THE BEE: OMAHAi FRIDAY. JUNE 14, 1918. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) - EVENING - SUNDAY BOUNDED Bt EDWARD BQSEW,TEB VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR THB BEE PUBUSBiNO COMPAfiT. fBOPBlETOB. Entered at Omaha poatoltics coni-elt mtUr. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Hr Carrier hi Hsu. o.iu ana suada, ............ . 2 0lU HUJOW SuudW..... ' 'JJ JJJ luTiilaf Um OAU. ................. ... M -'. i"dnot alcaante ot tMnm inanleritt Wr M IAmu ttw Circttlaltoa ItenartJHPl MEMBER Of THE ASSOCIATED PRESS m aaelitS Pna. suit The Bai a SMsMr. omoM iuSttoTS S UMfoT euSllcaUo. of .11 ee dOpefcJMs ornate p OUMCWtM erJlt ta Oil. PapST. and l UM total WSnroUwrwft. aU MM. wWt-iKi. al ow mI diapstebe. II IMtWl ' t tCHTTANCE Mrnii inft. enreat or imtal ontat. Only sao 'J-oso UuU tits Maura ztu. aot aocertad. . " . "" OFFICES ' . Hnuik Ooitiut 2311 Ji Bw Ne Vort J flfta in. & N t . St B' Qf UXMrea V , cpRRESPONDENCE -. kMnm ooaunantoUrM leletlnt to SS siUorlal aula m Onufaa Boa. Editorial Demrtal MAY CIRCULATION. " Daily 69,841 Sunday.59,602 tnm efrcolatioa for IM swats. sabatrlbM aoo saws to W IVlutwM Clrcultti Manasec - Subscriber tearing ths city should a.r Th Itt Hllil t tbtm. Addr s chanted aa fUm a wqutod. THE BEE'S SERVICE FLAG N ligisaiii'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiii iBHIIiillliil Old Glory, we salute yout & Dsn Cupid keep right on ith his work(Jn softs of war nd hot weather. Hlndealmrf Is hurrying, right, hut the ireuhlt If how to get by Foch One yttr lince Afnericn troopi landed in France, but we have made tome history in that tfant. ' " ' " "" '' Omaha hat mored to an enviable place in the iuaiaetl world, and ia going to hold it, which ia more. Mr, Hoorer could aaVe the people a lot of worry if he would prepare a definite achedule ' and adhere to it s - . 1 "Soaking the aoldier" is jnot a popular game hj Omaha, and the few who indulge in it ahould be made to feel the weight of public displeasure. Whenever the Russians get ready to help themselves they--will' find Uncle Sam willing to aid in any way to give them good government One hundred and forty-one years flung to the winds of the world at an emblem of liberty, Old Glory loots brighter today than ever in its life. . . , q If the kaiser will only take t second look, maybe he can discern a weakness in his "founda tion for a atrong peace." At this distance sev eral cracks in his wall may be noted. Wonder bow that hyphenated meter la run """WrfAg dpwn the itrfetJ'Are we atill foe the odious 1 hi'dh ay'ate'm of weights and measures, or live we gone back to the beautiea of the metric yslem? . . , v UNDER THE STARS AND STRIPES. Today the "Stars and 3lripes are whipped in every wind that blows around the globe, kissed by the sun of every clime, an emblem every where of man's highest achievements and noblest aspirations in life. Beneath that banner today stands the mightiest nation of all the world's history, united in arms to support and defend all that Old Glory represents. No selfish motive, no thought of conquest, of national aggrandize ment or gam in wealth and honor, moved this peace-loving people lo take up arms and enter the world-war. Animated by the loftiest pur poses, dedicated solely to the preservation of human rights and the liberty ; of - all peoples, Americans have put aside, their- ease, tioffed their garb of peace and dopned the panoply of war, determined to strike such a mighty blow against tyranny, injustice and oppression, that the world will be made safe for all freemen and unsafe only for despots. This .has been our national destiny, and to, it we have built upTour, strength. Just as for longer thana century men of every race sought under the Stars and Stripes security and opportunity that could -be found nowhere else, aonow they see the flag of our country in the sky, a vision more peal and substantial than that which daztled the eyes of Constantine at noon day, and with legend as clear: "Under this sign conquer! i Fly your country's banner to the breeze and sun today, and with it give thanks that you are living under it, and pledge yourself again to all it stands fori ppen or Secret Discussion of Treaties? . Senator Hitchcock's personal organ credits him with having won a great victqry in defeating the Borah resolution calling for open debate in the senate on pending treaties. For the present at least the chairman (by rightof seniority of the foreign affaire committee has been able lo pre serve secret debate on our dealings with foreign powers. This is the last vestige of star-chamber practice that once permeated our system1 of gov- ernmeni in me lorm or secret caucuses agree ments and the like. It ifremarkable thaf the democrats, with all their parade of "let the people rule," should cling to this last remnant of bygone diys. ' i Secret diplomacy has generally been de nounced as something to be avoided in the future. Our president includes it as one of the cardinal points on whjchUhe future peace of the world la to be established. Senator Hitchcock contends he correctly interprets the president's meaning to be that reaties may be negotiated and ratified secretly, and the people be informed of their contents after the engagements have been made. This is keeping the word of promise to the ear and breaking it to the hope. ft is conceivable that in certain situations the president might ask that delicate foreign rela tione be considered in camera. At such a time It would be proper for the senate to consult be hind dosed doors, but the practice should be to require a motion to -consider the treaty in execu tive session, rather than one to discuss it openely. The Borah resolution ia In line with public senti ment and sooner or later will be made the 'rule, despite the bourbonism that persists in the present majority of the .senate. ,' President Hale Holden of the Burlington be cCmes regional director of all the railroads of the central division. "Jim" Hill's shattered dream of running the . Union Pacific by proxy Sow savors more of truth than poetry. The efforts of the democrats to stir up strife Li the Omaha police "administration will bring t era naught but trouble for their pains. Our t .'.ice force is out of politics now, and will attend t'rictly to businesa, in spite of tie effort of the Caveator and) his appointee to disrupt and de t:.;oy jta efficiency.' ' ",;;"V -'- J ;. c -; Cheerful Though Blind. Person who shudder at the thought of losing f-t Sens, of sight, and who habitually think of t blind aa hopelessly submerged with regard to C y of the pleasures of life,' might have learned czsethinf at the convention of the blind held ?e thia week. SuA persons would have been r :st agreeably astonished to find these afflicted t 1'viduala laughing and talking among them i.Ttcs, going cheerfully about the routine of their r :etisg, "reading" papers, discussing points, re- LZag experiences, and even telling of what they "iaw" about the city,; These blind people have a most comforting way of adapting themselves to their aituation. Instead of bemoaning the sad fate that deprives them of eight, they set about t) develop their other senses, so that any loss i :e to the missing one may be supplied by the tliers as far as possible. What they can not t 'p they nave no time to waste on, for they are t. j busy looking after the things they can do tzi extracting real sweetness from a life that h both rea, anH earnest to them. Here ia a t:sson tor grumblers. , , - "., : 8ave Beef for the Soldiers, s Food Administrator Hoover haa requested that more ardent effort to save beef be made by Americana His latest order puts us on shorter Nations than the one establishing meatless days, with the exception that it does not now include pork or mutton. I Americans are so devoted to the war that they will waste ho time ,in discuss ing the whysand wherefores of this, but Jvill cheerfully respond. If it is necessary ta' deny themselves beef in order to help the soldiers they will give up beef. Aside from any patriotic or sentimental reason, the order carries with it something of hygienic value. During the long, hot days that stretch between now and Septem ber 15 the prudent man will voluntarily abstain from meat as much as possible, contenting him self with liehter diet, to the end that his bodilv comfort and physical well-being be properly con served. It will be slight sacrifice for many to give over beef in all forms, and the privation of the few can be compensated, for as have all the donations we have made from our habits of self indulgence. It is a contribution, small enough, to the success of the great cause, and if the sol diers need the beef we will give it to them. Michigan democrata endorse Henry Ford for United Statea aenator. We, well, well 1 The last we heard of Henry in politics was when his name was put on the ballot in Nebraska for the republican nomination for president, 'and" how our democratic friends did make fun of him I upen diplomacy docs not appeal to our hyphenated senator from Nebraska. "He shud ders to think what, would it exposed by throw ing the light on some of his own secret, treaty negotiations with the German-American alliance. .The Italian captain of a motor patrol boat who destroyed' an ' Austrian dreadnaught has achieved a feat that makes David's victory over Goliah look like a commonplace. Nothing in the war has been finer than this. I . v '01d Glory's Epochs - . j ' I 177? First displayed over a military post at Fort Schuyler, on the site . , of the present city of Rome, N. Y. 1777 First displayed on a vessel of war , . by the famois John PauJ Jones of the "Ranger.- ; v 1777 First carried into battle, on the x banks of the Brandywme. 1777 First hoisted over a foreign stronghold, when Captain Rath - bone of the sloop of war Provi dence captured Fort Nassau,' in v the Bahamas. A , ; 1783 First displayed in an English port' i by the schooner Bedford o Massachusetts'. . ' 1790 First carried around the world by the American ship Columbia. 1824 First carried through the Straits of Nfagellan by the merchant ship ' ' t Endeavor of Salem, Mass. 1829 First raised in California by Cap tain James P. Arther,( seafarer from Plymouth, Mass.' 1839 First wied far beyond the Anarctic circle by the pilot-boat Flying Fis of the Wilkes expedi tion. 1844 INrst carried around the world by ,an American steamship. 1848 First displayed upon the Sea of, N Galilee, hr the'tXDedition of Lieu tenant L nch. s " 185.J First displayed in Japan at the landing of Perry's party in the bay. of Jeddo.i 1861 First raised and kept flying on a public school by the high school of New Bedford, Mass. 1867 First raised in Alaska, on the transfer of that territory . from . Russia to the United States, 1868 Raisedover the Midway Islands, in the Pacific ocean, the first ac- quisition ever made by our gov-' ernment in this manner. - 1S6S PI anted on the summit of Mount Baker, 10,613 feet above sea level,, on the occasion of the first ascent ; oHhe peak by man. . . 1871 Carried into the interiorf W Africa by the Henry L. Stanley expedition. 1873 First raised on the summit of the Andes, by a party of American 1 . "engineers engaged in railway sur veying. t K 1877 Unfurled for the'first time in the far interior of China4 " , 1917 Displayed on a European battle field ton the first time by the American expeditionary force in France. " V T The Hohenzollerns vs. Democracy Final Drive of Autocracy for Uncontested Supremacy. New York Evening Post. That ihe German government has nowi fully committed .itself to combat the demo cratic movement, evidence accumulates. We need not take too seriously the roundabout reports irom- Austria that uermany may intervene to aid the Austrian government in withstanding the demands for self-govern-, inent within the dual monarchy. There can be no doubt, however, that what is going on in Bohemia causes as much concern in Berlin as it does in Vienna. But in Finland, in the Ukraine, as well as m the Russian Baltic provinces, uertnan mttuence and uerman bayonets are distinctly put at the service of political reactionaries. It is a vast change since the first days of the Russian revolution, when the German chancellor, Bethmann- Hollweg, made his remarkable'Speech warn ing absolute monarchs to .give need to the aspirations of the people. The particular ap plication of this lie then made was to the Prussian franchise bill. But it has not yet nassed and the junkers and the fatherland party declare stoutly that it htust not be al lowed to pass. During the twelvemonth past Germany has swung over, to full re action. . v ' : How bold the reactionaries have become was strikingly brought out by protesting so cialists at a recent meeting of the Reichstag committee. They complained bitterly of a pamphlet, containing "patriotic instruction," which had been freely circulated in the army, oarticularlv amonsr the troops under General von Eichhorn. There have been references to the matter in the cable dispatches. Fuller extracts from this quasi-official attack upon democracy and democratic nations have come by mail and show what an unblushing ciocu ment it is. " Thus we read that there is nothing more insupportable than democracy." In democratic countries "money plays the chief part.". And take this: . "He who does not reiect democratic in ternational propaganda on the' veny threshold is working for the enemy; he is not work ing for true freedom and equality, but for the interests of ' an international' society , of swindlers." , In the Reichstag committee the minister of war denied that he 'had ever heard of this "instruction" olaced in the hands of German soldiers. But no less a person than Herr Erzbemer at once rose to declare that he himself had sent copies of it to the ministry of war more than a month before. As we have said, the pamphlet pays its respect to existingdemocracies. Of France it says that its motto of liberty, equality, fraternity, must be translated "disobedience, irreverence and hatred." As for the United States, it is "the land of corruption and bribery." But it ap- nears that we must discriminate between democracy and independence. "Let us, de mand Ireland forithe Iriah, so that we can make Irelands interests our own an liaven it knowethN what that may mean. Egypt and India ought'also to be independ ent, while Gibraltar should be given back to Spain and the Suez canal to the Turks Still, one must not press independence too farl For Germany needs in its business some lands that desire independence. "In the east Courland. Lithuania, and large tracts of Po land will Rive uo the necessary settlements for German peasants. In the west and, east we must keep the important coal and iron areas. Above all, we must maintain our control of the Flanders coast. r To such a publication we would ,'nof at tach more weight than it deserves. But it falls in with much other evidence. The way in which the German agents av Brest-Litovsk met the challenge of the Rassian radicals with a rough military hand: the open aid given by German troops to the, counter-revolution in Finland and the Ukraine; the. talk of supplying monarchs to both these inde pendent republics; the willingness of the German rulers to be identified with "order in Warsaw." meaning stern -and bloody re pression of agitation for? popular rights; their emasculation and final postponement of their promised law to make the, franchise equal in Prussia all these and jother mani festations the Vssential spirit :.'of Prussian ism argue strongly an intention ' to crush German liberalism if the military party has ' its way. , ' ,. v' 1 - All this casts its light upon the renewal of the German attack on the western front. It is dictated not merely by miliary exi gency. It is the. final bid of the junkers and the dynasty for uncontested supremacy. They are willing, nay, from their point afj view, are forced, to hazard everything in order to sustain themselves in power. For they know that if they go back to Germany beaten, there will be an end of their whole regime. It is not Germany fighting' in self defense on the battlefields of France; it is Prussian autocracy against democracy. No wonder 'that the democrats of the world are bidding ea"ch other to be of stout heart and unconquerable faith in withstanding the on set. " ; We Won't Fight, Eh? - Just before he departed from Germany Ambassador Gerard reports Wilhelm Ho- henzollern sneeringly remarked, "Oh, Amer ica won't fight." ' This country has been at war with Ger many now 14 months. In that period it has raised $10,UU0,000,00U for war purposes;: it has armed and equipped 1,000,000 men, and more, the greater part of whom are now in France, andjwho, according to late reports, are halting the Hun's second drive on Paris until enough of them will be- prepared to smash them. It is launching ships at a. rate that is the amazement and wonder of alt; it is turning out munitions in quantities almost incredible, and shipping airplanes by the hundreds, if not thousands, every week.i In deed, America is preparing on a scale so stu pendous as to cause wonder. Won't fight, eh? . - . There may have been a time when this country was as slow to action as it is to wrath. All this has changed. One need only watch on the streets the demonstrations that take place whenever some of the heroes from "over there" . parade; or see t,he "movie" audiences when battle scenes are thrown on the screen, or portraits of the president, our army and navy leaders or the soldiers of our allies. The people of Amer ica are Hot only in this- war, they are for it Won't fight? The tremendous sacrifices which Hohenzollern is making; the tens of thousands whom he is sending to untimely death; the starvation to which he js subject ing his nation; the haste' to accomplish his fiendish' work before America really gets in, belie his sneering and .contemptuous remark. The nation that so easily subscribed to $10, 000,000,000 of Liberty bonds; that cheerfully gives hundreds of millions to the Red Cross and other war demands, is in this fight to the bitter end as Hohenzollern will discover before many more moons. Chicago Invest ment News. Grafting on the Soldier. Omaha,vjJune 13. To the Editor of The Bee: One- of my sons In the service Is at Kelly field, Ban. Antonio, Tex. Some time since he went into a restaurant in San Antonio to get a lunch.- When he-went to pay for the lunph they were going1 to hold him up. The price named was' out of all reason. - He thuew down what he thought:' was full payment for what he got. r The boy 4.siuite a husky kid and there was about to be a rough house when a policeman appeared on the scene and asked my boy what the trouble is. He tpld hirt. Ttr place was put out of uAlueoo. Is it not a fact that we forget the great obligation we owe the boys who are fighting our and posterity" bat tles? Is it not a fact that too often they are robbed of the scant allow ance they get from, the government? The man who will rob the boy' in the serviced the present time is a graft er, a patriotic robber, and should be pint out of business He is not worthy of public patronage. ; ' Yesterday a young man from Fo-t Omaha, and, who did service in Mex ico, came to my offloe to inquire what it would cost to bridge in a front tooth. After taking in the situation, I told him I Will put i a gold bridge, with porcelain facing, for $5. This is pot by any means my regular price. He just came from an office where the defatict asked him J SO for a por celain facing, $45 for an allfgoUi tooth. I want to raise my voica against this grafting our soldiers. I don t care.wnetner ne is in-my own profession 'or not, the man who will impose thus on one of our boys should feel the indignation of a patriotic public. It is not a time to get the dollar, but to overthrows militarism, and uphold and extend 5 democracy throughout the world. A DENTIST. CHEERY CHAFF "Look" t that sawed-off itoveptp nd that monocle. Look at that loud vest. Oh, that a child of mine ahould dress like that." "Don't take It ao hard. Boyi will be boys." "But lurhal. ihe'a a girl." Loutsvllle Courler- Jou THE FLAG GOES BYI Hat off! : r- Alone the etreet there cornea A blare ef buglea, a ruffle of dfunu, A llaah of color beneath the ikr; Hata offt - The flap la pasalng by I - ; V Blue and crlmaon and white It ihlnea -Over the eteel-tipped, ordered llnea. - Hata off! - ' - The colors before us fly; , But more than the f lac la paaitnf by. Sea fight and land fights, grim and great, Fought to make and aave the state; Weary marches and sinking ships; Cheer of victory on dying lips. - . f Days of plenty and years of peace: March of a strong land'a swift Increase; Equal justice, aright and law. Stately honor and reverend awe. i Sign of a nation, great and strong To ward her people from foreign wrong; Pride and glory a4 honor all Lire in the colors (to stand or faC - Hata off! - ,' Along th street there comes' blare of bugles, a ruffls of drums; -And loyal hearta are beating high; Hats off! The flag Is passing by! HENRY HOLCOMB BENNETT (IS! A SONG OF THE FLAGrs Oh. sing we the song of the flag, Of the banner that billows and beats As it rlpa through the wind on the rootl of the towns And whips at the top of the fleets. ' It tears through the rage of the blast, In. a fury It tugs to be free, ' , As it swing In the teeth of the storms ol the land And sings In the gales of the sea. y It runs In the winds of the plains, ' It steadies and stiffens and thrills, It streams in the smoke of the scatterinl clouds ' And gleam on the bayonet hills.' - Oh, sing we the song of th flag.' As It bellies and flutters and flings. As It leaps to a home in the arms of the air And laughs at the lusta of the king. It flames with the red of the dawn And the whits of th breakers that raee. It burns with a beacon of wonderful stars On a banner of Infinite space J an my "Take a good look at this ladder, boy." . . "What for?" . "And then remembs- that If It were pos sible to get to the ' top at a single bound there would be no use for the bottom rungs." Detroit I'ree Press. .. " ' "I am Old Glory." says th Star Spangled BanneU "I am Bold Glory." says the Service Flag. "I an Gold Glory." says the Liberty Loan Honor Flag.--Llfe. .. "Talking about getting help, I know a man who engaged? t woman to cook, wash, iron, clean up for him, just for her board." "How did, he manage it?" "Ho married her." Baltimore American. 'So Hiram's been to the city," said one to Another. . "Oh, yes." 'Where did he stop?" "Why, he said he stopped at nothing." Tonkers Statesman. Jack They say candy Is a cure for fa tigue. , Nell Shouldn't wonder. I know the man who brings me bon 'bona never makes me so tired as the one who doesn't. Boston Tnajiscrlpt. "WhatVstatlon la this, conductor?" asked the lady on her way to San "Francisco. "This Is Reno, madam; do you wish to get off here?" "Oh. no; I'm only engaged nowj," Brook lyn Citizen. People and Events Had New Jersey been warned of the com ing of the U-boats, a mobilized mosquito fleet would have staged another horror of war. "The Oregon, State Grange rescinded its action of a year ago and will have no further dealing"! with the Nonpartisan league. 'Brief acquaintance convinced the grangers that trfey could put $16 per to better uses. During the first four foonths of 1918 motor accidents on New York state highways decreased 50 oer cent, compared with the ;ame months last year.' 'The knowledge of s ite police being on duty at unexpectM places tightens the breaks on speeding. Art.circles in New York feel humiliated to the 'dust. The hurt would be less painf 1 had European fakirs trimmed the guild with bogus pictures. This time the shady work was skillfully done, by Oklahoma "artists," who unloaded several "bogus Braklocks" at fr icy prices. t ' Uncle Joe Cannon does not thunder in rnnoraa aa waa hia iiahit in ar1ifr vpnra. but is on deck as usual working and voting to win the war. Danville sticks to Joe as closely as Joe sticks to Danville, only more so. The chief worr- of Danville just now is to hnd a way around a partisan law and give Uncle Joe an uncontested re-election next tall., - Just SO Years AgoJToday CharM Cornell and Mike James left for St Paul to accept positions In 3, 1'ear Ago In, the Was. I the offices of the Stock Yarj)s com- Gerroaa Zeprielln 14S. brought Pany ' . town by British naval forces in .the I After playing hers? Oilmore's band North sea.- v A- " British forces continued a vigorous offensive along many miles of the est front y - v Thb Day Wo Celebrate . t , J)r. B. B. Davis, surgeon, bora 1859. . Charles 3. Magill, Jr lo the money order department at th postofflce. born 1871. MaJ.-Gen. Joseph E. Kuhn, com mandant at - Camp Meade, bora In Kansas 64 years ago. John McCormack, celebrated tenor, om at Athlone, Ireland, 34 years ago. Grand Duchess Marie of Luxem burg b.rn S4 years ago., r ' Day In History. 1777 Congress established the -erican flag of II alternate red and :te stripes to represent the It c-rigl- i colonies and of white stars on field to represent the state. IS05 MaJ. Robert Anderson, who -manded Fort Sumter at the out' Js. of the war between the states, "ii la Kentucky. - JJiea in. r ranee r-her S. 1871. i ' : 118 Daniel W.; Powers, Backer i nniianinroDisT. wnon , zaiin in led ftates securities in the civil r xaifoei mm immense weaitn, oorn ' Genesee county. New York. Died (vet womanT it Rochester, N. tv December XI; j "The Bphlnx." Baltimore Amerl- .. ls went on to Denver. South Omaha republicans met In Pivonk-a hall, on Twenty-fourth Street, and in a buslness-lika way formed a campaign club.. Speeches were made by 8. W. Dennis, J. H. Vah Deusen and Attorney Elliott -V Edward Rosewater, editor of The Round About the State T ' Editorial Shratftel v Realising that hyphenated titles are not aa popular as they have been, the Crete Vldette drops the link and shunts'.the annexted. "Herald" to an Inside sub-title. The old name sounds better and 'gains m sweetness with e. .. -V , . . y Farm land values sre on the up war bound in Colfax county. Howells Journal mentionXthree, recent sales in Lincoln precinct at $175, $200 and $225 per sere. "It is our firm belief." says the journal, "that the high prices of today are low, indeed, com pared with what will be in the near future. This is a good time to buy land and In our opinion a poor time to sell." ' The' swimming season starts In early taking its toll, scoring two boy vic tims in the- Blue river at Beaver Cross ing., Boys will be boys around the 'Isle swlmmln' hole" and; knowing it are reasonably safe. Venturing IntoJ strange waters without elderly pro tection is mighty risky and the boys thus tempted . should, turn over in Bee, left for a two weeks' trip to ths their carefree minds Just oue word, east s 3. K. Choote, superintendent of the Colorado division of the Union PaclOc, left for the east in a special car. ; , The Oldest Womau. v "If everybody knows that Methusa leh was the oldest man who vr'ThA Jnurnnl forecasts, mi earlv show iivmA whn Un.. nM A . u . i .1 ! j . u .1 null nt. Washlngton Post: BernstorfT loses an (American honorary degree almost eery day, but what does Joe care tor anything savoring of honor? Baltimore American: "King George tt England is wearing a suit of clqthcs that set him back $14.25. There are a good many over here ,ho would like to know his tailor. Minneapolis Journal: The old civil war joke about the horse marines has come true. Seven hundred United States marines are now riding the up per decks of horses, i Minneapolis Tribune: The Haps burgs certainly ate having a hard time of It; they are rated so low 'n the dynasty scale tnat they have pome to beldescribed as the Perhapsburgs. New York Herald: Mr. CUtude Kltchin's attitude toward Ou newspa pers c this land is strongly suggestive of desire on his part to kill the goose that hatched, if she did not laj, the Ifcggs of patriotism. , New York ' World: Nine- women were killed in the German .air raid onBrftlsh hpgpitals behind the line. That by the test ot Prussian fright fulnofes. Is the full equivalent of the gain) of a. line ot trenches in mr.nly warfare. Brooklyn Eagle: The Germans d Vot tell how many men have leon to other stations and some of It stays . killed, wounded and taken prisoner for translation Into "current funds, 'since the 'flrlve started on MMrch 24. fiermans are cheap and BPO.OOtt uf them canvbe slioveled IMo the maw c Moloch with uo.apoloc-ies. It is n 1 toheniollem holiday and the Ger n .n people's funeraL Don't. Falls City Is something of a, divi sion point on the route from St J6oe J to the dry belt. Considerable quirn- titles oi me saintly ougjmv rtois y I Hospe Says: Here Are Some Sacrifices in UPRIGHT Pianos It lifts it hers battles are blown, Where ths thunders ar hurtled hurled , It lightens the loads ot the weak sf the earth Andguardsat the gates of-ths worldl PERRIN HOLMES LOWNBT. r?'"- f:rn the Air, y Lf they need a cool head. On f' the streets you need cool, comfortable feet Slipknot resiliency will keep your feet I m iiuuio ngni up IO 1 X.. . bed time. Say "ShpknoU" I i . that'eenongb. 'II ' f Mapufactered br ' I I I KYMOUnl RUBBER COMPANY . I I I , Canton, Man. i II V Put on at all Shoe Repair Shops I I ' lo cum Cash or Terms. Haines, Ebony .f...S135 Bailey, Mahogany . . .$165 Chickering, Ebony .$165 Camp & Co., Ebony, .$165 GeoiSteck, Mahogany $185 Erbe, Mahogany . . . .$185 Kimball, Oak ... 7. . .$200 Hinze, Walnut .v... $200 -McPhail, WalnutT...$235 Vose & Sons, Walnut $250 You will need to hurry to get in on the Ground Floosj . for jQuality and Prices.' 1513-1515 Douglas Street The joy of feeling fit and fresh rewards those who heed the laws of health, and keep the habits regu lar with A. U PHILS tarswit Sale of Any Medicine in Iks World. , 5 3! i Everywhere. Iiy boxes, lOfe, 2 Sc. ClearYourSkin Save Your Hair With Cuticura Zt. each. Sample each ot "Oatteara, T Twice Told' Tales" . Th Pledge. v WHiile vlsitinsr a penitentiary some lime since a social wqrker paused before the' door of one of the cells '.o say a few encouraging, rords to ' colored prisoner. - V ."I suppose," remarked the social vorker. "that If you were given your liberty you would not take a chance' in getting in here ayain?" x " 'Deed I wouldn't, boss," de ilared the prisoner. "No mo' ob dls IOlffln h ins fn" rrtp'" "I am glad to hearthat," returned?) the othev. "what wouldyou do U you pot ut?" , ' . "What would T do?' answered the colored one. s "Why." I would ro so tah away from heah dat it would' cos' nine dollahs to sen' me a postal i oawd'-Phlladelphla Telegraph. . . ! Dividend: Time Near: tiiiiaiiSiKiiiHii: IIIlBll ConservS'tion. - IB "1 see some boys In my apple trees, flail a policeman.". ; "Would you arrest the boys, for iating a few green apples? For shame." : ' . "It isn't that, but 1 want to get rii it them now. It's cheaper to -call a l'oliceman than a doctor." Louisville j Courier-Journal. , - . down on thi bootleggers' pull,-"and then the public may gefHjte surprise of Us life as to the prominent citizens involved in the booze scandal." ; Delivering the' Dust.- : ' "1 am afraid that vour son Is a folfower.of Hat ch us." stiid the preach-; er wTii) wts calling i nNilU Gotrcs.l a lonowei . e.-wia mcu oiu j rtx. "Why. he eauglit up with that! puy Bacchus and passed him years ) atto!" Milwaukee Sentinel . ' i On July 1st many thousands of dollars will be received in dividends by those who have put , "j their money to interest i Home Bonders' Guar anteed 6 shares y ' ' ' ' It is not too late for you to become a share-' holder or increase the number of your shares.' r Interest works while you sleep and soon amounts to a good monthly salary. You can startany day with one or more shares and increase them at will, leave, your money as long as you wish and after twelve months convert your shares into cash on short notice. Shares may be ordered "by mail or in person .through the 'j . ' , - ' ' Aalerican Security Company, Fiscal Agents for i INCOiiPORATCU OMAHA f - f