THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1919. ; : The Omaha Bee DAILY fMORNING-EVENlNG SUNDAY FOTJNDBU BY EDWARD ROSEWATER . VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR THE BEB rPBUSHIWO COMPACT. PROPHIETOB MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tft aatoclaua rA f wfetea The He I a ' " cluutait aatitlea Ik tor puellcatloa of il ewi dUpatoaee areillted or Mt oUierwl enditwl thi Bnu. and alw Uu local am mMMicd hwata. All rtn of twbllcatloo ol our i eyeulal dlioxebw re alao maenad. REE TELEPHONES! rnnu Branca bcktncc Art (of Un TvleF 1000 llmiUM rv Partlealar Pwirm Wanted. . Wvitaanl rv Vartlmlar Panrni Wanted. For Night er Sunday Service Calli Bdtlorlal Department - " CtmutMHW Department .... ' adierUtlni Department Tjlr 10ML. Tyler 100SU Tjler MOM. OFFICES OF THE BEE Hunt OhTtea. B Bulidlni. tltfe and 'arena. . ma , , 41 id North !ttt I Park Beitaoa tU4 ,,,itnr ara uth Bid Cuicl Bluir Scott St. I "inot ,. ' Out-of-Town Office! Nee Tor Ot ! fifth Ave. I Wiilntoo Cbleaev twit Bldg. I Lincoln 9613 liktsnmirta 3318 N Street 819 North 40th 1311 0 Street 1330 B Street JUNE CIRCULATION! V Daily 64,611 Sunday 61,672 Atirate circulation for trie month suDeensea ana iwo to w t A. lUgan. rireulmton Manager. Subscribers teavinf the city ahould have th Baa mailed to them ,. Address changed a often a requeated. You should know that ' Omaha leads all , metropolitan cities in per capita value of its manufacturing output. Some overdue resignations should come now. jNow, let us all sober up and get down to justness. (Now you nt throug A little le have ugh. a faint idea of what Louvain ss red tape in military circles might ive saved a lot of damage. , Omaha likes to see soldiers on the street, but If patroling under arms. I V'Mike" Clark - and "Sherm" Clayton 'itofliing to apologize for, have Being in .company with Washington, Boston and Chicago does not give Omaha any conso lation. - - - The president passed a restless night Sun day, but he did not have a thing oti Omaha in that respect ''. . The beautiful Douglas county court house may be restored, but none who watched it burn will ever forget the sight. Paderewski sees 2,000,000 Germans ready to spring to arms. But, as in the case of " Mr. Bryan, he does not say whose arms. ' , Soldiers showed a proper respect for the flajf by taking one away from some of the riot ers. Old Glory does not fly over mobs, j England is taking up airplane mail service to replace that cut off by the general strike. InTime the idea will be generally applied. ' ' The city firemen carried themselves with admirable coolness, even when powerless in the grip o tfr. angrymoD. Their discipline is. ex- Fnt. , , vIt was not a very pretty welcome to give t rye early Ak-Sar-Ben visitors, but hundreds 'of them seemed deeply interested' in the ' pro ceedings. J .' : ".' The governor ought to encounter little dif ficulty in finding a starting point for his in quiry, nor should he relax his efforts till he sets to the bottom facts. ...... ; , Omaha has weathered a great many shocks, and will survive the present affliction, but finds no occasion for pride in the fact that it must lift up its head again after being put to such shame. . ' Fraternizing is now permitted between lAmerican soldiers and Germans in theioccu 'pied territory. This may add a little to the ocial gayety of life over there, but will not materially cnange imngs omcrwisc. f f Mr. Wilson's condition will prevent his see s'; ing King Albert and Queen Elizabeth until .w after they have made their tour of the country, 1 but-we hope he is well enough then to receive their report on America's magnificence. No more awful example of the blind un reason of the mob could be given than its as sault on Mayor Smith. That was not a blow ... J J a1 - a. I at tnc man, Dut was airnea airecuy ai um nr- 3 talt-Ut-lVJlia, ad ,aw ,aaev v O " And somctody wanted the newspapers to "minimize" the reports of the riotl It is just that sort of pussyfooting that has brought Omaha to its present predicament. A little . ijire publicity may smoke out the incompetents, if ariy of them have' not yet been uncovered. DISGRACE AND OPPORTUNITY. - Omaha will not try tof hide the hame brought upon it, but will bravely seek to re cover the lost ground. Material damage may be repaired, costly though it is; lives lost can not be restored, nor may we wipe out the record. -That is done. - What may follow is to arouse our people to a keener sense of personal responsibility and a higher conviction of civic duty. Conditions of police inefficiency aid lawlessness that are dis graceful have been tolerated. Ample warning was given of the approaching storm, but with out awakening that element of the community whose power might have been exerted to avert the calamity. Crying over spilt milk will do no good now, but The Bee earnestly exhorts all good citizens to devote themselves to the establishment of order. It is not a time for the manifestation of activity by a self-chosen "committee of 500," assuming censorship of public and private mor als. It is time for sober-thinking, law-abiding citizens to assert their influence, and through proper action to put .Omaha's government again on its feet, that the city may stand among its peers once more. The disgrace and shame can only be wiped out by measuring up to the opportunty and snatching what of good the situation still holds out. When the Mob Goes Wild. No force of nature exceeds in its potential destructiveness the insensate fury of a mob. This is pathetically shown in the damage done at the Douglas county court house. By no stretch of imagination, sober or inflamed, could the way through the county treasurer's office, or that of the; register of deeds lead to the county jail. Nor could the priceless records contained therein, compiled by painstaking labor for years, aid in any way the mob in its attempt to get at its human victim. Wanton ness is the chief characteristic of such a gath ering, and was so manifest in these great of fices of public records and service. Deliber ately the vandals rifled filing cases, emptied the contents on the floor, devoted books, records indices, whatever could be destroyed, to the holocaust. The loss entailed in this does not cease with the actual money value, which is beyond estimate, but continues through the delay that will result to the public business. Taxes due or coming due are. needed, for the carrying on of the business of the city and county. Collection of these will be indefinitely put off, till the records can be restored suf ficiently to enable the officials to proceed. How long this will take can not even be guessed at. That it will add tremendously to the other damage wrought by the vandals is plain. This does not take into account the irreparable private losses endured by the judges, whose libraries were burned, or by the societies who had headquarters in the building and lost all. I,f the persons who took part in this vandalism will quietly reflect on this, it may aid them to achieve better behavior for the future. , I Who Pledged Us ? President Wilson says that we have pledged ourselves to support the covenant of the league of nations and that therefore we must sign it or be caught in an act of perfidy. Who pledged this nation? Who had the authority to say that the nation would accept the obligations which were conferred upon it at Paris? f ..... , , By what process did the nation make known its"! intent to assume these responsibilities and ti: hese risks? When and to whom did it declare that it would put its signature to the When did anybody with a mandate Fiume and the Future. "Fiume or fight!" is the slogan in Italy now. The Italian Chamber of Deputies has adopted a resolution recognizing Fiume as an Italian city. This is even more of a direct challenge to the conference at Paris than was the raid of d'Annunzio, which now receives of ficial and perhaps complete endorsement at Rome. Just how the matter will be taken at Paris may only be conjectured. In Italy the sentiment among the people is all in favor of d'Annunzio, and it has been flatly stated the army will not move to expel him from the city he capturid. No government can survive in Italy that seeks to turn the city back to the Jugoslavs. The settlement is squarely and finally up to the powers who, with Italy, com posed the conference. France and England, it has been reported, are not inclined to go to extremes in the matter of coercion, and if moral suasion fails will content themselves with the situation, just as they have allowed Shantung to go to Japan over China's protest. Several days ago dispatches from Paris said the set tlement had again been left with President Wilson. No intimation has yet come as to what he has in mind, other than that he might possibly suggest a boycott of Italy until it is willing to abide by the original decision.' A Jugoslavian representative in New York on Saturday prophesied war between his country and Italy for not later than March, with Greece siding with the Balkan people. Any way the situation is viewed, it presents an interesting aspect, and one that does not' argue very strongly for a league that would involve Amer ica any deeper in European quarrels. - Now1 for the World's Series. It is permitted, even under the -stress of ex citement' that surrounds us, to turn for a mo ment to contemplation of the premier sporting event of the ' season. The Olympian games have, been preserved to us in classic annals, and who shall say tbat dwellers beneath the moons in ages yet unborn will not pay similar respect to the World's Series, in the course of which the honorable title of World's Champion Base Ball Team will be determined? Greece did not breed a finer lot of athletes, nor more of them, that come forth from America's fecundity. They did not know base ball in those days, or the games between Troy and Athens might have afforded means to evade , the war and so have lost immortality for "the face that launched a thousand ships and burned the topless towers of Illium." The annual event is enlivened this year by the presence of a stranger. Not in the history of the National League has Cincinnati's team emerged on top until this time. That the victory of the Reds is popular is indisputable. Ihjbm the' American people make a promise to ' Of course the White Sox stand as high in the 'a Jv other nation or association of nations? estimation of the public, and many a fan finds 'a v other nation or association ot nations.' ' i ("Who pledged this nation in such a fashion to deprive it ot tne moral ngnt to examine den covenant? Was it President ilson? It . and as oresident Mr. Wilson derives his iUufhority from a document which specifies that h United Mates senate snan Rive aavice ana olisent before the nation assumes any obliga '"leAis under a treaty. '' The nation is not pledged and Mr. Wilson i j'.vs it Mr. Wilson particularly knows it be . s? last year in the congressional election he Aed for authority to speak, for such authority S tie re-e'ection of a democratic congress ftWcrSt trivf him. and was denied it by the voters. fx r. Wilson, who said he needed this vote ot Valence in order to speak with assurance at ns, did not get it, but is not now restrained tom'sayi'ig that he not only had such assur 1.,. hut he had more than any election could Inm, that he naa autnonty 10 raant a ircaiy ,ich was morally beyond the power of the amena. erston lured States senate to ai ' 3 This is not only i.erve I This cago Tribuut of facts but it 1, ...-version of the essence of our government Oicagu himself torn between two loves in an endeavor to determine which team he wants to see come out on top in the big struggle. More eyes will be turned to the score board for the next few days than ever were riveted on the doings of congress. We may occasionally view with in difference the proceedings of law-givers, or anybody else of ordinary importance, but no business is too absorbing entirely to distract us from the World's Series. Home-made wine is said to be the cause of a doctor lighting out from home in his night clothes. Must have been something like the sort they used to sell in the "bad lands." 1 Lloyd George will quit' politics, according to a report from London. He may have dis tinguished company in the course of about J eighteen months. The Show-Down at Hand From the Minneapolis Tribune. President Wilson said in his Cheyenne speech that he would interpret any reserva tion by the senate on Article X of the cove nant of nations as a rejection of the peace treaty, if such reservation were made a part of the ratification resolution. It mattered not, he said, how mild the reservation might be. He reserves to himself the privilege of saying, when the senate shall have acted, whether its action is an acceptance or a rejection. If this is not General Order No. 1 (or some other number) by the executive branch of the government upon the treaty-making part of the. legislative branch to do as it is bid, what else is it? The whole burden of all the president's speeches during his tour has been that the treaty with Germany, including the covenant, must be ratified without change. He has stated it as his view that any opposition to this plan makes out the opponent a "pygmy mind," a "Contemptible quitter" or an adherent of the pro-German sentiment of the country or all three. Senator Lenroot, one of the so-called "mild reservationists," has in turn served on the presi dent a notice that without a reservation on Ar ticle X the treaty will not be ratified. He doubt less is morally certain of his ground. At any rate he has had an advantage over the oresident in getting at the exact status of sentiment in the senate. It appears now that the reservation to Ar ticle X which was vociferously applauded at Salt Lake City when Mr. Wilson read it, was a mild draft upon which opponents of the cove nant precisely as it stands seemed likely to come to an agreement. The spontaneous cheers which greeted it and plainly nettled the presi dent indicate something as to what the Ameri can people are thinking, about in connection with this Article X, but the president is now giving up his tour and is going back to Wash ington, according to newspapermen on his train, with the assertion that he carries a man date from the people for ratification of the treaty without change. - The president's virtual ultimatum to the senate that it either accept or reject, the treaty as it stands comes at a time when that body seems most insistent on its dignity and pre rogatives as a constitutional part of the treaty making power and when the president appears to have become peculiarly impatient with the trend of things in Washington. The challenge to a "knock-out" fight has been sent forth and has been accepted. The senate has felt ever since last December that it has been unduly ignored and flouted. At no time has it been taken into the confidence of the executive de partment sufficiently to give it the light it needs for the most intelligent possible performance of the duties that devolve upon it. The White House conference was the nearest approach to it up to "'that time, but the president "re gretted" that he had not at hand certain import tant data that the senators asked for. That in formation has not yet reached them, and the senate has not been helped a whit to a better understanding of the treaty by what Mr. Wil son has said during his tour. Mr. Wilson, says a friendly correspondent with him. admits his pride has been hurt by the questions raised regarding the document he helped formulate and signed. That might be expected as quite natural in the case of one so sure of himself, but are the injured feelings of any man to tip the scales against the collec tive judgment of many men some of them equally able in a matte of such great mo ment? The senate is quite right in asserting its majesty at this time of all times. The issue is fast becoming if it did not long ago become one of executive monopolization of treaty making power against the wise division of that power set up in the fundamental law of the land by the statesmen of vision who drafted the American constitution. The Two Hundred-Egg Hen Poultrymen have long been looking for the 200-egg hen and the quest seems about finished. There have been individual hens which have laid more than 200 egs a year, but what breed ers have sought to produce is a strain of hens that would do that much as a regular business. In these days of high poultry prices 200 eggs from one hen, at an average price of 40 cents a dozen, amount to $6.67, not at all a bad con tribution by a single fowl, to which must be added the market value of the hen herself. The higher the cost of feed and the sale price of eggs the more important it becomes to have a flock of hens that actually lay eggs and are not merely supposed to do so. There has for a number of years been con ducted at Mountain Grove, Mo., at the State Poultry Experiment station, an 'annual egg-laying contest, one of which is now in its tenth month. A coop of five hens of one breed is a unit in the contest. Most of the well known strains of chickens are represented each year and the same breed is not always a winner of first place. The leading coop at the end of 10 months has an average of 208 eggs, the next 206, and the third 203, each with two months to go on. The first and third are Rhode Island Whites and the second is composed of White Leghorns. These are two radically different types of fowls. The Leghorn is a small breed, valuable for its laying qualities and the size of its eggs. The Rhode Island breed, both white and red, as well as the Plymouth Rocks, both white and barred, are what is known as the American combination fowls, large and good layers, valuable both for eggs and the table. Thesetontests show two things. First, they prove that the pure breeds of fowls lay more eggs than mongrels, or "just hens," as one farmer recently designated his variety. They also show that '.he laying qualities of each breed may be largely developed by a process of selection for the purpose of perpetuating special qualities discovered in individuals. This process of selection is rapidly giving us the 200-egg hen as a regular thing instead of an occisional show fowl. It means millions more of dollars in the pockets of our farmers if they will but avail themselves of the knowledge these experiments are producing. St. , Louis Globe-Democrat. Falling Foreign Ex changes and U psets in American Markets Qom&r From The literary Digest. Unsteadiness and alarm in dur own markets followed the recent fall of foreign exchange rates to record low levels. "How long can the outside, world continue to buy the goods of the United States at the prevailing rates of exchange, and how long can the outside world continue to buy our goods so enor mously in excess of the value of the goods we buy from the ' outside world?" asks Richard Hoadley Tingley, succinctly stating the prob lem in The Financial World. The outside world cannot settle in gold, and it cannot settle in goods. Bor rowing seems to be the only re course, but England, one of our greatest debtors, refuses to borrow. According to The Wall Street Jour nal: "Rather than add to her indebt edness to this country, she prefers the lesser evil, as she regards it, of sterling droDDing to lower levels, I particularly as the decline will tend j Vto restrict British imports and force' her people into ways or greater economizing. With the pivotal ex change of the world thus left to its own devices, the work or stanuiz ing the other exchanges is rendered more arduous. "England is much more favorably situated in the matter of her ex changes than some of, the other countries, notably France and Italy. She has . only a single problem on her hands, exchange with this country. As a matter of fact, ster ling even in some of the neutral centers, notably the Scandinavian, is quoted at a premium, while in others the discount on it is little more than nominal. Furthermore, were she able to realize the credits she has advanced to other nations, she would have little difficulty in liquidating her obligations in the United States and restoring sterling to normal. The amounts owed her by the other allied nations, including Russia, ag gregate in the neighborhood of $7,500,000,000, while her indebted ness to this country totals approx imately $4,900,000,000, including the $4,316,000,000 she has borrowed from the United States treasury. "British authorities have looked With considerable favor upon the re cent acquisition by Kuhn, Loeb & company of 750,000 shares of the Shell Transport & Trading company from British interests, Sand they hope that other similar transactions will be consummated. For, while the purchase tended to steady sterling, it did not signify the contraction of any debt in this country on the part of any British subjects, but merely the entrance of Americans into partnership with Englishmen in a huge business enterprise." On September 6, when rates on Paris, Rome, Berlin and Vienna went to the most unfavorable figures ever recorded at that time, and ex change on London went within 2 cents of the lowest rate, the New York Evening Post commented: "Just how great this depreciation of exchange on belligerent Europe has been, both during the war and since the armistice, will be seen from the following comparison of the low rates of the foreign currencies in American money this week, the low rates of wartime, and their normal parity: Thl Wppk English lb. ... $4 . 14 . French franc. 11.9c Italian lira... 10.2c German mark. 04.35c .Austrian crown 01.86c 10.6c Z0.3c "All of this week's low rates are Lthe lowest ever reached, except that exenange on lonaon toucnea 4.izl4 on the 20th of last month. Compari son of the separate columns makes the rather remarkable showing that all of these rates have fallen nearly or quite as heavily since the war as they fell during the war. itself. "This is not at all what was ex pected during the war. Most people looked for a decided movement of exchange in favor of these European markets as soon as peace was ar ranged. But then it is perfectly safe to say that nobody imagined at that time that the balance of actual merchandise trade in our favor and against belligerent Europe would be actually larger after suspension of hostilities than it was when war was going on. Yet here is the record of our exports in the first seven months of 1919, compared with the same seven months in 1918, at the climax of the war, and in 1914, just before the war began. The figures are in thousands of dollars: Exports to 1919 1918 1914 England ..11,342,72. 11,210,094 J29S.B8S Prance 683,259 555,201 68,187 Italy : , 272,818 274,548 38,126 DREAMLAND ADVENTURE By DADDY. "THE WANDERING MONKEY." (Peggy and Billy, aearching for Mr. Holt'a diamond brooch, which haa been stolen from a locked room, find a monkey In the wood. They think him tha thief, until he tell them of a black robber who haa a sparkling Jewel, and offers to lead them to th robber' roost.) CHAPTER III. The Black Robber's Roost. THE monkey hopped along so fast that Peggy and Billy had to run to keep up with him. "How far is it to the rob ber's roost?" asked Peggy, as they plunged deeper and deeper into the woods. "Ett-kee-ee. .Wait and see," said the monkey. "How do we know that you are not leading us into a trap?" asked Billy, who had heard of monkey tricks. "You don't know, and I don't know," chattered the monkey. "Any way, I am taking you to the black robber's roost, and if there is u trap there you'll And it." That answer didn't please Peggy and Billy a bit, and they stoppeci short in their tracks. "Who are you anyway, and how did you come to the woods?" askec! Billy, suspiciously. "I am Rollo, the wandering mon key, and I came Xo this woods when I escaped from circus that wa. War time Par. S4.4S ti.U. l.4c 19.3c 10.9c 19. So 16.4c 23.8c Total . . .J2,198,805 12,039,843 $404,901 All Kurope 3,079,745 2,208,433 735,046 "This unexpected increase in ex ports to such countries since the war has not been offset by any rreat increase in imports, which for the same seven months compare as follows, also in thousands of dol lars: Import to ..1919 1918 1914 England $118,075 I 98,882 1176,838 France , 46.611 Italy 15,393 37,946 15.655 70,407 33.641 The Day We Celebrate. Henry B. Liggett, treasurer of the Pan torium, born 1844. Max Rosenthal, proprietor Palace Clothing company, born 1869. Dr. Cyrus Northrop, president emeritus of the University of Minnesota, born at Rodge field. Conn., 85 years ago. Pierre B. Mignault, judge of the supreme court of Canada, borrt at Worcester, Mass., 65 years ago. Thomas W. Lamont, eminent New York banker who served as financial adviser to the United States peace delegation, born at Claver ack, N. Y., 49 years ago. Wilton Lackaye, one of tne. well-known actors of the American stage, born in Loudon county, Va., 55 years ago. Dr. John Henry MacCracken, president of Lafayette college, born at Rochester, Vt, 44 years ago. Rt. Rev. Joseph G. Anderson, Catholic bishop of Boston, born in Boston, 54 years ago. Thirty Years Ago in Omaha. . Omaha Medical college opened at the col lege building, Twelfth and Pacific streets. E. Rosewater, editor of The Bee, left for Milwaukee and Chicago. General D. B. McKibben, father of Gen eral Purchasing Agent McKibben of the Union Pacific railroad, is visiting in Omaha. "A Midnight Bell" was presented to a large audience at Boyds opera house. Total 1180,079 1162,482 1280,784 Cancellation of export orders as a consequence of the exchange sit uation are noted by the New York Journal of Commerce. "The resul tant situation is admittedly serious, and is regarded as one of the dis turbing elements in the current do mestic position," this authority re marks, and quotes "a leading inter national banker" to this effect: " 'But while we are waiting for the exchange market to right itself, it is conceivable that on this side American plants would, have to close down for lack of business while Eu rope's progress in the direction of normal would be enormously ham pered. " T have never been one of those who believe that Europe could not ret along without our assistance. If the United States should erect an Impenetrable wall against European purchases, I have the utmost confi dence that Europe would eventually gain its feet again. Europe needs us, however, and needs us badly.' "The old governments of Europe, it was asserted, are missing no op portunity to gain trade and, mean time, are watching every move by the United States with the keenest interest. In the case of . one can cellation reported, it was said that the government of which the ror eign buyer was a. subject, ascertain ing the existence of a cancellation clause In the particular contract, had instructed the purchaser to can cel and buy the materials needed at home. The European nations are understood to be devoting special attention to the development of trade relations with their colonies on a broader scale than has hitherto been observed." MUSTERED OUTI It ia fine to he back In God' country once more, And yet, it I iust a bit tamo To be plodding along as you did before It will never be Just the samt! For who can forget those atarlesa nlghU, When the furloua cannon roared When the skies were aflame with qulcR darttng lights . And the boche flares heavenward soared. It was hell all right, up there in the line. And grim death always stalked In your track, . But when thoughta of those days are thronging your mind. Don't you-wish sometimes you were backed ., C. Holmslykke, In th New Tork Times. He Sprang Nimbly Into the Branches. AMERICANS IN NEAR EAST Relief Organization Making a Proud Keoorcl in Asia Minor. It makes an American proud to see how his country is saving the lives of thousands of people almost every day in Asia Minor. The Amer ican commission for relief in the near east is feeding 500,000 people in the Caucasus region alone, not to mention many thousands farther west. It is spending $1,500,000 a month, and, among other items, is distributing 6,000 tons of flour a month. It plans to carry o this work of first air for about a year. But it hopes to keep in operation for 10 or 12 years a number of or phanages which it has opened. The extent of misery among chil dren in Turkey is frightful. There are many waifs who are the offspring of Armenian mothers and Turkish fathers. In Urfa alone I was told that there are several thousand Armenian girls homeless after being released from Turkish harems. Most of them are mothers or about to become such. Ordinarily the Armenians are set tled farmers or traders, while the Kurds, who persecute them at the instigation of the Turkish govern ment, are pastoral nomads. But at present the Armenians are nomads, toe, for most of them are homeless. They are living like an army on the road. All the way from the Cau casus to Adana, Aleppo, and Jerusa lem vou find them on the byways, and Bagdad is full of them. They are too tired to think about ven geance. All they want is to get the scattered survivors of their families together again and to build up as well as they can their ruined homes. Gregory Mason in the Outlook. A Mystery Solved. Her eyes were red and she ex plained that she had been to a wed ding. "I always cry more at a wedding than I do at a funeral it's so much more uncertain." Boston Transcript. here two moons ago," answered the monkey. "Maybe you are a bad monkey," said Peggy. "I'm a bad monkey when folks are bad to me. I'm a good monkey when folks are good. What are you going to be, bad or good?" "Good, of course," declared Peggy indignantly. "Then I am good," chattered the monkey, and he put on such an impishly Innocent look that Peggy and Billy had to laugh. They went on with him. and, after a time, came to a tall, tall tree. Away up near the top of the tree was a nest as large as that in which they had found the monkey. "That's the black robber's roost,," whispered Rollo, the monkey. "Climb up there and see If he Is home." ' Billy looked up the tree, then he shook his head. "No, thank you," he said. "May be I'd find the black robber in." "But maybe he is out, and maybe the diamond brooch is in his nest," suggested Peggy. "If it is, we can Just get it and take it back to Nora, and everything will be all right." Billy walked around the tree and looked up at the nest from all di rections, even climbing part way up another tree to get a better view. "I don't believe the robber is there. I'm going to climb up," he declared. ) "So am I," chattered Rollo. the monkey, and he sprang nimbly into ' the branches. "Caw! Caw! Caw!" a warning cry .suddenly rang through the silence of the woods. Billy and the monkey stopped in startled surprise. Was it the robber, or one of his clan? "Caw! Caw! Caw!" again came the cry, and Peggy gave a nervous laugh. "It's only a crow sentinel left to guard the nests while the flock is away looking for food." she cried. "Caw! Caw! Caw!" cried the sentinel, and Billy and the monkey j went on with their climbing. Now : they were sure the black robber wasn't home, for they thought if he had been, he would surely have looked out when aroused by the crow's loud warning cries. Rollo, growing bolder, raced on ahead, and popped his head up over the side of the nest. He started to call back: "He isn't " ,when suddenly he gave a loud scream, and something hidden in the nest seized him by the nose. "The black robber," he shrieked. "I'm caught in his trap." At the first scream, Billy turned to flee. Then he stopped still. He couldn't leave the monkey to flght alone. He broke off a dead branch from the tree, and thus armed he climbed to Rollo's aid. The mon key, his nose held tight, was thrash ing around with all four feet, try ing to tear himself loose. Billy couldn't get near the nest, but he thrust upward with his stick, again, again, again, until he broke through the bottom. A startled squawking arose above the shrieks of the mon key, and some big, dark creature fled from the nest, leaving Rollo free. (Tomorrow will be told how the dia mond appears and disappears, as if by magic.) DOT PUZZLE I I 24 3o 1 i 15 .14 9' 7 4. 3'5 ' ( fee Ab .4 8 47 bX 4d Xext you will come to fifty-two, And see an Woo, woo, woo! N Draw from one to two and so on to the end. 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