6 HIE HKE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY. SF,yTK.nKK 1. lPlS. THE ' OMAHA DAILY DEE rOUNPKn BY EDWAHi) RObKWATKR. VICTOR ROSKWAVEK, EDITOR. Tke Publishing Company, Proprietor. PEE) BriLPlNO. FA R NAM AND FEVi: NT EK N Til. Tntt-ri at Omihl pontoflce as acond-c1aas matter. TlCKMg OF BCBSi'RIPTION. psy carrier By mall per month prr ar. Jyrr and Pundar to I."0 pally without Sunday....'... .c 4 00 T?vntr.g and ."unr'av "c .W F.ventng without Sunday IFo 4.u0 Sundav Be only uo 300 Pond notlc of rhar.ae of addrrse or complaints of Irregularity la delivery to Omaha Bee. Circulation Department. REM ITT A NCR. ftoftilt by draft, esprn or postal oritr. Onlv two. ypt atampa received In pnymmt of amall ac counts. Peraonsl checks, axccv-t on Omaha and eastern as-chang. uot accepted. . OFFICfc.3. Omaha The Pep Bullrtine;; fouth Omaha ZtiS N street. Council H.urfs 14 North Main Street, Vlncoln 'A Littl Bulldlnr. Chicago ni HrarM Hut'illnt'. New York Room IK. 2,s Fifth avenue. Ft. louim-m New funk of Commerce. Washington 735 Fourteenth Pt.. N. W. cor n n . ro mjkncb. 'Address eommunlcs lions rvlatinr to news snJ edU tortal matter to Omaha Be. Editorial Departtutmt. JULY CIHCULATIOJI. 53,977 Ptata of Nebraska, Co'inty of Douglas, aa. : Dwlght Williams, circulation manager of Th Ha Publishing company, helna duly sworn, saya that the average clieuiatlon for tha mouth or July, 1&L6, was 4,177 DWIOHT WILLIAMS. Circulation Managr. fjuhscrined In my prenre and aworn to befor roe, thia Sd day of August, IMS. fiOUEHT HUNTER. Notary Public. Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should bare The Bee mailed to them. Ad Area will be changed aa often as requested. optamlMt 1 Thought for the Day 5'cf4 by Mary B. Ntwton Build thtt more siuteJv maniiom, O my $oul At fM $ifl seasoss ro l. Lean thy ioto vaulUd p tt! Let sact new Umplt nobur t an fit last bhut thee from heaven mitu a djmt mor vast Till tkou at length art tree, , Leaung thy otugrown $kel hy Vijt't vnrttttng tea. Oiver Wendell llo.mer. Diplomacy scores victories more enduring than war. If the war is to be over In October, It can not last more than another sixty days. Now Is the accepted time to consider the (aunt look of the coal pile and get wise. The short ballot is bound to come sooner or later, in Nebraska as well as in New York. Help make Merchants' week a hummer and It will become a fixture on Omaha's calendar. Apparently there Is no such word as "cure" in the lexicon of the state pure food commis sioner. , To be real frank with ourselves1. Secretary Uarrlson seems to be the only live one In the cabinet. Novogeorglevsk was smashed to bits by Teu ton artillery. Any attempt to weld the pieces deserves a like fate. As a sporting proposition any odds may be given on a majority vote sustaining the weather man's remarks on mean temperatures. Fortunately for the people of Dellevue, am p!e facilities are at hand for reaching Omaha and exorcising the evil curse in an atmosphere of sanctity. According to Bishop Bristol, "Billy" Sun flay ia coming to Omaha, not because it is a bad town, but because It Is such a good town. Just let that sink in! The prospect of peace between Colonel Roosevelt and Colonel Bryan are eves gloomier than among Europe's warring powers. Muni tions hate limitations, caloric none. Letter carriers more than any other class of public servants get closest to the people. It i,oes without saying that Omaha hospitality and welcome will be theirs during tbe national convention. State Auditor Smith Is not going to accept the attorney general'! ruling that we have noth ing but vacancies on our state railway commis sion. If Mr. Smith is not careful, the next opinion of the attorney general will create a vacancy in the office of auditor. The question recurs, Should the Nebraska farmer refuse to sell hts horses to be slaughtered la the war over in Europe, regardless of the tempting prices? It Is the same question as to whether the American manufacturer should fill orders for war munitions. Aug-uatua' flchtrmcrhorn, dlvlaton engineer of tha Vnlon Pacific tor Nebraska, waa united In marriauft to Mary E. Sharp, daughter of Mr. and Mra, P. Jl. Mtarp at tha reelJenra of tha brlde'a parenta. til od street. Rev. Haraha performing tho ceremony. The water worka company ia rapidly laying; plpu in that beautiful and near residence section of th city, known aa Walnut hi 1. The meeting cf tha carpenters' union at Knights cf Honor hull waa addresaed by Edward Itoaewater. ,W. J. Reevea and J. IX. Thompson. Tha eight-hour movement, the benefits of organization and other in terestlng Uptca war discussed. The Arcade hotel on. Douglas atreet between Twelfth and Thirteenth on Liouglaa has changed hands, the lctae and furniture havlni been sold by O. C. Camp ill. v ho I aa conducted It lor lotne inun h, to Julius CumtY, a Pennsylvania, gentleman. Mr. S D. Uwigs left for Kalamatoo, llli-h., on summons to tha feeCilde of a alclt slater. J. L. tin ndti, holesule dealer In d'y goods, boots, shoes Mid no' ins are movlr.g into their quarters at K fcouib Thirteenth street. K A. iienn n of Davenport ia at the pax ton. Chtef Butler lias gone to Long Branch to attend tha convention of Americas fir chiefs. Those Eight Million Men in Buckram. Some badly tangled figures purporting to fchow an alarming proportion of aliens In this country who rrfiis to assume the obligations of our citizenship are going the rounds, and sre l.plng accepted at fs.ee value as official. In the Rtrrn Laborer, a locnl publication here de voted to the Interests of wage-workers, these figures, plainly quoted from another source, take this form. That Her at H.pn .fro able-bodied men In th fnltrd states ho owa clle-ilance to Kurojean nations, waa dlsrUsed In libor dopartm' nt atatlntlca. Thera naturnltaat on bureau llrures showe d H.ono, 0 forelgn born cltlirna In the co intry who have not acquired cltlienah!p. The war has "ir.cted attention to th a stngKcrlna- number tf mnn who come to the United Htatfs and then refuse to become citizens. Si ch a sittiatU n would indeed be "stagger kg" if true, but that there is something wrong vtlth the numbers somewhere is quickly discov ered by any one seeking to verify them. According to the last census and tho 1910 flrures, relatively speaking, hold good today the total number of foreign born persons men, women and children In the United States are 13,516,886. It Is therefore preposterous to say that we have 14,000,000 foreign born persons who have not acquired cltUenshlp. The last census figures likewise show that the total number of foreign born males over twenty-one years of age In the United States is 6,646,817. It is therefore even more preposter cur to say that there are 8,000,000 able-bodied men in the United 8tates who owe allegiance to European nations. While statistics covering the number of for eign born who have become naturalized are not accessible to us, some light may be secured from o comparison with the election returns. Here In Nebraska the census gives us In round figures 350,000 male inhabitants of voting age, and the highest vote cast is approximately 275.000, which with the addition of the usual ten per cent for the vote not polled would bring the number of eligible to vote in this state well above 300,000. If Nebraska is typical, then, it would be not far out of the way to figure at most fifteen per cent of those of voting age to be in eligible to vote, and fifteen per cent for tbe whole country would be less than 1,000,000. So "the8, 000,000 able-bodied men in the United States who owe allegiance to European nations" must be for the most part merely 8,000,000 men In buckram. The Ballot and the People. Senator Root's speech to the New York con stitutional convention, In favor of the short bal lot, will bring the subject prominently forward for discussion again. His arraignment of "In visible government" is strong and virile, but the strongest argument for the short ballot does not rest on that point alone: The fragmentary re port of Senator Root's remarks, furnished for the news columns, gives no mention of the real reasons for removing a great many of the minor offices of government from the elective to the appointive classification. These reasons are nu merous and potent, and are coming more and more to be understood and accepted by students of our political structure. The short ballot does not mean taking tbe power away from the peo ple, whose rule will be more absolute when it la concentrated on the election of responsible ad ministrative and executive officers. The Bee's plea for tbe short ballot met with only partial response in Nebraska, where the length of the ballot has reached such proportions aa to be ri diculous as well as to effectually prevent an In telligent and discriminating exercise of the vot er's choice. If New York should adopt the pro posed reform It may encourage Nebraskans to similar action. Ak-Sar-Bea'i Growing; Greatness. Some talk was heard last year about aban doning Ak-Sar-llen. It had outlived its useful ness, said the objectors; the Jovial ruler of Oulvera had become passe and the people were tired of him and wanted something new. The answer to this la found this season la the largest membership ever enrolled under the ban ner of the king. The greatest crowds ever as sembled at the Den are there each Monday night, and more visitors by many thousands have been entertained by the knights this summer than ever before. Ak-8ar-Ben worn out? Never In all his twenty-one years of active life has Samson's mill for making boosters been so busy nr. now. The spirit of Ak-Sar-Ben Is growlag stronger Instead of waning, and the king waxes more and more puissant as his prosperity in creases and bis domain is extended. The In rtltutlon of Ak-Sar-Ben has proved its useful ness in ways too many to be readily enumerated, and It will be a factor in the life of Nebraska end Omaha for many years to come. Notable Feat of Naval Engineering. Bringing into dry dock the remains of sub marine F-4 is another notable achievement of the engineers of the United States navy. To do this some new records had to be established, ruch as the descent of a diver to the unheard-of cUpth of 215 feet. Deep disappointment will be filt that not one of the crew lost with the boat has yet been found, and that the processes of rescuing the hull have necessarily destroyed much that would have been useful In deter mining the cause of the disaster. Enough Is there, though, to give the naval experts great resistance tn their efforts to solve tbe problems of undersea navigation, especially as to the dif ficulties of proper construction, and future sub marine sailors will have the advantage of pro tection thus devised. For the public, the chief Htrt i that th navy has been successful in wresting from old Neptune's grip the bones of a teasel that seemed hopelessly lost. On Folly of Extravagance WtaniTred Cooler la afcHfeWs Marsala. AT THE outaet we should realise that th Urns "extravagance" la aucp.lole of va.ylng ue.iru tlona. It la a sliding scale, depending upon time and personal Income. W hat la extravagant for on peraon manifestly la not extravagant for another. Again, what Is extravagant In one time of our life. Is not In another. The repiehennlblo part of modern ex travagance, la that w puraue It so largely In order to Impress other people. If a luxury Is really the ex pression of (oraa vital need with ue, It may not be an extravagance. Frequently a peraon will mak many minor eacilflcea In order to aecura some ex. pensive thing which teems to him th moat necessary thing In the world. For Instance. atudenU of musli. who believe that they p.sicss extraordinary talent,, will nearly sta v for years. In order to pay enormous prleea for bawna Trcse sums wuuld be extravagant for most of ue, but are not so If th worker believes that he Is fitting h mself for a career which will on day bring him lame and fo tune. Rut the LSe!cS' extravagance la that which Induces tia to pay out btud sums becauae "every one is doing It." We are cowards, In mortal terror of run ning counter to conventional ty or not measuring up to certain atindnrds set by other. On of th com monest, yet most contemptible saylnna of which all of tia moderns are guilty, la: "If I give a dinner, I Insist on doing It right." The word "right" thua used, baa no moral, significance whatever what w mean Is, "If I give a dinner. I am going to do it In a cer tain conventional manner, to prove to my guests that I know how wealthy people entertain." Not to begin a meal with oyatera on the half-shell, or eeA grape fruit, or bouillon, would aigue that we were not ac customed to the usages of good society. Peoplo, there fore, In quit humble financial circumstances, agonize over necenpary entertaining, serve multitudinous courses, reduce their guests to a state of lethargy solely to show that they known how wealthy peoplo dine. Once In awhile, a wise, serene housekeeper serves a simile, nutritious and delicious meal a juicy beef atcak, or an appetizing salad, with a few ac cessories, quite Indifferent to the fact that It Is not done In tie best society. If her friends are discrimi nating they rise up and call her bleasedl One form of extravagance constats In weartna; clothes that rre not approbate. It Is net extravasnnt for a wealthy woman, who always rldee In her limousine, to wear white suede ahoee or French-heeled satin sllppe s, or shoes with Itjht cloth tops. It is a manifest extravagance, for the working woman, ob liged to wa k through muddy streets,' to Indulge tn such impractical footgear. Yet, because thos who set the fashions decree that . whit or champagne colored gaiters are the latest mode, every shopgirl Is miserable until she can purchase them! Tho result to beholders is moat distressing, as the tight colors sre usually stained and splashed with mud. Ther Is nothing refined about dirty finery. Rome people In our modern life (In small towns as well as cities) honestly believe that they are not ex travagant, because they cannot conceive of any way by which they can possibly economise. Men and women Imagine many vain thlnKS which they take for gospel truth. They orten say: "It always pays to purchase good things." In one sense, this Is true. A good quality of material will outlast a shoddy, cheap material. The extravagance or economy of a pur chase may depend, however, on other things. If you are one of th women of moderate Income who cast aside a suit or a gown th moment the least change of style has taken place, then It Is certainly not economy to buy an expensive gown. One for a lower pric will look aa well for a short season. People In very moderate circumstances have formed In th last few years, habits of entertaining at publlo restaurants and cafes, because unwilling to glvo a little thought and attention to meals In the home. In many cases this Is a foolish extravagance. Th temptation Is to order recklessly ana inaiecnminaieiy. MnA ik. r ail manner of other necessary expendi tures. Including th tipping of waiters. Th actual materials for excellent rerresnmenia are eompmrmuveijr h.n- it mv need that the housekeeper take the trouble to cook them. , Of course there la much to b said In behalf of th ease or entertaining in puonc. It certainly Is not extravagant, when th woman glv t luncheon or dinner Is a hard-worked professions! or business woman, but thes ar not th women to whom these remarks apply. Tt boa tutcnm a. atandlna: loke that popl of modest means In every village, town and city In Amer ica, are mortgaging their homes, in oraer xo nav a f annul sort. Undoubtedly It Is true that soma famlllea maintain motor cars, who seem not able to afford them; yet many cars are so inexpensive nowa days, that their Initial cost Is not great, and th seem ing extravagance may b justified Dy in oeneuia oi th new outdoor life, f esh air, and normal pleasures In which th entire family can participate. Th of ri, deoenda largety on the Individual circumstances, People living In th country take car of It themselves, house It In a amau anea on mo premises, and maintain It for almoat noth ng. In cities, th cost of keeping a car at a garaffe Is very high; this, many times, I th extravaganc. Many ar the fallacies with which peopl comfort themselves, and excuse running into debt. In Its last analysis, extravagance la not only a matter of bad judgment, of bad tasto, but of actual immorality. Hon esty is ono of the foundation qualities of a sound character. Extravaganc implies many times th presence of such unlovely qualities as indolence, of weak snobbery, of actual dishonesty. J7X v. Twice Told Tales Th Coaarwack. T. A. Dorgnn, th cartoonlat, ws trying to hlr a ehsuffur the other day and went about It In bis usually brsy style. When th ftrat applicant ap peared Tad said: "Of course, I want a man who can apeak French, play plnochl. curry a hora and make a Jack Rose cocktail." Well. I can do 'em all and still hav a fw trick up my sleev." said th chsuffeur, with becoming mod esty. Tad locked blm over and then aald, suddenly: "I don't know. When I lamp your fac and s you horn painted up that way it ttrlkes m that you aft. a hard drinker and I don't want any hard drfnkara driving a car for m and running ra over some pic turesque cliff." You are wrong." said the driver. "I am not r hard drinker, it comes eaay to m." Cartoons Magasln. The Bmm Ttwii Pral'lng America's growth. James J. Hill aald: "America's growth almost robs th Tin Can story of Ha hyrerbot. ' "A tender'oot. visiting the boom town of Tin Can said to the mayor: " 'Why don't you get out literature about this l ralltyT Why dn't you set out bookleta, Illustrate' with official pboto-ra"hs? Ia it possible you haven't ever had th town photographed r "Stranger," sail th iniyor, 'Tin' Can progresser ao gosh-alml'hty faat that ther ain't no camera quic enough to snsp it.' "-Bt Paul Dtst atcn. Court Interference with the last hour appro rrtatlons of the Illinois legislature seriously dls locates tbe science of logrolling and the effl clency of grab. Moreover, the action ties up until the high court speaks tbe sum of 1320.000 and strips the state pie-counter of much salu brious fodder, Including extra mileage the law makers voted to themselves. Peru's solution of tbe problem of what to do with ex-presldents by shooting up two o them does not commend Itself for general adop tion. Its efficiency Is unquestioned,- but It would rob succeeding presidents and tbe public of priceless advice and periodic "statements,' which enhance the gaiety of life People and Events Th American commercial attach at Shanghai te porta that China offers an all ring inaiket for trad In chewing gum anf rlayln card. Th former It needed aa a su strut for tr rope lip and th lattc t stl"t th talent Bret Hirt dl cvrd M Poverty flat. Word cornea out of U'saourt with all th strength of h'ghbrow authority that th stat university will lead a crusade for standard'slng woman's draaa. Student of horn economics," says th university vole, ar beginning to aak themselves. "Why should a woman spend ba t her life In dre!ng and thinking about how sh Is going to dreasT" Bounds Ik a man's voice. Put listen and make aur: "Women." continue th voice, "should assert their Independence in selecting r'O'hes tr et ar alrupl and becoming, and ther should wear them until they ar wore out.' Just Ilk a man. He's th limit. Coaaty Road Improvement. NOHTH LOUP. Neb.. Aug. 8l.-To th Editor of Th nee: There Is much dis cussion Just at this time with respect to the construction of macadamized roads. If, when we begin a Job of work, we would carefully go over th subject and find where other people hav failed In that same class of work, we might save much 'expense and many mistakes. Ia the concrete and brick roadbed a proper method of building long stretches of permanent road? 1 will say no, and I will give my reasons for saying it. Roads of a smooth concrete surface ar not good auto roads In wet, frosty weather. Any class of concrete Is too apt to crack and become rough. Brlclt Is better surfacing than concrete. One of the necessary element In per manent roads Is to get a surface that will absorb the water and remain perfectly solid and remain free from a sleek, slid ing surfuce. The material moet ideal for roadbeds is the Sherman Hill gravel used on the Union Paclflo railroad. It would not bcom sleek, the water rune through It like a sieve; it Is very firm for the heavier roadg. The only repairs necessary is a shovel to smothen down. Autos would not skid on it If the stat were to make arrangements for It the oost should much lower than cement and brick Publlo Improvements cost too much from th fact that much money is spent In vain on Ill-designed works. WALTER JOHNSON. Son School Qacstloa. OMAHA, Aug. 31.-TO th Editor of The Rec: W taxpayers are extremely grateful to your paper for exposing th secret sessions of th Board of Educa tion as you are, for we ar vitally Inter ested in how our representatives ar using th money and power we have en trusted to them. Ther are a few other Items that tho taxpayers and patrons of the Omaha public schools Should be acquainted with. For Instance, those of us who have known about it have been Incensed for two years at the arrangement of the teachers' pay days. It Is humiliating, to say the least, for th teachers who aro paying th family grocery and meat bills fand few of thorn are not), to osk tho grocers and butchers to wait until after the middle of each montfc for the settle ment of their accounts, because their warrants are not issued earlier In the month. Of course, we understand that the at torney for the Board of Education has deolared It Illegal to make out the teach ers payroll until the four weeks' teach ing has been completed. Why la It more Illegal to pay the teachers at the end of four weeks' work than It Is to pay the Board of Education' office force, and the Janitors and engineers at that time? It has Just 'leaked out" that the teach ers commltte has said their policies In tha future are to change the teachers about every year, and not let them know until th last minute before school opens In September, where they are assigned. Both policies, to our notion, are bad and unjust. If a teacher Is successful in one district, with on class of children. why chang her, unless she so desires, to a district or class In which she has to waste at least several months adjusting herself, her methods, tha children, ami everything else? Would it be good busi ness for a merchant employing a clerk who was an expert In selling shoes, to change him to the china department, and then when h waa beginning to do good work there, to put him behind the silk counter? I not th human mind and its training as Important as the selling of goods? It Is unjust not to notify the teachers of their assignments as soon as possible. Nearly every teacher return to th city several days prior to tbe opening of school in order to get settled that sh may be able to give her entire time and attention and energy to the strenuous duties of the opening days of school. Supposed one arranged for room and board, paying a month's rent In advance, as is required, tn the north part of the cltv. only to discover after she Is set tled for th year that she ha been as signed to a school in the extreme south ern part of the city. Can't th board realise the Inconvenience and useless ex pens that this "policy means to the tescher? TEACHER S FRIEND. Selene sa4 R-HH. CRESCENT, Ia.. Aug. ftt.-To the Editor of The Bee: Don't you worry about "Billy" Sunday. Science is your name, and you have caused tha dwellers on earth to worship you; you hav mad fir com down out of th heavens. "Ben" Franklin was the first to ac complish that feat, through his sctentlflo research. You hav filled th brains of Thomas Edison with your solence; you hav filled th minds of our ministers, and they taks the beast In their ohurch parlors, and have lots of fun with him. We are all handicapped; w can neither buy nor sll without the scientific label on our product. Now th time la at hand whan th foolish things of th uarth will confound th things that ar wise, and th weak thuigs of th earth will confound th things that ar mighty, and at th end of th world s greatest war, th Jews will rear up tha Kingdom of David, and shall reign for a thousand years. Thes will be the days when everyone U1 worship Osd, and not science. J. MAU3PEROER. Nebraska Editors John F. Bixby, formerly editor of the Genoa Leader. Is the new associate editor of the Osceola I'emocrat. Colonel Cecil Mathews, editor of th Rlverton Review, has been appointed deputy collector of Internal revenue. Editor Pchmled of tt,e Dakota City Eagle last week printed a full paire of portraits of pioneers of Dakota County. H. O. Cooley, formerly editor of the St. Paul (Neb.) Republican, has been ap pointed secretary of the Commeiclal club of St. Paul, Minn. 'i lie rl.ue bluings Sentinel, 3. H. Case Deer, publisher, issued a ten-pnjre booster edition last week. It Is beautitully Illus trated and is a fine specimen of th print er's art. Bridgeport News-Blade: The Alliance Herald and Alliance Times must have de clared an armistice. Well, the armistice should have been declared before the ficht began. A. H. Backhaul editor and proprietor of the Plorca County Leader, last week Issued a fine booster edition of twenty four pages. It Is printed on book paper and Handsomely illustrated. Brother Woods la a half century younger, fceventy-flve young school ma'ams have made Gering a blessed dream during the last week. And he was to years old, yesterday, too. Hastings Tribune: Old King Sampson of the Knlshts or Ak-Sar-Ben has fixed September 6 as editors' night at the Den. Any Nebraska editor who la found at home on that night ought to be shot on the spot yes, any old spot will do. takes everything seriously, ' If I were the iRsi mnn on eartn I'd ue mourning so manv f lend and relal.e tnat I don t suppose I d feel mt.cn it e txittng Pit in a wedding anynow." Washington Sur. "It Is hard to keep our boys on ths farm," said the Nevada aricultur.st. "lliey all want to go to Reno and h divorce lawyers." "Well, the early training oa the farm comes In handy." "What do you mean?' "They are familiar with th us of ths separator."- Louisville Courier-Journal. The managing editor wheeled his chair s ound and pushed a button In the wall. The person wanted entered. "Here, 1 said the editor, "are a num ber of directions from outriders ss to tha best wav to run a newspaper. 8o that they ar all carried out. and tho ofrlce boy. gathering them all Into a large wastebasket, did so. Washington Life. IOETHFTJL REMARKS. "Safe burglars do not boast about their worw." "Why should they?" "Yet they are always blowing about their business." Baltimore American. "I wouldn't marrv ycu If vou were the la' t man on earth!" said th girl. "Well, ' replied the young mon who GOOD-BYE. Qoodbye. goodbye to Michigan. Where I've acq u red a coat of tan. Nor e'er had need to wag a fan. 'TIs "au revrlr" to oosy bog. To plctier-p'' n: and mossy los;, Also to small green spotted frog. Frewe' farewell, ve great sand dune, TIs true that I must le-ive you soon; Fates e l beach log and summer moon. A-'len adieu, thou sandy beach. Where n-hltecaps do their best to reach T elr long, long arms to cull a peach. A long farewell, thou painted cup Whone s'rlet chellce n held up To tempt the weary ones to sup. Farewei, farewel'. thou gentian blue, h lured me Into piithwsys new I shouldn't have known them but for you. .Adieu, adieu, thou sandfly sinner, 'ndebted to me for many a dinner Yet I can't see that I've grown thinner. Also, good tiye sandler cheery, Your s"eet note rested me when weary. At leaving you my eyes feel teary. , Likewise farewell my dear friend Jin. Admo J.hln(r me from von hiirh limb (Depaitlnz trains seem to bother himV And 'rlendly sea sull on your stump, po you n tire that I' e had to hump? i Somehow In my throat there Is a lump). Yes 'tis goodbye to Ml -hi ''an pretty, Ruf, nray rU not W'ste on me anv rltv, For I'm golnj bick to my ovn home city. BAYOLL NE TRELK. Editorial Sif tings Baltimore Amartcan The German spy eystom Is admitted to be well n Sh per fect tn Its organisation, but an iron roes is du th spy who succeeded in becoming a member of th British Par liament. Springfield Republican: "it's a long way to Tlpperary," eang Stella Carol to rh survivors in th Arabic's boats. It helped to cheer them up, but aa a mat ter of geography Tlpperary was not 100 miles away. Philadelphia Ledger: -If Americans keep off foreign ships In th war son they won't get themselves or their coun try into trouble, according to Mr. Bryan. ' . a-rl his former associate in th Cemoc ratio administration in Washing ton hav seen to It that Americans shall not travel in American ships. Springfield Republican: Th obligation of th stranded Amartcan tn Europe who borrowed money from the government to get horn with at th outbreak of th war is surely a debt of honor. Of th 11,000 ... .iv Uiiped several hundred have not yet paid up, and Secretary MoAdoo la quit rtsrht in getting after them with a harp attck. Th tnon-y or a good excua ought to hav ben forthcoming long ago. First, let th names b published. Meat Cut Down Yourt Bill! Delicious dishes can be made by combin ing cheap cuts of meat or left-over meats with MACARONI or SPAGHETTI; D tt : . I ; . t 1 fffi-Y -v wucnng a pieasing variety oi new; ' ' 1 dishes you can delight the whole family., r Skinner's Macaroni or Spaghetti is different from ordinary kinds. Try it and see. Its taste alone will convince you. For safe of hading grocers , SKINNER MFC CO, Omstha, Nob. J7m Lmrgmmt Maemroni factory In America ui iii i j j f "i,uunn i.i iiiinw i a rr , - . t i - yv "4r as" t. . ' s B r V 1 w r- , ., . LA'y. xw vi?-;. amJA wmw I'. vsar Ml etter Service to St. Paul and Minneapolis Our new schedules effective August 22, 1915, still further improve Great Western service to St.- Paul and Minneapolis. - Our Twin City Limited the "get-there-first" train, will carry besldo through sleepers, chair cars and coaches, a brand new steel-Buffet-Club car through in both directions. NEW SCHEDULE Read Down ' Read Up .:S0 P. M Lv. Omaha Ar... ..7:10 A.M. 8:C0 P. M....Lv. Co. Bluffs Ar....6:50 A. M. 7:30 A. M....Ar. gt. Psu Lv....7:55 P.M. :05 A. M...Ar. Minneapolis Lv..,7:25 P.M. Notice the early morning arrival In Twin Cities and the Improved return schedule. Day train leaves Omaha 7:2 a. m.. Council Bluffs 7:60 a. ro., and arrives St. Paul 7:40 p. m., Minneapolis 8:15 p m. Through fl.'st class coaches and cafe Clnb Car NO CHANGE! OF CARS. Under the new schedule Chicago train leaves Omaha 3:45 p. m. and arrive Dubuo.ua 3:01 g. m., Chicago 7:50 a. m. For full details of Great Western serrtoe call or phone P. F. nONOKUKN. O. P. A T. A., 1522 Farnatn Ht.. Omaha, Phone IKmglM 2U. (Enhnz6 th "Ore?) Persistence is the cardinal vir tue in advertising; no matter how good advertising may he in other respects, it must be run frequently and constant ly to be really succcessful