Is THE BEE:, OMAHA, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1918. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY FOUNDED BT EDWARD BOSIWATZB VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR THE BEX PUBLISHING COMPANY, PBOPEIZTOB. Batered at Omaha poatofflea as aeond-elaat matUr. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION DMr aad Bonds, nc wmk. 1V em nu. M (Mi DUV without bund " liio " i.OO Win da km on!, to too wmaa aouea of cbum of addnaa or unfularltf la daUfarj to Omaha mm vumuauoa ufiwunfa MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS oa aaaoetatad Prraa. ot irhlrta Tha Baa u a sxmhv. la mlncit anil ltd to tba dm tor DuDllcaUon of all aawa dliuatehaa amuud a tt ar sot ouwnrtaa credited In thta papar, and alao Uia looal nawa pflsUalMd hewn. Ail rlUu of pubilcauou of out apeolai dupatcliea ra auo naarraa firMimurff at draft, axpraa or poatal ardar. Only I and l-eant ataapa takaa la pajmnt of until oootaota. ft Osaka and aaatara axebanga, aot aocaptad. OFFICES Oaiaaa, Taa Baa Bmldlna, Chtcaio Paoplrt Ota Bnlldlna BouU Omaha till N St. Nt York tta Clfik Am. OmdoU Biurfa 14 N. Maia SI Be Loult New B'k of Csauaarat i ma um wuuuas. waauofua illl U Bt, CORRESPONDENCE ojmBmleatloDi raiatlnt to m and adJtorlal aittai 10 coiwnai uenanmam. 2. -""' V' APRIL CIRCULATION, r Daily 67,265 Sunday 57,777 iaa efnolauoa for U mnita, asbaortbao aad nrora to Br Dwlgai :. wiiii uiwimhi aianaaaTi Sabecrlbara leaving tha city ahonld have Tba Baa ma 11 ad Mama cnanfea aa ones aa rwquastea. THE BEE'S SERVICE FLAG .:! 1 i: 5;;; W jf: Spirki In the council meetings simply mean that we now have a lot of live wires there. The "arch" will go, but Omaha's welcome for the visitor will not be in any sense lessened. t Never fearl Uncle Sam's boys will give a good account of themselves in the big battle. It should be understood that from now on hard coal is so denominated because it la hard to get What is our new police administration going to do about professional street beggars? This abuse can be easily stopped. 7 Omaha is in the lead for the moment as a flour center, prophetic of the day when this city will permanently occupy the position. Chancellor Avery is quoted Is saying he was ; tired of professors' views on the war. He spoke for the public as well as for himself. Extraordinary conservation of wheat if neces sary for the next two months. But Just wait tilt Nebraska's wheat crop is harvested and available! Our High school cadets cannot charge that the weather man has failed to keep up his record oa encampment week weather. They are about f tk. k..t lint. ..:. 1.. 1 PART THE FARMER IS PLAYINO. One of the remarkable publications sent through the mails while the late Liberty loan drive wis in progress alleged that the farmers are slackers. Just now a most sufficient retort to such a charge is afforded by figures from the Treasury department and the Department of Agriculture. Secretary McAdoo makes especial acknowledgement of appreciation for the farm ers' contributions to the "Xiberty loan; every state in the agricultural belt went over its allot ment and practically every county in every state, showing the tillers of the soil to be buyers of bonds also. The crop-reporting bureau of the Department of Agriculture gives the total acre age of all crops in the United States for 1917 as 359,625,000, against 311,293,382 for 1909. Part of this increase is due to opening of new farm lands to cultivation, but most of it may be traced to the extra urge on the farmer for pro duction to meet war needs. Preliminary reports for 1918 indicate a considerable increase in area under cultivation over that of last year. The final yield depends on conditions over which the farmer exercises no control, but as far as his part in production is concerned, it has been at tended to. The wholesale allegation that the farmer is a slacker or a profiteer, or that he is falling short in any of the great duties laid on him is a slander. To gtisp the scope of the new freight rate increase it should be remembered that there has already been one 15 per cent boost since the government took charge of the railroads. An in crease of 15 and 25 is a 44 per cent raise. The secretary of war should extend to some of the senators the same request he has made of the newspapers, not to comment on the size of the army we have in 'France. Most of the mis information now . in circulation comes from Washington, and not a little of it has source in the Creel committee. ; A "Welcome Improvement The city council has resolved on one thing that . will have general commendation. This is the removal of the so-called "welcome arch" that has obstructed and disfigured Farnam street for aome years. .Whatever the sentiment that might have ' prompted the establishment of this mon strosity, it was bt poorly represented in the working out,,or it was unworthy of an advancing community. No doubt possibly can exist as to the sincerity of Omaha's hospitality, which is extended on all proper occasions without stint. Visitors to the city need no ostentatious reminder of the fact that tfiey are welcome, but if such a proclamation must be made it ought to be.with out offense to good taste. The "arch" now con demned conveyed no such message and had de generated from whatever of apparent greeting it might originally have had into a cheap and sometimes discouraging advertising dodge. It , has been used to convey the idea to uninformed easterners ' that a certain promoter of an un certain commodity was so popular in this city that ie was given a municipal welcome. No general catalogue of its many misuses will be made, but it will not be missed, and the dignity of the city of Omaha will be increased when that obstruction has gone to the junk pile. Railroad Rates and Certain Shipper. One of the complicating features of the iren. eral freight rate situation in the United States is forced to the front by the order of Mr. Mc- Adoo putting into effect a 25 per cent increase. Lertain industries will be compelled to absorb this increase, which has the effect of putting them at a disadvantage with regard to competitors. Notably is this true of oil companies not affili ated with the Rockefeller interests. The Stand ard transports quite a large portion of its oroduet by pipe line or water, while its chief competitors, and the smaller oil concerns particularly! must a.a ,t,. a. ... j . : , . ubwiv, v.! ku lamuiui iv bciiu goouj to marKet. Under these conditions the rate increase will have to be absorbed by the shipper, for it is not likely the Standard will favor its rivals hv increasing the selling price sufficiently to prop erly protect thera. What is true of the oil in dustry applies to some others, live stock and grain for example. The basic selling orice for grain, fixed on Chicago delivery, includes freight charges, and unless the upset price is modified the increase must be taken up by the seller. These points have been called to the attention of the secretary of treasury and he has been asked to give the interests concerned a hearing The whole situation is a reminder of the fact that justice can not be achieved by sweeping and inclusive orders, even in war times, but must rest finally on a full examination of all the facts. Check the Riveting Contests. Chairman Hurley of the shipping board has issued an order that is of more than passing in terest. Its effect will be to stop the individual riveting contests that have excited so much comment within the last few weeks. Wonderful numbers of rivets have been driven by gangs working under perfect conditions, but the net result has not been the gain that might have been expected. It has been discovered bv ex perience that after a riveting gang has undergone one of these bursts of speed the reaction is such that several days, sometimes a week or longer, must elapse before its members are fit to work again. Recovery from the nervous strain, the burns and other disabilities incident to the test takes time, and the output is less rather than greater because of the endeavor. Mr. Hurley is of the opinion that a gang that will drive 1,000 rivets a day and do it six days a week is putting out more finished product than the gang driving 4,000 rivets in one day and then laying off five. From now on the test will be on the monthly output rather than on the achievement of a single shift. Steady and sure is a good rule for the riveter. Americans Learning New Art of War Improvements in Firearms, Battle Losses and Rival Strategy Francis Vinton Greene in New York Times. While the artillery has been of a charac ter such as no American had any conception of four years ago, and has produced such casualties as artillery has never produced in any previous war, yet the fundamental fact has not been changed that the combat is de cided by the infantry; and the manner in which infantry has been used by the leu tons and hence necessarily bv their oppon ents has been a constant surprise to all military students. For the last hundred years the improvements in firearms have been con stant and rapid and the difficulty ot moving infantry to the attack in face of the con stantly increased volume ot hre has been the subject of the deepest thought on the part of all military leaders and writers. The following figures are worthy of care ful study: Total Killed and Battles. Engaged. Wounded. Pet, rredenck 110,000 1745-58 7 Napoleon 1800-15 12 Crimea 1854 2 Italy- 1859 1 United States 1861-65 11 Austria 1866 1 France 1870 6 Turkey 1877 5 738,000 2,104j000 149,000 298,000 1,572,000 436,000 1,263,000 512,000 464,700 21,400 27,400 210,000 27,600 119,700 71,200 .15 .22 .15 .09 IS .05 .09 .14 Germany and the Open Sea. Admiral von Tirpita insists that Belgium must be retained -in order that Germany may have free use of the seas, but seems to overlook a proceed ing that engages more public attention than the remote likelihood of retention of Belgian ports by the kaiser. This is the move to Germanize the Baltic. No purpose is plainer than the de termination of the German plottars to hold the Baltic as a closed sea. All the world is to be shut out from this gateway to northwestern Eu rope. Seizure of the Russian provinces and sub jugation of Finland gives Germany possession of the Baltic and all that it means, to the ex clusion of England, America and every possible maratime rival of the kaiser. Conditions of the days of the Hanseatic league are thus restored and an old chapter of world history is again brought to light. Possession of Belgian ports is of small moment if the Hun is permitted to hold what he has seized from Russia. The pre tense of contention for freedom of the seas looks small alongside the plan to secure a monopoly on one of the world's great gateways for com merce. Von Tirpitx may hold Belgium up, bat he cannot hide the Baltic in that way. Total 45 7,072,000 1,052,000 .15 These figures enable us to get a proper sense of proportion between the wars of the past, and between each of them and all of them in comparison with the present war, which, as nearly as can be judged by such figures as have been made public by compe tent autnority, is somewhat more than three , times as great as the sum total of all wars during the previous two centuries. Before it is ended it will probably be six times as great. The figures also develop the unexpected tact that while there has been a constant im provement in firearms since Napoleon's time the losses in battle, in proportion to numbers engaged, have decreased. This is confirmed by statements recently made by our War de partment that the losses in killed and wounded in this present war are only 7 per cent of the numbers engaged. If this informa tion is correct, then the losses in this war, with its unprecedented array of machine guns, artillery, barrage, 16-inch howitzers, 70-mile siege guns, airplane bombs, poisonous gas, hand grenades, etc., has produced a smaller percentage of killed and wounded than any other great war of modern times save one. The losses in Napoleon's wars, it will be noticed, were one and a half times as great as the average of the other wars; if this present war is included, Napoleon's losses in pro portion to troops engaged are fully twice as great as in subsequent wars. The classic case of Wagram is still worthy of the most careful study, for, while firearms have changed, the human heart, the human mind and human psychology ("reactions" in modern slang) are immutable. The Germans have been the most pro found students and would-be t imitators of Napoleon. Their tactical writers, Clause witz, Von der Goltz, Balck and Bernhardt have always emphasized"' the advantage of the offensive and the necessity of "driving home," or, as the French say, "charger au fond.' The great general staff was satur ated with these ideas, their maneuvers dur ing the 10 years preceding this war were con ducted on these principles, which caused the British and American military attaches who witnessed them to draw the erroneous conclusions that the German emperor in his vanity and love of spectacular effects was practicing at maneuvers a method of warfare which would prove suicidal and ridiculous in actual war. In fact, the Germans have conducted the war on precisely these principles. They seized tne onensive ana nave held it Their attacks have been conducted on the funda mental idea of "driving home," not with col umns such as those of MacDonald at Waz ram with 30,000 men occupying a front of only 400 yards and a depth of 500 yards, but with endless successive waves of skir mishers rushing across "No Man's land" and using the bayonet freely. Their losses in the battles of the last 30 days have been fright- tui. it tney could nave gained a victory like Wagram it would have been well worth while. The loss of Paris, while of immense moral importance, is of no military import ance if the French army remains intact. But they have not destroyed the French or Brit ish armies, and their offensive seems to be nearing its end. Our allies have pursued a most judi cious course in falling back before these "slams, meanwhile inflicting on the Germans losses probably two or three times as great as their own. The time will come, as this war slowly drags its length toward its inevit able conclusion of the destruction of the Ger man army, when the Germans realize that they cannot break the French and British armies. Their losses in man power will then have been so enormous that they can no longer carry on the offensive: and thev will require time with their inferior economic re sources to replenish the thousands of tons of artillery ammunition which they will by that time have fired away. When that time arrives, possibly in the autumn of 1918, or possibly in 1919, they will have to change from the offensive to the defensive. They have a defensive line of marvelous strength behind the Rhine from Dusseldorf to Muhl- hausen, about 350 miles long. They will then be nearly 200 miles nearer their own base; behind them will be their own country un touched as yet by the ravages of war, and in front of them will be the desert into which they have converted "the smiling lands of France." Across this desert we and our allies must transport our troops and munitions of all kinds, and we shall be 200 miles further away from our own base on the sea. In order to have any chance of crossing this wide and deep river and pushing across the 300 miles from Strassburg and Metz to Berlin we must have a greatly preponderating force; and as the French and British have nassed the peak of their man power our contribu tion must be very large, not less than 2,000, 000 men on the fighting line, constantly maintained at that strength from reserves in training of at least eaual numbers. This is nearly twice as many as the British will tnen be able to supply (they have probably nevfT halt aa manir am 1 Wl iTTSft .1.. - - ' " " j i .jvj,jyjv iiii.ll Vlll 111C fighting line at one time) and fully as great as the French. The British and French com manders will be nerve-exhausted by the strain of more than four years of unparalleled re sponsibilty. The prinnle of unified command has at last been established at the expense of Brit- lsn traditions tully 1.UU0 years old; and it is quite among the possibilities that the commander of the 5,000,000 men engaged in winning the final victory will be some young West Point graduate now commanding a regiment or brigade in France and as un known to fame as Grant and Sherman were in 1861 and the early part of 1862. Upon this man, whoever he may be, will devolve a responsibility as a military com mander with which those of Caesar and Napoleon will ieem small. Upon his abilitv successfully to handle unprecedented num bers of infantry in an attack upon present day trenches and all the accessories will de pend the lives of many hundred thousands of American lads. God grant that he have ability commensurate with his supreme task. for which history present no precedent and comparatively little guidance. The Rainbow Sign in Ravaged Lands Red Cross Symbolic of Relief and Better, Days Calls Bee's Spirit Splendid. Chicago, May 28. To tha Editor of The Bee: Mr. Frank W. Judson. dl rector of the second war fund for the American Red Cross In Nebraska, has sent ua copies or Tne Omaha Bee con taining the very fine publicity which has been given to the Red Cross. We greatly appreciate the splendid spirit which prompted you to print these articles. The American Red Cross needs the sincere co-operation of the American, press and such ar ticles as were published by The Omaha Bee carried a message to the public which is Impossible to Kive In any other way. The Red Cross needs your help, and Nebraska Is to be congratulated on having your hearty co-operation. I personally wish to thank you for the aid you have given to the second war fund campaign and I am sura the re sults obtained In Nebraska are due In a large measure to the excellent pub licity given me cause by your paper. xours very truiy, LEWIS N. WIGGINS. Associate Manager Central Division. President Wilson's Appointments, Eddyvllle, Neb., May 28. To the Editor of The Bee: What percentage of the important appointments made by President Wilson have been given to republicans? W. J. LA.WSON. Answer President Wilson has an- polnted no republicans to office under his administration, except in the verv few cases wherein the law requlrae that he name someone not of his own political faith. Both President Tart and President Roosevelt named demo crats to Judicial and other positions, dui Mr. wuson nas at no time follow ed their example in this regard. He has named a number of republicans in connection with the war activities to places where the services are given gratis or ai a nominal salary. Distinguish Between Friend and Foe, Omaha, May 28. To the Editor of Tne Bee: Sweeping orders lnaueu rated by Governor Harding of Iowa win nna little approval amongst the oesi ana xnmKing class of Amer cans. They do not conform, neither in word nor spirit, to our laws and constitu tions and go much farther than our national leaders In Washington care to go. "There shall be no class legislation" is a provision of our constitution. Ac cordingly when a tew is passed it must be passed against Bohemians and i-onsn as well as against Germans be cause the two downtrodden nations are subjects of the Central powers, even though it Is by compulsion and not by volition. However, a governor In his rulings is not weighted by re strictions on class legislation and therefore should distinguish between enemies and allies, between friends and foe. In a communication to one of the local dailies, "Vox Culae," under his pseudonym, says: "There are amongst us from the belligerent na tions also those who are loyal and true. They appreciate the government that made them. They All the bill of requirements of American citizenship. They give their time, money and sons to maintain the government. Thav are ashamed of their fatherland, that has fallen to the most brutish methods of warfare and extermination that the world has ever seen. Make them feel that this Is their country our coun try. The writer hits tha nail nin1 mi the head, only he should not eall the delapidated Austro-Hungary the fath erland of Bohemians, for It Is not The fatherland of Bohemians is Bo hemia, not Austro-Hungary, and Bo hemians are proud of thetr father- iana, ror Bonemia aa a nation la lined up on the side of the allies and is leav ing no stone unturned to help the allies win the war against their op pressors of Ions standing. The Bo hemians not only fully contribute their share to the war funds of this country, -but in addition by voluntary contribu- Hons are maintaining their own In dependent army on the battlefield to held lick tha kaiser. The reports come this mornlnT that thj Bohemians of Wahoo bought the two pounds of White Housa wool, for which they paid $5,000, and the report says: "There is a large proportion of Bo- ' hemlan population thera (in Wahoo) . which Is exceedingly active In war work.- r The Bohemian population of Chi cago is about half that of the city of Greater Omaha, and yet the subscrip tion to the third Liberty loan of Bo hemian Chicago exceeded that of " Greater Omaha by almost a whole -million, and out of three Omaha boys who have laid their lives on the field of honor two were Bohemians. All these things should be taken ; into consideration before such sweep ing orders aa those made by Governor . Harding are propounded, for it pulls ." on the heartstrings when all these - sacrifices remain unnoticed and un heeded. SIMPLICIMUS. CHEERY CHAFF. r ... r ... ... . . about it waan't monay wa war aulng tor, but th. prinolpla of tha thins." - BO 7 "Tha lurr mm.m it In th&i llrht flV Ua a Mnl Aam." Tj.m4m.111 k Courtar-JournaL "la tba eouraa at a ainela parasraph. r thla wrltar haa aaaamble aa add man- 7 asarla." "What la ItT" "A tun do, a rnooa salt aa aoaaa rraj hound, a aaa paaa aad aa Irlah anil." Bl- Minora Amarloan. km a Jlnka Tba aid aatax aboai wolraa ka anaap-e aiociunv aomaa back ta a Blinks WhaaT Jlnka Whaa ha erdars aprlas lamb ohaap raatauraab Brooklya Basle. "itT 'wife la aaoh a thoughtful womaa." "So ta mlna. Ton couldn't Imaslaa alt ' tha things aha thlnka about ma U I hap- '' pan to ba datalnad In town." Boatoa Traa- . aorlpt Mamma War. Temmla, raa look quite palal ; Tommia Taa'int I've iraahad my 'faae twloa today I Tonkara Btataamaa. "Ha ramoyaa your molaa, traeUaa and wrinkles and makea yoa look 79ms again." "Tha baauty dootorT" 4 "No, onr photographer." Jodga, ' NOT Dim XmmmHpntrwivnmmmmmmn Mw.HiHiiNiiwiiiiiNV.iiiuiiiiaimmait In the matter of funerals we have won the public's confidence by fair prices and a mannerly method of conducting our business Let ua take charge of the funeral service and no disappointment will result N. P. SWANSON Funeral Parlor, (Eatabllabad ISM) 17th and Cumtaf Sta. TaL Douglaa 1060. St Louia Globe-Democrat At that great meeting in New York where the campaign for the Red Cross fund was inaugurated, one of the addresses made was by H. P. Davison, official head of the Red Cross organization in the United States. Mr. Davidson's talk went into that interest ing detail needed to impress upon the minds of people the extent as well as the character of the work the Red Cross has been ordained to to and is now doing in many lands. In telling of the details of Red Cross ministra tion it was unavoidable that he should draw many gloomy pictures. The background of such pictures can be nothing but dark. But at one point he showed a foreground illumi nated with' something like a ray of sunlight. In telling of the gratitude of peoples finding friends in direst need, he said: "It is be yond description. When we were in Bo logna, Italy, schools were dismissed and the children threw flowers on the ground that we might walk upon them. Everywhere we went the American flag brought forth cheers that were far from perfunctory. The way these people of our allies hold out their hands and look to America as the land of hope and promise, making it certain that German might shall not prevail, is stirring. America is today a rainbow toward which western Europe, from the north of Scotland to the south of Italy, looks as the sign of comfort, hope and victory." That is a very striking, as well as pretty, illustration of a thought. The rainbow is always a promise of clear shining after storms, so much that it has passed into proverb that "a rainbow at night is the sail or's delight," foreboding an end of storm-j tossed seas. Surely no other people in his-' tory could ever have been so finelr and fit tingly characterized. Europe is in blackest night. Its people would be lost in despair but for the suddenly appearing rainbow which spans their sky, and at the end of which is, really, the once fabled pot of gold iyi 01 nuii6, cijmpuiug aim transporting mil lions of men and for sending cheer and com fort to millions despoiled who. -without thi. sign of hope, might decay and irreparably weanen resistance, vve must tuifill the rain bows promise. People and Events A curious combination of lightning strikes was scored in New York during a recent storm. Nature's electricity struck a moving passenger train, smashed a school house chimnev and wrirtcH . tWnni. . fire house. Strange to say, the freakish jigiuning omittea cnurcji steeples from its visiting 11st mat time. Teremiah A O'T t m vi. German president of the American Truth society, is badly wanted down there; so much so that federal antlirriti nfr- - ...... r ?5U tor his apprehension. Two years ago kj cary was tne warmest curbstone agitator "T winams nignways, and the way he twisted and knotted th Rrif.-.t, - v.. .1011 nun g itu 8erit tV 5 of Joy a.cross the Atlantic to Cork nu jrmsaam. failure to appear in court inH artnJ 4 1 . . ououvi inai xor violating the espionage act prompted the reward for his capture. He is described as 37 years of age, six feet i""' "c.gui 100 pounds, dark brown eyes, bushv hair and cvhrna . u c j looking, good dresser and an affable, fluent tai&ct, r One Tew Ago Today In the War. British delivered heavy fire and raids on Tpres and Arras sectors. ' Workmen and soMlers seized Kron etadt, the Russian fortress defending Petroerad. and repudiated the pro visional government. The Day We Celebrate. Frank C. Durr, chief clerk to the auditor of passenger accounts of the Union Pacific, born 1887. Charles W. Martin ot Martin Broa Insurance company born 186S. B. H. gprague, the rubber man, born 1861. Margarete ' Matzenauer, celebrated iim mezzo-soprano, Dorn in xtun srarv. 27 years niro. Rt Rev. Patrick R. Heffron. Cath olic bishop of Winona, born In New york City, 58 years ago. Rev. Joseph C. Hartzell, famous Methodist missionary bishop, bora at Molina, 111., 76 years ago. , STils Day in History. ; 1812 President Madison sent a e reels! message to congress asking for a declaration of war against England. 18 3 1 Redfield Proctor, governor of Vermont secretary of war under Ben jamin Harrison, and for many years a. United States senator, born at Proc torevUle, Vt Died In Washington, D. C. March 4, 1808. 1868 Convention met to frame a new constitution for Texas under the reconstruction acta of congress. J list SO Years Ago Today A large and selected assembly of people took advantage of the holiday to visit the fair grounds and witness the practice match of the Omaha Cricket club, first 11 against 15 other membera A number of young men desirous of cultivating French (among them several Parisians) have formed the Franco-American club. They have leased and furnished the house at 1620 Douglaa street and engaged a s vtoitvco IPASSY hw French cook. TTnrtrf th mlsi French will be spoken at the table. The charter members of the club are W. D. McCaeue. C. W. Martin. Cionre-a I Ames, Frank B. Smith, Eugene uans ter, e. Penard, Emlle Bessiere, rrea urun ana Clarence 8. Smith. The well-known nrnnertv nf flan. eral Myers on the northwest corner vi oixicenm ana uavenport streets is now hftfnr itr111Ari fni. A...ti . a lot of stores and flats to cost 14.600. Around the Cities ' St Louis authorities call on saloon keepers for a showdown on Liberty bond investments. Revocation ot licenses Is threatened slackers. Still, It's a poor slacker who cannot bor row a bond for a showndown. . A three-cornered understanding has been reached in Sioux City between the car men, the street car company and the city. The men get the wage advance asked, the company aban dons the 6-cent raise in rates and the city pledges assistance in shooing the Jitneys from the cream pans on traf fic streets. Out at Yakima, Washington state, school authorities rule that married wome! teachers look their prettiest at home and are granted permits to stick to that Job. Exceptions are made in favor of widows and women compelled to earn their own living be cause their husbands are in the mili tary service. Yakima, by the wav. la a dot on the white map of a full suf frage state. Down in I.01llsvtll n whimsical sport manipulated the weather levers during the racing days of the week. A bet Of SS0O that tha aim urn 11 1 it ihlna during the afternoon races, although a aeiuge 01 rain was tailing at the time. The bettor won. Immediately after the races rain poured down, the wind rose to a 45-mlle gale, picked up an automobile full of racing fans and threw it into the ditch, and pulled other curious capera Jt does not aDDear that the weathar man arnnA in on the bet Right to the Point Minneapolis Times: Before the war is over Switzerland is likely to have the greatest private collection of ex- Kings and things in the world. Minneapolis Journal: Lloyd George, breathing hard, looks around remark ing, "Is there any other gentleman with a crisis who wishes to be taken on?" Baltimore American: The whole country applauds Mr. Wilson In his appointment of Mr. Hughes. Patriot Ism knows no partisanship and the best brains of the nation should b utilized in prosecuting the war. Wall Street Journal: Kaiser tells his generals: "We know our enemy lo the last depth. We have given him two frightful blows." But every lime he blows the whistle the boat Htops. He wastes a lot of steam. New York World: According to Justin ftnrtArd tha TTronrK Hr...t,r k efficiency of the American ambulance imps i um Hum nas naa a great deal to do in decreasing the mortality of allied wnnnrtAri rA eni . - . I. Qtt.lUg DUI diers' lives is, after all, the equivalent vi war cuecuveness in staying enemy troops. Wall Street Jnnrnal- "if abolish all that fa fnr.in .om .v.. Jtalser. Which would include the air plane, teletrrarth. tplnnhnna auhmo. line, quick-firing guns, automobile, aniline dvea. Inrnmntlit,. r- m . . ,i steam engines, and about everything connected with Germany's military ind Industrial life, except poison and traaehanr. uOver There and Here1' A law passed bv the New York leg islature gives any citizen the legal right to arrest persons making dis loyal statements. The American war garden army has been recruited up to 1,950,000. No limit to the opportunities for service in this line and volunteers may dig in at once. The board of superintendents of the New York City nublio schoola recom mends to the Board of Education the abolition of teaching German .during tne period of the war. Under a new law in Canada re fusal to work draws imprisonment or a fine. As the war progresses idle ness becames a definite class of treason to world freedom. A Minneapolis scrapper, weighing 113 pounds and standing 4 feet 11 inches, broke into the army on his ninth attempt There Is no such word as "fail" in his vocabulary. Jimmy Gorman of Milwaukee, a former Northwestern engineer, writes home to a friend that he was running the same locomotive somewhere in France that he used to run on this side. No effective substitute for tobacco has been found in Germany. Prof. Udo Dammer, custodian of the Berlin botanical cardens, tested scores of pos sible substitutes and found none pos sessing the qualities needed. "The only thing left apparently," writes the pro fessor in the Tageblatt "Is that we have recourse to the poppy." This explains the Increased output of "pipe dreams" in that quarts, 1 Brambach Baby Grand The only absolutely Guaranteed Grand Piano, if the Bride Baby Grand. Price $495 worth $600 Secure your Grand now before the price again nisei, it may cost you fifty per cent advance shortly. Easy payment!. 0 1513 Douglas St. 'Til' ..' WTV The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company Announces That on Sunday, June 2, the following changes will be made in its passenger service to Chicago: Train No. 6 will leave Omaha at 6: 14 P. M. (now 6:02 P. M.) arriving Chicago, 9:15 A. M. Train ! No. 20 (THE PACIFIC LIMITED) leaving Omaha 7:50 P. M., will be discontinued. Complete Information at 407 South 15th St., Omaha i S3