h There is no after-glow When you blow out a Safe Home match, it is OUT. And it stays out. Every Safe Homematch is chemically treated to prevent after-glow. Safe Home matches are extra long and extra strong. The extra length means extra service. SafeHome matchesare non -poisonous. They are safe to have in the home. All grocers. Sc a box. The Diamond Match Company THE MARRIAGE QUESTION (Continued from last week)) "Backward, turn backward, oh, time. In thy flight, make me a child again Just for tonight." When I was a child in the good olden time and prayed at a fond mother's knee, oh, little thought I that the cares of the world would cast the dark shadows on me. William Wadsworth bursts forth in his poetry: "How dear to my heart are the scenes of my childhood, When fond recollection presents them to view! The orchard, the meadow, the deep tangled wild wood, And all the loved spots which my Infancy knew. The wide spreading pond and the mill that stood by It, The bridge and the rock where the cataract fell, The cot of my father, the dairy house nigh it, And e'en the rude bucket which hung In the well." Such are the sentiments that come from this right kind of unit of gov- ernmnlg this home, and you will ex cuse me, but It matters not where we go, how long we live, that home sen timent will forever and ever cling to us. I know of no better way to bring that sentiment vividly before you than is explained by Thomas Camp bell in his "Exile of Erin." There was a story that a man In Ireland, for some cause or another, I do not know what, was banished to an isle of the sea. and Thomas Campbell un dertakes to portray this man's feel lng for home and country while In this lonely place, and In the second verse of that poem it seems that the exile thinks first of his country, he exclaims: "Erin, my country, though sad and forsaken. In dreams I review that seashore: But alas! in a far foreign country, I IR I non" poison Qua I I A Snug, Inexpensive Garage Make your garage as comfortable to work in as your home. Line the garage walls with Cornell -Wood-Board. , Cornell WoociEoarcl - For Walls, Ceilings and Partitions If you like to "carpenter" put it up yourself. Applied right to the studding. Cornell-"vd-Hnmt is guaranteed not to warp, buckle, d.ip, crack ur Jail. It com but 4 CENTS PER SQUARE FOOT in full box-board cates. t oriwll Wood Board I iMiuifarturad by tha Conwll Wand ItotucU Po If! O Fritbu, PmidwO. tow awl to tuU turn g.ul.w ImUti tun. AtM KOUtt LfcJtU.U fOH KKhK i'LAN. S. A. Foster Alliance, awaken, And sigh for the friends who can meet me no more. Never again shall my brothers em brace roe, They died to' defend me, or live to deplore." And then his heart filled up as he thinks of home and mother. He bursts out: "Where in the cabin door, fast by the wild wood. And where is the mother that watch ed o'er my childhood. And where Is the bosom friend, dear er than all? Oh, my sad heart long abandoned by pleasure, Why did it dote on a fast fading treasure? Tears like the rain drop, may fall without measure, Hut beauty and rapture they cannot recall." My friends, the beauty and rapture of home cannot be forgotten. This circle called home, made up of father, mother, sisters and broth ers, may have their Internal trouble. It matters not if a brother knock an other down, or a sister pull another Bister's hair, it makes no difference; but when it comes to a common as sault against the home, the entire family is ready to defend that home where God reigns and love sits su preme. Dut how did this home begin? It did not always exist. What was the nucleus around which this home life grows? What was the beginning of this home? When Ood created the heavens and the earth and all that therein be, he created man and he created woman. He did not create man to live alone, neither did he cre ate woman to live alone. It was nec essary that this man and woman form some kind of a partnership to start this home, and that brings us directly to the question as announc ed. We call that partnership marriage. Nature and the birds form that kind of a partnership. They call it mat ing: we call It marriage. Who, then, should marry and who should not marry? I take it for granted that most, of this audience are married people. If happily mar rled, "God bless you." If you are not happily married, you might be likened unto that fellow who had the bear by the tail and around a tree, "A little tiresome to hang on, a lit tie uncertain to let go." I contend here, as I contended In California, that these two people come together according to the plan of Almighty God. The day when he created man and when he created woman he placed In the breast of each the power of coming to the oth er. I care not whether you call it instinct or int uition, or what you call it, but as I said out there in Califor nia, it seems to me that it is far bet ter to call it by the sweetest word in Stock and Supoly Tanks Will outlast several steel tanks or several tanks made from other ma terial, and cost less money. Thes tanks will keep the water cooler Id summer and warmer la winter. Send for price list today. ATLAS TANK MFG. COMPANY, Fred Buisen, Manager, 1102 W. O. W. Bid, Omaha, Neb. Lumber Co. Nebraska the English language, a little word of four letters, spelled and pronounced love . I can make this no plainer to you by any words of my own than to take you into that splendid por trayal of natural selection. Mark you, I don't say proper selection. We will come to that later on. A natur al selection, then, Is portrayed by Longfellow In his poem of "Hiawa tha." Those of you who are ac-' quainted with that splendid piece of literature will recall that the ancient arrowmaker's daughter was sitting there, perfectly composed and satis fied, nothing of an unsettled nature, and along comes a stranger from a strange tribe, and from some unfore seen means, I cannot explain it, la dles and gentlemen, by some way or another, he was attracted to the maiden and the maiden was attracted to him, and the beautiful language that Longfellow uses as she had left, going down through the woods with Hiawatha "Thus it is our daughters leave us, Those we love and those who love us, Just when they have grown to help us, Comes some stranger with flaunting feathers, Wondering, piping through the vil lage, Beckons to the fairest maiden, And she leaves all things for the stranger." The only consolation that could be gained from the circumstance was the soliloquy which follows: "As unto the bow, the cord is, So unto man Is woman; Though she bends him she obeys him, Though she leads him, yet she fol lows, Useless each without the other." Now I have an Idea that if my friend Francis Galton had been up there when Hiawatha beckoned to the maiden he would have said "Hold on, there, by, wait a minute until I see whether this maiden Is a eugenic companion for you. "No, Hiawatha; she is cross-eyed and freckled. You can't marry her. For such union will not be conducive to the ideal superhuman." I want to tell you, my friends, that there is a class of men gone crazy on this trying to arrange so that they can breed what they call superman; that is, man that will be larger and stronger. From the fact that the Chester- White hog Is better than the wild hog of the forest, forgetting that the Chester-White is the result of much interbreeding, so much that there is no brains left in him, nothing but avoirdupois. Yet these men are try ing to breed us up to this superman. So I thank fortune, my friends, Gal ton wasn't there to stop that wed ding. Now they propose to tell us that this woman and this man shall not marry because one is an idiot and the other is Insane. If an Insane man wants to marry an idiot, I say, all right, let him go ahead: but that is simply begging the question. Nebraska and most of the Btates of the union have now statutory restrlc tions upon the marrying of idiots and feeble-minded people, and those that have not will enact them before, very long. In all probability. i I can do no better in this question of selection than to briefly relate a little experience at the International conference on race betterment in California last August. I don't want you to think at all that I am exaggerating, but it was truly interesting. They began the program there with a paper from Lu ther Burbank, the plant wizard of California. Now, those of you who have read of Burbank know that he is a wonderful man, has aone won derful things in breeding plant life. In the hybridization, be calls it, of plant life, be has experimented so as to produce the most beautiful flow ers. Not only tills, nut nas improv ed the varieties of cereals so they are much more profitable to the grow ers, but Immediately following him came Prof. Paul Poponoe, of Wash ington, D. C, editor or the Journal of Heredity, reading a paper for an hour on proper selection in the hu man family, carrying along the same line of thought that Burbank did in plant life, and after he had finished, Prof. Irving S. Fisher of Yale Eu genics arose and followed In the same vein. During th'at time, there was absolutely nothing, there was no indication of any of the finer or di vine sentiment coming into home life or anything that would bring togeth er man and woman on such Impulse. They forgot one thing, and that was that when Burbank was experi menting in plant life, there was a human superintending hand, and I asked them there on the floor who it was that would superintend the breeding of human life. But who is going to superintend in this breed'ng of the human family; who is going to superintend this breeding that we can make the sup erhuman perfect? And when I told them that I believed there was some thing in this life that was above hu man power, I tried to tell them there were two kinds of sentiment; one was human and one was superhu man. Scientists take a grain of wheat and tear it apart: but they cannot put it together again and make It grow. It takes a, superhuman pow er to do that. Further, I contended there, and I contend here, that it takes a superhuman power to bring a man and woman together In holy matrimony and for the benefit of mankind. In that auditorium there were per haps 1,500 to 2.000 or more people, and when I argued that there ' was such a thing as human affection -expressed in the simple, little word "love" that told of a power, above and beyond human Bcience, and that this was the Influence under the su perintending care of Almighty God that brought about natural selection, the audience seemed to catch the spirit at once and was quite demon strative, and Professor Fisher saw the effect on the audience, he became quite excited. Says ae. I owe you an apology. I owe this .meeting an apology, I forgot the very soul of my speech. I meant to say that the proper, Intelligent study of eugenics would bring about the sweetest, the purest and the most enduring love." There was a little old man, he was an octogenarian, I afterwards learn ed, he and his good wife were sitting up In front, on loose chairs, and ev ery time anyone was talking, the old gentleman would move his chair and prime his ear; he seemed to be a lit tle deaf, and when I was through, he arose, and said: "Mr. Chairman, I enjoyed this meeting very much; sor ry I can t stay longer, but before go-j lng I Just want to make this state-, ment: Fifty-two years ago I went to I a taffy pulling, and there I made my selection of this lady, my wife. We , have lived happily together for fifty-: two years. To us have been born eight sons, all of whom, thank God, we have lived to see grow up, marry and have families." That was the best speech that "was made In that whole program that afternoon, and my emotions overcame me. I had to go up and embrace him. But bo it Is. There is where the proper, the natural selection is made. Stripped of environment, there would be no trouble In this world of ours along the line of natural selection. It Is quite hard for these human scientists to tell us now In this late day, after this human family has lived in open violation of God Almighty's law from the beginning .you might say, for these fellows to come now and tell us that by the proper selection we can overcome all that sin we have committed. (Continued next week) PURE, SWEET AtlD MELLOW IS "OLD KENTUCKY" Has the Luscious Flavor of Ripe Fruit A Wonderful Chew BEST PLUG TOBACCO MADE . The natural juices of choice to bacco leaf -have an appetizing, wholesome relish and the only way you can get their full benefit is to chew good plug tobacco. The choicest Hurley leaf pressed into golden-brown plugs of Old Kentucky makes a chew that has never been equalled for mellow quality and pleasing taste. The pressing of Old Kentucky is done so slowly that not a par ticle of the juice escapes, so that every chew of Old Kentucky is full of the wonderful fruity flavor and wholesome quality that nature put into the leaf. You simply can't get so much delicious appetizing flavor out of any other chew. Try a ioc plug of Old Kentucky and you'll get more solid tobacco enjoyment out of it than you ever had before. Ask your dealer for Old Kentucky. If you tire lutylng liigli interest rates in the Building & Loun call on the Nebraska Land Company ami get the money at reduced Interest rates. LEA UN A MTTLK EVERY DAY New Zealand has 25,000,000 sheep. Italy's national emblem Is the lily. Sulphur is used as a fertilizer In France. Alcohol Is made from chicory In Germany. New South Wales has an alum mountain. New York claims to be the world's greatest seaport. Philadelphia ,In eight months, has had 71 auto accidents fatalities. Nebraska's 1915 dairy products are valued at f 40,000,000. California's 1915 citrus crop will exceed 130,000.000 In value. The automobile output of the United States for 1914 was 700,000 cars. Roasted ceffee is an excellent dis infectant for sick rooms. All the parks and public gardens of Vienna are to be laid as vegetable gardens. Goethe was a literary genius at 24. A big girder recently shipped from Steelton, Pa., to Chicago, required four flat cars to carry it. STUDY SCIENTIFIC AGIUCULTUHE AT HOME The time has passed when ANY ONE can farm and make a go at it FARMING IS A BUSINESS and re quires more accurate knowledge than any other business or profes sion. Ten years from today the agricul tural coleges will be the dominant In stitutions of the country. Are you interested in a farm? Have you a tenant or do you intend to live on it yourself? In either case It behooves you to POST YOURSELF. LEARN THE GAME as it is played today. You would not think of investing in a business or running it yourself un less you had first acquired some knowledge of that particular busi ness. HOW ABOUT FARMING? What do you know about It? SCHOOL OF SOIL CULTURE CAMPBELL CORRESPONDENCE You can't go to an agricultural college you are too old, and what is more to the point, you haven't the time. But you can take a course in the CAMPBELL CORRESPOND ENCE SCHOOL and during your spare moments learn everything that you could learh at an agricultural college. You are losing HUNDREDS OK DOLLARS every year by not knowing. GET BUSY. Write at once for our CATALOG NUMBER FOUR and a copy of CAMPBELL'S SCIENTIFIC FARM ER both free. Address: CAMPBELL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOL Billings, Montana Delegates to .National Convention At the convention of the Nebraska division, T. P. A., held in Alliance April 28 and 29, L. 11. Highland of Alliance was elected to the national convention to be held in Lafayette, Indiana, in June. it. C. Strong of Alliance was elected as alternate. Other delegates elected from over the state were: Omaha, John W. Gamble, O. L. Wholford, H. G. Hoel, N. S Brown, W. W. Watt, Geo. W. Ung. A. W. Miller. Chas. E. Allen; Fremont, P. A. Williams; Lincoln, Zeno Mackay, R. L. Newman, Geo. L. Reeder; Nebraska City, Jas. Kast- ner; Grand Island, Geo. W. Kelso; Norfolk. N. A. Huse; Hastings, W. C. Alexander; Kearney, H. A. Web- bert; York, R. Woodrun. Dr. and Mrs. Franklin, of Bayard, drove over in their car last Thursday and were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Treffney. Don't Judge This Company by One Act of An Unthinking Employee Every employee of this company has been taught that his or her duty is to render not only e'fficient service but to be courteous and absolutely fair in every action. We have been foremost to establish and propose to continue our efforts to maintain good wages and good working conditions. In return we insist upon efficient service from our employees and courtesy and thoughtfulness in their dealings with our patrons. We feel sure that all of our employees are imbued with the spirit of service and conscientiously want to serve you, but all of us are human and all of us occasionally do thoughtless things. When you believe we have made a mistake, when you think we have erred in anjr way in dealing with you, please call it to our attention. We want you to feel free to do so. We want to correct any error that has been made any wrong that has been done and we want you to tell us about It so we may. Do not judge us by one act of an unthinking employee. Al ways we are trying to serve you faithfully and well. Iff "No! I Said Calumet!' "I want what I ask for I know what it would mean to go home without it. Mother won't takt chances she's sore of Calumet lure of light, wholesome, tatty bak ings of positive, uni form results of purity ' i and economy. You try CALUMET Baking Powder lay aside your favorite brand once and you'll never go back to it. Calu met is the world's best Baking Pow der it's moder ate in price. Recehred Higheat Award hru CI Bwi f'rw Slif la Ptuad Cm. Cheap and big canBakingPowdersdonot save you money. Calumetdoea it'sPure and far superior to sour milk and soda. John HodgkinBon, bar tender at the King & Wilson saloon, was fined ll") and costs Friday night by Polloe Magistrate T. D. Roberts on charges of drnukenness and disorderly cos-duct. mSm