and sacrifice ' into the atay-at-homes. Equality of service is impossible, but equality of spirit is not. Ruth Law will be welcome when she flies over the city, even if we are all pretty well worked up about the Liberty bonds already., We might in sist she stop off, were it not for the fact that they really need hert St. Joe. - - - Mr. Hoover's explanation and denial of sugar crop shortage accounts for the sudden rush of su gar to storage warehouses in April and early May. The squeeze had no other basis than a Cuban ruction, which speculators quickly capitalized. Railroad managers naturally dislike curtailing passenger train service unless war orders render action necessary. In this they show unwavering esteem for the traveling public Besides, no man ager with a heart could deny the summer joy rider his accustomed travel luxuries. Reformers report progress in liberalizing gov ernment ir Spain. Monarchy is not an obstacle, mainly an ornament' The chief difficulty is to in dues the "ins", to retire and give the "outs" a chance to get nourishment Otherwise, reform in Spain is as airy as its celebrated line of castles. Singing Soldiers -New Yark WorU- Major General Bell recently spoke of the value of singing to an army, its helpfulness on the march, it. consolation in camp and even its in spiration in battle. Acting on this suggestion, various gentlemen in Washington are preparing a song-book for the soldiers who are to go to France, and we ace told that it will be of a nature to take the mind completely away from the war. , Perhaps this is not the right kind of song book. Most of the war songs of the civil war on both sides were either mournful or vindictive. It is true that thousands sang the' rollicking "Dixie," but larger numbers on both sides marched to the solemn strains of "John Brown's Body" and "Maryland." There was one song, "Tenting To night, ' so dispiriting that many commanders pro hibited it and the bibulous "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" was more of a favorite m the family circle than in the camps. "The. Marseillaise," like nearly all national hymns, is not what would be called a pleasing little ditty, and yet it fires the hearts of men who never saw France. Our own "Star-Spangled Ban ner, "America," "Hail Columbia" and "The Bat tle Hymn of. the Republic" would never be se lected to take the minds of our soldiers away from war. Even ;'Tipperary," aadly lacking as it is ra words, carries a plaintive air which for a long time supplanted all the historic martial tunes of Great Britain. And we are tint in ui w the favorite American army. song, of the Spanish I Tighten Up the Poor Farm. Diversion of public opinion to the war may be expected to operate as a cover for many abuses that would not otherwise be allowed to pass, but waste of public money is not justified war or no war. Right now we have special reference to the exhibit of multiplied expense of running the Doug las county poor farm and hospital under the new democratic regime. The high cost of living is ex pected to bob up in public housekeeping as it does in private housekeeping, but while every private householder has been watching the corners it would seem that poor farm operations had been extended. Instead of more, there ought to be actually fewer inmates of the poor farm today than tiering a corresponding time a year ago, because every willing worker can now easily secure employment, and, besides that, the advent of the "dry" era ought to have removed some of the causes con tributing to poor farm population as it has to jail population. The only explanation must be the relaxation of the rules for admission or the keep ing of folks there after they should be discharged. It is not the purpose of our taxpayers to run a star boarding house any more than it is to give them less than is necessary for wholesome but simple meals. No good reason can be presented why poor farm inmates should fare better than the families of average self-supporting wage earners. On its own report the poor farm holds out an urgent invitation for the county board to do somj checking and to tighten up the leaks. Dubious Expedient in Finance. , Many million! of dollars belonging to Ger man citizens are now impounded in this country by reason of interrupted communication. This comes from interest on loans and bonds and divi dends onr stocks owned in Germany, from the proceeds of goods bought and delivered, from royalties and from other sources, and only awaits the re-establishment of relations to be paid over to the rightful owners. A hint now comes from Washington that under, an act to be passed by congress it will be possible to invest this money in Liberty bonds and thus "make the Germans'pay for the war." Such a course might be legalized by congress, but its moral aspect would remain unchanged. We must not fail to distinguish be tween public and private property, or at least property that may be put to direct war uses. One of our reasons for entering the war is to secure the certain inviolability of private property wherever located on sea or on land. If Ger many has seized property belonging to individ uals anywhere under pretext of necessity, the offense belongs to the Germans and does not con vey to us any right to imitate the' example. The suspended millions belonging to German .inves tors and business men should be safer in this country than anywhere just now. Americans have a considerable stake in Germany, and the ques tion of their property rights will surely be kept in mind by the. government when settlement time comes. For this, if for no other reason, any thought of investing the money of German citi zens in Liberty bonds ought to be put aside. Lesson from Joliet Earnest workers in the cause of prison re form will suffer something of disappointment, while thoughtful persons who .have not investi gated closely will be shocked by the disclosures made in connection with the disorder at the joliet prison. Primarily 1( was brought about by an effort to curtail certajn privileges that had been abused.. Among these. was that. of receiving let ters from women outside the prison, wht from one or another motives had volunteered to write to the convicts. That some of these women Were imprudent is to state it mildly. Expressions in letters taken from the convicts, written them by strangers in most cases, indicate such a perver sion of the impulse to aid in reformation that a sober mind is at a loss to ascribe a motive for the language used. No man can be assisted to decency in his way of life when stimulated by the suggestions conveyed to him through silly letters, no matter what the writer of such let ters may think. The plain lesson of the Joliet affair is that more caret must be' exercised, both in and out-of prison, if the moral fabric of the nation is to be preserved. Xronstadt and a Free Russia. The experiment of the soldiers and workmen at Kronstadt, said to have been abandoned at the urgent pleading of the provisional government, is interesting to sociologists as indicating how stub bornly a fallacy persists. .Here pure idealists again sought to establish, an Utopia, where no dominant personality ahould gain control over another and where all business should be carried on by commissions, each equal in authority with all others, and each member having similar attri butes, with no leadership, and no management, one man's word being as good as another. .The end to this is easily discerned, but the tragical fact is that Kronstadt is an expression of the condition that threatens free Russia, whose people must find means for the establishment and maintenance of order and the formulation of their will into effective acts. Liberty is a priceless pos session, but is easily lost when unsupported by a firm foundation. This is not yet provided in Russia, where ' the situation is far from en couraging to those who cherish aelf-government. A strange turn of affairs it is that has given autocracy, as represented by Prussian militarism, its chance for new life through the endeavors of the Russian people to aeize their liberty. Kron stadt is typical of the weakness of the masses when left to their own devices. The proposed form of government is attractive as a dream, but a genuine da'nger to free Russia. College Students to the Front The most inspiring feature of the rally to the colors is furnished by college students. No other distinct class equals their zeal for service or their speed to the recruiting offices. Long before the United States entered the war nu merous ambulance corps of American collegians were in the service. . These organizations be came the nucleus of the fighting body, which recently exchanged ambulance work for guns and carried Old Glory to the west front. Most of the big colleges are represented in this body. This year's classes in many colleges have been sharply reduced by enlistments in ' various branches of the service. In two instances, at least Colgate and the City of New York, the school year was cut short because some 400 students of each left to enlist Princeton, Co lumbia, Yale and Harvard are sending ambu lance corps to the front Other colleges are making proportionate contributions to the coun try's service. In energy, devotion and enterprise these men, properly seasoned, will Drove worthy M their country and lend luster to the stars of the flag they follow. ,.'.." . ... .. ; . ., .. "'V ' Avenging Jonah By Frederic J. Haskin ' Washington, June 5. From the Pacific coast conies' vTord that the whalers of the state of Washington and of Alaska are seeking markets for whale meat in an effort to increase their own profits and supplement the nation's de pleted food supply. This report has excited so much interest that the Bureau of Fisheries here has had a number of inquiries as to the edibility of whales and the chances of creating a national market for their flesh. The government experts looking into the matter are not prepared as yet to publish their conclusion. No government investigation is needed to de termine the edibility of the whale. In Japan whale meat, both fresh and canned, is a staple and plays a very- important part in the diet of the poorer classes who cannot afford to buy beef. In the island empire the heart, liver, tongue and intes tines of the whale are eaten, as well as the meat and blubber. The meat of the humpback whale, which is considered the most desirable, sometimes sells for as much as 15 cents a pound, but is eenerallv obtainable for about half that amount. Roy Chapman Andrews, who has spent much time at the shore stations ot the modern whaling industry studying the great sea creat ures for the American museum of national his tory, states tffat he has eaten large quantities of the meat and has found it both palatable and healthful. He says that chemical analysis shows it to contain about Vs ner cent of digesti ble material, whereas beef has seldom more than yj per cent. It is described as a coarse meat, which tastes something like' venison, but has a very distinctive flavor. The favorite way of serving it m aoan is raw. with chonoed vege tables and a sauce. Great quantities of it are cooked, canned and sent to all parts of the em pire. This canned whale is said to be superior to a great many of the potted meats sold in the American marxet. While the old New England whaling captains were writing their memoirs of this vanished in dustry a young Norwegian was busy invent ing a new method of whaling by which the re maining abundant species, the blue whales and fin whales, might be profitably hunted. Back in the 70s the harpoon gun and the shore station were being perfected, and now this new whal ing business has grown into a world industry with products worth $70,000,000 annually. It is carried on up and down the Pacific coast from Mexico to Alaska, where the whales con gregate in immense herds on certain rich feed ing grounds; from South Africa, Japan, from the Shetland Islands, the south Orkneys, the talk lands and South Georgia; from Spitzbergen, the Faroes, the Hebrides, Greenland and the Gala pagos. A peculiar thing about the industry is that practically all ot the harpooners, who are generally also the captains of the vessels, come from ionsberg, the little Norwegian town where Svend Foyn, the inventor of the harpoon gun, lived. The importance of creating a market for whale is due to the fact that, besides greatly in creasing the value of the industry and adding to the world s food suddIv. it might be the means of saving the whales from extermination. Al though there are some few laws with regard to whaling, there are none that are effective. In the sub-Antarctic islands especially the whale is being rapidly exterminated by means of the float ing factories. These are great steamers carry ing apparatus for the trying out of blubber, from which the smaller vessels operate. Not only all of the meat, but often all but the thickest part of the blubber, is thrown away. A whale that would be worth several thousand dollars in Japan yields only about $40 or $50 to these wasteful methods. In this way an industry which is worth millions of dollars is being rapidly destroyed. This new method of hunting whales from shore stations, while it threatens the extermination of the race, has also afforded science its first good opportunity to study them. From the decks of the whaling vessels many new and interesting denervations of the movements and habits of whales have been made, while at the shore sta tions, where the huge bodies are pulled out for butchering, the first accurate measurements and records of color and marking have been ob tained. As almost everyone knows, the whale is a mammal, the same as man and the other higher forma of animal life. There is no doubt that it is descended from some mammal which lived on land in former geologic ages, and was forced by some sudden' change in its environment to adapt itself to a life in the sea. It still breathes air, but is able to hold its breath for a long time, and is known to stay under water for at least forty minutes at a time. How deep it is able to go no one knows. It was formerly supposed that the pressure of the water made it impossi ble for the animals to descend more than 300 feet, but whalers report instances in which a whale has taken out a quarter of a mile of har poon line and risen within 100 yards of the point where it disappeared. -, " The blue whale is the largest animal that in habits the globe and is believed to be the largest that ever did inhabit it, exceeding in size even the dinosaurs. Blue whales have been taken which were eighty-five feet in length and weighed seventy-five tons. With the exception of the killer whale, which is a very ferocious species about fifteen feet in length that destroys seals and fish, the whales do practically no harm. They are very worthy of protection because of both their scientific in terest and their commercial value. Our Fighting Men Joseph Strauss. Rear Admiral Joseph Strauss, a noted ordnance expert of the United States navy and for some time chief of the Bureau of Ordnance, is a native of New York and a graduate of the Naval acad emy in the class of 1885. In addition to the rou tine duties of his calling alternating sea. and shore duty and circumnavigating the globe Ad miral Strauss has directed important experiments in the line of naval ordnance. For several years he was in charge of the United States naval prov ing ground and he commanded the cruiser Mont gomery while that vessel was used for experi mental work on torpedoes. Admiral Strauss is the inventor of the superposed turret system of mounting guns on battleships. William C. Bralated. Dr. William C. Braisted, the present surgeon general of the United States navy, is the man who, above 'all others, is charged with the preservation of the health of the American sailor and marine during the present war. Dr. Braisted is a native of Toledo. O., and was a practicing physician in Detroit when he entered the navy in 1890 as an assistant surgeon. After having served on many vessels and at many naval hospitals be was made surgeon general in 1914. Dr. Braisted represented the medical department of the navy in Japan during the Russo-Japanese war and was decorated by the emperor of Japan in apprecia tion of his excellent report on the Japanese hos pital service. He ia also the possessor of the Order of Bolivar, given him by the president of Venezuela for his services in caring for the Vene zuelan wounded at the battle of Puerto Cabello. Frederic R. Harris. Rear Admiral Frederic R.-Harfis, chief of the Bureau of Yards and Docks, is one of the noted engineering experts of the United States navy Admiral Harris was born in New York City and received his technical training at Stevens insti tute. Previous to entering the naval service in 1903 he had established for himself a high reputa tion in the engineering profession by his work in connection with harbor improvements and other engineering enterprises along the Atlantic coast. As an engineer in the naval service he assisted in the construction of the new navy yard and dry dock at Charleston and constructed the .great naval station at Guantanamo, Cuba. . .... . , .... . Proverb for the Day. Competition Is the life of trade. One Year Ago Today In the Wax. Russian, recaptured th. fortress of uiuk. in voinynla. Allies reported to have begun a blockade -if ureece. Italians teized high mountain passe" nonnwest or Trent and blocked A us trians In heavy battle near Aslago. In Omaha, Thirty Years Ago. Henry Hornberger has Just re turned from a trip to the east, the feature of which was hi. attendance upon the golden wedding of his father ana mother in Manmnurg, Ind. Quite a crowd gathered near the Fourteenth street entrance to the Pax ton, attracted by a hilarious Individual who was throwing articles out of a fflllff-lrS.Sin 8; second story window, to the danger of the passentby Officer. Dempsey and Whalen reported the matter to the hotel clerk and the jubilant Individual subsided. The funeral of William T. Preston took place from the residence, corner Seventeenth and Clark. ' The office of the Board of Public Work, has been moved from its old place In Creighton block to room 21, the one Immediately south. U. B. Balcombe will act as clerk to the chairman of the board. A Bprlghtly debate took place in the rooms of the Daniel Webster society at Creighton college. The following young men took part in the debate: H. Town, J. O'Gorman. J. B. Furay and P. Burke. Eugene Noon read an essay on "Socialism." Contractor James Griffith will com mence the erection of the new school building on Twenty-eighth and Web ster. C. E. Fanning of C. E. Fanning & Co. clalmB that he is saving the city $1,100 overy month by sweeping the streets of the city. This Day In History. , 1806 General Gideon J. Pillow noted confederate commander, born in Williamson county, Tennessee. Died in liee. county, Arkansas, October 6, 1878. 1838 General George M. Sternberg, surgeon-general of the United States army during the war with Spain, born in Otsego county. New York. Died No. vember 3, 1916. 1842 James C. Barbour, Virginia governor and secretary of war under President J. Q. Adams, died. Born In Virginia. June 10, 1775. 1861 Virginia troops transferred to the conferedate government by the governor. 1867 The empress and emperor of Austria were crowned at Pesth as king and queen of Hungary. 1892 Bob Ford, the slayer of Jesse James, was shot and killed by a dep uty sheriff at Creele, Colo. 1893 Business portion of Fargo, N. D., destroyed by fire; loss estimated at over 13,000,000. 1916 William J. Bryan resigned as secretary of state in the Wilson cabinet. The Day We Celebrate. Dr. Thomas E. Dailey, the dentist, was born, June 8, 1881, in Lincoln. Frederick H. Mlllener, custodian of Union Pacific headquarters, is Just 45 today. He was born in Tonawanda, N. Y.,-and is a graduate first of De Veaux college, of Magara college in electrical engineering and of Jefferson Medical college. John Q. A. Brackett, former gov ernor of Massachusetts, born at Brad ford, N. H., seventy-five years ago to day. William W. Canada; United States consul at Vera Cruz, Mexyborn In Randolph county, Indiana, sixty-seven years ago today. Dr. Samuel Simpson Marquis, noted Episcopal clergyman and sociologist, of Detroit, born at Sharon O., fifty one years ago today. Clarence H. De Mar, celebrated long distance runner and Olympic contest ant born at Medina, O., twenty-nine years ago today. Timely Jottings and Reminders. Today is Woman's Liberty loan day. Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo Is to speak in New Orleans today In behalf of the Liberty loan. The government grain report to be Issued today is awaited with keen pub lic interest because of the prominent part that the foodstuffs situation is expected to play in the winning ot the war. Many church dignitaries and men ot national prominence are on the pro gram ot the diamond jubilee celebra tion of the University of Notre Dame, which begins today and will continue over Sunday. A magnificent memorial to Robert E. Lee, erected on Gettysburg battle field by the state of Virginia, is to be unveiled today as the crowning fea ture of the national reunion of United Confederate Veterans, which has held forth In Washington this week. Etoryette of the Day. "Are you an advocate of prohibi tion?" asked the lady with the Bryan eeque chin. , - "Yes, ma'am." replied the Individual with the irrigated, carmine-colored eyes, "I advocate prohibition, in lta proper place." "In Its proper place. What do you mean, sir?" she demanded suspiciously. "I mean, ma'am," 'he answered, "at least twenty miles from any human habitation, ma'am." Philadelphia star. HOMEWARD BOUND. Dr. Henry Van Dyk, former .American minister to th Netherlands, who arrived at New York yesterday, wrote th poem printed below on hta voyas; acrou the Atlantic. Home, for my heart at HI call me; Home through the danger ion;. Home, whatever befalli me. X wilt salt again to my own. - Wolves of the sea arc hiding Closely along the way -Under the water biding Their moment to rend and slay. . Black la the eagle that brands them. Black are their hearts as the night, Black la the hat that tends them To murder, but not to tight. : Flower of th 0rman culture, Boast of the kaiser's marine, Choose for your emblem tho vulture. . Cowardly, cruel, obscene. , Forth from her sheltered haven ' Our peaceful ship glides alow. Noiseless In flight as a raven. Gray as a hoodie crow. She doubles and turns tn her bearing - yke a twisting plover she goes; i The way of her westward faring, Only the captain knows. In a lonely bay concealing , . She Hnser for days, and slips ' At dunk from her covert,, stealing ' ' Through channels feared by the ships. Bravo are the men and 'steady, "' Who guide her over tho deep, , British marines ready . To face the sea wolfs leap. , Lord of the winds and waters Bring our ship to her mark, Safe Jrom thla game of hide-and-seek With murderers in the dark. ...... s v Waehiagten Post. Tribute to Charles H. Tully Lincoln, Neb., June 6. To- the F,dltor of The Bee: The daily press Monday carried the news cf the death of Charles H. Tully of Alliance, nnd no one who knew him well has felt a happy moment since. A pioneer of western Nebraska, whose people he best knew and loved, ne naa lound iittie time to mingle with the hosts of the more populous east ern section, although men of promi nence generally knew Charlie Tully, for he was a great soul. Strong, brave and generous, he made no bid for friends. He was one of those na ture's noblemen, with a personality to wnom men were irresistibly drawn. He was incapable of a small thought or a mean act. V , , It was a rare privilege to share the hospitality of his beautiful, home and his lovely family. It was a royal treat to traverse the great ranches of the TuIIV-MllNHPr I.nflri onn,t,on.L nnH some of the nation's noted men have tesiinea to delightful hours spent, the guests of Charlie Tully and his be loved nartnAI-H .nil .nm-n.I T C. Musser and Herman A. Peters of Kusnvine and Hay Springs. Charles H. Tully was typical of the Verv best of NehrflRltn-a vpaal ranchmen. Hailed as a cattle king, he waa as moo em as a.cnild and as ten der, too. Always unassuming, always optimistic and always an intelligent and studious man of affairs, the value of his life cannot be estimated. That he is gone we can only be thankful fos what our memory holds of the good things he contributed to the welfare of the world. Politically a loyal domocrat, he was as jealous of the principles which his party upheld as he was of the friend ships so dear to him. He was in every sense a superb type of American man hood, whose sojourn upon earth was correspondingly as fruitful of happi ness as his untimely death was sad, and In the hearts of countless men, women and children long will abide the sterling name of Charles H. Tully. HENRY C. RICHMOND. Turn All Back to the Indian. Omaha, June 6. To the Editor of The Bee: In the early days of this country and as far back as 1492, the land belonged by right of possession and Inheritance to a race of red men, who lived, perhaps, not according to our standards of civilization, but un doubtedly as God intended them to live. They had their tribes and lived freely and happily until the advent ot the white man, then they saw their lands pre-empted, seized and occupied by their enemies, and themselves driven back slowly, but surely, from the lands that were theirs by all the rights that man should require. We ruthlessly drove them from their homes that we might found a nation of our own, and when they in despera tion turned and fought for their very existence, we as an enlightened na tion called all our troops to help us wrest from them their last foothold on their native soil. Then we segre gated them I on reservations, over which they bould not step, and also over which we placed guardians to see that they had no freedom of person or speech which was not sanctioned by our government. Now, in this day when we, too, in our turn are fighting for our right to hold what we took by force, we turn to the oppressed red man, and not onry request, but demand, that he stand by us to see that no one takes from us what we have stolen from him. I ask you In the name of Jus- tic, and right, would you, In his place, raise one finger in such a cause? . JUSTICE TO ALU In other wards,- the writer would have 100,000,000 civilised inhab itants dispossessed in favor ot th. 200,000 savages who were here when Columbus came. Pleads for Red Cross. Omaha. June 6. To the Editor of The Bee: I am surprised and grieved at the seeming indifference of hun dreds of men on the streets of Omaha who do not wear a Red Cross button. They should realize the great impor tance of supporting the Red Cross. We are told that the wounded in France, both allies and prisoners, are suffer ing for bandages and the Red Cross cannot meet the demands. Surely there are but few men but who could give l to the Red Cross. The people do not seem to realize that the gov ernment depends on the Red Cross to take care of the wounded. Let any man remember that $1 will supply bandages for one or more poor fellows who has been hurt while fighting for the rights of those who stay at home. Now it is high time that these hun dreds of men that we see on the streets were buying and wearing Red Cross buttons. Say, Mr. Reader, when you retire on your comfortable bed, would you not feci more comfortable to know that you had given relief to one or two wounded who have been fighting for you? Think it over. J. M. TALIAFERRO. MIRTHFUL MOMENTS. Bzej! l" can't sing. Besz Really, 1 can't. Rzzt Well, if you lnelst. "What is that?" inquired the visitor. "That's a little record we put on before the vocal selections. Makes the music seem more natural, don't you think!" Louisville Courier-Journal. Judge It aeems to me that I have aeei you before. Prisoner Tou have, your honor; I taught your daughter singing lessons. ' Judge Thirty years. New Tork World. "I declare it Is simply outrageous all they demand of women." "What's the matter now?" "On one hand they are calling on women to come to the front, and the next minute they want them to work hard In their back yards." Louisville Courier-Journal. tfcWCAlUNir ON A CSAttji SH0WLVX W7fNBwSUtY? Wrs N Foolish irWstMEWf 5 SWE IS UNt W "Where are you going to take your chiN dren next summer?" "J don't know. The board of health hasn't made any plans for them yet." Life. "He's such a daredevil that I'm surprised he doesn't en Hut." "That's too tame for him; he'g trying to get Into the diplomatic service," Life, Reggie There's been something trembling' on my lips for months and months, Margie, and Margie Tes, so I see. Why don't you shave it off? Puck. "How long after you were married before your wife spoke crossly to you?" "She yelled at me the minute X. stepped on the train." "My goodness! What for?" "Well, you see, I tore off about four yards of it." Judge. Suspicious Employer Did your grand mother's funeral take all the afternoon? "Er yes, sir er It was a double header." Life. Judge a Player on PERFORMANCE Not Equipment U My" "-easy to pedal FREE TRIAL $375 1 0-Year Guaranty Genuine Mahogany, Walnut or Fumed Oak Divided Payment if Tou Wish Oulbnansen-made Player has what surprising re.erve power how quickly it respond. how fast it repeats how It with, stands wear, and even abuse let us prove that It Is ea.y to " play, always ready to play, and . that the depreciation will amount to less than 10 cents per dayl This Gulbransen-made Player Is fully equipped beautifully equipped but Its vital qualities are so far superior to those of many higher-priced Players that we urge you to i - Judge It on Performance! You wouldn't buy an Automo bile just because It had a certain kind of oil-gauge, would you? You'd want to know something about the engine how much power it had whether or not It would "pick up" quickly how much the upkeep was likely to be per year how fast It would depreciate how dependable It was. You ought to Judge a Player the same way. . . Just come In and ask us to show you bow much power this After we have satisfied you on these vital things things that determine Performance we'll show you some equipment, tool But don't let any smooth salesman get your attention cen tered upon a clever attachment and aell you one of the old-styla hard-running, sluggish type of players. You'll be sorry if yon do! Better see the Oulbransen made 'Player before examining1 others. A. IIOSPECO., 1513-1515 DOUGLAS ST. THE VICTOR STORE THE OMAHA BEE INFORMATION BUREAU Washington, D. C. Enclosed find a two-cent stamp, for which you will please send me, entirely free, a copy of the Bread Book. ...... Street Address. ...... T. City............. State