5S The Only Save Route There are no sidepaths, no tunnels, no short cuts in acquiring money and property. Men have gone over the same route for centuries and there is no way open to any of us but the steady, conservative and matter of fact route. Save money and you will have it. Even squirrels save for the time when they can not work. Bees do the same. Both are hard workers and save more than they consume. We pay 4 per cent interest on saving accounts. Come in and let us explain our system. AMERICAN SAVINGS BANK 110 South 11th St. Named for Lincoln Made in Lincoln I (BERT OUR , . . Test of the Oven Test of the Taste Test of Digestion Test of Quality Test of Quantity Test t f Time Measured by Every Test it Proves Best Demand Liberty Flour and take no other. If your grocer does not handle it, phone us about it. H. O. BARBER & SON MH.O.BARBER ScSONsl J-IPERTYjt RYE FLOUR A SPECIALTY TELEPHONE US Bell Phone 200; Auto. 1459 Once Tried Always Used Little Hatchet Flour Made from Select Nebraska Hard Wheat WILBER AND DeWITT MILLS 145 So. 9th St., LINCOLN, NEB. Dr. Chas. Yungblut Dentist AUTO. PHONE 3416, BELL 656 LINCOLN, NEBR. ROOM No. 202 BURR BLOCK Wageworkers Attention We have Money to loan on Chattels. Plenty of it. Utmost Secrecy. Kelly & Norm 129 So, Htti St. Two New Year's Resolutions By A. N. JONES Copyright, 1910, by American Press Association. Jack Carmody couldn't meet a girl without making love to her, to the ter ror of his father and mother, who were always In dread that lie would marry some one far beneath his social status. ack woke up one New Year's morn ing, and the first words he said were these: "I solemnly resolve on this first day of the new year not to pay the slight est attention to any girl for the whole twelve months. But," here comes a saving clause, "if I do pay any atten tion to any girl it will be only such person as my mother shall approve." How pleasant one feels upon mak ing a resolution! It seems as if all past weaknesses are dead and buried and a new pure life has opened up be fore the resolver. Jack had especial reasons to feel thus, for the night be fore he had seen the old year out with a party none of whom would have been admitted to his paternal domi cile. One of them, a girl with whom he had been training for months, Moll Dugan, had been lying in wait for him and during the festivities had in duced another girl to suggest a wed ding with Moll as the bride and Jack Carmody as the groom. Having im bibed more than was good for him, he consented, but was saved by a friend, who put him into a closet and locked the door. It was the serious contemplation of this escape that led Jack, waking up at 11 o'clock on New Year's morn ing, to make the resolve mentioned. To one who makes a resolution with a saving clause, the moment tempta tion comes the clause looms up splen didly. Jack found it dull associating only with men, so he looked about him for some nice girl of his own class with whom he might pass an occa sional idle hour. Miss Gwendolin Kingsbury was a very ladylike young woman to whom Jack's mother had introduced him, trusting that the two might make a match. It made very little difference to Jack who was the girl, and he became much to his moth er's joy quite devoted to Miss Kings bury. But just as Mrs. Carmody was congratulating herself that her son was about to close the deal with her favorite her husband took it into his head to buy a ranch. Thereupon Jack announced his determination to go west and become a ranchman. : Mrs. Carmody was in despair, and Miss Kingsbury was both miffed and disappointed. But Jack comforted his mother by reminding her of His reso lution not to devote himself to any girl of whom she would not approve and to return before the end of the year and "fix it up" with Gwendolin. "You see, mother," he said, "where a man thinks of marrying a girl he should be sure she is going to be con stant. If Gwen is fancy free, except for me, when I come back I'll lead her to the altar and you can give us a bang-up wedding." Jack had no sooner got settled as a ranchman than, cantering along a road, he met a little greaser girl can tering in an opposite direction. She was about sixteen years old and pret ty. When she came to be twenty-five she would probably be a hag, but beauty is not what it will be, but what it is. Her costume was tawdry, but calculated to catch an eye that had begun already to miss seeing feminine apparel. Jack doffed his hat and joined the greaBer girl. Unfortunatelyor fortunately, ai tha case may be7the greaser" glFT Bad-a greaser lover. Nevertheless month by month Jack became more and more enraptured with her, and the greaser lover became more and more danger ous so far as Jack was concerned. The girl was really true to the man of her own class, but her parents did not propose that she should throw away the chance of a lifetime and insisted that she should throw over the man of her choice for a gentleman and a fortune. In November Jack wrote a letter of twelve pages to his mother, stating that he was about to marry the daugh ter of a Spanish grandee and explain ing in detail why the match was a very advantageous one for him. The missive threw his mother Into a fever, but she wisely said nothing about the matter to Miss Kingsbury. The next letter Mrs. Carmody re- ceived from her son stated that the match with the Spanish girl was off and he would be at home by the end of the year. Something had intervened. It was this: One morning the greaser lover met Jack riding with the "daughter of the Spanish grandee." Love and jealously long pent up burst their bounds, and the greaser opened Are on Jack. Jack drew and wounded the greaser, whereupon the girl pulled a pistol from her holster and opened fire on Jack. In the scrimmage all three were wounded, though none of them dangerously. Since the girl preferred the greaser Jack was disenthralled. Jack arrived at home on New Year's eve, went to bed at 10 o'clock and woke up the next morning at 7. His arm was in a sling and a scalp wound was bandaged. He made the follow-. Ing resolution: "I solemnly resolve that I will today propose to Gwendolin Kingsbury and that if she accepts me I will ask mother to lock me up till we are married." He kept the first part of this reso lution, and since his mother watched him carefully till the wedding the second was not necessary. WHAT THE LABEL MEANS. The union label Is the satis factory assurance that child la bor, the menace as well as the disgrace of modern civilization, has not entered into' the produc tion of the article sold and as sumed. It is the assurance that the work Is done under sanitary conditions. It Is the assurance of the pay ment of a reasonable wage and of a steadily Improving wage. It is the assurance of reason able hours reasonableness to signify that after the eight hour day Is a complete victory then may come the seven hour day and a six hour day, ever remem bering that labor's grand pur pose is the economic and social betterment of the masses. It is the assurance that so long as the Intense and deplorable form of competition, as evi denced in our present day In dustrialism, shall make it nec essary for woman to earu her bread in shop and factory she shall continue to enjoy econom ic equality with her male co-employees. t Tb7e" T3tis Elevator company has about fifty different shops In as many cities from New York to San Fran cisco. Its principal shops are lu Xonkers, N. Y., where more than 1,000 machinists are employed. The com pan? employ mere xtuA lfyWW sua