Tilt. M.h. UA.A.IA. TtKMUV. APRIL 1. IV. The Omaha Bee MORNINC-EVENING-SUNDAY. 7he te rmuMiKO tour at ft. DUtfttR, bMil WM MIMStft Of TM ASSOCUTtO MtM l f M" 'l f aIU.ll W n mill mtmumm " x " M NUI Jt tf Ik . tf P"- lllT IM !- " "-" "" Tk ! tlrli' f Tli Osssfce Be for M.rth, 1132 Daily Aver 71775 Sunday Average ...78.365 THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY ft, HtWH, CmwiI Mim LLMtK S, HOOD, ClreaiatM Mer r U igbMIlM kelers sm lkt Ilk 4r Frusta Ur.m'm thm. AT . ... IwhkimkI r tew) e ATliilll Ni.kl tall AfUr I F. M.I 1000 b.slBient, ATtoaiM Hit f t. omen Main Oftlre I7U fara. Ce. Uttlft U ' ' ' It. n.o Yorii-: rini. A w.Siiil-tll. 0. CMest ! : Btdf. rrl. Irase IS It Haeor. Ways to School Economy. There ! not been enough heard from teach er anil tihool exocutivet on how the high cot of education may te trimmed. The Dilter Record, libwevcr, ijuotea approvingly a definite program put forth by Superintendent C. L. Westcott of the Hhiehill schools, recotuineudationi eor repd cloely with tho.c nude by The Bee in it Mirvey of the tax filiation. llllicicnry niu! not be sacrificed, Mr. West cott postiitates, but all teacher should be re quired to teach the maximum number of claiiei. A return to the yjtcm by which the superinten dent Mould cut down the work of supervision and do some teaihinif is also urged. In schools where some clauses are extremely small, he would com bine clatses, with a view to cutting down the teaching force. I f is prngiam further includes: Keeping efficient teachers as long at they will stay; sanity in the deduction of school time for holidays, athletic events and graduation exer cises; adequate supplies, but cheaper; not carry ing too many lines of work teach for community i-fe as much as for preparing for college en tiance, and not trying to make a college out of a high school. Parents of school children frequently are sur prised with stories brought home about special teachers breaking into the school day. At Col lege View, for instance, there is a special teacher for penmanship, for gymnastics and for music. Possibly the music teacher is needed, for not all regular teachers can sing, but there appears no good reason why children can not learn writing and exercise without extra help. Mr. Westcott points out such conditions as containing possi bilities for economizing. Frank T. Tearce, editor of the Diller Record, promises his support to Mr. Westcott for state superintendent of public instruction if he could be induced to run on this platform. Aside from any personalities, this is the sort of program that the taxpayers, in their capacity of voters, are looking for. What "Papa" Joffre Saw. . Marshal Joffre saw at Lincoln on Saturday something lie may treasure alongside the most memorable sights he has viewed in a long and active life. He is familiar with the pomp and circumstances of military display; he has heard the clash and roar of battle, where millions of men contended for mastery; he has noted the despair of the vanquished and the exultation of the victors. Cheers of thousands have greeted him at home and on his travels, and he has viewed the mightiest of nature's outdoor displays, vis ited the magnificent accomplishments of man, and noted a list of wonders too long to catalogue. Yet the simple ceremony he was a spectator of at Lincoln on Saturday deserves to be listed as one of the really great things he has witnessed. It was that of a free and progressive common wealth, moving to furnish for itself adequate and commensurate dwelling. For the housing of its activities and archives Nebraska is providing a new home, and as befits a wealthyy enterprising and forward looking state, this home will be a noteworthy one. It is not in the building alone its merit resides, for steel and stone may be worked into' a structure even more spacious and costly than the one that is planned for Nebraska; the new state house will typify the spirit of the people of the state, and will stand before the world an exemplification of those sturdy quali ties that have made Nebraska great. Partisans may affect to scorn the ceremony of Saturday, to deride the beginning of a great enterprise, but the day will come when all the satisfied and prosperous people of this common wealth will note with honest pride that they did tax themselves to erect a capitol that is a credit to replace one that has become a reproach to the state. Record Vote on Navy Bill. Congressman Kelley of Michigan, who re ported the naval appropriation bill, says he will ask a' record vote on the amendment adopted Saturday increasing the enlisted personnel to 86,000 instead of the 65,000 at which it was fixed by the committee. He should encounter no dif ficulty in getting the members on record, and for the public good it is hoped that each representa tive will be in his seat and cast his vote. This is one of the most important divisions of the session. Arguments have been earnest and long as to the merits of the question. Advocates of the "Little navy" program insist that the 65, 000 men provided for will be ample to support the dignity of the American government and protect its interests everywhere. President Har ding, Secretary Denby and a majority of the house members do not agree with this view. Under the Kelley plan the 5-5-3 ratio, let up at the Washington conference, will be done away with, these aver, and the naval strength would stand 5-3-2.8, with the United States on the lower round. National safety requires that the United States establishment be not set lower than that of Japan. Losing the point in the committee of the whole, the "little navy" forces plan to carry on their effort to reduce the sea power of the na tion, and will renew their attack when the matter cornea before tbe house in regular form this week, It hat ceased to be a partisan question, for the democrats are as mur1 'divided as the republicans trap the iiue. The record rote lkd for fey Mr. Kelley ought to be had, thu the country may know exactly the sentiment of corigrttt. , The Faith of a Judge, Law at living process and not as the dead f n4 of the put imposing its will on rh""! condition! of which it knew nothing is an ideal that will not be hard to reach if there art many jurists surh a Judge lirnjamin N. C'ardoio of the supreme court of New Yoik, The Ui of the Medei and Persians, which changed not, do rot fit modern situations nor, be it said, do sonic of the precedent! rt up before the modern In dustrial era. Unwise as it would be to reject the past, et it it the part of witdom to fit it to the prrtent and future. There are no doubt some excellent riiirtni who will reject the theory announced by Judge CardoiM in hie book, "The Nature of the Judicial Process," To others it will give reas surance of the ability of legalimn to live up to the emergencies of progress. This it hit con clution: The final cue of law is the welfare of so ciety. The rule that ntiri its aim can not per manently justify its exigence. . . , Logic and history and custom have their place. We will shape the law to conform to them when vie may; but only within bounds. The end which the Uw serves will dominate them all. There it an old legend that on one occasion Cod prayed, and hit prayer was "Be it my wilt that my justice be ruled by my mercy." That is prayer which we all need to utter at times when the demon of formalism tempts the intel lect with the lure of scientific order. . , . When they (L e.. judges) are called upon to say how far existing rules are to be extended or restricted, they must let the welfare of so ciety fix the path, its direction and its distance. Instead of criticising the judicial system or grovelling in depression at the failure of courts now and then to do all that might be hoped for, it would be better to get behind men of this type and strengthen their influence. Hanging by the Big Toe. Darwinism has scored another hit, but whether it is a home run or jut a bit of a bunt remains to be determined. Anatomical sharps who have been dissecting and analyzing the remains of a gorilla, lately deceased in New York, have made certain discoveries that suggest his kinship to man, or man's kinship to him, as you rare to ex press it. Relying on the pcroneus tcrtius, the analogy between the simian and the human is sustained, with the obstacle to definite and con clusive proof that the muscle is sometimes want ing. However, it has to do with the middle toe, nd while important if true, can not. even by its absence, exclude the evidence of the big toe. Like Katislia's left elbow, the late lamented John Daniels, hee just a plain gorilla, had a big toe worth going miles to see. He had developed it until it was not only human, bilt superhuman in its varied aspects and activities. Taken together, the peroneus tertius and the big toe-are consid ered as providing irrefragable proof of the direct kinship of John to man (we had almost said of John to Josephus). One thing will always be regretted, however; during his short but useful life, John neglected to develop a bunion.' If he had had a floating sesamoid, or some other dis placement of the metatarsal phalange, his ap proach to the well known human race would have been that much closer. A bunion may not make a man ol a monkey, but it will make a monkey of a man. Just as Satan is "o'er sib to Adam's breed," so are some of us a little too near to simians in our ways to put up much objec tion when Darwin gains support, or to more than feebly cheer when Mr. Bryan denies the allega tion. Just now, instead of hanging by our tails, we are dangling by a big toe, it seems. Veterans "Clean-Up" Results. Quietly but persistently the United States Veterans bureau has worked on a job that had caused others to despair. It is that of giving information to service men as to what their rights are. Many of the soldiers who were so hastily mustered out of the service of the United States went home unacquainted with provisions made for their care and comfort by the gencrat gov ernment. Some of these were discharged from hospitals, others have developed disability since, and a great many have suffered because they did not know their rights. One hundred and seventy thousand of these men have been hunted up' by the bureau and afforded information as to how to proceed to get the aid the government has pro vided. . This is the sort of clean-up that counts, for it will ease the minds as well as the bodies of these men, many of whom thought they had been forgotten by a country they served so well. Smarting under a sense of injustice and neglect, they did not realize that ample arrangements have been made for the care of just such cases as theirs, that millions of public money have been appropriated to defray the cost of their treatment, education, and support, and that instead of being niggard and negligent, the public really has been generous. When all are looked after, and ift time all will be, then the true picture of what has been done for the disabled veterans will be noted. Just now the big task is to get the information to those who are entitled to the aid. That is why the veterans clean-up looks so good. ' Meat products, principally cured pork and lard, are showing a steady gradual increase in exports. Europe appears to be raising its stand ard of living, a fine thing for producers. The drys announce they are pleased with the primary elections so far, while the wets point to substantial gains. It is a mighty fine election that pleases everybody. Politics make strange bedfellows, but his tory has never seen such a dormitory as Genoa will be, with Lenin, Lloyd George, Wirth and Barthou. A little more light on the Bureau of Printing and Engraving may serve to clear up what is now only an obnoxious fog. Germany and Russia have signed a new treaty, yet what the world would most appreciate would be i check on account. "Periwinkle" blue, you understand, has no relation to business blues, such as prevailed a year ago. ' The Mississippi valley is certainly wet enough, if that is what the world has been waiting for. Even yet the democrats are not certain who their candidate for governor is to be. That "shoot-to-kill" order hadn't brought much fruit as yet. A Wonderful People Thought Suggested by the Farewell Words ( M argot. Easter Sunday got by all right in Ireland. (From th Boston Transcript.) That we are a wonderful people in America mut be a rn nf mu h pride to u. and aU true American will appreciate the g" compliment which Mrs, A-quith ha paid u on her retum to I'ligUud- lc ha said that American are "a wonderful, w underfill prople," doubling her ad jective in the Italiau itunner, but bad this c rompluhed U!y u-ed the -ingle adjective, we should have trlt jut a much flattered. It U evi dent that he na made a protouinl siuuy of con. dition mural and phytic! in the United tair, for .he M)i that prohibition it the only fraud which ne louiKl here, which is a rrrora in an buc of toiHi.Ptihon. It is alino.t a ditappoint meiit to see that h says she contemplates no Kngli.il lecture on her ckpenenrei in America, for so many of her compatriot have contented to make copy out ol the noipiunty ana tne in stitution of the republic, that it em a pity that o brilliant a woman and one so well acquainted uith politic both in the United State and Great rritaui should not continue the terie. She i further reported to have told the newspaper cor respondent that she had been in politic all her life, tliut affording the public one of the aM too tnirequeut giiuipxt ot what muu nave uecn an extremely tntcrcttinff career. ' What give a tcntation of depression, how ever, in resiling the report of her interview, is Mr. Aqmth statement that although the en joyed every minute of her stay in America, she did not contemplate returning. The only relief to the dippoiiitment at hearing this is the re- liretion that at leatt Mrs. Asquint returns to Albion's shore not without souvenir. That our late visitor should have come to America and held the series of cauteries to much enjoyed and appreciated is in itself a cauc for satisfaction, nut greater niibt he tins taUMartmn when one reflect that such profitable. brik visits bring out in blab relief the indomitable com- plaeente of the American people. Mrs. Atquith tay that the will not return, but there i always a rift in the cloud. She may not, but we can be quite sure that some other victor will tuke tip the great work of enlightening and cheering the American people, and telling them about their own affair. Here is clfihuet. It may be doubted whether a famous inhabitant of Chicago or San Francisco would take all this trouble for his or her countrymen; he would probably palter and say that none would listen to him, and he would shirk this vital obligation to a young and pathetically innocent commonwealth, as new as it is wonderful. Xot so the waiting apostles across the Atlantic. Like trusty lifeboat men at stations, they but wait the word from the lecture agelicies to cross the heaving jcas. making noth ing of the hardship and privations of the voy age, counting mal de mcr and the difference in exchange as drops. Dispatches by cable are even now hardly re covered from war's confusion, so it may he a mistake when Mrs. Atquith is reported as asking somewhat peremptorily whether the corre spondent supposed Mic were going on the Mage. She and all the noble army of light bearers are on a stage, the noble stage of mollifying a young people as to its manners and of patiently increas ing its modest store of knowledge. It is only the superficial and the prejudiced who say that com ments on a nation's institutions and economy should be based on years of study and personal acquaintance. Are we not shown, the contrary, for do not the light bearers come over and stay for a few weeks and tell us the most profound things about ourselves, our polities' and our cookery? No American could do this, or if he has ever tried this, he gave it up long ago from motives of personal comfort and the need of an income. Americans sometimes have good nat vrcd fun poked at them for a certain optimism, s chceriness, a lively confidence in the sunyy side of tomorrow. They have every reason for this, and not the least is the tranquil knowledge that the supply of trans-Atlantic light bearers, zealous, condescending, kindly, is virtually inexhaustible. German shipping may be able to rehabilitate itself in time, but British or German, every liner will still bring over a trans-Atlantic lecturer looking with grateful anticipation to the land of the wonderful, wonderful people, the most com placent in the world, the most long suffering. Saving the Golden Moments The Detroit News publishes a photograph of Jimmie Dunn, discoverer of a means of conserv ing knowledge (which has been said to be power) tor himselt. He is shown seated on a strmgpiece holding a fishing rod, while upon his young head ia strapped a wireless receiver. While waiting for a bite he listens to a concert. In the newspaper text accompanying this photograph we are told that "fishing is a great sport out it is very tiresome and lonesome pleas ure when the fish don't bite. However, with the present-day craze for radios, fishing kits will in clude one of the small receiving sets shown here. . . Little Jimnue Dunn first thousrht of the idea and so gets credit for being the first radio fisherman." Any survival of the concept of fishing as "the contemplative man's recreation" can not last long. In the first place "the contemplative man" is himself now an anomaly and a cumberer of the ground. Passive existence is seen to be willful waste, bringing woeful want. An active mind even a static body is a postulate of contempor ary life, and the activity must be acquisitive, for any mere deliberative use of the faculties is wasteful of the sroldcn moments as thev fall. Jimmie Dunn is a finger of fate, pointing toward the time when man or rather, boy, will be able mechanically to use all of his five senses all the time, whatever he is doing; and possibly he will develop another sense or two, just for the sake of the machine which will be invented to serve it. Baltimore American.- , How to Keep Well ? DR. W, A. IVAM QuIWM (wtmiai lrlM. miI. mm Or. lv k, Mitn Tk Bm. anM k -a MrMll ukjMt lw luaiuii-a, ! s Htmptd, 44,,t4 t.bp, j, . Of, lM Ml Ml) '"' ' l-f M4ii4M ;' A4i buw ia Cwrtli OX An Old Man Not So Wicked Among the truths which a great many sign ers of contemporary declarations of independ ence hold to be self-evident is the truth that old men are a drag upon civilization. Yet, at the age of eighty-eight, Charles W. Eliot offers a rather bothersome exception to the rule that old men are, ,jn a positive way, wicked, vand, in a negative way, obstructionists. Ihe presi dent emeritus of Harvard was seventy-five when he laid down his active duties at Cam bridge, but it is not on record that his coiner was the removal of a dead hand upon the liberal spirit at the university which he had served for lorty years. Neither, during the thirteen ' years that have elapsed since his retirement, has he been an incubus upon the -progress of creative intelligence in the country at large. A lively interest m the world of today, a great sympathy for liberty and intelligence working towards progress, an unflagging cour age, a pungent tongue and pen Charles W. Lhot is not quite another example of that Vic torian cowardice and flaccidity to which so many of the world's ills are, by formula, attrib utable. But then he was born three years before Lytton Strachey's heroine ascended the British throne. That may be the reason, per haps, why Charles W. Eliot escaped the curse. He is, by three years, a pre-Victorian. New York Evening Post. Nth Power of Gossip. With a proper radio outfit you can keep in touch with the gossip of the world, but we cal culate it will be a long time before science re places the Ladies' Sewing society in giving 100 per cent efficiency. Philadelphia Inquirer. Grand Right Worshipful Slacker. Some men would rather rie to high rank in fraternal order than rank high as a worker. And their work is likcty to show it. Forbes Ma gazine. LIME FOR CONVULSIONS. Thla U nut a !! Your pardon iBliiiiirt nnd ihu nerrwt utmni whlrli promt.! tin. nUa did t --,--r in nil- CIIIIIIIIU, However. I Mia ruMed by lhl utMlriiit-nt, anft an ,.,,,. ! ,! on in newnpaprr tnry to - . v m, ana thu, In , iiii-ivis atnvra, Th jiory. InauMane. wu (hut Dr. A. II. Luekhat'dr. In annarin,.... in with animal from which th imrainyrttio ria! rien removed, had round A way in nmmt k-n. aloveloplnir ronvuLloim and cthr l'ainniiit' fluorflfri. The Idea n.nveyea mm ne hud fnund a rum or antitoxin or ometit!n of that Ron. Till Id Wllllt r.ll. kll-rHf m.tA bloom reported. They removed th pariilhyroldx ftnm certain (1"S.They then Injected Jtinger'a otitlon. a o- miion tlimut th umt In mln-! a Mood Mrnm. Into a vein. Hy dally Injecting- enough of ttila Holuilnn lo kep th kidney freely vim, mrjr ine mood tream wanned free from th ukiiinl. which einii cnnvulnlonn and In thut way Kept tne dug alive for about two monthn. It neenm Hint thev cr.uld hnv keep tlirno doe In good health Indefinitely by waehlntf th I oiaon daily from the blaod through th kidney. Th parathyroid are four mnl1 bortl located In thn neck behind th later! lobe of the thyroid. Thev are piiihU, welshing- altoaether only about 45 trniliiH. nnd ench nieumiren about the am a a nen. Though mint!, they are Important, it they ieeni HiMiichow to deMroy a nb- utiince which cuca convulsion. Till ptiiwtanca I formed elsewhere In th oody. n hen these bodie are removed pnrpoNely ns In experiment, or bv acclder.t In th operation on the thyroid, or other i nurture In th neck, th animal from which thev re removed hn convulnlon until deBth termlniile the cene. It ho been micEcntcd. but not proved, that In ull forms of con vulsion nnd convulelv disorder th "s gland are lieuieJ. What I nnr likely I th.it In tinni con vulsive dlnordiT they nr dlseaited. but that In other they nre unequal to tho lank of neutralizing the ex cessive amount of convulsion pro ducing principle manufactured else where. I.urkhnrdt and noenbloom hold that tho convulsion producing mih- manca can be wanhed out through the kidney. Thl demonstration I worth noth ing directly In a practical way In the treatment of convulsion, but. It doea lny a enbntantlnl foundation on which somebody may be able to build somo practical curative procedures. A a kidney wush Luckhardt and Ttosenbloom found a solution con taining no lime was a effective as one which contained thl mineral. There Is a great deal of clinical proof that people with tendencies to convulsive disorders should be given some form of lime. This applle to children with the spasmophilic diathesis, children who have croup easily, those prone to develop spasms, and adults with va rious forms of spasms. How lime doe its work in these disorders in not known. Luckhardt and Kosenbloom's second experiment proves that tf lima Is of benefit it Is not by washlnir poisons from the blood through the kidneys. Salt Tlolds the Water. W. B. writes: "As a saline ca thartic draws water violently from the entire system, creating a thirst, and disperses it rapidly through the lower bowel, should it not have a tendency to reduce watery tissues?" : REPLY. . The theory is that some of the salt, whatever it is, lags behind in the tissues, the rate of excretion not be Insr equal to the rate of intake. It is salt in the tissues that holds water in them. Nonbathers Get It, Too. J. L. W. writes: "What causes this terrible itohinsr and is there any 111101: one can use or do to relieve it? "I take a morning: bath daily, and have been told this causes it, drying up the natural oils of the body. . If you can tell me of any rem edy I would greatly appreciate it. I must have my dally bath, if possi ble." - REPLY. Assuming that you have bath itch. your trouble ia caused by the wast- T m enM kM hui Ml to N ea mrnm au to J ear hmmU aMi. II rwMW WI w iimM Mrt, a -. 1 ! rmf ml Mm. M h,iiu 1 la MMm. I IMt )IW a iki oil aiwa k la aWiaa. TM kb "-rtmi la lk l-aller feat I An Invniif, omatu. April l To the rdiir of Th lie: Th failure of a bonk, of v.hl. h wa an official, deprived in of all my earthly pomm-iush, ivlng a commercial value, but lrt w hHh. self rpt, an aim In life, a will umhaken, pen un broken, a Mer.i ward fOP ruln and hn.tr, a Joy in ith work and Play, family and friend to love and the confidence of my fellow town men, Th till I empty, hut Ilf Ull how a profit. A HANKER. Our InwrraUng Currency. Omaha, April It. To ihe Editor or tii nee: it la a ratifying fact, that, while other nation are having muen irounie with ihir currency, we are having no riou trouble witn our, although thl nation, in the lat few year, haa tud through experience that probably put our monetary tem to th severest test. Ju.t bow we have cen ved from such monetary dis order a are afflicting Germany and liuui la an lnterting question which Z think even the exnene In (Inane would not all answer In the Mine way. Th paper mark of Gr many la now such a dim nark that it I almost a blank, and the paper rum of KuMia might well be railed bubble, liut In thl country we have metallic money of several kind and paper money of seven kind all cir culating at par. and an Immense amount of businrss Is done with bank check. If. we look wisely for the factor of thl happy condition we see first th great fact of governmental sta bility. In looking for the factor of this great stability we come across th word ot Georg Washington: "Intelligence and virtue ar th pil lars of a republic." Not Oil the r0 Pie of this country are Intelligent, not all are people of good character: but a w look Into the history of the nation or of any of the state or th union w find evidence or tne dominance of Intelligence and virtu. Our paper money i In two general classe: rrtlflct and nots. The eertllicste are In two elase. one representing gold and th other sil ver. Tho words of tho sliver certifi cate for 1 nr. "Thl eertlfle that ttier hn been deposited In tn treasury of the Vnltd State of America on llver floiisr psyaoie to the bearer on demand." In like man ner gold certificates represent gold held In the treasury. Th notes are so called because they are promis sory, note. Ilk notes mad by one nerson rthe obligor) to another (the obligee). These notes are in rtve clas ses, in eacn ease in promise m. nui to pay so many dollars In gold or silver, but lmoly so many dollars. The question might be ried. what doe the word flouar mean in iucn a ease ? I think it must be construed to mean gold or silver dollars, he cBnsn under our constitution there are no dollars but gold and silver dollnrs. On the notes of four or these classe the promise is to. pay "on demand.- The otner ciase is that of those designated officially as United States notes." but commonly known as greenbacks. Oji these the words, on demand, do not appear. The promise is simply. "The United States will pay to bearer $1," or lng away of the outer layer of the skin and exposure of sensitive nerves underneath. Where this condition ts extreme, n is advisable to cleanse the skin with creams, using neither soap nor wa-r- nni o extreme can use bran water or borax water, but not soap water. Sometimes soaps can be used ir i.thi-v - nni iinn with great fre quency and provided th aoap ts of good quality. On the Baggedi Edge, rr r wfIih' "If. after taking bread, beans, etc.. and within an hour or two a trace of asi era enAWI In the urine and then within three to four hours there is no sign or sugar in me urine, wouia you call it diabetes? i'tl.h. I., ia -ft. Healre. for water and urine is passed about five times aav, out not in large uniuuuis. "If not diabetes, is such, a thing serious?". REPLY. Tah hava what la called a di- Mlnl.h. tnleranea foe aua-ar. Toil are probably not a diabetic now, but are proDaoiy on ine msgau cuc My advice is that you careffilly regulate voue diet Just as though you were a diabetic. Keep your sugar vA .Iniwh Intake hlnw th level where sugar appears In your urine. Pi: Young Men-- Are You On the Road to Success Y o A YOUNG man who start an account with part of the con tents of his first pay envelope, and continues to make regular deposits each week, is on the road to success and financial independence. ! Start your account now and know that the money you are setting aside is safe in this strong, helpful institution. The Omaha National Bank Farnam at 17th Street Capital and Surplus $2fi00fi00 o m rrriain Mut.twr if doIUis. If a pion iioul. mat, h.h i f trut kind nj the uiii, iing an aMlon in enuri tin ih ni. id eouil ouI4 itiU'raMrtly liava a i nt I'll" Ihe nola a pivslil tin tleuiaiut, iif decide t,at lb in nt was tm -i.r.i.. hi. pd ran- of animi l euld trr acrru mi It. Th girenbuek la B peculiar Hung lit num. tary tu.inrv ll rt lie.t ii i jriP J, ahile ihe rilil war i iirra and Ihe government w.ia in a trin, financial lni h. At on lime I he market Value of gold il"IUr In greenback wa II i. n.t ll is mill a queaiiun In di-ptii whether ihst dlspariiy ws beiau) uf ib-pm u. lion of ih grntwt-k or an sppr elation if Ihe gold dollar. A-ioiJ. Ing lo statement feuni Hie tied -my ihr are still more than IlK noo,. 004 In greenbacke In i-irfiildtimt. Th legal name of ihe,n kind 0kf ItMlaifli MAUi fa t I ia I i, It l l'aa !' ii"iw- aiua f e eel e t l ulled stales note, national lauk i nol, tresaiiry note, federal rfrv note end federal ffrv batik note. liKRIAH r. tiKH It A N. CENTER SHOTS. There ar lh who might b better off if they were not o well Off. Detroit New. !.ol of wnmii think Kter Hun. dv a iecorition J'iv New lin den, Conn., Ltentng 1 My. Th hand that rock th cradl rarely rocks th boat launched on Ihe ea of matrimony. Asheville, N. C, Tunes. If woman lbrekr were tried by Mind Juror I lie verdict tnlnlit be different. Nashville, Tenn., Ten ncstean. It Is a miahty small caliber offi cial who hss nut been photographed listening In on a riil.o set, In dinnapoli HUr. That wild man 'f th tennl- vsiila, mountain who wii caught bv a picbnlted trip fell fur tho "i.-riiRt of society." Cincinnati Tlmes-hiar. Th old-fashioned actrcus who hsd her Jewels stolen tins been crowded off th front page by ihe millionaire who bnx cellar bus been raided. Columbia is. C.) Itecord. Jury dim hai-Rcd nfter f.S hours of deliberations tn a Lo Angeles mur der case I said to hav "dlMgrrci! only on th question of guilt or In nocence." ri'obahly It ogrced per fectly on weather, ImmcImII, prohibi tion, etc. Cleveland News. w "'mm ls ? I : ar M'liMtNa 1111. )te " kiitJMf f at tall.a Iks I i.laial at liiiliaul Mniiii r lit.t.(j ThaltaaalBaJa M it I ti liuii "" - IU1I ' w' ir"-n tUw4 ft4 ft tt-Sf DR. CALDWLll3 SYRUP PEPSIN TtiC FAMILY UXAlrvfc Tk fe fIJlli grrue Fr.i .- r!ii4-4, huinitt. k-4disr w nut of win. .tU will end aut 'I e-ailtl tn4 comi'lei m l in. Bad hl aa eu,inxii Mill m edrJ i.mimbi14 el euttwa b pro tii ihuiiu. Hau .ounce sorru rait ftm v.irw ewin. m tf ia mm m)M la,- i Ikrf a! In uJ ll- H W t 7 m,,i K '4 ml tmt IW rlt Of f M4d jt wiVu tea iil H J klei tua .-fl, a J x- haaw J aVU . 8. t""1, "4 '""" kn4. lit IU m4 Until. SLOAffS RELIEVES NEURALGIC ACHES FOR forty years Sloan's Liniment has been tbe quickest relief (or neuralgia, sciatica and rheuma tism, tired mnacles and lame backs. Ask your neighbor. You just know from ft stimulating healthy odor that it will do you good! Keep Sloan'e handy and apply freely at the first twinge. It penetrates ttilkout rubbint. Those sudden sprains and itrains which unfit you for work or play are Soon eased when Sloan's is used. The sensation of eorafort and warmth surely and readily follows it Use. Sloan's matters pain. You'll find Sloan's Liniment clean ad non-skin-staining. At all dniggists 15c, 70c, 11.40, SUdDSi Liniment c 3 When In Omaha STOP WITH US Hotel Conant Hotel Sanford Hotel Henshaw Our reputstioa of 20 year fair dealing is beck of theie hotels. fluakla mat, -Inn at ana am nf lhn with Ihe eisuraoce of receiving hon it value and courteous treatment. Conant Hotel Company I 375 I jS,s'"s,jB",MaF asStafettejr4Pa(aAasaaaar,1 arcs Ifetilis The torrar aiikla Itch will quickly banlitvad by applying baton ntiring, Dr.Bobaoa'aEcsanaOliiti neat. Onset Dr.Hobeoa'S Family KaaMOM. HobsoiLS mm iTlii iniiQintmenta KEEPIN0 WELL An Hi T.hl.t (a vstabl spttUnt) taken t nighi will lulp kp you wll, by toning and trnfthnlng yeur dl- ..iih ana -iimm-iion. Chips off ihe OU Block M JUNIORS Little Me Ona-lhlrd th rtgulir do,. Mada of th sania logrediantt, than candy coated. For children and adult,. 5 Mierman ft .Mctaiinrll Urns Hlorm Shave With Cuticura Soao IHe Wew Way Without Mug Hotel Castle OMAHA NAAAAtAAeAVNWaraawMVSi'ajaMar1Maai Let these books tell you about r aaaa a- ' mm i bbbbBW i m T , . HE glories of its mighty granite peaks towering far above the tim ber line; its deep canyons; gem-like lakes and laughing cataracts. Its roaming deer, bounding bighorn sheep and busy beavers; its bright plumaged birds and brilliant wild flowers mariposa lily, forget-me-not, colum bine; its glorious sunshine and cool, bracing air; its irresistible invitations to play and recreation. Accommodations to suit'every taste ranches, camps, inns and luxurious hotels. The books tell the whole story, Write for "Colorado's Mountain Playgrounds' end "Rocky Mountain National (Estes) Park." Yellowstone National Park book, too. They are free. Fares Greatly Reduced Tu Quae Itoauid trisi Mir Uttla mere than the far on air, April is vacation planning month for summer vacations. Let us tell you bow cheaply you can visit Colorado. Then you will want to go on to Salt Lake City and Yellowstone National Park. For Iniorrottion tile Union Sudan, Consolidated Ticket Office, 1416 Oodf St., Phono Douglas 1684 A. K. Curt. City P8. A (tent U. P. System, 141S Dodge St, Omaha, Phone Dougtli 4000 Mia System (