THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY AUGUST 13. 1917. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNLN'O-EVENING-SUNDAT FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, PBOPBIETOR. Entered at Omihm poetoffice m aeeond-elaaa matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Br Carrier. By Mall. . lty an Bun4a par mooti. s Bar fit. IS.M ! sritbout Sunday 4 - J.OO giratof and uodj -4m ' " . Srmmt without Bandar " " IS? Sunday Be only - So " n l0 Haif notice of caante of address or Irraralsrftj Is oelltar? ta Osaka Be. Ctrealatiea DeptrtmeuL REMITTANCE end W flrafl. erprwa or portal ordf. Only J-canl (tans; Ua ninnt cf tmiU aocoanta Pnntl cbask. eicept oa Oiaaua aad eutera exchaota, ao sampled. OFFICES. o-sa-a-TDe Bm BolHWs. 'bicam-Peor!a, BilWlna. IKouia Omaha 4 B. 34th WL New York 2C Flfta iff. Unooia Little Building. Kiihimton lla at. . W... CORRESPONDENCE Mdrest ewanranleatlnm reUtint ta ae and editorial Bittar U ''nana Bee. Editorial Dsparunent. JULY CIRCULATION 57,229 Daily Sunday, 51,153 ene etrmuiion tar tfia iwuti sut)orltea ecd aor Dsflghi miliums. CircalsMoo atsaassr. Subacribara leaving tha city shouTd bava Tha Baa Baailed ta than. Address chaafad aa often aa requastad. It seems that the hyphenates struck a discord in that choral concordance. It is evident from the scream of the press that the American embargo hits the Teutons nearMhe belt. Opening wider the doors to draft service em phasizes Uncle Sam's eagerness to accommodate the rush. x The marksmanship of Governor Lowden of Illinois is attested by the speed of the coal pile coon coming down. Sudden cabinet changes are the incidents of war. If we in the United States escape them, it will be almost a miracle. The recruit who survives all the farewell feed ing and feasting will have successfully passed the last test of physical fitness. Germany's mark has shrunk SO per cent in money value, thus proving the efficiency of the empire's celebrated anti-fat treatment. The military situation in Turkey embraces two impressive tactjdal operations rustling food at night and dodging for shelter in day time.' It may be remarked once more that royal com manders personally observe the rule of safety tlrst and keep out of range of enemy shooters. A brief study of the American Revolution af fords solid ground for confidence in Russian pa triots pulling together and finally making good. Echoes of that police scandal and shake-up continue and fear is expressed that the end is not yet vTiine for the bad actors to take a back seat. i - A two-billion federal tax bill glimpses the toad to be shouldered in the immediate future. Brace your underpinning and do your bit cheer fully. ' ' " The British cabinet explosion was the biggest world news of the day for Sunday's papers, but readers of one Omaha publication would not know it without a searching expedition. General Pershing's plea for an age limit of 45 for general officers sent to the front does not evoke enthusiasm at Washington. The plea liits too many veterans glued to the rule of seniority. Public attention and hospitality bestowed upon he soldier boys are fitting and proper. In a lim ited way both evidence 'the deeper affection for the men who answer the country'! caH for service. Too many cooks cannot spoil army broth. Nearly 4,000 can be accommodated in the national army's culinary department. The quicker they romt and pick up ?90 a month the happier Uncle 'ssin will feel. " . - '. , Ther War department's plan of giving military rank to the personnel of thf Red Cross serving abroad means that William HoWanl Taft, chair man of the central committee, will be a major , general. Think of that jwith Roosevelt only a colonel. ' t Every time politics mixes with patriotism, pol itics comes out second best. The political itch ing palms of New York did 'not get very far with draft loot, simply because patriots on guard saw them first. Like vigilance everywhere makes for national safety. , t The famous blue laws of Connecticut, vene rated but not wholly respected for generations past, are about to receive long deferred interment. Growing liberality and the impulse of world war uproots provincial notions and broadens the view of life. Connecticut feels the spur of the times ad follows Iowa's example in sending blue laws to the scrap heap. General Crowdefs Success St Lauia Globe-Da macrat Westerners have long followed the career of Enoch H. Crowder with admiration and pride and they are consequently gratified,-but not surprised, at the report that President Wilson contemplates promoting him to a' major generalship. His Out standing character and abilities have been recog- - nized by four presidents. McKinley made him a brigadier general of volunteers in June, 1901. i Roosevelt commissioned him colonel judge advo vate general of the regular army in April, 1903, and Taft made him brigadier general and judge advocate general in June, 1911, and a few months later entrusted him with an important special mission to Chile as envoy extraordinary and min ister plenipotentiary. In the Philippines, in Cuba and in Manchuria he distinguished himself and reflected honor on the country. Like that other . Missouri West Point graduate, General John J. rershing, Oeneral Crowder showed the wisdom to take a thorough university course in law, which accounts for the excellent service he long ren dered as judge advocate general General Crow dtr'l dealing with the delicate complications aris ing from the somewhat anomalous status of the Pershinft expedition in Mexico attracted wide and . favorable attention, preparing a larger public for ht handling of the stupendous task of raising a national army under the conscription act The manner in which he has discharged his duties as provost marshal general has focused national at- tentioo upon him and even brought praise from experts, in other lands. . He was graduated from West Point in 1881 and has ever since shown liuiiavii luxiyi ivi aa I a v 11511 J ViUVIVlIk VHIVVU capable of arising to whatever new duty devolved upon him. His promotion would be universally recognised as a reward of high merit, . The British Cabinet Ruction. The British cabinet ruction, involving the en forced retirement of Arthur Henderson, who was in the war council as a representative of the labor party, shows that Lloyd George is 'not dis posed to tolerate any half-hearted support of the war program by any of his official associates. Had Mr. Henderson been merely a private citizen or, perhaps, even a member of Parliament, he might with impunity assist in promoting the proposed socialist peace conference to be participated in also by enemy representatives, but as an official charged with the duty of prosecuting the war, it is a gross breach of propriety, to put it mildly, for him to encourage such a movement in person without the sanction of the government and in direct opposition to the understanding of his col leagues. On the face of the evidence so far disclosed, the weight is preponderant for the position taken by Lloyd George--for in war there can be no divided councils either on one side or the other.; We may be sure that under similar circumstances, the same thing would have happened to a mem ber of the cabinet in Germany or Austria, in France or the United States, in any of the belli gerent countries. Democracy in Days to Come. Along with the fight to make the world safe for democracy comes a still greater responsibijity. Democracy must in some ways be made such a condition that it will merit the great boon of human happiness entrusted to its keeping. Just now this' is not in all ways realized. Throughout the United States, most democratic of great na tions, may be noted signs that self-government has not fully inculcated the lessons that lead to government of self. Disorders of various kinds, riots, violations of law, such exhibitions of un controlled energies or passions as would in peaceful times excite wondering comment, ar: be ing passed over as worthy only of a moment'a notice, while all attention is centered on the greater objective of the moment, that of prepara tion for the war. Vet each of these disturbances is symptomatic of a derangement that must be remedially dealt with if our republic is to come to its fullest usefulness as an institution of hu man government.' Our people lack regard for laws of their own making; this does not mean they are" vicious or lawless, or unruly. They are careless, thoughtless, impulsive, and prone to follow individual judg ment or convenience rather than consult the rights of others or to observe rules laid down for governance of all. In seeking each hist own comfort, happiness or advantage, obligation to observe what is due to others is overlooked. Every man for himself, and the devil take the hindmost, is not a good rule among folks wher ever situated, and yet it has come to have such general observance among Americans that strangers might well take it for our national guide. ' Americans are generous, are chivalrous, de voted to high ideals, and capable of tremendous sacrifices. But under the rule of liberty they have ceased to practice some of the homely vir tues essential to true greatness. Our social life can be made simpler and less impetuous' without sacrificing any of its desirable qualities. -Our national fiber will be firmer when we set a tlittle higher standard for success than some now ob served, and when each American comes to re gard himself as responsible for his share of the nation's greatness and gives to it as mu,ch atten tion as he does to making provision for his own well-being. A better democracy should emerge from the flame of war, and will if only each citi zen willingly adds his own mite of self-restraint to the common whole. No War on German Art. Any movement having for its purpose the suppression of German music, drama, literature or art is misdirected, Whatever quarrel we have with the workings of the German political ma chine, or its present manifestations, should de cently be confined to that, and not extended to' those things coming from Germany that minister to our esthetic senses. Culture should not be confounded witli "kultur." The contributions of German minds to the treasure store of world knowledge or delight are not to be lost to man kind simply beciuse a war lord and his cohorts have gone on a spree of destruction. ' Those gen-' tie souls who were inspired to sing songs to the lark, or whose artist's "ears caught the music of dreamt or "the light that never was on land or sea," and gave it to us in music, in song, in paint ing or poetry, deserve better from us than that, we let tur stern disapproval of a mititary cult lead us into the mistake of excluding all that is good in the simpler life of Germany from our own. I Halting the Coal Holdups. Adequate fuel supply for the coming winter already presents a serious problem in the middle west. The problem involves both supply and price. Few if any coal terminals hold the normal August stocks. Lake ports are reported short on both hard and soft coal, and urgent orders from retailers receive limited and belated response. Whether from design or accident the apparent shortage furnishes the groundwork for a wide spread squeeze of consumers surpassing the pirati cal holdups of coal brokers last winter. That some of the projected squeeze rests on design is pub licly charged by J. H. Davidson in an appeal to President Wilson in behalf of fifty hotels and apartrnent house owners of Minneapolis.. The identity of the companies involved is not disclosed, but the fact that the big steel and railroad cor porations are securing an . abundance of fuel while the general public faces a shortage supports Mr. Davidson's charge that "a working agree ment exists among the companies to increase the price of coal to consumers and compel an extor tionate price by force of necessity." Public indignation and the power behind it constitute a mighty force which operators dare not ignore. The apparent certainty of the state, as a last resort, taking over and operating the mines proved an effective weapon in Illinois. Oper ators abandoned "the public be d " attitude, went into a conference with state authorities and agreed to state supervision of price and distribution. The result promises much relief locally and in sur rounding states, where the Illinois product forms a large part of the fuel supply. A conference of governors of twelve middle west states, called by the governor of Illinois, foreshadows further con certed action against extortion and profiteering. The spur of war is manifested notably in the July charters of new corporations. Excluding companies capitalized at $100,000 or less, the aggregate for all states amounts to $492,965,800. The total tops the monthly record for the year and for 1916 and 1915. Urgent demands for war supplies accounts for much of the record capital ization. V- - p "'. '! V' -; ;' 1 Mrs. Humiston and the Missing Girls " By Frederic J. Haskin New York, Aug. 10. The popular feminine idol of New York at present is not an actress, but a woman lawyer. The newspapers print her pic ture regularly; the movies are after her to sign a contract, and in the Italian quarter where she is particularly well known, the activities (of the "avocatessa" ; are followed with awed interest Moreover, try to start a conversation . with . a New Yorker and in a few minutes you will find yourself in an animated discussion of Mrs. Grace Humiston and her missing girls. ' v ,4 ' Mrs. Humiston , has made her personality strongly felt in New York in the last Itvr months. In finding Ruth Cruger, she started .a campaign for the recovery of the other 853 girls reported missing in five and a half months. The police de partment suddenly awoke from apathy and estab lished a whole new department forthe recovery of missing girls. Then it appointed Mrs. Humis ton its special agent, with full police powers and a squad of five policemen to assist her in her work. As a result, nearly 800 girls have been returned. - The great problem, Mrs. Humiston believes, lies not with the girl herself, but with her home conditions. She stands the mas long as, she can, then she runs away from home. Lonely and unprotected, she is usually an easy prey for the various plausible gentlemen who frequent the city's streets, representatives ofsthemost sordid business in the world. The average girl feels that a good time is her natural heritage. If the good time happens to appear in the form of(a well dressed young man who approaches her with just the proper amount of admiration and respect and suggests a car ride on a soda, she is very apt to accept. There is one chance out of tea that the young man is harmless, in Mrs. Humiston's opinion, and there are three chances out1 of five that the soda will contain a drug." . . The white slave traffic has been the principal feature of so, "many sensational moving picture dramas that the average individual has about reached the conclusion that it never did exist any where else. Mrs. Humiston, however, can tell you that it does. In her rescuing of girls she has uncovered some information that has put the po lice department and every Home on its guard. For the last two months her spies have been occupying certain "beats" in various sections of New York, and they have made the unanimous report that it is practically impossible for a young girl to walk for ten blocks in New York without being ac costed by a dozen strange men. Cases of girls who have been drugged and carried off in taxis are numerous. Several are now being handled by the Humiston office. - The majority of these are girls who have had a good, bringing up in the most conservative of middle class homes. It is an interesting fact that the middle class suffers from this evil the most The girl of the East Side and slums, who has practi cally been brought up on the streets, usually un uerstauas tneir dangers ana is an expert. 111 avuiu ing thein. On the other hand, the society girl is too well protected to be subjected to them. , But the middle class girl is neither sufficiently so phisticated or protected, y Of course, you will say, it is primarily the girl's fault. She should not allow a strange man to Vck her up." But what would you say if you knew that every once in awhile a girl is taken screaming and struggling against her will in the very heart of Broadway in iroad daylight? This, acording to Mrs. Humiston s chief detective, has happened repeatedly. Two men overpower a girl and force her, risisting,, to a taxi, while a third stands a few feet off and calmly turns: a fake moving picture camera. Under thefe circum stances even the traffic, policeman grins good naturedly while the crime-is being committed, ' Protection, however, in Mrs Humiston's opinion, dies not mean close surveillance. : It means' giving your daughters a good home, and sufficient recreation to keep, them satisfied with their, lot. The other day a distraught mother came to Mrs. Humiston and asked her to find her daughter, who had run away from home. "Her father will never forgive her," she wailed miser ably.. "He always said she wasn't no good." The next day Mrs. Humiston located the daughter in Pennsylvania. She had obtained a situation in a small town and was living in a quiet boarding house. When told that her parents had sent for her, she began to cry. and said she would not go. home. "My father called me a street bum " 'she exclaimed bitterly, "and I won't let anybody calf me that." Mrs. Humiston brought her back to New York, however, and turned her over to a friend of her own. Then she called on the father,' and, knowing .Mrs. Humiston as we do, it is highly probable that when the interview, was over he was a changed man. At any rate the girl was taken back enthusiastically by both her parents and has made no attempt to run away since. Mrs. Humiston thas attacked the missing girl problem from an entirely new angle. She does not believe in punjshing the girls, even if they are wayward.' She does not believe in wasting too much energy in closing disorderly houses. She does believe in striking at the root of the problem economic and home conditions. " , Mrs. Humiston's work is not entirely confined to niissinn girls. She is primarily a lawyer. There ii'nothing that she loves better than to win a case for a man who is so poor that he is never likely to be able to pay for her services. This is how she started her New York career, and she is still doing it. She was left a widow with a large income when still very young. She decided to study law, a profession which at that time was considered entirely inappropriate for women. Upon passing the bar examination, she put her money in a law firm of which the present Mr. Humiston was a member. People and Events nmnav Proverb for the Day. It Is hard to teach an old dog lew tricks. One Year Ago Today In tlie War. Constantinople claimed further adV varices for the Turks against the Rus sians on the Persian front. . Northwest of Pozieres, north of the fiomme, the British advanced aeveral hundred yards over a mile front. In Omaha Thirty Years Ago. A merry party started in the Pull man car, Bogota, for Spirit lake, the excursionists consisting; of Hon. John A. McShane. Hon. William A. Paxton and wife, N Frank Colpetzer and wife, Mrs. Joseph Barker and Charles, H. Ouiou. ' A building on Sixteenth and Web ster streets, belonging to S. T. Peter son, and occupied as a boarding house by H. W. Miller, was damaged by Are to the extent of $200. Count Raymond de Chambrere and family were in the city, the count being on,, the way to succeed Count Le Brusin as minister plenipotentiary and Mrs. Mary J., Lamb of Chicago takes high rank among America's Spartan mothers. She gives three sons to the country's service and re grets that her fourth is too young to enlist. Writ ing to the exemption board, she expressed .these patriotic sentiments: "I think I am only doing my bit by seeing that there are no slackers or yellow streaks in my manly, brave, willing and America-loving sons. It makes me disgusted with womanhood to hear so many selfish mothers voice their terrors. No mother loves her sons more than I, but I look on this war as God's laundry." ( San Francisco's bureau of municipal research wields a probe that is a penetrating peach. It delights in turning the spotlight in the shady by ways of graft, occasionally throwing a search light in quarters of dignity and respectability. The latest revelation of the bureau deals with the bureau of architecture, composed of "honor able men," one of whom is "consulting architect without salary, also a brother-in-law of the mayor. Although not directly attached to the pay roll, the researcTi bureau reports he scooped in fees amounting to $47,499 in the Vast two years. Artistic work for an "architect without salary.'1 The elder who hies to his old home town with boyhood memories freshened up for the occasion gaily stumbles on a mound of disappointment. Visions of things and places as they were years before obscure thoughts of progress and change and lure the pilgrim on to a rude, heartbreaking jolt. An Omaha tourist recently scouted around his boyhood town of Buffalo, flitting here and there seeking scenes memory cherished. All had vanished. Remorseless progress wiped everything but the streets off the map. The home, the haunts of boyhoold gatherings and games were sub mersed bv industries, and scarcely a foot of vacant ground remained as a memorial to the fiercely contested games of base ball in the mak ing. The school was recognizable only by its number, the bridge spanning the nearby creek disappeared as completely as the creek itself, and the hallowed "ol' swimmin' hole" revealed itself transformed into a children's playground. "That was the blow that killed father." tThe first train out carried shocked pilgrims toward the Mis souri. , v., envoy extraordinary for the republic of France In the Central American 'states. Adolph Meyer has left for Spirit Lake and will bring his wife, who has been sojourning there, back with him. . The men engaged in grading Twenty-fourth in South Omaha to the lim its of Omaha have their work almost done. v Articles of Incorporation were filed for a new savings bank, the leading mover in the enterprise being J. I MJles of Davenport, la., and the fol lowing gentlemen being the Incorpora tors: John U Miles, Dexter L. Thomas, Samuel Cotner, James Thompson, Al 1n Saunders, John Rush, Andrew Rosewater, Samuel D. Mercer, J. II. Evans,, Erastus A. Benson, Morris Morrison and George E. Barker. A. D. Brandeis has returned from a trip to New York. This Day in History. 1704 Battle of Blenheien, in which the English and Austrians, commanded by the duke of Marlborough and Prince Eugene, defeated the French and Bavarians. 1 1792 Adelaide Louisa, the Oerman born queen of England, who won the devoted affection of King William IV, born In Saxe-Meinlngen. Died in Eng land December 2, 1849. , 1812 American ship Essex, in com mand of Captain David Porter, de feated the British sloop Alert in a battle of eight minutes. 11888 Count von Moltke resigned as chief of the general staff of the Ger man army. 1896 Dr. Nansen, the Arctic ex plorer, arrived at Vordoc, Norway, on' his return from the far north. 1898 Manila surrendered to the American forces after a short land fight and bombardment by the fleet. 1906 Riot at Brownsville, Tex., In which negro soldiers - of the United. States army killed and wounded sev eral persons. 1914 Belgians repulsed the Ger mans near Dlest. . , 1915 Petrograd reported a repulse of the Germans in the Mltau region. The Day We. Celebrate. Erie B. Brown was born In Gra ham, Mo., August 13, 1871. He is en gaged in the real estate business. Marquis of Cambridge (formerly the duke of Teck), elder brother of Queen Mary, born in Kensington, palace forty-nine years ago. Dr. Karl Liebknecht, famous Ger man socialist leader,' imprisoned for "attempted high treason," born forty sijf years ago today. Harry L. Gandy, representative in congress of the Third South- Dakota district, born at Cherubusco, Ind., thirty-six years ago today. ! Rear Admiral Clifford J. Boush, tT. S. N., retired, born at Portsmouth, Va., sixty-three years ago today. . Brigadier General John L. Clem, U. S. A., retired, who was the last civil war veteran on the active rolls of the army, born at Newark, O., sixty-six years ago today. Fielder A. Jones, manager of the St. Louis American league base ball team, born at Shingle House, Pa., forty-six yearsago today. Timely Jottings and Reminders. The International Typographical union opens its sixty-third annual con vention today at Colorado Springs. The police department of New York City today opens a school to train de tectives in the scientific detection of criminals. Patriotism is to furnish the keynote of the annual meeting of the grand aerie of Fraternal Order of Eaglea, opening today at Buffalo. Journeymen plumbers from sll sec tions of the United States and Canada are to meet at Toledo today for the annual convention of their interna tional union. The third annual convention oj the National Association of Custodian Em ployes of Federal Buildings meets at Indianapolis today for a three-day session. An important step toward making Mobile one of the chief porta on the gulf will be the special election in that city today to vote on a $600,000 bond issue to carry out the greater port project Storyctte of the Day. A soldier in the English army wrote home: "They put me in barracks; they took away my clothes and put me in khaki; they took away my name and made me 'No. R75'; they took me to church, where I'd never been be fore, and they made me listen to a sermon for forty minutes. Then the parson said: 'No. 575. Art thou weary, art thou languid?' and I got seven days in the guard house because I answered that I certainly was." Christian Register. ABOUT RATS AND PARROTS. All the eomraon hou rati btlonfed oritinatJy to tha old world, from which they earn to this continent in ahlpa. Tha tail of the rat ia s moat Import appandace. It haa mora muaelea than the human hand, twins vaed aa a hand, aa a balancer and aa sprint to aid in jumping. The brown rat, erroneously called tha Norway rat, waa originally a native of India and Persia. It entered Europe through Russia about 1727. and waa brought to America about 1775. - Mamo ia the name of a beautiful bird of the Hawallip Islands, now bellaved to be extinct, having been destroyed for the sake of its golden-yellow feathera, used in for mer daya to decorate , the state robes of Chiefs, . The little parrots called "love birds" are nativea of Africa . and are abundant in Madagascar. These birds adapt themselves readily to captivity). They bread readily in confinement, producing 1e broods in season. Tha gray parrot of western Africa is credited with having greater power of imitating tha human voice than any bird of the species. It has long been a favorite and ia the subject oC many stories of greater or leas credibility. V - Purpose of Food Control. Washington, Aug. 10. To the Editor of The Bee: Now that legislative action has been taken setting up the food administration, it will be possible for us to make a definite statement tfs to the objectives of the food admini stration and the national and interna tional issues which are involved. I shall take the liberty of forwarding to the press of the country, through the usual distributing agencies, a series of articles, prepared by myself and staff, bearing on the entire problem. The world as a whole is faced with a definite and growing food shortage which will have a most important bearing on our national life, not only as affecting our task of supporting our allies in the war, but in its ulti mate reactions upon our entire range of food industries and the life of our people. I recognize that to an intelli gent people it is necessary, to prove the case that such a shortage exists and will increase, and that this proof must be furnished as a basis for creat-ing-tbe dominant idea in the national mind that we must enlarge our food service to the world, not only as a war measure, but as a measure of hu manity itself. If we can secure the .emplacement of this idea in the minds ,of the people, the wi""t P of constructive order which we may make will fall not only on -a rcej.. mind, but upon a convinced Intelli gence. Aside from the necessity of increas ing our production and reducing our waste and unnecessary consumption, we can substitute certain commodities which we have in excess for those which, by virtue of their concentrated form, may be shipped abroad in this time of diminished shipping. Fur thermore, we have to contend with a large disturbance of our economic sys tem by virtue of the suction of this food vacuum upon our resources, and a sequence of measures will be taken to improve our national handling of foodstuffs and to hold in check the forces of speculation and avarlplous ness. We are Imbued with a desire.not only from an immediate point of view, but in the long run as supporting the very essence of democracy, that all of the above measures shall be acomplished to the last degree by voluntary effort among.the people themselves, and our greatest service will be to direct such voluntary urganization and to stimulate it to action. If this can be accom plished, we shall have demonstrated the ability of democracy to defend it self through its own instinct of organi zation, for if it cannot rise to this sit uation, it will have proved Itself a faith which cannot endure in competi tion with the forces of autocracy. To guide the public mind in these channels, we are wholly and abso lutely dependent upon the press of the country. If we do not reoelve this sup port, the problem is hopeless. If we do have It It can be solved. I am therefore addressing you per sonally to enlist the continuance of the support which you have given us to , date and ask for the . devotion of space to the material which we shall send in the course of a few days, I believe this material is of distinct news and national importance, andf we ehall disclose for the first time the actual food situation of the world, backed by statistics and figures, for we Relieve that we must first prove the case and then we must trust to the guidance of the press of the country to secure the awakening of the national conscience to the dominant Idea of food admini stration.. That is. I reiterate, that, we are faced with a world shortage in food and with the necessity to feed our allies on a scale hitherto un ' dreamed of, and we must protect our own people if we are to win the war. HERBERT HOOVER. Jerry Jars tlie City Solons. Omaha Aug. 11. To the Editor of The Bee: I desire to submit a brief statement of facts through your widely read paper to the public, especially to those of the Irish race who were ever and always faithful and true. Enclosed find a copy of a petition addressed to that exalted body in tht city hall. ' It speaks for itself. Probably, but for that great problem that confronts our beloved nation, wherein every, emotion must be taken advantage of to arouse and stimulate our fellow citizens to patriotic action. it is more1 than likely that fellows of the caliber of the present city commis sioners would never be petitioned to.' recognize Commodore John Barry. Yesterday I called on the city clerk, who has a prefix before his name that a woman could throw a washtub through, expecting he might take pride in the memory of the hero, Barry. But lo and behold I was flabber gasted when told with a sneer that "ordinance No. 9657" became law a week ago, whereby the streets were named. One of them after Brigham Young, etc. ; Notwithstanding the depravity of the city administration you would think that it could be hardly possible for that body of statesmen to be so lacking in decency and patriotism as to object to naming a street after the "Father of the American ' Navy." . JER.RYHOWAD. Omaha July 2.-VTO the Mayor and City Council: At the solicitation of a number of my fellow citizens. I am re quested to cal lthe attention of your honorable body to a patriotic and im portant subject, to-wit: that the his- tory of the achievements won by the founders of the nation, whether 011 land or sea, should be kept before the minds of our fellow citizens, wherever the opportunity presents itself to stimulate their thoughts and ideas to lofty aspirations and valorous deeds. And whereas, your distinguished body . has under consideration the naming of the streets recently acquired through the consolidation of Benson and Florence with Omaha, I hereby suggest that one of the streets be named after Commodore John Barry, thereby having a street on the north, side like Washington street, on the south, bearing the, names of the "Father of the American Army" and the "Father of the American Navy." If this republic ot ours is to endure its history must be kept straight and the valor of its heroes ought not to be forgotten. JERRY HOWARD. MIRTHFUL REMARKS. "I'm very much afraid that Jimnile Isn t trying enough." wrote an anxious mother to the teacher. "You are uite wrong." wrote back the tired teacher. "Jlmmle Is'the most trying boy In the class." Christian Beglster. "What's the matter with your father?" "He says I need a paddling." replied the kid. "He's looking for a shingle and having a tough time. You know we live In a cement house. Louisville Courier-Journal. TaMori-When are you going to pay me that bill 7 Owen I declare, old chap, you remind me of my little nephew. Tailor I do. Why? Owcn Because you ask questions that for the life of me I cannot answer. Boston Transcript. ' Reputation Established, -A Future Guarantee We dare . not jeopardize our priceless asset, Good Reputation, for a transitory Profit. We dare not misrepresent our goods or our endorsements.'' ' Consider this well ! Reputation is the safeguard of inexperience. "Avoid those that make, false claims." 'Whether or not a man has expert knowledge of Diamonds, Watches and Jew elry, he is safe if he puts his trust in merchants of good reputation. Why take a chance with small or unknown dealers when' your credit is good with Loftis Bros. & Co., The - Old Reliable, Original Diamond and Watch Credit House, 409 South Sixteenth Street. Es tablished 1858. This business, "the largest of its kind in the world," is a monument to . the proverb, "Honesty is the Best Policy." liiiii:iiiailHlltij:iiii!:iiii'!ii'i!:i!!i;iiiii!ii!itii:!iiiiiiiin:iirs 5 t (Hotel Dyckmanf I , Minneapolis I Fireproof Opened 19101 Location Most Central I 300 Rooms with I 300 Private Baths - Rates $1.75 to $3.50 per day I I H. J. TREMA1N, : I. Pres. and Gen. Mgr. ; Kliiliiliiliiliiliiliiliiliiliil'iliiliiliiliiliiiniiiliilKlnlilliJi.liiL Over the Top of the Ocean A PLUNGE throu&h breakers laden with trie tanfc of tke sea discounts fresh water bathing as a midsummer tonic. Finest ocean batHin& in the world at Atlantic ' City, Cape May and other Seashore Resorts. Low Fare Round Trip tickets sold daily to principal resorts, also to New York; direct or via Washington Pennsylvania Lines Variable Route Tickets to New York and Boston; all rail or rail and steamer; choice of routes includes Washington, Norfolk, Mon treal, Niagara Falls, Buffalo and other cities. The Ride Through the Allegheny Mountains is Delightfully Cool in Midsummer For Particulart About Farts, Ete., C TicM Aztnts. or Additu W. H. ROtVLAffD. 7Vmi'nr Paisengtr At". 2H-22S City Kalimal Bank Side., Plum Doutlau 2003, OMAHA, AEB. THE OMAHA BEE INFORMATION BUREAU Washington, D. C. " - , Enclosed find a 2 -cent stamp, for which you will please send me, . entirely free, a copy of The Red, White and Blue Book. Name Street Address. City i State . . . .'