4-B THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE; APRIL 26, 1914. THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ItOSEWATEIu"" VICTOR R03EWATER, EDITOR. . Tho Beo Publishing Company, Proprietor. j BEE BUILDINO. FAP.NAM AND BEVRNTEBNTH. j Entered at Omaha postofflce as sceond-ciags matter. By malt i per year. 1 .! ! 4.00 : .Q0 4.W 1 2.P0 ' TBRM8 OF SUBSCnirTION. By carrier per month. Pally and Sunday . fe..- Bally without Sunday..-' 0 " Kvenlng and Sunday.. -We... Evening without 8unday ' SS " Send notice of change "o'f"addrcs on complaint 61 lirrgulartty In delivery to Omaha Bee, Circulation I Department. nmttTTANCE. . . , , nemtt by draft. express or postal order. Onlr uro cent postage stamps received In payment of small ac--rounts Personal checks, except on Omaha end eaatem exchange, not accepted. OFFICES. Omaha-Tho Bee Building. Pouth Omaha M8 N street. Council Bluffs H North Main street I.lncoln-M I.lttle Building. . k Chicago 901 Hearst Building. New York noom HCH, 286 Fifth avenue, Bt IxiuIi-503 New Bank of Commerce.. Washington 725 Fourteenth St.. N. w. "" CORRESPONDENCE. Address communication relating to new and dl- toflal matter to Omaha Bee. Editorial Department. MARCH SUNDAY CIRCUIjATIO.V. 45,364 t3tat of Nebraska, County of Douglas, as. Dwlght Williams, circulation manager of The Bee Publishing 'company, being duly sworn, say that the average Sundav circulation for the month of starch. 1914, wa 45, SM. DWIOHT WlUilAMB. Circulation Manager. Subscribed In tny nresence and sworn to before I'Jtj this lit day of April. 1914, , ROBERT UuNTEK. Notary Public Subscribers Icnvlnj? tlio city temporarily should linro Tho Ilco mailed to them. Ad dress will ho chnnRcd 'ns often im requested. Follow the flag, for It follows destiny. Perhaps it Is not war, but it looks mighty, much like it. Where is the njan who said th.ere would bo no dandelions this year? -.t .i Let us trust tho Ro-to-church moyomenL had a conservation attachment. I Happy is tho man whoso last winter's coal bill Is paid up and his homo ball team winning. Looks as if the city of Montoroy Wore' doomed to bo captured as often as was Torreon. Now If all the peach crops have been fully destroyed, let our sprlns lambs proceed to gam bol on tho green. Tho Bible society that distributed 338,000 Bibles .In Now York City doserves credit for tackling tho biggest Job In sight. "The governor of MIsbouH plays ball,' ob serves tho Atlanta Constitution. Tharo come a time when every governor should. Tho pity of it all Is that if anyone! must pay the penalty of Huorta's murderous roglme it cannot bo tho guilty lnstoad of tho innocent. Seventeen American lives lost and seventy five wounded In' taking possession of Vera Crvz. Don't lot anyone peraUadd you, however, it Is war. It's a tough Job those days for anyone out line of the Mexican firing lino to command public attention, no matter what his rights or wrongs may be. But what a Mexican spy would bo doing in Sioux City is beyond us unless ho were trying his beet to find a spot whore he. would , be. sure not to bo discovered. Pome mon are born lucky, some achieve luck and somo have luck thrust upon them. If In doubt, ask tho lawyers who havo gotten outA from under their Indictments. Because they aro killing peoplo with' bullets !n Mexico Ib no good reason why we should recklessly slaughter them with .automobiles In Omaha or in'other American Cities. Chicago people who are protesting against the 'immorality" of crowding street cars evl dently despair of winning the fight on thi grounds of convenience, sanitation or Justice,-. Von Moltke-hnew of elshteen wayn of invading isngiana. nut none or setting out.-rExchan.gn. Which 6nco more brings us back to old "Manifest Destiny" as the real commandor in charge of our troops In Mexico, It is gratifying to learn from' the rindefllo,! lips of Congressman Hobson tbat we-may safely rely on the privates in the rank. " Rncb n '. matlon had already- cdriii 1 fo pome, however, irora viewing the records jof the past . We have the word of Mr. Bryan's vraein Commoner for it that "Mr. Bryan lives to servo nia reiiow men." That is why, ho doubt, he is unwilling to try to live on $12,000 a year with out piecing It out on the Chautauqua cirqut. Could it Have Been Arbitrated T Although war with Mexico finds the Amor Iran people, practically to ft man, shoulder to shoulder behind the president, many are ask ing, and many more will ask in the future, Could this troublo have been averted by arbl-, tral'.bn? To poace lovers It appears tp be the irony of ato that vro should laue a 'forty-eight-hour ultimatum and fend battleships to seize the ports of a neighboring republic at tho very mo ment that we aro loading in a world-peace movement nnd claiming credit for negotiating arbitration treaties in pursuance of a peace plan designed to mako battleships unnecessary. According tq last reports twenty-seven coun tries havo already accepted the particular form of arbitration treaty especially advised by our secretary of Btate, tho essence of which is that no resort to war shall be had because of any dlsputo between tho contracting nations until after one year shall have elapsod, during which time efforts shall be made to adjust differences. Had wo had a government in Mexico with which wewere Willing to deal, wo would doubtless by this time havo had such an arbitration treaty with that country, and wo would havo been in honor bound to havo waited n year, oven after refusal of an unconditional salute before tak ing the drastic measures we havo alroady inaugurated. Does this mean that the peace plan is fore doomed to failure, or does it moan that we are unwilling, or unable, to guide our own actions without a treaty according to tho rule by which Wo would by treaty bind oursolvcs and other nations to follow? Or, to put the question in another way, Had w.o had an arbitration treaty with Mexico in terms corresponding to thoso with the other countries, would wo havo ob served Its requirements in this case, or would wo havo lnslstod that tho treaty did not cover such an affront to our national" dignity and honor? Will our Mexican affair bo a stimulus and help to tho peace movement, In which we thought w,e' were in the forefront, or will U bo a check and a setback, and be hold up against us whenever we essay again to talk arbitration to other nations? ' The. new of the day I the announcement of the death of Dan Allen, for year king of the sporting fraternity In Omaha. Dan Allen wa born at Felt Mill. N. Y , in 1W0. locating n Omaha. In J8&J, where he opened a saloon and operated a (aro bank, and waj proprietor of the principal' gambltng house for over thirteen year. In hi later year he suffered from ill health, which terminated with a compile., Hon of pneumonia and consumption. The funeral U to take place Monday from hi late residence lit Douglas street e At a meeting of the North Omaha Improvement commute J. J. Brown. A. J. Popplelon, Joe Red man, Jerry "Whalen and Tom Daily were appointed to wait on tho county commissioner to request that a ditch be built to drain the swamp district east of Sixteenth street and north of Nicholas. Rase ball In Omaha Is not dead, for arrangements have been made fa organising the Union Paeiflo tlub anew and making It stronger than ever. The street ear began running on the new track on the north aide of Farnam street (hi rooming. The old dog. "drip." waa run ovtr and killed while going to a. fire ytiih No. 3 hose eart, Warren Bwltxler Is billed to deliver a lecture on fOHIieiuhlp" at the Young Men's Christian essocl tlnn next Tuesday. ... - .... ,The KnUrhJ sjjjidjsjif Honor. Frjendjihlp hjdgg, jt.e Jftelr Xlrt party to e.i attendance of e.venty. One Man in the Bight Place. Our brush with Moxico has gone far enough to make plain the fact that Colonel Goethals an governor In actual command of tho Panama canal and zone is the right man in tho right place. President Taft's original' idea and Pres ident Wilson's concurrence in naming a mili tary man for this position havo seemingly been vindicated. Governor Goethals proceeds with plans for fortifying and handling tho canal as if ho had been dojng that thing for many years, His military training, together with his con structive knowlodge of tho Panama, enable him to render n service which could hardly be expected ofa civilian, except as" guided by ex pert advice.- ' It must have occurred to many by now that it would havo been an egregious error to have lot New York, Dayton or any othor city have Colonel Goethals for its own. The Bee said at tho timo these calls wore made that Goethals belonged to tho nation and was too valuable a public servant to bo shunted off into the em ployment of any single municipality. Now York's police department may need him ever so much and Dayton's civic affairs may call loudly for his services, but he has had special training in neither lino of activity and might, in addition to being lost to the federal govern ment at Panama, have come short of require ments in these narrower channels, though such failure be highly improbable, ( uogiirmoBB oi coniuoting viows as to our future in or out pt Mexico, this much seems ovldont, wo are oply entering upon a porlod of Slgravo uncertainty and, aside from the proper government of tho Panama under normal condi i.. .it t .... . nuns, win nave urgent neeu mere ror such a man asjQovernqr Goethals for some time, Sumor as a life Treaerver. Mvoryone wants to live to a ripe old age, nnd ovoryone Is, therefore, ready nnd oagor to learn what contributes to lasting health and happiness. Celebrating his eightieth birthday anniversary, Ghauncey M. Dopow chalks up humor In the first place among' life preservers "One of the principal sources of healthy lon gevity and tho pleasure of living," saB Mr, De- pew, "Is a sense of humor and, the keen enjoy ment Of it. Peoplo who laugh easily and often nover havo appendicitis." Now, the best part of this prescription is that it is cheap, and within the reach of all, rich and poor, high and low, Alike. Somo pM pie may Inherit a humorous vein, but there is no natural monopoly of It, for it may bo ac quired and cultivated, although there is a dan ger, also, that It may be destroyed. Mr,. De pew, himself, sees this danger, and gives this note of warning The increasing intensity of our lives, th. r. for money and the erase for new and blsarre amuse ment for thoie who hav money, have limited con versation to the tock market, the shop and the af fair of society. I fear It U rapidly destroying American numor. as signs or the , change he refers to "tho "venerable witticisms", of the Caraboo society bringing a reprimand on the most distinguished officers of the army and navy, the after-dinner jokes of our American ambassador being called down by the United States senate and the Grid- Iron club's entertaining skits being rosented by tne new generation of high public officials Tt . ... 1. 1 I . .. .. ... i icnuiimuijr, ii wiese aire tendencies are not stopped and .counteracted, our saving sense of humor will be destroyed and our death rate be. again speeded up. If the object lesson of Cbauncey Depew's eighty years is to be a,f any use, it is up to- us to keep oursefves fit to laugh, and make others laugh, for that has been his experience, as ho lesijiies: a nave iritu. or Known otliars who have tried allopathy, homeopathy, osteopathy, tliristian tk-l ence. faith oures. Swedish exereUe. massage, foniuus goerns matter and to laugh with our friends, to contribute to their cheerfulness, to find out and onjcv the Inexhaustible good fellowship which can be foand in everybody, have done mere than all else o keep me healthy and happy. Reason or Prejudice? "I nm frank to admit thaf ln arguing to jurors 1 try to appeal to their prejudice Instead of their reason and judgment," says a Chicago attorney of somo prominence. "You may thlhit that a very remarkable .thing to say and a very unworthy thing to do, but-1 am only one of many lawyers who follow that1 rule. I do It, not becauBO 1 prefer to, but because l feel that'l havo to; that the average jury can only be Influenced by prejudice." We wonder how many lawyers coincide with this viow. The inference is that-the avorace jury Is no totally blind to reason tn"at it Is wash ing time and,the chanco of winning a caso f6r a lawyer to stand on its merits. Fosalbly there Is some ground for the criticism, melancholy as it Is. Possibly tho averago man who manages to get on a Jury is governed moro by prejudice than reason, for It takes tho strongest of us not to be, but oven so, aro lawyers ready to admit that tho situation is so bad as. to require such a practice as this lawyer sayB ho pursues? Tho abuse seems to be at least partly due to another alt tbo common custom on tho part of lawyers, namely, to screen into the Jury boxes only such man as, In their opinion, may be easily influenced by prejudice. For a long time wo havo been awaro that ontirely too little premium is placed upon Intellectual capacity In Jurors. Maybe a reversal of tendencies there wouldOffer some relief at the other end. In any event, It Is up to our lawyers to holp remedy conditipns of which they themselves complain. EDITORIAL POPGUNS. Stop Picking on Bryan Tho president is visibly harassed by ru mors of lmponding changes in his cabinet, es pecially In view of his emphatic assertion that, so far as he knows, no such changes ore In pros pect, and particularly by the vague speculation as to the resignation of Secrotary Bryan. If that" Is tho way he feels, lot evoryone stop picking on Mr. Bryan and give him a free hand to do his best in a Job that is hard enough at its easiest. Of course, It Is the way of Americans to dis cuss their public servants and affairs freely Un-' der all circumstances in whatever way thoy de sire, and yet the prosident has shqwn some ir ritation, even under less trying conditlonr. with tho recurring rumors of cabinet changes. While from the first many have inclined to tho bollef that Mr! Bryan would not complete the four years' term as a member of the executive family, It does not stand to reason-Hhat either ho or tho president Would wish to swan horses crossing such a stream of uncertainty asow lies before us. In short, as wo view It, no vlslblo'cood is to come from spreading tho rumor of Mr. Bryan's imminent retirement, while on the contrary, mischief of one kind or another might ensue. "SSBBBBSBBSSJMW The Business of Art. Two of America's most famous sculptors, Outzon Borglum nnd Solon Borglum', make thomsolves responsible for the startling asser tion, that "nearly1 60 por cent of all tho'rqonu ments and statuos in the United States, includ ing 'thoso in 8tatuary hall, Washington, wero not mado by those whose names J.hey bear." Humbler men, employes, pupils of, the more conspicuous artlBts, are said to have produced them, receiving an employe's wage, while the larger fruits of their skill, wont to bless their employers. This evidently moans that unless .checked tho more greedy corporate mechanism, that has commercialized Industrial pursuits, threatens to commercialize also individual talent in the field of art. Perhaps it will bo paldi in view of the fate of many an inventive and artistic genius, that this is not altogether new or unusual; even so, that doos not help the matter or call for acquiescence and submission, for the encourage ment of nrt must depend, as it always has, upon the possibility df winning tho highest prlzo. Putting art on the basis of big business, with the artist as a hired man, is calculated to deaden creative offort, and undo in a short time what ever has been accomplished toward developing real art in this.country. Porhaps, now that Messrs. Borglum sons of an eBtoomod Omaha family by the way have had the hardihood to bring the subject to pub lic attention, something will be done toward re dressing the grievance. It has been very wisely suggested thnt the National Academy of Design look into the situation and take such action as seems necessary. The Joke of the season is porpetratod by tho Omaha newspaper with the vilest advertising columns printing congratulations on its prom ise to "cloan up" at some unfixed future date. It hides behind a pretense of "Unexpired adver-. Using contracts," when everyone who knows anything about It knows no advertising contract compels any newspaper to print anything objec tionable to its management If Itjs willing to forego collecting for tho unused space. io ne Buro, the victim was shaken down twice to the tune-of J40.000, and' a third de mand for 5260,000 failed, but be satisfied that thero was nothing in the nature of blackmail about It. Tho money was abstracted and dl vlded by the lawyers, in n perfectly legal and professional manner nnd In strict conformity with the accepted ethical code. Ocean greyhounds' command precious few years of. life and much less renown. The steam ship Majestic, one of the first five-day boats of tho Atlantic, goes on the superannuated' list at the ago of 24. The Campania, empress of the journ ago, uiso disappears among tne hacK .numbers. Come to think of It, that fellow Huerta is making, a lot of trouble, considering the fact tna.he was supposed to have abdicate more than a, year ago, when President Wilson told him to resign fc-rthwith and go out of the dic tator ousiness. Boston Transcript: And 'Teddy" 'stcen thousand miles away! New York World: Is war so popular that a doubled income tax will be ac cepted as a blessing lit disguise? Philadelphia Ledger: What makes the Mexlsnns so peevish Is the fear tbat the Americans may go down there and estab lish law nnd order. Indianapolis News: It looks as It It were the prtnclple-of-the-thlng that Is making 8nor Huerth so pigheaded and, that, 'ou know, has caused as much trouble as any one thing in the world. Louisville Courier-Journal: Had a sim ultaneous aaute been agreed to Huerta would have been Just the sort of humor ist td grin from .behind stilt loaded guns after the smoke of the American satute had cleared. Springfield Republican: It will be In teresting to observe whether Mr. Bryan's "Prince of TeaCe" lecture will be In as much demand hereafter on the lecture platform- When the secretary of state first prepared that, lecture ho had not heart! of General Huerta. Nek York Sun: The only foemen we shall know are those who have been ex ploiting the unhappy country and Its pop ulation for their own selfish ends. In this (spirit we shall approach reluctantly but serenely the ordeal that may lie be fore us with clean hearts and unselfish purpose. Boston Transcript: We do not seem able to earn the praise of German mili tarist critics, who find the same fault with the demand for a salute that they did with "watchful waiting." If the Ger mans will indicate exactly what the nlted States should do to please them we may make a note of It. HERE AND THERE. Successful experiments wltti cotton growing are being carried on In the canal zono by a xsortn waronnan. A newspaper In a town In Braxll 2,000 miles'' from tho mouth of the Amazon gets all Its telegraphic news by wireless. The" officials of a ndmber of gas, com panies qf Europe have agreed to paint geographical signs on the top's of their gasometers to act as sign posts to aeronauts. Figures compiled by the department of labor at Washington show that wages in the lumber industry In the United States have increased 29 per cent In the last twenty-five years. In Formosa . thjrejs. a- tree . between 3.600 and 3,000 years old, wth a circum ference of sixty-five feet and the lowest branches forty-five feet from the ground. The tree Is a 'species of ' cypress, the Japanese Benlkl. , Venders of newspapers In Berlin are to be limited to calling, out the names of the Journals they sell. To make known the contents of the papers or Indicate any particular item of new is forbidden. In many of the Buddhist monasteries of Thibet and Siberia the process of printing made use of before the days of Uutenburg Is still followed. Kach page Ik a, carved block and no movable types are used. The Canadian Pacific Railroad com pany Is the largest land owner in the world Despite . the sale or millions of acres from the original grant of approx imately W,TpO,000 acres the railroad still possesses more than 11,000,000 acres, worth on the basis of sales in 1912, at least J175,00,OCJ). , WfflTTLED TO A POINT. The poor cook Is the physician's friend. Get busy and dust oft y&ur conscience. Hope Is the mortar used In the con struction of air castles. Look well to the start and then keep an eye oh your finish. When a mother gives a child a sponge bath she uses a wash rag. In this age of suffragettea it's a wise child ythat knows It own mother. The one sure thing Is that one can't be sure of anything In this world. Fighting your way through the world does not mean treating others unfairly. if people follow your advise they al ways have some one to blame their fail ures on. And some rnen get as tired of being married as some women do of single blessedness. , . When men rave over a girl and when women' say mean things about her sne la. a beauty. There are all kinds of people in this old worldexcept the kind that talk the dialect found In some books. You can't always tell. Occasional' the toughest boy In the neighborhood grows up and becomes a minister. There's only one thing a woman lovea better than to be told a secret, and that Is to find it out for herself . Tho chap who keeps everlastingly- at It accomplishes a lot of things that are not necessarily worth the effort. When a female lecturer gets off that ol saw about an honest man being the noblest work of God, every man In tho ai'dlence Imagines thet he Is blushing. AROUND THE CITIES. People and Events 1 1 Housefly to the swatter- "If you can't boost, don't knock." Kerosene burned up Chicago) gasolene caused the shooting up of Vera Crur. People who consider war reports as the greatest thrillers of the spring 'time should observe tlie amateur gardener eagerly scanning his beds for signs of growth. Cleveland put forth superior claims for a regional weather bank. Ninety degrees on the 18th ittit. and a snowstorm on the Kill pushes Cleveland so far to the front' that Pittsburgh Is again a fadeaway. Tho New York litigant who won a suit for moot) at a cost of $1RS,0CK. Is several If agues behind the celebrated Iowa -calf case which started atouhd ifl and cat up J)l,6.29. That's the brand of fighting spirit that puts buttered Joy In the legal bread basket. An eastern clergyman suggests as a forward movement among girls that they stop chewing gum for a year and gtv Say half of the $20,000,000 annually spent lor their quids for foreign missions. Its up to you, girls, to be gfjpd for the heathens sake. "On with tho dance, let Joy be uncon fined." The Americans who danced all night at a club In Mexico City after Huerta refused to salute the flag realized with greater certainty what the morrow would bring forth than did the partici pants n similar revelry In Brussels nearly ninety-nine years ago. According to Its Year Book, Trinity church corporation of New York City has propsrty valued at $14,20i,S12. which makes It the richest single church In this country. Trinity Is now considered a re formed landlord, getting an average of $1 a week per room from Its tenants, tho annual Income totaling ti77,20S. The minimum wage scale for ministers, recommended to the New Kngland Metho dist Episcopal conference, calls for $S50 In small towns and $1,000 in cities, with shelter thrown in. These sums are equivalent to a dally wage of $2. So in tho country and $2.73 In cities, considerably below the union scale for skilled labor and without extra pay for Sunday work. A Brooklyn man who married the girl he rescued from drowning In Long Island sound received a medal for his bravery. For the rescue or the marriage?gucss. A bottle of Jamaica rum left In Phila delphia by the British when the city was evacuated during the revolution has been, promised to the AVlslar Institute of Anatomy of the University ot Pennsyl vania, The anatomists must not pull the cork or fool with the contents Just now. That Job Is reserved for the university directors who may bo In office In 1932, when the institution will celebrate Its centennial and the rum will be 211 years old. The-director who keeps his thirst keyed up With .anticipation ,(or. seventy tight years will have earned the first snifter. SECULAR SHOTS AT PULPIT. Boston Transcript: The Troy Methodist conference calls attention to the fact that Americans spend $9,000.(00 more per an num for gum than for missions. That's something to chew on. Brooklyn Ha?le: New England Methe diets favor a minimum wage for mints ters. $f0 a year. As Itinerancy rHak everp clergyman an efficient 'vaiKfng delegate the rule will be self-enforcing. New York World: When suffragettes Interrupted the seniors at St Mrgi.lt', Westminster, "the church offlclnts " Ig nored the women and the demonstration subsided." That seemt tn be nbiut the most effective remedy. Houston Post: Tho ministers ot New York are still debating the question of Inviting Billy Sunday to hold a meetln there. We wonder if N-w fork Is in any financial position io take on a Billy Sunday, stage at tnli time. , Springfield Ttepubll -an: The minimum Salary for clergymen as flxed.by the New England conference of the Methodlft Episcopal church Is worth renumbering. It Is now to be $850 end a par: mags n small towns, and $1j0 and a pirsonags In largo towns and cities. No deductions allowed by the standing com'n'itec for Christmas presents to Ihe minister, or for what comes to him at donation parties. PASSING PLEASANTRIES. MUFFLED KNOCKS. Fast friends will always make a man slow up. Home people hate to take advice even when they pay for It. Iti takes a woman who hasn't any to know all about raising children. Every now and then you rur. Into A map who always needs a handkerchief and never has one. Now that automobile funerals have be come 'the thing many a woman will be witling to exchange an ornery husband for a nice -ride. The reformers say a lot Of mean things about boose. But the worst thing' we can say about It Is that It makes men Imagine they can fins. The man who wears a celluloid collar may be a good cltlsen, but he always smells as though he had spent the night In a bag ot moth balls. Judging from the cuts In the advertise ments, some pf our athletic young men play foot ball and tennis when they are attired only in their underwear. The old-fashioned man who used to stay home at night and read books now has a son who stays down town at night and reads programs and menu cards. If some of the girl angels can't play ihelr harps any better than they play their pianos while here, Heaven Isn't go ing to be such a fine place after all. When an eld married woman sizes up her fat, homely husband and rtallze; that she once called him "Ootsie,' she won ders if there la any Insanity In her family. Job may have been patient. But he was never on a street car going to a ball game when a coal wagon Insisted upon occupying the track for about five squares. MEXICAN VOLUNTEERS. HI! Over H.00O fe-undllngs or lost children were picked up and .ared for in New York City last year. Tarklo, Mo., boasts of a women resi dent who hasn't missed a Sunday rchool lesson In thirty-one years. She Is la;r, fancy free and 40. In New Orleans . one can drive an auto without a license, prcebded oy a competency examination. Pittsburghers plan to rear monu "jntnt to the memory of George Westing house. Inventor of the all brake. New York City's population Is U per cent Italian. 1 per cent Hebrew and 3 per cent Polish. St. Paul is one pf the first western oltieK tjj install an auto street sprinkler. Blrmlfbham. Ala., uses wire cage In rineratdrs to burn up paper waste col letted In the parks. Pittsburgh 1s discussing propositions for bond issues totaling $10,000,000. I.rt the nmtlr Prorrrd.' Cleveland Plain Dealer Now that the French government has made Its annual statement that ''last year's wine crop was extremely small, but ot .excellent quality." the war can proceed. Our forces are on the wagon, anyway. lilg Bill Haywood, loader of the I. W. W.'s. who has been bellowins so long and loud for healing snrloKr. Turkish , batha. onasing cltnuu iore. ought to rush to the Rio Grande If ho can JJ??"MV w.W. tor .-Ml not find enough "blud to ti.fv hin! ? . from ills, or to prevent their recurrence or preserve long and healthy life. All have merits But mlmr orado. unough "blud to satisfy him In Col- Chrerlnir JVewa. Indianapolis News. The announcement that the United gtat$s is gQing to quarantine against Cu be n (leas' ought to .be might cheering news to the dog. Where It Cme From. Boston Transcript The suspicion deepens that' Porflrlo r!az was the genius who Invented that quaint old expression. ' X should worry " CONTROL BOARD The Packard control board on the steering column places ignition, lighting, fuel mixture and electric horn all within easy reach of the driver's hand. Every switch is at the finger tips and the dash is completely cleared of littering control devices. The Packard standard of con venience and safety can be obtained by no other arrangement. Orr Motor Sales Company 2416 Farnam Street, Omaha, Nebraska LINCOLN HIGHWAY CONTRIBUTOR oAsk the man who owns on& "You know." said the weary-looking man, "that our next-door neighbors have a parrot, a self-playing piano nnd several children who sing and recite!" "What of it?" ''I was wondering whether It wasn't possible for this pitiless publicity" idea tb be Overdone." Washington Star. "Why does that lady grin so every time ihe sees you?" "She knows I'm only getting 110 a wosk." I "But why the grin?" 1 "I was engaged to her once and broke it off, and she afterwards married a millionaire." Cincinnati Entjulrer. . "I saw your friend Brown yesterday." "Brown's no friend of mine." "What's that? Why. he. told me you borrowed money from him!" a "Yes. and what did I do with It? Spent it In folly, t tell you Brown's no frjend oi mine. vievnmnu nam i-'rnier. r The railway train had just put in a tango pmying macnine. "Are we running on eastern or central time?" asklsd a passenger. "Neither." replied the ennduetor, wearily; "rag time." Baltimore Ameri can. "Posterity will view your action with uisuriiiiinaunt. eyea. earn me painoi. "Some of it may," replied Senator Spr ghum. "But I suxpect that a birge per- rCltnOr Cit nA.t6.lM. Vt'lll Via nil, 'Ii.A1.ImI. rtt the moving pictures." Washington ciar. "Well, Bridget, are you going to, the new place?" "Sure I'm not: the lady couldn't give a satisfactory reference from her last cook." Boston Transcript. "I can understand how we got along without wireless, or electric light, or the telephone." said the society bud. "Well?" "But how did we ever get nlong with out the tango?" Louisville Courier-Journal. William Ha!pes Lytle. (Song of the Mexican war period, 1S46-7. The author, an Ohio man, served In that war and tho civil war. and was killed In the battle of Chlckamauga Sep tember 20, 1SB3.) The Volunteers! The Volunteers! I drtam, as n the bygone years, I' hear again their stirring cheers, . ; And see their banners shine, What time the yet urtcowtUcred'north v Pours to the wal-s her legions forth, " For many a wrong to strike' a blow WJth mailed hand at Mexico. , The volunteers! Ah. where ate they ' Who bade the hostile surges stay When the black forts ot Monterev , Frowned on their dauntless line? When, undismayed anlld the shock . Of war, like Cerro Gordo's rock. They stood, or rushed more madly on' Than tropic tempest o'er Sah Juan. On Angostura's crowded field Their shattered columnstcorned to yield. And wildly yet defiance pealed Their flashing batteries' throats: And echoed then the rifle's crack. As deadly as when on the track Of flying foe, of yore. Its voice Bsdo Orleans' dark-eyedglris rejoice. Blent with the roar of guns and bombs, How grandly from the dim past comei The roll of their victorious drums, Their bugles' joyous notes, When over Mexico s proud towers. And the fair valley's storied bowers. Kit recompense of toll and scars. In triumph waved their flag of stars, Ah, comrades of your own tried troop, Whose honor ne'er to shame might stoop, Ot lion heart and eagle swoop, But you alone remain; On all the rest has fallen the hush Of death; the men whose battle rush Waa wild as sun loosed torrent's flow On Orizaba's crest of snow. The Volunteers! Tho Volunteers! God send us peace through all our years, But if the cloud of war appears, We'll see them once again. From broad Ohio's peaceful side, From where the Maumee pours its tide, From storm-lashed Erie's wintry shore, .shall spring the volunteers once more. 4