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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 30, 1913)
6 THE BEE: OMAHA- SATURDAY, AraUMP .T 1913. The Omaha Daily Bes RUNDED BV EDWARD KOSEWATBIt VICTOn nOdEWATKK. ISDITOn. BEB BUlkUINO. FAKNAM AND TTH. Bntered at Omaha postolflee as second, claw matter. ... TERM 3 OF bUBSCIUPTIONi RunflAv Bc ana year Saturday Bee, one year J-w Dally Bee, without Bandar, one year. j" ruii ng Bii riundAV. one year..,. .w DEL.IVKHED B5f CARIUBUJ Evening. wlUwut Sunday, per month.fcc Daily Bee. Including Sunday, per mo.w Dally Bee. without Sunday. per no.tte Address all' complaints at Irregularities In deliveries to City Circulation Dept. ' ItEMITTANCB. Remit by oralt, express or postal order payable to The Bee Publishing company. Only J-cnt stamps received In I'ra;"1 ot small accounts. Personal check, ex cept on Omaha and eaatem excrange, not accepted. , OFFICES: Omnha-The Bee building. South Omaha-Bls N Street Council Blutfa-H North Main Street. X-lncoln-M Little building. Chlcago-801 Hearst building. New York-Room 1104. , 2M FU lh Ave . EC Louis-Mi New Bank of Commerce. Washington 723 Fourteenth BU N. v. COKRESfONDENCE. Communication relating to news ana cflltbrlal matter thouid bo addressed Omaha Be Editorial department. JULY CIRCULATION. 50,142 BUte of NebrasK. county of Douglaa. ss. Dwlght Williams, circulation manager ot The Bee Publishing company, bein. duly -worn, aaya that the average daily circulation tor the month of Juiy, Mis. was KUU. DWJQHT WILLIAMS, ClrculaUon Maiuuter. Subscribed In my, presence' and wort to before me una n w11?s,1' Notary rubile. gab.erlfe.rs leaving tha city temporarily should have The Ilea mailed to tbeni. Address vUl be changed aa often aa requested. Alter Huerta, Jidng. what? Oh, same Labor any is luu uo-t nollday in tie list. Chalk, it up. Hu&rU's man Oaiaboa 1b some pje8sago-wrlter, Just tha saino. Ertfi a sprinkle, just enough to lay the UBt would be appreciated Well, Mexico ought to bo a fine eoaBtry bow to sot out of, anyway, Anyway, Omaha la on the) War de partment' military map, and there to stay, jW4 you ror notice that the win .jrj (mm never complains ot the "b4 .rtkkiT" " C ' KegarelteM of reuUs,- the early clwhn thssat im4s a dandy good topee et tfsfcatsj. Strange talsge souasUrae. happen, .'Watch ot lor a HKcfeck-liryn harmony hrsakfw. aLtat rSwfc t)e Ph4MPftt t(Jeajryli nwr the dttriMatlto of the H, XeM Hammoiid, he ahfrald worry.' Brwthor W4 will t 1m talking 'out Ik school agal that way alter Boss Howell tg hold ot him. Te Maay el thM who talk loud cti het M.iac Omaha beautiful d athlas whatever to help reach the goal. San Francisco fixes 3 B as tho age Unit for women police. As if any applicant would ever admit exceeding tfc HkIL It a couple of luimant sutfra- awtt- try to "Bsankaadle" an eml sent Awetten gait ykyer and what hatai. Th sfhti wer of the world ------- Uk t 1u.. rt ..wfcs pay; vk lht wentM topi . it o git -SIT sutter shui run sajalt, will to naka publicity afpo IttsMi oeu-ip-ita t4 a jranouatr If jUMMt. numerous improvement clttba mlly wast to expedito public irApraremests, they wilt push the 3mmb rul charter alont;. Nehmka has supplied the Grand Array of the' Republic in the post with two national commanders and ti ready now to make It three times. If 80 per cent of the divorces grow eftt pt questions of domestic economy sjtd division of the family Income, where do votes for women come In? One thing, thoroughly demon etrated by tho secretary of war dut isc his visit to Omaha, is that ho is vrtse enough to know what not to say. Tha prise belongs to those Cana ril&n counsel of Thaw's when they can put on across that crowds the New York prosecutors entirely out of court. With the first Tift in tho Mexican cloud, Secretary Bryan slips in chautalk over at Newhope, Pa., which, let ns take new hope, has a sappy significance. If, as reported, the, English rail insai. last year carried 3X.900.0OO fawer passengers than the year be fore, it must mean that the Britons feave gone In stronger than ever for their walking habit What bidden meaning can there be t the president's warning tor & Junertcans to leave Mexico? Jf tho aagoitattqsvs Wad so strongly toward Pe, why cuUor? purely thai in the matter of possession of HmtimlkmH skoetisff i the dsrk."in.chlR.N At to Foreign Labor. Evidently there Is a good deal of floundering by democrats in congrosS seeking to justify free trade at the oxpense of tho protective tariff. Sen ator Smith of South Carolina hits upon tho southern European Imml grant and his "meager" wages- In New England mills and factories as a basis of attack, having finally to retreat In very bad order under tho combined fire of facts by Senators Llppltt and Qalllngcr, leaving his causo more Injured than helped. The South Carollnan begins by saying that wo are crowding out American labor with tho Influx of Cheap "foreign" workers, and when routed by tho showing that there are not enough American laborers for the principal work these "foreigners" are doing, and that much of It would not be promptly dono but for them, ho flies to tho next point, which is that these "foreigners" are sending back to their natlvo lands about 11,000,000,000 In ten years of our good American money. Here ho is badly shattered again by this return yolloyi Yes; and that billion of dollars Is com posed of their surplus earnings, and yet the senator (Smith) Is talking about their being HMrcatcd so far as wages Is con oerred. Then, shooting aimlessly in the air, Senator Smith attempts to show how tho New England cotton mills are grinding tho llfo out of their em ployes nt beggarly pay, whereupon Senator Llppltt produces tlguros to provo that while tho avorago weekly wago in tho Now England mills Is $6,03, It Is J3.D5 in tho southern cot ton mills. And yet Senator Smith probably did as well as could bo dono against such an impregnable battery. No Harmony for Hearst Although ho. hlmsolf, admits that ho elected President Wilson, William R. Hearst does not socm to bo partic ularly plcnsod with his job and has no difficulty in letting It bo known, try hard as ho does to conceal it. His latest characterization of the president peoks out through the meshes of n long open loter telling why ho cannot support certain nomi nees on tho fusion ticket in the New fork City olectlon, whom ho accuses of being false to their promises and traitors to their obligations. It is principles, not high sounding party names, that count, ho explains, and going Into details doclares: Tho name democratic party eounda wall "Demos Kratos," the power ot the bec- jrte-but tho name means little when tha party represents tha autocratic arrogance ot a Tammany boss or the pompous poel- uveness of a visionary and vainglorious sMdcue: It takes no very keen Insight to -trogU this vetted allusion-.- It irclj hw-eK. that tk Adgjlals- tratioa nea not jook tor dependable support from the Hearst' papers and that efforts to harmonize them will .... ee misdirected energy. The Straw Hat. If we go by tho calendar and that is, about all wo have had to go by this summer wo must discard tno straw hat, as the inscrutablo law of fashion fixes Soptcmber 1 as the beginning of its closed season. Yet tho Straw hat, llko the bank note, gonorolly calls for o, few days of graco, and. especially in years such as this has been, when all signs fall and styles la cast. How do wo know that summer is over? Cer tainly not by the lapso of another siastth, All mmUm look alike now adays; May merges into June and June into July ut July into August without s sattck as a jar of the mer cury in crossing the threshold. How do we know hut September will ha but a part ot tho continuous vaude ville of weather we have bee havta tor more than three months? wny not compromise with the fashions and agree to woar the xnenaiy old straw until the first soaking rain? Or would that be safe? It worse comes to worst. there is tho mayor's proclamation to fall back upon, for it has savod the day before and may again. Time for Permanent Prcoautioa. Such accidonts aa the grade cross ing collision of an automobile and train near Chicago, In which five per sons wero killed and three seriously injured, should warn us ot the dan ger ot leaving exposed these inter sections constantly traversed hv trains, street cars, automobiles nnd other vehicles, as well as pedestrians. There nro many such places of immi nent peril In and about Omaha that ought to bo looked after without de lay. They have already exacted some tou oi me ana win exact rooro it proper precaution' is not taken. Whatever Is done la this direction to protect llfo should ho ot a permanent nature, lor the autos, trains and street cars are permanent and tha traffic constantly becoming more dense. Wo may congratulate our selves that we have escaped with bo few fatal accidents at our grade crossings, where no provision what ever Is made to prevent, Those re sponsible in authority should lock ahead and act now. Forty thousand automobiles regis tered for the state of Nebraska doesn't' sound a great deal llko pov erty. And Douglas county's share ot the total, 2,700, makes It appear that the farmer leads the city man a Looking BacWairl lisDcWitiOtuahaJ COMPILED iROM PER MbES 1 UXj AUGUST 80. f OOP 1 Thirty Yearn m The Union roclflefe didn't do a thing to the Dtn Moines bunch In tho home burg. They plied up only fourteen runs to their opponents' seven. Omaha entertained a dUtlngulnhed party of visitor for the day, among them Mr. and Mrs. George WestinghoUse, sr., of Sohenectady, Mr. and Mrs. George Westlnghouse, Jr., child, maid, nurse and servant of rittsburgh, and a number of other Ilttsburghcrs, stopping over on a western tour. Tho Nebraska Fuel company has been Incorporated by George Peterson, Geotga C Towle, F. IL Blake and F. G. Gaylord, according to papers Just tiled In the county clerk's office. I The meeting of lawyers called to take1 action on bar nominations endorsed Judges Neville and Wakeley for reflec tion, The marriage of Gilbert M. Hitchcock and Mis Jessie U Crounsa ot Fort Cal houn took place at the residence ot thu brldo'a father, Iter. A. F. Bherrlll offi ciating. The party who went up from Omaha Included Judge and Mrs. Lake, Mrs. It. H. Wilbur and the MIssos Wilbur, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kennedy, Win Hur ley and John Hitchcock. The Dee's ac count concludes, "Mr. Hitchcock Is a rls nit vountr Draetltloner at the Douslas county bur, of marked oratorical ability) and commanding; a most successful fui ture." The Union Panlflo employes are to bo tendered a complimentary excursion pis-, nlo to Fremont by the company. J. E. Wlgman. Charles Gallagher and Charles MIdgley were appointed a committee on arrangements. Henry Hobby la a father and Is setUng them up to the boys. Miss Nellie. Ballanco ot Flattsmouth Is visiting Miss Utxto Eagan. Mis. M. A. Kees of Keokuk Is the guest of her son, Samuel Rees, the welt-known Job printer. Twenty Years Ago The bar association recommenaea juages Walton,' B. R. Duffle and W. 8, Curtis for place on the district court bench and Irving F. Baxter for county Judge. x Mrs. James Tledman, residing on North Fifteenth street, near Ohio, was cleaning house when Qme gasoline became Ignited and caught her dress, Inflicting severe burns before relieved. Men passing heard her scream and, rushing In, satur ated her with water, while also exttn- uglshlnr the tiro In the house. Much fuss was kicked up over the Union Pacific's wage reduction, which affected one-eighth of the employes. Tha company netted a saving. It was said, ct only $1$ a month for tho1 entire system. Its payroll for July, Includlt.g the Fort Worth and St. Joseph branches and the' Ttock Springs miners, was 1,150,000. George W. Blgwart, superintendent of speed and racos for the Douglas county fair, predicted 100 entries for tho races when tho fair opened and he said there would bo some tast horses In the bunch. Mrs. Fox, widow of Fire Captain Fox. killed In the Shlverck tire some months before, declared In an open letter to Tho Bee that tho benefit gotten 'up for her was entirely without her knowledge, that ahe did not evon know the promoters of It and desired no one Jo patronize it cn her" account,.,, ' . - J iuarsnau w. itennard, one of Omaha's pioneer business men. died t his reil flence, Douglas ' atreet. at 7:80 p. m. He was 71 years old andhad, uorrd with stomach trouble for many yuars. He came to Omaha In 1571, though lie had settled at Council Bluffs In 1SSS and it Da 86to, twenty-one miles north ot Omaha, In 1K8. He Was survived by Mrs. Kennard -and one daughter. Mrs. John D. Pe-body, of Petersburg-. Fla. Beits Bros., liverymen, were sby one team and a buggy, which were rented to a man and woman whq called at the stables, 1115 Capitol avenue. Later tue liverymen received a telephone mesatgo from G. C Bexton of Neola, la., saying ho had an outfit he believed was the one missing. He owned a livery stable and a man calls there and sold him two horses and a h-ggy for t5 down and the balance later, and up to that time ths man had not called tor the balance. A strange, welcd .story, almost uncanny In Its Incredibility, swept Into Tho Bee office, over the wires from' Colorado Bprin. It was that the Omaha hall tm had 'actually won a tame, defeat ta the Colorado Springs team by the o- etslve aeore et 12 to 1 That made Osaaha's forty-second victory fop tho seaMn, as against sixty-five detaats. Cenyaltan played right field tor the -Brings, Harry McKeeley pitched, Flem ing was at left, GUI at second and old Bill Kverltt at first Frank Currle, the Bhorthem statesman from the western end ot Nebraska, was In town, reglstored at tho Merchants. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Utnsted and son. tSlmer, got back from an eastern trip. People Talked About Old Keokuk has local and general war rant for emphasizing Its booster liter ature with a big dam. Judge Alton B. Parker ran Into a nor- ntts' nest the other day and got an un pleasant reminder of the stings of Ingrat itude of 19M. Mrs. Rosa M. Haynle ot Salem. Ill-, has been decorated with a police star and commissioned to look otter the city's boys and girls who full to attend school regularly. What a delightful rest and recreation the reading world would have It Sulxer and Huerta, Thaw and Johnson wero far enough removed from the flapping winds ot publicity. Senator Helen Ring Robinson says of her Colorado sisters; "We love our homes end our husbands Just like other women Most ot us are gld and proud to vote. and It takes Just twenty minutes a year." The comptroller of 8 Louis, referrlnc to the use of city automobiles for Joy riding, bluntly declares that "every drop ot gasoline burnt to carry a city em ployo on a private errand la grafted." What do you know about that? Jennie Ochlupa, M, laughed no hard at a Joke told by another girl In the cigar factory at Camden. N. J., where she is employed, that her Jaws became locked. The SCO employer of th place were panic stricken whea the girl began to scream with her mouth wide open. Gt-orge H. Murdock Is the oldest In, habitant ot gomervllle. Mass. Last Sun Cay was Ms tout birthday. His hair Is white, his eyes are bright. He has posl uve views on several subjects. No man nouia own more land than be can till with bis w luii, Mr. Murdock think. In Other Lands Punishment FH the Crime. Bulgaria Is stewing hi the Juice of Its own atrocities. A crow would starve to death in the sections of Thrace which tho Bulgars transformed Into a desola tion. Fortunately they will not be lvm a chance to repeat their crimes In that region for some time to come. The Itirlo are back In the land they were driven from less than a year ago. Adrla-iople and Kirk Klllesch are In their posieulun. Who wilt put them out? Echo give no answer. The Bulgars are not only ex hausted from their bloody orgies and defeats, but there Is not a national pawn broker In Europe bold, enough to stake the discredited King Ferdinand with a plaster. The probability ot the powers using force to compel the evacuation ot the Turks from Thrace grows remoter with each passing day. Indeed, It a doubtful if any of the powers, no matter how eager they might be, could have the heart to take up arms In behalf of a state which has stained the land with the blood of Innocents. The more the light of publicity Is turned upon the causotess ravages of the later war on the part ot the Bulgars, the greater is tho repulsion ot sentiment against help ing a state to profit by Its crimes. Be sides these factors against European co operation there is a Turkish army ot iM. 000 men In and about Adrlanopie, a num ber sufficient to cause due dellbeiation before putting; force behind a writ of ejectment. Austria's Stormy Petrel. The St6rmy petrel ot the dual mon archy, Count Tinxo, premier, has fought his third duel this year, the combaatanta In each Instance escaping serious damage Tho latest duet was the outcome of a Ubol suit In which the former premier, Dr De Lukacs, had been Involved Dr. De Lukacs had been accused ot giving gov ernment favors to a great business con cern In return for political subscriptions, By manipulation ot tribunals a verdict was secured against the accuser; but the latter appealed and was granted a new trial, which resulted In his favor. It was established that, while Dr. De Lukacs wnj personally unsmtrched, his party had benefited heavily by contributions from a concern which had done a tot of business with the government The affair had a good deal to do with the retirement ot Dr, De Lukacs, and promotion to the premier ship rewarded Count Tisza's services aa speaker ot the House In pushing through tho army bill. The count, it Will bo re membered, ordered troops Into the cham ber to preserve freedom of debate, and opposition speakers were expelled from the House. Australian Reforms. Premier Cook, speaking- for the newly Chosen government of Australia, outlined a large program ot radical reforms. He nas declared that the government pro posed to amend the labor law relating to conciliation and arbitration In auch n! urav as to prohibit preferenoe being granted uy the court to members of any organiza tion whoso funds were applied to political purposes, and also to restore the exemp tion of rural workers Xrom the act It was the intention ot the government to malntuln a protective policy. The Inter state commission would report In respect of Industrial production and comemrclal exchange, ana would also Inquire Into the working ot the tariff and Its operation upon the, investment of .capital and the employment of labor In Australian In dustries. Tho government Intended to take advantage of the approaching visit of the high commissioner to discuss the opening of new and the developing ot ex isting oversea markets. It was desired to assure the Identity ot Australian products. Inquiries were being made with a vlsw (o formulating a comprehensive scheme of national Insurance on a contributory basis, embracing sickness, accident, ma ternity, widowhood and unemployment. Regarding a maternity allowance, min isters felt it an obligation to the public that the allowance should be limited to necessitous cases. China's Railroad Concessions. The collapse of Dr. Hun "Vat Ben's rail road projects for the development of the republic of China necessarily followed tho doctor's fall from grace and favor at Peking. In their stead are the tempting- otters pf the Krupps to take over the abandoned projects, put them through, and fatten tho publlo treasury with SIS, 000,000 In return for satisfactory conces sions and a twenty-year monopoly of gun- making for China. The dud had. not been closed at lost accounts, but with a treas ury yawning for coin, hills piling up and Insurrection menacing, the prospects fa vor the Krupps pHe ot old. Railroad development means vaat mlaeral develop ment The tmdvetope4 wealth ot CMna Is enormous, hut the fn-cieal transfer matlon cannot much longer deterred. and the prospective spoils are a great temptation to capital. What Dr. Bun Tat Ben was striving for was a plan that would bring In foreign capital on terms fair to China and not Inimical to national Independence, but tha 1vl war has for tho time being made the problem far mora difficult, and may In proportion help the foreign concession hunters. The Seasoned Kaiser. New. photographs of the emperor of Germany, taken especially tor the twen ty-fifth anniversary ot hi a accession, show him to ha vastly different from the stock pictures ot form or years. They show him as the man between 0 and 60, rather serious and stern-faced, present ing a marked contrast to the cartoonist drawing ot the young war lord." neither young nor warlike now. The kaiser has been as great a force In peace as Bls march Was In war. He took over the sceptre from the hand of tha Iron Chan ceUor, who had In reality wielded It be fore him, and tha world trembled at the menace. It has done Its full share ot trembling ever s'nee; hut Wllhelm has made no ware. The peooa of Europe has been In his hnnd more than In tha. hand of any other man, and he has preserved It He has unified Oennany u Bismarck probably could not have done, for Bis marck was a Prussian Imperialist while Wllhelm has been merely an Imperialist Out of the Ordinary Nine-tenths of the letters handled by the United Btatea mall are In the usual business slio envelope. What Is said to be the largest rattle snak farm In the world is conducted In Texaa by a roan and his wife An extensive deposit of fuller's earth has been discovered In the canal zone on lend owned by the United States. A roughened rubber pad for cleansing (he tongue has been attached to the han dle ot a tooth brush patented by aa KnglUhmaB. Comparative Ite.Utrltlon m9& Vot?. OMAHA, Aug. 29.-T6 the Editor at The B: I was much Interested In the show ing of party strength In the new resp iration In Omaha. 111 you not kindly give me the figures to make comparison by printing the corresponding" vote In the city for the presidential candidates of the dlferent parties last year? E D. HOWARD. Noie: Here are the official complta tlons: Presidential Ret;, to VnU 101 A, II Ml Totals for Omaha 22.630 15.M7 Republican , 4.E98 8,81 Democrat 9,m 5,:3t Progressive 6,062 3(3 Progressive republican 102 Socialist l,OS J91 rronioition , 74 n independent 7 No answer 632 The Real Itenson "Why. OMAHA, Aug. 21 To the Editor ot The Bee: In reference to the letters by M..L. and bid Fogy we would beg to say that Miss Viola Meyers Is welt known, highly respected and loved by everybody and has scores of friends, and as td being Insulted by being called "mamma's gtrU" such was not the case. They only wished to be rid ot the annoyance of It and es pecially In public. And as tor laying the boy's and mother's secret bare would bo an Impossibility, as she told that to many years ago and everybody In this neighborhood knew about It . FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS. Affects All Working People. SOUTH OMAHA, Aug. 21-To the Editor ot The Bee: As the department store girl and the fellow office worker have decided that the business woman has plently of tlmo to do her shopping before 0 p. m. I would like to have them toll us when the thousands of railway and packing house employes are to do their shopping. The majority of them work from 7 a. m. to 8 p. m. and a great many of them get from fifteen to thirty minutes for lunch and also a great many of them work until 7 p. m. If they can tell us when we can do our shopping (working fnoee hours) with the stores, closing at 6 p. m. every evening, I think It will be greatly appreciated by at least 19,000 people In Omaha and South Omaha, A RAILROADER. The Rural Sohool. CLARKS. Nob.. Auir. S3 Tn tho "EMItnr of The Beo: Slowly we are awakening to the tact that all mads to tearing lead through the town high schools, and re quire four lens years of the child's Ufa- between the ages of 13 and IS years, to' pass up through these grades. With th lirhth ornAn irHftf hUm In their hands the youth ponder at the forks ot the road: the ope roads turns back to the land', and to the home life, which they are yet too young to leave; the other leads up toward the highest halls' ot learning. Every prize and Ingenious Inducement known to tho mind of man urges the Child to take this road. Signboards and pennants point out the way: hope, in spiration and expectation urge them on! voices of the Muse whisper Invitations; and lured on by the siren's songs of the pleasures that are said to always linger along tho. may, rr.aay leave the ahelter ot homo and take the road that "leads to fame and fortune," Few -who take this road ever -return, to the land of their birth. Though many paths fall away from this highway, they lead away, ever away from the farm. Not only are the doors of the home school Closed against them, but all the-college and universities refuse Ihem admittance. The eighth grade diploma unlocks only the door of ths high school In the town. Wo make a lane from the pasture to tlje clover field, and then wonder why tho stock will not remain In the pasture. Wo make the high schools In the town and cities a lane leading from the rural schools, and then wonder why people will leave the farm. By way ot the town wo may become teachers or preachers, doc tors or lawyers, men of business or mon of science, men of learning and of cul ture we may sit In tho high places ot state: all this Is before us If wa will only leave the farm. If we stay on the farm we nor our children may either teac or preach, yr occupy pnsltlons of learning. We are coming to a. day of "carpet hag" education. We pay to be taught, but may not hope to teach. We pay to he governed, but may not hope to govern. This and more is the penalty we pay for being faithful to the land. This Is the Price, wo pay who stay on the farm. Wa Shall have crowded cities and deserted farms. On the farm children crying- for the learning that will make llfo worth living; In the cities children 'crying for rd that thev may only live. There Is a remedy, for all this. Estnb- !,L.,"',,f,0'" of '""I" out nn the land within reach ot the hbme. Do this and you will satisfy the hungry mla.l; do this and yon -will check the wanderlust that Is fast breaking up the country homes: do this and the social, foon.imlo and educational balance will be restored and the whole country prosper as nevvr fcefore. jvr. H, CAMPBELL. Loentlnir rmw T.ln-, OMAHA, Aur. 29.-T6 the Editor f Th Bee: Referring to the agitation for street car servtoo southwest r fin t about the city that many more, eltlxens sre mieresiea to get the aervtee on Lin coln avenue than wo thought It posUb'e. Property right on Lincoln avenue might not be desirable at present for residences, but from MO feet each aide are some of the most beautiful slts for where In our cltv. With th .. 1 - - - - ' ' H.niu)iii 1 possible by uslnr this Hinrn,vh . Ithi. m ! r il m nt -.. .... t . 1 "' i lopis, in' ; street railway corporation should no nssuate at an, as the greater number could and would be accommodated hy this route. Wa are not anxious to dictate to or I nm, the street railway company In the least but after living In Ambler Place and neighboring additions we all teal wo are competent to know the advantages 'obtainable to all concerned by raoM dl. tract transportation. Grades, bridge over men line, no crossings or other railroad trades, pavements already down, Benlt school, whose teachers have had to wi to and fro for twenty-five years, and the many families now livtnr there, and him. dreda mote who will gladly come to this district when facilities are ar ran gel to tney can get back and forth Wo be lieve truly when this matter Is mora carefully the line will he plaotd on wncom avenue by the car company. F-B. HOLE ROOK, an South Forty-slsth street Pittsburgh Dispatch. When Senator Tillman makes one of his Impassioned argumaats against woman auftrage U has the effect ot making many people previously opposed to the chance think rather favorably of it Editorial Sif tings Washington Post: Since Mexicans love posing snd Americans love humor, Huerta's little ultimatum" doubtless gave pleasure all around. Indianapolis News: It the worst comes to the worst as It sometimes does there Is nothing to prevent Senator Cummins from assembling In national convention and adopting any resolution that he may see fit Cleveland Plafn Dealer: If a certain hard working father hadn't piled up a surplus ot 'dollars the young man who has become an International ( nuisance would have remained harmless and un known. Baltimore American: An lows. nmnht says there will be a beet famine for the next two years. This will rive tha vegetarians a fine chance with their theories upon a more or lees unwilling public. Brooklyn Eagle: Russian Investigations confirm the worst stories ot Bulgarian atrocities at Adrlanopie, so strenuously denied by a Christian power. When It comes to mendacity the unspeakable Turk must yield place to the unbelievable Bulgarian. Pittsburgh Dispatch: The meetlns ot the universal peace congress at The Hague was marked by the Insistence of the delegates that In splto of wbat has happened In the Balkans, Mexico and a few other places the trend toward peace is Increasing. The best proof of this Is the way In which the great powers have been sidestepping war. Springfield Republican: The scale on which the federal government Is In tho lumber business through tho forest re serve Is suggested by advertisements In Washington and Oregon papers calling tor bids for 70,000,000 feet of national for est timber. This Is also a reminder that government conservation does not mean a refusal to use the forest growth and sentimental Insistence that It shall stand till It falls and rots, but rather a. sci entific use when the $rop Is matured. Thm Bmmf FoodBriak S?Sr52!i Inmlmt Upon original uadi ye GENUINE nUllkl Vl 9 AvoM fmHmtfnm-Tk9 No tubatltarte Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form. More healthful than tea or coffee. For Busnte, invalids and growing dukkert Pmcnutrkion.upfcu-dingthewholcbody. Invigorates aurMsg mothers aad the aed. -3jHlBg W g'jsinriwwgsyfrMge Thinking of Your Vacation? Plan to Go East Sea what the Great Lakes Region and Atlantic Coast has to offer you, .Innumerable varied attractions await you both in the cos mopolitan cities and at the attractive seaside resorts. -Sightseeing, ss well as fishing, boating, bathing and other outdoor sport will wake this vacation something different something to be remembered. Low Summer Fares Now in Effect via tho Chicago and North Western Line to "Chicago an variable routes therefrom to points Best, some of the more important being as follows; Detroit, Mich. $27.50 Boston, Mass. $42.10 to 46.50 New York, N. Y. 43.50 to 46.50 Niagara Fulls, N. Y. 33.50 to 35.50 Toronto, Oh. 31.10 to 35.50 Montreal, Qu. 36.50 to 40.35 Atlantic City, N. J. 45.80 to 46.00 Portland, Ma. 43.85 to 47.S5 Buffalo, N. Y. 33.50 to 35.50 Tickets on sale daily until September 90th. Return Mm St 60 days not to exceed October .list. Favorable stopover privileges.. ' Unexcelled train service to' Chicago and direct connections WEBSBSBEBB& Excursion Tickets on sale daily VIA THE CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY HOtND TRIPS FROM OMAHA: Atlantic City, N. J. S45.60 S46.00 Bar Harbor, Me. , jr.. $50.50 S54.50 Boston. Mass, S42.10 S40.50 Buffalo, N. Y. , 833.50 S35.50 Detroit, Mich. . , S27.50 Montreal, Que. S30.50 Sew York City 843.50 S46.50 Portland, Me. S43.85 847.85 Quebec, Que. S40.50 Toronto, Out. 831,10 Low round trip fares to many other summer resorts In Canada, Now England,, New York. State, Northern Michigan and the Wisconsin Lake Country. Attractive tours on the Great Lakes. Circuit tours to New York and Boston going vja one route, returning via another. Ask for copy of booklet, '."Summer Homes' or any other Information desired regarding your tnpt C5 Y TICKET OFFICE, 1317 Famam St. Phone Douglas 283 '. E. Book, City OMAHA CHEERY CHAFF. v;the3La. crM for Id ,Mm to mo ,,hLnow a verr little would t , m?, "erfectly happy. Jack-How much? m rinT?,08 n ?oul to -h around my finger. Boston Transcript hlmJ Jif5riiw5or '"! proposing finds Sw isk'hVr-'unpMtn b0Ule-" onlv't'ft fiartp?fi.n?, the" effervesces, American a ""'-B-lUmore chrhe?rih?- M - man"?t 1IlUo ' nrmteea Persiflage, old "Just tho some I think I hnd better lM3-35aVrm ml"-r"'Vlllo Cour- baby0,,hyowf" b Prise In the sth".'"',d.V, proud but worried father. And I guess we'll move out of wiilCm,m,Un.Uy- A,! th0 envl0l' ne'ghbo?i mgtoWur.1 " l0n " 1,6 1,v-,'-",ash. WHY JBE DEJECTED? S. H. KUer In Record-Herald. Perhaps you think your case Is touch nS.e.c,fu,,6. yoU hav & labor. S" TnT.'. -?" eanl l""8 enough Hi ,.tc?..up wUn your neighbor; SJSa!?ave, ,m?de 'ot in corn nimlh.tner MAa ot dealings: or cnX.", S? your Iot w'tr rn or cling to hopeless feelings? KRSh VSS wUa who makes glad vWlth her sincere affection hve no cause for being sad Or clinging- to dejection. . P&bape you are Inclined to grieve For Joys you've never tasted; You may unhappily believe Your life is being wasted: You may be ready to suppose That Fortune has betrayed you, And cast your hopes away when those Whom you must serve upbraid Jou; But if you have a chlW to claim Your love and your protection There's no one but yourself to Warn If you are In dejection. It fciay be that you seldom smile And have no heart for Jesting: Perhaps you have to labor while Less worthy men are resting; It may bo that you crave renown Which Fate la still withholding, But why sit down to tret or frowi Or waste a moment ecoldlns--If neither wife nor girl nor boy Depends on your protection. Think ot the freedom you enjoy, And rise from your dejection. Luneh mi Fmmsimlmm Agrees with the weakest desu'ort Keep it on your sideboard at home. A quick lunch prepared in a minute. - -rsn with all Bass East. . For printed matter and fall particulars call on or addrats Chicmg end North Western Ry. (401-1403 Famrnn St., Omaha. NeL Rates East until September 30th Passenger Agent. V