Green Gables The Dr. Benj. F. Baily Sanatorium LINCOLN, NEBRASKA for soa-cootsgioaa eareoio rtlwmas, Largest, best equipped, moat beaattfallw fttrmimhed. Once iTried Always Used Little Hatchet Flour Made from Select Nebraska Hard Wheat WILBER AND DeWITT MILLS RYE FLOUR A SPECIALTY TELEPHONE US 145 SXk Aa. 1459 RECTOR'S White Pine Cough Syrup Is a quick and positive remedy for all coughs. It stops cough iig spells at night, relieves soreness, soothes the irritated membrane and stops the tickling. 25c per bottle RECTOR'S 12th and OSL E. FLEMING 1211 O Street Jewelry and war 01 Precious MetalsS Best selected stock in Lincoln. Here you can get anything you want or need in the line of jewelry, and at the inside price. Especially prepared for commencement and wedding gifts. Watch repairing and Engraving. See Fleming First TILL THIS ON THE V. . There is mush quiet amusement ta administration circles anent an anecdote relating to no less a per on than the v e p nt A Terr sprightly lady who aat next to him at a dinner one evening last week turned suddenly to him and asked the q-aestion : "Pray tell me how too ever hap pened to he cl!fd Sunny Jim. "Madam." he wittily retorted, "I w called Sonny Jim when I was a little boy." lmrvdiasely the whole tahle was t Copyright " Anecdote of Emi Yat lVro-t" Bureau, Washington, O.) Chicago Tribune, Pr. Theodore Leasing, president of the ansi-noisr ax-iation at Han over. Germany, in a lecture on the ryvhoJor of noisw, recently deli ered iu thai city, said that the. de sire t make a nose could never be conquered. "U manifests itself not air in the yelling of teamsters and the whistling of hackmen, but in needlessly energetic wielding of itcdsf-niaking implements of trade," he continued. T'v l.Vv. i - ,: UVvi;.-t. :s 8,' M..i;:v.v !V : haxut.c Iwn pro:iso!cd by PUi II: father an A ;.-: arW hisJvp, and he is the first cas of a member of an archbisho- far.iily sng over to the churvh -.. me. So. 9th St, LINCOLN. NEB. DIAMOND BITS ARE COSTLY Fair Value for the Eight Needed In Drilling in Rock la About $800. A diamond bit for rock drilling is quite an expensive article. Its value, however, will undergo fluctuations, dependent upon the price of the dia monds. Perhaps $S00 is a fair value for a bit. The diamond used is ex ceedingly hard harder than those usually used as jewelry. Their carat price is considerable, averaging, say, at $60 a carat The diamonds used will weigh from one to two carats, so that eight have a value ranging from $430 to $960, on the average. The loss of a bit means so many dia monds gone and may lead to diffi culty with the hole. The diamond is not tough, but brittle. It will with stand heavy pressure if applied even ly and without shock. It can read ily be seen that drilling through seamy rock may become quite unfa vorable. If there is much quarts present the abrasion may become ex cessive. Under ordinary conditions, however, the wear on the diamonds, while considerable, is by no means prohibitive. Cassier's Magazine. SHE DIDNT REALLY MEAN IT Rejected Suitor Takes Young Lady at Her Word and Receives Only Abuse. "I'm so sorry,' she said, as gently aa possible. "But I cannot be all that you wish in your life. I will always think of you as a very dear friend, though. "Thanks," he muttered. "And if there is any way in which I can ever help you by advice or en deavor you must not hesitate to call on me. "Do you mean it? Well, there is a wav, right now." "What can I do?" "Ton have refused to marrv me. So I thought I'd propose to Mollie Jones. If youll see her and put in a good word for me it'll help me a lot and might make me the happiest man on earth. My destiny's still in your hands, and And that was all he said. For she interrupted him by saying that he was the meanest, lowest, aneakin'est man on earth and that she would never speak to him again as long as she lived. THE REASON Mrs. Kigby Is she happy sine she secured her divorce? Mrs. Digby Very. As a wife he allowance was only $50 a week, hut now he has to pay her (50 a week alimony. HIS CALCULATIONS. She 111 be ready in a minute, dear. He All right JTl just fix this paper while I'm waiting. I wont take more than an hoar." BIG PROBLEM OF COLLEGE Many Parents Doubtful of Wisdom of Sending Their Boys and Girls There. Shall we send our boys and girls to college? That is still an open question in the minds of many par ents who are not convinced of what they have seen of graduates and un dergraduates that the years spent in separations and supposedly in study pay. The answer to this question, we think, may often be found in the wish and ambition of the boy or girl. To cross the settled desire of a thoughtful boy must always be a doubtful matter. The real question is whether the unthoughtful and the unambitious should be sent Many of these may be waked up to ambi tion in college, but their chances of success in life will be much greater if they enter with a stro-initial purpose and desire. It might be well if fathers and mothers were this summer to question their sons and daughters who are nearing the col lege entrance age to ascertain wheth er they have given any real thought to what the college opportunity stands for to themselves in particu lar. If the nebula of childish think ing that goes with so many of the examinations could be reduced to definite points of light before en trance it would greatly simplify the task of the colleges and increase the chances of success in life for every student' There was a wise father, himself a successful educator of boys, who insisted that his sons should have at least a year's experience in business before they went to college. Their success in various walks of life has amply vindicated the wis dom of his plan. The Congrega tionalist NOT SO FAR FOR MAD TO GO Hewitt Which can get more an axy a thin man or a fat man ? Jewett It's much easier for a thin man to set mad clear through. CHEESE AS FOOD. Cheese contains all the essentials of human food, according to a pamphlet recently issued by the de partment of agriculture. The popu lar belief that cheese, even when green or un ripened, is difficult of di gestion is not justified. The milk ol ids in cheese are very digestible ana make an almost perfect food. With the addition of rennet and the development of lactic acid in cheese- making, some chemical changes take place ; but these do not transform di gestible solids in milk into indigest ible solids in cheese. The digestive distubances attributed to peculiari ties in the cheese itself are. probably due merely to over-eating, or to the custom of eating cheese only at the close of the meal, when one has al ready had more than enough food. TWO MILLION YEARS OLD. An important discovery recently made in Spain appears to place be- vond doubt the existence of primi tive man in the Pliocene period sav between one million and two mil lion rears ago. Simple and rough ly fashioned tools were found asso ciated with rocks and fossils which undoubtedly belong to this period. Modern discoveries have greatly ex tended knowledge of man's antiqui ty, and have shown that the human race was in existence long before the Ice period which succeeded the Plio cene era. , PILOT LIKE HIS NAME. "My, how the car slips and slides 1 I must discharge this chauffeur." "But perhaps he'll improve if yon give him a chance. "Impossible. His name is Skid more." Life. QUITE EVIDENT. "I found a rare biography of Amerigo Vespucci in a book store yesterday. "I'm not interested very much in the lives of Italian bandmasters. 1 ' MUSIC HALL ARTISTS' PA! Sixty Years Ago They Got Four or Six Shillings and an Allowance of Gin. Music hall artists' salaries have increased during the last 60 years. In 1842 a writer in Blackwood's on London entertainments stated that the chief music halls of the metropo lis "the the Catherine Wheel in Windmill street, the Mogul in Dru ry lane and the Eagle in the City road. These contain spacious apart ments fitted up for hundreds of both sexes, having at the upper end a platform on which is a grand piano. The singers usually include a prima donna or sentimental leader, a basso, a primo buffo and one or two other nondescripts. The music is of a pop ular class songs of our English school, though airs from Auber and Bellini adapted to English words are well received. Six shillings is the! usual nightly remuneration of in strumental, and four shillings of vo cal performers, with a reasonable al lowance of gin and water. The price of admission varies from two pence to one shilling, according to place." London Chronicle. HIS FATAL MISTAKE Visitor I suppose now, you wish' you had taken the straight and nar row path. Prisoner G'wan! Dafs what I did take. If T only dodged into dat crooked alley dey wouldn't a' ketched- me. ROMANCE FLIES AWAY. Mr. .Charles Alden Seltzer, ques tioned recently about the scene of bis newest book, "The Two-Gun Man,' replied : "All the romance has gone from the west now. I believe I would find very little in Xew Mexi co now to remind me of the old west Of course, a transition was inevit able; civilization must advance, and with its advance the old conditions. and old customs must go. Fences and laws and sheep have stopped cattle stealing and the cowpuncher is dethroned. - But he was once king, with the unf enced range for his king dom. He lived a free, hard life, obedient only to his own desires. I wish to remember him as I knew him and do not wish to return to de stroy my sense of the romantic in the west" Outing. JOB SEEKERS AS A GAUGE. A man once ran for office, and after a very dose election the re turns showed that he had been elect ed, by a few votes. A friend with whom he had been discussing the matter asked: "What makes yon think that all the votes weren't counted?" "You see," replied the successful candidate, "I'm judging from the number of fellows " who've come around - asking for a job on the ground that they voted for me." A CONSIDERATION. "Thirty-eight cents a dozen for eggs !" expostulated the lady. "Why, thaf s more than three cents for one egg" .' "Well, mum," replied the grocer, "you must remember that one egg is a whole day's work for one hen." Housekeeper. MODERN EDUCATION. "Fifth grade this year, Tommy?" "Yes, sir." "You're in decimals or fractions now, no doubt" "No, sir. I'm in crochet work and clay modeling now. QUICK WAY. Lady Visitor Is there any way in which these foreigners can he made to feel an uplift in their lives ? Resident Sure, lady, they has all the uplift anybody here wants. They uses bombs. ORGY FOR THE CANNIBALS New Guinea Natives Once Caught 32S Chinese and Ate All but One of Them. Probably the biggest cannibal orgy on record is one of which Miss Beatrice Grimshaw tells in her book, "The Xew Guinea." "In 1858 a shipload of Chinese was being taken down to Australia. The vessel was wrecked upon a reef close to Bossel island (Xew Guinea). The officers escaped in boats, but were never after heard of. As for the Chinese, numbering 326, the natives cap tured them and put them on a small barren island where they had no food and no means of getting away. They kept their prisoners supplied with food from the mainland and ev ery now and then carried away a few of them to eat, until all but one old man had been devoured. This one succeeded eventually in getting away, and told something of the story, which seems to have met with general disbelief. True it is, how ever, on the evidence of the sons of those who did the deed." JEWELRY AND ART THEFTS Great Robberies of This Kind Often Nearly Synchronize, Saya London Paper. Curious that great jewel robberies nd great art thefts often nearly syn chronize, comments the London "Chronicle. Gainsborough's Track less" was stolen in May, 1876, a few (weeks after Hatton-garden was re lieved of 25,000 worth of precious jstones. Mr. Wertheimer's pictures iwere lifted in February, 1907, and a imonth or two later 50,000 of state jjewels were taken from Dublin icastle. In January, 1908, Queen Auexan jdra's miniatures disappeared, 5,000 worth of jewelry disappearing soon after from Wiomnore . street The : "Turners" which were bagged in !March this year immediately preced ed the vanishing of 2,000 worth of gems in a train journey from Bugby ito Euston. And now we have the case of the Louvre "Da Vinci" and the Dalston haul of diamonds. BUT COULD HET - "How absurd some of the jokes about married people are !" says he. "Aren't they?" laughs his fiancee. "I read some the other day about married men having to wash the jdishes, and that sort of thing." "Perfectly ridiculous !" "As if a man ever would have to wash the dishes after he got mar ried !" "Silly r . "Seems to me they could find something funnier than that to print" "Indeed, yes!" "How does anybody ever happen ot write such nonsense 7 "But, Nearest" "Yea, my angel?" "You know how to wash dishes, don't you?" Judge's Library. FEAT OF CLIMBING. A wonderful feat of rock climbing in the Grindenwald, Switzerland, was accomplished recently by Mr. Percy H. Thorp. He succeeded in climbing up the face of the Eager to the Eigerwand station of the Jnngfrau '.railway (a tunnel rail way) and clambered in through the aperture by which travelers admire the view. This aperture is situated at a great height above the valley, and the rock wall reaching up to it is almost as steep and smooth as the side of a house. The feat has never been accomplished before. A CONSCIENTIOUS SENTRY. An officer at a state camp decided to Gee for himself how his sentries were doing their duty. He was some what surprised at overhearing the following: "Halt! Who goes there?" "Friend with a bottle." "Pass, friend. Halt, bottle." Everybody's. GIVING HIM THE HOOK. "You will excuse me, madame," said little Binks to the fair lady at the reception, "but really I didn't catch your name." "How funny," said the lady. Tf s Fish." Harper's Weekly. THE REASON. "Why do people always wait for the verdict of a jury in a murder case with breathless suspense ?" "Because a hiuglig mutier is al ways cause of breathless suspense." DRESSING A LONG PROCESS Modern Man Must Do Many Things Before He Is Ready for Breakfast. "Life is too short to sleep," saya Mr. Edison. Most of us, however, seem to need sleep. The inventor is more practical when he adds, "It takes me one minute to undress at night, 40 seconds to fall asleep and two minutes to dress in the morn ing." It takes other people longer to dress and undress, and maybe that is why there is but one Edison. Nowadays it does not suffice to doff night and don day raiment Dress ing in the morning is a rite an hour or more long. One must- swing dumbbells, and have a shower, and brush his teeth, and gargle - his throat and spray his nose, and rub his gums with magnesia, and shave, and apply witch hazel, and knead his scalp, and use an eye cup, al eat quinine for a cold coming or going, and uncork liniment for soma local ailment Most of these processes are under taken to promote health, preserve youth and postpone old age. They are like lifting one's self over a fence by the boot straps. They H the first hour after sleep with fussy activities and bring the subject t breakfast tired out While he i primping, youth passes and old age arrives, if one will not do aa Mr. Edison does, better take a leaf from Garfield's example he read the classics while shaving and equip the bathroom with wall charts and improving books, oilcloth bound. New York World. NATURAL DEDUCTION "Yes, sir; he's a man of sterling integrity. His character never has been assailed. "What?" "I say his character has never beeat assailed." , "Then he never has been in poli tics." QUICK ON THE TRIGGER. At the risk of cutting off his reg ular morning tonic, every right thinking man must have a sense that conditions would be improved in this land of the brave and home of the free if the merry little pistol wss not so conveniently accessible at all times. Under stress of passion or ia the presence of apparent danger tha most peace-loving are at times ca pable of committing homicide, fa what they believe to be the profce tion of their life, their honor sr their property. But the protection assured through the instrumentality of firearms is generally more "fancied than real. Honor, particularly, "is shattered far more often than it is preserved through recourse to tha gun, which has brought death ia more than one instance to an inno rent victim, and left the survivor a life of bitter but unavailing i Washington Poof. TOURISTS INCREASE. The high water mark of tourists risiting Switzerland was reaches! last Jury, when the Swiss Federal railways, exclusive of the funicular tines, transported 7,972,000 travel ers, and the receipts amounted fa $3,600,400, which, totals have never been attained in previous Tears. At present owing to the weather becom ing' suddenly chilly in the higher ro lorts after two months of heat, aowds are coming down to the large towns, while the express trains are ilso taking away many visitors, es pecially Germans and Italians. SAD FEELINGS. "Ja?2sbv takes even his pleasures ?dlv."" "He does?" "Yes, and to sm-h an extent that srhen he goes on a spree, he never lees green serpents, pink monkeys or purple elephants, like other fows; he sees nothing but black snakes."