THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1917. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER VICTOR ROSEWATErTeDITOR THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. PROPRIETOR. , Entered at Omaha Doatiiffie. aa second-class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Hv Carrier. Bj Mail Osllf and Kundif Kr snath. t' Kt F. f! I tHIly althout Sunday...., " 4' " iM Kfanlni an 4 Sunday.. ,, 4"o " 8.10 tnnini wttbout iiuaday "IV " 4 M unday Btt null sue " 100 Hnd onttct f toanrs of address ot IrrefuUrttj la delitsry to Omaha Ba. Circulate tpartmeot. REMITTANCE Omit tor draft. xprM or potul nrdrr. Only S-rwit stamps taken m pstnmt f wnall arvoonia. f'traonat clieck. except o Oca aba and eaatera exciianae, e acefpted. i OFFICES. Omaha The Brt Bulldlna. . rhlmm-renple'a Cat Hirtldlm. rVwUi Omaha 4S2f 8. Mtk Kt. St arim Fifth Ate. a'mnxHI Blnlte 14 N. Mala Dt. Ht. Iruia Nr B'k. of eomnwrre. Lincoln Utile BslMlaf. WaahlBston 33 14th Bt. N. W... CORRESPONDENCE Addrns Mmmiinli'allimj rvlaiim U and editorial natter t Omaha Bee. tutorial Denanasnt. , 1 JUNE CIRCULATION- 55,982 Daily Sunday, 50,986 Areraae drruiatinn for tlia miinUi subacrined and worn to tt Dwleh. WUIISffis. circulation aUnaser. i Subecribera leaving the city should have The Be mailed U them. Addreee caansad often at requested. In the meantime, the, weatherman is doing tolerably well, thank you. Gently but firmly Mexico is reminded to defer the prodigal son act until the invitation arrives. Any port in a storm. The Teutonic ship of state lightens cargo as a measure of temporary safety. Our soldier boys have now reversed the Henry Ford slogan, and are singing "into the trenches by Christmas." In urging peace without indemnity or terri tory the forward-looking German politician fore sees the inevitable. Chairman VVillard reports the 693 railroad sys tems of the United States completely mobilized. The work is waiting for them, too. ' - , I. W. W. agitators might with profit read of the proceedings at Rockford, where Judge Land is sentenced 112 of them to jail in a batch. "' The kid "emperor" of China will not be lone some in exile. The old world has a flock of his kind. More are tagged for the same destination. A sergeant from the Somme is now at the Fort Omaha balloon school as an instructor. Wager he does not complain the air is unsuitable. Residents of Texas, New Mexico and Arizona will breathe normally, no doubt, and take custo mary nourishment Herr Zimmermann looks like a goner, , The Russian drive gains steam as it presses onward, , Lemberg looms just ahead. Beyond lies Vienna in the thickening shadows of the Slav peril. It is quite evident that, southern senators are willing to regulate the products of the north so long as cotton remains free from official restraint. Could loyalty do more? Poor Herr Zimmermann. He, too, is slated to go ere his work Is doner The world of diplo matic gayety is bound to slump when Herr Zim mermann walks (he plank. Army authorities complain that they are hav ing more trouble in finding cooks than iu getting generals. Which might give rise to debate' as to the relative value of the two functionaries. The University of Nebraska is too important to have its usefulness in any way impaired by dis. loyalty among its professors. Here may be a job for the chancellor and the Board of Regents. If a contractor can afford to' pay $7000 for the privilege of removing only a portion of the city's refuse, should not that be a strong argu-' ment in favor of the city doing the whole job' itself? V If Governor Howard succeeds in solving the open muffler question for Lincoln he is invited to come to Omaha, where he will be provided with ample opportunity to exercise his pew-found power. Now ' comes' the "Fighting Fourth" Nebraska, asking that its ranks be filled., This regiment has been in service for a long time and deserves a little attention from the boys who want to get to the front. V Due notice should be taken of the fact that soaring corn prices are not due to export demand, but to a rush by distillers to get ahead of a pos sible "bone ( dry" food regulation bill. Unex pected results 'flow from well-meant efforts now and then, and this is one of them. Farmers' with corn to sell will not worry if the senate keeps up the debate' indefinitely. ' ; Some of the Compensation -Minneapolis Journal Josh Billings' once said, "It is the height of wisdom to get comfort out of calamity." War is a calamity. t Yet war lias its compen sations as we'll. And'.wfie'n' war is forced upon us it is the height of wisdom to look about for compensation aud to count up the possible ad vantages to be gained. ,. . .. The economic value of temperance has been demonstrated to the world in the present conflict as never before. The waste of time, labor, money, foodstuffs and manhood resulting from the use of strong drink has led most of the nations at war to face this problem squarely and resolve that this waste must be stopped. In the case of Canada, Australia, Britain, France and Russia the advantages to the nation from the practice of temperance are already so obvious that it is hardly possible for the old condition to obtain after the war. Then the necessary practice of economics is bringing health and happiness to a multitude of homes and is helping in a measure to solveythe difficult problem of the high cost of living. The possibilities of the productiveness of the soil are being demonstrated and hundreds of fami lies are already producing in their own gardens necessaries of life for which they were formerly dependent on the market and this self-reliance is cxienaea 10 nations as wen. Nation s are learning to produce at Home a multitude of necessaries for which they formerly went abroad and this is furnishtnir employment to many classes of laborers and is helping in a large measure to solve the difficult labor problem Then, too, this war has stimulated the growth of democracy. 1 hose who do the fighting de mand a voice in solving their own problems and in making the conditions under which they must fight. The people and not those claiming to rule by divine right are hereafter to govern this world. Nebraska's Unpatriotic Element. Much food for serious reflection is afforded by the pointed statement from the Nebraska State Council of Defense in regard to affairs within the state. It has been patent for many months that a decided opposition to the war ex isted in Nebraska, though it may not be greatly different in other states. A year ago this was made manifest in many ways; it was not then a matter of national contern. Now that the coun try has entered the war, whatever remains of pro-German activity has become anti-American. This is a condition that cannot be changed by any amount of sophistry. , The United States is at war and lias requisi tioned the services of all its citizens; whomsoever is not prepared to respond without' reservation is to that extent lacking in patriotism and is not a good citizen. None is asked to choose between other countries except as they are friends or ene mies of the United States. The time has come to end shamming, to fairly meet the fire in the rear, whether it come from a professor in the uni versity, a preacher in his pulpit, a citizen who threatens his banker or his merchant, or the idler who thoughtlessly gossips his unimpor tant chatter. Six thousand Nebraska boys are al ready enlisted in the army of the United States and other thousands are to be drafted into the service and they must not march away to war knowing that enemies of the government are at home enjoying all they are fighting for and mak ing their efforts the harder by a cowardly cam paign to undermine the strength of the United States. Russian Drive and Its Effect. Expert analysts of the war's progress are dis concerted to some extent by the energy with which the Russjan army has renewed its activity. Many of these had considered as only remotely probable the vigorous participation of the new republic's soldiers in' the summer campaign, That the Germans had so looked on the situation is evidenced by the withdrawal of their forces from the eastern front. The determined advance of the Russians in the direction of Lemberg must now engage the attention of the Central Powers. If the defense is left to Austria troops must he withdrawn from the Italian or Rumanian fronts, each.actively threatened by our allies. The ferocity of the German attacks on the Champagne and the drive against the British left wing along the Yser suggest a definite purpose there to cover some greater strategy, which must be developed later, Two reasons for this are in full view; a land victory is imperatively demanded to meet the political situation developed at Ber lin, while, as pointed out by The Bee some weeks ago, the moves of the British against the German right in Belgium threaten the U-boat campaign by exposing Ostend and Zeebrugge to land at tack. . r ; . v If the Russians are able to maintain their re newed offensive at its present pitch their return to the battle line will greatly embarrass any plan of the Central Powers on the other fronts. That this has been foreseen by the German high com mand and taken into consideration may be ac cepted as a fact. The outlook just now is that plenty of the war will be left when the big Ameri can army gets on the scene some time in 1918. Food Control and th.e Public. Herbert Hoover, chairman of the food admin istration board that has only moral power to sup port its mandates, has written a very interesting letter to the president, pointing, out what should be done to protect the public in the matter of food. His summing up of the situation is accu rate and his proposals are extremely practical. Mr. Hoover realizes the producer must be given full reward for his energetic efforts to meet a great emergency and that the,qonsumer must, be entirely saved from the rapacity of greedy specu lators. How to accomplish this is not so easy, but Mr. Hoover's general plan holds promise of some result if it be reasonably enforced. The letter to the president, however, deals with only one phase of the- problem. Next to production the most vital factor in the work of feeding the nation is the question of distribution. The National City Bank of New York has gath ered some interesting information on this point disclosing a state of facts that reflects no credit to our national system of management. From one Florida correspondent the bank quotes tot the effect that less than 20 per cent of the available food raised in the gardens there reached the con sumer. From Texas it has the word that vege tables in the Lone Star state were worth more as fertilizer than on the market. While prices in the north were sky-high these southern grow ers could not get their products shipped. In Texas market towns the growers saw long trains loaded with green stuff grown in California go rumbling through, while they were unable to obtain cars, Daniel Willard of the Council of National De fense advises people to buy in their nearest mar ket.and thus help the railroads, but bow does he propose to meet the situation that confronts the Texas growers? ' The food problem of the United States may be made less acute, but it will not be solved by a single act of legislation. The evil is too deeply rooted and bad practices, entrenched as firmly as the opposing armies of Europe, may be elimi nated only after a long campaign of education and control, rigidly and effectively applied along lines that converge, at the point sought. Con gress is looked to now for help and congress must keep In mind what the difficulties are that must be met. ' Time continues mocking war prophets and prophecies. General Kitchener's " prediction of three years of war nrars its limit without visible sign of the finish. Albert Ballin, Germany's ship ping magnate, last March predicted the end by June 30, but the basis of the calculation failed to support the conclusion. A host of less distin guished prophets have also fallen discredited. When inclined to prophesy, don't!" A Navy for the Air A Tested Weapon By Frederic J. Haskin Washington, July 9. The people of the United States, through their representatives in congress, are asked to appropriate the neat sum of $639, 000,000 for the building of a fighting force of air planes. Upon what evidence do the supporters of this program base their request for this huge sum? Here is some of the more striking evidence of the efficiency of the airplane and let it be stated at once that every dollar invested in an air fleet will be money well spent, even if the projected sum is doubled. Without airplanes au army cannot see. Air domination means artillery domination and artil lery domination means land victory. This is a proven principle of modern war and it is being proven over again every day on the western front. Without a certain amount of supremacy in the air the allies could not push the German line back. Given complete supremacy in the air, they can break that line. We can give them com plete supremacy if we strain our industrial re sources to the utmost. ' he airplane in its seagoing form, the flying boat or hydroplane, is the best of all methods to tight the submarine. I he aviator can see the submarine from thirty to 100 feet under water. He can see the wake of a periscope with ease where a Ship can only see it with difficulty. He can swoop on the submarine in a few seconds. He can sink it with bombs or if he has one of the big new airplanes he can sink it with one single shot from his three-inch nonreeoil gun. All these things have been done. From the very be ginning of the war submarines have been sunk from airplanes and dirigibles. There are a score of recorded instances and how many subs the British have destroyed this way only the admir alty knows. Only a few days ago a submarine rose and cleared its deck guns to sink an Italian freighter in the Mediterranean. A convoying hydroplane dropped 1,500 feet and began to drop bombs. The U-boat submerged without cere mony and may have been sunk. The freighter was unharmed. This sort of thing is of frequent occurrence. . Within the flying radius of the seaplanes they make the most effective convoys. We can extend that radius across the ocean by building bigger and better seaplanes and by establishing ocean bases or mother ships. The biggest and best flying boats in use today, the one that England is using in this work, are "built in America. Airplanes can sink battleships single-handed by the use of torpedoes. The form of airplane used for this purpose, the torpedo-plane, with its ac companying device for launching a forpedo, is the invention of an American, Admiral Fiske. No battleship has yet been sunk by an airplane, but a German plane, using the Fiske torpedo,' launching device, has torpedoed and sunk a i.sW ton British ship, the Gena. Airplanes can inflict and have inflicted severe military damage on fortified towns, munition bases and submarine bases. Air raids by the English on the German bases of Ostende and Zeebrugge have inflicted such damage, as was admitted by the Germans. Airplanes have repeatedly attacked and routed strong bodies of infantry. . In the recent British .advance in France airplanes flew low over the German lines and raked them With machine 3un fire. Aviators attacked troop trains and fired through the windows. In the Egyptian campaign occurred one of the most striking instances of this. Four allied machines discovered a Turk ish force of 3,000 infantry and 1,800 cavalry exe cuting a flank movement on the British forces. The four airplaneseight men attacked the 4,800. They dropped forty-eight bombs. Of these bombs forty-seven exploded in the thick of the Turks. .The flanking force was completely demoralized and routed. That was on the 26th day of March, 1917. JT M Proverb for the Day. Empty wagons make the most noise. One! Year Ago Today in the War. Germans repulsed French south of the Somme. German submarine bhelled Seaham harbor, on English east coast. British captured German first line of trenches on front of nearly eight miles. In Omaha Thirty Yean Ago Today. While James Wyman and Michael Metady were driving in a buggy on Farnam street the horse became res tive and dashed off at a rapid rate, throwing both men td the ground with great force. 'Wyman received a com pound fracture of the right leg, a dis located shoulder and a fractured skull, while Melady escaped with a broken rib and a severe cut on the face. At the regular shoot of the Omaha Rifle club at Bellevue Dr. Worley, hav- ing the highest Score, carried off the medal. A meeting of the clothing salesmen of the principal houses was held at Metz hall, where a permanent organi zation was effected and the following officers appointed: W. P. Hudson, president; C. O. Rulhard, treasurer; L. IT. Barr, secretary. Harry Hunter of The Bee is catch ing salmon down the romantic and picturesque St. Lawrence. The following gentlemen have filed articles of Incorporation of the "Apollo Literary and Social club:" Messrs. H. B. Kennedy, E. D. Bibkins, Fred Jacobs, J. N. Turrants, H. H. Huff. L. J. Hendershott and C.fB, Hook. A. D. Jeutson, the Omaha catcher, has arrived from Syracuse. He is a great big, good-natured six-footer, 22 years of age and looks as If he ought to be a No. 1 shortstop. , ) With the big machines which are now being built weights of bombs and weights of armament hitherto deemed impossible are easily carried. An American machine with an American pilot has risen to 7,000 feet with twenty passengers. A sin gle French squadron early in May dropped 2,500 pounds of bombs in a single night. The same squadron dropped 7,250 pounds of explosives in four days. Airplanes can now mount three-inch guns, which is quite a respectable caliber of ar tillery for a sea-going ship, and one well-directed shot from which can sink a submarine. Our own experts say that one man in a modern airplane is equal to from 100 to 500 infantrymen. It should be remembered that we cannot build an airplane fleet over night. I.t will be many months, perhaps a year, before we are turning out 3,000 engines a month. The task is a tremendous one and the United States today is the onlv na tion in the world that has the resources and the capacity for wholesale standardized production that it calls for. But in view of the hard facts of the case; aside from all rosy hopes and prophe cies, with all due discount for disappointments, it seems the thing best worth doing, the most prom ising solution of the world deadlock. The great est project the specialists put before the nation deserves the support and the funds that they ask. Our Fightng Men Jamea B. Erwin. i Colonel James B. Erwin, U. S. A., who at pres ent is on special inspection duty for the Eastern department, is one of the well known officers of the cavalry service. Colonel Erwin "is sixty-one years old and a native of Georgia. His army service since his graduation from West Point thirty-seven years ago included duty in the Gero nimo campaign, service in the northwest and as superintendent of Yellowstone National park. Soon after the beginning-of the war with Spain he was assigned to the Philippines and remained there nearly seven years. When the war cloud appeared, on the Rio Grande he was sent with General Pershing into Mexico. As commander of the Seventh cavalry Colonel Erwin was men tioned for special bravery in connection with the pursuit of Villa. At any rate, Army Chaplain Major exhibits the spirit proper in an officer and a gentleman. He is wilting to battle energetically for the men under his care. Better understanding of the men in the ranks and some of their problems might easily lead to less of mollycoddling. What the "boys" need is to be treated as rational men, not as a peculiar group of especially exposed sinners. The Indian bureau sits dowa sharply on the good intentions of Jackson Barrett, the Creek In dian millionaire of Oklahoma. Spurred to act like the paleface in contributing to the Red Cross fund, Barret won a call-down from the White Father and an order tightening his purse. Bureau cracy rarely misses the leather medal. Flour, which reached the top-notch price of $17 a barrel in May, now sells under $12 in the market Still, the loaf hesitates to take on weight Ira A. Haynes. , Colonel Ira A. Haynes, coast artillery corps, who has been assigned to the command of the South Pacific Coast Artillery district, with head quarters at Fort Milcy, Cal., has served in the coast artillery since 1911. He was graduated from the United States Military academy irt 1883 and was appointed a lieutenant in the field artillery, in which branch of the service he served until 1910. He was graduated from the Artillery school in 1888. Recently Colonel Haynes has been on duty as assistant to General Erasmus M. Weaver, chief of the coast artillery corps, at the War de partment in Washington. , People and Events Suit for damages for unlawful detention of a Danish steamer has been started by the Actiesel kabct Dampskibsselekabetstorcbelt. If this doesn't start something among the proofreaders good intentions go for naught. Representative Jeannette Rankin of Montana is working overtime to save women in the print ing office from working overtime. Presi of print ing requires extra hows at extra pay, but that does not weigh in the scales of reform. ' Ach, Himmci; and some more. Saloonkeepers along the waterfront of Hoboken must close up shop at 10 p. m. and tay closed 'until 7 a. m. Military and local authorities joined in the order and for seven hours out of twentv-four Hobo ken's front is a sober picture of still life. Mayor Thompson of Chicago has a staunch follower in Mayor Meraviag of Elizabeth, N. J. The latter is an Austrian bv descent and passed up an invitation to participate in an American flag presentation. At last accounts his name was on the public pay roll as a testimonial of his ad miration for the American dollar. Tills Day in History. 1817 Henry D. Thoreau, famous author and naturalist, born at Con cord, Mass.., Died there May 6, 1862. 1842 Ofara Louise Kellogg, at one time proclaimed th world's greatest prima donna, born at Sumter, S. C. Died at New Winsted, Conn., May 13, 1916. 1848 Archduke John of Austria elected vicar of the German empire. 1856 Crimea was evacuated by the Allies. . 1867 Announcement of the Impe rial decision to remove the capital of Japan from Kioto to Tokio. 1876 King of Greece visited Eng land and was Invested by Queen Vic toria with the Order of the Garter. 1892 Cyrus W. Field, projector of the Atlantic cable, died at Ardsley, N. Y. Born at Stockbrldge, Mass., No vember 30, 1819. 1915 German cruiser Konigsberg destroyed by British monitors and cruisers. The Day Wc Celebrate. Lewis A. Ellis of the Lee-Coit-An-dreesen company was born in Cincin nati sixty-seven years ago today. He Is an Omaha pioneer of 1870 and has been in the hardware business fifty three years. . John F. Stout Is 56 today. He was torn in Middlesboro, O., and has for twenty-one years been engaged In law practice at the Omaha bar. Frederick W. Krelle Isjust 41. He Js an Omaha-born boy ' and builds Omaha houses, being one of our ar chitects. V. Ray Gould is an Omaha-born hoy. Just 85 today. He is in the con tracting business, being secretary and treasurer of F. P. Gould & Co. Sir Frederick E. Smith, attorney general in the British cabinet, born at Birkenhead, England, forty-five years ago today. Elhu Grant who has been appointed professor of Biblical literature in Ha verford college, born at Stevetisville, Pa., forty-four years ago today. . George Eastman, inventor and man ufacturer of the kodak camera, born at Watervllle, N. Y., sixty-three years ago today. Jeter C. Pritchard, former senator from North Carolina, now a Judge of the United States circuit court, born at Jonesboro, Tenn., sixty years ago today. - Sir William Osier, formerly of Johns Hopkins university, now professor of medicine in Oxford university, born at Bond Head, Canada, sixty-eight years ago today. Timely Jottings and Reminders. Today Is the 100th anniversary of the birth of the late. Alvin Saunders, appointed by President Lincoln to be governor of the territory of Nebraska, He was afterward United States sena tor. Today is the centennial anniversary of the birth of Henry D. Thoreau, the famous author and nature lover. Senator James Hamilton Lewis of Illinois is to be the orator at a great patriotic demonstration to be held on Boston Common today as a feature of the Elks' reunion. All land owners in Mexico have been summoned to meet in confer ence in the capital today to consider means to avert the threatened short age in the country's food supply. Business women of the United States are to "mobilize" In Chicago today to work out plans whereby every busi ness woman in this country may be at the nation's disposal on a moment's notice. Storyette of the Day. Sometimes, to be sure, the opening is so unfortunate as to incur instant resentment and positively invite re fusal. .Take the rase of the diminu tive man of kindly appearance who was Accosted by a seedy purist with the words: "Sir, 1 am looking for a little suc cor." . ' "Well," snorted the wearer of the size 13V4 collar, "do I look like one?" Atlanta Journal. J.fV i w Lr iw f. i RED CROSS. (Thomai L. Maaeoi, Editor of "Life.") Out where the line ot bkttle cleave ' , Tha horizon of woe, And atghtlesa wartiora clutch the leaves. The Red Croaa nuraea go. la where tha cots ot agony 'V , Mark deal h'a unmeasured tide Bear up the battle'a harveatry Tha Red Croaa nurses glide. ' Look ! Where the hell of ateel has torn Its way through slumbering earth, Tlfe orphaned urchins kneel, forlorn, And wonder at their birth Until, above them, calm and wise, With smile and guiding .hand, God looking through their gentle eyes, The Red Cross nurses stand. Here. In our sheltered homes we sit. Remote from war's red sweep. Doing half-heartedly our bit. Sleeping our painless sleep. See! Where the Red Cross flag'a unrolled With red. and white, and blue; Let na pour out our treasured gold T guide the Red Croat true. Interpreting Words of Bible. Omaha, July 10. To the Editor of The Bee: U B. H. in the iBsue of: July 9 passes Christian Science through heathen philosophy, panthe-i ism and finally eliminates it by assert ing that it makes God to be a liar. Judging from the context the critic is desirous of following the teachings of the Bible and therefore it is proper for us to invite him to a further in vestigation of the subject from the Bible record. It really is a matter of small mo ment at this stage about the name "Christian" or "Science." Let us find out first what it is and whether it is worthy of consideration and afier we have turned in our report on these questions the name will take care of itself. Bible students of the type before us invariably criticize the teachings of Christian Science that are bodily taken from the writings of St. Paul. Their investigation leads them to the con clusion that they are new, heathen and lies. They cannot be all three. No claim is made thatf they are new. Merely calling them heathen carries no weight and so we fall back on Paul to prove that the specific charges now made cast no cloud on the veracity of God the Father. "The carnal mind is enmity against God, for it is not subject to the law of God, neither, indeed, can be." Bear in mind that St. Paul wrote this, not Mrs. Eddy. Substitute if you wish "mortal" for "carnal," for they are synonyms, and you have the problem presented in the words of Jesus, "I am not come to destroy, but to ful fill." Certainly Jesus did not come to fulfill anything opposed to the "Iaf of God." Remember that he did not come to "destroy" anything. He speaks of evil, Satan, as "a liar and the father of it." Is a lie real? Is two and two are five real? Nothing is real that is not subject to the law of God, Prin ciple. Mrs. Eddy says, "If what opposes God is real there must be two powers and God is not supreme and infinite." (Science and Health, P. 357.) We make too hard work trying to under stand Christian Science. AVe have let the theologians tamper with the gos pels and the epistles to such an ex tent that when Mrs. Eddy presents them in their original simplicity we do not recognize them and think it must be some outlandish heathendom that we know nothing about The Bible is its own best interpreter, but we have lost sight of this fact in the maze of commentaries, and Mrs. Eddy is simply endeavoring to lead us back to the primal truth con tained in its pages. When the way seems clouded she points to the "works" as well as the "words" of Je sus and in them finds both the inspi ration and the guidance for the dem onstrations in Christian Science, which after all furnish the final proof of its being of God. CARL E. HERRING. up a case and carry it to the supreme court of the United States. That court once said "the negro has no rights which while men are bound to re spect;" but I doubt If it would dare tc close the distillery and give the whol' , Job of debauchery to the breweries. If I were a member of the hous I would indignantly reject the senat a i . a. I kitl Cat . amendments ana iei me euuie um o,kar than nprnelrnlfi such an Out rage on soldiers and certain indus tries. Let us not "ao evii, mat. isirai may come." The president's excus is "he does not want the bill delayed." If he had pushed this bill as he did the census bill it would have been anantaA IaH7 a this time. That CX" cuse will not be accepted by the best people or tnis country, wueu mo bin, anA oohincf nf firat Britain asked the archbishop of Canterbury a - 1 ..I J to abstain rrom wine, ne saia no tuum nnl An njlthntlt it. TTe WR8 Quite Will ing, however, that the soldiers should be deprived of it, ana tne worm scouu his name today. This action on the part of our great .president will dim the luster of an otherwise illustrious administration. These vicious amend ments are directly opposed to the pur pose of the bill and will greatly weaken, if not defeat it. If brewers can waste barley, naoonshiners can waste corn. "Thow that sayeth thou shalt not steal, dost thou steal?" I call upon the house to "stand pat" and defeat this outrage upon the con stitution of the United States. We need the law bad enough, but not bad enough to commit such an outrage. D. C. JOHN. Class Legislation. Omaha, July 9. To the Editor of The Bee: I object to Mr. Wilson's attitude on the conservation bill, now pending in congress. It is class legis lation of the rankest kind. By a pre vious act soldiers have been deprived ot all intoxicating drinks. Now, Mr. Wilson and the senate "say that civil ians may have all the beer and wine they want Mr. Wilson says it is as necessary for civilians to be efficient as soldiers in this war, and if so they should be under the same efficiency discipline. ; . If I were an officer in the army and loved a "nip" once In a while I should say to Mr. Wilson, "I shall suffer no such discrimination. If total absti nence is necessary for soldiers, it is just as necessary for civilians. I ob ject to your making me fish and my civilian brother flesh. Accept my resignation; I will not be made a slave to set the world free; if any preference is shown it ought to be shown the soldier, who risks his life for his coun try,, which the civilian does not." If I were a distiller I should pro test against the favoritism shown the brewer and winemaker. Ten men are rendered inefficient on beer to one on spirits. Beer wastes barley Just as whisky wastes corn. Precisely the same reason exists for prohibiting beer as for prohibiting whisky. You can not without offensive partiality forbid one and not the other. If I were a distiller I should make f 1000 Rooms 700 with Bath A cuisine which has made the Astor Vj) New York's leading Banqueting piace. SingleRoom,withoutbath, 12.50 and $3.00 Double 13.50 and 14.00 Single Rooms, with bath, 13.50 to f 6.00 Double f 4.50 to $7.00 Parlor, Bedroom and bath , ! $10.00 to $14.00 Times Square, At Broadway, 44th to 45th Streets the center of New York's social and business activities. In close proximity to all railway terminals. Dorii worry aboux your skin Resinol cleared mine completely If you are embarrassed by a pimply, blotchy, unsightly Complexion, try Resi nol Ointment and R esinol Soap regularly for a week and see if they do not begin to make a blessed difference in your skie. Resinol Soap and Resinol ' Ointment are sold by all drus -gists. Try them and see how beneficial they are not only for tha skin but for the hair, too. Persistent Advertising is the Road to Success. Vacation Opportunities Via Rock Island Lines ROUND TRIP FARES FROM OMAHA. San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego, Cal $60.50 San Francisco and Los Angeles, Cal., tone 'way vja- i Portland, Ore $78.00 Portland, Ore., Seattle, Tacoma, Wash. .$60.50 Vancouver, Victoria, Prince Rupert, B. C $60.50 Spokane, Wash., Huntington, Ore $60.50 Butte, Helena, Mont .$60.50 Boise, Ida .$57.00 Ogden, Salt Lake, Utah $35.00 Yellowstone Station, Mont $37.00 Yellowstone National Park, including complete tour of park with hotel accommodations, 5 days . . $89.00 Yellowstone National Park, including complete tour of park with camp accommodations, 5 days : ........".$80.00 Mesa Verde National Park, Colo. .$47.00 Rocky Mountain National Park, Colo $27.00 Glenwood Springs, Colo. .$33.00 Durango, Colo .' . .$42.00 Leadville, Colo $30.00 Denver, Colorado Springs, Pueblo, Colo ... $20.00 Trinidad, Colo. .r. . . . .$23.00 Phoenix, Ariz . . . $56.00 Above fares are in effect daily, carry long re turn limit and very liberal stop-over privileges. We also have many attractive Alaskan Tours to offer. ' Through daily Standard and Tourist Sleeping Car Service to California points, with choice of two routes. v ' For Further Information Phone, Write or Call J. S. McNALLY S Division Passenger- Agent. 14th and Farnam Sts. W. O. W. Bldg. THE OMAHA BEE INFORMATION BUREAU , i Washington, D. C I Enclosed find a two-cent stamp, for which you will please send me, entirely free, a copy of The Canning Book. . . - Name . a . a .a-a-r, MKtin Street Address. City.. ..... State