Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1912)
THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, JUNE 23, 1912. 1 1 I The Omaha daily Bee TOU-NDKD BT EDWARD ROSEWATER VICTOR ROSEWATER. EDITOR EM BUILDINO. FARNAM AND 17TH. Entar4 at Omaha PoatoMca as acoond- TSRiid OF SUBSCRIPTION. " raaday Bee, one year 2.50 aturdav Bee. one veer CM Pally Bee (without Sunday) one year .14.00 Willy Bee and Sunday, one year DELIVERED BT CARRIER. CWlnr Bee (with Sunday), per mo... 25a party Bee (Including Sunday), per mo.. 65c Pally Bee (without Sunday), per mo... 45c Addreea all complaints or Irregularities 111 delivery to City Circulation uept. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order. maun iv Alio ikb a ujiwu."!, rf . inly J-cent stamps received in payment ti small accounts, reraonai cneciie, i tpt on Omaha and eastern exchange, sot fcoeepted. OFFICES. Omaha The Bee building. 8outh Omaha 2311 N St. Council Bluff 7t Scott Et Ltnooln-J IJttU building. Chicago 1548 Marquette building. Kansas City Reliance building. New York- West Thirty-third. Waihington 7S8 Fourteenth Bt. W. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relatlnc to news and editorial matter should be addressed Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. i MAT CmCTLATION. ,-60421 Itftte of Nebraska. County of Douglas .is, Dwlght Williams, clrculauon manager HI The BM FuDllining company, Deing duty sworn, says that the average dally emulation for the month of May, mi, was KHiU D WIGHT WUUaMS, Circulation Manager, lubsorlbed in my preeenoe and sworn to before me this th day of June, 1811 (leaU ROBERT HUNTER, , , Notary Public lberibre ' leavlaa thm iy hnpeisrlly ikstld kTe The He mailed . tkem. AMwh , will b skuni aa aftem as tw t nesed. faUsnea It M refrnhlni as !vater in hot weather. lea from tha smile) ho is wearing, Old VlBg Corn la eridently satisfied with H Is si raif leant that leap year fiads 1,000,060 women with the rtgnt Iftffl effiesseekers who would rather f down In defeat may.have their wish gratified, Per the weather mas July IT BMfcablf waa recalling that July IT, ,1110, made a record of 104, H wilt taka mare than a eheek fer $160,000 to get 'Mother national 'eeaventlon located In Baltimore, When Justice Hughes can "under HO circumstances," the words mean simply "under no etreumateneei," 1 To pUy, "Tho Wvoreo Question' will go on tho ro4 nest season, It a bad Quito o run in several big cltlei, "Were you over la GlnelsnaUf " tresis la tho Chicago Intor-Oooan, Think of asking that Question with tho aweary ollmhing. : Tho first wheat harvest reports in Nebraska show a yield of from fif teen to twonty-fivo bushels an aero. Js'ot so bad for a starter. These prise fight fakert about to stage another farce at La Vega are not getting the free advertising (that promisee big returns. "To tho republican r vrty l owe all that X have bad In publlo life," say Senator Lodge, who refuse to let 'oven , personal friendship make an ingrato of him. Tho man with his traveling bag pasted all over with label from va rious way-stations would not fer anything remove tho label for (ear he would not then bo mistaken for a globo ,trotter. f After all, what Is a political crisis to a country Ilk ours? We have had so many of these crises and got away with them so handsomely that wo rather court thorn for tho exercise they offer. Tho Saviour of mankind set an Inspiring example to tho world by loot only working, but exalting work land no mail may faithfully do less 'at any tas than hie best, for it Is impossible to exalt toll by shirking la duty. 4. . - : : : ; '!: .; Had Colonel Bryan deferred his description of Colonel Roosevelt' (preliminary defeat, the picture of the event. Invested with personal atmosphere, 1 would have rivaled a -iEtler -etching, la color and feel -.Ing. .' v" ' , ' ' Tho voice of the people, which In the democratic primaries in Nebraska spoke out loud for Champ Clark, teams to have been lost by tho dele fates whim they arrived In Balti more.:..', v ' ; Senator, Knute Nelson of Minne sota say he will aot bo a candidate for another term la tho senate. Ho Is now past 70 and expresses disgust with tho trend of hi party In, his state. Minnesota will miss Knute Nelson, and so will the senate. Vardaman, Mississippi's wild man. thinks ho is a fighter, but he cannot frighten Mr. Bryan. . He went to Mr. Bryan' room at Baltimore to "make peace." fWbo are you for?" snapped Bryan. "For Harmon,- replied the fire-eater from tho land of chills and ague. "Get out of this room. No Harmon man can come preaching peace to me." And reports say Var daman got without further ado, '' v. - : The Party of the People. One could not scan the list of field marshals at the Baltimore national convention without appreciating the force of the democratic boast that It Is "the party of the plain people." First came "Boss" Murphy of Tam many, with New York's ninety votes in his vest pocket. ' Then came "Boss" Sullivan of Illinois, "Boss" Taggart of Indiana, "Boss" Hearst of every where, to say nothing of a few hefty leftenants like "Boss" Thomas For tune Ryan, sitting as a delegate from Virginia, to see that the "masses" got a square deal. Nor should we over look August Belmont of Wall street, Dc Lancey NIcoll of Wall street, Wil liam F. Sheehan, Tammany's late de feated choice for senator In New York; Clarence H. Mackey, the Pos tal telegraph magnate. The relentless vigor with which these patriot fight for the "plain people" was nothing short of heart rending. . , Meat Supply and Prices. The big meat packers insist that they would welcome a decline In prices that it would mean larger profits to them. They declare that if It were not for tho by-products, they could not continue in profitable business. . . .. Meat is from 25 to 40 per cent higher than a year ago, while at the five principal packing centers re ceipts of cattle were 25 per cent less in May than a year ago. A thought ful person will readily find many reasons for a stringency in meat supply from the range. In the first place, the range has not quite ad justed iweif to the newer laws favor ing subdivision of many of the great ranges. In tho next place pastures were scorched last year and tho corn crop lacked moisture, so the farmers sold off their stock very heavily. This year, with pastures in excellent condition, finds the farmers short on cattle and facing the alternative of either leaving the rich pastures unoccupied by large droves or buy ing new supplies at heavy prices and running the risk of having to sell later at smaller figures. These conditions wore not created by the packers. It is only fair for consumers of meat to look at them as they are. . ,.' Keep the Boy Busy. Vacation time should not mean complete Idleness for the boy who is largo enough to attend school, v He should be given the freedom that boyhood requires, of course, but not unrestricted license. Ho deserves better than that at the hands of his parents responsible for his bringing op. Give the boy something to keep him busy. Even though it be a Very small task, let him feel that each day during his season of recreation, something is expected of him. ' Tt will make a better boy of him, give blm a larger idea of his own lm portance and fit more nearly Into lino With that tho school during the longer period of the year is trying to do for him. Overindulgence is no more wholesome for a child than for an adult. Of course the child Is not tho one to find this out and fortify himself against it That i the duty of tho parent Club Women in California. Nine hundred thousand American club women are represented by del egates holding their conclave in San Francisco. This convention assem ble under circumstances to them most auspicious. In the first place, it is held In a state which but re cently granted woman tho right to vote and sent two women to a na tional political convention and la on tiro with reform schemes which the club women have been tealously pro moting tor years. A sister state, Colorado, Bends two women to an other national political convention. Equally significant Is the fact, that 1,000,000 women, more than tho membership of all their clubs in this country, will have the right this tall to go to the polls and cast their ballot side by side with the men. Of course, lt is pardonable to men tion" that the men have, graciously given them this right - So, while of course, the Woman' club ha other aspirations than tho elective franchise, then California surroundings must cheer the good women on to real achievements. No mere difference of opinion with these alert women must disparage the power they aro accumulating or the influence hey are wielding. 1 ' The Curbstone Hasher. The policeman, as a rule, knows his business bettor than another can tell lt to him. Me knows that it is hi business to prevent as near as possible the irritating nuisance of "mashing" on tho streets. There fore ho may bo expected to do some thing to reduce the measure of this annoyance which Is going to extreme bounds in Omaha Just now. It is especially noticeable during the noon hour on principal downtown corners where youths or quite young men, puffing their post-prandlal cigarette, ogle and pass remarks at working girls and women obliged to pass their way. There is no good reason why women, to whom such gratuitous at tentions are distressing, should have to tolerate them. Speaking of. bolts, how .would a bolt of lightning, followed by copious showers, Sttlttr CAEE OF THE BABY IN HOT WEATHER -By R. W. Connell, Health Commissioner. (By Request.) Some valuable hint have been pub- rhea stop all food. At the first sign of llahed by the department of health of Chicago, pertaining to the care of the baby, a number of which will be quoted. There are many who have the care of babies who are unable to keep ice boxes or even furnish ice for the proper Care of the milk, but there are very few who can not imDrovlse a cheao ice bo sufficient to keep the milk in as good condition as though they had an ex- pensive refrigerator. It is made in the following manner, with anv ordinary noun box or fruit packing case. In this is Dlaced a tin nail umunM with a sheet of tin bent in circular form, which makes an air space. Between this and th wn f th. t norv wits .,M,,.t Place the Ice in a circular chamber sur rounding the pall. Fold one doren thick nesses of newspaper the size of the box and place over the top and cover with lid. The cost of ice for a box made in this manner would be only or 4 cents a day. The visiting nurses in their work this summer In looking after the welfare of babies will make arrangements whereby they will furnish these kind of boxes and also the Ice, to those who have In fants and are not able to supply the boxes and ice themselves. A postal dropped to the Vlslnlng Nurses will re ceive an immediate response. The best substitute for mother's milk Is properly prepared or modified cow's milk. Milk should be modified accord- ing to the age. health and strength of u. uaDy unaer . aov.ee o me pnysi- Wttlt tJ . . . " """y c"'e "T looseness Ol tha bowels or Is feverish, something IS Wrong. Bend for the doctor. ine new porn Daoy IS so unosveiopea It needs its mother to complete it. Be- fore birth it needed her blood, after birth u neeas ner m.iit. cow miiK, wnne it is tne nest suosiuute, is aaaptea natur- ally only for the calf, and unless lt is moamea tor tne inaiviauai oaoy u is about as well fitted for the baby as hay, grass or oats would be tor the mother. - Feeding too much, too often, or the wrong thing, is the chief cause of dlar- rhea In infancy. Hot weather weakens tne naDy, so tnat it contracts diarrhea more easily. 11 the baby contracts dlar- COMMENT ON CHICAGO CONVENTION Editorial View on the Struggle and the Nomination. 1 Tbe Esseatlal Tb.Ua. , xjuksio express rep.). ne isoi uiai Kooseveit insisted on his own candidacy as the most essential thing in his cause must be accepted as confirming the charge that, whatever he may have represented to others, in his own mind that was the only thing in his cause. And It is today the only basis which he has for a bolt All Parties Progressive. Philadelphia Ledger (ind.). . Ail parties are now progressive and in eager rivalry to attract the progressive vote, but the only progressive doctrine nd policy which Mr. Roosevelt's third party can offer, that Is not found ia one of the other two chlaf parties, Is the colonel's progressive deolre to have a third term., It 18 purely a personal party and by August. When .the colonel brings it into actlon-lf it die not utterly before that tlm-U will b. wholly unlmU.n't Stand on the tariff. Pittsburgh Dispatch. President Taft has taken his stand clearly and earnestly on the policy of me larui out 01 we squabbles and trading of politics and fixing lt solely oy impartial investigation of ths dif- ferences ln labor cost between the United States and Its principal competitors, against this policy Is arrayed the avowed purpose of severe and Injurious reduc- tlon of the schedules, dictated apparently by partisan prejudice. That is reslly to be the psramount issue in the coming campaign. 1 Saved from the Rains. Boston Herald.. (Ind.) One valued treasure has been saved from the ruins! In renominating the presldent and maintaining control of the organisation, the' conservatives have kept the republican party in shape to serve the sane and commonsense elements of the American electorate when the i. evitable reaction comes from the present wave Of unrest. This is the one triumph of the Chicago convention. Republican ism has not been transformed into radi calism. To the country one conservative party has been saved. The Mala Pnrpoae. Springfield Republican (Ind.) Coming to him as the nomination does, fiercely disputed and besmirched by the most popular republican ' leader of the time, Mr. Taft need have no regrets over the contest he has made and the achieve ment to be credited to him. Abundantly Justified in making use of every lawful resource rendered available by party usage and precedent and the advantage of his position against such an antag onist. Mr. Taft has accomplished Ma main purpose and that la the defeat if Mr. Roosevelt's aspiration for a third term as president of the United States. rally Earned the Honor. Des Moines Capital, (rep.) President Taft has been renominated because a majority of the delegates, in re sponse to the sentiments of the constitu ency which sent them to Chicago, realised tl.at he had earned the honor as fully as any man that ever preceded him; be cause they realised that th repudiation of President Taft meant the repudiation of tne work of his administration of the last four years, and that such repudiation would be a confession of Judgment by de fault under the handicap of which no party sould possibly win at the polls. tromsr. Sonad, Safe. Bt Louis Globe-Democrat (rep.). The republican party, already con fronted with the responsibility of meet ing new conditions In Industrial life. found itself confronted with a demand for a third -term in the presidency by a man who. without proposing anything oefinite or practical, called himself to the task of doing everything. His political affili ations with bosslsm and associations with men of great wealth and aggressive cor poration Um made him an object of sus picion from the first. But his going in person to the city where the convention waa being held, dragooning his supporters to accept his immediate personal com mand of them and arrogantly demanding diarrhea quit feeding milk and all other kinds of food. Instead of milk or foods, give the sick baby barley water. If not better at the end of two days, at the latest, call a physician. The proper way to make barley wates for the baby: Take two tablespoonfuls of pearl barley, add one quart of water, let simmer six hours, to the remaining portion add enough boiled water to make one quart, then f'n. en" the barley water is ready or " fcven though tne Breast miiK is scanty, provided it is neaitny mil save a. yU value tne Dany me ana neaun. n or two "wallows at a leeomg may 10 aleet tne uncial sumuiuw. wnen nreast miiK is scanty, 0.0 noi ai ternate the nursing with the bottle feed ing, as that will have a tendency to dry up the breast. Nurse regularly all the breast will yield and immediately give the prepared bottle as a dessert. If the laby crle between feedIn lv boUed water. Why babies cry: Babies cry because they are tired of lying on one side and are not strong enough to turn over. They cry because they are warm and tingrjng with prickly he.at They cry because they are wet or their clothes are uncomfortable. They cry because they are thirsty. They cry because they are sleepy and want to be laid down and let alone. They may ery for hunger but we must not think they, are hungry, every time they cry. Tliv irv vh.ii 4n nftln tint ui that none of. tn fcbove tn, nuH of tnelr crylnfc Mon dtcldlng pttla cauw, then, t0 cry. TIT l. V.U.. I- ..All. " nsu m. uu; . lt lfim, tw1v hnnr. nut nf mvmrv twenty.four, wUnout being rocked. When I( v.rv thre or fr.nr hnnr nnrl la ..tlsfled. When it aalns a few ounces avarr WMjc. when it h a noft veilow ,t00i every itfi without medicine or othw he!p. when lt i00k, happy and contented ' v0 solid food should be slven a nurs inK baby. Don't give it anything to chew until there are teeth to chew It with. Don't rock the baby. Don't take It iin everv lm It rlM TVnn't Ut vtalt. ore or relatives pinch or poke or "boo" at lt to make it notice them or laugh, Don't let the children of the nelghbor- hood visit and kiss it .There may be danger of the baby taking some disease. a setting aside, in his Interest, of all the rules and methods of procedure long used In party government, left no doubt of his unfitness, or of his ournnosa to seise the office for himself and not for the party, or the country; Tho rapid change in public opinion made Itself felt ln th convention, and showed, In the n4 sweeping triumph of Americanism ov,r Mexloanism. The party Is still strong, sound and safe. It Is still master of ltsslf and of its destiny; still a fit repository of a free people's confidence. "We stand at Armageddon, and we battle tor the Lord." 1 1 ' ' Not a Personal Victory. ", '. , ' Indianapolis News (ind.). Preildent Taft rightly Interprets the Teat victory won at Chicago. It is In no Mn PnJ- The people and the convention, were asked, after a violent ,nd 1,eat.fJ c4mp4ltf?' PftM onc "JL. statesmen deliberated for months and years. They have decided, at least, that they must have more time to think about them. It is the duty of all those who thMe questions are fairly presented-lf they are to be presented at all-and that they be decided ln the. light of the full- est knowledge. - sanely Progressive. Baltimore American (rep.). ; There has never in the history of this republic been' a president who, after serving one term as chief executive, was better deserving of the approval of his party man wiiuam Howard Taft. Few .of his predecessors have been so pro- gressive-progresslve along the lines of ae ideals. If progresslveness means i. repudiation and an upsetting of ths fun- draental principles upon which our sys- tem ot overnmnt ) based. President Tft ta not to b c,a8ed 8 tht kInd of Pi"081- Within the bounds set by tne wlM men wh0 foun5e1 W' llc" prty' Pent T" h" an W1U eon0nu to be a progressive. EDITORIAL SIDE LINES. St Louis Globe-Democrat: 8taropedlng a repumican nationnl convention con tinues to be merely a theory. Washington Star: Chicago Is com pelled to announce a certain shortage in the supply of overwhelming demands. , St. Louis Globe Democrat: The trouble with some people is that they think when 15,000 people In a convention hall go crasy that the whole nation has become demented. St Louts Republic: Congress voted an appropriation to mount the skins brought home by Colonel Roosevelt, but refused to Increase the sum originally named, probably on the theory that he has not get got the scalp of William Howard Taft Louisville Courier Journal: There is a general feeling that General Leonard Wood ought not to be legislated Into limbo and that President Taft did well to veto a bill aimed at him. ' General. Wood has a pretty fair record of achievement and if he is guilty of not having been hased at V est Point he should be forgiven. Pittsburgh Dispatch: It may interest those who perforce have resorted to cereals In the vain hope of escaping the exactions of the meat combine to learn that ln the opinion of a packing magnate they are only helping to fasten the shackles upon themselves the more firmly. Increased consumption of cereals has boosted corn, and boosted corn has boosted meat and there you are. olid Baals stf Good Times. ' . St. Louis Globe-Democrat Only a few figures were introduced 'n Senator Root's speech, but they point to many more of the same kind. For ex ample: "Witness the 1,537.155 separate savings bank accounts, with HH2.5S3.5SS deposits In the year 1911. Witness the s,ael,SU farms, and the value ot farms and farm property of $!O.1.4.690 In the year 1910, a value more than doubled be tween 1900 and 1910." The solid basis of good times is undeniable. EookinBackward TliisDay inOmalia COMPLL&D FROM DE.E rilE-' JUXE 28. Thirty Years Ago Creighton college's fourth annual com mencement took place with an Impressive program participated in by the following students: Harry Patrick, James Flana gan, Charles Donahue, Frank E. Me Guckln. Charles H. Gibbons, Harry C. Potter. William C. Mooney, Frank Crearv. Harry J. Gallagher, Edmund F. Daily. Oak C. Redlck, Thomas F. Dan ahey, William Flanagan, Robert Murphy. The faculty for the year Just closed was made up as follows: Rev. Thomas K Miles, president; Rev. James A. Dowling. vice president; Charles B. Meyer, John F. Bergin. Francis MeKenna, Edward A O'Brien, Michael Owens, Simon A. Black more, August Walther, Dr. J. R. Conklin The long talked of consolidation of the two German papers is to go Into effect on July L with Mr. Welnhaggen in edl torlal charge. On acount of continued hot weather tho entertainment to be given by the young people of the Lutheran church has been indefinitely postponed. The marralge of Mr. Thomas Kinney, a popular fireman of the Union Pacific, and Miss Mary Fitzmorria was solemnised by Rev. Father Shaffel at the Holy Fam ily church. Miss Nellie Fltzmorrls and Danied Monoghen were the attendants, and the newly married couple lmme diately took up their home in a cosy cot tage on the corner of Seventeenth and Clark streets. The second trial for of Charlie Kosters resulted In a verdict of not guilty. Dr. Porter Is resorting to want ads to find two or three rooms suitable for physician's office. Linen and mohair coats and dusters a' Hellmaa'a. Twenty Years Ago Leaders, delegates and newspaper correspondents were coming ln for the national people's party convention and pitching their tents for battle. J. H Wlllitts of Kansas, treasurer of the Na tlonal Farmers' Alliance and Industrial union, has got in, and Chairman H. E Taubeneck of the national committee was expected any mlnute( as was Ed ward Belllamy, - author ot "Looking Backward."' E. M. Morsman took out a permit for the erection of a two-story frame dwell Ing at Thirty-second and Davenport streets, costing $14,000. General L. A. Grant first assistant secretary of war, was an Omaha visitor and was received with the honors due his rank. He was royally entertained by General Brooks and other army offi cials and civilians. Another dlstln gulshed visitor was Special Indian Agent Cooper, who had Just disbursed $100,000 among the Indians on the Pine Ridge reservation. Benjamin C. Arnold, youngest son of Dr. and Mrs. Arnold, 323 North Seven' tcenth street, died of trouble of the bowels. The city council decided that It would take another squint at the Ketoham- Fur nlture company's methods of doing busi ness before turning over to lt the $20,000 for furnishing the new city hall. George C. Whitlock, resident agent of the com pany, has asked for the 120,000 payment ln full, and the matter was referred to the property committee of the council with the decision to delay matters until further light could be thrown on the curtain. Ten Years Ago The number of Union Pacific strikers was placed at 1,270, composed as fol lows: Five hundred machinists, (00 helpers, 175 bollermakers, seventy-five helpers, 130 moulders. Seaside weather from 65 to 57 degrees was prevailing. v Mr. and Mrs. Metealf had returned from a ten months' trip ln Europe. 1 T. J. Mahoney called a meeting of Irishmen interested in the plan outlined by William Redmond. M. P., in his Omaha speech, for forming a branch of the Irish National League of America. Those to be called on for service !u or ganisation were: T. J. Mahoney, C. J. Smyth, I. J. Dunn, J. A. Connor, John Power, E. C. Ryan, John Rush, T. J, FItsmorris and John Parks. The laying of the cornerstone of the Omaha Auditorium was postponed by the board of directors on, account of rain till the Monday following. Governor Ezra P. Savage had arrived ln the city to lend the weight of his official dignity to the occasion. Edward Rog water was demanding to know, through The Bee, why the rail roads of Nebraska should pay less in taxes in 1901 than they did In 1S91, show. Ing a net decrease ln valuation of $2,91$, 1M. People Talked About The record for somnambulistic feats Is held by R. Harrington, a farm hand em ployed near Stockton, Cal.. who, while asleep, swam two miles down the river. Mrs. Hannah Albee, 80 years old, of Wiscasset, Me., has never ridden on a steam train, trolley car, good-sized pas senger steamer or automobile, though she is in perfect health. She still uses the old-fashioned spinning- wheel she used when a girl. In one summer she spun on this wheel 600 skeins ot yarn, four yards to the skein. One of the new birthday peers, Francis AUston Channlng, waa born ln Boston, Mass seventy-one years ago. He Is th son of the late Rev. W. H. Channlng; Dr. William Elllery Channlng was his uncle. He Is an Oxford man and a bar rister. He sat in the House of Commons a number of years for the eastern divi sion of Northamptonshire, and has been a baronet since 1905. Mrs. Clara Baldwin Stocker of Los Angelrj, one of the daughters, who re ceived $10,000,900 of the late Lucky Bald win's estate, la having a unique private railway car built for herself. The prin cipal novelty Is an apartment for her aeroplane. On the roof of the car will b landing stage that can be extended when the car Is on a aiding. She intends to do much traveling off the beaten path, and to use her aeroplane often. Corn and foot doctors are booked for a mass convention In Chicago. No great contest over the temporary, chairmanship Is looked for, but a lively scrap is prob able on the question whether tis nobler to lure the festive bunion from Its lair by progressive treatment or amputate the dern excrescence root and branch. The progressive treatment seems to b ln favor because It makes the better im pression on the bill, . ""TING BEHA Mrs. Newedd Shouldn't we weigh the things we get? Are we wise in trusting the grocer? Newedd He's probably wondering the same about us. Baltimore American. Dobson Rogers is comparatively rich, isn't he? DeBroke That depends upon whether you use me as a standard of comparison or Mr. Carnegie. Boston Transcript "We want a standard bearer" began the impassioned orator. "Pardon me." Interruped the energetic candidate. "We've got standard bearers enough. What we want is more men to constitute the rank and file of the pro cession." Washington Star. Photographer I have been taking some moving pictures of life on your farm. Farnam Did you catch my laborers ln motion? Photographer I think so. Farmer Ah tm ful thing.-Brooklyn Life. "That you. Maria? How would you like to dine al fresco today?" "I don't knnw him' Inhn . in,. any stranger out here u ttilnjr h n you 'no oouse is an torn up 1 11 go over tn nnu nt th n.ivh(m..ilri.t.,. -r.. bune. "Putting the nnrtralti nf rr.af m.n our paper currency is a proper and de- eiveu inuuie. "YeS." reDliftd Mr Rrmir' "An It, who gets to hold on to a piece of paper inuncy ions enougn to iook at the pictures?"-Washington Star. Always interesting; always entertaining. The Omaha Sunday Bee Special features of next Sunday's great issue. What some Omaha men recall of their first day in" school. An article containing genuine human interest. Lady Duff Gordon talks on the "falling off" goTra; the seamless gown, the "new don't match" dress: and the new peasant coat. The Ducliess of Manchester's Soul Hos pital Odd experience by this titled woman in theosophy just outside 'of London. How good are dinners a bit which you never taste. Repairing Eyes Like Broken Window Panes ' How a new cover, permitting the person to see again, was placed over eyes that had been stone blind for eight years. The Political World Everything, that has been politics is found in The Bee. The Sunday Bee. - - "Dope" on the Johnson - Flynn Fight This battle comes off Thursday, and Bee writers will tell what is to be expected. Colored Comics The colored funny fellows great paper. Mutt and Jeff also will be up to another of their laughter-provoking stunts. Get The Omaha Sunday Bee and you will need to read no other paper. WlIA TEA Tho Ideal Dovorago. Eithor Icod or Hot ONE TEASPOONPUL MAKEO TWO CUPS Published by the Growers of India Tea (Kansas City- Hot Low less City (0 p. a Aims C:t S;rrxs, Ml, 25 p. a. Thia high class senrice ia effect dally. PSseettgera. from Omsba. Iwm Union Station yIa Missouri Pacific t:S0 A. M. Arrlra Kansas BCity 5: IS P. ML Connects vita tne Kansas Citj-Hot Springs Express. No change ot cars. Solid trains. Coach, Chair Car, Sleeping Car and tne oeai ei uining ir aervica. THE P MILES New Tork Times. There's an idiotic fallow, whom I meet where'er I go; He's the crasy kind of fellow all the little children know. Tou wouldn't think him silly from his manner or his style: Still, it seems he must be foolish, for he always wears a smile. When the way Is long and weary and the load is hard to bear. When you're weighted down with trouble and there's no one seems to care. That's the time this foolish fellow comes singing up the road. With a word and smile to cheer you and to help you with your load. With his smiling 'cause we're "Buck up. bound to partner, pull it through; Though your load's too big for one man. it's a little load for two." And you feel yourself uplifted with the strength to play your part. With his arm to aid your body and his smile to brace your heart No, he hasn't got ambition, but his life-work never ends; He knows a million people and he's got a million friends. He doesn't strive for fame and wealth, he hasn't got a goal; He's just a simple fellow with God's sunshine In his soul. Tes, he's Just a foolish fellow, with the . eyes that cannot see All the misery and sadness that are plain to you and me. But he knows the Joy of living, all that makes the world worth while. And I'd like to be as foolish as the man behind the smile. , done during the last week in The very latest will arroear in appear on four pages of this Springs Express D : . . For fall Information call or address TOM HUGETE8, Travdiag Passenger Agent. THOS. F. QODFBKT, Passenger and Ticket Agent. 1428 Fanam Scrse. or Uakns fitstfan, Omaha, Heb.