Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 13, 1918, Page 8, Image 8

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    THE - BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13,- 1918.
The Omaha Bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER
VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR
TH BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, PROPRIETOR
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Aiml frew, ul kqilIi Th. be la uirtnDer. exoluejtele
tntltled to lilt um for publication of all newt lipatohe endued
to tt or not otiierwiw credited In till peper, and also Um local
ctwt publtahed herein. All rttbla of publican oo of our apeclal
d!itciiw sr. also reeervvd.
OFFICES:
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htm Vork 28 Fifth Ate. South Omaha 2318 N St.
f)L Umu New U'a of t'otumerce. Council iiluffe 14 M. Main St.
Wsihlnslon 1S11 Q Ht Liucoui-Uttl. Bulldini.
.' . .. OCTOBER CIRCULATION 1
Daily 68,570 Sunday 60,405
Aieragt circulatiun for the month tubtcrlbed and sworn to b;
K. K. Raasn, Circulation Manager.
Subscriber leaving th city ahould hav. Ths Be mailed
to them. Address changed often a requested.
r!E BEE'S SERVICE FLAG
if
ii
lli1IIIIIIM
' Ever. t!ie weather man lias caught the
Spirit.
The squeal of the defeated Hun is a natural
refrain to his hymn of hate.
Munitions go to the bottom of the list of
.nonessentials. Hooray!
He may have been "Pad Bill" in Berlin, but
in Holland he is "SweefWilliam."
Hoover still reminds us of our duty to others
as regards food. We must save or some will
starve,
Carl Hapsburg and Bill Hohenzollern can
inaugurate' a new series of letters on the topic
of "Ltold you so."
The next procession the world will watch
, with interest will be that of the German army
going home in a barrel. , t f
If Foch left out anything, which does not
appear to be so, the omission can be corrected
by the peace conference.
Keep right on saving food; millions in Eu
rope are hungry, and will be fed only as Amer
ica can provide for them.- '
., . '
Suggestions that Christmas shopping be
don$ early are still of all their original force.
Distribute the traffic and help save light.
4
The big revenue bill may undergo some mod
ification, in light of recent events. However,
congress should hurry up and let us know the
worst as soon, s possible.
Poor little Holland has her woes further in
creased by being required to furnish asylum for
the greatest criminal of all time, but he is safe
there from his own people at least.
Hindy offers his sword to the socialists, but
they will fall a lot in our estimation if they ac
cept his services. Even a modern packing
he-use, could not use such a butcher.
.I,"-
; "Jim" Hanley clings to the hope that the
soldier vote may elect Lobeck, but why he
thinks so does not appear. Is he still of the
belief that no republicans went to war?
Mr. Burleson's efficiency plans for railway
mail service get fine illustration in the fact that
appeals for democratic votes, issued and mailed
in New York in October, are' just now reaching
Omaha. '
The united war work drive is just as impres
' sive in all its aspects as ever it was, and the
necessity for making it a success is fully as im
perative.' Make the giving a joy by giving
promptly and liberally.
Von Hindenburg is to be questioned by a
committe from the" soldiers' and workers' coun
cil, who will decide whether he is an asset or
a liability. If he ever gets back to his Masur
ian swamps he will be glad to stay there.
Profiteers, big and little, may take warning
front the proceedings of Monday. In cele
brating the overthrow of the kaiser abroad the
people indicate what may be the fate of the
meaner lot of oppressors at home.
The Hun was frightful to the very end, a
fact attested to by his drenching small French
towns with poison gas on Monday morning just
before the hour for the armistice to become
effective. Those things will be remembered
long after peace comes.
Spreading Joy in France
Nothing has so delighted the French who
have been brought into touch with the Amer
ican troops as their wonderful gayety that
neither the hardships nor the tragedies of war
can dim or dampen. The Paris LTllustration
has had many an article couched in the highest
terms of appreciation, describing the effect upon
French village of the behavior of. American
troops both before they went into battle as well
' as after they came out. Their singing and dancing-Mho
dance including the familiar college
campus "snap the whip" or "snake dance;" their
teal for cleanliness, their smiling faces, the
whiteness of their teeth, their chivalry, and,
what touches the French abave all, their ardent
belief in their cause and the idea that they are
there to redress a gross wrong, and to be the
happy vehicle of justice to France and to the
world. All these things are painted by able
?rench correspondents and writers, so that it is
the simple truth and not the fond admiration
for its own that leads Sophie Borie Norris to
accentuate this phase of the American "crusade
over there. Indeed, her vivid pen picture of
these boys, well or wounded, who have a ca
pacity for gayety that goes hand in hand with a
sound head, even .to the insouciance of being
inveterate "souvenir collectors," is one of those
heartening things that must be read along tvvith
the more solemn lists of those who have made
.he great sacrifice. Only those who have a good
cause and a clear conscience can be gay, and
that despite their amazement at the "yelling"
(college cheers and Indian warwhoops and cal
liope calls) and at the shrill "whistling," about
which they have their doubts, the French see
the fine side to this almost rollicking gayety and
art telling their countrymen all about it, is a
fine feather in our cap. With all the horrors,
we have a right to be rap-v -s tv of au
tocracy impends. Philadelphia Ledger?'-
PART OF THE PEACE PROGRAM. .
So many big things confront the world as a
result of the end of the war that the best
thought will be engaged for some time in ar
ranging the program for future action. Con
sent will generally be given to the proposal that
our first business must be to feed the hungry.
The Bee long ago pointed out conditions that
prevail in central Europe, where more than a
hundred million people now face starvation.
Had it not been that the barrier raised by Ger
many was broken down, millions would surely
have perished for want of food. With our ut
most endeavor many of these will not be
reached. To send supplies, then, is the immedi
ate business of the hour.
Fortunately, the change in conditions of
j .ocean traffic will permit the tapping of great
j stores of food held in the Antipodes, in South
j American, and other lands where it has been
! unavailable because of lack of shipping. But
this will not be enough, nor can it be reached
early enough to meet the emergency. America
must provide at once for the wants of Europe.
This naturally entails on our people a con
tinuation of the food conservation program to
which we have become accustomed. Just as we
gave last winter to feed Belgium, Holland,
Switzerland, Spain and the Scandinavian coun
tries, while aiding our Allies to keep up their
war effort, so must we give now that starvation
will not complete the work the war begun. Un
til another crop can be sown and harvested in
Europe its population must be fed by the world
outside, and the greater share of this duty will
fall on the United States. y
When the food crisis is passed we can take
up the other details of the work of restoration
there.
TODAY
Right in the Spotlight.
The 80th birthday of Joseph
F. Smith will be celebrated today
by members of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints, com
monly known as the Mormon
church, of which he is the president.
President Smith is the nephew of
the Joseph Smith who founded the
church. Was born in the village of
Far West, Mo., in 1838, he was but
10 years of age when the great Mor
mon exodus to the Salt Lake valley
took place. The youth drove an ox
team in the long journey across 1' e
plains and for some years after ar
riving at Salt Lake he worked as a
mannal laborer. Then he went to
the Sandwich islands as a mission
ary, returning in 1858 to become a
member of the High council.
Further work as a missionary in
Europe and other partswas follow
ed in 1866 by hi ordination as an
apostle. In 1880 he reached the
post of second counselor of the
church and in 1901, following the
death of Lorenzo Snow, he was
chosen to the presidency.
Founding a German Republic.
Herr Schiedeman has, according to reports
from Berlin, declared the German republic from
the steps of the Reichstag building. In general
terms, the overthrow of the empire has been
made complete and a new. government set up.
For the present this is essentially socialist, as
that party already had the organized machinery
of government to seize and exercise control.
It is also reported that an agreement has been
reached between the moderates and extremists,
intended to insure the world against a repetition
of the bolshevik excesses such as occurred in
Russia. In some way the proceedings remind
us of what took place in Paris in 1871, although
as yet there has been no conflict between the
"Commune" and the National Guard, such as
marked the transition in France. That the dis
orderly and criminal element does exist in Ger
many is admitted, and the new government will
chieve much if it can maintain order without
calling on the conquering armies of the Allies
to assist in putting down and quieting the tur
bulent. Also, it may be questioned if in
Schiedeman, Liebknecht, Ebert and their kind
will be found a group of patriotic statesmen
comparable to Thiers, Gambetta, Favre and
their associates, who so successfully founded
and fostered the French republic. The German
people are really on trial now, and as they be
have so will they establish themselves before
the world.
One Year Ago Today in the War.
Resignation of the Painleve min
istry in France.
Austro-G.rman troops crossed the
Piave river at the point nearest
Venice.
Twenty-seven survivors arriving
at an American port reported the
sinking of the steamer D. N. Luck
enbach in the Bay of Biscay.
In Omaha 30 Years Ago Today.
Secretary Nattinger of the Board
of Trade left for Chicago to reprc
sent the city at the meeting of the
convention for the boards of trade.
A petition signed by fifty citizens
was submitted to the council pray-
America at the Peace Table.
Very soon the world will witness the most
momentous gathering of nations in its history.
Around the peace table will assemble represen
tatives of all the governments of the world, to
determine" the future of civilized life and na
tional existence. Lessons taught by the war
will be crystallized into binding agreements and
given the validity of treaties to be supported by
the moral and physical force and power of the
nations. Our president has never indicated his
choice for the American delegation. It is but
natural that he will want to be present himself,
but whether he will break the tradition, as he
has others, that has prevented the president
from leaving the country during his term of
office may not now be answered. The delega
tion should include our ablest men. In this the
president has an opportunity to redeem a funda
mental mistake of his policy and permit repub
licans to share in the great work. In this con
nection the names of Elihu Root, Henry Cabot
Lodge and other great Americans naturally
come to mind. The democratic party, too, has
its able men, and it should be possible to make
up a delegation that will represent the nation
and not a political party. Samuel Gompers will
undoubtedly be one of the group, and others
might be suggested, but the decision is with the
president, whose selections will be awaited with
interest. '
Harsh Terms Justified.
Dr. Solf, German foreign secretary, promptly
approaches President Wilson with a request
that the conditions of the armistice be "miti
gated." This was to have been expected. The
nation that endorsed and boasted of Bismarck's
perfidy in 1870, when he deliberately destroyed
a dispatch that would have preserved peace and
substituted one that forced a war; that has
gloried in the terms he dictated to conquered
France, and has lived since then to enforce
those terms, could scarcely be expected to abide
the application of justice.
The conditions of the armistice are not in
tended to crush Germany; they are designed to
protect the world outside. Only with a dis
armed and impotent Germany can the world
feel secure. To plead in the name of the Ger
man people at this time is to remind the world
that these same people gave their sanction to
the treaties of Brest-Litovsk and Bucharest;
that they shared in the loot of Belgium, of
"France, of Italy and of other countries where
the Hun came into control. Not alone the ap
propriation of property for military uses, but
wholesale despoliation scientifically carried on
under direction of government experts and sup
plemented by private theft, this climaxed by
the wanton destruction of everything that en
tered into the home life of the people in occu
pied territory. AH, this done with premedita
tion, careful deliberation and diabolical thor
oughness. "With what measure ye mete it shall be
meted out again unto ye" was notspoken in
vain. Germany is not to be looted, as were its
victims, but will be required to make restitution
and reparation. The Hun showed no mercy,
and now will receive only justice.
Prophecies that the peak of high prices has
j been passed were based on the fact that the buy
i ing power of the public had reached its limit.
Time is ripeior old Hi Cost to come down,
ing for the removal of the W. C. T.
U. hospital from the present site.
Mrs. Charles H. Dewey left for
the east via Milwaukee.
General J. C. McBride of Lincoln,
member-elect of the legislature, is
visiting in the city.
Mrs. Geeorge M. Cooper and
daughter have returned from the
east and are at home at 811 South
Thirty-third street.
Rev. Mr. Copeland left on the
Union Pacific for Spokane and will
be three days and four nights on
the road.
Miss, Maggie O'Brien has re
turned from Council Bluffs.
James Householder has gone to
Hastings, la., to engage in the
stock shipping business.
The Day We Celebrate.
Dr. F. S. Owen, oculist, born 1856;.
H. N. Jewett. wholesale lumber
merchant, born 1849.
W. H. Rowland, former traveling
passenger agent for the Pennsyl
vania lines here, born 1869.
Joseph F. Smith, president of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints, born at Far West, Mo., 80
years ago.
Louis D. Brandeis, associate
justice of the supreme court of the
United States, born in Louisville,
62 years ago. '
Prince Albert, the ruler of the
little principality of Monaco, born
70 years ago.
John Drew, one of the foremost
actors of the Ametican stage, born
in Philadelphia, 65 years ago.
This Day in History.
1732 John Dickinson, author of
the celebrated "Farmer's Letters"
during the agitation preceding the
American Revolution, born in Mary
land. Died r Wilmington, Del.,
February 14, 1808.
1745 Valentine Harvy, who in
vented the art of printing with
raised letters for the blind, born at
St. Just. Died in Paris, June 3,
1822.
1867 First passenger train from
Omaha arrived at Cheyenne.
1868 Antonio Rossini, celebrated
and brilliant musical composer, died
in Paris. Born near Bologna, Feb
ruary 29, 1792.
1914 British parliament called
for 1,000,000,000 more men for the
army.
1916 British launched new offen
sive at northern end of the Somme
battle line.
Timely Jottings and Reminders.
One thousand five hundred and
sixty-sixth day of the great war.
Wartime economies are to be dis
cussed by the Eastern Ice Manufac
turers' association, meeting in an
nual convention today at Atlantic
City.
The Mississippi River commission
meets at St. Louis today to begin
its annual trip of inspection down
the river to New Orleans.
Many men prominent in insurance
circles are to gather in Chicago to
day for the annual convention of the
Federation of Mutual Insurance
Companies.
Storyette of the Day.
"France's success in this war,"
said Gen. Oscar L. Standish of Sn
Francisco, "has been due in great
measure to the readiness of her
come-back. No matter how hard
Germany has hit her, France has
always returned the blow with speed
and vigor.
"France, . in fact, has been as
ready as the young fellow who pro
posed to the school teacher. The
school teacher said to him scorn
fully: ,
"'Do you suppose, Mr. Doolittle,
that I'd ever marry a man so be
nighted as to carry a great big horse
shoe in his pocket for luck?'
"Doolittle paled. Then, recovering
himself quietly, he gave a loud
laugh, took out his horseshoe, laid
it on his knee, patted it and said
gayly: ."
" 'Well old fellow, I guess no
body'U ever doubt your efficacy after
this!'"! San Francisco Bulletin.
The Capture of Sedan
New York Times. ,
France is much beloved of us, and the
Tricolor stirs the blood of Americans. We shall
always honor the name of Lafayette, and our
gratitude for the, aid of France in the dark days
when the young' republic was fighting its way
into the light will never die. It has fallen to
troops of the United States under Pershing to
be the first to enter Sedan in the great offensive
of the western allies before which the Germans
have been retreating to their frontier, leaving
thousands of prisoners and great spoil 'of guns
in the hands of the French, British, Belgians,
Americans, one of the most disastrous retire
ments in history.
It seems only the other day that Pershing
stood at the erave of the Frenchman so be
loved of Washington, and spoke those words
that will always be memorable: "We have
come, Lafayette!" For 48 years "revanche" for
the woe they suffered at Sedan has been written
on the hearts of Frenchmen. The word has
been a synonym for the defeat, humiliation, and
abasement that the Germans inflicted upon a
proud nation in the war of 1870. Who could
nave dreamed in all the intervening years of
waiting and forbearance that it would not be
the Tricolor, but the Stars and Srtipes of the
ally of the American revolution which the eyes
of Frenchmen living in Sedan would see stream
ing in victorious battle above their town in the
war that was to settle the long score with Ger
many? To Americans as well as Frenchmen
what a thrill there is in the news contained in
Mr. James' dispatch to the Times:
'In the First army's remarkable six days ad
vance of 40 kilometers it not only liberated 100
French villages and several thousand civilians,
but also captured the city of Sedan, liberating
5,000 French folk. It also cut the main German
railroad system of communication from the
western front through Luxemburg. Moreover,
the Americans have driven the German Fifth
and Third armies, which were holding the pivot
of the whole front, in full retreat."
To the mind of every American soldier so
fortunate as to take part in the glorious entry
into Sedan must have occurred the contrast be
tween the rout of the Germans, which he was
witnessing, and their arrogant triumph in those
days of August, 1870, so somber for France. By
forced marches the Third and Fourth German
armies had taken positions between Metz,
where Bazaine was shut up, and Chalons, and
the Germans had pressed MacMahon's army
back toward the Belgian frontier, foiling his at
tempt to rel'eve Bazaine. Defeated in several
days of fierce fighting, MacMahon decided to
make a stand at Sedan, then a fortress, and he
occupied the heights surrounding it on the west,
north and east. The Germans, outnumbering
the French two to one. encircled MacMahon's
army. Battle was joined on September 1, Wurt
temberg troops blocking a French retreat upon
Mezieres, and the Bavarians, Saxons, Prussians,
and the King's Guard attacking the whole
French line. Few battles have been so brief
and decisive. After carrying the village of
Bazeilles the Germans brought their heavy ar
tillery, 500 guns, to the heights above Sedan
and began to bombard the town, to which the
French had fallen back. On the second day
Napoleon III, who was with the ill-starred
French army, raised the white flag. Two thou
sand, nine hundred officers and 83,000 men laid
down their arms; the French emperor became
a prisoner, and with this disaster the second
empire fell.
There is no fortress of Sedan to surrender
today. A residential and indusrtial place now,
it is to be hoped that the retreating Germans
have spared its churches, the college, museum
and the remains of the castle of the 15th cen
tury. The battle for Sedan by the Americans
began, it may be said, on September 26. and in
an advance of 34 miles the fighting has been of
a desperate character. For sentimental as well
as for strategic reasons the Germans have
fought -hard to keep the enemy from across the
sea out of Sedan. Lines of communication be
tween Metz and Belgium have been cut by the
American victory, which must have cost the
Germans far greater losses than the trench suf
fered in the Chalons-Sedan campaign.
s Sedan now means to Germany a disaster that
has eclipsed the triumph of 1870. Americans,
who were supposed to be impotent to transport
armies across the Atlantic, have been the in
struments of the revenge for which the French
had longed. ,
Compliments to The Bee.
-,.mha' Nov. 11. To the Editor of
The Bee: I wish to congratulate
you. Your splendidly edited news
paper. The Omaha Daily Bee. Is a
welcome visitor to my home. It la a
great treat to read its columns and
feel assured that the facts contained
in it are authenticated befnm helm?
Yi... 10 lne vubllti. The recent
, It on of tne Rotogravure section
to The Sunday Bee is certainly very
enterprising on vour nart nnd hrln.ru
our city truly in the metropolitan
class, such added improvements
cannot fail but swell the number of
subscribers and make The Bee more
popular than ever. I certainly wish
you continued success.
G. K. YOUNG, D. V. S.
Liberty at Home.
Oinaha. Nov. 11. To the Editor
of The Bee: If l had the self
esteem held by the South Side cor
respondent who took to himself the
glory of influencing congress to the
extent of repealing the daylight sav
ing law I might with equal Justifica
tion claim the responsibility for the
republican landslide in Nebraska,
for did I not jn two occasions in
The Bee Letter Box call upon the
public to tarn out the IneflVient
democratic office seekers and office
holders because they had no other
instinct than that of creating new
offices for the faithful and reckless
expenditure of public funds?
The scheme of the democrats to
brand criticism as unpatriotic was
expected to aid materially In keep
ing them in office, but their work
was too coarse and the people si
lently and effectively criticized with
the ballot.
Now that the republicans are
again dominating national affairs, it
will be safe for any American citizen
to express honest critlrlsm without
being Interned. The conduct of the
late political campaign by the dem
ocrats ought to be classed as the
quintessence of damphoolishness.
NORTH SIDE.
MIRTHFUL REMARKS.
"Bill says the doctors at that high-priced
hospital took his temperature every day."
"No doubt, those fellows will take any
thing you've got." Buffalo Express.
'What's the objection to petticoat rov
ernment?" "Some peope appear to be afraid It will
lead to too many fsllls." Louisville
Courier-Journal.
Christmas Gifts for Soldiers '
When our government's device of "Christ
mas coupons," one of which was to be sent
home by each soldier abroad to the relative or
friend he might select for the privilege of send
ing him a seasonable gift, was announced the
plan was viewed with resignation, if not exactly
with favor. That is because it was recognized
that, if all of us who could and would send
Christmas presents to the men in France were
allowed to do so, the carrying of the packages
would take up far more ship space than possibly
could now be devoted to other than strictly
necessary transportation. With the passage of
time, however, resignation to a justifiable re
striction has given plade in many instances to a
feeling much like irritation.
On the other hand, the men across the water
are writing home two things first, that most
of them find it difficult, and those engaged in
active operations almost impossible, to over
come the many obstacles to getting the coupons
from their superior officers, and, second, that
not a few of those who could conquer those ob
stacles are embarrassed when it comes to choos
ing the recipient of the coupons. This embar
rassment has two sources the invidiousness of
a selection among several persons about equally
entitled by love or friendship to be thus favored
and the delicacy that forbids the making what
seems like a demand for a present from any
body. So, in not a few instances the soldiers have
decided not to try to get the coupons.
Here there is growing up the impression that
this determination is just the one the military
and shipping authorities like best and the one
they tried to bring about. Hence the irritation
to which reference has been made, and it is to
the indirection by which the desired end in con
siderable measure has been reached rather than
to the reching of the end. If we had all been
told that in the existing conditions it would be
inexpedient and more than inconvenient to -ship
even 2,000,000 small Christmas packages from
the United States to France, the reasonableness
of the statement would have been recognized
at once, and nobody would have done any more
about the matter than sigh, as so many times
before, that "war is war. The providing of a
way that wasn't a way was different and fret
ting. New York Times.
- Super-Piracy of Huns
Even if it stood by itself on the records of
these wartimes, the case of the Norwegian bark
Stifinder and its abandoned crew would be suffi
cient to convict German frightfulness of outdo
ing piracy in point of ruthlessness. Such is the
conclusion one must reach who reads the plain
story of the bark's crew who have just reached
New York after long days and nights of tortur
ing, heart-breaking struggles in an open life
boat. There were 17 men on the Stifinder'when it
left New York, bound for Australia September
26. They took to two boats October 13, when
a German submarine first looted and then sank
the bark. They were a thousand miles from
the nearest shore. The brigands of the sea
turned their backs and sailed away. Seven vic
tims of this barbarity are still to be heard from
or never to be heard from. Ten are in this
port with their pitiful tale of 15 days of hunger,
of ceaseless, blistering toil at the oars.
No crew with any prompting of human de
cency would have treated even a militant enemy
as that U-boat 'gang treated the men of the Sti-.
finder. That these suffering Norwegians were
not foes at all, but sailors of a neutral nation
is a fact' aggravating the German offense not
against humanity alone, but world-laws of bel
ligerency. New York World,
"Jorkins is trying to break his wife's
will."
"That Is something he never tried to do
while she was living." Chicago Post
"Would you advise a young man to go
Into any business where he saw an open
ing?" "Yes, unless he was sure the opening
wouldn't get him into a hole." Baltimore
American.
Brlggs Well, the world seems to move
faster and faster all the time.
Griggs Nonspnse! Durlnir the revolu
tion we nad minute men. Now we have
rour-minute men. Life.
"My wife asked me to bring; home
head of cabbage."
"Tea, sir; large head or small hsad?''
'"Oh. about 74." said the man, absent
minaeaiy. rearson s Weekly.
"One thing you can say In favor of
tne snaaes or night."
"What's that?'
"You can't break the spring In 'em and
nave 'em refuse to roll up again." "Flor
ida Times Union.
Pickpocket (visiting- friend tn J.ifl) I
nirea a lawyer for you this mcrnlng
Slim, but I had to hand blm my watch
as a retainer..
Pal And did he keep ltT
Pickpocket (smilingly producing the
timepiece) He thlnka he did. Buffalo
Express.
Albert (anxiously) I'm afraid I'll soon
be bald. My hair comes out every day,
his uood wire Why worry about that
Albert; don't your teeth come out every
night? Indianapolis Star.
"There is one thing odd about our
dealings with a photographer."
"What is that?"
"When we ask him If he can make
good picture, we are contented with his
answer In the negative." Baltimore
American.
"He calls her his 'queen of the links.'
''Ah! Their courtship began on a golf
course. I presume?"
'Far otherwise. She used to sell blm
bologna in a delicatessen store when he
kept a bachelor's ball." Birmingham
Age-Herald.
"KAMERAD 1"
The Huns are begging hard for peace),
They want to get their breath;
They're squealing like the Hamelln rata
To the pled piper s tune.
With hands upstretched, it's "Kamerad!"
The coward fears his death.
But to dishonest prayers and pieaa
The allies are immune.
The Oerman beasts are walling now
For mercy to be shown.
As through the lands swept Hunland
hordes, t
Then pity there waa none.
"Oh, Kamerad! please spare me now!
Forgive my awful curse!
(In the next war in after years
We'll make these hell deeds worse!)
So It's over the top and after them!
The Hun fiend must pay.
Surrender now, inhuman wretch!
Tis your accounting day.
Tou've stolen like a vicious thief;
Despoiled the Chureh of God.
And nocombatants through your scourge
Now sleep beneath the sod.
Omaha. HAZEL E. JOHM8UK.
GIRLS! TRY IT!
HAVE THICK, WAVY,
BEAUTIFUL HAIR
Every particle of dandruff
disappears and hair
stops coming out.
Draw a moist cloth through
hair and double its
beauty at once.
Your hair becomes light, wavy.
fluffv. abundant and appears as
soft.' lustrous and beautiful as a
young girl's after a "Danderine
hair cleanse." Just try this
moisten a cloth with a little Dan
derine and carefully draw it
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. This will cleanse
the hair of dust, dirt and excessive
oil and in just a few moments you
have doubldd the beauty of your
hair.
Besides beautifying the hair at
once, Dandeirne dissolves every
particle of dandruff; cleanses, puri
fies and invigorates tne scaip, ior
ever stopping itching and falling
hair.
But what will please you most
will be after a few weeks' use when
you will actually see new hair fine
and downy at first yes but really
new hair growing all over the scalp.
If you care for pretty, soft hair
and lots of it, surely invest a few
cents in a bottle of Knowlton's
Danderine at any drug store or
toilet counter, and just try it.
Save your hair! Beautify it! You
will say this was the best money
you ever spent. Adv.
State Press Comments
York News-Times: The wheat
fields look like Nebraska was trying
to Imitate the Emerald Isle.
Beatrice Express: An extra
pound of sugar per person per
month, ought to at least have a ten
dency to sweeten things up a bit.
.Burt County Herald: What has
become of Bryan? With so much
peace talk In the air it does not seem
natural for him to lose such an op
portunity to talk.
Kearney Hub: There will not be
any break In the program of making
tne woria saie lor aemocracy. t;ven
a democrat can feel perfectly safe.
We have a Joh in common of making
the world safe for everybody.
Wayne Republican: Now that the
campaign excitement is over, per
haps there will be some develop
ments concerning the identity of two
former county commissioners who
returned a lot of money to Hamilton
county through the agency of the
taxpayers' league.
Wayne Herald: The change back
to the old time is quite agreeable to
rural communities. Many farmers
did not make the change in time last
spring, but followed the old sched
ule, finding it more practicable and
satisfactory. An additional hour for
gardening and recreation in the
cities was no doubt worth while. In
the country it usually served no advantage.
Peppery Points
St. Louis Globe-Democrat: Corn
slumped because of the prospect of
peace. Now, aren't the wheat farm
ers thankful that Uncle Sam standi
behind their wheat?
Baltimore American! Turkey may
be too high for all on Thanksgiving
day, but the humblest home will
have a feast In comparison with th
menu In Austria Rnd Germany, of a
dish of crow, with humble pie for
dessert.
Philadelphia Ledger: The action
of the Croats in raising the Italian
flag in Fiume and demanding Incor
poration with Italy Is a striking Indi
cation of the difficulties that will b
encountered in settling the future of
the Adriatic.
Brooklyn Eagle: That $400,000,
000 in Husvsian gold that Germany
did not get and the Omsk govern
ment did set. may be so much direct
loss to the allies as things have
turned out; but the seizure Is just
so much saved for Russia, and it
needs it all.
Kansas City Times: The quarter
master general announces that con
tracts have been placed with the
British government for 1,800,000
pairs of trousers and 1,400,000 coata
for the American Expeditionary
Forces. The reason why fewet
coats than trousers were ordered
doubtless is that the American boyi
fight with their coats off, differing in
this respect from the Scocth who
"We Want Candy Cascai rets"
Rtstlvti: That when our tongues turn white,
breath feverish, stomach sour and bowels consti
pated, that our mothers give us Cascaretj, the nice
candy cathartic, and not nasty castor oil, mineral
oil, calomel or pills. Cascarets "work" without
griping and never hurt us kids. Cost only 10 cents.'
TO MOTHERS ! Learn to give harmless Cascarets to your cross.
sick, bilious, constipated pets and save coaxing, worry and money.
Children love this candy cathartic. Nothing else cleanses the little livei
and bowels so effectively. Each 10 cent box of Cascarets contains direc
tions for dosage for children aged one year old and upwards.
r .pi
The Expectant Mother
"The Shadow of Coming Events" often darkens
the days of the expectant mother.
Constipation, always a handicap to the health and happiness
of every woman, become doubly dangerous to the woman
who u preparing to fulfill her highest duty maternity.
The expectant mother must nourish two. She must be able
to get rid of a double waste. Failure to do to poisons herself
and the child that she is to bring into the world.
Constipation means more than mere failure to have a regular
thorough bowel evacuation. It means stagnation of waste
matter in the bowels, production of irritant and poisonous
matter, its absorption into the blood, and distribution all over
the body.
"It means aggravation of all these discomforts that attend the
period of pregnancy. It contributes to the tragedies of child
birth. It prejudices the ability of the mother to nurse her
child after it has been born.
And, it is dangerous to employ pills, castor oil, purgative
mineral waters, salts, etc. that force the bowels to act
But the Nujol Treatment for Constipation is not only harm
less but in every way efficient.
Nujol helps Nature to re-establish natural, thorough, bowel
evacuation, regular as clockwork.
Nujol is absolutely harmless.
Nujol is not absorbed. It cannot affect the child. It is easy
and pleasant to take.
Best of all, Nujol not 'only overcomes constipation, but it
hinder the formation of poisons in the "bowels, absorbs and
carriei them out of the body, thus preventing complications.
Get Nujol from your druggist and take according to direction.
Wnrviivta NUJOL " wM only waled
f r Ul Mffg , botjc bearing Nuj0j Trade
Mark. Insist on Nu jol. You may sufftr from substitutes.
Nujol Laboratories
STANDARD OIL CO. (NEW JERSEY)
SO Broadway, New York
QodtWorit