"If you plow deep While sluggards sleep You'll have corn To sell and keep "--Foor Richard. Set dollars working for you while you sleep and you'll prosper. It's what you save, not what you earn, that brings prosperity. By systematically saving a little every week from your pay dieck; -and depositing with us, you will soon have many dollars working for you while you sleep. . We pay 4 per cent interest. Come in and let us explain the workings of our system. American Savings Bank 110 South Eleventh . Street Named for Lincoln J Made in Lincoln 51 IBERT H.O.BARRER Test of the Oven Test of the Taste Test of Digestion Test of Quality Test of Quantity Test 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 Green- .'Gable The Dr. Benj. F. Baily Sanatorium LINCOLN, NEBRASKA For non-contagious cbronio diseaaee. . Largest, bail quipped, moat beautifully furnished. Dr. Chas. Yungblut Dentin BSx ROOM No. 202 AUTO. PHONE 3416. BELL 656 LINCOLN, -:- NEBR. Wageworkers Attention We have Money to loan on Chattels. Plenty of it. Utmost Secrecy. Kelly & Norris 129 So. llthSt. A FEAST I SAMOA Develops Into a Conglomerated Scramble For Food. A SCENE OF WILD DISORDER. The Native Guests Steal All the Eat ables Within Reach, Which They Pass Over to Crowds of Waiting Relatives Gathered on the Outside. The principal native foods of Samoa are bananas, breadfruit, taro. fish and pork. Bananas prepared "Fa Samoa" would hot appeal very strongly to an epicurean taste, for they are gathered unripe and baked under heated stones, as all Samoan cooking is accomplished. A baked green banana favors some what a roasted chestnut, but not enough to cause any mistake between the two. The breadfruit. In my estimation, appeals more strongly to a white man's taste than any other Samoan food. The large, mealy. balls are bak ed, broken open and eaten, usually with one or other of the two Samoan sauces palusami and fai-ai. Palu sami Is made from the young shoots, of the . taro plant, cocoanut milk, and sea water. Fai-al Is evaporated cocoanut milk. The milk is poured Into a leaf, the ends and edges tied at the top, and it Is then baked until the; water evaporates, leaving a thick cream, which Is very rich and quite palatable. Faro Is the root or bulb of a plant which is an exact counter part of what we call "elephant ear" in the United . States and is somewhat like a yam. but inclined to be stingy or shreddy. The inside of a baked faro bulb is very solid and of a bluish tint. The fish needs no explanation. Pork is the supreme delicacy, accord ing to the Samoan mind, and it is al ways eaten in a half cooked state. Since a Samoan will sell his birthright for a. piece of pig. one-half grown is worth $30 or $40 and will always find a market; therefore it is easily seen that pork can he afforded only on hol iday occasions. The Samoan method of killing a pig is unique. The ani mal's feet are tied together, and it is laid upon its back. Then two large, heavy natlres place a 2 by 4 scantling across Its neck, after which they seat themselves one on each end of the scantling. As the unfortunate pig is slowly strangled to death his heartless execu tioners calmly talk politics. The rea son for strangulation In putting a hog to death is simply this: A pig Is held in such high esteem that it breaks the Samoan heart to see even the blood being wasted. The blood is used in conjunction with the fatty parts of the entrails and when baked forms some kind of pudding. 1 have never tast ed this kind of pudding myself, but a Samoan will tell you that it Is simply delicious, and I am willing to take bis word for it. Even the cleaned entrails are utilized, and right here In Samoa we can again bring into use the Chi cago stockyard phrase that "only the squeal is lost" 1 well remember the first and only Samoan feast I ever had the pleas ure of attending. I received an Invi tation one day from a Samoan whose friendship I had formed to attend a feast the following night which he was giving to dedicate his new home. There were several white men present and about fifty natives. We were ar ranged in two rows facing each other, sitting cross legged, and in front of each, was a small mat on. "2J4ch.was a profusion of "food, Including a" Tupe (or pigeon), a piece of pork (palusami), taro (breadfruit) In fact, everything which goes to make a Samoan feast all to be washed down with cocoanut milk. I had taken two . or three mouthfuls of the pigeon when I no ticed that there was a ring of natives each with a basket waiting impatiently Just outside the bouse. As 1 turned to the man on my right for the purpose of asking why these people were as sembled outside I sensed a movement , in close proximity on my left. Turning quickly around, I was just in time to catch a farewell glimpse of my tine supper being dumped bodily Into one of those waiting baskets. I saw at once the reason for that overflow meet ing outside. The woman who sat next to me had taken a favorable opportu nity when my back was turned to pick up my mat and dispose of my meal to her waiting relative, who had attend ed the overflow neeting with a bas ket Then ensued a conglomerated scram ble, and the feast was turned into n scene of wild disorder as each native strove to outdo his neighbor in secur ing the most food to send home.- The strategy, flank movements and tact that they exhibited under the inspiring grab game so far protoked my comedy bump that I was more than repaid for the loss of my supper in watching their energetic struggles to obtain foot! gratis. I was afterward informed that the pectacle I had witnessed was simply the natural course of a Samoan feast, that they always ended the same way and I was indeed fortunate to have secured a taste or so of my pigeon. Los Angeles' Times. The Indispensable Boy. - Caller How Is your new office boy getting along these days? Lawyer Oh. fine! He's got things so mixed up now that I couldn't get along without him. Puck. ''Think all you speak, but by no means speak all you think. Vienna's Municipal Railways. Municipal operation of public serv ices of all kinds is far from a failure in Vienna, the Austrian capital, accord ing to Hugo Weinberger, an engineer. "In Vienna the street car service, the gas, electricity, power and water are furnished by the municipality," said Herr Weinberger. "We don't crowd as you do' here. If the conductor lets more persons into the car than the law permits he goes to jail. Nearly always we have two cars run togeth er. In rush hours we run trains of three, maybe five cars. And how clean! Not till I came to this country did I appreciate that. If you get on in workingmen's hours before 7:30 in the morning you can ride anywhere over the city and transfer on transfer as you need for 2 cents only, riding per haps three hours. After 7:30 it is 24 cents in two of the three zones and 4 cents to go through the whole three. The city makes in profits millions of guldens a year." Women In Industrial Life. ' The department of agriculture of Prince Edward Island is occupying it self with the establishment of women's institutes. These 'institutes are being organized in all portions of the prov ince, the minimum membership being 20 and the annual fee 25 cents. The department is to provide ect'irprs twice a year, together with literature on domestic economy, hygiene and die tetics. Instruction is to be gi ren. among other things, on the im-wrtant-e of proper ventilation of dwellings, cleanliness, wholesome cooking of foods, food values, changes in diet, nurture of infants and physical and mental exercise.