4 THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, APRIL 7. 1919. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) -EVENING SUNDAY FOUNDED BY EDWAKD ROSEWATEE VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, PROPRIETOR MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS n auoclaud I'm. of wturh The Met It member. Is exclusively entitled to tb n for puhllretioo c( aU news diipetciiM oreniteil lo H or aot UinrlM uedtted In this paper, mod also the local news published herein. All rliUte o( pubucettoa of out special dispatches are ales nil 111 OFriCESi Chinos People's 1m Bull dine Uuibt Tne Bw Bld(. Nov Toil 1M rtfta An. South Omtho MIS N HI. lib Loult Nr B'ns ol Common. Council Bluffs U K. Mom St. WaobJnttoo 1311 O St. Lincoln Lilllt Bulldln. MARCH CIRCULATION Daily 65,293 Sunday 63,450f Imit eireulsttoa for tho month subscribed tad twora to hj B. B. Buu. ClreulsUoa Manner. Subscribers leaving tho city should hovo Tho Bo moiled to than. Address changed of ton oo requested. The end is in tight at Lincoln. Fiume put up the Italian flag, a pointer to the peace council. Show the French band boys today that they are among friends. dy'' Peace by Easter is now said to be impos- ' , sible. But the talk must end some time. Paris continues to be headquarters for the rumor makers as well as the peacemakers. "Soldiers' and Sailors'" councils may be all right in Petrograd, but will hardly thrive in America. Another story of how the czar met his death is given out. A collection of these accounts wil soon stock a library. One ray of light seems to have penetrated Russia. Lenine is now said to be convinced that the "terror" was a mistake. The man who stands four-square today must expect to be called synicafby the light-headed persons who are running around in circles. Chicago brickmakers are alleged to be in a combine to keep up prices. It is suspected that a similar condition prevails throughout the land. Railroad earnings for February show another such deficit as must convince anybody of the beauties of governmental operation of the trans portation systems. General March warns discharged soldiers that they must wear the red chevron with the uniform. This may later be extended to in clude the "conscobs." Mr. Baker promises another revision of the court-martial law. It was worked over in 1916 the last time, and he had a chance then to do a lot of things he now proposes. Doctors are now in pursuit of the specific germ of lethargic encephalitis, and we hope they have better luck than they did in their quest for the flu bug. It's a great game if you don't weaken. The mayor urges exploitation of the local clay banks as a remedy for the high price of bricks. Which recalls the vigorous fight made a short time ago to suppress a couple of local brick yards. American .soldiers are exhibiting their pro clivity for gathering souvenirs in a way that irritates the Russians in Siberia. The foreigner has some difficulty in understanding our peculiar brand of democracy. Canucks returned from the battle front do not take kindly to the home-grown movement for abolishing rum and tobacco. They have imbibed a definite notion of what liberty means, ind are not backward about expressing it. The code bill, now in its final stages of pas sage, is intended to provide a business adminis tration for Nebraska, and is being enacted to redeem a platform pledge. That is why it worries the democrats, who did nothing to save money when in control. Efforts to get men who are needed at home out of the army are in active movement, and the boys are helping along by volunteering to go back and help finish the job. Thousands of youngsters are showing an unselfish patriotism in this way that is encouraging. The Rainbow boys are on their way back from the Rhine. The sorrow is they did not get to show themselves in Berlin. That division marching down Unter-den-Linden would have had a moral effect worth many days of speech making and the like at a peace conference. You may have noted that the democrats are now yelling loudly that the present legis lature is extravagant because it has made an appropriation for a new capitol building. Yet every one of these critics knows that the build ing is needed, and has been for years, and that three democratic legislatures deliberately side stepped the situation, arid thereby made it that much worse. Nebraska republicans will cheer fully accept any responsibility for waste that may be based on providing a new state house. Medals for StWpidity ' vFrau von Hindenburg, sister-in-law of the field marshal of Germany, and who is said to enjoy his confidence, is out with a proposal to have leather medals struck for stupidity, to dis- tribute widely through the old German official- dom. This lady is of the opinion that the re . mainder of the world has entertained for a long i time that the greatest gift of the German mind is stupidity. But the sister-in-law of the man upon whom the kaiser relied for victory says that the British sailors, disguised as Germans, started the dis astrous Kiel revolt, and this was the outbreak ; of the revolution. So, at last, the secret is out. The Germans fought the war with the senti- " ment, God punish England, upon their lips. And now they are told by the sister-in-law of Von Hindenburg that British sailors in disguise precipitated the revolution. If this is so, what a magnificent tribute is thereby paid English resourcefulness and bravery 1 'Over against this exhibit are to be placed the maladroit machina tions of the German plotters to start a revolt in the United States and to stir up Mexico. These were stupid in the extreme. But the British sailors did not do all the work against the Germans. Hindenburg was misled . as to submarine efficiency and as to the ability of the LJnittd States to land considerable forces in France. So the Americans did something, also, to upset the German bean pot. Yes, Frau Hindenburg is right, stupidity medals are in order all around not forgetting her distinguish . id brother-in-law. Baltimore American, BOLSHEVISM IN THE SCHOOLS. New York has discovered that bolshevism is being inculcated in the public schools of that city. It seems rather late for Father Knickerbocker Jo find this out. Social theories of radical tend ency have been fostered in American schools for many years. Scarcely a university in the land but has had its group of "advanced think ers," who have found in the class room or the laboratory the panacea for social and political ills, and have devoted themselves to the propa gation of their ideas. It would be out of reason to trust that these notions would not spread from the colleges to the high schools. The most hopeful sign for the race is that economists and sociologists have united in ef forts to revise certain conditions of lift. They have carefully distinguished between what is sound and what is not, and although agreement has not been entirely obtained amongst them, they have achieved a great deal of good while clinging to the fundamentals. This work has been hindered materially by the course pursued by some who fail to fully comprehend all that is involved. Mistaken persons seize a theory, expand it, and rail at the world because it does not accept views resting on pure reason alone and lacking in all the elements of workability. In the public schools the effort at self-government for advanced classes have held an ele ment of danger, in that the so-called democracy tends to the socialist rather than the republican form of control. Immature minds, incapable of appreciating the difference are led unconsciously to the conclusion that socialism is correct be cause it exalts the group and makes no note of the individual. Economic conditions augment this. It is rather difficult to explain to a youth who has known nothing but the dreary round of exploited toil that a better way of living may be found through another means than that of substi tuting the state for the indivdual. Such explana tion may be made, and a proper application of the basic law of living to the teachings in the schools will soon eliminate bolshevism. Train the individual to know that he is responsible to the state, instead of having it the other way around. "Sweetness and Light." About the beginning of the present century some inspired phrase-maker invented a locu tion that has held Americans in thrall ever .Since. Me spoke ot sweetnes ana light as tne purpose of some enterprise he was promoting. Since then no faker has sought to lure people away frtm the hard path of duty, illumined only by dear-bought experience, but has labeled himself an optimist and an apostle of "sweet ness and light." Let his scheme be never so impracticable, his reasoning never so unsound, he yet can charm the masses with the magic formula, safe in the knowledge that long before the logic of events exposes his chimera, his dupes will be following another will-o'-the-wisp in another direction. He may be promising a world from whence sin has been drown and evil annihilated, in which disease no longer exists; where health and longevity follow man willy-nilly; it may be a life of ease and luxury without effort; it may be that he has wiped out all strife and con troversy. In fact, it does not matter much what it is, if he only promises enough and presents his bait in form sufficiently atractive, he will get his followers. Disappointment does not dis illusionize, and the victims of credulity are eager at any time to adopt any device set before them as a relief from work or a remedy for evils following indulgence or misconduct. Those who undertake to set up the rule of reason are overwhelmed by the cry of pessi mist or cynic, and are forced to accept the melancholy satisfaction found in knowing they are right. The law of love, which all are so anxious to establish, does not contemplate a life of ease for any, but demands the active exercise of every human energy all the time. Work is the only way to happiness; idleness brings misery. Common sense has its reward when properly applied to all the ways of life. But Barnum was right, and the faker will al ways get a hearing when he comes bringing "what the people want," and declaring himself a gospeler of "sweetness and light." "Reciprocal Demurrage" a Danger. The legislature has just sent ahead a mea sure that embodies an ides of real value, but in such form as will defeat its object. It looks to the establishment of a "reciprocal demur rage" charge, whereby railroads will be held responsible to shippers for failure to provide cars within a specified time. A little reflection should have convinced the proponents of the measure of the difficulties in their way. Once or twice a year it happens that the de mand for cars in Nebraska is far beyond the ability of the railroads to supply. In the rush days of marketing experience has shown the physical impossibility of providing transpor tation equal to the demand. To penetrate the railroads because of failure to always have "empties" ready when the shipper calls for $hem seems unfair. ; Nor is the proposed charge "reciprocal" in its true sense. Demurrage charged against a user of cars for failure to load or unload within a specified time is intended tc incease the ser vice by eliminating unnecessary delays. The rule works to the advantage of the prospective shipper, by securing return of cars more prompt ly. Such is the chief purpose of the demurrage rules. Some regulation may be devised for meeting any deliberate delay of a railroad in furnish ing cars, or discrimination between shippers, but the measure just sent through the legisla ture will hardly afford the relief sought. ' It was quite thoughtful of the peace dele gates at Paris to apprise the late chairman (by right of seniority) of the senate's committee on foreign relations of changes made in the draft of the League of Nations constitution. This will help him revise his speech and bring it up to date, but it will not affect the attitude of his paper, which has roundly abused all who suggested any alteration of the original docu ment which the president himself said was merely tentative. Marse Henry Watterson is now back where he started, a free lance in journalism, but that wilt not dim the brilliance of prestige in the least. He still retains the right, the exercise of which has made him great, that of indepen dent personal views on whatever question is presented. Bavarians are forming a national society to promote emigration. It might be interesting to know where they expect to land.' Training Household Servants London Times. , The Women's Advisory Committee of the Ministry of Reconstruction were asked by Dr. Addison in December to consider tht Sdoincstic service problem (which now confronts the housewives of the country in acute form), and to indicate the lines on which the available supplies of labour can be used in the best in terests of the nation. The committee's pro cedure was to appoint four sub-committees of people specially qualified to consider the ques tion from these aspects: (1) Training; (2) ma chinery of distribution; (3) home helps; and (4) organization and conditions. The report of the sub-committee on training is now available. It urges the importance of a better training of domestic servants, not only as a corrective of the waste and friction that arise out of inefficient domestic labour, but also as a prime means of raising the status of the occupation itself. "One of the root causes." it savs, "which has led to the present low status of domestic service as an occupation, is the lack of opportunities for training, such as will enable a girl to become a skilled worker." Training of this kind is pro vided to a limited extent, but parents are in too many cases unable to meet the loss that they must surfer if they encourage their daughters to undergo such training rather than to enter a commercial or industrial occupation. "We are of opinion that, so long as facilities for training are beyond the reach of most working-class homes, the occupation will suffer from its pres ent lack of status, and continue to receive the greater number of its recruits from women who are driven into it by economic necessity. It is essential that domestic service should take its place as a skilled occupation, and that the con ditions of employment should be made compar able with those which exist in other occupa tions." The report then goes on to detail the exist ing facilities for the training of women and girls in domestic service, showing that in 1914, apart from philanthropic agencies and other in stitutions, tne total provision in England and Wales was far less than 700 pupils. Some of these Institutions 'were closed during the war. At the end of 1917 the pupils in attendance num bered less than 300. Reference is also made to the fact that the bulk of domestic servants obtain such training as they possess either from a mistress or, in a large household, from upper servants Under whom they work. "Some mistresses of small households," says the report, "both understand the work themselves and take pains to teach their maids, but the unsatisfactory nature of the instruction given by many mistresses, owing to their own ignorance of, and lack of system in, domestic matters has been brought prominently to the notice of the committee." The training received by young girls work ing under other servants is criticized by the com mittee as being often superficial, in that the up per servant may have neither the time nor the ability to explain the reasons for the various processes which have been adopted as a result of experience. Hence the pupil's intellect is not trained; she tends to become mechanical in her work, and her intelligence suffers in conse quence. Two further disadvantages present themselves in this kind of training. In the first place, the number of large households is not enough to provide training for all; secondly, the girl leaves school at 14, and the committee and all the witnesses examined were unanimous in agreeing that- girls should not enter domestic service under the age of 16. In Part II of their report the committee describes the training which they consider most desirable. The schools where it is given should fall in the category of junior technical schols, to secure recognition of domestic service as a skilled occupation. In certain particulars the course suggested follows that laid down by some of the more enterprising educational authori ties. The training should, however, extend over two years, beginning at the age of 14, when the girl leaves school. During the second year specialized training should be undertaken, which if posible should include work in some house connected with the school. The cost of such training should be borne entirely by the local education authority, aided by state grants. Maintenance grants to the pupil should be made on such a scale as to enable a parent to allow his daughter to undertake this training without greater financial expenditure than would be en tailed if she entered some industrial or commer cial calling. "Without some such policy," the report adds, "there is little chance of raising the status of domestic service, and thereby providing a skill ed occupation for a large number of women." Though conditions of domestic service were not within the scope of this particular sub-committee's inquiry, they report themselves unable to conclude their recominendaitons without stating emphatically their opinion that the mere pro vision of training facilities will not suffice to attract girls to housework, unless the condi tions of service are radically altered so as to conform with those of other occupations. Burleson and His Bludgeon Postmaster-General Burleson may usually be depended on to do even the right thing in the wrong way, and when he does the wrong thing he has the faculty of exciting the strongest indignation. The merits of his dispute with the Postal Telegraph company are highly tech nical, and from the first there has been a sug gestion in his manner of proceeding that per sonal animosity was a motive. In summarily removing the president and directors of the company from all authority over its affairs and, as he states in his official order, removing "the owners" also Mr. Burleson may claim as a precedent the case of the few railway presi den'' who were similarly relieved from duty by Director-General McAdoo. But the ground assigned for that action was refusal to co-operate in the Railway Administration's working plans. No such reason is alleged by Mr. Burle son in a way to carry conviction, and on the other side, we have the company's assertion that the resistance was to Burleson's plan to put up telegraph rates where the company was convinced that increase was unnecessary. It is not to be wondered at that even some demo cratic congressmen are giving quiet aid and en couragement to the plan for taking the Burle son episode aggressively in hand. New York Post. : a v The Day We Celebrate. David Baird, late United States senator from New Jersey, born in County Derry, Ireland, 80 years ago. Most Rev. Randall Thomas Davidson, arch bishop of Canterbury, born 71 years ago. Commondore Ellsworth P. Bertholf, com mandant of United States Coast Guard service, born in New York City 53 years ago. Rear Admiral Nathaniel R. Usher, U. S. N., who retires today for age, born at Vincennes, Ind., 64 years ago. Beny Leonard, champion lightweight pugi list, born in New York City 23 years ago. John J. McGra'w, manager and part owner of the New York National base ball club, born at Truxton, N. Y., 46 years ago. In Omaha 30 Years Ago. The funeral of Joseph Dinebar, late teacher in the Bohemian school, was attended by all the Bohemian societies and the largest crowds ever gathered for such an occasion. A 21st birthday party was given for W. TJ. Drake at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Allen, 1114 South Thirteenth street. Rev. John Gordon. of the Westminster Pres byterian church preached an anniversary ser mon. In two years the congregation has grown from 47 to 147 and erected a handsome edifice. Dr. George L. Miller has accepted an invita tion to speak on the Irish question at the com ing Parnell meeting to be held in the opera house. Around the Cities Detroit Is reported to have ac cumulated 200.000 quarts of booze, as a result or ths recent Ohio deluge. .Luckily the city's1 supply of clear water ls equal to the demand. "Not for $1,000," exclaimed a taxi driver In Chicago when requested iy tne court to apologize to a police man. Defiance cost him $25. Still some people think peace prevails by me lauestae. Sioux City building contractors and bricklayers are wrangling over the wage scale for the year. The men demand $1 an hour and the Mulders offer 87 hi cents an hour. The argument promises a showdown April 1. Publlo school facilities In Sioux t'lty have not kept pace with the citys needs. The school board will submit to the voters at the spring election a jioo.ooo bond proposi tlon, the proceeds to be used In new school buildings and equipment War among the flsh dealers of Cin cinnati caused a slump In the price of sea food and consumers hopped the markets Joyfully. The shift to fish hit the eg market and Driees took the toboggan. When profiteers fall out consumers get a benefit. Kansas City' chief of detectives reports that the Mafia etctorted "more than $100,000" from resident Italians by Black Hand methods during the last year. A reign of terror grips Little Italy in conse quence and the. police authorities are begged for protection and relief. Philadelphia, druggists are going to the mat with tne telephone people April 1. The drueglsts insist on the existing split of SO per cent of the receipts of the pay telephones In their stores, which the company con siders too much Orders are out for the removal of the phones and about 4,000 are booked tc go. New Tork City anticipates a grow ing rush of tourists from various dry belts during the next four months, and sees a rising scale of prices for farewell souses. Little old Chicago looks for considerable busi ness in that line, and St. Louis, Phil adelphia, Baltimore and Boston are ripe for overflows. Go to it! Tou'll be a long time dry! Sioux City and other Iowa munici palities are in the same boat with Nebraska communities. Both must go to their respective state capitals every two years to obtain permis sion to do certain things or prevent certain things being pushed over. Sioux City wants permission for a larger annual budget with which to meet increased expenses, particular ly pay increases for firemen and policemen. RIGHT TO THE POINT Lzi5&? cc&' DREAMLAND ADVENTURE By DADDY (In this adventure a stranger In armor comes to the aid of Peggy when selfish birds try to upset the peace and happiness of Birdland.) "THE MYSTERIOUS KNIGHT." CHAPTER I. BALMY spring has come and all the earth seemed busy and hap py. Peggy, digging in her garden, glowed with the Joy of living. It would be fun to plant her seeds, more fun to watch the plants spring forth from the ground, and the most fun of all to gather her ripened vegetables In the summer and fall. As her eager space turned over the soft noil, dozens of worms were brought Into view. "My, what a feast for the birds." thought Peggy, raising her eyes to search tne sky for her feathered Philadelphia Ledger: Some lame pocketbooks will need to be helped over the spring styles. Minneapolis Tribune: "Put Away Your Kurs" is the way a headline reads, .but if memories of summer garb serve truly, this Is the time to bundle up in them. Baltimore American: The prob lem of defining beer is beyond the courts. Leave it to the poets to de scribe that blissful twilight zone in which one hears the birds sing at sunset. New Tork Herald: Fashion de crees that women's hosiery is to be more diaphanous than ever this sum mer. Almost at the same time conies the statement that the mild winter will bring swarms of mosqui toes in the warm months. Enough said. Brooklyn Eagle: Maine, which "went hell-bent for Governor Kent." votes to retain her September elec tion. But, after all, her "Dirigo" has become a mighty unreliable weather vane, whether vanity is in her mind or not. New York World: The United States has enough enemy alien prop erty to cover all claims against Ger many; for.-.ier owners may look to Berlin for their pay. The simplicity of this arangement may cause envy in the nations of the entente wonder ing how they will get their bills paid and suspecting that payment may prove impossible. MEETING A MAN FROM HOME Sin. O Muse. In the treble clef, A little song of the A. E. F.. And pardon me, please, if I give vent To something akin to sentiment. But we have our moment Over Here When we want to cry and wa want to cheer; And the hurrah feeling will not down When you meet a man from your own home town. It'e many a lonesome, longsome day Since you embarked from the U. S. A., And you meet ome men lt'a a great big war From burgs that you never hid known before;. And you landed here, and your rest camp mate Wai a man from tome atrange and distant state. Liked him? Tes; but you wanted to see A man from the town where you used to be. And then you went, by design or chance, All over the well-known map of France; And you yearned with a yearn that grew and grew , To talk with a man from the place you knew. And some lugubrious morning when Your morale la batting about .110, 'Where are you from?" and you make reply, ind the o. d. warrior says: "So am I." And the universe wears a smiling face As you spill your talk of the old home place; Tou talk of the streets and the home.town jokes, And you find that you know each other's folks; And you haven't any more woes at all As you both decide that the world Is small A statement adding to Its renown When you meet a man from your own home town. If you want to know why I wrote this pome. Well . . . I've Just had a talk with a guy from home. Capt. F. P. Adams, U. S. A., in Colliers. friends. And as If the birds knew that tho worms were awaiting them a great flock was sweeping toward her. "Yo ho. breakfast is readv." shout ed Peggy, gaily. But to her sur prise, the birds paid not the slight est attention to her call. Uttering shrill cries of alarm and flying their swiftest, they rushed past without looking downward. They seemed in a panic like an army of refugees fleeing from some grave peril. "Yo ho! Yo ho! What's your hurry," shouted Peggy, but not one of the birds answered her. Old and young, robins, orioles, bob-o-links, thrushes, wrens, tanagers, martins, swallows and scores of others, they seemed too much disturbed to give heed to t lie feast of worms to which she was inviting them. Where could they be going? Whnt danger had driven them from home right in their busiest season when they were building their nests and preparing for their summer's work in fields and orchards? Before 1'engy could even guess an answer to these questions. General Swallow, Reddy Woodpecker and Blue Jay came rushing tip, while Judge Owl puffed noisily along be hind. General Swallow shrieked a warning. "Flee, Princess Peggy! Revolt has broken out! Birdland has gone all to smash!" "Find a hollow tree, quick!" panted Judge Owl. "And be sure It's hidden deep in the woods." "What has happened?" cried Peg gy', while shivers of excitement ran up and down her back. "Who Is In revolt?" "Jack Sparrow and his gang," snapped out Reddy Woodpecker. "What are they revolting about?" puzzled Peggy. "Everything has been so pleasant and prosperous In Birdland since I tamed the Giant of the Woods." "They've got ' kinks-brain kinks," hooted Judge Owl. "What's that, some new kind of disease?" "The craziest kind of a disease," affirmed Judge Owl solemnly. "It turns folk3 topsyturvy and then they want to turn everybody else topsy turvy, too." "Jack Sparrow caught It listening to soap box speechniakers on the city streets," exclaimed General Swallow. "And he has given It to the Eng lish sparrows, the cow tiirds, and all the shiftless, good-for-nothing, talk-talk birds, who want to live off the toil of others," declared Reddy Woodpecker. "They say they are going to do away with all rule and order In Bird land. Food and nests will belong to everybody In common, and the lazy Idlers will have as much right to them as the workers, who have earned them." "Why, how slliy!" exclaimed Peg gy. That s not fair nor honest and woul sta "Hurrah for Princess Peggy," shouted Blue Jay. "She will settle this revolt." "Then she will have to get busy In Daily Dot Puzzle .vould upset everything. We'll not itancf for it here in free America." 37 a i. S3 35 44 & V 23 !? k ft 10 k: 82. .Sr4f - .in w 1 1 fi m f 82 See the Virginia Trace the lines to eighty-there. Draw from one to two and so on to end. a hurry." shrilled General Swallow, "for here come the revolutionists!" Peggy looked up to see a dark cloud shutting off the sun a cloud made up of hundreds of tramplsh, rough-looking birds. (Tomorrow will be told how Peggy is captured and the mysterious knight comes to the rescue.) ox Chief Justice White. Bruning, Neb., April 3. To the Editor of The Bee: Will you please answer in the columns of The Bee at your earliest convenience for the benefit of an eighth grade pupil, who is the chief justice of the supreme court (national), and was Hughes chief justice at the time he resigned? I say not, but others sav he was. AN EIGHTH GRADE PUPIL. Answer Edward Douglas White is chief justice of the supreme court of the United States; he was appointed by President Taft In 1910. Charles Evans Hughes was an associate jus tice of the superme court of the United States when he resigned to accept the republican nomination for president in 1916. DAILY CARTOONETTE SflYBo-'LflMEDUCK"lS QOlNTOiOiN INflWAUffl IF I WASYOUl'UPUTfUL MY RDU ON HER?J Daylight System Is a Fraud. Omaha, April 4. To the Editor of the Bee: Some people have blamed me for saying that the so called "daylight saving system" is a fraud. I still claim it is a fraud. In the first place it defrauds millions of peonle of their proper hours of sleep, for by having the clocks set forward It is dark nearly the whole year at 5 o'clock in the morning, and. that really means four o'clock, a time that lots of people find their best time for sleep. Morn ings in this part of the country in the summer time are the finest part of the day and by depriving us of our fine mornings, it makes it all tne harder for older people and especial ly for the women of the homes. The wives and mothers of a good many workingmen have told me they do not like to be compelled to get up the year round in the dark to get their men folks ready to go to work and that the mornings when they have to get up now ,is often the only time of the day they can sleep de cently. One man who does nothing but sit around and read and smoke and "gas" said, "what If the women do have to get up before daylight in the summer time? They have to do It in the winter time anyhow." I told him that was a very heartless way to look at it, as the women had some, rights as well as the people who favor the daylight saving fad. I see that the fuel administrators claim that $1,250,000 tons of coal was saved In 1918. Most of the fuel administrators were either lawyers or college professors and I do not think they know much more about the coal business than I do, and I do not know anything about it. I will not say the administrators lie, but will say I think they are very badly mistaken. They must study a funny kind of arithmetic when they say fuel is saved when we have to get up in the dark and call it seven o'clock in the morning and burn lights and fuel for an extra hour. I do not see how they figure that any fuel is saved by burning it an hour longer each day. Stock men told me last summer that they ate their breakfasts by electric light every morning last summer, a thing they never did be fore in their lives. I would like to ask the daylight faddists what about the saving there? From the way people talk about this so-called sav ing of daylight, I do not find one in a hundred that favor it. FRANK A. AGNEW Conditions at Soldiers' Homes. Omaha, April 4. To the Editor of The Bee: Recently I went to the Soldiers' Home at Milford. Neb., and stayed there for a number of weeks, where I did not find very good condi tions for the veterans of the civil war. The commandant seldom makes any inspection of the rooms and in the six weeks I was there, he did not come into the room I used at any time. Then the old soldiers are fejl on the vilest kind of oleomargarine that is so nasty that it would make a hog sick, and the bread is always so sour that it is enough to kill the old men who are so unfortunate as to be inmates of that home, with no chance to get Into better places. I had a little money with me and bought my own bread and butter while at that place. It seems to me that If the young and robust men who served in "the recent war with Germany could be simply swamped with cigarettes, to bacco, candy, ice cream and chewing gum, that the boastful state of Ne braska could at least furnish the veterans who saved the Union and indirectly saved republican forms of government to the world, with de cent food to eat, and have that food cooked for them in a decent man ner. 1 do not begrudge the young soldiers who served In the recent war any of the good things that were given to them, but I do think the old veterans of a war that ended more than 50 years ago, ought to be given as good as the land can furnish. Then when people In that home are taken sick they are not given proper attention by physicians and are not furnished proper medicines. The janitor of the Soldiers' Home at JUilford is a colored ex-convict who was convicted of murder a number of years ago and who now mistreats the inmates of that home and calls the veterans the vilest kind of names, names not fit to be printed. - It seems to me that the state of ebraska could find a better man for that position, and one who will treat the veterans with respect. . While I was at that home an old soldier died and when his funeral was held the. commandant refused to attend and when the veterans, who did attend, came back from the bur ial, they found the commandant playing cards. A man who will not show more respect for old soldiers than that Is not fit to govern over them. Then the Home at Milford Is not built right for the comfort of the old men in that institution, for the win dows are all of them placed so hieh, that it is very much like a prison. The state of Nebraska ought to furnish a decent place for those old men for their few remaining years. I think the legislature ought to make a thorough investigation of conditions at the Soldiers' Homes at both Milford and Grand Island, for the conditions at Grand Island are about as bad as they are at Milford. Let the people of Nebraska arise in their indignation and demand that conditions at the soldiers' homes be improved for their comfort and hap piness, for it is a disgrace to the state of Nebraska now. JOHN D. SAWYER. Late Co. K, 5th N. Y. Engineers, U. S. A., from 1861 to 1S65. My. address is No. 4826 South Twenty-third, Omaha. Case Against the Dog. Shenandoah, la., April 4. To the Editor of The Bee: I. L. Edmands seems to be of the same childish no tion that most children of about 6 to 14 years of age have, that is, that a cur dog Is worth more than any thing or anybody excepting of course his own immediate family and that if it was not for the dogs the viscious wild animals, burglars, tramps and criminals would take everything worth having and make slaves of all honest people or kill them or some thing worse. Now I have no such fear and have tried in vain to find something that some dog would do where the human effort required to get the dog to perform said act was not greater than the effort which would have been necessary- for the human to have done the useful part which the dog performed, but on the contrary have found the dog to be a money and material loss as well as a waste of human effort to try and train the dog to do anything useful In a civilized community. It may be that some dogs are useful in war and for handling sheep, but my experience in handling cattle has been that it is oftener that the dog proves to be a nuisance than help, and as for - burglars they are not afraid of dogs, as one of our fellow townsmen left a cross bulldog locked in his house and some burglars broke into his house and stole the bulldog; and who ever heard of a dog biting a tramp? I have seen people try to set a dog on a tramp, but the dog would never take hold of a tramp. As soon as the dog gets its nose with in three feet of a tramp its bristles will immediately fall and it will wag its tail as though It had found a long lost friend and be willing to follow and obey him ever after. It may be that dogs are really useful in the Arctic and Anarctic regions to haul sledges, &C, but in a city they are undoubtedly a great nuisance and ihey are such a destructive and filthy beast that I will give $5.00 reward to any one who will be instrumental in eradicating them from an area of two blocks each way from my resi dence. I believe Omaha has a very wise mayor when he recognizes the dog nuisance, and I hope your city council will be as wise and try to eliminate the nuisance. P. S. Most stories of the great services performed by dogs are pure bunk and should be classed with fairy stories and Arabian Knight stories. A. J. HEIST. MIRTHFUL REMARKS. Problem If you should observe a man on a train, elevated or street car take out all the papers in his pockets and scan them carefully, tearing some up, what would be your deduction? Answer That he la going home to hla wife. Judge. "Honeymoon, ehT Pretty happy, ah?" "That's what. The bride kisses him ao frequently that he can't (tet a chance to smoke a clgaret." Louisville Courier-Journal. "QIU tahuria did: oi, rne com tfturau.itcx3TruAta PostToasties "So you've gone to work now that your husband is In the army." "Yes, ma'am." "Are you doing well?" "Very. I'm making mora money than he ever made, and I'm Just waiting now for him to come home and aprlng that old pag on me about my not being able to sret along without him." Detroit Frea , Press. Bedton was alwaya complaining of his frlfe's memory. "She can never remember anything," laid he. "It's awful!" "My wife was just as bad," said Clinker, "till I found a capital receipt." "What was It?" asked Bedton eagerly. "Why," said Clinker, "whenever there'a unythlng particular I want the missus to emembor, I write It on a slip of paper and gum It on the looking-glass." In llanapolls Star. Did You Buy New Clothes? Then protect them by pro viding the proper kind of lug gage. 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