41) TUB OMAHA SUNDAY 11KK: JANUARY 2J. J913. THE OMAHA SUNDAY DEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD .ROSK WATER. VICTOR ROSKWATKR. KDITOR. Tho Bp Publishing Compsny, Proprietor. r.EB BUILDING. FA UNA M AND EKVENTfTCNTH. fintered t Omaha postofflce aa eecond-tiass matter. . Fy mall per year. , 4 00 too , 4 . 2.00 TERMS OK SUBSCRIPTION. Hjr carrier per month. Tally anil Sunday ... Iaily without Sunday....' Kventng and Sunday 40c... Kventng without Sunday c.., r, i T ' 1 - rMirwsy fuij . Send notice or cnange or iari or roimiminn , i Irregularity In delivery to Omaha Bee, Circulation , Department. 1 REMITTANCE. j Hem.lt by draft express or postal order. Only two- l rent postage stamps received In payment of email ac- i counts Personal cheeks, except on Omaha and eaatern exchange, not accepted. OFFICES. Omaha The Pee ftulldlng. Houlh Omaha OTS N street. Counrll Hluffs 14 North Main street. Lincoln M Little Hulldlna. fhlcaao m Hearst HuHdlng. New York Room lion, 2X8 Fifth avenue. Pt. Iouls-KB New Hank of Commerce. Waahliaton 7X Fourteenth Ht.. N. W. CORnEPPONDF.NC15. Address communications relating to new and edi torial matter to Omaha Bee, F.dltorlal Department. DKI K.H1U H bl'Mi.W CIRCLLATlOX. 45,029 Btata of Nebraska, County of Douglas, . Dwtght Williams, circulation manager of The Flee Publishing company, being duly sworn. Bays that the averare Buwlay circulation for the inoiitli Of Iiernnbir, 1&I4, was 4'. 0211. DWIOTIT WILLIAMS. Circulation Manager. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me, this 2d dav of January, 191ft. KOBERT HUNTER. Notary Public. Subscribe ra leaving the city temporarily ahould have The He mailed to them. Ail dress will be changed aa often m reqneated. Jaanary B4 Thought for the Dav 5.'cf by Daniml L. Johnson In men whom nuin condemn at ill, J And to much of gxtdnett ttill; In menvchom mn pronounce divine, J And to much of tin and blot I huilale to draw the lint Between the two, whert Qod hat not. Tip to the patronage hunters: Don't overlook: the White House baby. Only six weeks more of this congress on President Wilson's hands. ' The array appropriation bill carries $300,000 for airships. An air fleet comes high. It Is the weather man who gives the word of command for the enow-shovel brigade. Remember,' too, that all the money to bo made In Omaha real estate 'has not yet been made. Suitable timber for chief Justice of our supreme court does not grow on every bush In Nebraska. A year's gain of $76,000,000 In the total 1 uslne ot five meat packing companies disposes of the charge that the retailers got ail the money. With the. submarine below and the air craft above, the battleship nowadays runs an 'awful ri"k of getting In between fires. Note the difference: in olden days the only snow that was promptly removed from the streets was the snow that fell just before a pri mary or an election. Notwithstanding the outcry against those shocking transparent skirts, It's dollars to dough nuts tliut the non-transparency decree ot the fashion censors will not arouse any great amount of popular enthusiasm. The returns on police Judge tallied exactly with the recount in Just -six voting' districts Election Commissioner Moorhcad ought to estab lltsh something like-the Order of tne Iron Cross for Judges and clerks passing the test of count ing right -Jl Corn si Food. Spodins a brigade of cooks to Europe to loach the natives there to eat corn is only re newing an experiment tried in times of peace. "Corn Cake" Murphy gained Immortal note by Ma efforts tilong this line, while Clark E. Carr and later Maurlre Egan did much to give tho Europeans a notion of the delights of corn as a comestible. These apostles of a new gas tronomy for the people of Europe met with tho cbslacle that has so far proved insurmountable. Prince and peasant alike associate corn with stork feed, and therefore decline it, even when presented In Its ruoKt attractive form. It is Laid to overturn age-old traditions In the matter of meat and drink. Hut corn is really a food for the gods; In nutritive value It 1b but little behind whole wheat flour, containing within G per cent as much carbohydrates and within 3 per cent as much protein. Much of tho food value of wheat Is Facrlficed In preparation of flour, to the end that our dainty appetites may be piqued by the snowy whiteness of the bread. Thus bulk for bulk, good corn bread In quite as nutritive as Is the wheaten loaf. When it comes to appearance, h plate of "Johnny cake" surely can not be less inviting in appearance than a platter heaped with "kartofel brod.'.' So much for the looks of the. comestible. Many ways of cooking corn are known, but tho simplest are the better. A sturdy race of pioneers throve on mush and milk and corn pone and hoo cake. Civilization and luxury have led the children of these pioneers to look with dis dain on corn, and to prefer to secure its great health-giving properties through other mediums. We have been taking our corn by wny of pork and beef. Now, that this process is becoming really expensive, wouldn't It be a good idea to educate American as well as European taste, to the end that a wider usefulness be found for the unquestioned king of American crops? If corn Is restored to Its proper place as an American food, It will help solve the cost and increase the Joy of living. Welcome Sign of the Times. The announcement that the Burlington pro poses to build the long-mooted Guernsey cut off takes on added importance under existing cir cumstances. The Investment by a great railroad system ot $1,000,000 is not usually subject for extended comment, but at this moment it my be accepted as a pointer on the attitude of the railroads. It is a part of the revival of business, so manifest In other ways, and welcome.be couso it Is an extension of enterprise. Omaha's Interest in the project Is the more immediate, because it means an expansion of Omaha's trade territory, making more accessible an extenslvo area ot fertile and productive country, the out put of which naturally seeks the Omaha market, and the supplies for which are furnished from here. It Is a good sign of renewed activity to the west ay TIOTOB BOIlWaTra. People and Events Immigration .reetrictionlsts demand the lit eracy test merely because It Is in the direction of closing the door against Immigrant newcom ers. But nothing but closing the door tight against all foreign born, whether educated or un educated, will satisfy them completely. The City University. Dr. Dabney quite naturally is an enthusiastic advocate ot the "Cincinnati plan," of providing university training in each city for the use ot those who want to pursue their studios beyond the high school course. Ills idea la to make It aa easy and Inexpensive as possible to obtain tba higher education. Other educators ot muca experience, and who speak with some authority, take the view that an education too easily had Is not likely to be properly valued, for the reason that value Is Instinctively associated with cost. And somewhere between the two views will be found the ground that has been adopted In Ne braska. , ' Nebraska's plan, which may be called good when Judged by its results, provides training at expense of the state from kindergarten to th degree of doctor of philosophy. It has worked well, and baa permitted the ambitious youth of the state to obtain educational training at very little cost That all who start are not ap preciative of the advantages nor desirous of fully realitlng them, is proven by the number who enter but do not finish in either high school or university. Hundreds do avail themselves of the opportunity, working their way along, that they may support themselves while at school. This is true not only of the' state-supported chools, but applies to the sectarian or privately endowed schools of the state. Nowhere does "Knowledge her ample page, rich with the spoils ot time," more freely unfold It than In Nebraska,. The problem of popular education Is not yet - solved, however; It is too big to be settled off Land, nor Is it likely that one man's views will ultimately prevail. Just as present Its more press lag and vital phase i that uf vocational traininr. and it will be along this line that the next great ktc'l) In the march of education ail! iuott llkciy be taken. "Roman oe of Nebraska's History." John Loe Webster may be an enthusiast on the topic, but the story of Nebraska glows in lovely tints under the light of his eloquence. The history ot Nebraska really is tinged with ro mance; its life has been full ot stirring advou ture, salient episode and thrilling endeavor, and these Mr. Webster has modestly called to the , attention of the people, who are too busy in their dally round of making further history to give a great deal of attention to the past. It la good that we should be reminded from tlmevto time ot the struggles and the triumphs of the pioneers, for In them is' found a constant source of inspiration to greater endeavor for the Intellectual, spiritual and material upbuild ing of the state. Nebraska has had its' truly great men, who gave freely of their best capabilities to .he service of the state and its people. The present ia too close to get the proper perspective on these men and their work, so that we cannot fully appreciate the actual importance of their achievements, but their names are set down ImperlBhably I p. the annals ot the state and the nation, and in time they may come to a fuller recognition ot their true worth. Mr. Webster named but three ot a list that can Justly bo greatly lengthened, but the three are typical In themselves of the spirit of the Nebraska pio neer, out of who.se toilsome labors has arisen a commonwealth ot such importance as is not rightly understood, even bv Its own citizens. Mr. Webster suggests quite pertinently that attention should at ouoe be given to prepara tions tor the celebration in 1917 of the fiftieth anniversary of Nebraska's admission as a state. This event ought not to pass without fitting recognition by the people. His request tor a building for the State Historical society should wait on the comprehensive plan for a state civic center, aa suggested by The Bee. Revision of the Boai Laws. So many bills for amendments to existing road laws, most of them dealing with district overseers, havje been Introduced at Lincoln, that it seems a general revision ot the Nebraska statutes under that beading Is required. Ne braska has good roads, but it ought to have bet ter. The need for the better organization of tho highway department or the state's housekeeping l apparent; closer co-ordination ot effort should be provided for, to the end that better results may be achieved. One bill now pending has for Its object the vesting control of roads In a county overseer, thus centralizing to a greater extent the responsibility for the care of the county roads. This is a move in the right line, but scarcely goes far enough. A comprehensive plan for road construction and maintenance, carefully carried out under responsible authority, Is the ultimate solution for the highway rroblem In Nebraska. The legislature could easily do worse than to re vise the Nebruska road laws, to the end that proper highway development may be made certain. Few specimens of Turkibh humor travel on the American circuit to afford a measure of its merit. But tho action uf the Mokm war censor in requiring the EuglUti publisher of an English weekly at Constantinople to fill his paper wiih glowing accounts of the victories of followers of the prophet, goes to show that Turkish huni r carries the makings ot a smile. 1F1ND that this peraonal column of mine la being read more widely than I anticipated, if the number of those who In conversation with me make reference to It or ask questions about something I have said, affords any fair lest, ft Is natural that such mani festation of Interest temHs mo to keep nt It, but If I overtax patience, I trust my frlenda will let nio. know or call a bait. Specially to the point bave been several reminders from out of town. Whi'.e perhapa not Intended for publication, I take the liberty of printing a letter Just received from Major E. C. Hardy, for many yeaia associated with my father aa his chief editorial writer, and now spending Ills advanced years In retirement In Chicago. This Is what Major Hardy writes: "I waht to tell you of the treat gratification I derived from reading. In your 'Views, Reviews and Interviews,' the extract from your father's diary relative to the unveiling of the Perry monument In Cleveland September 1, 1. I waa there. Had Juet started aa a reporter on the Leader and of course waa an active and Keen observer of what was going on. Some of this tho quotation from tho diary brings vividly to memory. It was a some what Inclement day, as I recall, rather gloomy and chilly, but this did pot Interfere In the least with tho popular enjoyment of the historic occasion, as graphically related by your father. I particularly romember Governor Hprague of Rhode Island and the fine military company he brought with him. accompanied by the then famous Dodaworth band of New Tork. Fpragua a small map physically, but reputed very wealthy, aa In fuct he was and his entotirngo attracted more attention than any other feature In the celebration. If I nm not mis taken. It was on this occasion that Fprague first met Kate Chase, tho ' handsome and brilliant daughter of the distinguished statesman, Bnlmon P. Chase. She became Mrs. Fpragne and their domeatlo life was marred by troubles that led to estrangement. The mock battle on Lake Erie, briefly referred to by your father, was somewhat of a farce, but- the people enjoyed It. It was In deed a great occasion for Cleveland and it Is easy to. understand that It made a strong Impression upon young Edward Itosewater, as Indicated by his extended reference to It In his diary. "Well, I feel that I must tell you of the pleasure the reading of the extract gave me and I trust I have not bored you In doing so. The recalling of long paat events In which one shared affords gratification which In later years you will ap preciate mors than you can at present." Ppeaklng f Major Hardy, or "Old Man Hardy." aa we used to call Mm, this letter Is In the same beautiful copper-plate handwriting that distinguished hia copy when he first started to turn It In on The Bee nearly thirty years ago, and aa I have no doubt It waa before that when he furnished copy for tlu Cleveland newspapers. In my day, I have handled all sort of manuscript, but I have never known a man who could write so -evenly and regularly an Major JIardy. I could tell to exact precision Just how many words an article of his contained by sim ply counting the pages. I have nover corns In eon tact with any one else of whom I could say the same. This "antl-tlpnlng" bill Introduced at Lincoln by soma thrifty rural lawmaker recalls a little experience I had last winter while traveling with. Mrs. Rose water In the south. We stopped over at Oulfport, Mias , and soon made the discovery through placards In the hotel room, and Inscriptions on the menu cards, that an antl-tlpptng law graces the statutes of MIsalBslppl threatening a lot) fine upon one who gives, offers, solicits or receives a "tip" for performing any service about a hotel or other public place. We had arrived lata In the evening, and having had a real dinner at noon ordered a very light supper, for which the bill footed exactly S3. "Now. I'll see whether this antl-tlpptng law is alive or dead," I exclaimed as I handed tne waiter a ?5 note. "If be brings my money In even dollars,, it will mean no tip, but If he returns It In small change, It will be an Insidious Invitation." Tho colored waiter was back In a moment with a tray full, of nickels dimes and quarter." "I wonder what would happen to us." saJd I "If I ahould forget to carry off some of these coins." And the amlle that lit up the Benegamblan face was all the re-assurance needed. "Toil guessed light,", remarked Mrs. Rosewater, later. But on a par with Mississippi's antl-tipping law is our Nebraska law prohibiting the sale of cigarettes. If there was ever any serious attempt anywhere to en force that law, I have never heard of it When Sec retary of War Garrison was here about a year ago, I waa on the reception com ml tee and as we were com ing out of one of the big office buildings not The Bee building to us who were , serving as his escort he seemed suddenly to disappear. I went back and found the secretary in front of a cigar stand. ' i "We feared we had lost you. Mr. Secretary. " "Oh," said he, "T Just wanted a package of cljar ettes and, seeing this place. Just dropped back to buy them." "Well, then," I remarked. Jokingly, "you have helped break one of Nebraska's most solemn laws." "How's that?" qulzslcally. "Why," I answered, "our lawmakers have strictly prohibited the Sale uf cigarettes to man, woman or child In the state of Nebraska." "That explains It," was his retort: "l thought the girl looked at me rather critically when I called for cigarettes, but she reached out the package without asking any 'questions." That Is just one shining example ot the results of freak legislation. I am wondering whether our law makers will this time screw up courage and conscience enough to repeal a fake antl-clgarette law that only breeds law defiance. The recall of young Mr. Cutrtght from nls consular post for foolishly writing a letter recalls a story re inforcing the moraj. This story, as I heard It, goea back to the good old days when "Church" Howe and "Tom" Majors were fighting out their political feud In Nemaha county, and some compromising letter which "Tom" had written had been turned up, on which "Church was expatiating before a school bouse audience. "Never write a letter," exclaimed Major Howe. "Why, I'd rather travel a thousand miles than write a letter." ' "That's right. Church." came a voice from a far corner. "It costs two cents to write a tetter, and you can travel on a pass." The Omaha Glee club has arranged for the assist ance of the Chicago Madrigal club for Its forthcom ing grand concert next month. Mr. C. II. Iewey l back from New Orliana. ' Superintendent and Mrs. I. M. Pierce of the poor farm entertained a number of their friends in their usual happy manner. Councilman P. Ford announces that he haa fitted up elegant aample rooms at 416 Tenth, between Ha.--ney and Howard, open to the public title evening a fine style, and extending an Invitation to alt. August Weiss, agrnt of the Hamburg German American line, has received notice of a still further rate cut, so that ths price of paaaage has been re duced from Omaha to Hamburg. Bremen and Havre to lataS, as the result of the rate war. Mr. and ('Mrs. P. H. Sharp are aadly afflicted by the death of their youngest son. Joseph 8. Sharp, aged 3 yea i a The T and F cluo held Ita first imvlmg lest night at the beautiful new residence of Dr. Jensen, coiner i:tt.-titeenih and Leavenworth streets. The program was prwnted by Mrs 8. P. Xtorse, Mr. K. B. Chap man. Mis Hot art of New York, Mrs. 11. Marony and Mm Janus Ma: tin. Thrirty people who are doing their holi day shopping now are getting the worth if their money all risht. I'urlng the Isst year the carriage fac tories of this country turned out 9".0i hprse vehicles, worth $.Vt,0W,V). Carry that news to auto row. Hevcni days to ground hog day. Whether siTtixhiise or clouds murk the day. It Is safe t bet on six weeks, of weather. It's a lonu, long way to March 1". It Is the dictum ot the mayor of Bos ton that professions! Interpreters of the ait of dancing must wear socks In addi tion to the customary oicn umbrella regalia. Boston is a stickler for draped art. A Jury of women In a mock trial In New York brought .in a verdict giving a wife sole control of the money she saves from household expenses. Judges of real courts may gather from this the future grip of Justice. Bernard Shaw is coming to New York, on business and pleasure bent. His re cent observations on tiic war were so deftly balanced that he can draw busi ness from both sides of the neutrality line in this country, Hamuel Wagner of Pnna, lit., the man who wigwagged General Pherman's famous message. "Hold the fort, for I am coming," to General Corse at Altoona Pass, Is dead at the age ot 73. Wagner was a member of an Illinois regiment. A California woman who deserted her husband and children for a hobo affin ity and tramped with him from the Pa cific const to the Atlantic and back again, is now laid up In a Portland (Ore.) Hos pital with a broken hip, the result of a heating administered by the hobo. Tho hobo Is booked for a round with the Mann act. Occasionally the affinity business works its own punishment. M. P. Kellogg ot Herlngton, Kan., sawed the wood that made the fire that cooked the substantial for .the feast In honor of his ninety-first birthday. Mr. Kellogg is the father of nlnetoen children, has thirty-five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Hia score also In cludes two wives buried, and the third, still living, he married when he was S3. All of which proclaims an energetic life. SECUIAR SHOTS AT THE FULPIT. I DOMESTIC PLEASANTRIES. THRILLS OF HEROISM. St. Louis republic: The captain ot the Formidable went down smoking a ciga rette, In reckless disregard of the opin ions of Carrie Chapman Catt and Lucy Page Gaston. Chicago Herald. Next to a good life comes a brave death. Captain Loxley of the Formidable, like so many other sail ors In -this war, died as befits a man. His last words were a compliment on the seamanlike manner In which a subordi nate was superintending the launching of the boats. "He gave his orders aa calmly as If hts ship bad been In harbor with Its anchors down," says a rescued sailor. Peace Is good and war Is bad, but the time will never come when tho pulse will not thrill to the hero tale of the man who fronts death bravely and takes it calmly oftern for "some Ideal dimly understood." Cleveland PI gin Dealer: The sinking of British warships by mines and sub marines Is not merely a matter of luc&. It haa become apparent that the num erous British disasters are the result of a systematlo campaign planned by the German v naval authorities. The los.-es are ' alrea.ly ' so great that Great Britain cannot Ignore them as insigni ficant. Ship after ship has been de stroyed) by unseen agencies. Slowly, but with amazing system, the Germans are reducing the size of the navy which holds their ow"n ships bottled In Prussian havens of refuge. And while the British are losing their ships the Germans are losing almost nothing. Disregarding the battle of the Falklunda, which practi cally wiped out the German force be yond the North Sea, the naval perform ances of tho war have been strongly to the advantage ot the Germans. SIGNPOSTS OF PROGRESS. Mexico appears destined to become the world's principal source of petroleum. . American factories are now entirely in dependent ot Europe tor the 'manufacture of incandescent mantles. A Pennsylvania sportsman has Invented a clamp to hold an electrio torch on a rifle or shotgun barrel for night shooting. A pad mounted on casters on which a person can kneel when at work on a floor has been patented by a Chicago scrub woman. The uuperdreadnought California, to bo built at New Tork navy yard, will be the first American battleship to be driven by electrio motors. To protect the eyes of motorists at night from glaring headlights goggles have been Invented the upper portions of the lenses tf which are of dark amber glass Apparatus to be fastened to a man's feet aa he lies In bed. to make hia legs go through the motions of walking, haa been Invented to treat vlcttma of partial pa ralysis. In SOS labor camps in CaUfornla 19.01. perrons are housed, according to a report Just made by the California Commission of Immigration, after a three months' in spection of such places. In each case especial attention was paid to sanitation. The body specialises In handling com plaints of Immigrants and Investigating alleged land frauds. , TABLOIDS OF SCIENCE. Yeast treated with oxone shows greater fermenting power. Glycerine applied to the glass stoppers of bottles will prevent them sticking. A German Invention for extremely near alghted persons are spectacles in which abort telescopes serve as lenses. French army surgeons have found that a mixture of freshly slaked lime and phosphorus will remove tattooing so that It can a at be detected'. The seeds of tho sunflower make good food for live stock, ita oil Is eo,uat to the best Unseed oil and Its stalks are as good as coal for producing heat Generally speaking, the New Kngland states have the largest death rate, but In recent years the greatest improvement haa been shown In thla section. Thorite, a mineral found principally in Norway, has been found te possess some of th therapeutiq power a ot radium and til serve as a less expensive substitute for it. One of the objects of an Australian Antarctic expedition will be the estab lishment of a iiM'teorological station to give warnings by wireless of the severe storms which sweep far southera acaa. Chlrsgo Herald: A Chicago church Is split on "one-man power." One-man pocr In a local organization genernlly a rices from one man's willingness to do most of. the hard work. Bwltimore American: The dream of the ages will be fulfilled, a dream which has existed since the Crusades, if Pales tine Is finally delivered from the rule of the Turks and the Holy Land passes into Christian hands. Brooklyn Kngle: Princeton university will make chapel attendance optional to "get rid of hypocrisy." Planers are not called to repentance In any of our modern universities, though the optionally right eous get many exhortations. Houston Post: "Don't begin te tell your .vire a He the moment you get up In the morning." advises a Kentucky evangelist. That's good advice. A proper observance of the tenets of "Safety First" would sug gest the postponement of all prevarica tion until the arrival nt home about 1 a. m. New York World: For the old John Street church, shrine of American Meth odism, a skyscraper structure Is proposed, the top stories to be an aerial place of worship. There have long been sky scraper churches, Ilhelms cathedral, be fore the Germans trimmed It, roae four feet higher than the Standard Oil build ing in New York. The spires of Cologne are higher than any metropolitan sky. scraper except the Bl riser. Metropolitan and Woolworth towers. Ulm, the tallest spire, cquuis forty average stories. But usually the floor of even the loftiest church Is near the ground level, and wor- j shlpera look up, not down. "My ancestors came over In th? Muv flower." "Yes?" rejoined lr. f'nmiox. "I un derstand tne fare whs quite low. But th linat miiu, H-i-a I. ..on I.Trtlili OVCf- crowded." Washington Mar. "Is It trus that the appendix Is also Ititoly useless?" naked the medical stu dent. "Cselxss?" tlm tide red the professor, "why. sir. It's a vcnt.iMe gold mine for surgeons." Philadelphia l.fdser. "Women hnve all the best of It." "How now?" VA woman will drink two cocktails, cat a lobster anil a hunk of plum pudding and then blame her lieaiische on bet n.l'V. mrtit cr, ... ... n. n - t n.ii.t ii:., " . nna, l.iio l. uv. iu.t. . .v. Courier Journal. Cholly Before I met you I thought of nothing but making money. Ethel Well, keep rlpht on! Pop ain't ae rich as folks think: Dallas News. "This poor girl was slmplv sold to a rich husband." "Oh, you're m'stnken. I wss there, and saw her father give her away." Balti more American. The Head Barber Sure, Mr. Allgall, I'll lend you a dollar. Glad to help you out. Mr. Allgall Thanks, old man. They're having a sale of safety razors around the corner and I didn't wapt to miss It. Philadelphia Bulletin. QUAINT BITS OF LIFE. A suit has arisen In Sunbury, Pa.i over the business Of Philip Bradford, who rented hens for 2 cents a day, the renter taking a chance on getting an egg for his money. A St Paul woman walked into the lax collector's office and paid 1 rent taxes on personal property overdue since 1119. The transaction required as much labor as the payment of 11,000.000. Fifty-four years ago Alfred Nelson threw a mitten belonging to Alfred An derson down a well. From this result! a feud between the families whloh lasted until a few weeks ago, when Nelson and Anderson, now both aged to, agreed to bury the hatchet One of the few funds, if not the only one, left for charity by a president of the United States, Is used in Lancaster, Pa., for buying coal N for, the poor at Christmas and for other good uses. Tho fund was left by President Buchanan, who waa a resident of Lancaster, and the income now amounts to about $3,000 a year. Details of a curious family complication come from St Gall, Switserland. A naturalized Swiss citizen, German by birth, ia married to a Hungarian. His brother-in-law la fighting agulnat the Servians and the husband of hia sister-in-law le fighting against tho Austrtans. Of the man's two brothers, one Is In a Prussian regiment and. the other Is serv ing France under General Galllent. A man was recently canvassing In Atchison. Kan., for members to organize a new order, which is to be unique. It is to be free of assessments, and only married men are eligible for membership. Its purpose will be to work for two "days of rest" every week, one to be devoted to doing Just as their wives please and the other to doing Just as they themselves pleaee. MUFFLED KNOCKS. , A good conversationalist never talks when he is through with it Why do we pity those who are crippled in the limbs and make fun of those who are crippled in the head? Women have their faults. But you never saw one who shoveled her food Into her mouth with a knife. Some men are busy laying up treasures in heaven when they should be paying some attention to fire insurance. Every man believes that he has good sense. But he couldn't prove it by the love letters he wrote to his wire before they were married. In Patrick Henry's time liberty and death were usually coupled in the bet ting. But nowadays alimony secures a whole lot of the liberty. If a man can t get the girl he wants, he gets peeved and quits. But If a girl can't get the man she wants, she goea and cops out the man some other girl wants. ' Another of the sure things of life is that when two new families move into the same square on the same day, the neighbor women are not going to get much housework done. A woman who was rummaging through some old stuff discovered a waist that she had worn some fifteen years ago. And she found enough material in each sleeve to make a perfectly good modern skirt. When a girl has such a powerfsl voice that you can hear her yelling for a aquare, her fond mother sends her to take singing lessons. And the result is that you can hear her yelling for two squares. The old-fashioned woman who was al ways taking something- old and making It over into something new for the chil dren, now has a married daughter who wouldn't think of letting Fldj wear the same sweater for two seasons. , A PRAYER FOR HELP. New York 8un. Canst Thou not hear us. Thou Almighti' God? Are all our prayers like bubbles upward blown? The earth is shaking. Man and sea and sod, v And all Thy winds together, making moan. ChV aacrlflce! Oh, tragedy sublime! The fathers old are marching with their sons. To fling themselves by thousands at a Unto Against the maws of devouring guns! And where art Thou? The people rage like bc&n; With fa.ih forsworn and passion at Ha flood. They Thee forget, and at their dreadful feasts They lltt to Thee strange flagons warm with blood. And overhead, within the fenceless sky, Vt hich waa our own, and made for our delight, Are aliapra like birds that slaughter as thry fly. And s.ng ot hate, with all the stars In aishl! If Thou hast missed our voices from the choirs. How can we praise Thee while the bui-' l.-ts sins. i And smoke wreaths curl above our dear desires. And faith flk-s slowly en a wounded ' wing? Msker of worlds, and hope of every race, ' Through warring camps, by suffering oula implored. Bend Thou to us from His exalted piece Thy Angel Michael. With liu flaming, sword! 1 A Genuine Brambach Grand Piana, Price $455 Our Inventory Discount Sale Embraces Following Bargains: Shoninger, walnut case, good tone and OIQC action UlLU Kremlin & Son, mahogany case, large size, i n r big bargain UluD Mueller, walnut case, full size, good condi- ft 1 0 C tion U1LU "Wheeler & Son, Q I if fl .mahogany case ..yfU Weser Bros., ma hogany case . . . , 3175 Kimball, oak case, parlor size SI90 Cable-Nelson, 000 IT mahogany case -wLL) Steinway, ebony case, in excellent condi- flOTr tion Q.0 A small payment down, a small payment a month sends one home. A. Hospe Co. 1513 Douglas St. Our 41st Year Plan a Trip This Winter The ILLINOIS CENTRAL OFFERS I.VTF.KESTIXfS RATES FOR WINTER TRIPS TO NEW ORLEANS, La. FLORIDA POINTS VICKSBURG, MISS. . CUBA AND PANAMA If you bare not decided Just whera to go ask for a' copy of our WINTER KXCTRSIOX KAREH BOOKLET Lot the Illinois Central plan your trip. Address tho under signed, stating where you wish to go, and Information as tu fares and attractive literature will be freely furnished. 8. NOTtTH, District Paaaenger Agent, 407 South leth Street, Omaha. Phone Douglas