THE EEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, MARCH IS, 1919. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATEB VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR THK BEE PUBUSHWO COMPANY, PROPRIETOR MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Th AmociiikI i'rM. of wtueh Tb Km It a meuibar. It ioIusIyvIt tnritl to Utt km for imbiioailoa of all n,wi dtftiwtcbn erdltd to H or not otbrwlM ar4iid In UUt ppr, kr.d alio tonal awi iuUitb4 kfla. ail rljhta ef publication of our nxciu aitPMCAM art ai IMWHJ. OFFICES i Cnto Ftoilt"i Oat Bnllfioc umiha Tlit Bw Bld. htw Ynr-Sj. rifift a. South Orali Mil N St Bt. Uui Ntw B'nk of CcauMtoa, Council Bluff 14 N. Mala I fl'aahlBitan 1SU 0 BL Lincoln L1!U Kulldlm. . FEBRUARY CIRCULATION Daily 64,976 Sunday 63,316 Araran eirnilattn for tfca month mtNcrttwd and nram at br A. B. fttfta, circuituoa uuiiitr. Subaeribare leaving the city ahould have Tha Baa mailed to them. Addrata chanced eftea aa rtqueated. And thou, too, Bryan I Peacs by March 20 will not b a minute too toon. Conn on with the treaty. The house at Lincoln contines quite "tetchy" on the topic of lobbyists. Its immaculate purity thus far is safe. The president expects to land at Brest to day and get away for Paris tonight, so that things may commence to happen over there again. Sir Horace Plunkett perhaps knows as much about the needs of Ireland and what is good for its pepple as the Boston professor who chal lenges him. It will no longer be "the German Rhine,' but the world Rhine if the report made to the peace conference is adopted. That ought to help both France and Holland. What's this, our sugar rationing did not ef fect any saving? Well, you try to tell that to the careful housewife who had to make her short allowance go around the family. As a result of the failure of congress to act, the railroads are back in Wall street trying to borrow money to keep alive. But this will not worry the democrats, who made the trouble. Putting up a spite fence to hide a pretty wo man's seductive ankles is the latest wrinkle in New York court practice. If this is to be come general, jury service will be duller than ever. Food Director Roberts of England is right when he says we can not let the Hans starve, but at the same time it is hard to overlook the fact that they brought it not only on themselves but the rest of the world. Six thousand Yankee boys succumbed to the allurements of as many French maidens since the army went across, and have formed a permanent alliance with them. , This sort of thing is the real league of nations. The story of the air raid on Berlin may be a little overdrawn, but let us hope it was of a nature to give the inhabitants of that delightful city a notion of what London and Paris had to put tip with for four years of frightfulness. The "grandmother of the revolution" is too ' polite an old lady to say that Raymond Robins 'lied; she contents herself with the statement f. that, Mr. Robins to the contrary notwithstand ing, the bolshevik! did commit unspeakable atrocities. I Bills are falling under adverse votes at Lin coln in a way that seems to promise the end of a number of ambitious schemes for reform. But smokers who do not care to roll their own still may purchase the "tailor-made" cigarette In Nebraska. Free trade is re-established between the United Kingdom and other parts of the British empire, but that does not give Yankee makers unrestricted entry to John Bull's market. Yet our democratic wiseacres cling to their anti protective tariff notions. One good way to everlastingly end the League of Nations would be to submit it to a referendum of all the peoples of the world. By the time the vote was taken and counted, the oldest inhabitant would have forgotten about the origin, and the whole thing would have to be commenced anew. Well, Omaha missed the secretary of war again, but let us hope in the glad sweet days of peace to come he may find it convenient to give the once over to two of the prettiest military posts under his jurisdiction, from which were sent out many of the best equipped specialists in the service of the late army. The president has asked for the resignations of all members of the Civil Service commission, the only reason being that he wants to reor ganize that body. A year or two back along the trail will show this commission opposing some of the political activities of the postmaster general, and only a few weeks ago it was active in opposing the plan to make the 1920 census an exclusively democratic partisan affair. This may explain a situation Secretary Tumulty says he knows nothing about How the Soldier I eels The thing that concerns the soldier most to day is what the morrow may bring. That means home and a new mode of living. Some men have a position awaiting their return. Others have trades or training that they cart follow up advantageously upon their return to civil life. Then there is that great number of young men who have no particular line of occupation or knowledge. Men who only recently finished school men who had put in the several years before entering the army, at loafing. There was always that type of young man in each small town. Before going into the army he was not considered an asset to anyone, himself in cluded. , Today that young man, if he hasnt already given the last full measure of devotion, is a valua ble asset to any man or concern. He has broad ened out in a large sense. He has tasted the pangs cf hunger and fatigue and he has tasted the fruits of victory. He has learned to obey, a thing we Americans are prone to neglect More than this, he has acquired the most valua ble achievement ol all, he has learned to accept responsibility. With all these acquisitions the returning soldier hardly needs charity nor does he need the elaborate preparations a lot of well meaning, but thoughtless people are making for his re turn. All he wants is an even break and an op portunity to make good. Leave the rest to him. The Barrage, published by the 18th Field Artil lery, Army ef Occupation, WHAT ABOUT THE PUBLIC? From Chicago we get a vague and not at all reassuring announcement that a tripartite agree- ment has been entered into between the live stock growers, tha packers and the government, whereby any difference between producers and packers may be quickly eliminated. ,This is all very fine, for it is expected to stop the ever lasting allegation of discrimination, manipula tion, and other excesses and abuses brought by the stockmen against the great meat purveyors. How will it effect the publicf That remains to be seen. Experience with the food adminis tration was not such as to justify expectations of any immediate or extensive concession in prices to the consumer. When the producer agrees with the middleman as to what is right, the presumption naturally is that they know what they are doing. The outsider will event ually find out Price stabilization that goes no further than this is not likely to help out on the cost of living. "Passing the buck" will continue to hold its popularity as the greatest of American sports. The people had a right to expect something of better service than this arrangement, which, while it will bring peace to two elements of the triangle, holds very little for the third. Crowder and His Critics. Senator Chamberlain, chairman of the mili tary affairs committee of the senate in the last congress, has joined the hue and cry against the judge advocate general of the army and the courts-martial. General Crowder has made a temperate and Judicious reply to these, such as must satisfy any reasonable individual, or one not deliberately seeking for personal or par tisan advantage. Most of the appeal rests on the fact that a number of sentences, seemingly unduly severe, applied for what are alleged to be trivial of fenses, were passed by courts-martial. Those who indulge in the outbursts have not called attention to the fact that a military offense differs in character and gravity from an offense against civil law, and also that a distinction ex ists as between war and peace in the matter of punishment. Disobedience in civil life is not visited with summary punishment, but in the army and in time of war, it is the gravest of crimes, varying in degree, of course, but always most serious, because it affects the entire fabric of discipline, on which rests the purpose of the army. This is true of desertion, and of many of the offenses that are being paraded as minor, but which really are of first magnitude in the army service. General Crowder s?ys: Considering the charges from the stand point of the officers who assessed the sen tences, let me see who they are. They are men taken in a general draft throughout the nation. They come from every walk in life. There are 200,000 of them. They comprise a faithful cross-section of our whole people and our national life. . What is this charge of severity by them? I have seen that it can not be an indictment of the system. It is simply a difference between the opinion of well meaning and humane critics, far removed from the scene of the of fenses punished and with only a partisan, in adequate and highly-colored statement of the case to guide them, and the opinions of men who considered the facts under the solemn obligation of an oath to be honest, impartial and fair; who lived in the environment of the offense and were steeped in the reasons mak ing it grave, and who assessed the sentence on the performance of the highest civic duty to man the defense of home and country. The critics should keep in mind that the of ficers who composed the courts-martial also led their men in battle, and either time they were engaged in defense of the flag and all its stands for. Senator Chamberlain, Congressman Gal llvan and others like them ought also to remem ber that the Articles of War are enactments by congress, not framed by the War department or compiled by staff officers, and that the man ual for courts-martial ' was revised in 1916, in which work Colonel Ansell took part, and that none of the objections now raised was then presented. The attack on the courts is directly an attack on the gallant officers of the army, who have been so ' loudly praised for their services in other directions. What is the purpose behind it? Bryan and the League of Nations. Even the hardiest of commentators will hesitate before accusing William Jennings Bryan of lack of devotion to the cause of uni versal peace. He is the original pacifist, and not so very long ago was being generally scolded because of his devotion to peace at any price. Therefore, he might well be expected to consent to anything that would tend to achieve the ob ject of his fondest desire. Admitting this, what are the champions of the "swallow-it-whole" propaganda going to say when Mr. Bryan takes his stand alongside Henry Cabot Lodge, Charles Spalding Thomas and other senators who have taken exception to the draft of the constitution of the league as given out at Paris? Especially when Mr. Bryan cites specifically the same points of weakness on which the senatorial critics lay greatest stress. It begins to look as if the desire for peace were not going to be transmuted into unques tioning support of a plan that may not promise peace, and which will be better understood when what it is said to imply is expressed clearly and directly. Americans want peace, but it is hard for them to forget how they were buncoed in 1916 with the "kept us out of war" battle cry. Making a Farce of Prohibition. The raid on the wine cellar north of Flor ence, accompanied by all the spectacular fea tures of flash-light photography and special star reporters, may be an excellent bit of pub licity work for the state "booze hounds," but how does it help to enforce prohibition or make for temperance and sobriety? No effort was made to conceal the fact that the wine was stored there; its existence has been a matter of common notoriety. No charge is yet made that illegal selling had been going on. It is known that the stock was used for sacramental purposes. Yet, assuming that its storage at the winery may possibly be a violation of the law, why could not the state agents wait until they had determined that fact before removing the wine to a store room djwn town? If the court eventually declares their acts unwar ranted, the state will have to pay again for hav ing the wine hauled back and placed in the cellar from whence it came. Would any public inter est have suffered, had a guard been placed over the cellar until the court had given a decision? Under proper guard the stock would have been as safely held where it was found as where it is now stored, and at far less expense to the state. Some of the movements of the liquor sleuths are mystifying to tay the least Keepsakes of Soldier Dead New York Evening Post. It mar have been a memento of his mother a gift from his sweetheart, a keepsake dad had slipped into his pocket when he left, or a bit of fraternity jewelry, but whatever it was that the 'young American cherished when he fell in battle, his family cherish it a thousand times more, simply because it wae his, and so a war machine that cannot always t human estao lished the effects bureau, port of embarkation. at Hoboken. It is the brain of a great system, a highly sensitized system, whose nerves are rooted in France. Italv. Belgium, in hospitals, ana every where an American soldier paid his last full measure of devotion. It recognizes no distinc tion; the dead are without class, and as far as this bureau is concerned a brass ring on the finger of a dead private is worth as much at the elaborate equipment of any officer. Intrinsic value is nothing, associations are everything. That is the spirit in which the corns of workers set about their task of return ing to relatives and friends the little keepsakes that every life picks up In the stream of ex istence. These workers do it with the care and sympathy which they themselves would expect. lo them the loss of the things a family cher ishes is almost as great a tragedy as the other of the battlefield, for it leaves a vacancy which mieht have been filled. For that reason there are card indexes, tags, and files checking and rechecking at Hoboken, so that not even the slightest trinket may be lost. In the warehouse there is a nondescript assortment of baggage, trunks, boxes, weirdly shaped bags, every one a treasure of some relative or friend, who expected the owner to return, but who bows before the sacrifice, ana accepts with mute gratitude the things that have come to mean so much because they were his. There are crutches and stretchers, too, grim reminders, but precious. There are small boxes, though size means nothing. It may contain a pipe, a tobacco pouch, a package of cigarets, perhaps a photo graph, stained a little, but priceless. Or it may contain souvenirs, trophies of battle, i German knife, or a bit of shrapnel. The va riety is limited only by the fancy of an Ameri can soldier. And this is the first war in which the United States has been engaged that a concerted and official report has been made to save the effects of the men who died in battle. Effects they are called in a sort of coldly official way, but to those who are working to save them they mean much more. Instead of becoming hardened to the work, as might be expected where such de tail and routine are involved, the staff at Ho boken takes an increasingly personal interest in restoring the belongings of those who died to their relatives and friends. Naturally, the work at Hoboken would be futile were it not based on the work of others on the battlefield and in hospitals, for some one must be responsible for the collection of the effects. Organization commanders in France and commanders of hospitals everywhere were ordered to collect and preserve the effects of all. men killed in action or who, for any cause, died within their jurisdiction. After the belongings of a soldier are col lected, they are sent to base sections. If he dies in France, Italy, or with the army of occupation in Germany, his effects are sent to Base Section No. 1. If he dies in England, they are sent to Base Section No. 3. After they are packed the first time, they are inspected and rechecked every time they are moved, and duplicate checks are forwarded to the headquarters at Hoboken. When the package or luggage containing the ef fects arrives here, they are checked again, by the list already sent, and joint record from both lists is placed in the card index in the bureau. The next step is to find the person who should receive the effects, and this is often ren dered difficult by the naming of persons other than relatives on enlistment blanks. Many men wishing to save the family from shock give the names of friends as those who should be noti fied in case of death, and then rely upon them to make it as easy as possible. Letters are written to the person named on the enlistment papers, and they are not cold formal letters, but individual letters. No stereotyped expressions of sympathy or rubber-stamped tears clutter the mail of the effects bureau. In many instances the person addressed gives the address of those to whom the effects should be sent If there is any doubt as to who has legal claim to the property of the deceased, a staff of lawyers em ployed by the bureau settle all technicalities. All of these are imbued with the spirit of helpfulness, and whether it be a request for the watch fob of one who sleeps in Flanders fields, or a plea to straighten out an allotment tangle, something is done about it, and that something usually gets results. There are two classes of mall which come into the bureau, almost equal in size now that the work has been going along so well One class is made up of appeals for aid or requests for the property of those who were killed in action; the other, expressioni of gratitude for the dispatch and feeling with which the request has been fulfilled. Another Illusion Vanishes Among the not many things about which there has been what seemed like . absolute unanimity of opinion and belief was the proper behavior ef a man caught out in a blinding snowstorm and unable to find his way home or to other shelter. Everybody has said, and it has been printed innumerable times in innumerable books, magazines, and newspapers, that he should keep moving in order to keep warm that if he sat down, and especially if he went to sleep, that would be the end of him, for he certainly would freeze to death. And now along comes Vilhjalmur Stefanson with the calm assertion that this belief is ut terly wrongl The man caught out in a blizzard, he says, should stop the moment he finds that he has lost the sense of direction. He should make himself some sort of a snow house if cir cumstances permit; if they do not he should set down with his back to the wind, rest his head on his knees and go to sleep, and wait for the storm to blow over. . That, at any rate, is what the Eskimos in variably do when they find themselves in such a situation, and it is what is done by wise white travelers in the arctic And when they are correctly dressed they do not freeze to death nor do they suffer any particular severe hard ship from the cold. New York Times. Friend of the Soldier Replies will be given in this column to questions relating to the soldier and his prob lems, in and out of the army. Names will not be printed. Ask TheBee to Answer. otMte qos' Qom&r ITQDAY The Day We Celebrate. Thomas P. Redmond of the Burgess-Nash company, born 1869. Noah E. Carter, architect and builder, born 1863. Rt. Rev. Joseph S. Glass, Catholic bishop of Salt Lake City, born at Bushnell, 111., 45 years ago. Jack La it, one of the most successful of American short story writers, born 37 years ago. Oswald G. Villard. New York editor and pub licist, born at- Wiesbaden, Germany, 47 years ago. In Omaha 30 Years Ago. Bishop John P. Newman is back in Omaha after a four months' trip to the south. Madame Janauschek is playing in Shakes pearian repertoire at the Grand. The Woman's Christian association is 'pre paring to put on a "Merchants' Carnival" with 30 to 40 popular young girls drilling in costumes representing different business houses. The Emerald Hand Ball court at Twelfth and Chicago is completed. It has a gallery ac commodating 150 spectators. Councilmen Lee, Chaffee, Baily, Davis, Kas per, Lowry( O'Connor, Saunders and Shriver left for Chicago to inspect underground conduits. Death of a Soldier. Miss Bessie 8. The 102a Infan try 1 part of the 26th division, Its present address A. P. O. 709. This division Is under orders to prepare for return to the United States, It sailing- being scheduled for April. It waa In the Argonne-Meuse drive, be ing twice on the front line; on No vember I it waa on the right of the American line, about 20 miles north of Verdun, we have no way of locat Inn the exact situation of a com pany; the official maps and reports deal with divisions. Would suggest that you write to the captain com mandlna- the company in which your brother served, asking for par ticulars of his death. Some In formation may be gained writing to tha adjutant general of the army, or to "Erlects Bureau, Fort of Em barkatlon, Hoboken, N. J." Many Questions Answered. Mrs. F. H. B "Write to "Effects Bureau, Port of Embarkation, Ho boken, N. J.," where you may fee able to get th,e Information you seek. B. J. The Third corps artillery park is at Heippes (Meuse), A. p. O. 814. Will probably be held there for some time. F. J. F. Ths 85th division Is scheduled to sail In March; can not tell what port It will be landed at watch papers for announcement M. F. W. The S27th supply com pany Is In the service of supply, and Its address Is A. P. O. 702. which is located at Paris. No date set for the sailing of any units of the 88th division. O. M. S. Write to the officer in command of the air squadron with which your eon Is serving; you should have little difficulty In secur ing his discharge from the army. A. J. V. N. Headquarters of the 88th division are at Lagny; can not tell you exact location of any of its units; no orders for Its sailing. No orders have been Issued for sailing of camp Hospital No. 33. Miss A. B. The present address of tne 9tn balloon company la A. P. O. 764; it Is with the Third army corps. and no orders for Its return have been issued. J. O. M. Most of the units of the 40th division have already reached the United States. Mrs. E. M. The present address of aero squadron 638 la Lay (via St. Remy), A. P. O. 784. It Is with the Second army. w. B. The 6th balloon company is assignea to early convoy home. Do not know what service It was In. The 304th mobile ordnance repair shop is with the 79th division, lo cated at Is-sur-Tille (Cote d'Or), A. x O. 71Z. This division Is scheduled to sail for home In June. Mrs. W. A. S. The Fouth Infan try Is part of ths Fifth brigade of the Third division, and is in the army of occupation; A. P. O. 740 Is stationary with this division. The 327th mobile laundry company la in the service of supply, A. P. O. 717. If your husband remains with the Infantry he will be held for some time In the army of occupation. No date set for return of any of the quartermaster units. Abble B. The 145th machine run company Is scheduled to sail for home In March. Mrs. C. H. C. No orders have yet been Issued for return of the unit you Inquire for. Watch The Bee for the announcement M. L. The 86th and 91st di visions are scheduled to return in March: can not give you exact date of sailing of any unit E. L. B. -The 22d engineers is engaged in railway construction work; at last report Company L wae stationed Commercv (Meuse), A. P. O. 747: no orders for return of this organization. E. F. D. The 27th division ts now on its way across; the 26th is under schedule to sail in April. a iteaaer Tne istn balloon com pany Is scheduled for early convoy; the 26th division Is under schedule to return in April. The 83d engi neers is in the service of supply. scattered from Brest to Nevers; no orders for its return. Judith The 313th engineers are in the 88th division; no orders out for its return. The 803d aero re pair squadron Is In the servics of supply, address A. P. O. 718A, at Romorantin (Lolre-et-Cher). Mrs. H. C. W. The 4th balloon company Is assigned to early con voy, t A Soldiers Wife No orders have been Issued for the return of the 88th division. Mrs. J. E. P We have no word as to the 72d engineers. The 468th pontoon train la part of the Third corps of the Second army; address, A. P. O. 714; headquarters at Longres. E. W. The 24th battery, anti-air craft artillery, is with the First ar-1 my; address, A. P. O. 774. No or ders for return of Base Hospital No. 49. A Mother Butcher Company No. 841 is in the service of supply; its present address Is A. P. O. 721, lo cated at Dijon (Cote d'Or). No word as to when It will be sent home. Anxious No word aa to when the motor transport repair unit you ask ror win oe sent home. Mrs. C. No word as to time for return of the hospital unit you ask for. A. P. O. 798 Is at Mesves-sur-Lolrs. - Mrs. J. L. B. Both the B40th en gineers and the J12th motor supply train are in the service of supply, and not attached to any division. No time fixed for their return. J. T. M. Base Hospital No. 10 Is located near Commercy, and Its proper address la via A. P. O. 747. Omission pf this postofflce number probably accounts for delay In de livery of letters to your son. Add to the address you have been using, "A. U. 11, A. E. iT." DREAMLAND ADVENTURE By DADDY Pri7 and Billy bid the Wild rjM whs are chased by the Flying- Ogre, and later encounter tha Ofre at tha edge cf tha wood.) CHAPTER IV. The Secret of tb Ogre. Tl HE Ogre carried a rifle. That seemed queer to Peggy, who had read about many ogres in her fairy books, but never about one armed with a gun. Nor had she ever read about one who traveled in an airplane. They usually appeared out of clouds or something like that She concluded that thla must be a very modern Ogre, who, possibly, was all DAILY CARTOONETTE U)U.1E H0U) MANY TIMES I niiST I TEU.YOU NOT TO j chew om?! throwit awry at once! r, i V3 4 f w The Ogra Carried si Rifle. the mors dangerous on that account. The Ogre came directly toward the tree behind which Petrcry and Billv were hiding. Peggy felt Billy's fists clench as he prepared to fight if the Ogre should find them, and she wondered what a boy, no matter how brave, could do against an Ogre with a gun. But the Ogre didn't see them. He went on Into the grove and they could hear him aa he searched around, evidently looking for the Wild Geese. After a time the Ogre came back past the children, and they noticed that in addition to his gun he carried an armful of dried sticks. He walked down the hill and turned Into a little valley. After a few minutes, the children saw a red light and heard the crackling of a fire. "He Is going to camp there." whispered Billy. "Let's creep up closer and take a look." Still hold ing Peggy by the hand, he went cau tiously forward until they came to the top of the rock, overhanging the valley. Lying on this rock they could look down directly into the camp which the Ogrs had pitched Here they had a surprise, ths Ogre waa not alone. "There are two of them, Just alike:" whispered Peggy, and her heart sank. It .was hard enough to try to save the Wild Geese from one Ogre, but how could they outwit two such monsters? Then the first Ogrs did a funny thing. He stretched in front of the Ore, raised his hands, and took his funny head right off, goggle eyes and all. And at the same time he opened up his rurry skin and stepped out of It. Peggy'a eyes nearly popped out with amazement, and for a moment she .was so stunned she couldn't breathe. A surprised chuckle from Billy caused her to take a quick second look at the Ogre, and what aha saw made her sink back with a giggle of relief. The Ogre's head was just a big aviators helmet and the furry skin was Just a coat Out of them stepped a shrewd-looking man, whiskered and apectacled. "I couldn't And the Wild Geese." said the Ogre, "but we will surely pick them up tomorrow, and then I will kill that beautiful Blue Goose for my collection." The other Ogre waa now getting out of his helmet and coat and he proved to be the pilot of ths air plane. "You seem awfully anxious to get that Blue Goose, professor," he re marked. "It Is a perfect specimen," de clared the flying Ogre. "And so is that handsome gander leading the flock. Him, too, will I kill after he has led his flock north and we have learned all the secrets of its flight Ah, ha! I Bhall be more famous than ever after this trip. No other naturalist before has thought to study the habits of migrating birds by following them with an air plane no other naturalist has gath ered so much knowledge for a thrill ing book no other naturalist haa secured so man? fine specimens as I shall kill for my museum." Billy looked at Peggy with startled eyes. "A scientist!" he whispered, "and he wants to kill both the King of the Wild Geese and the beautiful Blue Goose for his museum. It will be a harder job saving them from him than if he were only a common Ogre." (In tomorrow" chapter I.oneinm Bear takes part la a conspiracy agatnit the Flying- Ogre.) Daily Dot Puzzle 4. IS Id 16 17 Ue 6 . Vfc IB 19 c ' - iO v 26 SB He W at IV -V 1 4 f 'SX' Draw from one to two ar.d M aa te the end. UPSET STOMACH Pape's Diapeptin at once ends sourness, gas, acidity, indigestion. sust- s st - gas 'lees ox Give Vs Peace First Oxford. Neb., March 10. To the Editor of The Bee: President Wil son, speaking against criticism of the league constitution, said "They do not make any impression on me because I know there Is no medium that will transmit them." Did he mean that the press was to be muz zled that the peoples' voice could rot be heard, or was he referring to the fact that he had put the crimp on congressional discussion of the league? If the league is a good thing for our people to enter into why all thla hush business? Are we to have no self-determination whether we desire to put our government udder the control of an International com mittee? There are thousands of good loyal citizens who believed our president erred when he left our capital to make his abode in Paris. They hold that when the 80 days' armistice was signed that his first duty was to in sist on an Immediate peace treaty and the return to their homes of the soldiers who were conscripted for the one purpose of conqnerlng Germany. Why should senators be con demned and their honesty question ed because they proclaim the dan gers of the league as they see them? Why should they be charged with playing politics more than they that are exerting every influence they can Ming to bear to make the people see the dangers that they believe await them If they do not accept tne constitution without question or , ucuaio . j3iBxiui xt lur uur govern ment to Become godfather to all the little governments that are, and are to be created in the world. Is too serious a question for political play. It is also wrong to work upon the peoples aversion to war for league support which is on par with the kept us out of war" slogan. This constitution should never be tacked on th,e peace treaty as a rider in hopes of logrolling It through the senate, but should have the careful consideration of every citizen In the union. It is not enough that Eng land wants us to accept this consti tution, or that France, Belgium and Italy will be disappointed If we do not sign It, neither should we accept it because our two greatly admired statesmen representing the two great political parties are for it. The de ciding factor should be, do the peo ple thoroughly understand the obli gations of this league and do they wish to subscribe to it? There should not be another moment's delay In making a peace treaty and releasing our soldiers to their homes. They have written on the scrolls of fame that Americans are not too proud to fight and when they do fight that the boys fresh from the farms and the shops can match the life trained war experi enced soldiers of the greatest mili tary government on the globe. They have nobly performed the work they were called to do and should be re lieved at the earliest possible mo ment A. C. RANKIN. Stroug for the league. Mlnden, Neb., March 8. To the Editor of The Bee: I have two sons yet in Germany and one who just recently came from training camp on this elde of the water, hence I believe I should have a right to my opinion of all such men as Borah, Reed, Polndexter and Thomas. It seems that certain congressmen and senators are determined to damn President Wilson If he does or damn him if he don'.t, and there has been Just such a bunch bobbing up from the first of his administra tion to date. I will not enter the de tails, any sane man who has read the daily workings of congress and the senate knows all the pusillanimity that Mr. Wilson has had, to contend with from first to last. Mr. Taft has made It plain that the league has every chance to ac complish what it is aimed to do, and some of the wise ones simply abhor Mr. Tart because he Is honest and believes that we sent our boys over there to fight for a permanent peace and the freedom of all mankind. Now, shall a few disgruntled fellows that Mr. Taft said he would not trust ovej night block the game Just to spite the president and make the grandchildren of these same sol diers fight arlother war over again because America sneaked out before the finish, because they were misled by a bunch of misrepresentatives who seem to think war a Joke? If they had any sons in this war, I bet a dollar dog they had a "safety first Job." My sons with dozens of other neighbor boys were on the front through the big drive and from the letters they have written me I think any man who would lay a straw In the way of the league of nations should be hung up by the neck. 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