THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, JULY 27, 1918. The -Om aha Bee PAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY FOUNDED 8T CDWASO ROSXWATEB VICTOR EOSEWATER, EDITOR THl 1U PUBUSHINO COMPANT. PBOPBIgTOB. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HnHil W cdv w nr puommnH oa w eeT T. y M MH all nfBH m mwtm-m " " OFFICES itbih ri hm eusua. . mma fwn'' oe sneie ' Smh OaSe-SllS . N Tora-I flft Aa liawia i m't BtiMf washiaaioa uu aw. JUNE CIRCULATION Daily 69,021 Sunday 59,572 Awnm sLwaiaUoa ft tot Beats, eolsarlbeB twora Dw'' VtiiUM Ctoculatlea - . them. AdAreee changed wqn m. THE BEE'S SERVICE FLAG. TWINHIM! II svsr ths "muny" let plsn wilt bs wel tems, wr is L---- 9 At tar nt, ths Gsrtnsa 191$ offensive ( has fcaa "knoeksd Into cocked hst Th weather mm and tha rain god ought to get legthr for a eonfab, their teamwork being very Fsrhsps (ha drop in cotton may be due in part t txcapttosal enlargement of the cottontail rabbit family. v ' , : The next round between the "Jacks" and the PJIffli" will be tUged at Lincoln. One gueu 11 to the entcome. ,;.'. : J Two pounds of sugar will be the "percap" al lowance for August, but sven that amount ought $0 keep mrybody eweet during dog days. M. Csssensv is eminently correct in hia atate meet that "Russia needs a policeman." The pa trol wagon should have been called long ago. - ...... , . The crown prices aeemi to be willing to. con slder the preient' movement ai a major action. At any ratejie found it too big for his army and called for help. Another batch of Runiaa grand dukes hai been kidnaped, the bolshevik! doubtless feeling the seed of further inspiration in the caujeoi bumaa brotherhood. ' v President Wilson's denunciation of mob spirit contains good advice for everybody, but just now Americans are not in the mood to be very patient with a certain class of offenders. I Unfortunstely hitching an appropriation onto the army bill if not the same as constructing the water main to Fort Crook. The qexfthing is' to get the pipe line put in and the post used to full capacity. . The '"lure of lucre" is the term applied by the Chicago Tribune in condemning the frauds per petrated in furnishing army supplies. We would call it "Jove of larceny" and still keep' to the alliteratioB. I ' PLAN FOR AN OMAHA BEAUTIFUL. The proceedings onder way to open up a dose' in entrance to Carter park should carry; a strong popular appeal - The value of ,a park depends largely upon its accessibility and the superiority of Omaha's park system grows out of the very fact that it provides nearby parks in close proximity to the population centers. The parks that have the advantage of natural watet should be specially cultivated and developed, since it is the experi ence of all cities that they make the most de sirable and best patronized public resorts. Some Jay we hope the plan once suggested by Park Commissioner Cornish for a river frorit boulevard, joining north and south parks, will be taken up and pushed through. He advised ac quiring the bottom lands along the Missouri, from Riverview.to Carter-lake, for the purpose of a driveway and connecting breathing spots Overlooking -water all the way. The embellish ment of the river front, furthermore, would do away with the disfiguring junk heaps, coal piles and lumber yards which at the present time make the vieW at the main entrance to Omaha look like an unkempt backyard and give the visiting stranger a bad first impression that has to be Removed by later inspection of the city. We can have an Omaha beautiful in time, and a not very long distant time, by merely utilizing our natural advantages if we will only look far enough ahead and work steadily toward that end. Cotton on the Way Back. King Cotton is coming down from the lofty perch that was almost beyond reach, and his re tirement is somewhat . disorderly. Principally this is due to the collapse of a "bull" movement in -New York, where prices had been boosted be yond reason,' and against which the crop report sent s series of high explosive. In a single day the price dropped $8.50 a bale, and the total re cession for the first four days of the current week is put at $16.50 a bale. Cotton is the one great staple of the country that has so far escaped governmental regulation Southern representatives in congress were able to aecure the exclusion of cotton from laws that gave the president power to fix prices, andjthus the speculators were left free to work their will. One result of this has been that on none of the necessaries has the selling price advanced to the degree noted of cotton and cotton products. Less than four years ago the whole country was urged to contribute to the support of the southern plant ers. ''Buy a bale of cotton," wear cotton gar ments, do everything to assist the cotton planter to stave off ruin. Then, when it became neces sary to head off ha grain gamblers, who were sending the price of foodstuffs high above the reach of the public, cotfon was especially ex cluded, and the priee of 9 cents in 1914 went to 45 cents, and even 50 cents, in 1917. , For the present, losses fall chiefly on specula tors, for whom little sympathy will be felt, as their open attempt at profiteering removes them from any consideration on this score. The inci dent, though, should fores Washington to realize that cotton is as proper a subject for price fixa tion treatment as is wheat, corn, beef, pork, steel or coal. .. .:.;.'.;.l!ftV ' V r When the government takes the telegraph and the telephont, in addition to the railroads, mighty alim pickings will be left for state railway com-mlssionsr-No wonder our commission protests against either federal or local control of public service utilities. ' In the Cass of James Fryatt f This is the second anniversary of the death of Captain James Fryatt, executed by the Germans because he sought to defend his ship from being destroyed by, a submarine. On s trip through tht North Sea Captain Fryatt tried to ram a U-boat that had. mads an unsuccessful attempt to sink his vessel Later he was captured, given s hearing before a aummary cour-martial and promptly shot as a "franc tireur." The outrageous aspect of the case Ties in the assumption by the "Germans that a merchant vessel has no right to undertake a defense against a warship. According to the plea of the Hun in the Fryatt case, if a merchantman resist or attempt to escape it loses all standing and becomes legitimate prey, with no recourse. The real purpose, of course, was to terrify captains of t commerce carriers, so that they would risk loss of vessel rather than incur the penalty of execution for "piracy" in event of cap ture. Only one other outrage in the kaiser's long Series of violations of all laws takes the ssms clsssUcatioa as that of the execution of Captain Fryatt It is the murder of Edith CavelL No blacker spots stain the record, Bor will they be efaaed by say sophistry or subterfuge the high cttalasls may hereafter present James Fryatt'a fats' did not dster other captains from attacking juadsrses pirates and hia name will long stand in Exaad's annals as a barrier to friendship with jths nstion that put its trust in the terror. . True War Spirit Among Workingmen, . A ring of real victory sounds through Vthe message sent by the Woolwich munition workers to fheir disturbed and ill-tempered brothers and sisters st Coventry: '"Strike, and you may go to hell. Woolwich , will remain at work and earn the right to, shake the hand of the soldier when he returnC So far the merits of the matter in dispute at the Coventry works are not fully un derstood on this side, but it has to do with an or der of the British war council the workers are dissatisfied with. Whatever it is, it can contain nothing to give it such paramount Importance as to warrant interference with the war by a cessa tion of work. Absolute' proof is furnished in plenty that the worker has more at stake, in the great war than any other class. Hia status in aft free countries, built up by ages of hard effort, is threatened by the German ides, and if the war is lost through his defection he will bS responsi ble for riveting the shackles on his own limbs. This is not a figment of fancy, for the condition of the workingmen in Germany before the war and now is the best evidence of how government from the top deals with the masses. Workers at the Woolwic arsenal have caught the spirit, and give the creed forcible expression. It should be adopted by all American workers. "Strike, and you can go to hell; stay on the job, and you can shake hands with the soldier when-he re turns." "N ' '"y. v , . 1 t' V George Sylvester Viereck admits having spent $100,000, received from Bernstorff and Dumba for German propaganda, but he did not say how much of.it went to circulating copies of "The Fatherland" embellished with that famous front page portrait of our United States Senator Hitch cock. .; ,. "i ' Epizootic and malaria are said to bs epidemic smong the Huns, but the most serious ailment of that army just now is due to the presence of a lot of' husky Yankee lads, who are putting real fear into the hearts of soldiers who hsd been told they were Invincible snd who believed It. About the New Style Policemen ; What Public Expects and Receives-From the Guardians y of the Law J , New York Post - ; :i 'Z ;:C'V..,: r Readers or crand WtMtlock a reminis cences will recall his strong conviction, like that bf "Golden Rule" Jones, of the weak ness of thepolice and the injustice of the police system. TheNtwo for time paid the expenses of trial of all Toledo citizens ar rested for petty offences, believing that, "for instance, if some poor girKwere arrested. i and a jury were demanded for her, and her case given all the care and attention it would have received nad she been wealthy, the 00- Mice were . . . apt to be a little more caretui ot tne iiDerties or individuals, iney halted the practice of arresting people on suspicion, simply by .showing juries that "there is nothing more absurd than that the policemen should make criminals o( people by merely suspecting them, and sending them to prison on that sole account" As Whitlock summarized.the results of the cru sade, "the policemen of Toledo had their clubs taken away ffom them, and learned to help people, and not to hurt' them if they could avoid it." " yhe reform: spread to Cleveland, and has reached one American city after another. People Tio longer say "Call the police" merely when they want an arrest, but often when they want help; social workers regard the police as humane allies; and innovations like the employment of po licewomen are common. How the movement manifested itself in New York in the last administration, ex-Commissioner Woods de scribes with intimate detail in his recent Princeton lecture, now published in book form. The attitude of too many policemen to wards criminals was once that of the deputy commissioner who, asked by Woods what he should say in a speech to Sing Sing con victs, replied: "That's all right, go and tell them you are glad to see them all there 1" Policemen are not sentimentalists, and are men of simple rather than complex ideas upon their work. They have a professional pride, and since the days of Peel they have been told that the prime aim of their profes sion is the punishment of crime. It has been the task of reformers to teach them that re pression is the aim, and that prevention is nine parts of repression. With the Con firmed criminal the only way of dealing is to make detection as overwhelmingly proba-' ble as possible, arrest as prompt as possible, and trial much, more speedy than it now is. But the natural criminal, as the scientists who have destructively criticised Lombroso, and laymen like Josiah Flynt, agree, is rare. With Flynt. who denied Lombroso's tyoe- marks, asserting them either the marks of bodily and mental suffering in prison, 'or of no significance, Woods partly afigna himself, saying that he found too many in his own face I Andt beyond certain limits of effective ness the repression of crime by punishment cannot go. Patrols may be multiplied; sig nal service perfected; the detective force kept unceasingly alert; the record system i t j 1 it.- j 4: SCienlincaiiy orucrcu, aim mc aumuusuauuii improved crime will go on, and,, says Mr. Woods, "we shall never go far towards rid ding the community of criminals until we get at the breeding places." One inspector here has estimated the amount of crime that might be stopped by the mechanical perfec tion of conventional police methodsat 50 per cent nl the whole, and another at 1 per cent But the casual criminal or man forced into crime can be prevented from falling into wrongdoing if society can surround him. as well as itself with certain safeguards, s The .citizen who leaves a door, unlocked, or bis window open within reach of. valua bles, or sticks; his wallet loosely in his pocket, is a humble accessory to crime. So is the business "house that tolerates the sus pected employe without precaution. When in recent seasons the hotels have bean great ly crowded, managers as well as police have. been expected to take measures against pick pockets and confidence men. But this is apart from dealing with poverty. , O. Henry's story of the tramp who shattered a plate glass window to find a warm haven on the Island is paralleled by Mr. Woods', of the man who, in 1915, hia family starving sent a paving stone through a showcase Because something had to be done, and he could think of nothing else. ' When that winter the city and the . charity societies did all they could to keep men "on their feet," the police assisted, furnishing coupons exchangeable for provisions and hunting Work. Feeble mindedness must be faced, and it is becom ing a backward city that has no psychiatric bureau to advise the police and judgesas to this problem. Mr. -Woods estimates the number of the mentally defective attested daily here at 25, and admits that too many are sent surely and unnecessarily into ave nues of crime. The drug habit, estimated to hold 200.000 persons in New York, is be ing fought with the assistance of new federal and state laws, out tne Dartie must oe long. Nothing ..but drink makes more or more hopeless criminals. Juvenile delinquency must be handled as tactfully as ihe children s court is beginning to do it; and released con victs musttbe helped to a fresh start One of them told Woods that "the only stuff we can t stand is the f rodigal ion stuff; they know it is the manly as distinguished from the mawkish attitude that means the square deal. . r Mr. Woods concludes that we are bound to have a preventive police because the pubjic will demand it and will reward suc cess;" a rather courageous statement after the last election. It will not be easy, largely because a "preventive police" implies not only an internal reorganization of the policfc forces of our cities, but a new relationship between them and other city departments. Expert methods of co-operation with the agencies administering education, health, recr reation, employment bureaus, and so on must be learned before prevention will amount to much. The old police department was usually partly bad in itself, and partly bad in its aloofness; it must change in both respects. New York Post. nog up ale iImtn and yok ffct with Uau "ppr." Cincinnati Enquirer. Fathr Mr Scar, IT I ahonld dl pnnl leu, art 70a veil prcard to flint your Danzhtar I think to. father, I'v bei through threa naemnti already. Balti more American. v . ' "Whaff Flubdub grinning about?" . "He bought aome war atampa, geta good lnterett aa hia Inveatment, got a klaa from a pretty aetreaa for buying them, and hia wife can't aay a word tor fear of appearing unpatriotic." Louisville Courier-Journal. How London Wakes to War George R. Sims in It is 5 o'clock in the morningby set of Parliament when I leave the, shelter of the roof beneath which my household still slum bers and sten out into the waking world of London. As the green of turf and tree, a little grey in the early morning light, meets n T9T T think nf th anno- nf Clarihel that B - w - --- - . was so popular in the drawing-rooms of my boyhood." - 1 ' , "And the old, old story was told again At 5 o'clock in the morning.''. ' "Tri n1T ftld atnrv" wn ah idvll of pas toral peace. Today the great world of Lon don is waking to the grim realities of the tm't anrt tn!l nf war. Because of the toll of war the women who toil are as early afoot as the men. At 3 o'clock the young women who have the lights 0' London in their care are on their way to extinguish the lamps. Soon after 5 I meet brave little Waacs in parties of twos and threes making their way to the Tubes and the Metropolitan stations. There are no motor-buses in Baker street yet, and very little traffic. A railway van rumbles by, a party of officers flash past me in a motor car, and a couple of milk carts clang out their "songs before sunrise." 7rt a quarter to 6 Moorgate street is just rousinfuself with s yawn, but outside the station a pretty railway girl in uniform with roses in her cheeks snd forget-me-nots in her eyes, is lying in wait for early comers to sell them a flag for the Railway Benevolent in stitution. At 5:50 my buttonhole has been benevolently beflagged by the comely con ductorette, and her brgnt smile haunts me still. v I . By Moorgate street and Finsbury square I make my way to Liverpool street. There is plenty of work -going on in the railway yards as I pass, but the streets are deserted except for a few laborers sauntering work ward with their midday meal wrapped in the conventional red handkerchief, and ' little groups of charwomen boond for the buildings and houses in the neighborhood and gossip ing as they go, but with the langor of early mom. . v ; . i .-? Towards 6 o'clock a rivulet of humanity begins to trickle into the city. It is made up mainly of elderly and middle-aged men of the laboring and artisan class. 7 At 6:30 I am in the apacious coffee room of a big railway hotel At over s dozen ta bles groups of officers are already breakfast ing. . ' . , -- At 7 o'clock the great terminus Is s scene of intense animation. The departure plat forms are crowded with khaki The arrival platforms sre filled again and sagirt by the Inflowing tide of humanity. Train after train arrives from the suburbs snd environs of Lon don and discharges its freight snd from s dozen platforms a broad stream flows jout into the world of work. The war has made London Chronicle. a marked difference in the character of these mighty streams of humanity that converge upon London in the early hours of the morn ing. The few young men in them seem to be tossed to and fro like derelict spars by the surging seas or femininity. Soon after 7 there are hundreds of young girls in the incoming crowds. Some of them are not going direct to their Work. Their offices and places of business will not be open yet. and so the station waiting rooms are packed with them, and many of them una resting piaccs in - aucn oi me , city entireties as open early for their accommoda tion. : ' These girls sre compelled to come to their work with time to spare. If they left it till the last train they might fail to find room in it then they would be late at business. This fear of being late has a marked effect on the attitude of the crowds that are now beginning to wait for tramcars and motor 'buses. Every where you seeanxious faces and eyes peering eagerly into the distance. There is a notable cjiange in the character of the morning invasion as the hour ad vances. The majority of the girls in the 7 o'clock crowd are young and pale and poorly dressed. TJieir skirts are skimpy and there is little attempt at finery. They carry their midday meal in brown paper parcel, and many of them have a well-worn paper covered sixpenny novel under their arm; At 8 o'clock there is an appreciable differ ence in the type of inflowing femininity. The girls are older. Many of them' are young women and women who are not so young. They are fairly well dressed, and they carry their provisions' for the day in an attache case Many of them have a novel in volume form under fheir arm, and some have brought flowers from the garden, it may be to adorn their office desk, or it may be as friendship's offering to a fellow employe of the other sex. At 9 o'clock the young women who flow in- graceful streams along the city ways are quite daintily and fashionably dressed. They wear silk blouses and carry vanity bags.. They do not carry brown paper parcels or-camouflage their food in attache cases. Their sal aries permit them to lunch at a restaurant By 10 o'clock the city and the West-end are wide-awake. Londoners are up and out and the great world of London is at work to win the war. You have only to watch the awakening of Lf ndon to understand how great and glorious a part women are playing in the world's fight for freedom. From east and west snd north and south since the ear liest hours of the new-born day a noble army of women has been spreading itself over the capital to be the working bees in ths great hives of industry eonnected with the war and the munitions of war. to take the place of men in all the industrial, commercial and cler ical occupations. r Here and There The British war cabinet has beld 100 meetings within a year. J Scotland has a min capable of turn-Wr " tmr mg out zuv .ona oi paper a ween irom sawdust " . k Ten thousand firms, employing- I,- 500,000 men ana women, are making munitions In Great Britain. The United club, with 600 members, all self-supporting girls, has opened a fine, big club house m New York. Girl workers in German factories are getting 11.20 in cash out of their wages weekly and are compelled to use the rest to buy war bonds. England has an organization called the Zetetlcal society, the members of which believe the world to be fiat like a pancake. Instead of round like an orange. . Two odd and brief .epitaphs are to be found In Belfast cemetery. On one of them, erected to the memory of a lazy fellow by one who ldently knew him well, are the words, "Asleep, (as usual).'' On the. other, "Left Till Called For." . . : Bread is now baked on board some of the British warships, where a spe cial set of bakeries has recently been constructed. Thua the fleet is supplied by parent ships with-the day's bake and the old "hard tack" has been sup-; plemented by good bread, freshly baked. . ' - , Daniel Webster referred to Eng land's morning drum-beat keeping company with the sun and stars and encircling Hhe globe 'With one con tinual and unbroken, strain of the martial airs of England. Neither does the sun set on the .Stars and Stripes, for whtn it is p. ntrattAttu Island, Alaska, it is 9:86 a. m. next day . in eastern Maine. r ' THE REVEILLE. Bret Harte. Hark! Z hear the tramp of thoueanda And of armed men the hum; Lol a natlon'a hoata have gathered Round the quick alarming d ram Say In t,- ''Come, , . x v Freemen, aome I , x 4Sre your heritage be waited,' aald the quick alarming dram. Let ma of my heart take eonnaeli War la not of Ufa the eum; Who ahall atay and reap the harrwrt , When the autumn dan ehall eomef But the drum Echoed "Comet Death ahall reap tha braver harfeet," laid the eolemn eoundlng drum. ''But when won tha eomlng battle. What ot profit aprlnga therefrom f What U eonqueet, aubjugatlon, Kren greater Uli become T" But the drum , Anawered, "Comet Ton mmt do the eum to prove It," laid the Tankee-aniwerlng drum. ."What lf. 'mid eannon'a thunder, Whlatllng ahot and bunting bomb, When my brothere fall around me, ' 1 Should my heart grow cold and numb?" But the drum Anawered, "Comef Better there In death united, than In life I TODAY One) Tear Ago Today la the War. Russians evacuated Caernowlts, cap ital of Bukowlna. German aircraft raided Paris, doing li-irht damage. leeond contingent of American trops arrived at a European port C" Day Ws Celebrate. . " lYank C. Best real estate man, 1671. ' w t;:ie M. James, United States sens t:r from Kentucky, born In Crittenden t.tr ty, Kentucky, 47 years ago. . L irrtao'n Fisher, artist and illustra te, born ih Brooklyn, N. X 41 years t-x ' ,' tl'i ay to History. 1776 -Congress resolved to estab T an army hospital and appointed -mln Church physician general. Lie -General O. O. Howard suo X " 4 General McPhersoa in the i naad of the federal army of Ten- U s. l- ' V- t ;l A French fleet visited Cron- f" V Russia, and waa received with l ei&atle demonstrations. l.-SI Orville Wright mads a new t: rs record for the aeroplane, being f i t-s air one hour one minute 40 sec i - i and carrying a passenger. till Austrian airmen dropped tr;s on the Italian city of Verona. I It Captain James Fryatt of the " h eteamehip Brussels, after trial vy (rourt-martlaJ (or attempting to 1t a German rubmarifl. was exs r 2 X iTritses, Just SOYearsAgo Today George W. Cook has been appointed general western freight and passenger agent of the Missouri Paciflo in Im mediate charge of freight and pas senger trafflo in Colorado, Utah and northern New Mexico. A number of soldiers arrived In Omaha from Forts Sidney, Robinson and, Laramie, enroute for ths Bells vuS rifle range. -,. . . , ,j The ' county commissioners are spending today at Lincoln laboring with the state board of equalization to aecure a reduction of - Douglas county taxes. County Commissioner O'Keefe Is in Chicago visiting a niece. ; BUndstghS, : ' "I can't afford an automobile." . , But I . thought you bad one." "I have. That's how t discovered that I can't afford ns,'V-Boston Transcript, State Press Comment Norfolk Press; Old Mother Hub bard went to the cupboard to get her poor dog some bread. . She fed him a slab or this substitute stun ana now the poor dog is dead. Norfolk News: They say dogs are bringing $5 apiece in German meat markets. A cheerful thought may be they'll get all the dachshunds eat en up before the war's over. Gothenburg Independent: We'd like to see It rain, you bet we'd like to see It poor, we d like to see you get so wet that you could kick no more, we a Uke to see tne corn grow tall three feet above your head. You'd kick ana say the ears are small, and kick .when you are dead. Ho wells Journal:- . The Lincoln Journal, which has been a defender of every citizen whose patriotism has been oa crooked ever since America got Into the war, never loees an op portunity to take a shot at the State Council of Defense. The publication Is doing a distinct service tor the kaiser, as much si as a masked bat tery oa ths western front Hiding behind ths eloak ,ot Americanism Its editors are .tabbing in the back the very men who are behind the various war activities- that are so Important to ths success of the great war. The people of ths stats are becoming wise to ths situation and to be denounced by the Journal Is an honor and marks a man with special bade et pa triotism. V Whittled to a Point irtl 1... C.ntlnal AnVWftT this uunu -.r tri.A tAntr Th la Ann without OU VUU -t ' any highly colored advance announce ments. .. ,.,:- n....iita TVlfcnna; And they're lassoing American regiments from al lied airplanes to Keep wpm um ac ting to Berlin ahead of Schedule. -1st Louis Globe-Democrat: Travel- - v mittitvi tn rarrv era- dentials with them or submit to an In vestigation, before being permitted to SD6&aC Baltimore American: The proposed tax oa the household will cause, even a more faithful and diligent reading of department store advertising, for tne Bargain wui au un uuyui tance. - '" Atlanta Constitution: In point of troop movement overseas we- are six nMihi ahn.d of the original urogram. says Secretary Baker. Which brings the ena ox me war au sue moau nearer than . most of us calculated on. i" ' ' Stars ana stripes:: -Tne airxerence between American and French auto mobile driving Is thin: la America whea your tire mows up you say, flood heavens! -There goes our tire! and In France v you say, "Hooray! That was only the tire. . Louisville Courier-Journal: The Boston Globs finds It "very difficult to get drunk ontwo and three-fourths per cent beer. Why not try a pro prietary tonic, or one of those medi cines for women which are sold in all of ths drug stores It you earnestly desire to nayj a high-lonesome? Twice Told Tales 7 Out and In. , t Representative Klnkald of Nebraska was talking about Russia's repudia tion of her national debt "Francs is hit the hardest by this repudiation," he said. "France has I forget how many billions of francs Invested in the Russian loan. "It's a good thing for us Ameri cans that we never went In for Russian-securities. We are like the banker. The banker said of a man of the Russian bolshevik type: "When he called I was out but I'd been out mors lf Fd been in.' " ' Lawbreaker. Representative Foss bt Ohla was talking about .the latest submarine atrocity. . "Such an act" ne saia, "is. of course, against International law, but what difference does that make to Germany? ' "Germany! Pah! t - 'If the allies may be said to rule wvm ' nrminf mat wlttt truth be said to waive the rules." -'V- " 1 ' i ' Ha Couldn't Say. "See here, Rastus," said the new arrival at the hotel, "do you mean to tell me that this egg Is fresh T" It was whea It was laid, sun," re plied the waiter. "And when was that pray!" de manded the guest. "Ah dunno, boss." replied Rastus. "Dls yere Is mah first season at dls ysrs hotsl, suh." Dallas News, a recreant Cornel" Thua they anawered hoping, fearing, Some In faith, and doubting, eome. Till a trumpet-voice proclamlng, Said, "My choeen people, comet" Then the drum Lo! waa dumb. For the great heart of tha nation, throb bing, answered, "Lord, wa eome!'' SAID IN FUN. Medley (enthuslaaUcally) What a change a baby makee about a house. Hedley Well, I don't know about that There's been very little change about our house since the baby's advent Houston Poet. "Been making a cruise In houseboat, eh T That'a a good way to avoid agents, "peddlers and the like." "I thought so, too. But tha second. day of our trip we were hailed by a man la a skiff who was taking orders for a patent can opener." Birmingham Age-Herald. "Selene aaya that w eaa easily wear paper clothing." "We might obtain soma artistic reralta with wallpaper." Tea, and tha girls eould keep happy get- Hospe Says: Dorit starve Vour "soul Iry skuttiruj aat good music. ' ' Jou say yovt ' cant play? yox can play any music you wish witK the music rol w of a playcrpiaTva w Come in- &sV to . Wwiy rtecesyou ' like, lahe home ru?w , rolls for your neglect 1 ed player-piano. ' ' Pianos : Player-Pianos : Rolls Vicfrolos i Records: Sheet Mttfic mm- 1513-15 Douglas St NOT OILS ft' ft?,' A 1 ';: J.J. : "JToiiness is OooftThfliiTr Yra" UEI HI SALE' Toilet Goods and Household Drugs SATURDAY, JULY 27TII, AT THE Sherman & McCorinell Drug Stores As wo have before reported, we srs experiencing little trouble in getting merchandise and as tangible evidence, have received 102 cases of merchandise at our Twelfth street warehouse during the last five days. These shipments comprising: Two Targe cases of Rubber Goods from New Haven, Conn., two barrels, of Witch Hazel from Essex, Conn., wth shipments from other points as faf west as San Francisco, Cal. America is still taking are of itself, but can do so best if cool ness and confidence are preserved and a large measure of real work be given by those who are able. ; ' 50c Lambert's Listerine. . .39d $1.25 Pinkham's Comp. . .98 50c tSloan's Liniment for. .34 BOc Caldwell's pepsin Syrup for ..39t 80s Bromo Seltzer for. ...19 85c Jad Salts for. . . . ... . . .69 35s Fletcher's Castoria. . . .244 50c Limestone Phosphate 344 1.50 TSeott's Emulsion.. $1.14 Sal Soda, 1-lb. pkg.. 54 l-Xti. Muls. Team :Borax. . .144 : Household Ammonia, 104-154, 25c Carter's Little Liver Pills ' for .. 194 Bc Hinds' Honey and Almond Cream for 344 50c Pe-be-co Tooth Pasts 394 Eagls Condensed Milk, can .4 .. ..........194 50c Pape's Diapepsin for. .344 25c Liberty; Dry Cleaner. .194 25c Bingo Corn Remedy.., 144 60a Denver Mud for. 444 Hire's Root Beer Extract v Bottle) holding make firm galls, J for.........' 75c Abonita Lilac Vegetale. Special Ssturday for. . . .594 35c Arabo Bath Tablets... 19 Colgate's or Williams' Quick, and .Easy Shaving Soap, cake. .84 Mosquito Talcum, per box. 254 Sherman's Lavender Shampoo Crearatl per Jar .".354, 604 60s Galatea Powder, iour shades, for ....394 CIsar Specials Henry Georgs or Portuondo ' Cigars, Saturday 6 for. .254 Flor de Melba or Lady Cur- , son Cigars, each. . .... .74 tt-lb bo t jure Peroxide.. 9 $1.00 Eno's Fruit Salt.... 894 4-os. bot Gran. Eff. Phospate Sodium for . .. i . .. , . . .394 r Pears' Unscented Soap, Sat urday, eaks .124 Special Sale v Madam Yale's Preparations 25c Tale's Antiseptic for. . 194 25c Yale's Hair Tonic for. .194 $1 Yale's Elixir of eauty 894 tpSQ Yale's Magical Secret 984 $i.50 Yale's Face Enamel, white, flesh or brunette...... 94 . . . ' Sberman & UeQonnell Drug Co. iota aaei ni"-y . v - . . N BL Cor. ISth and Farttaa Sta- Haadsome CommoOious. HarrarJ aaraaatr. Mth aa SfrMteSa . - . Waat Ea4 rixaraaacy. Sla Streets. Oenaral Offkiaa. U flew, . Faraaaa atraata. .A 1 Fa 4 DaSa I S aa4