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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1914)
(9 TTTK BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY. 'AUGUST 20. 1014. THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOtTNDKD RT EDWARD ROSKWATER. " I VICTOR HOSEWATER. EDITOR. The Pp Publishing Company. Proprietor. r.KB Bl'lLDINQ. FARNAM AND 5F.VENTKF.NTn! Fntered at Omaha postoffir a aecond-rlaaa matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Tiy carrier By mall ppr month. per year. n and Fnndar fc.o I m llr mlthout Sunday....' 4 00 KVenlna: and Sunday t G Kveninff without Sunday ito 4.00 Sunday Fe only I Oft Fend notlre of rhanae of address or complaint of lrree-iilarttr in delivery to Omaha Bee, Circulation Xjepartment. RF.MITTANrR Hmlt hr draft. expresa or postal erder. Only twe rent stamp received In paymmt of amail ae rounta l"erannal cheeks, except on Omaha and eastern .exchange, not accepted. J OFFICES. ; Omaha Th Tie Btiildlnr. Ponth Omaha 231 N street Council Hluffa 14 North Main Street. 5 Lincoln M Little Hiilldlr.. ? "hlca(to fl Hearst BiilMlntf. New Tork Room Fifth avenue.. Ft lunula--MB New Hank of Commerce. , Washington 726 Fourteenth St.. N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Address rommunlcatlnna relating to new and edi torial matter to Omaha Bee. Tutorial Department. JULY CIHClXATIua. 52,328 Flat of Nebraska, County of Doug-las. aa. DwlKht Williams, circulation manager of The BV Publishing company, being duly aworn. aaya that the averse dally circulation for the month of July, 114, waa 6..l:s. DWWHT WILLIAMS. Circulation Manager. Bubacrlhed In my presence and aworn to before me. this 4th dav of August. I4. IIOBEHT HUNTER. Notary Tubllo. : gubcrtl)ra leaving B city temporarily t should have The liee nailed to Uiem. Ad dress will be changed often ai requested. In the meantime, our soldier boys are watch fully waiting on the Rio Grande. Late rains, remember, always put the pas tures In good shape for the winter. i But think of what the terrors of protracted war will-mean with the rigors of winter added. Carranra'may bet prudent man, but he did 'not show It when he banded the British minister .bis passports. Note that the discreet Turk will remain neu tral until It Is safer for him to take the side against Russia. The suffragists are going to Interrogate the 'candidates, but kindly give tbem sufficient no- Itlce to prepare a getaway. i Has it ever occurred to you that the country 'Is running along rather smoothly with the stock tgamolers shut off by the wart The climax of our calamities comes In the knowledge of the fact that the war threatens to destroy the dyed-hair industry. "With God's gracious assistance, the duke of Albrecht and his splendid army have gained a glorions victory." Ob, let us not drag God into the business. As on the Sea of Galilee, The Chrlat la whispering- Peaca!" Whlttier. But the voice seems for the time to be lost In the roar of battle. The war has already knocked Boston out of its grand opera season. Grand opera got Us knockout in Omaha, not through the war, but through the bunco methods of the over-greedy managements. In adjoining columns Premier Asqulth and i Chancellor Von Bethmann-IIollweg tell us that I Germany and England, respectively, are to t blame for the war, and the duty of neutral Americans Is to let it go at that' for the present . The method of appointment, however, let jus repeat, and also the tenure and terms of Mrvlce of appointive officials, are but details ,-of any short ballot plan that can be readily ad justed without affecting the' principle involved, r . ' . The democratic ' state editors want to lay plans for an early and continuous campaign In Nebraska. It Is all right to lay plans, hut with the European war occupying the center of the ; stage, attempts to carry them out will be wasted "effort. , And now we are told that the neutrality of Belgian territory waa but a pretense, anyway; " that Belgium was fortified only on the frontier facing Holland and Germany, and freely open ;oo the sides toward France and Ens-land, if ;-so. Belgium must either have had a hunch all ithe time or have wilfully invited trouble. The paving of Farnam atreet. toward the com. pletlon of which Ita merchant have Ion cast anx ious eyea. waa finished today. The atreet car com pany completed . Its tart of the atreet. and ran Its track up to the west line of Fifteenth, which looks aa If It Intended at no dlatant day to run Ita cars paat the new court houae. A new republican atate committee haa been organ lied with C. E. Yoat aa chairman. The Omaha mem bers are laaao llaecall and W. F. Bechel. The Vnlon Padflca outdasaed the Kaokukg In their came, VhltV resulted In a T to 0 nothing" vic tory for the home team. The reals-nation of General Manager 8. H. H. (Tun of the Union Pacific is officially announced by Preat dent Charles Kramle Adams. The aame order makea B. R. Callaway second vie prealdent and general manager, effective rVpuraber L i Kv. T. C. Hall and bride returned from Em rope today. Mlaa Annie Pcannell. who has been visiting her Uncle, John Iluaale, left for her home in Chicago. Goodly Brucker returned from an exten.lv weat rn trip luting six eeka, during which be went as far as Ban Franclaco and Portland. Andy McAusland of New York City la la Omaha visiting relatives and friend. J. M. Falrchlld, the expert electrician, who has Keen here for the laat nine months Installing the electric light plant, has returned to New York. The German Advance Allowing for bias and coloring, the only conclusion possible from official reports ema nating from all the different military intelli gence bureaus Is that the German advance across the French and Belgian borders has been going steadily forward. Had the kaixer's armies daxhed across the frontier at the outset It would not have evoked great surprise, for the reputation of the German military machine had been built so high that it was believed to be capable of almost any Imag inable achievement at arms. That the allies have held the Germans In check for nearly a month, and made their progress as slow and costly as It has been, merely testifies to the fact that the armies and fortifications of France, Belgium and Great Britain were popularly un derrated, particularly their preparedness to re sist sudden onslaught. The Germans, however, concededly have the numbers, the implements of war, the war chest and the master military minds, which In com bination constitute the formidable engine for aggressive campaigning. Oermany has been able to pick for Itself the field of operations, and Its armies are not dlntppolntlng expectations. Repeating an eiprewtlon already quoted by The Bee, "The Lord fights with the battalions." While the fortunes of war may smile on one side or the other. In the long run the only way the Germans can be kept from the supreme victory Is by the development by the allies of a superior military force, for which, if possible at all, time and money will be needed. American Fanners in Canada While thousands of our American farmers who went to Canada have seen the error of their way and returned, the stream of emigra tion northward has not ceased. In March of this year, reports show, G.800 experienced Yankee farmers took up their homes in the western provinces of the Dominion. They represented a combined capital of $1,776,000 In cash and 11,132,000 in settlers' effects. In the year 1813, of the 418,000 newcomers to Canada, 116,000 were citizens of the United States. Thus we see that while many are returning to the "states," after giving Canada a fair trial, others are going to take their places. One effect of this migration for Canada will be good farming in its newer sections. Another effect for both Canada and the United States will be undoubtedly closer mutual relations, both from a business and political standpoint. Commercially, this effect is already reflected in the demand for American-made agricultural machinery, Immense quantities of which are now going from our factories to Canada's farms. Thus, already the migrating American has cre ated new markets for home industry. Then the American investor has followed the farmer, Just s the American drummer fol lows the missionary into the fastnesses of for eign lands more distant than Canada. In 1913, for example, American Investments, according to reliable sources of information, amounted to $G37, 000,000. as against $417,000,000 in 1911. Of this former sum $190,000,000 went Into land, mills, mines and factories In British Columbia and $40,000,000 into the prarle prov inces. In 1913 Canada sold $351,000,000 of new Canadian industrial bonds and the United States took more than did Canada Itself, while Mother England bought only one-fifth of the en tire issue. Just here it Is Interesting to note a revival of the fear In England that this steady coming together of the business elements of Canada and the United States Is sure to produce what Mother England pleases to call the "American ization of Canada." From the figures Just quoted. It appears that the dear old mother is not doing all she might in the premises to ward off such a baleful contingency. Canada and the United States are bound to come even yet closer together from every standpoint, simply for the reason that it is to their mutual advantage and, so far as Americans are concerned, they are not greatly exercised over these periodical tldea of emigration flowing Into the Dominion. - How to Beat the Price Boosters. A number of our American cities are meet ing the conditions of high living cost through artificial price boosting by opening municipal markets for direct exchange of food articles be tween producers and consumers. The first suc cessful example of this sort of municipal activity was set by the mayor of Indianapolis a year or so ago, when he bought potatoes on municipal account and sold them to poor people at cost. Chicago city authorities are just now arranging to open up seven municipal marketa at strategic ally located points that will cut out greedy mid dlemen's profits." Omaha is hardly up to this method of self-defense, but it is well to keep in mind the possibility of resort to it in case of necessity. Answering- When Opportunity Knocks The new president of the Burlington rail road system, Hale Holden, is a comparatively young lawyer, with almost no experience as a railroader. His chief claim to fame just now is that he had an opportunity thrown in his way one day and cinched it "clean and cold," as we say here in the west. Chosen to represent the railroads in the fa mous Minnesota rate case at a time when he was recognised as a fairly good lawyer at the Kansas City bar, he had sense enough to know that this was a chance of a lifetime. Maybe John J. Ingalls was rlgu after all. Anyway, Hale Hol den was taking no chances on opportunity knocking twice at his door. He laid himself out on that brief. He was right in thinking it might land htm something big. Th. brief caught the eye of James J. Hill and It must have been exceptional to do that Mr. Hill's eye is small, but It never falls to get all 'round the biggest objects. Mr. Hill In 1907 offered Mr. Holden the position of general at torney for the Burlington, and three years later he was advanced to assistant to the president and then vice president. Now, at the age of 45, Mr. Holden becomes president of the road. "We are children groping in the dark," ex claims an eminent local military expert conclud ing a critical editorial analysis of the progress of tb war. And no one rises to dispute the as sertion. It seems those moratoriums over la Europe look so luscious that a member of congress Just couldn't resist the temptation to propose one for us over here in the United States. r7 ftdr'w it Brief ewaltfnatf a ttaaely topic Urtfca. Tfc mi rnim a iwayewaTMmr fee- ytalM Santa. All UMave awV atlea y edit. 49fTAfs94 J tot Here's m Re nek of rreelctloaa. NORTH LOUP, Neb.. Auc. IS.-To the Killtor of The Hee: Th?re haa been a great amount of dlacuaalon In recent years with respect to planetary dloturb anc on the earth's atmosphere by which weather conditions and rainfall are af fected. About fifteen years ago I began the study of thla subject by Bending each year to Washington, D. C, for the work known aa the Kphemerla, or Nautical Almanac. Thla work la prepared three yeara In ad vance by the government, at hundreds or thousand or dollar of expenne, and all position of the planets, down to the minute, are recorded ao that those posi tion may be known by turning to the proper table. At the beginning of each year I copied Into a small pocketbook the varloua poiltlona and configuration of the planet Mercury, Venn. Earth, Mara, Jupiter, Saturn, I'ranu, Neptune and all moon change, showing exactly the day hour of the phenomena and the combinations of those phenomena. Thla gave me an onnortunllv in mnka notes on the weather condition tempera- ire, wind velocity, tornado and rainfall, any year I atudled weatlier conditions from that data. I find that maanetle ndltlona stand at the bottom of weather change. Those magnetic eondl- n are certainly canned from reverxl lagnetlam otherwise known as positive nd negative. If I have reached the nroner connlualnn nua haa a greater Influence over our atmosphere than any other except the l mis la rrom the fact that Its orbit adjacent to the earth and aun M. netle conditions vary by the same rule by which heat and lirht are Since Venua. being a very small planet, and JuplUr a very large planet, the former being near the earth and aim an the latter far from the earth and sun, to apply the rule of heat and light would greatly diminish the magnetic force of inner on reaching the earth' atmo phere. To double the dlatanc rr iu- source of heat and light dlvld. , of heat and light by four. In the atudy of thla science for twenty ears I feel c ertain that . . f .,.. may be eatabllahed by which the wet and dry period of the season, on any part of the earth's surface may be de termined In advance of the phenomena. n mis shall be accomplished the benefit to farmers In sowing and reaping crop .. me oenent to transportation com Panle In protecting from flnorf. amount to hundreds of millions of dollars Lnnuauy, Some of the moat xpnflsinai Ain.i - xM.r-jr position are to ncriir t (ha September, mil. Beginning with the IJth ,n8 month and continuing a period of twenty days, if you see extensive flood windstorms, hall and tornado, especially 111 the Mlsaisslnnl villw rf . w- Prised. I am ,ay)ng. thl, tiua condl- iim aoein exceptional. WALTER JOHNSON. tlor m a Veil PHe Rematlaar Magnified. OMAHA, Aug. 37. To the Kriltni- nt njn,- Bee: I think v an 4llfJ to get after the unscrupulous price boost era right here In pmaha. A lot of our shopkeepers have marked things up that have been standing on their shelves for months or years lust brrmu h- v..,.. the war pretext. A friend of mine broke nia giasse. ana when he had the lens replaced discovered that be was being; charged quite a little more than he paid the laat time, and when ho protested he waa told that the price had gone up be cause some of the lenses used by opti cians come from Germany. Are people going to stand for that all along the line? K-irir ret Workmen' Compenaatlon. OMAHA,' Aug., S. To the Editor of The Bee: The writer of the letter signed "A Taxpayer," assumes that the so-called workmen's compensation law enacted by the last legislature will go Into effect when the referendum vote Is cast at the coming election; that the law will put an end to personal Injury litigation as be tween employer and employee; and that on account of the decrease In litigation, the number of judges In this district should be reduced, to save a few thousand dollars expense to the county. "A Taxpayer" puts the dollar above the man. The so-called compensation iaw, wmcn in my judgment waa passed through the tireless efforts of the Inaur. ance lobby. Is not a compensation law In any true sense of the word, but la purely and simply a confiscation law of the worst description. It confiscates or takes from the laboring man practically very right that he haa worked more than a generation to acquire. And fur ther than this, it would not do away with litigation or leasen litigation as "A Taxpayer" seems to think. There Is no provision In this so-called compensation law which insures the pay ment of even the meagre allowance which It provides. If the employer re fuses to pay the Installment from week to week, the injured employee will be obliged to bring suits In endleaa num ber, which instead of decreasing, will Increase the litigation. Where, at the present time, tor total disability the laboring man. would get a verdict from a jury of probably IJ5.0OO or more, If eventually aucceaeful under this law, get probably S5.000 or S8.000 In tb course of thirty yeara. But If the laboring men of this atate will read this law and use their brains to think about It; and If the people of thl atate In general will exercise their humanity and their consideration for their fellowmen, thla law will be over- whemlngly defeated. o far aa the Injured man la concerned, the best provision In the law la that re lating to total disability, and thla pro vision la so Inhuman as to be almost un- Uilnkabl. WUI th people of thl atata.vote for ich an Inhuman thhig aa thlj so-called compensation law, and forever depiiv th laboring man of th rfjhts that he now haa, vn In order o reduce th number of our judge, or av "A Tax payer" th few pennies that he may have to contribute to th raahitaJnanc of our courts as at present conducted T More than XS.000 of t'i electors of thla state filed a petition asking that this question b submitted to th voter at th referendum, election next November, and they will then bav an opportunity of answering th question. GEORGE B. NORMAN. Former PreaideiU Central Labor t'nion of Omaha, The War-Who's to Blame? fcadew af the Rasalaa Bear. Hanns Helns Ewers In Fatherland. Thla war hsd to come. Everybody In Europe has known It for years. Sooner or later It had to be 1 ilded which was to be master In Europe, the west or the east. The weat-that mean Oermany, France, KnKlend and Italy. The east Russia. Germany's only foe, first and la.t, I Russia. Ru ala, first and Inst Is the eternal foe of England and Austria. Srniuld Hohenxollern and Hapaburg be de feated, Russia would be the Invincible enemy and con queror of England. Italy and France. The defeat of Oermany In this war would result In nothing else than the beginning of Muscovite supremacy throughout the world. A supremacy which sooner or lateT, but quite Inevitably, would overrun east Asia and America as well. Let the Yankee as well a the Japanese bear thl In mind! For this is the mot signal weakness of all our diplomat: they go In for a day-to-day policy. They lack that far-sighted breadth of vision which Bismarck had and which even though only by In stincthas governed every move of Russian diplomacy for age. The defeat she sustained in the Japanese war was but a pin-prick In the hide of Russia, Just as the last Crimean war: hardly feeling it, she pushes her masses steadily on toward Berlin and Stockholm, aa she does toward Constantinople, India .nd th shores of the China sea. This Is rmt an essentially German point of view: It la the positive knowledge of every far-slghtcd Euro pean. 'Bernard Shaw expressed this idea. Just as clearly ss 1 do. And so convinced of this is the German emperor that he lays aside all other considerations with the sole object of preventing It. He is fighting for Germany but at the same time he Is fighting for the civilised world. Hence the violation of the neutrality rf Belgium and Luxemburg; hence the desperate queries to Italy, Sweden, Belgium, Holland: "Are you with us or against u?" Which means neither more nor lesi than: "Are you with or against yourselves?" Just as the Magyar was for centuries the guardian of the west against Islam, so today Is Oermany the guardian of the west that Is to say, the world's cul tureagainst the Turk's successor, the Russian. Root Go Rack to Anelesit History. Arthur Bullard in the Outlook. I suppose me have all asked ourselves who is to blame for this tragic disturbance. We all have a deep Impulse to regard the world as a melodrama, with a hero to applaud and a villain to hiss. But this Is a question which Is hard to answer. We may be quite sure that future historians will argue about It and disagree. Since the first rumor of trouble the press agents of all the governments concerned have been trying to persuade us that the "other fellow' started it. It ha not been a dignified spectacle. I have been reminded of a strange sight I saw on my first visit to Paris. Two able-bodied and appar ently able-minded men were quarreling on the side walk. After calling each other all the vile things they could think of they began to spit at each other. Americans one-half a mad would have been fighting. But,- It was explained to me, the French law of as sault Is very severe on the person who 'strikes the first blow. If you really hate a man In France, the meanest thing you can do Is to make him lose his temper and hit you. The powers of the entente tell us that the kaiser first drew the sword. The Germans say they were In sulted beyond bearing. Where the aggression started is very hard to say certainly Europe ha not gone to war over the Servian dispute. The ill feeling which has caused this confla gration Is very much older than that. We In America dislike the militarism which Is associated with the name of Bismarck. But Bismarck could not have im posed hla gospel of blood and Iron on his people if all Germany had not been smarting under the Insults of Napoleon. It would be easy to trace the roots of this conflict back to Charlemagne-whom both French and Oermans claim as their national hero. And doubtless an Industrious historian could fix some of th blame on Julius Caesar. The sad thing is that war will not liquidate this age-eld hostility. You cannot make friends with ma chine guns. And, of course, the one evlsh of America is that peace may come again to Europe to our cousins by blood, to our partners In business, to our comrades In the march of civilisation. We should give thanks that we can bo neutral In this conflict we have friends on both sides. Breaking; Pnlat of Military Competition. George Horace Lorlmer in Saturday Evening Post. To underatand this war you may forget all about Hohenxollern and Hnpsburg, Slav and Teuton, Servla nnd the Archduke Francis Ferdinand. A monarch ap plied the match, but the Institution of monarchy had little to do with It. Republican France contributed as much to the conflagration as monarchlal Austria, and democratic England almost as much as autocratic Russia. v There was a situation In Europe which could isaue only In war or disarmament, and effort In the latter direction were unavailing. Military competition among the great powers had been steadily Increasing for ten years until th tension had become almost unbearable Then came a supreme effort. Oermany raised her extraordinary war contribution of a quarter of a bil lion dollars by drastic special taxes on top of the heavy ordinary taxation. Franc lengthened tbe term of active military servlc from two years to three. Russia adopted scheme of hugely .augmented mili tary expenditure. England lifted her naval appropri ations to an unprecedented figure. A man can't stand on tiptoe Indefinitely. Military competition could scarcely be pushed further. There must be a letdown or a fight. The proximate cause Auatrla'a Irritation against Servta-was trivial enough. But the real caua waa national Jealouay, suspicion and hatred carefully ed and exploited everywhere by the military class and the noisy few who find a profit in war. The grand stock in trade of these fomenters of war is that bar barous patriotism which Is merely a modem extension of the tribal sentiment that made the Indian who lived on the south aide of the creek consider It a ploua ddty to kill one living on the north aide whenever he got a chance. Whatever the cost of this war. there will be another aom day if Frenchmen are atlll taught to hat Oermans, Germans to hat Russians, and so on In Other Cities People and Events The eatat of B. V. Kaith. tbe theater owner, ad mitted to probate In Pittsburgh, I valued at ti00,c00. Oua Bruno, at one time a prominent charactr comedian, died on Monday in New York, aged yeara Thomas O. Plant, a retired aho manufacturer of Wolfboro, N. ., was fined 1 cent and eosts for beat ing s reporter, who tried to take pictures of his eatat. Plant has appealed the case. The American minister at Th Hague, Prof. Henry Van Dyke, dnlv a report published in Berlin that his son had enlisted In th German tuny. Florencio Constantino, th operatic tenor, is again confined to prison for debt. His bondsmen gav hint up. He owe $ou,O00 to Oaoar Haromerstela, on a jug mnt for breach Of contract. Thr Smith hav filed for places ea th primary ticket at Atlanta, O. Thy. ar Frank F. 8mltb, city tax collector; John Y. Smith, recorder, and Charles W. 8mith, for alderman. ( A son was born In London on Monday to th Prla ees Arthur of Co nought. Prlnc Arthur and the duche of Flf wer married on August K, 1911, at St. Jama Palace. H I a son of th duke of Connaught. - Banjaffiln H Boltoa. biologist of th Maryland agricultural experiment station, at College Park. Md, baa been auigagwd by th Cuban rTernmeot to take charge ol extermination of bog cholera In th Island republic, . Pari haa ntxiut Hi residents to th acre to London's fifty. Pittsburgh Is making determined efforts to abate smoke hulsani e. Philadelphia Is now unlng Us new North east boulevard, which cost S3.f0O.Oi0. Wllllamsvllle, N. Y ha celebrated a "Come Back Day" for the benefit of ex iles. Cleveland will enforce city ordinutve prohibiting sale of parlor matches after September 1. Water from King Solomon's sealed fountain Is now piped through the streets of Jerusalem. Cleveland's city paving Is said by fcomo automobllist to be the worst In the United States. Philadelphia la completing two new mu. nlcipal piers between Catherine and Christian streets. St. Paul Christian Scientists have opened a new temple at Summit avenue and Grotto street Phlladelphlans plan erection of an office and religion building a a memorial to Dr. Philip Schaff. Hollldayshurg, Pa., has demolished a building erected In 1755, to make way fur a business structure. Memphis, Tenn., school board has dis charged a number of veteran teachers for age reasons, without pensions. x A phonograph carried In a ca.-e reiem'i llng a camera by a man who frequents crowd 1 a Parisian advertising novelty. The Alatlc town of Maiwatchl, on the border of Russia, Is inhabited by m-n only. Women are forbidden enl ranee to It. An enterprising laundrvman tn Pari use a captive balloon to lift the clothing which he washes high Into the ulr tu dry and bleach, uncontamlnatel by the tlvst ef the city. JUST IN FUN. "What business are you going to put your son to. Hrow n?" ' Well. 1 haven't decided yet; but. Judg ing from the hour he keeps, I should say he whs naturallv cut out tor a milkman." Sydney bulletin. "How's your boy getting along is col- Icire?" "Not well. Thev hatted him out of the box In the third Inning the other day." Detroit Free lYess. ' I hear you married Thompson's di vorced wife." "Yes." "How did you come to do that." "Thompson recommended her highly. He said hla only trouble whs she snored, and you know I'm deaf."--Boton Tran script. mmertlmc. Riding Is so bumpy. Walking Is so hot, Tenn! Makes you grumpy. Golf I worse a lot. Never mind the diet. Keep your conscience free, Just a keepin' quiet That's enough for me. Cleveland Plain Dealer, THE LESSON. Ella A. Fanning in New York Bun. She gazes at her little brood, Their clamorous wants she must supply. New tenderness is in her tones "Oh. blest ami happy mother I! "But yesterday this humdrum life, Its homely burnVns. wearied me. Impatient I. and discontent. My cares were all that I could see! "From dawn to dusk new task arose How blesised each one seem todayl The plain farm duties! How I Joy Here. safe, protected, dull, to stayl "The plenteous fields are stretching wid The quiet village lies below. No rumor comes of pillage, want There's no alarm of threatening foe! "Gay hollyhock nod by the wall. The boughs with ripening fruit hang low. From yonder oat field sounds th voice Of one whose fealty well I know! "God pity woman oversea. Who husbamls, smns, must give to die! God make me thankful! They deserved Love, safety, peace, as much a I!" Heat heat th mi.m hi less during tbe hot weather Here s a food that is far more nutri tious than meat and doesn't seat. FAUST SPAGHETTI Mk m flat, feutr. owrTTln-iI. Full af (Intra a m aside huiUnr. Pnparad in a jiffy yoo doa't aave to ererwock ever a antauna, Jr. ana ffcssW-fasr at-A. MULL BROS. 84. Uu.tfa, f l . mm Against J .'Against X Substitutes .. Imitations Round Package lnjUjKLL MALTED miLli Made In the largest, best equipped and sanitary Malted Milk plant In the world We uo not make "milk products? Skim Milk, Condensed Milk, etc. But th. Original-Genuine HORLICK'S MALTED MILK Made from pure, full-cream milk and the extract of select malted grain reduced to powder form, soluble in. water. Best food -drink for all age 3 ASK FOR HORLICK'S ' Used all over the Globe m foTTsTisTnsi ot &OUQCttttl -r 'I.J 'it S i 30. OMAMA. NCR . .. ' . . tS V-" ' : , r . . , Most Modern and Sanitary Krewery in th Wee. Family trmde supplied by: South Omaha WM. J17TTKR, 2603 K fHtwett Telephone Sua til tt&S. Omaha HUGO Y. BTLZ, 1-534 IVm-La Street Phone Douglas 804a Council Bluffs OLD A UK BAB, 1612 Month Mrt Street: Phone 3623. Used1 in mors Hosaej t&aa urj two stker bnak el cottks Beer csmboed Anheuser-Busch Company of Nebraska OMAHA Rosenfeld Liquor Company Council Bluffs. Iowa DISTrUBl'TORS Family Trade Supplied by G. H. Hansen, Dealer Phone Doug. 2506