Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 14, 1908, EDITORIAL SECTION, Page 4, Image 12

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    TITE OMAIIA SUNDAY BEE: JUNE 14, 1903.
n
TinuOMAiiAi Sunday.' Be
TOOKDTEO BT EDWARD H06BWATKH
VICTOR ROSSWATER. EDITOR,
Kntared at Omtht Poetofflee second
class matter.
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Cundsy Bee, ona year 10
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Evening Baa (with Sunday), par waak...lue
. Address all eomplalnta of lrregularitlee In
' delivery to City Circulation Department.
OFFICES:
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CORRESPONDENCE.
Communication! relating to nawa and edi
torial matter should be addressed: Omaha
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REMITTANCES.
Remit by draft, express or postal order
payable to Tha Bee Publishing Company.
Only J-rent stamps recelred In payment of
mail acoounta. Personal checks, except on
Omaha or eaatern exchanges, not accepted.
, STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION:
State of Nebraska, Douglaa County, ss :
George B. Tischuek. treasurer of Tha
Bea Publishing company, being duly sworn,
says that tha actual number of full and
complete copies of Tha Dally, Morning,
Everting and Sunday Bee printed during
tha month of May. 108, waa a follows:
X 34,640 IS SS.100
SS.6S0 IT ,060
.700 .. MJtt
sasao if ujKto
.....se,eo so ss,sao
aa,0M ai SB,aso
.. ,sio aa aasso
84,370 83 88,800
88,180 84 88,100
10 88J00 8S ...88,000
11 344&0 aa sa,aoo
, 18 84410 87 30,880
13 38,180 88 38,880
114.,,,. 36,0tO 88 39,840
1 , 3S.B&0 40 38,440
, 81 86808
Totals X,180,S0
Leas unsold and returned copies.. 3,840
Net total 1.110,710
Daily average . SSas
OEORQE B. TZ3CHUCK.
I Treasurer.
Subscribed In my presence and sworn
to before ma this 1st day of June, IStOS.
, M. P. WALKER.
Notary Publio.
WHEN OCT, OF TOWN.
Sakeorlkars learlasj tha elty teas
po rarity ahaald have Tka Baa
mailed ta thaaa. Addraea will ka
, eksage as ftasi aa raaaated.
i There la no longer any question that
the ticket to be named at Chicago will
be Taft and
Publlo Printer Leech haa assumed
the duties of his position. He ought
to be able to stick.
Can you tell, off-hand, what became
of the William Stuyvesant Chanler
presidential boom?
t "Is reading in bed Injurious?" asks
correspondent Depends Tory much
upon what you are reading.
." Tha seating capacity oi a band
wagon Is really not aa important aa
good wheels and running gear.
' Venezuela Is entitled to real sym
pathy. Even if it gets rid of the bu
bonic plague it will still have Castro.
The opposition to Mr, Taft at Chi
cago promisee to be numerically less
than that to Mr. Bryan at Denver.
Frank Hitchcock gave up his proxy
aa national committeeman from New
Mexico when Sol Luna came ' out of
eclipse.
"When will we have none but hon
est lawyers?" asks the New York
Press. When we hsve none but hon
est litigants.
"The sentiment for Johnson grows
Stronger every day," says the New
York World. Perhaps, but sentiment
does not vote in the convention.
The country is getting along re
markably well, considering the .fact
that Senator Tillman and William
Randolph Hearst are both in Europe.
There van be no good argument
offered against King Edward's vlait to
,the esar, who has been doing a lot of
business with his uncles lately.
A college president says that secrets
cause most of the divorces. On the
contrary, a secret never causes a di
vorce. ' The trouble comes when It is
BO longer a secret
' It appears that Tammany fooled
Mr. Hearst the second time by not
stuffing the ballot boxea in that may
oralty election. in 105. Mr. Hearst
was also fooled by the people who
promised to vote for him.
It is proposed to perform surgical
operations on school children to see it
It will not make them bright The
plan should be dlscoursged. If it
works well the doctors may be trying
It on some of the rest of us.
i
Congress appropriated $10,000 for
the Piatt National park In Oklahoma,
la Justice to congress it should be ex
plained that the park was named for
the late Senator Piatt of Connecticut
and aot for the New York senator.
Eastern papera announce that the
price of lobsters has been cut In half
on account of the unusually plentiful
supply found in Maine waters. It is
funny how information of that kind
can so long escape the attention of the
proprietors of restaurants.
William Waldorf Aator, Jr., Is or
gaalsinc a semi-teetotal pledge a sac
elation in London, which binds ita
members to drink only at midday and
evening meals. Astor claims that
men need a stimulant to help their
conversation. If two drinks a dy
make Astor talk like that, we suigsst
he becoaas a total abstainer. ,
TBt CBOICt AT CB1CAOU,
James A. Oarfleld once won a nom
ination' followed by election for the
presidency of the United States by a
speech p which he declared that "the
shallows murmur, while the deep are
silent," and explained that the verdict
of the voters of America waa not de
cided in the heat and passion and
hurrah of political convention, but by
sober reflection of thinking men in the
homes and at the firesides, in which
the merits of Issues and candidates
were considered by the cold light of
reason. Mr. Garfield's picture very
fairly reflects the proceedings of the
republican national committee in ita
sessions at Chicago for the purpose of
considering the contests in the various
states over the selection of delegates
to the convention to be held this week.
The national committee has com
pleted its labors, so far as the consid
eration of contests is concerned, and
the result is simply a confirmation of
what all Americans have known for
weeks, that the sentiment of the re
publican voters of the country is em
phatically in favor of the nomination
of William Howard Taft of Ohio as the
next standard bearer of the republican
party. It were idle now, perhaps, to
discuss the motives of the opponents of
Mr. Taft The political game, in all
parties, is played by well defined rules.
Mr. Taft has been a victim of the usual
charges. It has been asserted that he
is not a real candidate, but is an echo
of the present occupant of the White
House. It has been charged that execu
tive Influence and federal patronage
have been used In Influencing delegates
to his support. It has been heralded
that while the voice was the voice of
Taft the hand was the hand of Roose
velt. On those Issues the preliminary
fight has been made and the contests
presented to the committee, The result
has been an overwhelming victory for
Mr. Taft. The contests from the south
have simply broken down by the weight
of their own Insincerity. Almost with
out the necessity, or even the request,
for a roll call, the national committee
composed of men, many of whom
have not been friendly to the Taft
candidacy has decided the contests in
favor of the Taft delegates, the evi
dence being that most of the contests
were trumped up solely for the pur
pose of "throwing sand Into the ma
chinery." The result of the preliminary In
quiries shows simply that Taft Is
stronger than Hughes or Fairbanks or
Cannon or Knox or any other candi
date mentioned for the nomination.
He haa had a wider experience as an
administrator, has met more people
and Impressed more people with the
solid worth of his character, and, more
Important, stands more emphatically
for the continuation of the policies
espoused by Mr, Roosevelt and en
dorsed by the -public. In .the final
analysis, Mr. Taft is the candidate who
Is needed and has been asked for by
the country. He stands for the prin
ciples that have taken deep root in the
political soil and best represents the
policies to which the republican party
la irrevocably committed. .
I HE AOt or SCHOOL TEACBKRS.
The Chicago Board of Education has
made a rule against admitting persons
of more than 60 years of age to teach
in the public schools, alleging as a
reason that 50 years Is the age limit
at which the mental and physical
vigor of teachers begin to decline and,
of course, Chicago will have none but
young men and women on guard to
guide its children and Olroct them in
the path of wiadom and knowledge.
It Is unfortunate that a body of men
charged with the most Important work
of the time, the education of the youth
of the land, should be led by Ignorance
or politics .to make a ruling bo fraught
with injustice to the teachers of the
country and, for that matter, to all
persons who hsve gatheied years, aa
well aa knowledge and experience. The
Chicago Board of Education appears
to have had the "Osier theory" In
mind. When Dr. William Osier, In
an address before physicians at Balti
more, Jocosely placed at 40 years the
age at which a man's usefulness to the
world ceases, many people took the
statement seriously and its publication
aroused wide discussion and criticism.
Dr. Osier vainly tried to deny serious
ness in his statement and the world
has generally come to accept his re
mark aa a Jest, but It appears that the
solemn and omniscient Board of Edu
cation of Chicago accepts his "theory"
aa law and gospel.
Men and women do not begin to de
cline at the age of 60 years. Study
of the world's history shows that ths
greatest achievements in literature,
art. science and education have been
accomplished by men who have passed
the sixtieth year. Von Moltke, at the
age of 70, waa Germany's chief strate
gist la the war with France; Blucher,
at 7S, reinforced Wellington at Water
loo and Dandolo stormed and captured
Constantinople at 96; Goethe com
pleted "Faust" at 82; Titian's brush
waa turning out masterpieces when he
died of a plague at the age of 100;
Humboldt began his "Cosmos" at 76
and completed it in his ninetieth year;
Newton discovered the law of gravita
tion at 60 and worked until he waa 84;
Lord Palmerston died in the harneas
at 81 and Gladstone's ministerial du
ties were continued until he was 84.
Literature and art and science- would
bo greatly impoverished If the Chicago
Board of Education had been in charge
of the workers in those lines and had
placed them on the retired Hat at the
age pf 60.
In teaching, perhaps morw than in
any other profession, the teacher is
also a student until his fiftieth year or
after. He can aot teach wisely until
be knows himself and his studies
rarely cease until his fiftieth year,
when he becomes more than ever capa
ble of imparting the information he
has gained by yeara of study and so
bered by reflection and deduction. It
would have been more to the credit of
the Chicago Board of Education if it
had made a rule prohibiting men and
women from becoming teachers before
the age of 40 or 60, Instead of prohib
iting them from teaching after they
were 60 years of age.
LET "DIXIE" a lout:.
An organization known as the
"Women of the Confederate Choir of
America" is making a misguided ef
fort to revise "Dixie" by elevating the
literary tone of It, without impairing
the lilt, of the tune. The revisionists
argue that the worda of "Dixie" are
rough, uncouth, almost coarse and
should be discarded for something
real chaste and classic. Poets are be
ing Invited to prepare verses that will
fit the good old tune and still be free
from the hint of rag-time and "coon-
song" elements that have come down
with the merry song of the southland.
It Is suggested that instead of the old
familiar words, the song be started
something like this:
Oh, Dixie Is the land of glory.
The land of cherished song and story.
It won't do. "Dixie" Is the land of
cotton, "Cinnamon seeds and sandy
bottom," and all the literary tinkers
In the world can't change it and
should not be allowed to try. It's a
home song, springing from the heart
of rustics and- dressed In homespun,
find it would be awkward, unnatural
and without Us real ring If it were
dressed in literary silk.
Regardless of acts of congress or
the commands of officials, "Dixie" Is
a national song and there Is no way
of getting around it. Assemblages
may arise, or stand with uncovered
heads, while the band plays "The Star-
Spangled Banner." Its sonorous
strains command attention and respect,
but let the band or the orchestral
strings and pipes strike up "Dixie"
and there Is an immediate clapping of
hands, laughter, stamping of feet,
cheers and the swell of patriotic emo
tion. It was a south song originally,
it la true. It was a battlecry of the
"Johnny Rebs" in every conflict be
tween Bull Run and Mobile Bay and
the north tried to learn to hate It. The
effort was in vain. Now that sectional
discord Is forgotten, "Dixie" has come
into its own, its every note pulsed with
patriotism and its every word written
In the language of the national heart.
"Dixie" does not .belong to the
"Women of the Confederate Choir of
America." It is the property of the
nation and its words should be let
alone.
MKHACE OF A PLAOVE
. Medical authorities of the govern
ment appear to b getting very much
in earnest in urging the' public and
the officials of the country to take
proper precautions against a possible
spread in this country of the bubonic
plague, which is spreading through
most of the Caribbean countries. The
marine hospital service has Issued a
number of bulletins advising the adop
tion of the most rigid sanitary meas
ures In both the Atlantic and Pacific
seaports and In a special publication
the people everywhere are urged to
institute and prosecute a systematic
warfare for the extermination of rats,
which are recognized as the greatest
means of sprekdlng the disease.
Latest reports show that practically
all of the coast towns of Venezuela are
Infested with the plague, which has
spread to Trinidad. All the ports of
Cuba have been closed to Venezuelan
commerce and the most stringent In
spection methods have been adopted
for vessels arriving at American sea
ports from Venezuela and the Carib
bean countries. Some time ago the
disease seemed to have had a strong
fcothold In San Francisco, but was
stamped out through energetic and
systematic effort of the federal and
local authorities. The best medical
authorities agree that the disease Is
most commonly spread by rats that
are carried from plague-infested coun
tries In ships' holds and soon spread
the contamination through the rats
that thrive In' the sewers, along the
wharves and in the warehouses in the
shipping centers. The experiments in
San Francisco showed that rats which
had been caught In ships' holds and
marked for identification were later
caught as far east as, Ogilen, where
they had been carried In cars contain
ing grain and other merchandise.
Such experiments, proving the danger
of a wide spread of the disease, have
caused the publication of the warn
ings and the agitation for a war of ex
termination against rats.
THE SOLDIER AtlD THE CURFEW.
The officials of the War department
have frownlngly discouraged the at
tempt of a captain in the army and a
Judge of the Juvenile court in Colorado
tha on l luted soldier something
VU iua aa v - - - i
of a mollycoddle. Incidentally, the
new rullna-. based on a court-martial
proceeding, Is a reaffirmation of the
old nrlnclDle that Cupid has perfect
right to follow the uniform, without
regard to town ordlnancea or parental
objections.
it annears that one of Uncle Sam 8
flthtlnc men. an enlisted soldier at
Fort Logan, was arrested by the civil
authorities of Denver because he was
keeping company with a young woman
not yet of age after 8 o'clock at night
All testimony offered tended to show
that the young man was demeaning
himself aa a soldier and a gentleman,
but that he simply couldn't help being
tt nn tha air). The evidence also
showed that the curfew bell had been
rung and the object of the soldier's
attentions, under the ordinances of
Denver, should have been tucked away
In the nursery under her mother's
guarding eye. The Judge of the Juve
nile court thereupon soaked the soldier
with a sentence of ninety days In Jail.
The company commander took a hand
and recommended to the War depart
ment that the soldier "be discharged
without honor," just as though he had
shot up a town or committed man's
size offense against the laws of his
country. Cupid, Mars and all the
folks who love a lover will be glad to
know that the recommendation of the
commanding captain was turned down
good and hard by the officials of the
War department at Washington, some
of whom were once young in their own
right and yet remember how they em
ployed their time when they were on
leave from barracks duty, and when
girls were just as plentiful and attrac
tive as they are today, in Denver and
elsewhere. The War department has
ordered that the soldier, just as soon
as he has paid the penalty Inflicted by
the civil courts, be restored to hla
place and rank, being required only to
make up to the government the time
he will lose by his ninety-day contrlbu
tlon to the terrors of Denver's curfew
laws.
The decision is wise and to the
credit of the Washington authorities
The "discharged without honor" mark
is never lost by one of its victims and
it should be placed only as a penalty
for some real offense against the laws
of the country or the regulations of
the army. Enough difficulty Is al
ready being experienced in keeping the
ranks of the army recruited up to any
thing like the authorized strength
There would not be soldiers enough In
the ranks to suppress an insurrection
In a home for the aged it enlisted men
were to be discharged in disgrace for
responding to Cupid's distress signal
RIGHTS CP STREET CAB PATROXS.
Street car patrons everywhere will
find Interest in a decision Just rendered
by a New York judge concerning the
duty of street car companies to pre
serve order on their cars and to pro
tect passengers who behave themselves
from injury and annoyance at the
hands of those who do not. In the
case in question a woman passenger
was hit in the face and seriously hurt
by a shoe, thrown by one of a number
of men who were engaged in a free-
for-all fight. The woman sued for
damages and secured a verdict for
$800. The street car company appealed
the case..
The street car company argued in
the higher court that the company
was not responsible for the throwing
of the offending sfioe. The shoe was
not thrown by an employe of the com'
pany, but by a passenger and, so the
attorney argued, it was the duty of the
passengers to protect themselves from
each- other. ' It was also argued that
the-1, woman's claim was not against
the company, but should have been
brought, in a suit for civil damages,
against the person who threw the shoe.
The court refused to agree to the
proposition that It was the duty of
passengers to protect themselves and
to. If necessary, become expert in
dodging shoes or other missiles that
might be thrown in the course of a
street car ruixup. The court held that
it was clearly the duty of the company
to maintain order on Its cars, and that
for a company to tolerate riots on Its
cars or behavior on the part of passen
gers that resulted In hurt or annoy
ance to other passengers was "an of
fense against civilization and unjustl
fiable." The award of damages was
sustained.
No street car company is going to
encourage lawlessness or unseemly
conduct on the part of its passengers,
but there is a disposition in too many
cities to allow too much liberty on the
part of half-drunken or quarrelsome
men who make street car riding un
pleasant, if not at times dangerous, to
respectable persons. The street car con
due tors and motormen, who always
have troubles enough of their own, are
too often disposed to overlook minor
acts of rowdyism on the part of some
passengers and endure open nuisances
rather than cause trouble. At the
same time, it should be remembered
that well-behaved passengers have the
right to protection from annoyance
and insults and it is the duty of the
street car companies to furnish such
protection.
Richmond Pearson Hobson has re
luctantly decided that there will be no
war between the United States, and
Japan for another year, at any rate.
For this relief, much t'anka. Heart
disease is too prevalent to make It safe
for the country to stand a presidential
campaign and a war with Japan at the
same time.
"If Taft is nominated," saye a
Georglvolonel, "I am going to etump
every doubtful state for Bryan." In
other words, he will do some spell
binding In Missouri and Kentucky
and they're not very doubtful.
John Hays Hammond's vice presi
dential boom has collapsed, tut it
.lent be a good plan to make him
chairman of the finance committee.
He has a worldwide reputation for his
ability to locate gold.
"The new directolre gown," saye a
leader of New York fashions, "Is a
most uncomfortable and highly expen
sive garment." No other reasons are
neceaaary for ita popularity.
Soma Scraps Oatalde tha Fames.
New York Commercial.
You have a tine country," said Cardinal
Logue to Mr. Rockefeller, and tha latter
modestly admitted as much. Of course It
waan't neceaaary to go into trifling details
and specify that there were some few odds
and ends to which air. Rockefeller had
not yet acquired title. , ...
SECTLAR SHOTS AT THE PULPIT
Chicago Record-Herald: It looks to a
layman aa If the greatest possible attrac
tion In any church Is a pastor who thor
oughly believes In tha religion ha preaches
and Is devoted to tha spiritual welfsra of
his flock.
Washington Herald: Rev. Dr. Dixon has
Just Informed Savannah that there Is "no
such place as h I." Doubtless there ars a
few thirsty souls down there, however, who
disagree strenuously with tha doctor, even
though politeness does prevent them saying
so out In meeting.
Kansas City Times: Bishop Brent of the
Philippines is the old-fashioned person who
cables his decision, using ths Bible as a
coda book. "John v to." There was a time
when this practice was at least as fash
ionable as postage stamp flirtation and It
was hardly good form It tha young woman
did not reply to her proposal of marriage,
"Sea Ruth 1:1."
Baltimore American: It Is a Una sign of
the times that In tha churches of America
the question of citizenship has ths front
place. The preachers of all denominations
are emphasising the point of active, ag
gressive morality. They are making it very
uncomfortable for the man who has dif
ferent codes for business, politics and Sun
day. They are showing the glaring weak
ness of any religion that finds excuses for
Its members because they think the preach
ing of Sunday should not be too closely ap
plied to the practices of Monday. A na
tion's safety Is In Its clean, moral, honest
cltlaenshlp. And the churches are doing
a noble work In educating and stimulating
the civlo conscience,
IERMOM BOILED DOWJt,
Prudence Is a good form of prayer for
Providence.
It's slow work tS'mbing to heaven on
smooth words.
Moral muscle does not come from mush
and moonshine.
More good men go to tha bad In good
times than In bad.
The best way to fight sin Is by being
friend to the sinner.
It Is slways easier to promise butter than
It Is to provide bread.
The price of finding truth Is being willing
to psy anything for It. .
It Is only the empty bag that needs many
props to maintain Its dignity.
When religion mesns closing the eyes it
never means keeplnk tha, mouth shut.
There never yet yas a milliner who could
do much toward your heavenly equipment.
It's not much use talking of loving folks
unless your llvlngjnskes their lives lighter,
When religion enters through the gate
way of common sensa It Is of uncommon
service.
Every man ought to be willing to leava
the world a few unsolved problems when he
has gone.
There are few temptations that continue
to allure when you get heaven's clear sun
light on them.
The fact that you are gaxlng at heaven
does not excuse you for standing on your
brother's corns.
The man who spends Sundays dreaming
over heaven often spends the week growl
ing over tha dirty city. Chicago Tribune.
PERSONAL AND OTHERWISE.
One hundred and thirty-first anniversary
of the American flag. Salute It.
Having bagged all tha big game In Chi
cago and elsewhere. President Roosevelt
naturally looks to Africa for exercise next
year.
Assurances coma from several quarters
that lobsters will be plentiful this sea
son, especially when tha campaign
opens up.
Tha Kaw river shamelessly persists in
vetoing the sovereign will by demonstrat
ing that large sections of "dry" territory
are decidedly "wet."
Beef is going up, steel Is coming down.
Unfortunately tha science of dentistry has
not progressed far enough to lake ad
vantage of the situation.
Scientists claim that tha InhablUnta of
Mara are suffering for water. A pipe
Una to the Missouri or tha Kaw would
help some, besides relieving the local pres
sure.
The optimistic Oeorga J. Oould, aa ha
was about to sail for Europe, kaid: "I
am leaving my properties In a comfort
able position." Four are In the handa of
receivers.
A short stretch of imagination enables
one to sympathise with the Chicago
woman who awoke from a fascinating
dream of heaven to find herself enchored
in the Windy City.
Universal suffrage prevails in Finland,
and the governor, unable to fill cabinet
positions satisfactorily, changed tha offi
cial furniture to bureaus, and his '.roubles
qulcly vanished. Wise old guy.
Maryland produced a bumper crop of
strawberries this year and marketed 10,
000,000 quarts. People addicted to the
strawberry habit will readily upport
Maryland's claim to be tha Uarden of
Eden.
me 6t. ijouis woman who threw a
lighted lamp at her husband haa been
given a vacation of ninety days from do
mestlc csres, and her darling, crisped In
spots, is rolling In cotton In a hospital,
Too much light on a subject often dis
courages an investigation.
Gracious Diplomacy.
Springfield Republican.
No diplomacy could be more gracious
than that of China In deciding to spend
practically all of the Boxer indemnity
which waa canceled by the United States
In educating Chinese boys in American
schools. Two hundred boys will be sent to
this country annually for a period of ten
yeara. Incidentally, China could hardly
use tha money to better advsntage.
Paalihmrnt Fits tha Crime.
Baltimore American.
Tha fool who rocks tha boat appeared In
Pennsylvania tha other day and got a lesson
which should be repeated on all his tribe.
He stood up In a rowbeat and rocked It to
scare two young , women companions,
wherest ons of them promptly knocked hlra
overboard with an oar and rowed away.
A crowd on tha shore cheered the ducking.
A Impressive Spectacle.
St. Louis Republic.
After observing ths Taft band wagon
during tha last few dsys, writers of a
former and mora classlcsl generstlon would
hsve called It tha Car of Juggernaut But
the allies In Chlcsgo clearly perceive that
they are In front of a ateam road roller
of heavy tonnage.
Pertloaa Lares for Maa.
St. Louis Times.
Within tha paat few daya ona maa has
been killed while gsslng st a pretty wom
an's pretty dress snd another probably fa
tally hurt while reading from tha "Ru-
batyat" of Omar Khayysm. Women and
song thus appesr to be mora disastrous
than wine.
A Gilded Saavealr.
Indlsnapolla News.
After tha convention Oovemor Jehnsoa
need not hunt up the fellows who furnished
tha gold brick. They will not take It back.
Gattlag a. sieve Os,
Chlcsgo News.
From ths crop prospects It appears that
the tdla boxcar aooa will have a chance to
wear the rust off its axles. . .
I v
DIAMONDS ADVANCE
I Just received woTd from New York Importers that diamonds
will positively advanca 10 per cent in price July 1st. I have a lar;o
stock which I will continue to sell at the old prices. Always re
member TOVn CREDIT IS GOOD.
Diamonds are Just aa good as United States bonds, why not
Invest? You'll not regret It-
A DOLLAR OR TWO A WEEK WILL DO
THIS WATCH $14.00
1.00
10-year, gore "Tried rase.
It size, IS jewrl movement.
regular 120 valui
special
this week at $14.
tl-00
Week. C.f Week.
A. MANDELBERG,
1522 FARNAM STREET.
FLAG DAY.
Henry Holcomb Bennett.
Hats off!
Along the street there comes
A blsre of bugles, a ruffle of drums,
A flash of oolor beneath tha sky.
Hats off!
The flag la passing by!
Blue and crimson and white It shines.
Over the steel-tipped, ordered lines.
Hats oft!
The colors before us fly:
But mora than tha flag la passing by.
Bea fights and land fights, trim and great,
Fought to make and save tha state;
Weary msrehes snd sinking ships.
Cheers of victory on dying lips;
Dsys of plenty and years of pesce;
March of a strong land's swift Increase;
Equal Justice, right and law,
Stately honor and reverend awe;
Sign of a nation, grest and strong
To wsfd her people from foreign wrong;
Pride and glory and honor all
IJve In the colors to stand or fall.
Hats offl
Along the street there comes
A blare of buglea, a ruffle of drums;
And loyal hearta are beating hlgbt
Hats off!
The flag Is passing by!
DOMESTIC PLEASANTRIES.
Mother Tou should have given an alarm
when that bold young Staylate kissed you
Is st night.
Daughter (demurely) I did give one.
Big Brother Humph! It must have been
a still alarm. Baltimore American.
"But." aald the lawyer, "your case seems
hopeless. I don't sea whst I can ta tor
you. Tou admit that you Mat your wue.
Tea, replied trie aeienaani. eui say
wife's testimony will discount that. She'd
never admit that aha waa beaten." Phila
delphia Press.
"Whst did father aay when you asked
him for mef"
"He didn't say anything. He fell on my
neck and wept. Chicago Record-Herald.
"They ear thst tips tor waiters have
greatly declined."
"I never knew them to be." Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
Farmer Comstock Who ara these folks
who hsve Just found out that they are
cousins and will pay ua a summer visit.
Maria T
Maria I guess they're tha earns folka we
discovered were related to us when we
A Start in Life Without Capital
To Men and Women (young or old.)
There Is an easily earned competency awaiting you In life Insur
ance work.
. There Is more activity In Insurance today than ever before. i
The only capital required Is Intelligence and energy.
Represtlng a high-class Insurance company Is pleasant and
attractive. There Is no long and difficult apprenticeship. Experience
Is not necessary for a start.
The beginner, with even ordinary salesmanship qualities, may
secure applications as quickly as the veteran solicitor. The independ
ence of the work specially commends It.
But everything depends on the company you represent . Secure
a contract with THE EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY OF
.THE UNITED STATES and you will have the very best there Is.
Even If you are at present well employed, and if you have never
given insurance work much thought, take the time to send a postal card
for the booklet "A Permanently Profitable Profession" and see how at
tractie the information you receive will be.
, II. D. NEELY, Mgr.
Omaha, Neb.
fin Vnn ffnmr
EJV I UU IlllU.tf
Of course your good taste makes you the best Judge as to case
appearance, and your ear enables you to appreciate good tone. But
can you tell whether the piano you select will endure? Are you sure
that the time will not become strident and tinny, the action flabby,
and the case warped t Can you tell how much money you ought to
pay for a piano?
Probably you cannot tell these things, for It takes a specialist in
. pianos to do that, and you are no doubt a specialist In some other line.
The piano you should buy is at Hoepe Company's, 1513 Douglas
street store.
WHY?
Because they carry the well tried, best known and most satisfying
line of Instruments shown west of the Mississippi river.
WHY?
Because pianos thst are now In the Hospe warerooms are the samf
makes that their customers bought in 1874 and since just thirty
four years ef personality both in pianos and dealer.
WHY?
Because we carry the best plsnos In the United States. Each piano
is marked at the one lowest price for wveryone and we par no one a
commission. Consistent with the truth of our statements of price
are our statements of quality.
We are factory distributers for Kranich & Bach, Krakauer,
Hallet ft Davis, Bush ft Lane, Kimball, Melville Clark, Cable-Nelson,
Weser Bros., Decker Bros., Burton company, Conway, Cramer, etc.
Our values are the beat in the United Statea.
A. HOSPO Co. 1513 Douglas Street.
. " Braadi Houses Lincoln, Kearney and York, Aeb. Council Bluffs, La.
Watches,
Diamonds
or Rich
Jewelry
Make Ideal
Presents for
June Weddings,
Engagements or
Graduation
I SELL THEM
Fon cash on
CREDIT.
INVESTIGATE!
$1.00 a
Week
Buys this beautiful
diamond ring, pure
white stone, H-karat
fro Id mounting, spec
al prlct
$25.00
Omaha's
Leading
Jeweler.
5 TZ'tr&SL
f.
IT
J Glasses In Time
I Save Sight, .
Neglect to have them proper
ly examined may cause a life
time of sorrow and regret.
Small disorders grow mora)
serious every day. There Is
satisfaction In knowing for
sure that your eyes are ail .
right. t
I We Can Tell You I
4sV
t
y" JACTOSIfv I
I MISlIimALSTOCURVS
J OMAHA. XEB.
..
wanted somebody to do our city shopping.
Baltimore American.
Penslvelv the soubreite who was touring
the provinces spplied the coloring mixture
to her hair In the solitude of her own
room.
"How sad It Is." she murmured, "to dye
so fsr from home!" Chicago Tribune. ,
"Jim hss Joined the silent msjortty."
"Whom did he marry ?" Houston Post.
Piann fliialifu
IUIIU fUUIItJf I
1
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