THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY FEBRUARY 21, 1918. 5 SWEDEN GROWS RICH; FOOD GOES INTO GERMANY Dearth of Supplies Due to Cu pidity and Pro-Germanism, Says Swedish American. Pari-?, fcpt. 3. "If Sweden has crying need of food supplies, as Ad miral Lindmann, Swedish minister of foreign affairs, tries to make out. it is due solely to the cupidity of a group of money grabbing exporters and the infatuation for Germany that prevails in our aristocracy and court circles." This is the comment of a Swede, a resident 01 me l imeu oiaics, wnoi has just arrived here from a long so journ in his native country. Discuss ing the situation theie he said it is certainly difficult, and cited as proof the popular demonstrations which have taken place recently with sig nificant frequency. "The working classes of Sweden are desperate from hunger," he said, "but also they are exasperated by the policy of the government, which is autocratic to the extent of rivaling the Hohenzollern regime. Only a su icidal policy could have brought such distress to an agricultural country like Sweden, which, moreover, since the beginning of the war has in creased the imports of American ce reals 400 per cent, compared with the imports before the war. Fed Prussia, waae rroni. "The reason is that these imports, plus a vast supply of Swedish grain and cattle, have been exported to Germany to profit solely a number of wealthy pro-German Swedes and the German military party. These profiteers even had the impudence to extol the press what they called the intelligence, courage and material and moral fortitude with which the Swed ish government defied England. "But the food shortage led the peo ple to look into the causes. The dis covery that the government's policy antagonized England, France and the .United States, the very countries where Sweden could have obtained everything necessary for its alimenta tion and industries, created a spirit of animosity agains the financial aristocratic speculators, whose sole object was to pocket German mil lions and help fasten the Prussian j oke on Europe. Ruling Class Pro-German. "But hunger was not the sole cause of the recent disturbances. The work men and small farmers are republi cans as a class and are ready to seize any chance to escape from the semi feudal conditions and 'Prussian lib erty' which are choking Sweden. The ruling class, composed of a few ancient families, is imbued with ideas of German kultur. They admire Prus sian militarism, practice its principles, its domineering ways and its harsh ness and absurdity. "The ofheers m Sweden are more swaggering than in Prussia. Irtiita tors always exaggerate the defects of their model. Conditions have become worse since the accession 6f the pres ent king and queen, who are German sympathizers only, with pro-German sentiments. Any display of liberal ism lays a man under the ban and exposes him to all sorts of vexations from the tyrannical, brutal police. "Two leaders of labor organiza tions, members of the lower house, have been sentenced to prison for anti-German and anti-militaristic speeches. On the other hand, the greatec. license is allowed to the in surers of President Wilson, who is abused grossly for having, dared to take steps to protect the lives and commerce of the United States against submarines and to control the Swedish cxportations to Ger many. "The Swedish junkers profess con tempt for these steps and count upon profiting from a German victory, but will have reason to regret their blind ness and arrogance sooner perhaps than they think." Earmarks of Humanity Visible in Four Types "A good judge of human nature is born and not made," declared Dr. G. Stanley Hall, president of Clark university, at the University of Pitts burgh while speaking on "Tests. "We hope to be able to train them some day. All we can hope to do at present is to improve them. Base ball scouts are not able to tell how they pick men, neither can any em ployer tell how he picks his men." Dr. Hall described the French sys tem of dividing men into four general types and selecting them for particu lar positions in the army according ly. He said: "First The digestive type. It is characterized by the heavy jaw, broad abdominal region. Such men require more food, need it regularly, must be well fed. Such men arc best on the defensive. They are hard to dis lodge from the trenches. "Second The respiratory type Nostrils and ears large; large, long chest; demand plenty of pure air; get restive under confinement. Such men are selected for work on high moun tains; they are good in the charge; in making an attack. Such men ex clusively " are selected for the avia tion corps. "Third The muscular type. Head is square; limbs good and strong; body short. This type is good for the bayonet charge in the artillery service. "Fourth The nervous type. Large head tapers down to a sharp jaw. Such men have power to draw upon their reserves. They can get their second wind. The really great arc men of this type. Along with this type is closely associated a willing ness to sacrifice self for the good of (Others. "Children and animals are guided fcy the desire to gain pleasure and avoid pain. As they grow older they should learn to bear present pain for future pleasure." Dr. Hall said in conclusion that the fereat question is whether industries whatever develops human nature is good and everything that does not is pzd. Pittsburgh Despatch. Willi Idea. Secretary Daniels ald at a reception: "Some of the Ideas submitted to us tor flghtlnr the submarine peril are excellent. Some, again, remind me Irresistibly of. the fls;eon fancier. "There's a pigeon fancier In my native town who has great success with the bird. A farmer said, enviously, to him one day: "Ton. never lose a pigeon! How is tt? Where' your secret?" "Weir, you see,' said the fancier. 1 fcrosa my pigeons with a talking parrot, so that If tbey get lost they can aill the wiy gmeywashiogtoa SUJ v ; f ssj?gMT - wy oont jmZmK ir cold sc-r. -jr's you pur youz hrT ON aagBacr1 -u5T UK asac- you a c I vouz coco" w 'fi-XP fTs' cooc! I OW vVf5. tT HS Q LIBERTY MOTOR TEST ON PIKE ROAD Airplane Experts Able to Ex perience Conditions Similar to Those Encountered in High Altitude Flights. The decisive tests which proved the efficiency of the new Liberty motor and led to its early adoption by Sec retary of War Newton D. Baker for Uncle Sam's war airplanes were made on the Pike's Peak auto highway near Colorado Springs. Experts are still working with the new motor and daily experiments are being made at different altitudes on the highway. Airplane engine experts who have been conducting the tests say that there were only three ways in which the new Liberty motor could be fi nally tested in an airplane in actual flying, in a vacuum room where the barometric pressure could be reduced to equal conditions at an altitude of 15,000 feet and on the Tike's Peak auto highway. Engine on Big Truck. It is obvious that with the engine in an airplane for actual flying the tests would have extended over a long period and at best would have been exceedingly difficult. Experiments in a vacuum room would have been very expensive and wind and weather con ditions, which play an important part in airplaning, would have been lack ing. So the third method was adopted. With the engine mounted on a huge Packard truck, E. L. Graham, expert with the airplane division of the Na tional Council of Defense, and Glynn Reynolds, motor specialist in the sig nal corps, were able to experiment with the new Liberty motor at every altitude from 7,415 feet at the be ginning of the highway, to 14,109 feet, at the summit of Pike's Peak, where the highway ends. As a result of the facilities afforded by the Pike's Peak auto highway Un cle Sam's experts were able to make tests in a few weeks on which Eu rdpean experts had spent three years. Additional experiments arc now be ing made on the highway. The new Liberty motor which is here weiglrs about 535 pounds when developing 230 horse power, or an average of 2.25 pounds per horse power, the fastest British plane mtor weighs five pounds per horse power. The Liberty motor develops its maximum speed at 1,700 revolutions per minute and its loss of power in altitudes is so slight that it will have a big edge in speed at great heights, where many aerial engage ments are fought. Memphis' Inland of Mud. The Mississippi river rises every year. Sometimes the overflow causes a great deal nf damage and occasionally creates very umisunl conditions. After the overflow of 1911 the citlBcria of Memphis, Tenn.. no ticed a small place in the harbor where mud rose above the water. No attention was paid to this condition until 1915. when the river again overflowed. After the water subsided Memphis found a JlB-acro Island in Its harbor. This large tract of land threatened to cut off the city from the river trade. Dipper dredftcs are now at work removing the unwelcome land ac quisition. ropular Science Month!;'. When There's Not J$ Minute To Lose Instant is a friend indeed. Made in the cup instantly, and mighty de licious and nourishing. "There's a Reason" A Day of Military Life High Wireless Tower Now Marks Site of Ancient Beersheba. where Abraham dug a well and planted a grove as the Bible narrative records, recently became the headquarters of the Turco-Ger-man forces operating to prevent the British invasion of Palestine, writes a German war correspondent. In the thousands of years which have elapsed since Abraham's day, Beersheba has experienced no more remarkable change than has taken place with its occupation by the Turkish and German troops. Beersheba lies southeast of the town of Gaza, one of the goals of the British military expedition in Pales tine. Now the tall masts of a wire less station tower high in the air over this oasis on the borders of the Sinai desert and Beersheba has been blessed by the war with-material prosperity it never knew before. It has even acquired a "Hotel Abraham," a ba zar of small stores, and a moving picture show operated by the neigh boring electric power station. The performance began at 8 o'clock. The small entrance fee handed over, the Seven Reasons Why . Women Fear Mice Why is a woman afraid of a mouse? It is a question that no psychologist is able to answer satisfactorily. The best that can be done is to hazard a guess. One scientist says: "A woman is afraid of any small animal whose movements are rapid and uncertain. For that reason she fears a bat quite as much as a mouse." Another wise man suggests: "If women tfore trousers, they would not fear mice. Their fear is lest the mouse gain a lodgment beneath their cloth ing." Another says: "It is largely a mat ter of education. Mothers teach their little girls to be afraid of mice." Another: "Women anciently lived in caves, which were infested by swarms of mice. At night mice scam pered over them, engendering a nervousness on the subject which has become hereditary in the sex." Another: "A woman has an instinc tive antipathy to an animal against which she cannot very well defend herself, and from which she cannot get away. If it pursues, how shall she escape? I he tact that it never does pursue, being itself bent on es caping, ought to appeal to her reason But reason never governs a woman where her impulses are concerned." Another: "Women are not so much afraid of mice as they used to be. They know more about natural his tory than formerly, and it is no longer fashionable for a woman to be timid and nervous. Plenty of women now adays are no more afraid of mice than men are." Another: "Men arc more afraid of a good many things than women are. A man has an instinctive fear of a dead body; it is not so with women. Since time immemorial it has been a duty of women to take care of the dead, and so they have got used to it." Philadelphia Ledger. Postum Well of Abraham movie devotee found himself admitted to a farm yard. Ahead, on a fairly high house facade, hung the linen screen whereon Austrian and Ger man troops were to be seen wreathed in the smoke of cinematograph bat tles. Unfortunately, in the last few days, writes the German visitors, the movie paradise of the wilderness has closed its doors. British airmen turned noc turnal enthusiasts and made flights in the moonlight, in the course of which they paid visits to Abraham's ancient country seat. The authorities decided it was unnecessary to provide electric illumination to indicate where the visitors' bombs might most ad vantageously be dropped. The elec tric power station stopped lighting Beersheba's streets, and ceased to provide its current for the movie show. The proprietor of the show had to pack his boxes and rolls of films, and betake himself to pastures new. The date of the reopening is not stated. Possibly on the trium phant entry of the hosts from Egypt. Think of Thousands are bound to be disappointed this year for they won't be able to get a Super-Six. During the active buying seasons there has never been enough Hudsons to meet the demand. Imagine then what must follow this spring, now upon ua, when people will want cars. Automobile production has already been curtailed at least forty per cent under last year's output. Passenger train schedules have been cut one-fifth. More and more now we will have to rely upon the automobile as a means of transportation. There simply will not be enough cars to meet the demand. And just see how the Hudson especially will be affected with its reduced production. Never before has it been so important that the motor buyer be so particular about the proved qualities of the car he chooses. Thousands upon thousands of the best motor mechanics have left their regular employment in the garages and service stations throughout the country to give their skill to the repair of aeroplane and motor truck engines. The man who has a car requiring frequent mechanical attention will be greatly inconvenienced. There will not be the skilled men I i i ARMY OF 1,000 DOGS FOR WAR PROPOSED IN BILL Senator Brady'G Measure for Canine Fighters Has Ap proval of Secretary of War Baker. Washington, Aug. . With the backing of Mr. Baker, secretary of war, Senator Brady ot Idaho has introduced a bill to have 1.000 dogs "do their bit" in the war. His meas ure would appropriate $40,000 to en able the War department to buy dogs for military uses. The bill authorizes the secretary of war to accept dogs presented to the department. The senator has received a letter from Mr. Baker heartily endorsing the bill. The question of using dogs in the army has been approved by the war college as well as Major General Gorgas, surgeon general of the army, Mr. Baker said. He reminded the senator that the War department had urged an appropriation for dogs more than a year ago, but the congress had rejected it. Dogs are Contributed. Mr. Baker said the War depart ment had received a gift of seven dogs at the outbreak of the war, but had been forced to return them to the donors because there was no money to train and maintain them. He also said he understood that the Military Dog club of New York was prepared to donate 100 dogs just as soon as authorization to accept them could be obtained. Senator Brady's bill was referred to the military affairs committee. The senator is a member of the commit tee and will urge a prompt report on it. He declared that the example of the French army, which now is using 12,000 dogs, demonstrated the neces sity of quick action. Explaining his bill. Senator Brady said: "We are engaged in the greatest war of all time a struggle which will require every ounce of our strength in its prosecution. No stone has been left unturned to make the army we arc sending to France efficient. "No means should be overlooked to prepare and equip that army to meet the most capable foe, We arc fortunate at this time to have for our study the experience of the European armies in three years of strife. Among other developments of the war we find that great use has been made of dogs for military purposes. It is said that more than 10,000 of these animals are found in tie fight ing area, some serving faithfully and well as trench sentries, some serving as couriers carrying messages from the front to the rear, some suc coring the wounded and hundreds i " , n .in i sjyisssi.iw'i MBHgii-wsT II 'limU' 'ILIliaaggssassaaisMMi stM sisasaaaial this with reference to the Hudson Super-Six Fifty thousand cars sold in the past two years Only 15,000 available this year GUY L. "Service First" 2563-65-67 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. Doug. 1970. See the Hudson Super-Six, Space "10," At the Auto Show. watching and assisting in the cuard- ing of the hundreds of thousands of prisoners behind the lines. No mod ern army can be said to be fully ready for the war without these trained animals. Mystic Humboldt River And Its Crooked Course Asia Minor has its River Meander, South America its River of Doubt, and now Nevada comes to the tore with the Humboldt river for its width and length the crookedest river in the world. The Humboldt flows southeasterly through the central part of Nevada, wending its devious and irrational way over desert sands from a place whose origin is not yet charted, to end itself suicidally in a huge hole in the desert. The Nevada natives know it by various names, among them the "Locoed" river, and with good rea son, for the erratic stream turns, twists and corkscrews its path in a manner beyond comprehension or ex OUR i: DEFENSE Our boys arc defending this country on the high seas and on the land. Our own defense against a common enemy is to keep the system clean by ridding the body of tne toxins, or poisons, wnich are bred in the intestines. When you feel tired, sleepy, headachy, when your breath is offensive, or pimples ap pear on the face and necic, it is time to recognize the danger and protect your bodily health by taking a good laxative or liver medi cine. The machinery of the body needs to be oiled, kept in good condition, just as the guns or machinery of a ship. Why should a human person to make the repairs. That is another reason why the Super, Six must be the choice car. Its reliability is so well estab lished that buyers who appreciate the importance of having a car that does not call for constant mechanical attention will : soon take up all we can build. V Review in your own mind the history of the Hudson Super-; Six as you know it. ' Think of what it has done as proof of its endurance. You must know intimately the performance of from one to a dozen Super-Sixes. They are always on the road. Their owners almost never postpone planned trips because of some unex pected necessity for the car to go into the repair shops. , They are just like proved and reliable timepieces which go on day after day and month after month doing the things they wers built to do and doing it without obvious effort. Bear in mind that any automobile is going to be hard to get before the season is past because of the reduced production. Then think how difficult in particular it will be to get a car of such demonstrated reliability as the Hudson Super-Six. " SMITH planation. At one place in its flow, between points two and a half miles apart, it pursues a toftuous existence of eight miles, during which its course is alternately north 25 times, east 18 times, south 30 times and west 41 times. Every time it takes one of these radical twists it seems to try to run back and touch itself; at 33 different points it is within ISO feet of itself, or less. And at all these points it pre sents the spectacle of the same river flowing in opposite directions ISO feet apart. The Southern Pacific rail road crosses it 28 times. San Fran cisco Chronicle. Just Mouthful. Mrs. Brrwater was entertaining her club and the ices were being served. Presently the hostess observed that one of her guests had eaten all of her nervine if cream, where upon she hastened to her side. "My dear Mrs. Glover, da let m five you some more lea cream." "W.ll. thank you, Mrs. Brewster, I will take some more, but just a mouthful, please," replied the young woman. Martha." announced tho hostess, "fill Mrs. (Hover's plate." Philadelphia Ledger. neglect his own machinery more than that of his auto mobile or his guns? Yet most people do neglect them selves. Their tongue has a dark brown color, skin sal low, breath bad, yet they fail to see that their machinery needs attention. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pel lets have been known for nearly half a century. They are made of May-apple, leaves of aloe and jalap, made into a tiny pellet and coated with sugar. They are standard and efficacious. You can obtain them at any drug store in vials for twenty-five cents. Ask for Dr. Fierce'. Pleasant Pelletsand eet no other 1