T 7 THE BEE: OMAHA. TUESDAY, MAY 31, 1921. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY NELSON B. UPDIKE, Publisher. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tht AMMlttwl rim of which The 11m It nemtwr. It u luiltl entltlrU to m um for puDucttloo of til newt dltixlctiw tredtud to It or not otb.rolH orwllted In Urn ptptr. ud tin tbt Ire-il n(t pubh.iiM) horsm. All rifbu of iiubllcttloo of out swclsl l ivtlctwt tro tin ressrred. BEE TELEPHONES .Vlrtts Branch Eiobintc Aik for tbt Ucpwtutut or Fanoa Wanted, AT Untie 1000 For Night Ctllt Afttr 10 p. m.t EdltorlsJ Department AT lutie 1021 or 104! OFFICES OF THE BEE Main OfriM! lTlh and rimin 13 Scott t)t I BouUi Sid. 1033 South !ts at Couaoll Blufft New Tort COlOUO Out-of-Towa Offices! !SI Fifth An. Steser Bid I Wtiblnrton 1311 0 Mt I Paris. Frtno. 430 But 8k Honor The Bee 8 Platform 1. Nw Union Passenger Station. 2. Continued improvement of the Ne braska Highways, including the pave ment of Main Thoroughfare loading into Omaha with a Brick Surface. 3. A short, low-rate Waterway from the , Corn Belt to the Atlantic Ocean. 4. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with City Manager form of Government. Working Out a Peace Resolution. News from Washington that "jealousy" be tween the senate and the house may . delay the coming of peace need not disturb anybody. It is really not so serious a situation as might ap pear on the surface. President Harding has been consulted, and has said that he is unwilling to make a choice between the Knox resolution, passed by the senate, and the Porter resolution, which will be reported to the house and prob ably passed. What the president is interested in is a declaration of peace. The difference between the Knox and Por ter resolutions is not an insurmountable one, and scarcely amounts to more than a technicality. By the former the war is declared at an end, and the resolutions which declared a state of war to exist are repealed. By the latter war is simply declared at an end. Some time may be consumed between the two branchs of congress in debating which of the two forms of resolution finally will be adopted to end the fictitious state of war that has been in existence for almost two years. The matter will be brought forward in the house this week, and may be the subject of such debate as will develop the reasons for not tak ing the lead of the senate as a guide. Delay to the declaration ot peace is not especially serious at the moment. Germany is moving to comply with the reparation demands, and has thus re moved the greatest obstacle to the negotiations that may follow the action, of congress. When the senate turned down the Walsh resolution last week, it was further notice that this country does not intend to enter the League of Nations. We will be free at least from that entanglement in making, our own bargains. Europe's problems are turning on the Kor fanty revolt in Poland, and the reported collapse of the Lcninc-Trotzky government in Russia. So . far as our concern in these goes, we will be in iis good position to deal with the issues arising. , from.t'.kin if the passage of the peace, resolution is post;', tied to the end of summer. Therefore, the nc.;jtiations btween house and senate, over the 1; n ,uage to be employed in the declaration is not of especial moment just now. Mr. Har ding has left it to congress, and congress will decide one way or the other. Latest Little Indian War. The "uprising" of the Utes in Utah doesn't amount to much, when measured by the stand ards of modern warfare, and even is negligible as compared with the outbreaks . of ;. earlier days. Alongside the Meeker Massacre, in which the same tribe, under Colorow, performed some deeds of rapine and cruelty that will always live in western annals, this demonstration is insig-r ' nificant. What may be gained from it is at tention to the genuine progress the red man has made in the last quarter of a century. . Only those who are familiar, through personal con tact with the Indian, with the advance made in white man's ways can appreciate the change. Not only Indians of Oklahoma, where many have become millionaires through oil, are af fected, but the sturdier tribes have gained in knowledge and wealth because they have been induced to accept something of civilization. The blanket Indian has all but disappeared; indus trious endeavor at self-support has taken place of the indolent, shiftless life so long characteristic of the tribes under the mistaken policy of an earlier day. The white man sought to deal justly with the red, and by that effort perpetuated most of his ancestral habits. Only pvhen this policy was reversed, and the Indian was required to assume some genuine responsibility for his own affairs, to provide for his wants through the arts of peace, .rather than those of the chase, did his progress begin. Outbreaks, such as that reported . from Utah, are not a sign that the experiment has failed. They merely serve to prove that the Indian is, after all, a human being; that his young men can be and frequently are unruly, and that the passion for adventure has not yet died out in their bfeasts. That is all. How to Spend $100 a Month. i So far as is known, no estimate of how a man enjoying an income of $100,000 a year should apportion his expenditures has ever been made. He is left to, spend or save as he sees fit, and the public seldom noses into his affairs unless he quarrels with his wife. However, the wage earn er is showered with advice as to what to do with his pay check. The bureau of municipal research in Xew York City is the latest to figure out how the income of this class should be ap portioned. AH the items of legitimate expense have been tabulated and the amount that may properly be used for each is carefully estimated. For an unmarried woman. office worker the minimum annual outlay is set at $1,118.08. That eight cents indicates that some close figuring and nickel splitting has been going on. A single man, we are assured, can maintain the American stan dard of living on $1.09168 a year, and a family of five must spend $2,263.55. According to this budget." each man is given an allowance of $3 for collars and' $2.94 for ties (probably he is ex pected to get the rest from Santa Claus.) The unmarried woman is expected to spend S3 a week for rent and 95 cents a day for food. Clothing costs are set at $184.30. a year, with $21.50 as one-half the cost of a suit, $14.21 for one-third of a coat, $11.70 for shirtwaists, $1372 'or one year's proportional Jpst of a serge dress and $13.97 for an evening dress also bought to last two years. The cost of a coat, it will be un derstood, is to be amortized over three years, and the suit is to be worn for two years. All this would be very helpful if human wants and needs could be standardized. Perhaps it may be of some account for reference in seek ing out where extravagance or undue economy may be found. But no such hard and fast rules can be laid down for general application. One thing is sure, that if this minimum of liv ing costs were applied in all cases, a lot of stores, factories and other business houses would have to shut down for lack of business. The myster ious thing is that while a great many people have incomes larger than these prescribed amounts, a still greater number has smaller ones and yet continues to live. The conclusion that some are forced to exist beneath the minimum standard of comfort is inescapable once a budget estimate such as this is accepted as fair. Another Lesson From the Air. The terrible accident which befell an army ambulance plane carries a lesson not to be neglected. Whatever the technical fault may have been, and this will probably be in dispute a long time between the experts, the lay mind will turn to the fact that the flight was under taken in face of conditions that might have jus tified its postponement. Some birds breast the storm, finding delight in pitting their apparently puny strength against the majesty of the elemental wrath. Most of them, however, seek shelter when a storm blows up. These have a decided advantage over man, in that they may alight easily and find safe perch almost anywhere. The giant airships can not do this. Until better methods of control are de vised, that landings may be made safter, and a plane can come to rest almost anywhere in emer gency, it is foolhardy to undertake long flights under conditions that add so greatly to the or dinary risks of air passage. Men who hazard iife or limb in the air service may well be ex cused if at such times they take precautions that are warranted. - The unfortunate accident at Milwaukee is what might be expected at an exhibition of stunt flying. Terrible risks are assumed, just to af ford a thrill for the multitude. Nothing can. support the unnecessary jeopardy into which both the performers and the spectators thrust themselves at such times. It is deplorable, but it is only another of many proofs of the un natural craving for sensation that marks the time, time.' Best Wishes for India. Drouth, extravagance and speculation are among the factors that have induced a trade slump in India similar to that which exists in almost every corner of the world. This seems very far away, although many Americans are kept in close sentimental touch with the condi tion in India through church missionary enter prises. No one wants to see the people of Asia starve, but the increased poverty which has marked many districts there has more than its humani tarian aspects. Commercial experts assert that a recovery in the Orient would be a most favor able factor in improving the business situation in America. , It is as the largest producer of raw cotton, that the United States has a commercial interest over thereJ India is the largest importer of cotr ton piece goods in the world. Its 350,000,000 inhabitants use it almost entirely for their dress. But India does not buy this goods from Ameri can factories. No, but the British miils buy about one-fourth of America's cotton crop in nor mal times, and 30 per cent of the output of those extile factories was .sold to India, before the war. The disturbances in Russia and the depres-, sion in China and Japan have likewise affected this demand. It may seem romantic that hard times away off in Asia could exert a bad influence over the. whole southern part of the United States, but it fs true nevertheless. No nation today is indc-, pendent of any other part of the world. In fluenza, some medical men claim, spread from Western Europe over the whole world, and until this plague, spot is cleaned up danger will not be past. In much the same way do bad economic conditions make their way around the globe, and Instead of one nation, being better off when others are in distress, the burden falls on all. A Mockery of Justice. Nineteen men, found guilty of price fixing after the investigation ' of the building' material combine in New York . City, have been released upon payment of $500 fines. Samuel Untermyer, who served as prosecutor and special investi gator in these cases, has sent in his resignation, announcing -that he does not intend to seek any more indictments until legislation can be se cured which will insure imprisonment for these offenders. ' "The belief that these malefactors can secure iijimunity'by surrendering a pittance of their ill gotten gains if they happen to be trapped will serve only to stimulate them to further viola-' tions," he wrote to the attorney general of 'the' state, and continued: "I did not volunteer, and I am not willing to act as a collecting agency for the state in gathering in shekels for permis sion to persist in flagrant violations of law that are far more perilous to the public welfare and safety than are the aggregate offenses of all the unfortunate inmates of the penitentiary, many of whom yielded under great temptation while these men had no provocation1 save greed." The mass of the people will agree with his point that the manner of enforcement of state and national anti-trust laws in the past few years is such as "to breed contempt for the law and support a powerful argument in the hands of demagogues and enemies of organized society that our criminal laws are not enforced against the rich and powerful in the same spirit as against the poor and lowly." Combines to fix prices and control production! are a menace to the American people as consumers. Imposition of a small fine on men who are found guilty of this practice is nothing more than a mockery of jus tice. . t Before making a further movfc in the Dsbs case, Attorney General Daugherty intends to make a thorough study of the socialistic move ment, but it is not to be feared that he will be induced thereby to abandon the republican party. A bill in the Florida legislature would limit the income of all lawyers to $3,000 a year. This might be all right if it did not go so far as to guarantee every barrister that as a minimum. ' Summer, at least, has reached normalcy. Government As Mediator What Secretary Dapis Has Tried To Do In Settling Labor Dispuies , (Front; the Washington Post.) , The complaint conies with poor grace from the American Steamship Owners association that "the encouragement that the leaders of the unions feel. they are receiving from the secretary of labor tends to prolong a controversy which shows every promise of being quickly and com pletely ended," It displays a spirit that is not conducive to industrial peace and mutual con ridence. Secretary Davis' efforts to bring about an amicable adjustment ot tne marine sirixe nave been in the public interest and with a view to securing a square deal lor both employers and employes. His attempts at conciliation have been hedged with great difficulties, because the work ers have positively refused to accept a moderate reduction in wages, on the one hand, and the shipowners have declared their intention of de clining to sign another wage scale, on the other hand. Between these two unyieiaing positions the role of peacemaker has been difficult. But Secretary Davis has been persistent and patient. In his youth he worked in the iron mills and was a member of the labor union, so that he is now able to appreciate the viewpoint of the worker who is asked to forego a portion of his earnings. In later years he rose to a position of large affairs, which enables him to understand the feelings of the employer who sees his busi ness threatened by excessive labor costs. Also, his experience in philanthropic works and his close touch with humanity through a long period have given him a true perspective from the standpoint of the public interest. Possessing these qualities, Mr. Davis has clung tenaciously to the h,ope of bringing the contending factions to a common ground where an agreement is pos sible, and in so doing he is serving the nation well. The lofty attitude of criticism assumed by the shipowners indicates that these gentlemen are disposed to regard this strike as a private quarrel, in, which force alone is to decide the issue. This is a decidedly faulty understanding of the facts. From the viewpoint of Secretary Davis and of the American public which he rep resents, there is much more involved in this dis pute than the purely selfish demands of the ship owners and the marine workers. There arc questions of justice to be considered, touching both parties; there is the national interest in volved in the maintenance and extension of America's foreign trade, and there are other fac tors which apparently are lost to sight of both employers and strikers. In one of his speeches in New York President Harding announced as the outstanding aspiration Of his administration to "inaugurate the era of understanding." He said: "I want understand ing, between the captains of industry and those who make up the toiling forces." No higher goal of service could be set by the chief executive, and his secretary of labor, in his persistent en deavors to settle the marine workers strike, is but translating into action the great principle enunciated by his chief. . During his brief tenure of the portfolio of Labor, Mr. Davis has one great accomplishment to his credit in the settlement of the wage dis pute between the packers and their employes. This controversy, also, involved to a large extent the public interest, and it was realized that a strike in the meat industry would prove a great hardship to the American people, as well as a further detriment to an already stagnated busi ness condition. Secretary Davis intervened, and as a result an agreement was reached and the strike averted. Are government agencies to be condemned as meddlers for using their good offices to pie serve industrial peace? Are peaceful arbitra ments to be discarded in favor of settlements by force? If so, the doctrine of Understanding so impressively i urged by the president has scant hope ,of development , into fruition. Secretary Davis is proceeding in the interests of the Amer ican nation as a whole, and he is warranted in going ahead so long as there remains a bare possibility of success. How to Keep Well By DR. W. A. EVANS Qutttiont concerning hyfieno, sanltntion and prevention ot disease, submitted to Dr. Evans by readers of The Bee, will be answered personally, subject to proper limitation, wbtre a stamped addressed envelop is enclosed. Dr Evans will not malt diafnosis or prescribe (or individual diseases. Address letters in car oi The Be. Copyright, 1921, by Dr. W. A. Evans New Rumbling in Mexico Whether it be regarded as a threat or a warn ing, the memorial drafted by the liberal-constitu tionalist deputies presents grave political condi tions to the consideration of the president of Mexico; f or the government of the United States also it is fraught with serious possibili ties. President Obregon presumably knows how to deal with enemies of his administration. It is to be hoped that he will unhesitatingly act with whatever degree of severity the situation calls for. Doing so may not, however, contribute to maintenance of that state of peace which it was thought had been ushered in by his election and installation as president of, Mexico. Beware the fate of Francisco Madero. are the alarming words employed to emphasize the demand for a change of executive policy. Charges are made that lertain members, of the Obregon cabinet are disloyal and consoirinK against the- administration. The memorialists hint broadly that Obregon is in the same danper that surrounded Madero before that president wasv imprisoned and then slain in 1913.' But .their , -warning .may have a double meaning. If they are not given their way do they intend themselves to overturn the government? Which ever horn of the xlilemma Obregon may elect to seize, it is apparent that all his force and sa gacity will have to be brought to bear to uphold his authority. Fittsburgh Oazette-limes. Baby Pilgrims ,"A touch of nature that makes the world kin has assured a fervent welcome in America for the babies of indeterminate paternity that have been brought here from Great Britain for adop tion. The thirteen that arrived on the Aquitania found clamorous, heart-starved applicants wait ing fdr them. But the Jittle ones are not to have foster parents impersonally inflicted on them; they are to do their own choosing. A peculiar embarrassment arises in the case of the twins who cannot unite in a choice of parents-to-be. :The pictures show children that, with the careful nurture they are likely to receive, should prove a credit to any family. It is one of the pitiful ironies- of fate that such bright and at tractive youngsters should be denied homes of their own, not meredy because of parental need but in some cases because of callous parental indifference. Those into whose hitherto child less homes they come will lavish upon them a dcvotioB that is real and abiding. They may be trusted in the majority of instances to reward that devotion with a real affection and to acquit themselves with cerdit to themselves and to those-who received them into their homes. If they were abandoned is not their fault. Their new fathers and mothers will do the best they can to atone to them for the cheerless prospect life offered them at the beginning. Philadelphia Ledger. Both Have an Eye on the Spigot. Australia is watching prohibition in America. Incidentally, a great many Americans are doing likewise. Birmingham Age-Herald. Every Tax is a Nuisance. If Secretary Mellon plans to get rid of the "nuisance" taxes there will be no money at all to run the government. Indianapolis News. He's Too Good to Lose. Assurances arc at least given that fears of Uncle Sam's becoming isolated are entirely un founded. Wastgton Stan MALNUTRITION IN CHILDREN. All authorities are argeed that malnutrition in children Is responsl ble for bad health and bad scholar ship. Futhermore, they are agreed that many children are poorly nour ished. Whether this Is due to bad economic conditions, poor food sup ply, poor home discipline, errors In instinctive appetites, or to bad teeth there is not the same agreement. The man who has done 'more than any one else to call attention to malnutrition in chUdren is Dr. Emerson of Boston. He contends that every child more than 7 per cent below the weight proper for his height is poorly nourished to a sufficient degree to feel the effects. Here again we have some disagree ment. Others say Dr. Emerson should take into consideration the age of the child and its racial and family peculiarities. Dr. T. Clark of the United States public health service lays down three rules for determination of the state of nutrition. They are: Weight with respect to age and height, rate of growth, behavior, and appearance. The first two or tnese are as 101 lows: Boys should gain 6 ounces a month when between & ana s years old. Between 8 and 12 years. 8 ounces a month; between iz ana 16, 16 ounces a month, and between 16 and 18, 8 ounces a month. With eirls. the rate of Increase in weight are somewhat different, be- in 6 ounces a montn rrom & to s years, 8 ounces,. 8 to 11; 12 ounces, 11 to 14; 8 ounces, 14 to 16, ana 4 ounces, 16 to 18. To form any opinion from the gain in weight , the weighing must be carefully done on accurate scales and the weight of the cloth ing and the weighing time must be the same in relation to meal time and the time for the toilet. If these are taken- into consideration con-1 slderable light on nutrition is thrown by the rate of growth. According to the table or tne child health organization, from which the above scale of rate of growth was also taken, the height and weight of boys of different ages normally range within the following figures: Age. Height, Weight, Years Inches Founds 5 39 to 46 35 to 48 6 39 to 49. 36 to 55 7 39 to BS 37 to 62 8 42 to 54 44 to 69 9 45 to 56 49 to 77 10 .47 to 60 54 to 91 11 48 to 63 57 to 105 50 to 64 62 to 113 13 53 to 69 71 to 138 14 55 to 74 78 to 162 13 51 to 76 86 to 174 16 58 to 76 91 to 175 17 69 to 76 97 to 176 18 61 to 76... 110 to 177 For girls the measurements and weights are given as: Age, Height, Weight, Years Inches Pounds 5 S!) to 46 34 to 48 6 39 to 49 35 to 53 7 39 to 52 36 to 62 8 42 to 54 43 to 68 9 45 'to 56 49 to 76 50 47 to 59 53 tO 89 11 48 to 63 56 to 109 12 50 to 66 61 to 119 13 53 to 69 70 to 129 14 55 to 71 77 to 138 15 57 to 72 86 to 145 16 58 to 72 91 to 147 17 " 59 to 72 98 to148 18 60 to 72. .... .103 to 149 While there are broad ranges in weight and height for age the weight for a given height does not vary ' much from the figures given Dr. Emerson. The measuring must be done under uniform conditions as to shoe heels. It must be regular and systematic. Other signs of malnutrition are pallor, dullness, listlessness. easily produced fatigue, dark rings under eyes, no pep, poor scholarship, nervousness, fretful ness. irritability, hard to please, hard to manage, eat and sleep poorly. the breath of the person taking it. As a rule it is given for a. consider able time. There are no bad effects which develop after one stops using it. A Useful Publication Not Much Danger. J. R. B. writes: "Is there much danger for a woman to have the first child at the age of 33? She has small bones, but otherwise is in good health." REPLY. No. An Arsenic Preparation. C. L. B. writes: "Will you please write something about caccodylate? What is it used for and how long do they usually inject it and what, if any, bad results after one quits us ing same? Is it good for a run down condition?" REPLY. The caccodylates are arsenic preparations. . Caccoldyic add con tains as much as 70 per cent arsenic. It is givn by stomach and by hypo dermic. It is a tonic and alterative. Among other conditions for which it is used are neuralgias, certain in fections, anemias, rundown condi tions and certain skin diseases. One great drawback to its use is the garlic-like odor which ft imparts to Brighter Days for Austria (From the Boston Transcript.) With a settlement of the problem of German reparations finally reached, prospects for an early re habilitation of Austria have become much brighter. Once the "brilliant second" to the luster of the Hohen rollerns, Austria is still largely de pendent for her prosperity upon the German republic. Few countries in Europe have emerged from the war In a more pitiable condition. Austria of today is small in area, boasting a population no greater than that of the average third-rate power; it is heavily laden with debt, its cur rency is all but worthless, and it stands In almost total lacK or Tne raw materials necessary to put in motion again the long-arrested wheels of industry. The Austrian people dwell under the shadow of starvation, end in Vienna, ineir capital, starvation is reported al ready to have exacted a heavy toll of human life. The return of a fair measure of prosperity to 1 Germany, therefore, should exert a beneficial effect upon Austria. But help of another-kind, we are given 'to understand from European dispatches, will soon be given to the Vienna government. The league of nations has drawn up plans whereby it proposes to put Austria into a temporary receiver ship; and under such a receiver ship, the league hopes, through an international loan, to restore Aus tria again to a sound financial basis. An international committee of ex perts has already made a study of the problem, and this committee will present its recommendations, on May 20, to the financial commit tee of the league of nations, sched uled to meet together on that day in London. If the recommendations are approved, the next step will be to put into operation the receiver ship. It is hardly less essential for the stability of Europe that Austria be placed again on a productive basis than it is that Germany begin to take its proper share in wonld pro duction. A bankrupt and broken Austria will necessarily remain a European liability, and the sooner it ' is put on its feet again, the better. . For Sweating Feet. H. L. G. writes: "For more than 60 years I was bothered with per spiring feet like L. R.'s. I always had washed my feet in hot or warm water. For some years now I wash them only in cold water (every night) and am absolutely free from such trouble. I can wear a pair of socks a whole week without detect ing the slightest oder. My feet never blister or get itchy as they former ly did." Little Cau Be Done. B. C. writes: 'Tleaso tell me if you know of anything that will re lieve one 'who suffers from head noises or roaring ears, caused by deafness. The person is a woman over 70 years of age." REPLY. Local treatment of the throat, nose, and ears may be of service. Probably not, however. Skin Tuberculosis. J. C. writes: "Is it possible to have tuberculosis of the skin? If so, how, is the disease distinguished and what are the symptoms? Is it treated in ternally or externally? Is, there a postive cure?" REPLY. Yes. Skin tuberculosis usually ap pears as ulcerating nodules. These ulcerated patches have a tendency to extend. It is a chronic ulceration. It is treated by exposure to sunlight, by x-rays, and local applications. Tu berculin Is frequently giv.en hypoder mically. Need Skillful Care. H. E. W. writes: "Can yu pre scribe a diet suitable for one who has excess sugar in his system? I cannot afford thorough examination Just now, but wtnt a diet until I can." REPLY. You should not eat any food that Is mado from flour or even partly bo or in which there is any other form of starch: nor any food into which sugar enters. The details for carrying this policy out require too much space to be set down here. There are several small books deal ing with diabetes and written in sim ple language. Get one. A person with diabetes should have proper care, even if he is required to econo mize in some other direction to pay for it. (From th Washington Mar.) Now that tho grind on Capitol Hill is in progress again, Jokes at tho expense of thu Congressional Record some of them hoary with use are reappearing. Why is the publication? Who reads it? Has it a single interested reader but the proofreader? Yes, at least two others. Ont Is tho man who helps make it. The senator Xir representative who likes his office and wants to keep it reads the Record with care and especially when he appears in it. When ho has spoken ho wants to see if his re marks are correctly recorded. When he has voted he wants to see if his name is in the right column. He is thinking of tho campaign for re election. The other man Is at home figuring on succeeding that senator or rep resentative; searching tho Record for a possible slip of the tongue or mistaken vota on the part of the, it'fcjauiiur. jjti h. sup or niiHiuKen vote appear, and tho aspiring man behind tho llring line, but anxious for a place there, pounces on it, and parades it in his speeches for all it may be worth as a campaign docu ment. - But, of course, there are many other readers of the Record great numbers. There is no publication comparable with it for information about governmental matters; about what is going on in congress, and what the people at home are think ing. The bills and resolutions intro rtuced; the petitions presented; the speeches made and votos cast, are itidexe ; of public sentiment in the taw sometimes very raw as well as of sentiment which shows thought in its formation. As the Star has said before, tho Record is so good and useful a pub lication it ought to be illustrated ought to carry pictures. Not All Gloom. So long as the yeast and raisin crops do not fail, not even Volstead can keep the United States entirely unhappy. San Francisco Chronicle. America Stands With Allies. The president has convinced the allies that we'll stand by them in stead of bystanding. Washington Post. "Such a Headache.' Omaha, May 28. To the Editor of The Bee: "The next war!" There are already rumors that there is another one in store for us. I read a reprint from the Now York Globe, in The Bee, in whlrh Will Irwin states that the next war will Iih a destruction of civilian popula tions by gases dropped from the air. If another war conies such a thing may result. But if the next war is to bo fought by such processes, iBn't it duo time to disarm? A war Involving such tactics would destroy civilization. We are reaching a dangerous point of de velopment when men grant a prep aration for such a thing. Do w really wish to contlnuo this insane logic of war, and wipe out the pre eminence of the white race? Isn't it time to put on the brakes and stop the wheels of progress from slipping into the abyss Of destruc tion? , Why doesn't some Insane scientist Invent a bomb that would blow up the whole earth at once and be done with it? Some people laugh and tell us that there will be wars unto the end of time. But time won't last long for us if we keep Inventing poison guses to wipe out populations with. Isn't there sproe way to stop this insanity? What can come of It but ruin and death? "The next war!" We might as well close our eyes and stop our ears to the horror of it. It seems destined to come. Senator Capper writes that the next war will prob ably come suddenly, and it will de stroy suddenly and civilization may go with it. v C. SJOBLOM. A. HOSPE CO. PIANOS TUNED AND REPAIRED All Work Guaranteed 1513 Douglas St. Tel. Doug. 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The nature of the gasoline spray governs these things the power of the explosion, the completeness of combustion, the amount of gasoline for each piston stroke and the speed with which carbon will collect and the lubricating oil become diluted. Unless your gasoline vaporizes readily in all weathers, and unless it is uniform," you cannot adjust your needle valve to give maximum power and at the same time maximum economy. Use Red Crown Gasoline tvhich meets all U-- ' U. S. Government specifications Complete and uniform vaporization, and a series of boiling point fractions which in sure quick ignition and complete combus tion these are the characteristics of . good gasoline, straight-distilled gasoline. The Red Crown Gasoline you can buy every where is this superior quality gasoline. It meets the standards required by the United States Government for motor gasoline. Look for the Red Crown Service Station , The prompt, courteous service Red Crown Service Stations afford and the dependable gasoline and motor oils they sell add to the convenience, pleasure and economy of motoring. Drive ia where you see .the sign of the Red Crown where the little, but appreciated, courtesies such as free air for a soft tire, water for a hot radiator and road information and directions are cheerfully given. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEBRASKA , K t