12 THE BEE: OMAHA, i SATURDAY, APRIL 12, 191t. The OmAha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY TOUNDED BT XDWARO ftOSEWATIB VICTOR ROSEWATEB, EDITOR THS BE! PUBUSBIMO COMPANY. PBOPKIETOB MEMBER. OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ta SawalatiS Prets. f AM tMtam atember. to chu)tIy MUM to la m far rubUuMloa of til m dlipatebes cradltVd la II ot not otlwrirlM ereiiltwl ta this cir, nf tin Uh loeal am iHblMwl lurtia. all rlftau f pubUcaUon 0 our special SIseatclM i alia nniil. OPPICESi Cklcus Pcooto'i Dm Mldlng. Omaha n Be Bids . N fort 3M ritlk ava Soul Ones Hit N St. it. LoJN B'nk ot Ounasn), CotmcU Blufrt 1 If. lUla St WuhJnftoB UU a St. Iinoola Little Building. MARCH CIRCULATION Daily 65,293 Sunday 63,450 AterMs stiaulstloa br Ik; aunta sabsorlhet u im tt s B. . Iim, circulation Mum. Subecribar leaving Ik tlty ahauM hav The Bm mail! them. AaTdr change! aa eftan u requested. Home rule for Omaha ought to come first. Paving and grading plana will follow the ac customed course for the present season, at least. : Tree planting is good practice for Nebras kans, but care should be taken to see that the trees grow.. V The legislature has just given Omaha folks another strong hint to adopt home rule. Will it be acted on? j A visiting missionary says the world war was won by Standard Oil. This will relieve a y i.. . iuc ui suspense. ; A .L A I 1 J m ' nnuiiict suiicrican us oecn muraerea in Mexico, which fact will .very likely call for an- - -.1 a ' j Bolshevism is so popular in Budapest that as i high as $1,000 is offered for an American pass port to get away on. ; Price-fixing will wait on the president again, . just as it did at first His boards are not even : good rubber stamps. ; A magician ought at least to control the mind ;of his assistants, if he professes to read the thoughts of his audience. - Emiliano Zapata is reported killed again, but this leaves him far behind Pancho Villa in the ' number of lives he has lost.' Ak-Sar-Ben is promised all, the help he needs in making his new show go big, for nothing he 'undertakes ever falls down. Our absent president seems to have remem bered that the home folks also are in need of relief as well as those of Europe. f-At1rt .nn4.fl .mull K A .,.... . Tmm sailles in about three weeks, if you are still in terested in the Peace conference. ' I Director Hines says he is about through i raising wages for the time at least. Taxpayers, who are footing the bill, will hope so. : Packers tell us meat prices will continue high until after hungry Europe is fed up. All Mhe more reason for insisting that the bolsheviki 'go to work. ' 'i Do you suppose Newton D. Baker grinned when he awarded the distinguished service medal to General Wood? -It was the secretary who kept the general out of war. Yankee soldiers inclined to mutiny ought to '-remember that they must come home some day, and that wives and mothers Will demand of them full explanation of their conduct Quebec has rejected bone-dry prohibition by a round majority, thus providing a wet spot much nearer than Europe. Montreal may find itself i great tourist center after July 1. : A Roman mob promptly dispersed an at tempted parade of Spartacans, as the Roman soldiers disposed of the original Spartacus and hit Thracian followers some centuries ago. If Omaha can make vitrified brick fit for pav ing roads, let us no longer delay the factory. Millions of these brick have been used here, and millions more will be needed in the future.' ,. Somehow the bootleggers' bund appears to get through any barrage the booze hounds are able to lay down. You know, if there were no bootleggers there would be no booze hounds. The new "code" law promises business ad ministration to Nebraska, as pledged by the republican platform last year. Incidentally, the democrats are also redeeming their platform -pledges for they made none. , Life in Berlin is just one strike after another, bank clerks giving the latest demonstration. For a well organized capital of a race of super men, the Berlinese are giving a splendid imita tion of the damphool bolsheviki. Court-Martial Revision f Secretary of War Baker would find his de cision to ask for a law to revise our military ' code received with more enthusiasm had he made the same statements in January that he makes today. No one doubts that all those at were without any desire to set up a merciless code or to enforce the regulations that exist in a cold-blooded and heartless manner. Yet when the attention of the secretary was called ,to obviously cruel and unusual sentences and to procedures of the most severe and illegal charac ter, his first attitude towards his critics was to deny that any injustice were done, to defend the code in force and to express surprise that any complaints should be made at all in view of the fact that he knew of no valid cause for criticism and was unaware that the evils depicted ex 4 isted. His bland attitude irritated the critics, and in ' connection with the animosities de veloped by the Ansell-Crowder controversy, which had little to do with the real issue, led to much intemperate and indiscriminate abuse of War department ways which was bad for all concerned. . This, criticism was more or less tn- ' i 1 C ....... R-tr..'. ..... stf J..!!.- .:.k V 1 IXU jy cuciu; jjivc 0 r mj vr utsuug Willi the issue and was justified by incidents cited. - Now, however, the War department chiefs, the committee of the American Bar association and the "committee of former judge advocates" v Should all be able to get together finally and ' with the facts in hand devise a new code which will make impossible the miscarriages of justice that have been laid before the public by the various official and unofficial critics of the army coarts-nsartiaL That is all the people ask for. and. the secretary of war might have granted this in January and not delayed his approval for tares months, thus maintaining the issue as ii-mt ana acrimonious controversy. rnua HOME RULE OMAHA'S GREAT NEED. Failure, of certain amendments to Omaha's charter to pass scrutiny at Lincoln emphasises the need of the community for the right to reg ulate its own domestic affairs. The character of the defeated changes in the city' charter is not so important as is the fact that their disposal depended on the temper of the legislature. Mas ters concerning the city alone were being dealt with, and in all fairness these should be left to the decision of the'people of Omaha, and not be subject to the mood of the general assembly. It so happens that in this case a genuine favor was done the home owners by the legis lature. The city commissioners sought to be invested with extraordinary power in regard to public improvements. The Bee called attention to the bills when they were introduced, and at the time outlined the objections to them. Ar guments of much force and weight are made in favor of the measure, but the principle is un altered. If the citizens of Omaha are willing that the commission should have the power it seeks, well and good, but the authority should be granted by them and not by the state legis lature. A home rule charter, prepared many months ago, was held up by court proceedings, but it surely can not be indefinitely postponed through that means. Now that the charter amendments sought have been denied by the legislature, the whole charter may- well be presented to the people for adoption. Then it will be in order to bring forward any amendments deemed ad visable or necessary, and allow the home owners an opportunity to express themselves formally on the point. Let us take advantage of permission given long ago, adopt our own city charter, and cease the biennial pilgrimages to Lincoln to secure the privilege of attending to our own affairs. German Hunger and Peace.' A correspondent, sending word from Berlin, closes his dispatch with these words: "Finally, remember that the Allies are dealing with a desperate nation a nation hungry for peace hungry for bread." It is well to remember, also, that this same desperate nation is ear nestly and persistently attempting to capitalize this very desperation, and through its hunger for peace and bread to secure terms more fa vorable and less burdensome than it knows jus tice entitles it to. Germany is deeply infected with the virus of bolshevism; its boasted order and efficiency has vanished In S mist of riot and disorder; productive effortJias come, to a stop; responsible government exists nowhere in the empire, while the only evidence of organized ef fort is that furnished by the groups contending for mastery. The Germans must be made to realize, to understand fully, that they are mak ing no headway against their fate by the meth ods they have chosen to impress the world. When they cease their foolishness, their hunger for both peace and bread will be appeased, but they will be required to pay for both. Peace will be righteous, based on justice, and bread will be theirs because they have earned it. Railroad Wages and the Public. Walker D. Hines has just announced that another increase in pay has been granted the men in the train service of the roads under government control, amounting to $65,000,000 a year, or a total of nearly a billion since the Adamson bill was passed. . No one will be grudge the engine and trainmen the high rate of pay granted them, unless it be some of the less well paid employes, who may be envious of the success of their thoroughly organized brethren. The public, however, must foot the bill. February reports, unofficially tabulated, showed a decrease in net operating revenue at the rate of $150,000,000 a year under last year's experienced As the final net deficit in operating revenue for 1918 was $214,000,000, the indica tions are that for the current year, unless a marked change in business conditions transpires, will be close to $370,000,000. Add this to the $750,000,000 appropriation asked for the roads, and the net cost to the people for the second year of government management of the rail roads will approximate $1,120,000,000, which is some load for even the wealthiest country in the world to carry. Private ownership could not support such a 'drain, and it is questionable if the people long will want to put up with such a plan. The president washed his hands of the problem in December, and the demo cratic congress passed it along to the incoming republicans who will have here the knottiest of all reconstruction questions. Congress May Soon Be Convened. The news that comes from Paris suggests that Mr. Wilson has by, now recovered from the chagrin he experienced on his return from France in March, when congress failed to do six months' work in five days. He left Wash ington decidedly out of patience, almost angry, because of .the fact that the affairs of the United States demanded that an extra session of the Sixty-sixth congress be called, at once. At Paris he met with another disappointment, for the program there had been delayed beyond all reason. It is now reported that he seriously contemplates calling congress together, to work while he remains at the Peace conference. This will be good news for the country, for it will not only provide means for carrying on the govern ment after the end of the current fiscal year, but will materially contribute to the relief of business by setting the machinery of readjust ment into motion. The call might have been issued a month ago without interfering with the job in Paris and perhaps with advantage for America. Another decrease of more than, half a mil lion tons in the unfilled orders of United States steel may help 'to bring prices to a better level Director Hines evidently knew what he was doing when he declined to, accept the figures set by Secretary Redfield's board. ; The rule against rebating is part ol.the pro tection the small shipper has against the big in all properly governed markets. To destroy it simply places the .little fellow at the mercy of the larger. Some day the farmer will under stand this fundamental business principle. Sam Gompers is not the only, returning American to shed tears of joy at getting back to his own country. If anything were needed to make all citizens proud of the United States as well as grateful for the privilege of living here, it is furnished in Europe today. , , Raismli Is back on the war mapagin, but is fighting Spain this time, as something nearer his six. King Alfonso ought to get a .copy of the Roosevelt ultima turn and study It closely. Publicity and Speed New York Evening Post , , Two main grievances are now being formu lated against the peace conference. On the one hand, the conference is wasting time while the world is ablaze. On the other hand, the con ference is resolving itself into a star chamber. It was bad enough when a world-meeting of 70 delegates turned into a Council of Ten, gath ered in M. Pichon's private offices on the Quai D'Orsay. Today the conference has become a big four doing business in Mr. Wilson's private apartment or in the seclusionnof the Hotel Crillon. Those who were convinced from the beginning that the conference would fashion itself into an instrument of secret diplomacy for the purpose of "putting over" something on mankind are now confirmed in their horrid suspicions. The difficulty is that from this very source come most of the complaints about de lay in shaping the peace of which Europe stands so badly in need. No one as yet has formulated the method by which the representatives of two hemispheres and two dozen nations may express to the public stenographers all that is in their minds and hearts and do it in tne space ot it hours, more or less. A breakdown of publicity with respect to the conference would mean an outside world left in ignorance of the aims pursued by the as sembled diplomats, their specific demands, and their methods. It can not be truly said tnat with regard either to aims or demands at Paris the world has been left in the dark. On the question of Russia we have known from the be ginning that there is a clash between America and Great Britain, standing for conciliation of the soviet, and France holding out for drastic action, with Italy indifferent. On the question of reparations and indemnity we have known the issue to be between what Germany owes and what Germany can pay, arid in s general way the alignment of powers on either side. In the matter of territorial claims we have had just the opposite of secret diplomacy: instead of concealing their desires the interested par ties have been at pains to bring their maximum claims before the public Surely, nothing can be nearer to the ideal of open diplomacy than Italy's recent threat to break up the con ference unless she got Fiume. This may be wicked, but it is not secret. What the French would like to have on the Rhine, what the Czechs would like in Silesia, what the Jugo slavs would, like on the Adriatic, what Clemen ceau thinks of the league of nations, what Mr. Hughes of Australia thinks of Japan, is far from being a secret As a matter of fact, when the diplomats are not accused of secret practices, they are accused of uttering brutal imperialistic demands in cynical disregard of the opinion of niankind. The progress of the covenant of the league has been in the full light of humanly attainable publicity. It has been built out of material gathered in the open; it is based on ideas de veloped by Lord Robert Cecil and General Smuts with s large group of coworkers in Eng land; to some extent on the French plan of Leon Bourgeois; to some extent on the work in this country. No service was rendered Mr Wilson at the time of the publication of the covenant when it was intimated that the draft must stand without change in jot or tittle; then, indeed, there would have been excuse tor the charge of secrecy. Actually, a storm of pub licity has been breaking over the document, and the results are to be embodied in the final draft It is true that we do not know what have been all the arguments exchanged in the privacy of the commission meetings at the Hotel Crillon; just what have been the French fears about the league, what the exact Japanese reser vations, what the inducements offered to the league opponents, what the possible threats ut tered by such opponents, what the whole process of give and take. Only that such a conception of open diplomacy is an unattainable ideal. The ideal is unattainable because in every discussion there are legitimate arguments which cannot be spoken in public without peril or without frustrating a just purpose. We may imagine Clemenceau backing up his demands for large indemnities with a statement of France's unhappy economic condition; but it may not be desirable to reveal the true condition of France ; either to its own people or to its late enemies. We may imagine Sonnino arguing from the threat of revolution In Italy; but no govern ment will invite revolution by holding Out the prospect of its success. We may imagine Lloyd George citing his labor difficulties at home, but it is futile to think of a statesman announcing to the public, "If I don't get the Russian policy I want I am done for." The danger of secret diplomacy is secret aims. The peril to the world is in secret treaties that remain secret, though that peril, too, is minimized by the fact that secret treaties when exposed have a way of turning out very much what was suspected. As much publicity for diplomatic, proceedings as is practicable, by all means. Friend of the Soldier s Repfies 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, j Ask TheBeej to Answer. Hines Plays No Favorites The position taken by Director General Hines in refusing to be bound by the steel prices recently fixed by the leading steel producers and the war industrial board is not easily to be assailed. These "stabilized" prices represented some reduction from the war-price level, but they still averaged almost 100 per cent more than the pre vailing pre-war prices. They were an arbitrary creation and were recognized as such by the consuming trade, which has accordingly re fused to come forward with large orders at prices still regarded as highly inflated. Why should the railroads be expected or be forced to do otherwise, and load Up with a lot of im provements at such prices permanently capital ized into their plants? Copper prices have been left by the govern ment to seek their own level, and are now down nearly a half and close to the pre-war average. Why the government should deal with steel as a special favorite is not apparent Director General Hines is said to believe that the Department of Commerce's price agreement with the steel producers is against the federal anti-trust law. But whether so or not, he had been placed in the position of letting the rail roads be squeezed by the big steel concerns, and he declines to lend himself to such a process. On that ground alone, and as a trus tee for the roads as well as for the public inter est in the roads, Mr. Hines course evidently has abundant justification. New York World. i i on a v The Day We Celebrate.; Vice Admiral Sir Rosslyn Erskine Wemyss, first sea lord of the British admiralty during the wir, born 55 years ago. Maj. Gen. Jesse Mcl. Carter, former chief of the militia, bureau of the United States army, born in Missouri 56 years ago. Rt. Rev. Arthur C. A. Hall, Episcopal bishop of Vermont born in Berkshire, England, 72 years ago. ; . la Omaha 30 Years Ago. Buffalo Bill left Omaha for Washington, New York and Paris. Ed Rothery presented him with an elegant ring whip. Sherman Canfield, who was with him in his recent tour of Great Britain, will join him in Paris. The old Redfield building on the southeast corning of Twelfth and Dodge streets, in which The Bee was born, is being torn down and will be replaced by a three-story brick building, costing $6,500. Jules Levy, the great cornetist, and wife, are at the -Millard. Mr. Levy gave a concert last night at the Grand Opera house. , Editor Hitchcock is having lawn tennis grounds made on his Twentieth street lots. Oklahoma boomers held a meeting last night at Kessler's hall on South Thirteenth street. One faction of this association recently elected officers secretly as follows: Capt. J. G.Smith, J resident; Capt. W. P. O'Neill, vice president; . P. Henderson, secretary, and Daniel O'Neill, tteasvrep Bonus for Dischavrced Man. W. H. T. If you were Inducted into service and received pay as well a discharge certlHcate, you are en titled to the f60 bonue. Write to the Zone Finance Officer, lmon build in. . Washina-tan. I") C .n.l.ln. your certlHcate of discharge, or a icruiieu copy or me same, it will reiurneo, 10 you wiin tne cneck. Release for Soldiers. Mrs. P. M. 8. The Fourth division is In the army of ooeupation, and no definite date can be set for its return. Enlistments are now being made to replace me arartea men serving with regular army units in tnis work, as last as arartea men can be re- Disced bv voliintaura If will ha rfnna To secure the early release of your on, mane an amaavit, setting forth the facta, anil mimA l tn th. .antai. commanding hie company, together wiin a, request ior nia release. Also have your eon make a similar request ana amaavit ana give tnem to his CaDtaln. ThlS la th tlrmt mi an a rA the rest le done through military Many Questions Answered. Miss M. S. No orders have been Issued for the return of the 148th field artillery, now with the Third army In Germany. See answer to Mrs. P. M. 8., above. Drafted men may be held for four months after the declaration of peace. A Father Telegraph , battalion 414 is In the servlo of eupply at Ore leans, A. P. O. 797, and not on sched ule for Immediate return. Mrs. V. L. We have no informa tion as to when the 109th supply train will sail for home. A Sister See reply to Mrs. V. L., above. A Soldier's Friend The Thir teenth veterinary hospital Is sta tioned at Commercy (Meuse), A. P. p. 747, and Is not attached to a di vision; we have no word as to when it will return. The Insignia of the Seventy-ninth division is' a blue shield with a double cross In white and a red star embordered by a red circle. A Slstei- The JO 6th Infantry is part of the Seventy-seventh division, under schedule to sail in April; plans are being made to bring this division home in a single convoy. A Reader No orders for Immedi ate return of T. C. 160. A. M. P. No orders for return of the Second supply train, now serv ing with the army "of occupation; soldiers are given extra credit for overseas service, if that is what you mean by asking their "time Is doubled." A Soldier's Sistei- No orders for the immediate return of veterinary hospital No. 11. M. A. M.The Forty-sixth com pany, Twentieth engineers, is unas signed. Its present address is A. P. O. 731, which must appear on mall intended for men attached to this unit. The postofflce mentioned is at Neufchateau (Vosges). Mrs. J. C. W. Detachments of the 157th Infantry arrived at New Tork on April 2; cannot tell -you what units were included. A. ti. A. See answer to Mrs. J. C. W. Wife The Thirty-flfth division is on the Bailing list for April, and the Twenty-eghth is down for May. A Mother The Fiftieth aero squadron is In the service of supply with the First army corps; no orders have been issud for Its early return. M. very few transportation com panies have been sent home; the Thirty-eighth transportation com pany is now stationed at Glevros, and not under early Bailing orders; the Twelfth engineers is engaged in railway operations with the Second army; drafted men may be held for four months after peace Is declared; cannot tell you about the bakery company at Camp Banning. ' V. M. J. The Sixteenth balloon company Is in the service of supply with the Fourth army corps, and no orders for its early return have been Issued. Anxious Reader Camp hospital No. 28 is not listed for Immediate re turn. Watch The Bee for announce ment of its sailing. Mrs. L. H. See answer to Mrs. P. M. S. at top of this column; no orders for return of aero squadron No. 88, which is with the First army, or for the 168th transportation com pany. ' Mrs. I 8. The Third pioneer In fantry Is stationed at Heippes (Meuse). and is not attached to a di vision; its address ia A. P. O. 914; no orders yet for its return. A Soldier's Sister Sailing dates for casual companies are not 'an nounced in advance; many of these are continually arriving; the for warding camp at Lemans Is a re placement headquarters; watch The Bee for word from the organization you mention. Mrs. A. F. Li. we have no infor mation concerning camp hospital No. 108; the 800th aero squadron is in the service of supply, and not un der immediate sailing orders; base hospital No. 49 is assigned to early convoy, but the sailing date is not yet fixed. Marion Tne seventn division is In the army of occupation, and will be held in Kurope Indefinitely. M. D. M. The Twenty-eighth en gineers are scattered with the First and Second armies; no orders for the early return of this regiment. Mrs. B. It. B. Tou do not say what unit at A. P. O. 705 yon are asking for; this postofflce Is att Bor deaux, and many troops are sta tioned there, Waiting for transporta tion home. A Soldier's Brother The 838th machine gun battalion Is with the Eighty-eighth division; no date has been set for the sailing of this division. DREAMLAND ADVENTURE By DADDY (Whsn rvolt braaka out In Blrflland a mysterious knight cornea to Help Persy settla It.) CHAPTER VI, The Revolters Are Banished. , THE leader of the Hawks held General Swallow in his talons. "Cree! Cree! Everybody for him self!" he shouted, alighting on s dead tree. The knight set down the sack of wheat and, reaching into a saddle pocket, brought out two large chest nuts tied together with a string. This odd weapon he sent whirling up Into the tree. The Hawk never suspect ed danger until the string hit him and the flying chestnuts wound the eord tightly around his neok and wings. With a choking squawk, the nawK aroppea uenerai Swallow and fell from the tree right Into the hands of the knight The other Hawks, seeing their T DAILY CARTOONETTE I'M QOIN TO jET LITTLE FRODIE A JRLK IK THE BOX ASA SURPRISE? .f jwf 1 , j n W3 HE DID " She quickly opened up this bole. leader in peril, swooped back to the rescue. They smashed into the knight, tearing at his armor with beaks and talons. The only effect was to bruise and batter themselves. And while they were tearing at hjm APRIL SMILES. 'Why did you allow those two Dattents to have adjoining cots? Were you not afraid one might Infect the other T" I wish they would. The first one has Insomnia and the other, the sleeping sick ness." -Indianapolis Star. Smith I lost my Identity for two whole reeks last summer. Jones How did it happen T Smith SDent my vacation ,mnnr wlf'. relations, where I was simply known . as nna s nueoana. Philadelphia Inquirer. 'Better consider my course In efflelenev training. I can show you how to earn more money than you are getting." "I do that now." Louisville Courier-Journal. WHEN SPRING COMES. I would go to the fields wbera farmers ilng Of the ways of their honeat toll. I would go to the fields where I could list To the tuna of the crumbllnr soil. t would go to the pastures new and green, I would bask In the balmy air, I would loll In the arm of nature's charm With the low of the cattle there. I would go to the woods to gather flowers, I would sit by the winding stream. I would Hat to tha aong of warbling birds as tney rut through the smiling gleam. I would go to tire woods to see the green, I would stroll In the shade' of trees. I would cast to the air my weary care Aa I'd walk In the open breeze. - I would go to tha wooda to find a rest In the lap of their charm and thrill, I would go to the wood o find a gem In the tempi of 3od's good-will. t would go with, a faith where nature smiles In the vole of the open breeze, I would search for the fount of truth and love In the songs of the birds and trees. M. S. HOPEWELL. "Business Is GoobJhankydu -WHY NOT the knight reached out quickly and made them all prisoners. "Kill m! Kill 'em!" shrieked the revolters. "No," said the knight "They are our comrades. Didn't you hear their cry, 'Everybody for himself 7' " "That cry is silly nonsense. We're Sick of it," shouted the revolters. "What, sick of the revolt?" ex claimed the knight "You bet we are. We want the old happy days with peaceful birds free to enjoy what belongs to them," chorused the weary revolters. vvnat say you, Jack BparrowT asked the knight "Away with Jack Sparrew and all his leaders!" shrieked the revolters. "8o be It," declared the knight "And as for you, Hawks, It would be easy to drown you, but I think you cart become useful comrades of the honest birds of Blrdland. If I let you go, will you chase Jack Spar row and his agitators so far they'll never come back?" "You bet he will," promised the leader of the Hawks. Jack Sparrow and his leaders didn't wait to hear more. With a sudden whlr-r-r they took wing and by the time the knight let the Hawks go they were only 1 black specks In the sky. While this was going on Peggy became aware of a tap, tap, tapping on a tree near by. It sounded like Reddy Woodpecker at work. And, sure enough, when Peggy went to see she found that It was Reddy Woodpecker, but instead of being outside the tree boring a hole In he was Inside the tree boring a hole out . "Any old time you can keep a Woodpecker shut up in a hollow tree I'd like to know It," he scolded. Going around toi the other side of the tree. Peggy foiind the large hole which had been filled up when Red dy Woodpecker, Judge Owl and Blue Jay were ahut In the trees. She quickly opened up this hole and her three friends hopped out safe and sound. "Fair Princess, the realm of Bird land ia at peace again," said the knight, bowing grandly before Peg gy. "I bid you farewell." "Brave knight, I thank you," an swered Peggy- "But your name " "Call me Sir Good Friend," an swered the knight, mounting his steed. "I go back to the unknown, but If you need me I shall come again. Ki yl! Away, my gallant steed 1" But the gallant ' steed, before breaking into a gallop, turned Its Daily Dot Puzzle .7 jo . m hi . IV 4 So 53 eZ 48 l 4f i5o 55 49 20 44- Zl am 45 V & "I An Alpine x comes to. you ' When you've traced to sixty-two. Draw from on to two and o on to end. head and winked at Peggy in that oddly familiar way. Who was that mysterious knight? And why did she seem to know that wink? Peggy was still asking her self these questions when she re turned to her garden, but she wasn't to learn the answers until her next visit to Blrdland. (tn the next story King Bird finds thst being a king la not so much fun aa It seems.) A Qrand in a little home .1 TrlE WONDER OF ITl Sorlchly toned and sonorous, so graceful and classic, ennobling and beautifying Its sur . rounding. Yet so compact, taking no more room than li en upright and unlike an upright, fitting tastefully in the I centre ot anywhere in the room. Thus the little home with I its grand, proudly matchs the most palatial of residence. I ' This is the magic of the J .Sbl lira a,- araawasBi m am. amamSBsskw aa am asm am a aw aa am aai O 1 lANICH-GT-JSACH I ?! I 1513 Douglas Street. j T "The Art, Music and Victor' Store" Jl IV Nicholas Oil Company ,,. , ? y j 1 " 'l Q EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS; master creator of tales extraordinary, has surpassed himself in this, his sixth enthralling chronicle of TARZAN OF THE APES. Never be fore has an author created a fictional char acter so fascinating, so univers ally interestinu as TARZAN. In JUNGLE TALES OF TARZAN we have anothet entrancing narrative woven about the marvelous ape man, presenting newadventures and desperate encounters which befall him in the dark heart of his native jungle.' All Bookstores ' a, c McCLURO 4 co, PiUsim