I. i 0 4 D TIIE OMAHA SUNDAY REE: NOVEMBER 7, 1920. .ThlOmaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY TUB PKB PUBLISHING COMPANY. NELSON B. Lf DIKE, Publisher. MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Th. AMoentKl rn. whHHi Th Bat It eimlwr. i x- elniTlj uiiiImI m the u fur inihliraiion l all " tilu:i'e ' crtiliiwl lo it oi not inhrnln crrtliivd In ti! pir. i"J IhiI nr. rublUhixi berm. all ruliu of puMlvttioB o our NWiial dtH'Stfhrt ar alio r!fwl BEE TELEPHONES Prlri nrmch Eichniiffc Art fnr Tvler 1000 Ui iMp.ru.enl or I'tnua Wanted. ' For NIht Call Afttr 10 P. M.I btorlal Iaiartir.enl Jt"JH'ip pei-ariitient Vierililnf DeinrlumU Council Blufft New Tort i'hieairo OFFICES OF THE BEE Main orrire' Ulh and Famam 15 SooU 8U I South Sid. Out-of-Town Officaai IM Klftb Ar 8tear HM I Wiihln.tnn I I'arla Franc 420 But St. Honor. Tvler innOI Trier 1"SI Tjler lOoaL J31S N 8U inn o w. The Bee's Platform 1. New Union Penger Station. 2. Continued improvement! of the Ne bra.ka Highway!, including the pave ment of Main Thoroughfare leading into Omaha with a Brick Surface. 3. A hort, low-rate Waterway from the Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. 4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. - NOBLE WORK FOR GIRLS Much lias been written of the pitfalls that await the unwary in a great city, and particu larly the dangers that beset the girl, newly come from a country home. Fitiful talcs have tilled the newspapers of the land, telling how some tender, inexperienced maideu hat been lost in the maze of life to which she is unaccustomed, but into which she is frequently necessarily thrust because f having to make her own way in the world. In many instances .the careful home training the girl has received actually proves a handicap to her when she encounters those things against whih she has been warned, but from which she is unable to defend herself adequately. Girls have come to the cities by thousands within the period lince war disturbed the nor mal life of the world. They have been invited by the industries which needed them, but which made little or no provision to provide for their wants beyond furnishing them a place, to work, and in some instances certain accommodations in connection therewith. Industry , did not exhibit much concern about the girl it had caught up, as to how she lived outside the shop, the office, the store or the factory. That ,was her lookout, and a mighty big problem it proved to many. Before the war an extensive agitation swept the country in favor of a minimum wage for girls and women, one of the most frequently heard arguments being that the "white slavers" re cruited their victims from among the poorly paid working girls. This was, as The Bee said often and emphatically, a gratuitous insult to the girls. This paper then and now contends that the girl's greatest danger arises from the fact that she has difficulty in finding a decent place to live." The Young Women's Christian Association has undertaken to remove this difficulty. It maintains many activities in the way of service to these girls, one of them being the management of a home, provided by the Scottish Rite Masons not a boarding house or an institution, but a real home, where a girl finds those things she left behind. This is being put on a self-supporting basis, the girls who live there paying to maintain the home. At the main building down town the "Y" has emergency rooms, to which are sent strangers who become bewildered and who may there rest safely until they get their bearings. At the depots last year in Omaha, 481 of these were picked up and cared for by the vigilant and tactful "Y" workers. The summer camp, the educational work, the cafeteria, the extension work for the colored girls, all these are on the program of the Y. W. C A. In Omaha 10,082 young women and girls are employed; of these 2,218 live away rrom home. These must be cared for. Recently a "Y" worker walked the streets for hours, looking for a respectable place' to lodge, a young colored girl. That is the problem, and it will not be an swered in an off-hand way. These Christian women are coming before Omaha people this week, asking for help. A city which has given f o liberally to Red Cross work, to help for sufferers abroad, to the Boy Scouts, and, to similar enterprises, may reason ably be expWted to support the splendid work the "Y" isdoing for the girls who have em ployment but no homes in Omaha. It Is a noble iwork, sustained by the loftiest of sentiments; U is far better to give a girl a home before she gets into trouble than it is to furnish her relief after she has fallen. Think it over. No Indictment is a Halo. A cynical reference to American justicevthat is not good to see is displayed by a New York bank president, who is quoted as saying that a federal indictment is a recommendation for any business man. "A government indictment shows that he has been making money. If he has not " been indicted, he is probably losing money." In ' this somewhat humorous fashion the banker illustrated the way he apportioned hi j loans, on the basis that business houses accused of break ing the law were better risks than those operat ing without a Jegal cloud. Public opinion does not hold with the man who claims that commercial concerns are pen alized for success. It is the common belief that a few unconscionable profiteers have taken ad vantage of the consumers and have unjustly re flected discredit on many branches of industry conducted in honorable manner. The charge has also been made that eastern banks have been more ready to make loans to speculators who were running up the cost of living than to producers. Loose talk' discrediting the legal processes of the American court is to be con demned, from whatever source it comes, or Leslie's Weekly recounted numerous in stances of loss due to men carrying large sums about with them. He told of a foreign-born workman, brought up injured from the bottom of a mine. Under his left arm was found an oiled silk bag containing $450. There are un doubtedly great numbers of men who carry their fortune about with them in such ways. In addition to the danger of loss, there is added the failure to receive any income from hoarded savings. Money is useful both to its owner and to society when, it is at- work. The existence of so many fake speculative enterprises, of course, is a matter of discouragement to un trained investors, but responsible authorities al ways can be found, and there are plenty of solid places for investment or deposit that will do away with all peril or fear of loss. " Paderewski's Silent Piano. ' Taderewski has sold his piano,! and it is doubtful if he will ever again touch a keyboard. The nervous worry over affairs in his native country of Poland, together with a form of neuritis that has painfully' swollen his knuckles, may cost the' music loving public one of its idols. All America knew Faderewski; those who did not hear him play made his name a house hold word on account of his longhand tousseled hair. It may be that in addition to his othr dif ficulties as one of the leading public men of new Foland he is growing bald, for he is now 61 years old. Even this his audiences could for give, for once he touched the keys, his freedom from affectation, and his wonderful rendition of the great masterpieces drove all thought of extraneous things away. -With justice has Paderewski been called the greatest pianist of his day. When fold recently by an American corre spondent that the people of the United States hoped soon to hear him again, the' pianist held up his swollen hands and said: "I never shall touch a piano again. Not only does the situa tion of my country make me unwilling to con tinue my career as a public entertainer, but the shock of the repeated misfortunes to my coun try has so affected my nervous system that I am unable to touch piano keys even for private satisfaction. I am hoping that the' treatment I am now receiving in Paris will improve my fin gers so that I can occasionally play for Madame Paderewski." It is possible to admire the patriotic efforts of Paderewski, but s'till to feel that the world needs good musicians more than mediocre states men. From his first tour of America in the early nineties he was a power, for satisfying the de sire for good music. In some measure his pop ularity may be gauged by the receipts from a three months' tour in 1895, when he received the net sum of $200,000. Out of that he gave a fund of $10,000 . to encourage American com posers. Other and younger virtuosos will come, but just as the world likes the old songs best, many of us will cherish the echoes of Paderewski's piano above most other musical memories. A Line 0' Type or Two Hew to the Line, let the quip fall where th.r may. CONTRIBUTIONS to this department ar rive in envelopes with the printed address, "Fred W. Upham, Treasurer, buite Conway ;u;nr rhiratro." These directions are i crossed out and "B. L. T., Tribune," substituted. But it was Mr. Upham's idea, in sending out these envelopes, that they were to contain con tributions to the Republican campaign fund, ;., tv,; mlmim The worst of it is. some of the inclosed wheezes are at the expense of the j jwsa,dVn Kepuniican candidate. "THE maddest man in Arizona," postcards T U H., who has got that far, "was the one who found, after ten miles' hard drive from this hotel, that he had picked up the Gideon Bible instead of his Blue Book." Mill, they re both guide books, and they might be interestingly compared. Topic In Grief. Sir: The Harding-Wilson French quarrel mai oul, mai out not. The "vin blanc" purveyed these days should be spelt "vin blank." What has become of the old boys who used to idebate, "Poes prohibition prohibit?" Men formerly beat their wives; now they take it out on the world through Vox Pop. The Peace Conference adjusted the pieces of the world jig-saw puzzle, to fit comfortably, but not in the right places and now look at it! Q. A. R. THE Indians rather overdid their summer this year. Unless you believe that Indian sum mer, like making love to a widow (as the aged wheeze hath it), can't be overdone. A DESERVING CANDIDATE. Dear Sir: Let's see, wasn't it Thoreau who wrote: I have a great aeai oi mieiesuiif, company, particularly in the morninfr, when no- But what l started to say was, me How to Keep Well By DR. W. A. EVANS QitMtioni concerninf hygi.n., .anitation and prevention of diaeaae. aiibwltted to Dr. Evan, by raider, of The Be., will ba an.wered personally, eubiect to proper limitation, where a .tamped, add..d envelope i enclo.ed. Dr. Evan will not make diagnosi. or preacrib. for individual di.ease. Addre.s letter, in care of The Bee. Copyright, 1920, by Dr. W. A. Evan.. IN DYING PETROGRAD If you have any desire to glimpse how society can slip back in two farther than it has crawled 30U years, then read a storv of life In Petrograd. recently printed in the Saturday Evening Post. If the experiences of your lifetime, spent behind the. protecting walls of medicine and sanitary science, have made a Follyanna of you, pon der over this story. If you feel any desire to revile the men and insti tutions that have brought you se curity, study tin teachings of this storv and repent. We read that the death rate of Petrograd, whichMs normally about 22 per 1,000, rose to 43.6 in 1918 and 74.9 in 1919. In the latter year there were about 74,900 deaths. A population of 979, G80 was estimated for Petrograd in 1919. the basis of the estimate being the number of food cards issued. The writer of the story says the population was prob ablv less than 700,000. Now, let's see what 74,900 deaths among 700,000 people means; that almost oner-ninth of the entire popu lation died that year. The death rate in this counrty Is about 14. The Tetrograd death rate was six times as high, assuming that their popula tion did not exceed 700,000. Our so cial machinery was fearfully strained during the influenza epidemic. The Petrograd death rate or was OOUV caua. , Jui wiio-v a oiiA.w... . . x vHi.i." , . . Democratic candidate for Congress solicits my more than four times as nigh as our inconspicuous vote, mailing a card announcing that he-was born in 1879, graduated from the Chicago public schools, and lives with his wife and family of eight children. How can I resist? J. F. B. A LADY of 57 is in hospital as a result of ("take it from the City Press) "tripping on the hem of her shirt." Did you know they wore 'em so long? Or skirts, for that matter? No, That is Beyond Normalcy. Sir: "The physical benefit and the mental and manual training which goes with the naval service is of incalculable value," says Harding. We trust the instruction includes grammar. W. S. Reading for Winter Nights. , It formerly was the custom to enumefate the six best sellers in American bookdom each year, but it has remained for the1 Writers' club of New York City to select a list of the six best novelists, which is a vastly different thing. Theodore Dreiser, Edith Wharton, James B. Cabell, Booth Tarkington, Gertrude Atherton and Willa Sibert Cather were chosen, with the' three first named far in the lead. Half of these are men, and three may also be classed as westerners, with the exception of Tarkington, who sometimes writes in romantic vein, all are realists. Dreiser, in a remarkable series of novels, of which "The Financier" is -j one, has given a strikingly clear picture of some phases of American life that may become a per manent part of literature. Cabell has come into prominence in the last year through having his whimsical novel "Jurgen," banned by the Society for the Suppression of yice. Dreiser also has had his clashes with these same good folk, hut the others have been free from all such criticism. Of the women writers, Miss Cather is prob ably least known, but in some ways the most interesting to Nebraskans. She was graduated from the University of Nebraska in 1895, and has frequently used this part of the middle west in her stories. Her fine novel, "O Pioneers," is a story of Nebraska life that should be better known. The choice of these six novelists was made by men and women, who also are writers, and it is debatable whether they are better or worse qualified to judge than the reading public. The list, however, is a good one, and full of promise for those seeking a list of good books for these lengthening winter nights. "Back Talk" that Helps. "And don't give me any of your back talk 1" Somehow, the, spirit of domination, of dis regard of any other point of view, indicated in those words, is not much in evidence, these days. There is no king who can say that to hit subjects; no elected or appointive official who can tell that to the people he is called upon to serve. Wherever it may be, whether in politics, industry or any other department of life, sug gestions and criticism are received with more respect than was once the case. Merchants who send out the wrong goods, or sell an article that does not suit the need for which it was bought; are glad to rectify their errors. In many factories boxes to receive ideas from the employes on improved methods are relied upon for many' useful suggestions. Through every activity of life there is a willing ness to confer and to listen that is full of prom ise for better relations. "Talking back" need not be acrimonious. It is indication more of a thoughtful attitude, a knowing what you believe and , what you want It is by the clash of ideas that issues are settled, and it is for this reason much better to take "back talk" than to smother it until it bursts forth in other and less reasoning forms. A SCIENTIFIC expedition will hunt for the missing link in Asia, and may find it. But it will never be known whether the m. 1. was capable of the popular songs which one sees in the win dows of music stores, or whether it could have done something better. ' KANKAKEE NOTES. Sir: Our Republican candidate tor vjircuu clerk is running against a woman. His name is Charles F. Skinner. Do you suppose he will? Another thing I wanted to tell you was that our local bakery has a new delivery truck, lettered in gold as follows: "Economos Bros. River view Bakery. Quality Bakery. As High As We Can Make It." KANKAKEE. INVITATIONS to Join the Arts Club of Washington have disturbed a settled belief that there is not enough art in the national capital to sustain the smallest of clubs. The Oasis would seem a better name for the association. "I Know What I Like." (Jules Lemaitre, "18 Contemporains.) How then ran literary criticism be set up as a doctrine? Works of art defile before the mir ror of our minds; but since the line is long, the mirror is modified in the interval and when, by chance, the same work returns, it no longer projects the same image. Each man may ex perience that In his own case. Once I adored Corneille and despised Racine; today I adore Racine and Corneille is almost indifferent to me. . . . When I strive to be sincere and to ex press what I truly feel. I am appalled to ob serve how little agreement there is between my Impressions and the traditional judgments held on very great writers, and I hesitate to speak all my thought. It Is because that tradition Is almost entirely a matter of artifice and convention. One re members what one has, perhaps, felt oneself, or rather what venerated teachers have declared one should feel. It is never by anything ex cept such docility and such agreement that a body of literary Judgments can be formed and can persist. Some minds have enough force and assurance to establish these long sets of judg ments and to rest them upon unchangeable prin ciples. These minds are, by will or by nature, less changeful mirrors than the others and, if you please, less inventive, and in them the same works are always reflected in very nearly the same fashion. But one cm easily see that they have nothing within them by virtue of which they can impose themselves on other intelli gences, and that they contain nothing, in the end, but personal preferences grown rigid. One judges that to be good which one loves. There is the whole matter. lontVi r.it in 1918 There were American cities which were not able promptly to bury their dead on certain da in October, 1918. The average daily death rate for 1919 in Petrograd was more than twice as high as ours of Oc tober, 1918. There was a time when Chicago was so unheaithful that some thought the site would have to be abandoned. An irmy sent by the fed eral government against the Black Hawk Indians upon reaching Chi cago was taken Pick and never was able to go farther. The Petrograd death rate in 1919 was twice that of Chicago in its worst year. Manv more died among the 700, 000 in 'Petrograd in 1919 than were killed in our army of several mil lions in the great war in almost two years. The highest death rate Petro grad ever had prior to 1919 was in the great cholera epidemic in 1848. The death rate of 1919 was about one-third higher than that of 184S. The normal birth rate of Petro grad is about 28 per 1,000, being at least 3 points higher than ours. By 1918 the Petrograd tate had fallen to 15 and in 1919 it was 13. The death rate Is about six times as high as the birth rate. Sanitation is unspeakably bad, communicable diseases are wholly uncontrolled, the sigk are not cured for and the well are hungry, dirty and lousy. 4 The article is an appeal to the world for help through the Red Cross. They must have help or they must change thoir government, or they must abandon Petrograd and scatter out or a ittlo more than 10 years will see the- Petrograd popu lation wiped out. Will the 20th cen tury have its Sodom and Gomor rah? ' N excessive crime rate. If Hit- offenses of our foreign ami colored races vero stricken from lite calculation, cur crime ivonr-l would still greatly exceed the roco.-.l of western Eur ope. With all iu kindliness and good nature, the temper of our com munitlis contains u strong strain of violence. Wo condone violence and shirk its puiiisimu t. We lack a high instinct for oiiWr. Wo lack a sense of the dignity of obedience to re sliaint which is demanded for the common good. We lack a certain respect for our own security and the terms upon which civilized connnu rilies keep the pence. " 'There !s probably moro undis ciplined, egotistic, mischievoua force ;n the United States than In any country of first lank In the world." This Indictment, framed by an in ('U;nant newspaptri , is scarcely ex aggerated. There Is hardly a com munity where its accuracy is not vindicated. It Is little wonder, therefore, that the task which we have set before our police, has all but proved impossible 1 ODDS AND ENDS. n ....r xnuitui ii.dit at Norway kit the beginning of 1H20 was 391.11 crowns. At par of exchange this 1 $104 82, against .09 20 for Sweden, 573.1 7 for Denmark, and $235.34 for the I'nlted Sta'es. Consul K. S. Patton reports from Belgrade that the metric system is In general as well as official use throughout the whole of the klng trom the Sorbs, Croats and Slo venes. With the exception of the oke (about two and three-fourths pounds), which it used in southern rierbia, no units other than the me rle units are tis"d; even locally. National committees, so called, made up of empbwers nnd employes and Including representatives of the ministry of labor, have been so suc cessful In sottllnfr labor disputes tn Belgium that they are being formed In increasing numbers In various In dustries. They were exceptional in Belgium before the war. Union labor, which first regarded them with dis trust, now favors them. Yes, It's Dangerous. H. B. writes: "1. Will you please tell me the caus.i of gallstones? I am 42 years old and my doctor has told me an operation is necessary. 2. Is an operation dangerous? I have trouble in my gall bladder. REPLY. 1. Gallstones ure very frequently found, especially in fat women past 40. Not one person in 10 who has gallstones suspects the nature of the trouble. Gallstones are one of the most frenuent causes of dyspepsia, stomach trouble, indigestion, acidity, and "gas on the stomach." While there is much about the cause of gallstones that is not known, the fol lowing are accepted a among the more important causes: Attack of tvphoid fever, infection of the gall bladder, lack of exercise, laziness, obesity, overeating, eating a diettoo rich in fats. 2. Yes. Case Not Hopeless. R. F. D. writes: "I am 43 years old, a victim of prostatitis for nearly five years. I have taken both medi cal and osteopathic treatments. Is recovery possible? I am married. Is my case honeless? REPLY. Many cases of prostatitis are ben efited by massage; others by heat therapy. More of them would be cured by operation. Prostatic en largement is far from being an in curable condition. Kl I 1 '9, I'l " . II V.lrfSJ hi i 1 i 1 ; w :wim - mm. 11 Comparative Amount of Crime in American And European Communities Idle Money. Aa Immigrant girl died the other day in the effort to save her sister from drowning. A belt heavy with money pulled her down to her death. It would be an unfair inference that this young woman thought more of her money than of her life. Her fault was only the all too usual one of not knowing how bfct to take care of her sav ings. Accidents, fires and robberies, frequently rer real, the fact that the modern conveniences for ensuring the safety of securities and cash are not deauatel used. A writej in a recent number Germany and Austria are asking for ad mission to the league of nations, thus elimina ting the. charge that by staying out the United States would be in bad company. Kentucky democrats who charge fraud in the election perhaps suspect that negroes were allowed to vote. Soviet Russia is said to b'e tottering again. So is General Wrsuigel's outfit. Teeter-totter, as it were. ' It begins to appear doubtful if even all the democratic stump speakers, voted for Cox. IF Faguet were writing his w. k. book .today he would find plenty of material, in the presi dential campaign, to point his moral and adorn his tale. THIS WILL MAKE YOU ONE. ' Sir: The ultimate in service is achieved at a south side movie where mothers are allotted parking space in the lobby for their offspring. T'other evening without interruption of the pie fight, which was being waged with custardary vigor, this slide was flashed upon the screen: "Mother! Your baby is crying." Can you beat it? If I were a complete contrlb I might head this: "No. but Mother Probably Did." C. F. Q., REMINDS us of the recent announcement concerning the First Methodist Church of Evanston: "Miss Tillie Brown will keep quiet in the room where the babies sleep while the pas tor preaches." Ask Kelly, lie Knows. (From the Freeport, Tex., Facts.) Notice To my patrons, friends and the public in general, I am NOT an umbrella fixer. I am NOT a lawnmower sharpener. I have NO general repair shop. I have NO pardners in my business. ! will furnish vou an estimate on your pointing or paper hanging on short notice. T. M. Kelly & No Co. Ask Kelly. OVERHEARD by M. H. R. on the Boule ward: "Is she staying at the Moron Hotel in Highland Park?" "You mean the Moraine, don't you?" "Oh, isn't it French?" . AIN'T IT TERRIBLE? Sir: Overheard this InNFrankfort, Ind. First Lady: "Oh, yes, my husband has been working steady for ever so long. Is your business work ing?" Other Fair Voter: "No, he's been look ing around for over three weeks, but so far ain't found nothing." "Well, that's the Demo cratic administration for you. Ain't it terrible the way they've ruined this country?" R. A. V. PRTNCE PAUL of Greece is said to be a good dancer. He ought to know the Volcano Two-Step. ONLY THOSE WHO KNOW THE RULES MAY BREAK THEM. Sir: And they pav Riq to teach paragraph ing and capitalization at the U. of M. Dlo mio! Add advantages of a college education. EUCIE. "WILSON Has Echolalia, W. B. Hale de clares." Headline. Interesting. Now if we only knew what ails William Bayard? Every Little Helps. (Wisconsin Corporation Record.) Oesterrelch-Ungarlscher ' Franz Joseph Gegenseltger Kranken Unterstuzungs Verein, Sheboygan; name change to Na tional Aid Society of Sheboygan. ON the menu of the Woman's City Club: "Scrambled Brains." Do you wonder, my dear? WELL, girls, summer is over. Time to roll 'em up again. EXIT davlight saving time, dance 1 And good rid CLjT. I New York, Nov. ?. The bureau of social hygiene makes public today in part the results of an exhaustive study of police conditions in Amer ica to be presented in the forth coming book, "American Police Systems," by Raymond B. Fosdick, formerly under secretary general of the League of Nations, and during the war chairman of the commission on training camo activities of the War and Navy departments. The installment made public to day deals with the comparative amount of crime in American and European communities. On this sub ject Mr. Fosdick pays: j "The police of an American city are faced with a lask such as Euro pean police organizations have no knowledge of. The metropolitan police force of London, with all its splendid efficiency, would be over whelmed in New York, and the bri gade de surete of Paris, with its in genuity and mechanical equipment, would fall far below the level of its present achievement If it were con fronted with the situation in Chi cago." f . In explanation of this situation, Mr. Fosdick gives as one of the Teasons the preponderance of crime in America. He says:. "As to the fact of our excessive criminality, the statistics furnish startling evidence. London in 1916, with a population of 7,250,000, had nine premeditated murders. Chi cago, one third the size of London, in the same period had 105, nearly 12 times London's total. In the year 1916, indeed and it was not an ex ceptional year Chicago with its 2.500,000 people had 20 more mur ders than the whole of England and Wales put together with their 38, 000,000 people. The Chicago mur ders during this year total one more than London had during the five year period from 1910 to 1914 in clusive. In 1917 Chicago had 10 more murders than the whole of England and Wales and four more murders than all England, Wales and Scotland. In 1918 the number of murders in Chicago was almost exactly six times the number com mitted in London. "But Chicago is not exceptional. Other American cities suffer equally from comparison with crime condi tions abroad. New York City in 1916 had exactly nix times the num ber of homicides (murder and man slaughter) that London had for the same vear, and only 10 less homi cides than all of England and Wales. In 1917, New York had six times more homicides than London, and exceeded the total homicides of England and Wales by 56. In 1918 New York again bad six times more homicides than London, and ex ceeded the total homicides of Eng land and Wales by 67. This con trast cannot be attributed to the per culiar conditions in London inducefl by the war. In each of the years from 1914 to 1918 inclusive New York had more homicides than oc curred in London during any three year period, previous to the out break of the war in 1914. "Equally significant is the com parison of burglary statistics be tween Great Britain and the United States. In 1915, for example, New York City had approximately eight times as many burglaries as London had in the same period, and nearly twice the number of burglaries re ported in all England and Wales. In 1917 New York bad four times as many burglaries as London, and ap proximately the same number as oc curred in England and Wales. In 1918 the burglaries which the police reported in New York were approx imately two and a half times those in London. "While w-sr conditions undoubt edly served to heighten this con trast, they were by no means en tirely responsible for it; in 1915 New York City had more burglaries than occurred In nil England nnd Wales In 1911. 1912, or 1913. Chi cago in 1916 had 532 more burg laries than London; in 1917, 3.459 more; in 1918, 866 more, and in 1919, 2,14 6 more. Detroit and Cleveland generally report several hundred more burglaries per annum than London, although London Is seven or eight times larger. In each of these two cities In 1917 and 1918 the number of burglaries averaged one fourth the numbor committed tn all England and Wales. The annual burglaries in St. Louis always ex- coed those in London. ! "The disproportionate number of burglaries occurring in American cities as compared with English cities Is reflected in the prevailing burglary Insurance rates of the two countries. Due to differences In insurance practices and methods, ex act comparisons are impossible, but enough has .been gathered from careful investigation to warrant the general conclusion that burglary rates in American - municipalities are from 15 to 20 times higher than in the principal cities of England. "Automobile thefts ' are much more, prevalent In America than in Great Britain, as is shown by the following table: "Thefts of automobiles reported New York 5,527 Chicago 4,316 Detroit 3,482 St. Louis 1.244 Cleveland 2,327 Buffalo 986 London 290 Liverpool 10 "Comparative statistics as to the number of automobiles in America and England are impossible to ob tain, but it is probably a fair as sumption that the proportionate ex cess of thefts in the United States far exceeds the admittedly larger supply of machines in our commun ities as compared with the commun ities of Great Britain." Mr. Fosdick discusses the relation of our heterogeneous population to our excessive crime rate and comes to the conclusion that preponder ance of crime in America is greatly augmented by the presence of un assimilated or poorly assimilated races. He says: "It must not te supposed, how ever, that our foreign and colored population is the sole cause of our ADVERTISEMENT DIAMOND DYES Any Woman can Dye now Each package of "Diamond Dyes" contains directions so simple that any woman can diamond-dye any old, faded garments, draperies, cov erings, anything, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods, a new, rich, fadeless- color. Buy "Diamond Dyes" no other kind then perfect results are guar anteed even if you have never dyed before. Druggist will show you Diamond Dves Color Card. APOLLO The f ' Human Touch! A Wonderful Reproducing PIANO You hear your fayoriu Artist; his touch, his ped alina. his individual nu- annex, cresendoa. diminuendos hit very self, pictured with the APOLLO. By simply touching the electric device it will perform an d repeat at will. The first of these Instruments have just been received and are now on exhibition at our store. You are invited. Have your Christmas Piano eet aside. Male small down payment to tecure it. 1513 Douglas Street v O fl ts.? I 1 , , r. : ' ' ' I I AH Metal again $ave$ important records j taken from - 1 the ruin. m I I I BUSINESS IS COOP THANK YQU I L.Y Nicholas Oil Company 1 1 i 1 I umana jrinung vu.: r- nrrlr c I TDD f V uni ICC I The -plant of the Strassei-Uans Paint Company, Louisville, Kv., was destroyed by fire 011 May 20th. The following is an extract frojn their voluntary testimony to the fire-resist-ance of Art Metal: ttVt baa in ow ojfict one of you No. 1000 Mahog any oAn Metat Leite- tiles. All tht -wooden fixtures arouna this hit were euhe aestroyea o burnea c badty at tt bt enaeea useiess. Wber tnt pit oaa cooiea ror faentiy 10 enubu u: tc bandu tt. n en ve) much surprised to ftna tht "omento intact ana the letters and papers therein not even scorched.'' 'ot on mere claims but on its performance in actual fires may you place your confidence in the fire resistance oi Art Metal steel. Step in and let us show you these files and other Art Metal Steel Office Equipment. Complete catalog on request I. Tur nrrirF SUPPLY HOUSE Thirteenth t Fernam Phone Doug!.. 2793. I