THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15. 1919. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY rOUNDEP BY BP WARD BOSEWATEK VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR TKaj BBS PUBLISHING COMPANY. PRQPRIETQB MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ' TO Awoolilad PrfM. of wblok Taa Baa la a nrantnr, tt tl rluBwlr aaltllad to tha um for publlcalloo or U mi dtipatchea ortdttM la It or not oUmtkim cndlttd In triia papar, and alao ;. tha local pntilUhMl haraln. All rlfhti of lUBlloatloo of oiu apadal dniatcaaa aro alas monad. ,. """" BEE TELEPHONES i Prlrata Branch Kiohant. Art for tin TTrlo 1 0HO Dasartaaat or ranicutar Panon Wanted. ylCr 1WV ' IMItorlal DanaHOMot Circulation Papartirffnt , Adartlaln Dapartmmt Far Night and Sunday Sarvka Calli Tjlar 1001 Tjir imwi. Tjlar 10081 OFFICES OF THE BEE Botna Offic, Baa Building, i;th and Pamaa. Ifiafh nttietm: torn 4U0 North S4th I Park Banana 114 Military tn. South Blda Council luffa J" Scott 81. I Walnut Out-of.Towa Olflcaai Ca Tort Offlca 1M riftb A,a. I Waiulogtoii Calaato Swtar Btda. I Lincoln 2615 laannworth !31 N BtrMt 119 North 0th 1311 f Btraat 1330 H Btraat OCTOBER CIRCULATION I Duly 66,315 Sunday 63,160 ararata circulation for tha nonth aubaerlbad and aworo la by ' B. B- Baian. Circulation Minaiw. ' Subacribara laavlng lha city ahould hava Tha Baa Ballad . ta than. Addrcaa changed aa eftan at raquirtd. You should know that A riverside boulevard would set Omaha apart from all other cities of its size. BACK TO NEW LIFE. When the lights of the city were turned on Saturday night, after a fortnight of darkness, Omaha seemed to take ou a new lease of life. With the return to normal and accustomed hours of business, there should also be some thing more than just a renewal of the routine. Out of the adversity should be gathered a little lessoh of foresight. The community was given something of a jolt, emphasizing the fact that not a little of the unpleasant interruption was because of neglect of preparation. This fact should not be, forgotten in the rush jof the busy days to come. And the days ahead will all be busy. While holiday shopping has the floor for the time being, other things are preparing to take the stage. Announcement that the housing accommodations of the city are yet at least 2,000 dwellings or apartments behind the re quirements presages a building campaign of unusual extent, whiile the demands of business means that many of the big projects that have been on architects' tables for months will take on the form of construction as soon as the weather will permit. New enterprises are com ing into life, and the greatest period of pros- perity in the city's history lies just ahead of us. The end of the fuel embargo is the start of an era of growth for the community. Relighting the stores was in very truth' an omen of brighter days to come. Foreign Trade Facts and Hints. What The Bee Standi For: 1. Respect for the law and maintenance of order. 2. Speedy and certain punishment of crime through the regular operation of the courts. ; 3. Pitiless publicity and condemnation of .inefficiency lawlessness and corrup tion in office. 4. Frank recognition and commendation of honest and efficient public service. 5. Inculcation of Americanism as the true basis of good citizenship. 'A new police head will oe a very nice Christ mas gift for Omaha. - The Mexican situation is rapidly settling it self. Two more Americans are being held for ransom. President Howatt of the Kansas miners may some day find himself in the fix of the tradi tional parrot. The Bee's Free Shoe Fund ffers one sure way of getting help to the little ones who need it. Come in. ' Astronomers of authority agree the end of the world will not come on Wednesday. Lifts' an awful load of worry. ' " 1 Forty-four states having ratified the federal, prohibition amendment, that phase of the pro ceedings may be considered closed. A Prussian preacher declares himself still loyal to the "man of Amerogen." No doubt, but Count Hohenzollern is "S. O. L." just the same. , .: If no booze can be exported after January l, it means that there will be a nice stock on hand to greet the happy day to which the wets look for ultimate relief. . Seventy-five per cent of the miners are re ported to be at work. The rest will soon fol low, and all of them will be getting over-time before the coal supply catches up to the de mand. ' "Liberals'! in session at St. Louis finally lecided to launch a new party. If this keeps n, the "liberal" voter will be in a quandary as to which of the, numerous "parties" he be longs with.! ,' ' , Farmers in the Euphrates valley want some , American to teach them to raise crops accord ing to modern methods. The interest in this lies in the fact that that valley has been turning out good yields for at least 100 centuries. Lodge Punctures Hitchcock's Plea. Many times in the course of the debate on the Treaty of Versailles, Senator Hitchcock has referred to what he calls the "material in terests" of the United State's. He has set up that unless .the treaty is ratified as presented, th. nation will lose all the advantages con tained in the settlement, particularly those deal ing witih property interests and rights. , In his recent speech at New York he especially em phasized this, and again on Saturday, while the matter was before the senate on the Knox ef fort to revive consideration of the document, the democratic leader injected the issue of ad justments relating to property. To this Senator Lodge replied: v' The great vital interests of the United States, not only now, but in the futurV, are not for sale for 600,000 tons of German ship ping or $800,000,000. i , This is a phase of the question that has been persistently ignored by the administration group from the very outset. The Treaty of Versailles, which contains the covenant for the League of Nations, looks .o permanent settlement of cer tain grave questions. The president himself has said it is intended to do away with war "for all time," and his mouthpiece in the senate, has echoed this on many occasions. If that is true, it is all the more reason why the ar rangement should be approached cautiously. Senator Lodge speaks for a group that is unwilling to bind the nation forever to a course that contains so much of the experi mental as that now proposed by the president. .Nor are they willing to put into jeopardy the future of the United States in order that imme diate possession of certain formerly German owned shipping and other property may be confirmed. The price asked is too high for Americans to pay. The difference between Lodge and Hitchcock is that between principle and policy. One looks to settlement based on justice, the other to an adjustment on expeaiency. Americans can afford to wait until right comes in for recogni tion. , -,- The American "sport" who is starting with a million dollars to. "break the bank" at' Monte Carlo may or may not succeed, but he will do" a great deal to restore the prewar conception of what an "American" in Europe amounts to. .Mr. Wilson being able to get around the house he ought to reach his office after awhile. Whether this will make any material difference is not clear. The bureaucrats have not de parted very far from traditions established since 1913.; . ' . . ' . General Pershing is eminently correct -in his conclusion that the American army had something to do with the German defeat. If he had been as cautious in the field as he is in his report, the result might have been different., A Chicago reporter tried to find one of the $24.50 suits recommended by the "fair price," committee, but had no better"luck than an ordinary purchaser might have encoun tered. He brought back word that "there ain't no such animaL" -v German Dream oj Trade Supremacy As the cables depict it at one time, Germany is prone- on its back, needing the helping hand of Uncle Sam to give it a lift which will enable" it ' to potter along somehow industrially and economically. And then, just as this pathetic picture of the giant Rrovelinsr amid the ruins of its own house of cards is impressed on one, presto, changeit And as it by some tairy trans formation, such as one is familiar with on the 'stage, the setting changes and the helpless and the hopeless German industrial chiefs suddenly . appear as alert and equipped men blustering . . j t it; . ana tnreaiening ana leaving noimng unaone .. to recapture the world trade. This curious al- ternation has been a feature of the dye industry controversy ever since the armistice was signed. And now, at a time that Representative Long . worth asserts that unless a strong anti-German monopoly dye law is passed by January IS the - American dye industry will be destroyed, the J curtain lifts on the picture of the German dye industries consolidating and increasing their ( capital to nearly 1,000,000,000 marks. - It is true A ;that the XJerman dye industries, now that they " are no longer engaged in making high ex- plosives, are in a better position to meet the competition of the world than any other Ger 4 man industry. And even if the great bluff a new farm of economic friehtfulness does not exactly terrify our own dye makers, it cannot be Aoi, mm f tt wra manino-1aa .Yhfta tlpni Ledger. ' ' Garfield and the Cabinet. Explaining the reason for his .resignation to a special committee of the senate, appointed to inquire into , the fuel situation, Dr. Garfield cryptically refers to a "cleavage in the cabinet," and leaves an impression that the president's proposal for a settlement does not truly repre sent the basic thought in the executive's mind. We are hardly ready to implicitly accept this. Admitting that the principle laid down by the late head of the fuel administration to be the correct one, The Bee adheres to its already expressed view tha the president acted as he has in 'all the serious matters that have come before him, as an opportunist. The principle on wheih Dr. Garfield relics, that of establishing a correct ratio between wages and work with re lation to the production and the selling price of the product, was equally involved in the rail road question, which was disposed of by the passage of the Adamson law. Expediency rather than justice then 'determined the issue. A great strike was averted,' but the problem was not definitely disposed of. So it is in the coal industry at this moment, although it must be admitted that the plan adopted here is far more likely to reach a cor rect conclusion that was' that which prevailed in the matter of railroad wages. Proper inquiry into the fundamentals should establish eventu ally the correct basis for wages, and if the president's commission proceeds in this way, it eventually should meet the requirements laid down by Dr. Garfield. ' As to the relations between' the doctor and the cabinet, the public can wait patiently for the explanation that will come in time. The Wilson administration has become noted for its movement along the line of the least resistance and this instance is neither peculiar nor singular. Revival of "Spelling Bees." Nebraska's state superintendent of schools is reported to be in favor of a revival of "spell ing bees," the purpose undoubtedly being to restore the lost art of orthography. No good reason has ever been presented for the neglect of spelling in the public schools, but ample evi dence is available that the children have not been taught as they should be in this branch of education. As a result some shocking ex amples have come to notice. Not a great many years ago The Bee received a letter from the hed of t notable institution of learning, un doubtedly written by himself, in which was exhibited such lamentable proof of the writer's inability to spell that', the effect was shocking. That man had the right to attach after his sig nature a considerable portion of the alphabet, indicating his success at great universities, but he could not spell. Perhaps, in the weight of his extra erudition he found no place for ortho graphy, and had jettisoned it as unnecessary, but his example on those whowere studying under him must have been bad. Various ef forts at spelling "reform" have contributed, in directly, maybe, but not the less effectually to the result Accurate spelling is a detail of edu catioa that shows for itself the amount of de votion applied in the course of acquiring knowl edge, and, just as correct pronunciation evi dences b familiarity with the spoken word, bo does proper spelling show an understanding of From the New York Times. The report of the secretary of commerce, now in private life, dates back to June. The last fiscal year made world records for imports, exports, and tne credit balance between nations, but forecasts for the current calendar year, which are practically complete except for de tails, indicate a change in both quantity and quality of our foreign business. For the fiscal year there was a balance due us on merchandise movement of $3,978,134,947, but the balance for the calendar year will be $1,000,000,000 less. No one will be surprised at the decrease in exports of munitions and their materials as the months pass away from war, and therefore toward normal, conditions. That the decrease in the total of exports is no greater is due to the change in , the character of the trade.v Our foodstuffs are still in demand, and must be until another harvest, but there is an increasing demand for the products of our labor in the form of materials more or less ready for con sumption. How trade makes trade is shown by the fact that our larger exports of manu factures necessitate increase of our imports of materials for manufacture, the figures being $1,650,000,000 for this calendar year, or nearly $500,000,000 more than in either 1918 or 1917. Our total exports and imports for both the cal endar and fiscal years are above $10,000,000,000, or more than doble our prewar total. Evidently the momentum of trade between the nations which have not and the nation which has is so great that it defies the diffi culties of which financiers make so much. The difficulties in the exchange of currencies are daily greater, but the exchange of goods pro ceeds nevertheless. The suggestion is that the exchange of currencies affects but few, while .the exchange of goods affects all. In normal times the sale1 of goods for pounds sterling meant the exchange of goods for something which could be brought away from England, and which would buy other goods anywhere in the world. But the sale of goods for pounds now means the exchange of something of uni versal demand for currency which cannot be brought away from England, and which can be spent there only at high prices, and often times cannot be spent for what is wanted. We are lamenting that our dollars have lost half their purchasing power at home, but they have an advantage over other i currencies be cause nearly all countries want dollars to spend here, as the volume of our exports shows. It is not strictly true to say that there is 'a separa tion between the exchanges of goods and of cur rencies, but it cannot , be maintained that the hitherto unknown relations in the currency ex changes have the effe?t upon the exchanges of goods which would be expected. Normallythe exchanges of goods and currencies are equally free. Now the exchanges of goods are free, but the exchanges of currencies are hampered in many ways. The world has now a greater merchant ton nage than at any time in history. Our own shipyards for the fiscal year built more ships than the world's annual construction before the war. American tonnage in the , world's over sea trade in the fiscal year was . sixfold that before the war. There is no mechanical ob struction to the exchanges of goods, and the demand matches the world's distress. But there is nothing left undone to make the exchanges of currencies for each other, or for goods, dif ficult, dangerous, , expensive. Substitutes for true money are in use everywhere. There is under present conditions a minimum of ex changes of goods for currencies, together with a maximum ot exchanges ot goods for goods, merchants supplanting bankers,, unless both functions are united in merchant bankers. This condition is unstable. The world's wants will not await the leisurely process of our unionists and lawmakers. We lose our profits, and millions abroad lose their health or lives, -while our strikers delay and, decrease the production of goods which might procure for us other goods. The machinery for the creation of dollar credits, which might enable us to sell abroad our surplus product, for which the foreign buyers cannot supply goods in bar ter, has hung fire for months, and takes the form preferred by congress rather than that known to. be best by those who do such busi ness. The surprise that we are doing so well, nevertheless, -is a poor substitute for gratifi cation over how much better we might be do ing. - ' 3es1 t trar z Replied to "B. J. B." The Bee has received several let ters in reply to "B. J. B." who pro posed that the ex-service men , as sist In settling the coal strike, by taking the places of the strikers. Som of these are signed and some unsigned, but all are of the same general tenor. The writers' shaTply criticize "B. J. B." and express sen timents quite the opposite of his, The Editor regrets that these can not be printed in full, but assures the writers he appreciates their in terest In the matter. We Blast Educate. Auburn. Neb., Dec. 11. To the Editor of The Bee: Yes. Mr. Editor. we must, educate, must move toward civilization and being truly humane. The Presbyterian movement to ap ply the teachings of Jesus under- standingly and thereby not only bring about the solution of the ques tion, but the extinguishing entirely or to some extent at least, the quenching of that hell called war that hell the whereabouts and tem perature cannot be doubted. The Presbyterian churches. 9,600 In number, have been advised as to this movement and to do all pos sible toward checking this great evil and the consequences that have, and are sure to follow. ' It is but a few months since Pope Benedict was anxious to come to the front to render all possible assistance to the end that human slaughter no longer contribute to human misery, here, there or elsewhere, but that that gentle doctrine, as we term it, be the guiding star. By that gentle doctrine. of Christ of course, is meant the reaL the human that the principles of which have never been called In question, but only avoided by those so deeply imbued with human selfishness that dollars come to the front and the theory or lack or theory about repentance, forgiveness and many other falacious findings brought to the front, are being oft repeated, are by the pen and the press as well as by those who call themselves "the teachers of Christ" until it goes undisputed that such teachings and teachers have to remain silent when told of setting forth some times as 'much hatred, revenge, retaliation and in human conduct, while boasting or our religion and our patriotism. Again let it be remembered that along the line of the better way was the steps by Jews when 500.000 placed their signatures to the lines urging international disarmament. These with the multiplied millions of prayers by mothers, fathers, wives, husbands, sons and daugh ters, should be considered instead of the woeful inhuman reaching for dollars. I These and other moves should be aided and encouraged as along the line of true patriotism and true humanity. J. H. WTJNDAS. ature Study Outdoor Life Cfte VELVET I I A X M. M T- 1 . Pi) Jlrtnur brooks Baker imps GENE MELADY. ( He counts the day completely lost whose low descending sun illumines from his worthy hand no organizing done; for though the ath letes froth and fume to break each other's necks, their anger needs the spur and prop of good and gaudy checks, mjich as two youns? and rival bulls are eager for the fray, but can nily refuse to fight until they get their hay. So Gene Melady earnestly promotes athletic stunts. Me doesn't want the U. S., A. to breeil a race of runts. The order of tlie Dresent dav requires that some shall toil, shall go and dig Xow. Let's All Boost. Omaha, Dec. 11. To the Editor of The Bee: It's all over now! It was some battle I'll say. But It's settled and we now have more rea son to be thankful to the Almighty than ever before. We, the people, got it coming and eoine: we were out in no-man's Hand, caught in the barrage thrown down by both sides, subject to tne cross-fires of both armies and inci dentally threatened by other new armies joining in the war and sub jecting us to further and more dras tic barrages.. Can we ever forget the peril of our position when we lay awake at night and wondered where our next ton of coal would come from or how long our Jobs would hold out before being closed by the all-powerful fuel administrator. It's all over now! Soon people will resume the old hours of work. street cars will take up their old schedules, "movies" will re-open and all the world will rejoice to the music of the merry hum of pros perous business. The battle is won. Both armies were victorious. Both sides are sat isfied with the term of the armis tice and renewed hopes for contin ued iirosneritv are expressed on vrv side. Let everyone Join in the rejoicing whirh should take place at this time. . Now is the time to promul gate the idea of better times. Now is the time to endeavor ;to bring happiness and content to every household in these United States, by advocating cheerfulness and opti mism and by making the balance of the year a universal holiday sea son. Let everyone endeavor to the best of their ability to keep down for ever the smouldering fires of dis content which without 'our every co operation may at any time break Into a flame. Let everyone declare a moratorium on ill-will and gloom dining this season. To further, get tne puunc minu Sleepers. By ADEL1A BELLK 8 BARD. Do you ever wake up on a winter morning, then snuggle deeper under tne oedciotnes and wish you might sleep as long as you want? Well, that is how some of the wild creatures feel. No one insists upon their get ting up so they nestle deeper in their beds of dry leaves and grasses, shut their eyes again, and fall into a sleep which, in many cases, lasts all winter. 11, in your section of the country, these animals do riot al ways take such long naps, you may know it is because, where the win ters are warm, their habits are not c;uite the same as where winters are long and cold. ' One champion sleeper is the black bear, found in lonely places where the land is rough and there are deep wooas. niter a summer ot careless freedom and an autumn spent in growing round and fat, the black tear teels stupid and sleepy, and hunts up a shelter in a hollow where the drifting snow will cover him warmly, or in a hollow tree or a cave among ,the rocks. There he goes to sleep nd sleeps so soundly. tic uucs noi rouse nimseit until tne warm fingers of spring shake him into life again. It is a far cry from a big black bear to a tiny wood mouse, yet the mouse loves to sleep too for part or tne winter at any rate. In the tall, he piles up a store of grain afrd seeds, then becomes a soft, buffy ball, and goes to sleep in his dugout. It is said that he wakes at times to - w II FAT AMTI .JMM (M MlfcVINTm COAT pOR IKICMes THICI f ) V TUJNQNA gTSSjfy TneurtuwiMorbwf feed on-his supplies, but he won't leave his quarters as lone as his food lasts. The chipmunk also goes into re treat for the winter and deep in his burrow, all snug and warm, he sleeps away the cold days and nights. Prob ably betore tucking himself in, he devours the grain and nuts, so in dustriously laid by, and the hearty meal lasts him until he wakes up again in the spring. Another sleeper, the handsome, but to-be-avoided skunk, gets almost too fat to walk before he finally 'urns in for the winter. (Next week: "Jim Crow.") Boya" and Girls" Newapapar Service. 'Copyright, 1919 by J. H. Millar. their country's coal or till their country's soil, ' away from strikes, unrest and gen and men who bear upon their bofies a lot of i era! gloom, we ask the people of Umana aim viemity, 10 sei wa five or 10 minutes each day for dis pensing holiday cheer and everyone during that period to think, talk and boost for a happier holiday sea son. Let everyone Join in 'boosting a universal holiday season from now until the New Year. M. G. ROGERS. husky freight assume importance far bevond their simple beet and weight. ' He put the great Joe Stecker in the burly wrestling game, to gather for his worthy brow the furbelows of fame. He still believes in pious peace for parsons and for doves, but likes to see the huskies mill with reasonable gloves. If he were judge he would extend the mercy of the court to all who place an honest bet on gentlemanly sport. ) In private life he buys and sells the thrifty farmer s kine, reserving for his service a com mission thin and fine, and guarding rustic Reu ben with a roll upon his limb from city slickers looking for a healthy hick to trim, protecting him from bargainers who readily would sell the toll bridge on the river, city hall and Fontenelle. Next Subject: Ward M. Burgess. LAV the written language, bees ' Let us have the "spelling The Day We Celebrate, John Douglas, manager Douglas Printing Co.. born 1863. James C. Dahlman, secret service depart ment, police branch, federal railroads, born 1865. L. J. Te Poel, attorney, born Saunders coun ty, 1877. Alexandre Gustave Eiffel, the engineer who built the Eiffel Tower in Paris, born at Dijon, France, 87 years ago. Duke of Atholl, the only individual in Great Britain who is entitled to maintain a private army of his own, born 48 years ago. Van H. Manning, director of the U. S. Bu reau of Mines, born at Horn Lake, Miss., 58 years ago. Rev. William Devlin, S. J., president of Bos ton college, born in New York City, 44 years ago. Joseph Barrell, professor pf structural geo logy at Yale university, born at New Provi dence, N. J., 50 years ago. Rear Admiral John E .Pillsbury, ,U. S. N., retired, born at Lowell, Mass., 74 years ago. Thirty Years Ago in Omaha. ' Mrs. A. J. Poppleton went to Stamford, Conn., to spend Christmas with Miss Poppleton and Miss Mary Poppleton. The Immanuel Baptist church at Twenty fourth tiid Binney was formally dedicated. Rev. H. C. Woods. D. D., of Lincoln delivered the dedicatory address. Mrs. Thayer of Colorado was visiting Mrs. Dundy. T. C. Patterson was in Washington, D. C. "The King's Fool" opera company sang to a crowded house at the BoyA. JUaii Sax was the , . "Forty Senators." Omaha. Dec. 12. To the Editor of The Bee: The World-Herald quotes Senator Hitchcock as saying, "there are 40 senators ready to take the treaty as it is, without any reservations. They take no stock In the idea that we must view the na tions associated with us in this war as suspicious characters who are try ing to lead us into a trap. They take no stock In the idea that- a plot is afoot to ruin the United States, destroy our Monroe Doctrine, fasten us forever as a member of the league, put upon us the whole burden of world peace, get con trol of our army and navy and de stroy the constitutional powers of congress." If the honorable sea ator'a words are true, these betray- a greater tragedy than even the wildest flights of our imagination had conceived. Can it be possible tnat among tne authorized repre' sentative body of the American peo ple there lurks "40 senators" who "take no stock in the very essen tials of our national liberty and gov ernment? The names of these "40 senators" should be published throughout the land and publicly branded as fully worthy to take their places beside such gentlemen as Judas Iscariot and Benedict Arnold. There isn't the least doubt in the world that Emma Goldman and Alexander Weinberger, awaiting de portation for sedition and anarchy, would loudly applaud the names and deeds 'Of these infamous "40." But. thank God, there are only "40" and those 40 will get a nice long vaca tion far. far from Washington after the next election. We thank you, Senator Hitchcock, for your timely tip and beg to assure you thut in the future we will be careful to se lect men as our representatives who do "take stock" in their office and responsibility. "AMERICA FIRST." Study Problems Solved The Encyclopedia. By ISABEL W. CLAYTON. You have some friends who are not always known but who have a great deal of information which will help you in your studies? These friends are very obliging and will give you help if you ask for it. They are more numerous than the dic tionary. You do not always find them in your home but they can always be found in the public library and in most schools. Ihey are called encyclopaedias. There are various families such as the Ameri cana, New International, Britannica, i and others. Do you know how to use them? You are asked to find out about apples. Will you look in the dic tionary or encyclopedia? The dic tionary tells what they are. while the encyclopedia describes them by means of words and pictures, tells how they are cultivated the names of the different kinds, their uses, their diseases, what insect pests affect them and when and with what to spray the trees to destroy the pests. Therefore, if you want to find out more than the definition of a subject, use the encyclopedia. Ihe encyclopedia is arranged in alphabetic order like the dictionary but usually in more than one volume depending on the amount of material it contains. The articles are loneer and fewer than those in the die- It Was Worse. t Lady Here, my poor fellow, is a quarter ror you. It must be dread ful to be lame, but I think It must be worse to be blind. Tramp It is, mum. When I was blind they was always handing me counterfeit quarters. The American Legion Weekly. DAILY CARTOONETTE. tionary. A general encyclopedia like the New International or Britan nica contains articles on all subjects. Some treatjf only a special subject such as art, natural science or elec tricity. The articles are arranged under the subject noun, such as rub ber, apples, and boats. At the end of the most important articles, are lists of books treating of the same sub ject. On the back of each volume is printed the first part of the names of the first and last subjects treated in that volume. The same is done on each page. This helps you to find the volume and page which contain the subject you are looking for. If you wanted to find out about apples in the New International Encyclo pedia, you would look in t he volume beginning with A and ending with ARABIC and on the page begin ning with with Appert and ending with Apple. (Next week: "How to write a Theme?) , j Boya' and Qlrla' N'awapapcr Sarvlca. Copyright, mi by i. 11. Mlllur. DOT PUZZLE. TELl ME THE TRUTH DflRUNQ MOW PI nNT GIRLS rtflVt You L0VfD RND PR0P0SLO TO BLFORE HE? AND lit DID lb IZ '7 14 4 21 ( 3 . " 4. 4 22 24 -A 3' " Mo . 34 & $ Trace the dots to forty-nine, Then run for a line. Draw from ona to two and ao on to the end. TRADE But What About Coal? The president's message Is an in teresting and delightful essay on general conditions. But it is silent on the one overshadowing subject involving the welfare of this coun try. What is the government doing to get coal? On this vital question the president says nothing. Kansas City Times. "BUSWSSIS coop thank you' LY Nicholas Oil Company To Fortify The Sys tem Against Colds, Grip and Influenza Take "Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets" Be sure you get the Genuine Look for this signature on the box. 30c THERE comes, at some time, sorrow to all homes, when the family must be separated. It is then that the tnoughtful service of the well equipped mortician lessens the burden for those who have charge of the last rites that are paid to the departed. It is then that the sympathetic, thoughtful, and kind mortician enters into in timate relations with the family, serving as best he may, with and for them. We take from the shoulders of the sorrowing ones many details which are so hard at that particular time. It is part of our service. "tftouomtui ULEPHO service aiwdvs" DOUG 525 CUMING ST. AT NWETCCNTH f Conservation 1 I The Need ot the II out 111 The Need of the Uoui We are requested to conserve coal in order that the supply we have available will serve the necessary needs of our community, our state and our govern ment, v . We have been urged to conserve food to the end that a surplus be created to help feed the starving in Europe and the hungry at home. An urgent appeal should be made to conserve money so that our Nation will have the means of financing our future prosperity. A savings account at this bank will help to provide a surplus for this work. 1 one today. ; jl hli ,-CTT . .