Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 03, 1914, Page 4, Image 4
THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 3, 1914. .THE -OMAHA DAILY BEE POINDED BY EDWARD ROSKWATKR. VICTOR ROSE WATER, EDITOR. The Bee Publishing Company. Proprietor. rrE Pun.Dim fahnam aku seventeenth. ffred at Omht postoffloe aa second-class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. By caret c Hy mail per month. per year. l,aily and Sunday fio...... $, J'slly without Sunday.... 4 00 Kvenlng end Sunday 8 no Kvrnlng without Sunday ?o.... 4.00 Pun-lay Pea only XV . 2 Ow Jppnd notice of chance of addresa or complaints of arregularlty la delivery to Omaha Bw, Circulation 3 e pertinent. t REMITTANCE. Remit hf draft, eapreee or pontal order. Only two-Sr-ent stamp reee! ve4 In payment of small ae Vounts. Personal checks, except on Omaha and eastern fexehange. not accepted. . ' ; offices. Omaha The Fee rlulldlng i South Omaha SIR N etreet. Council Fluffs 14 North Mala street. I Lincoln 2 Uttle Building. Chcaro-U Hrarst Building I New York Room lis. SM Fifth iwnnt. I ft Inla -MS New Rank of Commerce. i Washington 7S Fourteenth BU. N. W. tCORRESfONPENCB. ddresa rnmmunlcatlons relstln to news and edi torial matter to Omaha Be. Sdltnrial JJepartment. JULY ClRClliATIOJl. 52,328 tState of Nebraska, County of Douglas, aa. I Dwlght Wllllarne, circulation manager of Tha Be (Publishing company, being duly sworn, aaya that a ho average dally oirculauon for tha mueHb of July, 3 i14. ii.m t DW19MT WILLIAMS. Clrculatloa Manager. Subscribed In lav presence and aworn to before ma, this 4th day of August, 1114. I . ROUERT HUNTER, Nobxry Public. Bubscrlbers - tearing the city temporarily should have The Boa mailed to them. Ad dress will ba changed aa often aa requested. For one those democrats ara lucky. Sedan, day Is past, but no surrender. i : At any rate, tha military aviator bualneaa la looking up. t rT No, smokeless powder doea not show on tha photograph. . J a 5 The "smile that won't coma off" wins often J: when nothing else will. :3 One consolation left ua, Omaha's esteemed ball team will not lose many more games this season. "Chauncey M. Depew rode out of Paris in a live stock ear," says a news Item, and that's no Joke, either. A little of this good September- osona from Nebraska would have a might? effect for pern a In warring Europe. ' Not many more receptions at Ak-Sar-Ben's Devil's hotel. Failure to register as a guest will be a life-long regret. Magy a school kid Is eagerly scanning the reports to see if his dear teacher may possibly be among those detained In Europe. ' Some of those accounts of barbario cruelties practiced on war victims in Belgium, read too much like the report of tha atrocities In the Balkans. Under the stress of war the doors In Brus sels are not to be kept open later than a t. m wbil in peaceful Nebraska the lid continues to clamp down at a. Nearly $10,000,000 In the prince of Wales renei runa. That doea not look aa it the moneyed people of Britain were trying to shirk, out of their obligations. The Iowa State fair is playing in an un lucky run of bad weather. Our Ne braska State fair folks should be wise and ar range with the weather man In advance. Chinese-Japanese war, 1114-15; Boar war 1819-1100; Russo-Japanese war, l04-ob; Balkan war. 1111-11; the European slaughter, 13141 What will the next decade bring? The cartoonist who drew the picture of the little girl with three dolls, two real ones marked "flogs or war and one of sawdust, labeled "Civilisation." was not far wronsr In bla cancan- tlon. , 'The forces ofgllglon return to their year work invigorated by a summer's rest and recrea tion, only to find that the demon of wickedness is equally as fresh and ready for the fray, though he. stuck to ths Job right on through tha hot weather. . Why should not the United States buy ships ; fromclUsens of belligerent nations it tbey want to sell them at mutual satisfactory prices? la j there anything essentially different In buying merchantmen than buying other articles of com 1 merce for our own use? Suppose we have a ij chance to pick up a few bargains in locomotives .: or automobiles from similar sources The Power to Declare War. Many people who deeply deplore the deadly conflict riming In Europe ascribe the outbreak to the porr exercised by the ruling monarch to declare war. According to their Idea It is a contest between emperors and kings, rather than between the peopl of the respective coun tries, which would not have been possible under a government in which the power to declare war lies not in one man, but in the representatives of popular sovereignty. Those who srgue this way try to persuade themselves that in a coun try like our, where a declaration of war must come from congress, no such combat at arms would be possible upon similar provocation. We regret to have to note our dissent from this conclusion. Bo far as outward appear ances go, the war is as much, if not more, a war of nations than of monarch, and the people of the different countries are thoroughly aroused to practically unanimous support of the w-ar lords who are leading them. Were the question to be put to a referendum vote on a statement of facts as they iww understand them, the re turns In every on of theee countries would be overwhelmingly for war. Neither does it follow that vesting the power to tlotiare war In congress, as we do, would have forestalled the trouble. The truth Is that war is almost Invarlaly precipitated re gardless of formal declarations. The absence of authority In the president to declare war did not keep us from our tilt with Spain, nor did the president wait for a command from con gress to seize Vera Crus In our late hostile demonstration upon Mexico. War is more like a wild conflagration set by a firebrand or flying sparks, equally hard to chock when once well started. While a war can scarcely bo successfully waged by any ruler aaalnst an ainverse sentiment of his own people, a war with a popular backing behind it is not likely to be halted by putting the power to make the formal declaration In one place or another. Tha Woman's Christian Tamperaaca union swv a Bkatina- sodabla at tha rink Uat alsht Tha Hand of Ilwpa. composed or boys and glrla. marched lata the hall with waving banners, alnxlna aa they marched, and rafraahmeaU wars earvad from taMea Using tha room. Fifth ward democrat orsanlsed a Cleveland aad llendrirka club with J. Wlfmu, praaldenl; A. lal toa, vice president, and 1. F. Umpmau, secretary, and this committee to drum up inure recnrlta: j! M. Rice, Thoroaa H. Dalley, Hue Carey, William Whltchouae. Jerry Waalaa, Jaooa Kaufinaa. vr. Salvara. Thorn Bwlft aad Jerry Beavar. Tha fair for St. Joseph hoapttal Is growing In at tendance. Donations reported yestarday Included: Mr. J. Bedford, una tun coal; Guy at KHeh. lea for tha buapltal; Pond Broa, a boy's suit of clothes; Mlas Jaooba. a lace tidy; R. Hendrlckson, i la Tocorl-a. ' U 1L Mlekal aad Mlas Nannie Malcolm aera mar ried at tha residence of J. C. Morrow oa Davenport a treat. Rev. C W. Savidfa officiating. Tha president af tha State alr association re ceived a telecram from New Orteana that lO.OuS fee of apaaa bad been reserved for Nebraska's exhibit t tha CVrttoa expoeltloa. ' John F. Coad. one of Wyomlnt's cattls klnga, sud family are Bti.ia at the Millard. . Sugar. Mr. Ultimate Consumer, who has been shocked at the rise in the price of sugar ss a result of the war. Is advised by so good an au thority as Charles A. Svreckels, president of the Federal Sugar Refining company, that "the worst is yet to come." In other words, Mr. Spreckles ssys: "If the war continues and I'm afraid it Is going to be a long-drawn-out affair there is no telling where prices may go." The American sugar market went up, so he explains, immediately because England, need ing some 175,000 tons monthly, began compet ing with our refiners for the Cuban product, her main source of supply being cut off. The advance was accentuated by alert American buy ers rushing In and purchasing granulated sugar far In excess of usual amounts. So much for the present situation, but the future is even more protentous. Warring European countries produce about 8,000,000 tons of beet sugar yearly, or, as Mr. Spreckles says, approximately 45 per cent of the world's supply. It is too much to expect that all of the present European beet crop yet in the f'leld will be harvested and made Into sugar. On the contrary, if the invading troops do not destroy It the lack of labor to gather the beet crop and work it In the factory would prevent. This picture means a continued high range of prices and curtailed consumption of sugar. It also Impresses the necessity of developing a sugar Industry of our own capable of supplying all American needs. Profit-Mating; Municipal Enterprises. Making profit out of municipal undertakings is simply another way of levying taxes. The theory of co-operative supply of any public service Is that the consumers Join together to provide themselves with It at cost. When a municipal enterprise is run on the profit making basis It means only a policy that prefers to raise revenue by taxes on consumption rather than by taxes on property or on income. All cot sumption tsxet, It should also be remem bered, are paid by the resident inhabitsnts of the municipality, to that extent relieving non resident property owners, who thus share the benefits of the city's growth snd expenditures without being called on to pay any of the money raised by this class of taxes. No Gag-fed Press. One of the guaranties of the federal consti tution is a free press. Congress shall not enact laws to abridge It, neither shall any other power, so far as the constitution prescribes. Yet in Butte, Mont., where martial law is pitted against mob law, the newspapers have been subjected to military censorship. That may be no worse than judicial censorshlpJ but It is nevertheless a decidedly questionable proced ure. No doubt the good of the community in volved In this Butte situation calls for the utmost discretion on the part of the newspapers, but that end Is obtainable short of Infringe ment of constitutional rights and guaranties. It seems to ns the military governors of Butte have gone to a dangerous extreme. Germany and Uer Railroads. The Imperial railroads of Germany have long been held up by American advocates of government ownership as an Illustration of what might be accomplished in the United 8tates. Yet. manifestly, one salient point has been overlooked, namely, tbst the very esxenre of the German plan goea to the kaiser's original scheme of prepsredneas for war. Events at least have shown that tha German railroads form an Important and integral part of the German war machine. To consider the question of ownership strictly upon its merits, therefore, this should be taken into consideration. Military value cer tainly doea not form an element of asset iu the appraisal of American railroads. 33 n Brief eoatrlbotleae oa ttmalg toplee 1 art ted. Taa Baa aaaaaiaa aa reayoaalMUty fat oplaloae af eorTespoadente. all letters aab Jeat ta aeaaaaaaUaa by edlte. hantaeqaa. IIAHTINOH. h. .pt. 5. -To the Editor of The Rrr: I noticed in the papers a letter fmm a clergyman sarin the Chautauqua Injured his church. Now, listen ti my expcrlem e. I am a traveling man out of Chlcas'', lived In larite cltiea most of my life, attended chautnuua at llnetlnsa. Neb., a few weeks ao. The subject woa the opportnnlttea of the youns American of today on the farm. Tha epeeker was a Catholic prleet. I am candid enough to admit I was prejudiced acalnet him, as I was brought up In prejudice In the north of Ireland, and, secondly. 1 said, "What doea a priest know shout fnrmln anyhow V Now, from the moment he faced that audience till the finish, about an hour. I t ever heard anythlns more practical, patriotic and his moral principle for guidance would suit Oentlle or Jew. The word re ligion waa never mentioned, but fur logic and solid advice that lecture waa a beauty. It would do a world of good In every town throughout the United States, for the profeeslona In cltiea are packed. If the preacher who complalna would only prepare better, he will alwaye find attentive audlencea. I left that tent a changed man and will never mlas a chautatinua again. I wna so pleased tliat 1 went un and ahook that prieet'a hand. a thing I ne-rr did before. Most men of the world like a manly man and prac tical advice from any source. DONAT.I) FilAPER. Condltlone in California. AN PIEOO. Cel., Kept. l.-To the Edi tor of Tha Bee: A word to those untie! patlnR emigrating to California. It don't pay a man of 60 yeara to break up a home and 'coma to California. Mvn of that sgo are not In demand it Is the young, but they should coma prepared. It la a pltlble sight to see ranch hands tramping with blankets on their backs looking for work. Employers of this class who tin not give their men beds are not deserving of help. In California, and eepeclally tha coast cities, religions gw lora ara found, and preaching and reform political meetings are the grind. Ban Hifgo abolished these meetings a few years ago not even the Salvation Army Is allowed to hold meetings on the streets. Pan Plcgo and all the coast cities are well repreacnted with palmists, spiritual mediums and fakers. Barn urn told the truth when he said Suckers were bom every minute." In the parks csn ba heinl the wall of the calamity howlers how to run the government snd every known religion Is discussed. Their wl dow would shock the gods. Don't come to California without money to return on If expectations ara disappointed. N. A. RTHVKN8. Formerly of Clarinda, Ia Editorial Snapshots Cleveland Plain Dealer: Scientists have discovered a lockjaw serum. Isn't that timely now that so many are in danger from powder burns? Pittsburgh Dispatch: Housewives In the midst of the canning season con fronted with tha prospect of sugar going to 10 cents a pound agree with Kherman. Washington Post: Men who make war for profit are bad enough, but the prise sucker of the universe is the gink who hurrahs for war without getting paid for It Detroit Free Press: The tougVest Job we know of Is that of a candidate for of fice trying to talk politics to men who ure only wanting to hear tha latent war news ' Indiana polls News: France has al ready lost In the war half again as many big guna at thla country owns, but our taxpayers still have tha money they weren't assessed for them. Troy Times: The republican party doea not believe In the recall of Judges, and is willing to say so. In a year or two that cure-all will le forgotten for some other raw notion. Indianapolis News: Just consider that the Panama conitl earned JV.WO the first week that It was formally open! Why, that'a even more than eonie of our star base ball playtra "earn!" ChrlatUn hVlenro Monitor: Represent ing the amull boy aa hoping tohool will not begin on time does not suitor with the fart thxt tt numbers of him have voluntarily attended the vacation schools. Philadelphia Inquirer: In some respects, after listening to a two hours' description of a man's vacation, we feel like a new oil well, freshly "bored," the only differ ence being that we are not bubbling over with the enthusiasm of the well. Drobbing Bombs Chanucey Depew Sizes Up War Game as It is Played r The selection of State Treasurer Walter A. George to head the republican state committee gives Nebraska republicans for state chairman a tried and true man, who not only possesses good executive ability, but has the confidence of the public generally, as attested by his elec tion and re-election to a responsible state office. Upon the new chairman devolves the task of completing the party reorganisation, which will call for his best efforta. Remember that the short ballot proposal looks as much and more to the election thau it does to the primary. It opens the only way to Intelligent voting, and therefore to effective popular government. Washington Star: An atrocity commit ted In the name of patriotism is no less nn atrocity. Wall Street Journal: "Venus de MUo is In the Ixtirvre's vaults, for fear of air ship bombs." Naturally, being unarmed. Washington Poet: Antwerp bombarded by Zeppelins would cause Byron to re vise his stansas to read "There waa a sound of deviltry by night." Hoaton Transcript: Ona way to stop bomb dropping on sleeping cities and non combatants would ba to proclaim no quarter for atrial murderers. 8t Fsul Ptupatch: Propping bombs Into a city la the horror of horrors of war. Notice of bombardment formerly was a rule of war, but how could notloe ba given of a bombardment from the air? 1'hlladelphta ledger: There has been a cry of protest from all over thla coun try afainst the dropping of bombs from airships on defenseless cities. Both side have barn guilty. Early In tha war French aviators were reported to ba dropping ex plosives on German .towns. The rules of war apparently have been suspended dur ing the war. Wkal of the War! ' "As to the tvsr. I met Kmpetor William when his fsthr and grandfather were loth living, and h" seemed a long way from the throne. I formed a very high opinion of his abilities. Both father and grand father dld In a few years, and he became emperor. I made a speech last year which wss widely printed over he-e on the twenty-fifth anniversary of his ascending the lhroie, and described him as the Prr-emskr of Europe. I think he then deserved the title, and that on many critical occaslona he had pre vented war. A year only hae passed and he has In augurated tho moat trrrlMe war of annlent or modern times. The carnage and ruin of this eonfllct appal the Imagination. Who Is to Blame f "I know from personal knowledge, that both Eng land and France desired most earnestly to avert war, and both did all in their power to prevent it. Ap parently, however, th military party, which has In creased In political strength every year since 1870, and whleh has tha active and enthusiastic support of the emperor's eldest son, the crown prince, has swept the emperor off his feft. He was deeply affected and 1m preseed by the assassination of his Intimate friend, the Archduke Viands i erdlnand: and apparently saw In It great perlla to exlstng Institutions. Thu purposes of the military party had been revealed In books like that of General von Bernhardl'a but no one thought them aerlotfs. Germany has three great classes: The Industrial, which has proapered so mar velously since the Franco-Prussian war; the intel lectual, which commanda the admlrat'on of the world; and the Prussian military, which is both militant and reactionary, but controla the policy of the am plre. Its alms are, reducing France to a German province, and pouring the marvelous earnlnga of the French poople Into the military chest, and the acqui sition of Holland snd Belgium. This would give to Germany fortified ports along the English channel, ltd whole rilatance, and enable Germany to dispute the control of tho chsnnel and the mastery of tha seas. It might also be possible to carry across tho nsrrow belt of water 6i0,0n or 1.000,000 soldiers, thus fulfilling the dream of Napoleon, to conquer Great Britain. War Party la Rrror. "Why move now? The purely military brain Is rarely that of a statesman. Superficially, England was on the eve of civil war over borne rule In Ire land. France waa In the most severe nstlonal finan cial crlsla In the history of the republic. The mili tary ami naval burden of 38,000,000 people to keep up army and navy with 8,000,000 cross the border In Ger many, was1 becoming too heavy, with the obligation also of paying Interest on the greatest debt of any nation In the world. No military commander In Ger many doubted but what the Belgians would permit the German army to cross Belgium and attack France on the Belgian frontier, where France la weakest "The German tactics of this war, both In statecraft and In arms, are those of Blamarck and von Moltke. The trouble Is. there ara no Blsmarcks nor von Moltkes, and the sttustlon In Kuropa Is entirely dif ferent frr.m what It was.in 1M. Russia was sup pood snd believed by the military party to be so weakened by the Japanese war and revolutionary propsgsnda that It waa a negXable quantity In a Euroean aar. What the war party did not reckon with were the tremendous moral forcas which have such universal Influence now, and 'Which did not ert sufficiently to be reckoned with at the time of-'.he Franeo-Prnaelan war. They bad a supreme eotempt for the ability of the social democracy which has come into power in France, and Is so strong In Great Britain, to organise war or to harmoniously agree upon a program. Probable Reealt of the War.' "All parties have come together in England until Great Britain stands as one man behind tha govern ment. The sama Is trus of France, only there every man and woman thinks it Is not only a matter of na tional existence, but of personal and family salva tion. The German people are equally united, and the German anny will give magnificent acaount of Itself, but when the Issues have been made clear by sacri fices such as were never dreamed of, may not the social democracy of Germany, which, from nothing in Bismarck's time, now casts over 4.000,000 votes, call a halt, and apeak tor peace? A million of men nt least are to be killed and wounded In thla war. The destruction of property and of. business Is beyond calculation. Public opinion Is to hold individuals and systems responsible for this catastrophe and the pos slbility of the recurrence of another like It. It may change the form' of government on the continent, and the people may take the control of there govern ments In their own hands." Leslie's. Weekly. Views of the War l!wice Told Tales Part's View ( War. New Tork World. Maeterlinck, after alleging that his "Imagination Is paralysed by the appall Ins realities" of the war. aays: "Tha wnate of ill After men have fought so valiantly agaiuat dlse.se aad death, after we have atrusgled aa successfully as alnsl natural forces, to fall at the will of a despot Into thla writer of ornate !" There la a hint at least of inspiration la that. t'aase for Frlctloa. Young Dtinmona, an adjuster for a bis Insurance company, was Juat returning home from a nearby city, where h had been to adjust a loas on a building that had burned, whan he met an old friend. ."How did the fire start?" Inquired tha friend. "I can't say with certainty," replied the adjuster, "and nobody seemed able to tell. But It struck me It might have been the result of friction." . "Why," asked the friend, "what do you mean by that?"' i "Wall,". saW Demntons gravely, "friction some times cornea from rubbing a llu.dOti hjI1. v on a IH'.Ort) building ."New Tork Times. Casey at the Mat. Ie Wolf Hopper, whose name will ever be asso ciated with Casey at the Bat, is something of a bats man himself when It comes to a game f repartee. At a dinner party ha had finished his speech, and as he sat down a lawyer arose, shoved his hands deep Into his trousers' pockets-ss wes his habit and laughingly Inquired: "Doesn't it strike this oompany ss a little un usual that a professional comedian should be funny?" When the laughter that greeted thla sally had sub aided, Pe Wolf lIopjer drawled out: "Poean't It strike thla company as a little unusual that a lawyer should have his hsnds In Ms own pockets?" The Popular Magazine. - HlamlDK the Mas. Pr. Anna Howard Hha', the suffrsgist, recently refused to officiate at tha wedding of a young woman who wanted tho phrase "to "obey" used In her wedding ceremony, for Pr. Bhaw believes that the vow to obey, made by tha modern woman of culture and action, la Impossible "But d.in't think," aald Pr. Khaw the other day in Philadelphia. "I'm a cyn'c as regards marriage. Oh, no! If you're looking for cynics, go to the other camp, the camp of the tintls and reactionists. "I heard an antl say the other day: ' The trouble with marriaga la that a woman be lieves all a man aaya to her before the wedding, and nothing ha aaya after it.' "Pittsburgh Chronicle Telegraph. Nat ta HUtM. "What shall wa do. John." said the farmer's wife, who had retailed much of her aentlment through twenty-five yeara of married Ufa, "what shall wa do to celebrate our silver wadding?" "Reckon up a here all the allver's (oaa to in bring ing tip our family." grumbled ha "Oh. no. John, It must ba something real good and out of tha ordinary. I tell you what. Let us kill th fattest pig and give a banquet." ' "Maria." said tha husband solemnly, "I don't see how the unfortunate animal Is to blame for what hap pened tweaty-flve years ago." Atlanta Journal. Pftrolt Free Press: President Wilson politely reminds the country thst neutrals mustn't even shoot off their mouths. Pprlngfleld Republican: Ara the Rus slsns to be the surprise of the war? One must still be a little skeptics) of the rate of their advance. Pittsburgh Plepat.-h: Wonder If tha secretary of state ever thinks now of that phraM "without the aid or consent of any othor nation on earth?" Wsshlngion Post: There la every res son to believe thst the United Plates wilt be fully aa Just to the warring nations aa they'll be to each other. Washington Star; Predictions that the war will be brief rannot obviate the fact that. It has already Issted a lifetime for many an unfortunate soldier. New Tork World: "Do thy duty wlth- Mlnneapolls Journal: It Is significant that the president's appeal for Red Cross contributions appeared simultaneously with hla discouragement of tha French loan. out worrying about us" was tbe word of a French painter's wife when her hus band wna obliged to go to the war. leav ing her almost destitute with four chil dren. Feminine human nature Is about the same In all lands. just for nm. -"Isn't the city nolser than It waa?" "It couldn't be. The volume Is tha same. but there Is, possibly, more variety." LJfe. Tramp Please, m'lm, I ain't had a full stuinmlck for three weeks. Hoeekeeper b nevolerstly) Too bad! Well, you go- somewhere and beg a meal of dried apple and I will furnish tha water. .New tork Woekly. "What sort of a chap la Johnson?" "Well, If you ever see two men In this club In a corner snd one looks bored to death, the other is Johnson."-London Tatler. Bhe You know very well that you had to ask me three times before I wool consent to he your wife He-Yea. I know, an.! that only gone to show that It Is sometimes rselhle to be too persistent. IV'ston Transcript- "Pam. I s"S by this paper that an elsv trio burglar aisrm hss been sdspted for the rhleken coop." ' "Well. Boss. 1 hones P goodness my neighbors don't henr about 1a. They is s pinous enough as It Is. -TenKara Statesman. "Csn I git off today. bos? ' What for?" "A weddln'." "Do you have to go?' "I'd like to sir I'm Ibe brUlegroarn. Cornell Widow. TO THE FAIR TjTTKKOWS. But yesterday mv hesrt wss weary, no The world Is flooded with a radiant gladness: All signs of care have vsnlshed from my brow. . . Thy message has dispelled all mourn ful sadness. But still, we'd psss ss strangers If by chance. . We met upon tha streets of this eur city. Without according each a thought or glance, Which, to my way of thinking, seems a Pity. Bo tell me. dear, the color of thine eyes, Thst by a process of elimination, Wa may be nearer drawn beneath tha skies By Just discarding half tha population. If'aueht Is in a name, thtn they should ba Great mournful orbs, soft, malting, sad and tearful: If I should Judge by the chlrography, ' They would be sparkling, snappy, . bright and cheerful. 1 would not love thee less If they blue: I could not love thee mora If brown their color. I only love you because you sre you With sense of humor that time makes no duller. Bo tell me. dear, tne color of thirty eyas. And Into my grey ones I'll dream they're shining Through misty, filmy wreathes of smoke, that rise From my good pipe when I have fin ished dining. DAVID. For Everybody From Every Point of View It is sound housekeeping judgment to use EVAPOR AT ED Storilixad Untweesoned It U economical--It if convenient It is taniUry It it rich It is economical because you can use every drop and have every drop carry proper food value. It keeps sweet for days after opening. It is convenient because you can always have a fresh supply on hand ready for any emergency. You can use it for every purpose for which you have been using bottle milk. It is sanitary because it's perfectly sterilized with no danger of con tamination as in the bottling, handling and delivering of bottle milk. It is rich because it is the richest milk from the best dairying regions with only most of the water taken out and with nothing added. Cottage Milk never varies from its rich creamy quality. Cottage Milk is delivered direct from our Condenseries to your ' grocer, so it reaches you always fresh. At all good dealers "In two sixes, S and 10c. Or Phone CULLEX BROKERAGE CO., Douglas 4413. 215 Brandeis Theatre Bldg., Omaha, Neb. AMERICAN MILK COMPANY, CHICAGO The Buying Impulse is the eame whether you are selecting on of fice, an auto, a chair or a home. It is really Service That You Buy An office in a well known, well kept, well lo cated and well tenanted building will render you the bflt service. That building is the BEE BUILDING The building that it alwaye new. OFFICE ROOM 103. America's Favorite Beverage AnhetuerBasch Company of Nebraska OMAHA Rosenfeld Uquor Company Council Bluffs, Iowa DIMTKIBI'TOIM Family Trade Supplied by C H. Hansen, Dea'er rhone Dooj. 2506