Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 11, 1917, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, JUNE II, 1917.
The Omaha Bee
DAILY (M0RNINO-BVEN1NQ SUNDAY
FOUNDED Bt EDWARD KOSE WATER
VICTOR KOSEWATER, EDITOR
TBI BBS PUBL18H1NO COMPANY, fROf 8IET0B.
Catered at Omaha postofflcs second-class matter.
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OeuU sue. Editorial Depsnataat.
MAY CIRCULATION
56,469 Daily Sunday, 51,308
anrats amlun let tu mtu auaaaitMd sod won w k OwlsSl
wtuutass.
SueecrtWs lrtc Ik dly shooU B.vs Th. Be suites
tkem. AfcH duagotj ee ltaai as requested.
Four more days to do your Liberty bond shop
ping. The question still is: Which will you do, en
list or buy? Uncle Sam needs you both ways.
If the country could rally its fake fabricators
and rumor mongers on the front trenches the bet
Of L. V. Nicholas would be a cinch.
The published names of towns in the earth
quake belt sadly reminds the reader that Russia
his no monopoly of tongue twisters.
, "German! are dazed" runs the news story, but
could you expect an army blown sky-high by
dynamite to alight on its feet with its head clear?
Ulsterites and South Itelanders fought
houlder-to-shoulder at Messines. Twas ever
thus when 'Weighting race" gets away from the
miasma of the"Boyne.
Omaha's business, as reflected in the bank
clearings report is such as to warrant the steadily
increasing chest measurement noted by the
visitors. Watch us grow.
"Everybody in the country," says Herbert
Hoover, "cats more than is necessary." Not at
all, Herb. Extra ration are necessary to as
similate the food dope coming out of Washington.
It is worth while noting as the war humps
along that precious few royal hides get within
range of the shrapnel. . Millions go forward to
death or mutilation, but royalty invariably plays
safe.
Public officials of all grades secure exemption
from military service under the draft law, Doubt
less the authors reason that the high cost of
election is all the sacrifice the nation can fairly
exact.
1 ' The pressure of national problems must not
becloud the fact that modern passenger station
at 6iraha is t necessary architectural adjunct to
an imposing, artistic bridge. Eventually, even
if not now. ' '
Irkutsk is reported to have received the Root
party cordially, but more interest will be felt in
its reception at Petrograd. By the way, its route
it a reminder that the back door to Russia it
wide open. " '
' German socialists are represented u "furious"
over France's demand for restoration of Alsace
Lorraine and reparation for ruthless invasion. The
temper expressed plainly tags whose ox it get
ting gored.
Sporadic outbreaks of independence and sep
aration are to be expected in Russia for awhile.
'Vast territory and limited sources of information
tempt would-be leaders to action. . The sudden
and unexpected removal of the shackles evidently
transfers the swelling front the limbs to the heads,
: One big railroad company has announced that
It will continue the insurance of all its employes
who enlist. This is a sort of practical patriotism
that, deserves emulation. It will help the soldier
on the battle front if he is assured that those he
left at home will be looked after if he does not
come back.
War charities in the British metropolis are
huge in number and variety. The London Times
carries from twenty-five to forty advertised ap
peals for various worthy causes. Nearly all have
to do with victims of the war at home and on the
battle fronts. Thirty-two months of struggle
made prodigious demands on public generosity
. and the end is not in sight.
Song On the Warpath
ftU.Jtlpl.la Ledier.
The War department is getting out a book of
songs for our troops to sing in the trenches and
on the march in France. General Bell is quoted
at authority for the statement that singing short
ens the weary mileage for the footsore, burdened
infantryman. Every military camp has found
itself sooner or later a nest of singing birds. So
prone are the Italian soldiery in the Alps to "be!
canto" that often they have to be warned in the
face of the enemy that song, as well as the live
thunder of the poet's description, leapa "from
peak to peak the rattling crags among," and
wakes betraying echoes. General Bridges, of the
British commission, which came to this country,
tells how he once had hard work to set anme
iatigued British stragglers out of St. Quentin,
when an overwhelming force of Germans was ap
proaching. Finally he had the inspiration (he
was then a major), to procure a toy drum and a
whistle, and to this music he and a trumpeter
oroggnt tne men out. 01 town singing tne British
Grenadiers." The other day. addressing: the train.
inf camp at Plattsburg, General Bell said he
wanted every company to have its own ton or '"A
tJot Time in the Old Town Tonight' has a swing
to n inai win put ginger ana com courage in tne
heart of men. Go to it. Sing and fight.) -Canadians
and Territorials marehinar thrnmrh
London on their way to the front are accustomed
, to lift their voices in music-hall ditties not as
-a rule, those of the latest vintage, but usually the
aonxs that have been gaining favor through sev
eral seasons. That is a striking fact about the
otkts the sailors sing. They are tenacious of the
oM and approved tunes. A modern baljad of a
rtytiim aumctentiy taking may sweep the regi
. BBnsnie line MiaA-uuic-guii unci uui lur one 1 ip-
erary" there are hundreds of modern mushroom
growths that perish. The song a soldier carries
' in his mental kit must have a swinging simplicity
of form and the sympathetic appeal of the ele
mental sentiment that makes the whole world kin.
June Crop Estimate Encouraging.
Crop estimates contained in the June report
from the Department of Agriculture are much
more optimistic in their nature than any sent out
this season. The department experts now figure
that the total wheat yield will exceed that of last
year, although it still will be behind the five-year
average. On the basis of 600,000,000 bushels for
home requirements, which is admittedly liberal,
the estimate shows 56,000,000 bushels free for
export. When the Canadian aurplus is added and
due allowance for economical food administra
tion at home is made the probabilities of meeting
the European demand are appreciably brightened.
Rye is to be considerably increased and barley
and oats likewise show great advance over last
year's crops, indicating general sowing and fa
vorable start for these cereals, all available for
food. Apples and peaches also promise to ex
ceed in yield last season's return and other food
crops are yet to be given consideration. Nothing
in this must be taken as excuse for relaxation of
effort to produce, but it does afford encourage
ment to those who have made such efforts to
meet the food emergency. Give our farmers a
chance and the world will not go hungry.
Emma Goldman a Modern Marvel.
Astonishing as it is that Emma Goldman
should be permitted to utter her covert treason,
it is even more astonishing she should have hear
ers. This disciple of and successor to Johann
Most, apostle of free love, anarchy and disorder,
has learned by experience just how far she can
go in her tirades and still keep out of jail. Her
less iadept imitators are sure to overstep the
bounds and encounter the grief that is avoided by
the crafty woman. Her doctrine leads to destruc
tion, to social and moral chaos as Surely as water
runs down hill She is typical of the whole roster
of "internationalists," or whatever they may call
themselves, who prate of "human brotherhood"
and undertake to seduce men from the path of
duty. The physical safety of these men and
women themselves depends utterly on the very
law they so ostentatiously profess to scorn. ' Even
Emma Goldman appealed to the New York police
and scolded them for not having giving her better
protection from the soldiers who interrupted her
meeting, while the most blatant of them never
fails to run to the written constitution and the
statutes of the country for his "rights" when
brought to book by an outraged community.
Emma Goldman is a modern marvel, in that
she has so long succeeded in evading even the
mild rule of the United States. In Germany she
would have been long ago suppressed as a public
nuisance. Her present dupes are either unwise
or selfish, whose hope to escape service will be
dashed. The limit of toleration for this element
of our citizenship has almost been reached.
Chinese Farmers and American Farms.
One of the proposed steps for relieving pos
sible lack of farm labor in the United States dur
ing the war period is a removal of restrictions
against the Chinese and the importation of a con
siderable number of farm hands from that coun
try. In support of this it is argued by one of the
enthusiastic advocates that the Chinese farmer is
far superior in ability to the American. This
statement rests on the fact that the agriculture of
China, fifty centuries old, is intensified to a degree
unknown in this country, and results that would
astonish our husbandmen are there commonly
achieved as 'a matter of national preservation.
So much of the argument as rests on the abil
ity of Chinese to successfully manage his agricul
ture on hid own scale will be accepted at its face
value. The trouble would come when he is asked
to adapt his methods to farm operations of the
magnitude familiar in America. The skimping of'
land, the crowding of crops, the attention given
to individual plants or even to the separate stalks
of plants, habitual with the Chinese, and possible
only because each farmer has comparatively few
growing things to care for, would be ridiculous
under the conditions that prevail here. It doubt
less is true the farmer who has nursed his seeds
and their growth so tenderly as is required in
crowded China may have in the course of an hun
dred or more generations acquired a knowledge
of plant life and habits beyond the grasp of his
American compeer. But this is not all there is to
farming, and the man who is accustomed to as
siduously tending a procession of crops on a tract
of ground the size of a hall bedroom might find
his experience and lore equally knocked askew
were he asked to project them on the scope of a
forty-acre lot, not to speak bf the wide-spreading
farms known in the west.
The Chinese farmer is entitled to great respect
for the wonders he achieves at the expense of
patience beyond Yankee ken, but it would take
him too long to adjust himself to our distances,
and the emergency would be over before his use
fulness were developed. '
Loosening Bonds on Export Trade.
One of the earliest effects pf the entrance of
the United States into the war is to loosen certain
bonds that have restricted our export trade. Much
inconvenience has been experienced by shippers
because of delays in connection with regulations
adopted by the belligerents, and which held up
shipments, whether destined for neutral ports or
otherwise. These regulations have been submit
ted to by American exporters with whatever
patience they might summon, but now it is ex
pected most if not all will be removed. In fact,
quite a few of the most onerous have already been
so modified that getting a shipment out of the
country is almost as easily achieved as before the
war. The fact that the United States is now as
much concerned in preventing communication
with the Germans as its allies will serve to guar
antee the intent at least of the shipper, and thus
relieve him of the additional supervision to which
he has been subjected, and may operate to ensure
that, barring submarine danger, goods will here
after reach their destination. At any rate, better
days are expected by those who are engaged in
the foreign trade.
At last, after a ten years' struggle with private
bankers, both .houses of the Illinois legislature
has passed a bill providing for state regulation
and supervision of all banks without national
charters. Selfish private bankers, organized and
aggressive, defied the state administration and
challenged its power to put the bill through. Leav
ing out of account a shameful record of public
robbery under the guise of banking, the open
threat of private bankers to prevent legislation
constituted a challenge to honesty that could not
be ignored. Honesty won. ' '
Railroad men are inclined to raise the ante a
little on the government crop reports, and they
are not alone in that regard, either. Nebraska is
going to be there when the returns come in from
the fields and orchards next October.
The Eyes oj War
By Freuertc J. Hun.in
Washington, June 8. The Federal Bureau of
Standards, of the Department of Commerce, will
be able to supply the needs of the American army
in the matter of optical glass. This is a matter
of the very highest importance, and represents
a distinct triumph for the bureau in a technical
and scientific way. The manufacture of high
grade lenses is one of the most complex, delicate
and difficult tasks imaginable. Until the out
break of the war, the highest degree of perfec
tion in optical glass was attained only in Ger
man and Austrian factories.
It was a part of the world's system of scien
tific production before the war for each nation
to specialize along particular lines. Thus, Ameri
can instruments of precision were probably the
best made anywhere. In the field of optical in
struments, especially optical glass, Germany and
Austria led, and this leadership gave Germany
an immense advantage in the early days of the
war. But the last three years have proved that
each nation which makes war must be prepared
to supply itself with every essential of warfare.
The Bureau of Standards has brought its work
to a point where America can meet the exacting
requirements of the army for optical glass.
Nowhere is the remarkable development of
finely made glass lenses more beautifully shown
than in the aeroplane camera. These cameras are
literally the eyes of the army. Every foot of the
battle-ground and the territory behind it is photo
graphed scores of times a day. These photo
graphs are made by men flying 5,000 and 10,000
feet above the ground level at a speed of eighty
miles an hour or more, and they are as clear
and distinct as the cabinet photo of ten years ago.
Only an expert in optical instruments can ap
preciate the triumph of science represented by
the lenses of these cameras. A simple lens, which
will make a photograph of a sort has no less
than five separate and distinct factors of error,
and would snow nothing but a blur if used under
conditions much less trying than those of aero
plane photography. In order to overcome the
sources of error it is necessary to combine
glasses of different chemical composition in such
a way that each glass exactly neutralizes the
error of the others. The composition of such
glasses must be calculated to the minutest frac
tion. The glasses must be cooled, annealed,
ground and polished until they are accurate down
to the finest point that human instruments can
measure.
Some of the great military cameras in use
on the western front make pictures seventeen
inches by twenty inches. Such cameras have
lenses with what is known as thirty-six-inch focal
length that is, the lens is placed a yard distant
from the sensitive plate. This is necessary in
order that objects on the ground may stand out
as large as possible. The longer the distance
from lens to plate, the more useful are the photo
graphs from the military point of view. But in
order to combine this long focus with speed, it is
necessary for the lens to be very large, and each
increase in size of the lens increases many times
the difficulty of casting and grinding it accurately.
The lens on such a camera may be as much as
six inches in diameter. It must be so perfectly
made that this great block of glass, combined of
different elements, casts a sharp clear image of
the scene below on every part of the photo
graphic plate. ,
Most of the aeroplane cameras are smaller In
size than this, on account of the difficulty in
handling the big plates. These smaller cameras
take pictures of such a sharpness that they may
be enlarged without loss of detail. The weight is
also a factor. It is said that some of the larger
cameras weigh as much as 200 pounds. This limits
considerably the height to which the aeroplane
can rise, and exposes the observer to greater
danger from shell-fire. Specially constructed aero
planes are being used to carry these big cameras,
equipped with devices to eliminate vibration.
An army photographer may make 300 pic
tures in a single aeroplane flight, and there are
hundreds of photographers attached to the aero
plane divisions of each army. Thus thousands
of pictures are brought back daily from over the
enemy's lines. These pictures, along with what
the observer sees through his field glasses, are
the real basis for military operations.
The signal corps of the American army faces
an unusually difficut problem in war photography
in laying its plans for a possible defence of Ameri
can territory. This is due to the lack of military
maps of American soil. It is comparatively easy
for a staff officer who has a large-scale and de
tailed military map of a given region to take a
number of photographs of that region and bring
the situation up to date from day to day. Lack
ing the large-scale military map, the problem be
comes more difficult. In such a case, the map
must literally be drawrt from photographic data.
It is said that our signal corps ana engineer oi
ficers, recognizing this problem, have worked out
a most efficient system for mapping a new region
entirely from aeroplane photographs. Details of
this system are, of course, not available, but it is
said that new apparatus of great value has been
invented and constructed by American experts.
The camera is only one instrument of modern
warfare in which a highly perfected optical glass
is the essential factor. Field glasses and tele
scopic rifle-sights are other common examples.
The Germans had a great superiority in these
instruments in the beginning of the war, but the
allies quickly put themselves on an equal footing.
The remarkable performance of long-range
naval guns is based on optical instruments of
beautiful delicacy and precision. Naval range
finders are sometimes built more than thirty feet
long. Periscopes as used both on land and sea
are based on the use of high-grade glass, though
the need for great perfection in these instruments
is not so pressing.
People and Events
"Don't comb the hair over the bald spot on
your head," pipes the Chicago News, "and then
kick because the grocer puts the big potatoes on
the top of the measure." This is another way of
polishing up the jewel of consistency.
General Manager Shonts of the New York
Interborpugh thinks because postage stamps
may be raised in price, traction people ought to
have 7-cent fares. Besides, much of the route
is decorated with flags, and that's worth an extra
touch.
British slackers enjoying voluntary exile in
this country are up against the real thing now.
Recruiting offices are brought home to them, one
having been opened in New York City. If quali
fied to fight, evasion is impossible. They may
not remain in this country, and should they elect
to go home the ultimate destination is the same.
The colored dupes of Chief Sam, who emigrat
ed to the Gold Coast of Africa a few years ago,
find themselves long on gold bricks and short
on the price of the passage home. If some phil
anthropist supplies passage the disillusioned will
pledge, themselves to stick to Uncle Sam for the
rest of their days.
Rifts of gayety penetrate the gloom of war
on the other side, now and then. Guests at a
London banquet heard some hot talk on the en
emy, and while meditating on the thoughts of
the orators discovered that all present had been
eating from plates marked: "Made in Germany."
Every plate was dashed to the floor. It was a
warm drive, but Germany had the price of the
plates, also the laugh. ...
One oi Dickens characters remarked philo
sophically! "The law is a hass." He must have
foreseen what happened in Salt Lake City re
cently, Office space had been donated to the
registration board. Furniture, fixtures, typewrit
ers and telephones had also been donated. Light
was needed. The local electric company was will
ing to furnish it free, but Utah Public Utilities
commission said "No. The law forbids -electric
light donations." Wouldn't that jar you?
I "1" I 1 A V J
Proverb for the Day.
Charity should begin at home.
One Year Ago Today In the War.
Italian cabinet headed by Premier
Salandra resigned.
Russians forced Austrians back
twenty-ftve milAs over 100-mlle front.
Audtrians attempted counter offen
sive before Tarnopol and lost 7,000 In
prisoners.
In Omaha Thirty Years Ago.
The following took part in the com
mencement program of brownell Hall:
Misses Cowdry. Klnger, Nellie Candy,
Flora Cautetter. Elizabeth Hall, Eva
Murphy. Cornelia Thomaa, Florence
.yer, Edith Underwood, Lula Bur
gee and May Royce.
Madame Modjeska and her husband,
Count de Hozenta, attended the pro
duction of "The Naiad Queen" at the
opera house.
George Canfleld was around In the
rain with hla face a little more
elongated than usual even in rain-
storms. The occaalon was the loss of
a pocketbook containing about 1350,
which he had dropped from hla pocket
and which was still missing.
The Life Endowment and Invest
ment company of Waterloo, la., has
complied with the Nebraska Insurance
laws and a certificate of authority has
been issued to them to transact busi
ness In the state of Nebraska. Charles
H. Baker is the general agent, located
at 209 South Fifteenth.
Mrs. F. Klenke was fooling with a
revolver In her husband's saloon on
Sixteenth and Mason when the weapon
was discharged, the bullet narrowly
missing her husband's head and bury
ing itself In a fine mirror behind the
bar.
Articles of Incorporation were filed
of the Plattsmouth Investment com
pany, the incorporators being D. H.
Ooodrlch, John Latenser, John Rush,
Albert Dubour, W. E. Gratton and G.
J. Fox.
Frank Colpetzer'a house at Twenty
sixth and Douglas was struck by
lightning, scaring the Inmates, but not
doing much damage.
This Day In History.
1741 General Joseph Warren, pa
triot, born at Roxbury, Mass. Killed
at the battle of Bunker Hill, June 17,
1775.
1775 Patriots of Savannah seized
the powder in the arsenal.
1776 Committee appointed by con
gress to draw up a declaration of In
dependence. 17S2 Colonel Crawford, having
been captured by the Indians, was put
to death with great barbarity near
Upper Sandusky, O.
1 SI 7 President Monroe, accom
panied by Vice President Tompkins
and General Winneld Scott, visited
New York to inspect the military de
fenses. 1832 Augustus H. Garland, United
States senator from Arkansas and at
torney general under Cleveland, born
In Tipton county, Tennessee. Died In
Washington, January 26, 1899.
1847 Death of Sir John Franklin
In the Arctic region.
1868 Federals under Colonel Mont
gomery captured and burned Darien,
Ga. ,
1882 Rising of Arab population
against Europeans at Alexandria,
Egypt: HO Europeans killed.
1903 King Alexander and Queen
Draga of Serbia murdered by officers
of the army. ,
The Day We Celebrate. '
Grand Duchess Tatiana. second
daughter of the deposed czar of Rus
sia, now kept prisoner with her par
ents, born twenty year ago today.
Marquis de Chambrun, grandson of
Lafayette and member of the French
war commission that recently visited
Washington, born in Paris, fifty-two
years ago today.
Mrs. Milllcent Garrett Fawcett. pres
ident of the British National Union of
Women's Suffrage Societies, born sixty
years ago today.
Kenyon L. Butterfleld, president of
Massachusetts Agricultural college and
head of the Massachusetts committee
on food production and conservation,
born at Lapeer, Mich., forty-nine years
ago today.
Mrs. Humphry Ward, celebrated
English novelist, born at Hobart, Tas
mania, sixty-six years ago today.
W. G. Dell, pitcher of the Brooklyn
National league base ball team, born
at Tuscarora, Nev., thirty years ago
today.
Timely Jottings and Reminders.
Rt. Rev. John B. Harris, Catholic
biBhop of Little Rock, celebrates his
silver jubilee as a priest today.
Major General Leonard Wood,
United States army, la to deliver an
address today to the students of the
Georgia School of Technology.
At the conclusion of the session to
day the supreme court of the United
States will take an adjournment until
October.
Delegates from every section of the
country will assemble at Savannah to
day for the national convention of the
Travelers' Protective association.
Final hearing on the recently sub
mitted plan for reorganization of the
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific rail
way is to be held today In the federal
court at Chicago.
The convention of the National As
sociation of Steam and Hot Water Fit
ters, to have opened today at Chicago,
has been indefinitely postponed on ac
count of the war.
The Boy Scouts of America have
agreed to visit 10,000,000 homes In the
nation during the four days beginning
today and to distribute subscription
blanks in the interest of the Liberty
loan.
New York City is to be the meeting
place today of the annual conventions
of the International Association of
Masters of Dancing, the Music Pub
lishers' association of the United
States, and the National Sheet Music
Dealers' association.
AROUND THE CITIES.
Federal and atata authoritiea arc invited
in a drive aaainat "blind nigi," which are
laying aieae to aoldlera and aailora at Fort
Sheridan and the Great Lakea' training ata
tion. Two grand jnriea are also trying the
fat of the captured "pigs." All four
bodiea confidently expect to pen some of the
booty bacon.
New York landlords are making a flying
atart for the withered laurels once worn by
the tribe In Ireland. A plan has been de
vised for pushing over on tenants every
advance in price for coal above S6.2& for
pea and 68.75 for nut alses. The 1917
model lease carries a clause to that effect
and alao bare auits for damagea if heat
and hot water run below normal require
ments. The Chlesare headquartera of the Automo
bile ProtectiT association ia authority for
the statement that the Industry of automo
bUa stealing baa doubled in year, whUe
receveriea decreased from 90 per oant to
44 per cent. A "fence' waa recently nneov
ered in the city, where autoa were wrecked
for the insurance and the parte Bold aa
Junk. This w expected to bring Insurance
people into the chase In the hope of saving
some of the premium.
e'sSs
Give l's More Music
Omaha, June 8. To the Editor of
The Bee: The enthusiasm shown in
front of the Douglas county court
house when the Denver drum corps
played some patriotic airs leads one to
believe that it might be a good thing
to have one of Omaha's bands play
downtown once in a while and thus
bring forth a few hurrahs in the busi
ness center of Omaha.
A READER."
Nonunion Painter's Views.
Bellevue, Neb., June 8. To the
Editor of The Bee: An advertisement
In The Bee June 8; by. the Business
Men's association, under the caption,
"Omaha's Labor Strike; How It
Started," was read by me with a great
deal of interest, for the reason that,
though I am a nonunion mechanic, I
am one of the sufferers of the present
strike, or lockout, caused, more by the
Dezettel-Coutts propaganda than by
the working conditions in force in
Omaha and contiguous territory dur
ing the last few years. "Unionism"
doesn't necessarily spell force nor con
tract breaking, though it occurs to me
that is the way some of our crafts,
who are organized, denne it at present.
I have been a painter and paperhang
er over twenty years and during the
first few years after becoming a Jour
neyman mechanic, belonged to the
union, and only turned in my card
when I learned that the spirit of
unionism was being prostituted to the
protits of a few officials, who knew
so little of the tenets of "pure union
ism" that they would not have recog
nized It had they met it outside the
confines of their offices or away from
the polished 'mahogany, where labor's
"battles" have been fought, and not
lost but sold. I thoroughly believe in
organization, not only of business men,
but of labor, for in union is strength,
and I believe that if labor organiza
tions divorced themselves from the
Idea that subterfuge and force were
the proper weapons to use in seeking
better working conditions and pay,
and confined themselves as organiza
tions to a discussion of conditions
among themselves, Instead of being
led by auch men as Dezettel and
Coutts, who are not working in the
interests of the different crafts, that a
good working plan could be had with
the master craftsmen whereby strikes
ajid lockouts would be unnecessary
and useless.
If, aa printed, It la true that the
painters in. their "working rules" de
manded "restriction of output," It is
enough to condemn them, as It is ap
parent to anyone familiar with this
particular craft, that to hold a me
chanic down below his normal work
ing speed, is to hold him below his
normal quality of work, for a me
chanic does his best work at his own
speed, unregulated by others. And to
penalize a man for working that gait,
even though more speedy than his im
mediate fellow workman is suicidal. A
pace setter ia a rare bird, but if you
control output you must have a pace
setter to hold men who are Just below
their natural speed and close to the
amount set down as right under re
striction of output rules. Restrict out
put and rob the fast man or overpay
-753
Residents of Ne
braska registered at
Hotel Astor daring
the past year.
SingleRoom.withoutbath,
tz.au ana to.uv
Double $3.50 and $4.00
Single Rooms, with bath,
13.50 to 16.00
Double (4.50 to $7.00
Parlor, Bedroom and bath,
110.00 to $14.00
Timet Square
At Broadway, 44th to 45th Streets
the center of New York's social
and business activities. In close
proximity to all railway terminals.
the slow man Is a theory that will
never do In these times. I want pay
for all I produce, my pal Is entitled
to the same, slow or fast, and no more.
"LET'S GET TO WORK."
JUNE JOLLIES.
"Lesrn to play while you're young, boy,"
advised, the old millionaire. i
"I'll try to."
"Then you will at least escape the dreary
Job ot pretending you're enjoying things."
Baltimore American.
That oal girl says she Is tired of being
pursued by peopls who want to marry hsr
for her money."
"L'm."
"Has she any money?"
"Yea. she has five hundred dollsra. No
body pursues her very far." Kansas City
Journal.
.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Don't blame your car. Fill s
it with Good Oil and give it 3
; another chance. S
The L V.KJcholas 03 Company
S Prwlstat S
E GRAIN EXCHANGE BLDG. 3
illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHiniltlllllllllllS
Give the Telephone
Number Distinctly
It Is Important In malting
a telephone call to speak the
number distinctly.
Several numbers sound
much alike over the tele
phone unless spoken clearly.
For example, 0 sounds much
like 4, and 2 like 8, and 5
like 9.
In calling a telephone num
ber speak slowly aad dis
tinctly, with the lips half an
Inch from the mouthpiece.
Say "Right" when the
operator, repeats the number
correctly.
If the operator misunder
stands, say "No" and give
the number again.
4gjBiSs
ffiolarine 'SL.. ; iTt
! ! MOTOR ' sgy 1 '!
J OILS 1 !
pi! 1 1 '
II1 1 , ,
III1 1 '1
pi!;;:. nAM.m.mmm, 1 . . ' '
COMFORT
You keep your car for jour comfort avoid the trouble and expense
of a friction-crippled motor by uaing
polarine
THX STANDARD OIL FOR ALL MOTORS
Holds Its body at any cylinder heat or engine speed. Ends carboni
sation, overheating, and scored cylinders. Every drop pure.
Look for the Polarlne elgn it etande for a reliable desler who will give you
what root ask for. .y as Red Crown Qasoline, the Dowsr-nill motor nisi.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
(Nebraska) OMAHA
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.
Name
Street Address.
City
State.
K i
1
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