r ! 12 A SOUTH SIDE LUCILE HARDY GIVES MOTHER W ONE BIG SCARE s hnree-Yeaf-Old Child Missing, But After Long Search Is I Found in the Clothes J Closet. Lucile Hardy, J years old, Twenty third and Madison streets, caused great consternation in the family household, and was responsible lor "ieveral police officers putting in some busy hours searching for her, when she- disappeared Friday noon after being scolded by ner momcr iui childish offense. , . Mrs. Hardy, after searching the premises and making inquiries of neighbors, called the police station ind asked for help in finding her daughter. Officers searched every place where they thought the whims of a 3-year-old child might go. Finally, Motorcycle Officer Earl Risk went to Lucile's home with instruc tions to make a search of the.prcmiscs, thinking perhaps she was camouflag ing her wanderlust by hiding some where about the house. , Attic and i sasement were visited, and then a L Jour of the clothes closets began. In . one, seated on a clothes basket in the arthest corner, was me missing mnu. Many New Books Are v Added at Public Library "Many new books for children have been put on the shelves of the public library. Among the new books of the week for adults are: Those "Gillespie," Hopkins; "Big Timber," Sinclair; "Alcohol," Bowers; "Rhymes of t,e Rookies," Christian, one of the w'cest little collections of the poems of the new armies; "British Navy at War, Dixon, what we owe the British; "Psychology of the Common Branches," Freeman, new book for teachers; "Bonnie Scotland and What We Owe Her," Griffis, delightful book of travel; "Beyond the Old Frontier, Grinnell, old Indian days; Utilization of Waste Products, Kollcr, good rhaptcr on the packing industry, seeded in conservation days; "Trench Pictures From France," Redmond,' by the famous Irish leader who was a great fighter; "Lord Northcliffe's War Book," Northcliffe; "Military Policy of the United States," Upton; "What Germany is Fighting For," Walstein, Germany condemned by a German; "Art of Interior Decoration," Wood, practical treatment of this interesting subject; read it before you house clean. -Dance and Theater Party For Boosters in Kemmerer Bruce McCulloch, editor of the Journal-Stockman, received a tele gram from Carl Smith, traffic man ager of the Urijon Stock Yards com- 'pany,who is with the Omaha booster party on a tour of several western states, telling of a dance and theater party given the mei. at Kemmerer, Wyo., Thursday night. ' , Mr. Smith says there is much snow and rain throughout Wyoming, and the farmers and ranchmen are rejoic ing over the unusually good prospects for heavy; crops of grain and live stock. The mild winter in that part of the country reduced the cattle losses to about ,1 per cent, and the sheep losses were negligible, he said. The booster party will return to Oma ha April 21. v Young Women Start Liberty Loan Drive at Cudahy's Six young employes of the Cudahy P;.cking company, wearing costumes of the national colors, launched a drive ibt Liberty bonds among the 3, 000 employes Friday neon. They are; Mrs. Mary Eddy, captain, and Misses Mary Tourek. Frances An- toniak, Helen Hartwell, Mary A. Tourek and Dora Olendorf. The young womeh will visit all depart ments of the plant, accompanied by T. C. Boughan, assistant superintend ent. Vac iiuresh will address the em ployes in Bohemian and E. C. Pace in English language. .A 100 per cent subscription list is expected. Young Armour Man Wedded to West Point Girl The marriage of Frank H.'Cal- don of South Side to Miss Margaret Anna Lindale. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Lindale, of West Point, was solemnized at St. BriUeet's church, Omaha, Wednesday, Rev. rather leahon celebrating the nun tial mass. Immediately after the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Caldon left for West Point for a few days visit The groom occupies a responsible position in the retail department of Armour & Co., at South Omaha where the couple will make their future home. . j Continue Hearing of Man Held for Shipping Liquor The hearing of Frank O'Neill. 318J4 North Sixteenth street, charged with illegal transportation of liquor, was continued until April 27 by United States Commissioner Neely Saturday morning. A trunk full of liquor, which was shipped from St. Joseph, Mo., is held as evidence against O'Neill. He de nies having anything to do with the shipment. A witness from St. Joseph will be present to testify at the next hearing. South Side Brevities Four-room housed J Iota, email frultlSth and Harrison St. Frank Byera, The ladles of the New Centurydub will have a doughnut sale a St. Bridget ! ball Friday night. For sale cheap, Rtudebaker car. 1917, on account of going to war. Phone So. ma, Father Jonaltla. Mrs. Fred Stroeh, 2117 D street. Who hat been 111 for the last two weeks, la re ported much Improved. Anton Kueek, 4 years old, a roomer t (313 South Thirty-third street, died Frl day night He bad no relatives her. Telephone South M0 and order a rasa of Oma or Lactonade. the- healthful, refreshing Home Beverage, delivered to your residence. --ha Beverage Co. Fifty-four men, from whom it will be Brie) City News Tow I, engineer, for commissioner. Have Boot Print It New Beacon I'resi Lighting Fixtures, Burgess-Graden Attorney Gernld M. Drew has re moved to 506 Security Bid. D. 3837. Five Per Cent Saved in the eco nomical 3-lb., can of Butter-Nut Coffee. $1 each. Adv. No Price Change The weely "fair price" list Issued by the Nebraska food administration details no changes for the week beginning Sunday, April 14. Offices Remain Open E. J. f toll, commercial agent for the Nickel Flate road, says that so far as he knows the company offices in Omaha will iot be closed. Quits Railroad Walter Mann, for 10 years city ticket agent in the Oma ha offices of the Milwaukee, has taken a position with the Holmqulst Grain company. Bextor or High School Enlists Louts N. Bexter, teacher In the Cen tral High school, has answered the call of his country and has signed as a prospective recruiter. Prudent savin;; In war timet la a hostage for opportunities of peace. Play sate by starting an account with Nebraska Savings A Loan Ass'n, 211 S. 18th SL $1 to ITi.COO received. Home on Furlough Walter W. Short, former clerk In the Northwest ern city office, now sergeant of the regimental ' supply department at Camp Cody, Is homo on a furlough. Not With Firm R. J. Flynn of Copeland & Flynn company an nounces he was not connected with the firm at the time of Its bankruptcy, having dissolved partnership July 1, 1917. Card Party for Mondamln Lodge A card party and dance will bo given by Mondamln lodge No. Ill, Fraternal Aid Union. Tuesday night, April 30, at Lyric building, Nineteenth and Far nam ttreets. Clan Cordon Social Clan Gordon No. 63, Order of Scottish Clans, and the Ladies' auxiliary, will hold a so cial and dance tonight, at which the Clan service flag, with eight star, will be dedicated. Auditorium Not Available Because the Auditorium Is not available for next Thursday night for the Liberty loan speech by Kev. Titus Lowe the committee is busy trying to arrange for another date. Maccabees to Elect Head Omaha Tent No. 75 will have a special meet ing Monday night to elect a new com mander, their former commander hav ing; resigned. They will also give an athletic exhibition. Philosophies to Meet The Omaha Philosophical-society will meet Sun day at 3 p. m. at the Lyric building, Nineteenth and Farnam streets. E. C. Page will sneak on "Thoughts on Commercial Freedom." Canviiaw Postofllee Harry A. Tukey and E. W. Slater canvassed the post-, office building for Liberty bond sub scriptions Friday and report they met with a generous response In practically every department of the building. Lodge Buys Bond A resolution to take $50 from the treasury of Omaha lodge No. 415 and Rpend It for the purchase of a Liberty bond was unani mously adopted by the Knights and Ladles of Security at a Recent meeting. Negro Is Held Jesse Nolan, negro, charged with selling drugs on the streets, waived preliminary hearing before united States Commissioner Neely Saturday morning and was bound over to the grand Jury on $1,000 bonds. Wife Keeks Freedom Ted T. Rohlfs Is being sued for divorce by Mlnda Uohlfs, who says they were married In Avoca, la.. September 10, 1913, and lived together until March 10, 1917, when, she alleges, he abandoned her. The petition also alleges extreme cruelty. Double Trouble Mary Wright got In wrong when she brought six quarts of whisky from Kansas City to South Omaha Friday morning. She was fined $100 .and costs in South Side police court 4nd was turned over to federal authorities, who charge her with il legal transportation of flquor. She Is colored. Open Lincoln Court Assistant United States Attorney Saxton, United States Marshal Flynn, Clerk of Court Hoyt and Deputy Marshal Nickerson will attend federal court In Lincoln Monduy. Judge Munger will presjde and a number of criminal cases will be heard. Judge Woodrough will open federal court in Omaha Monday morn ing and petit Jury will report. Fine fireplace goods at Sunderlands. Springtime Sunday Sermons "At North Presbyterian Church Rev. J. M, Wilson, pastor of the North Presbyterian church, Twenty- fourth and Wirt streets, is deliver- up; a series of springtime Sunday night sermons on "The Ten Com mandments and the Gospel." He speaks Sunday night on "The First Commandment: Thou Shalt Have No Other Gods Before Me." Lee G. Kratz leads the singing wit!, a chorus choir. Dr. Wilson's purpose is to make these discourses practical and inspirational and patriotic. High School Boys Going To Get Ideas on Farming Central High school boys today and next Saturday will go to a farm on the Iowa side of the river and begin lessons in plowing and harrow ing. Instruction will be given in the care of horses. The boys will leave Omaha early in the morning and will spend the day at the farm. E. Danielson, secretary of the State Board of Agriculture, delivers a lec ture at the school April 24. Allen Sleeper Purchases ' Nebraska Blaugas Company Allen W. Sleeper has purchased the Nebraska IHaugas company's plant and material at Twenty-eighth and Boyd streets for $70,000. Mr. Sleeper torecloseo the trust deed on the prop erty on the grounds of default of in terest of bonds. The sale was con ducted by Special Master B. H. Dun ham. selected to go to Camp Funston. have been notified to appear at the South Side city hi II at 10 o'cioiik, April 26. Two negro, boys, Sylvester Morris and Roy Thomi4 were arrested at 4S20 South Twenty-sixth street Saturday on a charge of disturbing the peace by fighting. John O. Wooley, at one time presidential candidate on the prohibition ticket, will apeak at a union meeting of South Bids churches In Grace Methodist church Sunday night. Incomplete returns of the liberty bond canvass at the stock exchange Indicate ap proximately ISO.aeO subscribed by members of the Omaha Llv Stork exchange, .and 100,001) by the Trailers' exchange. Complete figures will be announced later. Fire, thought to have been started by boys playing with matches, destroyed two coal sheds and a chicken house belonging to Sirs. Mary Kosiski, 401 South Twenty-ninth street, and Thomas K. Mason, 4017 Soflth Twenty-ninth street, Friday afternooa. The loss la estimated at over flOO. Ear) Chase, tiii South Twenty-seventh street', suffered a fracture of the Jawbone when the bicycle ha was riding was struck by an automobile at Twenty-fourth and M streets Friday afternoon. He was thrown to the pavement and the front wheel of the bicycle, demolished. The driver of the car did not stop, and Is aald by witnesses to have driven away at high speed. The license number. was obtained, and la laid to be that cf an Omaha automoblls dealer. ATTACKED BY DOG, MRS. HARRIS KILLS VICIOUS ANIMAL While on her way home Thursday afternoon a bulldog attacked Mrs. Harry Harris, 4817 Sahler street. She battled with the dog for nearly a half hour, it all the time snapping and biting at her throat. She finally grabbed the animal by the neck, dragged it to her home, a block away, where she killed it with an ax. Mrs. Harris swooned and was found by Mrs. W. Gould, a neighbor, who took her to her home, where her wounds were dre-sed. Packing House Head Talks On $25,000,000 Stock Issue During the ceremony attending the recent issuance of SZa.il'KJ.UUO addi tional stock to stockholders by Swift & Co., packers, the president, L. F. Swift, made the following statement: Having today received approval from the capital issues committee of the Federal Reserve board of our plan to issue additional stock at par, we are at liberty to announce it and are issuing circulars to our stockhold ers. Increased business requires in creased capital. The extremely high prices for live stock for which we pay cash and the continuous increase in cost of operation have made large de mands upon us. We have, therefore, decided to offer to our shareholders $25,000,000 additional stock at par at the rate of one share of new stock for each four shares of old stock. This will greatly strengthen the finan cial position of the company and win enaDie it to aiscnarge its tnnc- tions with a full degree of efficiency. This dividend is not being paid out of earnings. It is being issued against surplus based upon a recent appraise ment?" Second Degree Murder N Verdict in Stone's Case Guilty of murder in the second de gree was the verdict of the jury in the trial of Samuel Stone for the mur der of Detective Frank Rooney, in Judge Redick's court last night. The verdict was reached after seven hours deliberation. Stone was remanded to the county jail to await sentence. He took the verdict calmly. Harry Williams, first of the alleged murderers to be tried, was convicted several weeks ago of second degree murder. , Uncle Sam Wants Men for Many Places in Navy The local navy recruiting station has received orders throwing practi cally every branch wide open for enrollment, and has been specially impressed with the urgent necessity ot enrolling every possible recruit from this district. Registered men who can get the proper release from their local draft board will be ac cepted and enlistments will be made between the ages of 18 and 35 years. Permission has been granted to en roll men qualified directly in the rating of seamen, second class, a rating a step higher than can ordi narily be given, and numerous pre ferred openings are offered in other branches. Seamen, men to -Irian the guns, firemen, radio men, electricians, carpenters, coppersmiths, blacksmiths and apprentices are needed. HYMENEAL Carr-Whitney. Alfred V. Carr and Miss Tane Whitney, tioth of Omaha, were mar ried Friday evening by Rev. D. E. Cleveland at the minister's home. Mr. and Mrs. Carr will reside in Omaha. 1 At the Wrong Counter. Recently a man boarded a street csr and after futllely fishing In all his pockets for soma small chants handed the conductor a 110 clll. "I am very aorry." apologetically re marked the passenger, '"but this li the smallest money I have." For one lingering moment the conduc tor looked scornfully, yet enviously, at the passenger and his ten, and then pulled the Den rope. "Vou don't want a atreet car. mister." said he with considerable emphasis. "What you want la a taxlcab." Philadelphia Tele graph. Only Kindness. Private Slmnklns had returned from the front to find that his ilnl had been walk- trie; out with another young man, and nat urally asked her to explain her frequent promenades In the town with the gentle man. "Well, dear" she replied. "It was only kindness on his part. He Just took me down every day to the library to see if you were killed." St. Louis Globe-Democrat. A voce. Joseph C. Zimmerer and Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Simon Rehmeler were Ne- braska City visitors Wednesday. f L. J. Marquardt and L. W. Fahnestock were at Omaha Thursday. Miss Emma Mattheaion. of Park River, S. !., is here for a visit. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mldklff and sons, Oscar and Mat, were Cfinaha visitors Wed nesday. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Steffens, Nehawka, were here the first of the week. Henry Bredehnft of Berlin, was a visitor here Monday afternoon. Mrs. James F. Young, and sons, 'William and Llndel, and 'Chancy wine, of Cook, were visiting here the first of the week. Mr. ami Mrs. W. H. Thlele and daughter, were here from near Douglas the first of the week. Mrs. Ernest Stoner and son, of Omaha, wcro hero this week for a visit with rela tives. Mrs. Russell Hobsorf of Weeping Water has been elected manager ot the Farmers' Telephone company. Henry Wohlers and John Mohr, went to Omaha the first of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Botls and sons war here from Valparaiso, Sunday. Mrs. C. E. Jones and sons. Jack and Jess, of Lincoln, were visiting here last Sunday. Miss Inea Hudklns of Valparaiso, was a visitor Sunday. Henry Maseman, jr., has been elected manager of the Marquardt elevator. II. M. Marquardt and Charles E. Everett, were Omaha visitors the flrat of the week. Vilas Sheldon of Nehawka was a visitor Here the first of the week. Harry J. 8tutt, was attending to business matters at Nebraska City Wednesday. A. Zimmerer and son, Adolph. were here from Nebraska City the first of the week for a visit. fprlngfleld Mrs. Mary Preston sold her property here and has left with her son, Ueorge. and daughter, Lydia, for Knobnoster, Mo., where they will make their home, Mrs. Charles Miles and daughter. Flora, who have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Kills, left for their home In Chicago last Saturday. L. W. Drlskell and wife of Burkott, Net., are here on a visit. Corporal John Monahan of Funston was here last week attending the funeral of his sister, Florence Monahan, who was killed in an auto accident. Rev. H. C. Capsey returned home last Monday from Fortress Monroe, Va., where he has been In training. He was one ot five selected from a class of 5 for active serv ice. He expects a call to go to France in a few days. Mrs. Alvln Hansen is seriously 111 In an Omaha hospital. jid Mrs. Jap Snodgrass visited their From Qw Mair Ndhfoir THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: APRIL KULTUR IS WORSE THAN THE THUGS OF OLD IN INDIA Famous English Novelist and Poet Tells of German Atro cities and Their Purpose in World War. By RUDYARD KIPLING. A hundred years ago, there was a large and highly organized community in India who lived by assassination and robbery. They were educated to it from their infancy; they followed it as a profession, and it was also their religion. They were called Thugs. Their method was to disguise them selves as pilgrims, or travelers, or merchants, and to join with parties of pilgrims, travelers and merchants moving about India. They got into the confidence of their victims, found out what they had on them, and in due time after fcteks or months of acquaintance they killed them by giving them poisoned foods sweet-J meats for choice or by strangling them from behind with a knotted towel or a specially prepared piece of rope, as they sat over the fire of an evening. They then stripped the corpse of all valuables, threw it down a well or buried it, and went on to the next job. At last things got so bad that the government ot inaia naa to uuerierc. Like all governments, it created a de partment the Department of Thuggee to deal with the situation. Unlike most departments, this department worked well and after many years of tracking down and hanging the actual murderers, and imprisoning their spies and confederates, who included all ranks of society, it put an end to the whole business of Thuggee. Germans Worse Than Thugs. The world has progressed since that day. By present standards of crime those Thugs were ineffective amateurs. They did not mutilate or defile the bodies of the dead; they did not tor ture, or rape, or enslave peo ple; they did not kill children for fun, and they did not burn villages. They merely killed and robbed in an un obtrusive way as a matter of educa tion, duty and religion, under the pa tronage of their goddess, Kali and Destroyer. Very good. At the' present moment all the pow ers of the world that have not been bullied or bribed to keep out of it have been forced to join in one inter national department to make an end of German international Thuggee for the reason that if it is not ended life on this planet becomes insupportable for human beings. Even now there are people in Eng land who find it hard to realize that the Hun has been educated by the state from his birth to look upon as sassination and robbery, embellished with every treachery and abomina tion that the mind of man can labor iously think out. as a perfectly legiti mate means to the national ends of his country. He is not shocked by these things. Taught to do Murder. He has been taught that it is his business to perform them, his duty to support them, and his religion to justify them. They are, and for a long time past they have been, as legitimate in his eyes as the ballot in ours. This, remember, was as true of the German in 1914 as it is now. People who have been brought up to make organized evil in every form, their supreme good because they believe that evil will pay them are not going to change their belief till it is proved that evil docs not pay. So far, the Hun believes that evil has paid him in the past, and will pay him better in the future. He has had a good start. Like' the Thug, the Hurh knew ex actly what he meant to do before he opened his campaign against man kind. As we have proof now, his poisoned sweetmeats and knotted towels were prepared years before hand, and his spies had given him the fullest information about all the peo- pie-he intended to attack. So he is doing what is right in his own eyes. -He thought out the hell he wished to create; he built it up seriously and scientifically with his best hands and brains: he breathed into it his own Rev. Mr. Leady of Omaha preached In the Methodist church last Sunday. Miss Irene Mlnturn of Omaha spent Sun day with her grandmother, Mrs. Frank Mlnturn. Gorman Adsett went to Colorado, called there by the serious condition of his wife. Mrs. Frank Comte visited her daughter. Mrs. John Miller, in Lincoln this week. Mrs. W. E. Phillips, who has been visit ing her sister. Mrs. Ylrak, left Thursda for her new home In Temple, Tex. rnpllllon, Mr. and Mrs. P. D. McCormlck have moved here from Ralston. Lieutenant Clarence Welch of Port Omaha spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Welch. Captain Karl Brown of Fort Dodge, Ta., visited at his home here the first of the week. William Booze of Wichita. Kan., Is the guest of his sister, Mrs. D. I.. Horn. He will leave in a few jlays for Pennsylvania, where he expects to make his home. Mrs. J. M. Robinson entertained the young people at progressive high five, Tuesday night. At a meeting held at the court house Monday afternoon, plans were made for a thorough campaign for the third Liberty loan. The meeting was attended by rep resentatives from all parts of the county. April 17 has been set as Liberty loan day, at which time meetings will be held In the school houses of the entire county. Elk horn. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Mockelmann left for Colorado Friday evening, where they have purchased land. Mtss Elsie Otte and Otto Kunneman were married Wednesday. A reception was held at the home of the bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Ottc. Adolph Otte and Mr. Marshall motorea. to Otis, Colo., last week. The Herman Bull family were released from quarantine 'Thursday. Mrs.' H. A. Mockelmann entertained the Ladies' Kensington club Thursday. August Wltte and Mrs. C. W. Hickey ana children of Bennington visited here Thurs day. Mrs. A. P Ely was a city visitor Mon day. J. A. Wllllame of Omaha was a business caller Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Phillip SeefuS of Bcotla visited with Mrs. Phillip's parents Wednes day night. Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Green and children of Valley visited friends here Sunday. John Haney of Gretna called here Mon day. Mrs. Fred Clausen entertained with a birthday party Sunday. Mrs. William Wlnterburo donated an or gan to the Ref I son, Victor, at Camp Funston, last Mon day 14, 1918. spirit that it might grow with his needs; and at the hour that he judged best, he let it loose on a world that till then had believed there were lim its beyond which men born of women dared not sin. Cold, Organized Miseries. Nine-tenths of r.e atrocities Ger many has committed have not been made public. We were told the other day that more than 14,000 English noncombatants, men, women and children, had been drowned, burned or blown to pieces since the war began. But we have no conception and till the veil is lifted after the war we shall have no conception of the range and system of these atrocities. Least of all shall we realize, as they realize in Belgium and occupied France, the cold organized miseries which Germany has laid upon the populations that have fallen into her hands, that she might break their bodies and defile their souls. That is part of the German creed. What understanding is possible with a breed that have worked for and brought about these things? And so long as the Germans are left with any excuse for thinking that such things pay, can any peace be made with them in which men can trust? None! For it is the peculiar essence of German kultur, which' is the Ger man religion, that it is Germany's moral duty to break every tie, every restriction, that binds man to fellow man if she thinks it will pay. All Mankind Aroused. Therefore all mankind-are against her. Therefore all mankind must be against her till she learns that no race can make its way or break its way outside the borders of humanity. The more we have suffered in this war the more clearly do we see this neces siy. ' ' Our hearts, our reason, every in stinct, in us that lifts us above the mere brute, shows us that the war must go on. Otherwise earth becomes a hell without hope. The men, the ships, the munitions must go forward to the war, and behind them must come the money, without which nothing can move. Where our hearts are, there must'our treasure be also. From time to time the represen tatives of the allies meet together and lay down what the war aims of the allies are. From time to time our statesmen repeat them. They all agree we are fighting for freedom and lib erty, for the right of small states to exist, and for nations to decide for themselves how they are to be gov erned. All this we understand -and perfectly believe. That is the large view of the situation. What is the personal aspect of the case for you and me? We are fighting for our lives, the lives of every man, woman and child here and everywhere else. We are fighting that we may not be herded into, actual slavery such as the Germans have established -by force of their arms in large parts of Europe. Labor Under Lash. We are fighting against 18 hours a day, forced labor under the lash, or at the point of a bayonet, with a dog's death and a dog's burial at the end of it. We are fighting that men, women and children may not be tortured, burned and mutilated in the public streets, as has happened in this town and in hundreds of others. And we will go on fighting till the race who have done these things are in no po sition to continue or repeat their of fense. If for any reason whatever we fall short of victory and there is no half way house between victory and defeat what happens to us? This. Every Does not thrive in the dark. Your want ad to inspire con fidence, must be explicit, must arouse the reader's desire to possess. Vague descriptions . are insufficient Make an examination of your home from cellar to attic, the chances are one hundred to one that' you will find the ma terial for a great many W ar ' Savings Stamps merely wait ing to be toned in. v 't Make up a list of that old fur niture, stoves, etc., and either write a descriptive ad, or phone Tyler 1000 and have one of our competent ad takers assist you. Remember, the many articles you are1 no longer. in need of will not draw any interest. Call Tyler 1000 now, and. "Keep Your Eye on The Bee" relation, every understanding, every decency upon which civilization has been so anxiously built up will go will be washed out, because it will have been proved unable to endure. The whole idea of democracy, which At hnttom is what the Hun fights against will be dismissed from men's minds, because it will luvc "een shown incapable of maintaining it self against the Hun. It will die; and it will die discredited, together with every belief and practice that is bascjl on it. r What Kultur Means. The Hun idea, the Hun's root notions of life, will take its place throughout the world. Under that dispensation man will become once more the natural prey, body and goods, of his better armed neighbor. Women will be the mere instrument for containing the breed, the vessel of man's lust and man's cruelty; and labor will become a thing to be knocked on the head if it dares to give "trouble, and worked to death if it does not. And from this order of life there will be no appeal, no possi bility of any escape. This is what the Hun means when he says he intends to impress German kultur which is the German religion upon the world. This is precisely what the world has banded itself together to resist. It will take every ounce in us: it will try us out to the naked soul. Our trial will not be made less by the earnest advice and suggestions that we should accept some sort of com promise, which means defeat, put forward by Hun agents and confeder stes among us. They are busy in that direction already. But be sure of this: Nothing nothing we may have to endure now will weigh one feather weight compared with what we shall most certainly have to suffer if for any cause we fail of victory. The Bee's Ownership and Circulation SWORN STATEMENT FURNISHED THE POSTOFFICE DEPARTMENT APRIL 1, 1918. Statement of the ownership, management, circulation, etc., required by the act of congress of August 24, 1912, of The Daily, Evening and Sunday Bee, published at Omaha, Nebraska, for six months ending April 1, 1918. Owner The Bee Publishing Company. Editor and Publisher Victor Rosewater. Managing Editor C. M. Reeve. Business Manager N. P. Feil. STOCKHOLDERS (Owning One Per Cent Victor Rosewater, Omaha..... 194 Victor Rosewater, trustee for Nellie E. Feil 12 Chas. C. Recewatfr, Los Angeles.... 78 N. P. Feil, Omaha 10 Stella R. Feil, Omaha 12 Bondholders, mortgagees and other security holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages or other securities, are : None. Average number of copies of each issue sold or distributed through the mails or otherwise to paid subscribers during the six months preceding the date shown above is: Paid Daily Bee ., 39,219 Unpaid Daily Bee, including office copies, employes, tharity in stitutions, etc 1,034 Paid Evening Bee 18,950. Unpaid Evening Bee, including office copies, employes, charity institutions, etc 1,436 Total Pajd Sunday Bee Unpaid Sunday Bee, including office copies, employes, charity institutions, etc. Total .s. 52,780 N. P. FEIL, Business Manager. Sworn to and subscribed before me this first day of April, 191b, (SEAL) C. W. CARLSON, Notary Public. Confidence IMPROVING EVERY DAY How Two Nebraska Women Are Helping to Win the Wa Two young women of Dougla. i county, Nebraska, airs, nugene rioi ! lister and Miss Foulk, have brother i in the American army and each i; 4roud of the fact that she can tun j icr cftorts to doing something wort! while in this war tune crisis. Las', fall these two women husked 'abou 1,000 bushels of corn, besides doins Red Cross work and engaging in al. of the women's war activities. Recreation yMong Xew Lines. We have finmd It! Congratulate us that so esrlv In life, we have had revealed i us our chief end and justification for exist ence Hosts of men, an Innumerable proces sion of our fellow creatures, inarch (at at tention, at ease, route step or lock stepl from the cradle to the grave without hall an Idea of what it's Hit about. But we we know. Looking in Who's Who (the "English one) 'we came upon certain biographical particulars relating to Wilfrid Meyneil, among them the perplexing item, "Recrea tion, serendipity." We have never pretended ta. so much ai a bowing acquaintance with some of the words in the English language. The mem ory lingers of the time when a reader atkej the what-d'yo-call'lt of transposed letters oi syllables; for example, meaning to say: "Plcasa pass the marmalade" you observi Instead. "Please pass the parlor maTd." It took us weeks to find out that thi. particular slip of the tongue is known though somewhat restktedly, as a spooner ism, after the respected Spooner of Cv ford, whose lips were forever playing hlir false in that fashion. "Serendipity" stumped us. But the die tlonary and a member of the Columbii faculty lent aid. Serendipity, we were In formed, means "the ability to find valuablf thing's unexpectedly." The term comes froir. a fairy tale, "The Three Princesses of Seren dip," the heroes of which "were continual ly finding valuable articles .by chance." Th word was coined by Horace Walpole. Ser endip or Serendlb was an old name o: Ceyfcin. So Mr. Meynell's recreation became ex ceedingly clear. Ha cultivates the ablli'v to light upon unsuspected worth. This was more than Interesting; It was like a 10.000.-O00-candle-power searchlight brought u bear upon our own mental processes. New York Times or more of the stock.) Blanche R. Newman. Omaha 1 M. B. Newman, Omaha ! Estate J. Rosewater, Cleveland 14 Ida Rosenwasser, Cleveland oC Paul M. Rosenwasser, Cleveland K Herman B. Rosenwasser, Cleveland. . 1C Alice R. Cohn, Cleveland 1C 60,639 50,791 1,989