The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY FOUNDED BY EDWARD BOSS WATER VICTOR ROSEWATErT EDITOR THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. PROPRIETOR. MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS rut frau. ol wsice n Hei ii . aieniow. i ciuii jniitltd lo UM ass lot publication ol aU iww dupattnet credited to it or ".ot otlxrwiM credited Id thtt wet. and l the ierl am .ubllihed bertla Ail Hants ol publK-ttUio ol out ptoii tispu4 ire ln resemd. OFFICES OmUia Tt( B riathtnta, tTilctto-r-onrifi Ui Bulldto. South Oe.tfia-1311 N. St " Nw Vof-W Fifth At Uouacll Blufh-14 N. MW M 8L lul-Nf B k ol Oomaww Unooia-UtUt BtttWIna amwutoo 1311 O 8t JULY CIRCULATION Daily 68,265 Sunday 59,312 4Jb olrealtUaa lor too tsonUL eubttrlbwl anriaanm to bf Dwtjni A'llltania, Ctnsuletloe Manaier Subscribers leah tht city should beva Tho Bee mlld la thorn. Address changed as Itoa as requested Biflii;ifi!iiiii!iiiiiiil!llll "Bingo" Byng keeps right on banging. "T. R.V utterance still is cle.ir and resonant f-n ihe war issue. The boys in blue and the boys in gray are proud of the boys in khaki. ' If there is anything else Willie McAdoo wants, he should lt his wishes be known. ' Ak-Sar-Ben without the ball will be a nov elty, but anything can be looked for in war time. Why not appoint a mediator to adjust the is sue between Secretary. McAdoo and Chairman Kitchin? Captured German letters may of may not be genuine, but most of them read as though in-. tended for propaganda. It's only the lull before the big drive in the political campaign which will be fully under way in four or five weeks,' if not sooner. , Now that our muny water works is furnish ; ing frozen fluid, the next innovation may be to supply it also ready-heated for the hot water faucet " f Lincoln is fronting an announcement of a good, stiff increase m electric lighting and current rates. That V something Omaha so far has fortunately escaped. ' ' : ' The danger it that running for governor may become as much of a habit with "Brother Char ley" as did running for president with ."William J."' ' i" - " ' Of the making of books in America there rmay ' be an'end, until after, the war, according tothe War, boar'l, decision. This action may help folks tcget caught up with the authors. ' ' .A fine lineup bf autoists ' continues to say i "good morning, judge," each , day in Omaha. ' Some day these lolks will get to understand the iramc laws ana, Keep out 01 court, n is tucapcr f, and safer. - J f The peculiar Michigan "primary law would meet the requirements of some Nebraska poli ticians' who are now compelled to go out and' se cure camouflage indorsements , in , order to run as candidates for more than one party, , '. .: JS . i One of. Adam Smith's fundamental maxims of taxation is that as every tax must be paid out of ' revenue, it should be so levied and so collected as to interfere as little as possible with the con tinuance of production. ' Congress should be gently reminded that principle holds as good to day as it did when formulated by the father of political economy. I . t An Incident of Warfare. f A misfortune, deplorable, but apparently un avoidable, has just overtaken a crew on board a submarine chaser. Mistaken by an armed mer chantman for a submarine, the little vessel was quickly shelled and sunk, with the loss of most of them on board. The incident will empha- size the difficulties that attend navigation in Var times. Submarines have operated off our home coasts sufficiently to. fairly. bring them within the' war zones. Accordingly the vigilance of all mariners has been increased and especially after nightfall Is it keen and incessant Vessels move about wifhout the lights that ordinarily distin guish them because 'any of the usual signals is an invitation to attack from a submarine. A : sense of insecurity, "born of this condition, is the chiefest oft Germiij COnlnbutions to the life of sea-faring jnen. The ultimate victory over the Hun will again make the seas bf the world safe for all who wish to use them, but until that is achieved navigation of the Atlantic must be car ried on with due regard to the possible presence of a U-boat, and defensive action taken accord- ' ingly. . ." ... . - .. ' ; . ; . . CONSERVING COMMERCIAL CREDIT. The timely action of the Federal Reserve Board, recommending to the regional banks a conservation of commercial credit, should have a steadying effect on business of the country. Some apprehension has been felt because of a speculative mood that has developed rapidly with the present summer. As the military situation in Europe has improved, and the general conditions at home have shown a more favorable aspect, a tendency to venture into new and uncertain fields of enterprise has taken hold of Americans, who have sought to capitalize war prosperity in anticipation of the future. That a grave danger lies in this direction is apparent, and established business has felt the unfavorable influence of the movement, which has been the more menacing because of its insidious nature. That' the federal board has found it desirable to warn against any extension of commercial or industrial undertak ing not directly connected with or essential to the winning of the war should be sufficient warning to business men and investors of the need for conservative action. The impending fourth Lib erty loan will provide a splendid investment for any idle money, while reasonable conservation of credit will make the more certain that it will be promptly taken up. And no borrower should have preference over Uncle Sam. Germans Cling to Hope of Victory. Americans should not permit themselves to be deluded by reports that the morale of the Ger man people is breaking down. Flenty of proof is at hand that the contrary is trueL and that a considerable part of the leaders there yet de cline to accept anything short of victory. ' This feeling is not exclusive to the army, but per vades civil life in all its walks. While the news papers of Ge'rmany generally are under control of the government, carefully keeping their ut terances attuned to the official note, even those whose independence has brought them into con tact with the authorities at various times, such as ;,Vorwaerts, steadfastly contend for Teutonic supremacy. One of the latest exhibitions of this is the demand from George Gerhardt that the treaty of Brest-Litovsk be extended to include Siberia, or, as he phrases it, the "Asiatic bloc attached to Russia." That such a proposal should be seriously made in face of military re verses strikes outsiders as evidence of the fatu ous nature of German thought, but it must also be accepted as evidence that the German mind clings tenaciously to the hope of victory. The kaiser's people are not yet ready to admit even the possibility of defeat, and the utmost they will concede is a compromise in which their in terests shall be uppermost. Letters captured on the battle-1 field may breathe despair, but that spirit has not sufficiently permeated the Hunnish nation to appreciably affect its determination to persist in war. . Americans Are Nationalists. The commanding thought oi Colonel Roose velt's speech at Springfield, 111., is that Americans are nationalists, that we have national aspira tions and a national destiny. What we ask for ourselves we are willing to give others, because we are anxious to help other nations, and to live in amity with all. But we are not to be caught up and immersed in the jellyfish envelope of "internationalism." : Our characteristics are too clearly marked and our national aspect too well developed to permit this. In order to preserve the" things that are distinctly ' American, and worthy of preservation, it is not necessary to withhold ourselves from altruistic effort or ethical advance. America is not a hermit nation. Our communication with the world is full and frank, and we give and receive and grow because of our liberal interchange of thought and experience. But. through it all we have maintained those pe culiar ways of life, of institutions and of aims that have distinguished us as a people from the first. One of these peculiarities is a patient tol erance of visitors who come to our shores with visions or vagaries, not the least of whrch is the "international." We are probably destined to hear a great deal from him within the immediate future, but no fear as to an abandonment of the national quality of Americanism need be appre hended on this account The "common sense of most" still will prevail. 1 ' Schweiger, who sunk the Lusitania, is, now said to be captive to the French navy, having been taken with 75 of his pals when a big subma rine was destroyed! in the Adriatic. If it really be ,him, the courts piay have a chance to deter mine if the wholesale murder he committed was an act of war or a gross crime against all law. German depots back of the line are now get ting much needed attention from the Allies, and the results are telling on the foe. The Hun is having a hard time to find a hole deep enough to hide in and be safe. ' ' V ' - ; A New Jersey candidate for congress is said to be on the ballot for a similar position in Illi nois, after trying it in Nebraska. That man is entitled to something. Economy is the watohword now, according to Herbert Hoover. That does not sound so sweet as conservation, perhaps, but it is a good slogan. General Pershing On the Job "Black Jack's" Capacity for Work and Talent as a Listener "Here we are in a bjg machine, and there goes the commander-in-chief of the American army, walking along in the rain, talking to a private." 1 looked up quickly in time to see the tall, soldierly figure of General John J. Persh ing as he passed our car, listening with such absorbed attention to what the private was saying that he was utterly oblivious to the barrage of salutes from all sides. The pri vate was doing all the talking, and General Pershing, as usual, was listening. It was very evident that this private had some im portant information to divulge, and Pershing was absorbing it as the sand absorbs the eager sea. It was one of those "misty, moisty morn ings" that one encounters so frequently in France, and the scene was the general head quarters of the A. E. F., usually referred to in letters, telegrams and conversation by the doughboys as the G. H. Q. The place was a small French town not far from the Amer ican front, where the big boss of the A. E. F. was billeted in a romantic-looking old French chateau within close touch of G. H. Q. In the middle of the road, as far as the eye could reach, were khaki-clad American boys toiling like Italian laborers in an effort to mend this road and put it into better shape for the never-ceasing flow of traffic that daily swept past G. H. Q. These toiling doughboys would straighten up as General Pershing passed them, stand rigidly erect and salute their commander with military precision. He was by this tirfre aware of the fact that the barrage of salutes had completely inclosed him, for his hand kept going up to his cap with the automatic precision of an automaton. Life to General Pershing that morning was just one darned salute after another. Somehow the work progressed faster and more efficiently after Pershing had passed. His personality had left something electric in the atmosphere that lingered there and in spired the workers to do their best This is a little way that Pershing has. It is entirely unconscious. He doesn't strive to impress his personality upon anyone, and there is surely no one in France who would assert that the American commander possesses that quality which we define as "personal magnet ism." He hasn't a bit of that In fact, a certain detaohed aloofness always accompan ies him. I can't imagine anyone going up ta "Black Tack" Pershing and slapping him on the back. But, nevertheless, his personality is a strong force in the American army, and it is a force that encourages efficiency and hard work. Pershing is just what he should be. He is the big boss of the A. E. F. As a speeder-up of men he has no equal in France. The sky-looking young Americana who first set foot upon French soil were indeed the pick of our finest manhood. Clean limbed and athletic, fired with patriotic zeal to help the hard-fighting Frenchmen who had been defying the kaiser's hordes for so many years, the newest allies in the cause of world democracy were eagerly anxious to demonstrate their mettle in a bout with the Hun. Like Tob's charger, they had scented the battle afar off, and the odor of it was pleasing in their nostrils. Their intensive training in America had revealed much to them. They knew the things that the Hun knew and feared them not. A large propor tion of them came of American pioneer stock and their forebears had outfought the Indian on his own camping ground. They were confident of taking every new trick that the boche had in his bag and ultimately using it against him. It was this sort of men that General Pershing was bossing in France, and it was his job to turn our magnificent fighting ma terial into a battling machine . that would beat back the boche with irresistible blows. The big boss had not been in Frapce a week before he was on the job seeing ' things, planning things, doing things. From the time of his arrival things began to-happen of big import to America. We .were no longer in the position of an innocent by stander, likely to be struck at any moment by that big bully, Germany. No, we were actively in the fight at last, and, God willing, the big bully was in for a pair of black eyes from lusty American fists that would serve merely as a reminder of the more smashing defeat that was inevitably to come to "this intolerable thing" that had ruthlessly sacri ficed honor, decency and self-respect in a nightmare scramble for power. It was characteristic of General Persh ing's personality that he was listening with both ears and all of his pores open to what that private was telling him, on the misty morning that I first beheld him in action. Listening is a favorite "stunt" with Pershing if such a word as "stunt" be not too undig nified to apply to the commander-in-chief. Wherever he is, or with whomever, he is, it is ,the other man that does most of the talk ing. The consensus of opinion among army men is that Pershing is the most loquacious man with his ears in the world. He parts with words like a man sending a telegram. All of his conversation is telegraphically brief and straight to the point The old adage, "Don't use two words if one will do," seems to be his maxim in life. General Pershing parts with words so grudgingly, in fact, that it is like work for him to make a speech in public, when he knows that he is expected to say more than 10 words. When he made a speech in 'the Picpus cemetery in Paris on the Fourth of July, 1917, it wasn't really a speech at all. It was a verbal telegram. "I hone, and I would like to say it, that here on the soil of France and in the school of the French heroes, our American soldiers may learn to battle and to vanquish for the liberty of the world." That's all there was there wasn't any more. Standing before the tomb of the great Lafayette in this same cemetery, General Pershing said: "Lafayette, we're herel" Could an entire volume have said more than that? Edwin C. Ranck in New York Tunes. "I congratulate you; I envy you," he said diffidently to a wounded doughboy in a base hospital one of the first Americans to suffer for world freedom on French soil. But what fulsome compliment could have pleased that doughboy more than to hear the big boss of the A. E. F. say he envied him a doughboy? On another occasion, after having be stowed the Distinguished Service cross upon Sergeant Peterson, an American soldier who was mortally wounded after unusual gallan try in action. General Pershing wrote this telegraphic praise: "Request you express my personal sym pathy to nearest living relatives of Sergeant Peterson. After being mortally wounded srr9nr Ptrsmi ffavr detailed instructions to the wounded and gave first gas test, in order to save the lives ot tne men aooui mm. He was a gallant soldier, and I have awarded him a Distinguished Service Cross. Persh- n8- " ... His very name is as laconic as his woras, and there is a certain connotation in the mnH rViaf i militarv fffififnrv itself. And when he says what he has to say he quits . , . 1 j , . 1 wnicn is someining xnai many ouicr ycuyic would do well to emulate. Even when Prctiinor terrifieH America hv nrofferinST all of our resources on foreign soil to the r-rench government, mere was notning mel odramatic in the way he did it In the course of a meeting held at the front on March 29, 1918, which was attended by General retain, Premier Plemenrean and f. T.oiirheur. Gen eral Pershing went up to General Foch and said, simply and unostentatiously: "I have come to tell you that the Amer ican people would consider it a great honor for our troops to be engaged in the present battle; I ask you for this in their name and my own. "Infantry, artillery, aviation, all tnat we have, is yours; use it as you wish. More will come, in numbers equal to requirements. "I have come especially to tell you that the American people will be proud to take part in the greatest and finest battle of his- torv." There is no man in the A. E. F. who nrnrtra half a hard a Persbinff. His caoa- city for continuous, persistent effort seems exhaustible. That is why he often appears in the capacity of a slave-driver to some of his subordinates. Being able to accompnsn so much himself, he cannot understand whv ntfier men rannnt "stand the caff." An old negro "mammy" once said about Taft when he was president of the United Mates tnat "he looks like a man who is regular at his meals." Pershing looks like a man who is regular at his work. "Yon Pershing has a lean and hungry look," said a Shakespearean doughboy, look in nr. frnm tii road-menHinor work to fol low the commander-in-chief with his eyes.i 1 a . .1 ' it "Yes, but he gets tnere just tne same, replied a comrade, who didn't know Shakes peare from sciatica. Swollen Food Prices The tremendous increase in the cost of the necessities of life is corroborated by statistics collected by the bureau of markets of the Department of Agriculture. Every householder knows the cost of living is much higher than it was, though few realize that since June, 1913, food prices in the United States have advanced 66 per cent Yet the figures published by the Department of Ag riculture show that this is true, and that durinar the vear ended Tune IS last there was an average advance of 7 per cent in 28 arti cles of food listed, in this list ot a arncies the greatest advance noted was 28 per cent in round steak. During the five-year period mentioned the cost of milk has increased 44 per cent, butter 45 per cent and eggs 55 per centThese are three staples which may be classed as abso lute necessities in every household, and the steady advances, they have made in price in dicate the burden which has grown increas ingly heavier upon the people. An intimation has been given that Mr. Hoover, the food administrator, proposes to devote more of his attention to retail prices; that the abundant crops of the current year having assured a plentiful food supply for the United States and its allies, the food ad ministration intends to protect the American people from food profiteers. Efforts along this line will be welcomed by the public. The people are ready to assume any burdens which the war makes necessary, but they are decidedly unwilling to be the victims of un scrupulous dealers who adhere to the obso lete policy of charging all the traffic will bear. Washington Post. People and Events Relievlnc Uncle Sam. as a railroad man ager, is an easy one, the manager of a "fenre" in Terev f!itv worked un considera ble business buying silks and other goods - m m . Aan . stolen trom treignt cars, a w-ryear sentence with a $5,000 fine tacked on for good measure giye the profiteer ample time to think over another guess. Puck is no more, ah tnat was leu 01 it reposes in New York's newspaper grave yard. In the last quarter of the nineteenth century Puck shone resplendent and wield ed considerable influence. Those were the days of the colored cartoon, when the pens of Gillam, Keppler and Bunner overflowed with wit and vigor in picture and prose. With these high lights gone, Puck waned. The Sunday colored supplement did the rest. George Graham Rice, the later-day Wal lingford in the toils of New York, -had a valet on his payroll at $250 per week. Come easy, go easy. Imagine, fellow workers, the pained feelings of that valet when he goes against a lean pay envelope on a Saturday night And nothing to drink but waterl The Plane News halts a drive at the fly ing front long enough to remark that service with the colors ortcrs rare inducements to the baldheaded man. He may salute with out uncovering the bare spot. nrrrw 1 1 One Tear Ago Today la the War. Ueavy rains halted action on west ern front ; . . , , .' f- . ' Austrian civilians were ordered to leave Trieste. President WUion's rejection ot Pope Benedict' peace plea waa made pub- Tbe Day We Celebrate, iCharlee & Elgutter, attorney-at-law, born 1861. Frank B. Johnson, head ef the 1 0maha Printing company, born 1860. John W. Towle, civil engineer and contractor, born 1871. Charles 8. Whitman, who aspires to a third term aa governor of . New York, bora at Norwich, Conn., 60 ... .- ...... Bellamy Storer, former United , States ambassador to Austria-Hun gary, born at Cincinnati 71 years ago. This Day In History. 1T74 Elizabeth Ann Seton. foun dress and first superior of the Sisters of Chanty in the united States, born ia New York. Died at Emmlttsburg, 31a January. 4, iszi. 1(31 Lucy Webb Hayes, wife of ' the nineteenth president - born at I Chlllicothe, O. '. Died at Fremont O., June za, 1889. " . IH4 Five German warships sunk - oy tne tsruisn on Heligoland. . JSli Ambaaador von Bernstorft promised full satisfaction for sinking Just SO Years Ago Today Articles of Incorporation have been filed with the county clerk of the Con gregational synagogue. The officers are: President M. Hornlck; vice president, A. Monsky; secretary, J. Demartsky: trustees, J.. Bernstein, T. Talmud and M. Talmud. A delegation of Omaha Odd Fellows left for Los Angeles to attend the grand encampment of that order to b held at that place. Ted D. Marks, business manager of the Rice's Corsair and Evangeline burlesque companies, ia In the city maKing arrangements 1 ror the pro ductlon of piece at the Grand. The Union Pacific will commence to run trains of 20 coaches to within one block of the "Siege of Sebastopol" and the fair in a few days. rne Florence , election lor mayor Sidelights on the War The annual value of war pensions granted in New Zealand Is 1,364,143. It is expected to exceed 2,000,000 by the end of the year. "The steel bath exerts its effects on everyone and splashes over the home of the proletariat as well as over the playroom In the family of tne count concludes the Berlin publication. Softool children In Munich recently were employed stripping the trees and bushes in the public parks in order that the leaves might be converted into a substitute for hay, of which there is almost a total lack. A rlrhlv Illuminated aridrsM nlamnil by nearly 600 professors of law In France, England, Belgium, Italy, Ser bia, Roumania, Portugal, Japan and Russia has been handed to the Amer ican ambassador in Paris , for trans mission to President Wilson. In view of the' cost of travel there, little chance of profitably patronizing cut-rate barbers on the fighting frond. Plane News, published by American aviators in France, quotes shaves at 10 cents; hair cuts, 15 cents; hairL tonics, zu cents; racial massage, &u cents. Tips positively forbidden. At' a critical moment in the recent great battle along the Marne General retain saved the situation by . dls patching every available aeroplane on nis rront to attack and disperse a great hostile concentration which was preparing behind the German lines. The classic and brilliantly successful stroke set the seal on a new role of usefulness for the aeroplane that of a purely offensive weapon. Right to the' Point ! Mlnneannllii Tribune: "Down on your knees," says Maximilian Harden to the German people, uenerai x ocn will be saying the same thing in a few months. Baltimore American: They are paying $300 for suits in Vienna and $60 for shoes, with the winter coming on. That ultimatum to Serbia is com ing very high. Philadelphia Ledger: If the ftaiser thinks that he can use the Free Ma sons of Germany to promote a peace drive among their brethren In the al lied nations he is reckoning without his host ' Washington Post: Some of the civilian boches in the hinterland of Hungerland have heard of the threat of forcible feeding of suffs in Wash ington and are wondering how they can swim to this happy land. New York World: German opinion which objects to the use of shotguns as violating the" rules of war will no doubt indorse the attempts to drug American soldiers In camp as m Keep ing with the most honorable tradi tions of warfare. New York Herald: "How can you unscramble an egg?" The question asked by the late J. P. Morgan apro pos of the great steel merger is being recalled with some uneasiness apropos of the proposal to merge all the tele phone companies with the Bell sys tem under government control. The chance of these properties being re stored to their owners after the war Is very slender. Twice Told Tales Seven Miles Away. An American colonel, newly arrived In France, on his first tour of inspec tion, approached a sentinel squatting behind a hedge and started to ques tion him. The Yankee shot back a reply in husky whisper. Immedi ately the colonel flattened "out on the ground with more haste than dignity. After exchanging a few breathless whispers with the sentinel, the col onel whispered: "How far are the Huns from here?" "About seven miles," the sentinel whispered back. "Then why the are you whis pering?" the officer stormed. "Been like this for weegs; godda heluva gold," replied the soldier, wip ing his nose. Stars and Stripes. Allied Base Ball. The more things the draft officials do to base ball here the better it flour shes in London, according to Richard Hatteras of that thriving community. Mr. Hatteras says the game Is getting a firm hold on every nationality In the British capital. "Why, recently." quoth he. "1 saw a game In which East Indians were playing. One of these approcahed the plate at a crucial moment and cried aloud: "Allah, give thou me strength to nake a hit "He struck out I "The next man up waa an Irishman. He spat on the plate, made faces at the pitcher and yelled: "You know me, AU He made a home run." New York Tribune. 7 A Better Pay for City Guardians. Omaha, Aug. 26. To the Editor of The Bee: As a citizen and heavy taxpayer of Omaha I favor better wages for the firemen and policemen and hope you will use your influence to secure same for them. I am also in favor of these men having one day a week off In which under ordinary circumstances they would not have to report for duty. FRANK J. CAREY. Delivery of "Many" Ice. Omaha, Aug. 27. To the Editor of The Bee: I was interested in your editorial suggesting that delivery of muny ice be extended so as to in clude the community in its benefits. I do not wish to be considered as criti cising present arrangements, for con ceivably they are the best that could be made in the time at the disposal of the Water board. Yet it seems to me that the men who make up that body should have had the vision to see that the benefits of the municipal Ice plant will be applied within a rather narrow range under their pres ent plan. Now it Is possible only tor those who live comparatively close to the small distributing depots to get any good from the service, in which all the people are Interested. I can see in the municipal ice plant a possible emancipation from control of the local Ice trust, but only when the service is extended to be city wide and not confined to certain small sections. Experience this summer has shown Omaha folks the danger of depending on previous sources of sup ply. Also a lesson has been given in the difficulty of getUn" Ice to small consumers In the outskirts. 'Let the wise men who make up our Water board give this attention. A careful survey of the city's needs and some comprehensive planning for the coming summer, with a litt'e vigorous action, ought to bring relief. It is not asked that the city sell Ice at a loss; in fact, folks will be willing to pay as much to the city as they have paid to the Ice trust, but they would like to have a thoroughly de pendable source, one that cannot be Interfered with at the whim of a big cold storage company or a packing house. Let us have "muny" Ice for all- OLD FOGY. Needed Change In Primary Law. Deshler, Neb., Aug. 26. To the Ed itor of The Bee: I have Just read the results of the soldiers' primary vote and It emphasizes the necessity of a change In our primary law. Six hundred nAvpntv-fiavon were cast for candidates on the re publican ticket. Of tMs number George W. Norris received only 200, or less than one-third, and yet he becomes the 'nominee of the party. Such a result calls for an amendment of the primary law so that no man who has been repudiated by the party can be foisted ' on the party as its nominee by a minority vote. GEORGE WALSH. ' SUNNY GEMS. "Two aoups, waiter one tomato and one bean." "He filled that order literally," laid the other diner a little later on. "How ao?" "I got Just one bean." LouUvllle Courier-Journal. Como out and walk. The last few dropi of lisht , t, Drain silently out of the cloudy blue: Tba trees ara full of the dark-atoopinl ntcht. The flelde are wet with dew. All's quiet In the wood, but far away, Down the htllilde and out across .t plain. Movee, with Ions train of white that marKf Its way. The aoftly panting- train. Com through the clearing. Hardly noa we see The flowers, save dark or light against the grass. Or glimmering silver on a scented trea That tremblea as we pass. Hark now! So far, so far , that distant song see Move not the rustling grasses with youi feet, The dusk is full of sounds, that all aloni The muttering boughs repeat. So far, ao faint, we left our heads In doubt. Wind, or the blood that beats within our ears. Has feigned a dubious and elusive note. Such as a dreamer hears. Again again! The faint louno rise and fall. So far the enchanted tree, the song so low. A drowsy thrush? A waking nightingale 1 Silence. We do not know. EDWARD SHANKS. Hi frill QURLITV first g NOT HOW SOON? J BUT (SOW 6009! INDIVIDUAL I EXPERT TTDmOH PROMPT 'DELIVERY Photo supplies exclusively MOftDEMHTERCa 1 EASTMAN KODAK Ca I8B FARNAM ST." BRANCH 506 S0.I5?ST. Settlement- Worker Doe your husband have steady work? Poor Woman I think so. mum; at least he's never out of the workhouse more than a week at a time. Buffalo Express. "You went wrong the way you allowed that girl to take you. She doesn't know the road." "Wey, do you know, I had an Idea I was being miss-guided." Baltimore American. . "And when I marry your daughter will you settle anything on us?" I'd like to." k "You'd like to?" "Yes, I'd really like to settle the phono graph and the girl's mother on you, my boy!" Yonkera Statesman. Suitor (after proposing) If yon are al ready engaged why didn't you tell me so? She (Indignantly) I'm not the sort of a girl that boasts of her conquests. Boston Transcript Cholly And was my present a surprise to your alster? Willie You bet! Sis said aha never thought you'd send her anything ao cheap. Pearson's Weekly. Manager (of Hlckvllle Academy of Music) How many girls with your company? Advance Agent (evasively) Wa adver tise 25. Manager 'Taint no use advertlsln' un less you got 'em. The poppylatlon of this here burg will be at the depot to check em up. Buffalo Express. t VI', arervts. witk Yr, wonderful music rolls of a Dlavev-niinn irwiv fir'- r cKlld can aa-f-n. an cation in music wkick otherwise would cost hundreds of dollars as well as years of time. 4nd you yourself car i njoy the? Ixsutie ct thtHiterature of mu sic while developing the chili. Visit our roll department-take Kom some new Tolls. Our $425 Player Piano Will Interest You Terms to Suit 1513 wOUGLAl ST. HAVE YOU $1,400? It will buy fourteen of our shares. If you have not this amount, start with less and systematically save with us until you reach your goal. No better time and no better place. Dividends compounded semi-annually. The Conservative Savings & Loan Ass'n 1614 HARNEY STREET. , Resources, $14,000,000. Reserve, $400,000.00. 'ill M -- Comfortable and Cosy Lounging Rooms for Telephone Operalcrc Telephone operating is a pleasant and profitable vo cation. That is why it attracts and holds so many of the brightest and most capable young women in business today. To the young woman choosing a field of work, tele phone operating offers employment in light, clean rooms, with good wage3, excellent prospects for advancement, permanency of position and protection in case of sick ness, without cost to the employee. NEBRASKA TELEPHONE COMPANY Save Food Bar War Savins; Stamp ad Liberty Boada took place today. - . .... . e .