Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 15, 1915, Page 6, Image 6

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    TTIE BEE: OMATTA, THURSDAY, .TITLY 15. 101.".
THE "OMAHA DAILY BEE
FOUNDED BY KDWARi) ROSKWATER.
VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR.
The Bee Publishing Company. Proprietor.
PKB BUILDING. rARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH.
Fetared at Omih poetcffice second-class matter.
TEKM3 Or SUBSCRIPTION.
By carrier By mail
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Pend notice of char.es of rt1r or complalnta of
trrrrulitrtty la delivery to Omaha Bee, Circulation
Iteirtment.
REMITTANCE.
Jtemlt by draft. eprse op postal order. On It two
cent etamna received In payment of smell a
counts Personal checks, except on Omaha and eastern
exehscre. not accepted.
OFFICES.
ne Boa
ffoutb Omaha 3il N street.
Council Bluffs 14 North Mala afreet.
. tfneoln Llttla Building.
Chlraro oi Hearst Building.
New Tors. Room 1W, If6 Fifth evenue. I
Ft. Loisls-MS New Bank of Commerce. 1
Wsshlnston 7 Fourteenth gt. N. W.
CORRESPONDENCE,
dress eommunlrstlens reiatlnr to news and edU
torial matter to Omaha bee, Tutorial Department.
JUXE CIRCULATIOX.
53,646
Stat ef NebrneVa, County of Douglas, aa:
Dwle-ht WIMama, circulation manager of The Bee
Publishing company, being duly sworn, says that tha
average circulation for tha month of June, Ik 14. waa
el, eta.
DWTOrTT WTUJAMS, Circulation Manager.
Subscribed la my preenre and aworn to before
ma. this id day of July, HIS
ROBEJtT ftUKTER, Notary Publi
Subscribe leaving the city temporarily
ahould hare The Deo mailed to them. Ad
dree will be cliangcd aa often aa requested.
f
Thought for the Day
5scf set by Mf. T. B. Lemon
For other foundation can no man lay than
that it laid, which it Christ.
lit Cor. 3:lt.
4
All quiet on tha Rufljl!
Welcome the prophecy of fair weather. Now
to make food on It.
Base ball ii not the only thing going into
eoak la the wet belt
Those base ball magnates should Interview
the weather nan ai well ai the Commercial club.
Emperor 'William ! quoted aa aayisg the big
war will end In October. If he can end it tbon.
why not now?
The cause of humanity will be advanced sev
eral pegs It J. Pluvius will allow a reasonable
time -for each deluge to sink In.
The else limit of the parcels post package
has been increased to take In fruit and berry
crates. Do your preserving now! ,
"Old men made the war, young men are
fighting It." It waa unnecessary for Jane
Addams to go abroad to learn that truth. ,
The eminent Mr. Potash, U. S. A., seeks
nourishment In Spain. The goods of fair Castile
are a welcome relief from a fertilising famine.
BUiJ, with $100,000,000 worth of German
chips In American ports, the heirs of the Amer
icans among the Lusltanla dead have much to
lien on In a pinch.
John Wanamaker is 77 and Count Zeppelin
73. Both men, in quite different spheres, hold
the spotlight and switch the current to the elec
tric sign of the times: "It pays to advertise."
Ban Francisco exposition officials are the
ones who ought to complain at having General
Huerta and his family and retinue of tnore than
thirty people intercepted before reaching the
gate turnstiles.
Welsh coal mine operators and the Reming
ton Anns concern are animated by the same
spirit The mere suggestion of sharing war
profits with workmen 'offends the moral sense
of their mighty reach.
It would not be surprising If the victorious
leader of the British forces in South Africa
presently became Lord Botha. Consldersble
water has passed under the bridge since "Oom
yanl" Kruger crossed over.
The New York Sua has been taking a poll
of presidential preferences for both republican
ed deiuocralle 181 party-nominations. Fop
some unexplained reason it does not seem to
have thought it worth the postsge to take a poll
cf preferences for the bull mooae nomination.
The personal and official organ of our dem
ocraUe United States senator Is busy now drum
ming up candidates for the republican sena
torial nomination. That is part of the political
Sttoe as she is usually played, but it is a card
that fools no one who does not wsnt to be fooled
What Are They Up to in Georgia!
What are they up to in Georgia with this
new agitation and uprising over alleged plots to
free Leo M. Frsnk? Although the man is
quietly serving his term at the state prison farm.
to which his death sentence wss commuted, we
are told that extra guards have been put on and
the militia ordered to stay in readiness for a
call to frustrate an attempt to liberate him.
Notv, the people of Georgia are not so
Ignorant as not to know that no such effort
could be successful. They know enough to
know that Frank out of prison as a fugitive
vould be worse off than where he now Is. They
know thst ho would be extraditable wherever he
might be taken, and they know, too, that such a
Jail-break would do more than anything else
Imaginable to destroy what possible hope he
may cherish of an eventual pardon when the
true Inwardness of his case Is fully uncovered.
To the observer at this distance all this
maneuvering to keep popular prejudice excited
In Georgia looks like a continuationof the out
rageous performances which have already so
discredited that state, and, more than that, like
a deliberate attempt to lay the foundation for,
and to Instigate, another murder "a la Madero"
under pretense of shooting Frank down while
trying to escape. Before the people of the rest
of the country, the state of Georgia is today as
much on trial as Frank ever was, except that
the Georgia people have the verdict in their own
hands.
A Son; and Its Writer.
Something of the ' romance of wartime of
long ago Is renewed by the removal of the ashes
of Captain Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle to the
French Pantheon, the Hotel des lnvalldes In
Paris. In a fine frenzy of patriotism, at a time
when France was breaking away from the an
archy that followed the revolution and was un
dergoing the throes that culminated In the Na
poleonic empire, this young officer of artillery
broke out in song. "Ye Sons of France, Awake."
About the time he waa writing the words that
brought him eternal fame, his comrade at school
and in arms. Napoleon Bonaparte, waa training
his guns on the Paris mob and literally shooting
it off the streets, to clear the way for the Direc
tory he later seized for his own.
Not so very long after, under the inspiration
of the oppression of that same Napoleon, a
group of German patriots wrote songs to inspire
their countrymen to strive for the same freedom
the Frenchman craved, and Bluecher's volun
teers aang them as they marched and fought, to
overthrow the military despot of the day. Some
of these songs are thundered today by the mil
lions marching under the kaiser's command, but
none of them are known as is that flamboyant
bit of verse Captain Rouget de Lisle brought
fcrth while he was waiting at Marseilles the
order to fire onHhe armlea of the government
supposed to represent the people.
"Llberte, egallte, et fraternlte" have taken
many forms in fair France since that time, but
finally the people have come to rule their own
affairs, and now that France has paid the final
honors to the author of the Inspiration of patriot
and mob alike, the shade of de Lisle may Join
with the lhadea of Napoleon, Bluecher and oth
ers in wondering if their descendants know what
it is all about.
Baie Ball and the Public
Some attention publicly has been called to
the predicament of the Western League of Pro
fessional Base Ball Teams, incident to the expe
rience of that organisation during the present
neason. It has so far not had the happy experi
ence of other seasons, owing chiefly to the unto
ward weather, which has messed up the playing
achedule very materially, and has also held back
the attendance. Thla organized sport is not
altogether a private concern, for, although the
owners of the teams have assumed the risks
naturally attendant on their venture, the public.
is interested to some extent
It is necessary that patronage be each as will
provide funds sufficient to meet the expenses,
else the league cannot exist. . Much of the
Iresent-day expense of carrying on a base ball
club is due to an effort on part of the owners to
meet public needs or satisfy public whims.
Spacious parks, magnKicently equipped, have
been provided for the comfort of the patrons,
and other outlay of capital Is required for the
maintenance Of the plant Popular players art
idolised by the "fans," and thla popularity must
be met by the team owner In the way of in
ci eased aalary in order to hold the player his
patrons demand. Many other factora that enter
into the owner's problem might be here enu
merated, most of them Items the public does not
consider.
The value of a good ball team to a' commu
nity has been established. The public is re
sponsible la a measure for the increase in the
expense of operation, and it should also recog
nise lta partnership with the magnates to the
extent of helping to make the venture pay Its
cost.
wiwe 0mM e4 UJ
Aa eaodua of Omaha people took place for Europe,
the following entraining- to aall Saturday from New
Toik City: Sara IJaltlead. wife and three children
Charlie Denton. lfe and els children; Arthur Bur
nett, George Hail wood and Tat Purrsy.
Of tha members of the ltolmaa Indian cons-re
etoiifu committee only Mtun. Hoi man. Cannon and
liyua arrived here for tha atart to tha Rosebud and
Fine JUuff aen lea. Mr. Cannon's wife and charm
li. daughter, alia Helen, came this far with hi.n,
g.i:( to vleit relatives at Kanaaa City.
Tise Omaha Veteran club Untened to a program of
llioraiy etert iera slven by Comrades liartlett. O'Neill,
Iflocm, Kytitr. Cuareden, Parker. Erdtnan and Clark.
The wife of P.-. Harvey Link of Millard died In
her fifty -viKlith year, widely known and respected
is thw city.
Phil Andrea end Paul Welnhacn have returacd
frora the Nailonal Turnvtieln feetlvl at Newark.
The Vilas Pantile and Chirk flendereon have re
elf tied aa tRtrhere In tie I -tJ and Dumb InaUtuta
lu take pt.ulii, at Jacksonville Institute.
Mra. Harry 'almore and children event to Boetoo,
Henry D. I lo.bruk la at 14 cwiflntd te bis houee
ty U.!iMk
Putting It Over on the Senator.
And now we see the Bryanltes, merrily ral
lying around the plum tree, aboutlng with glee
over the prospect of putting over some appoint
ments the senator will not likely assent to. For
example, Brother-ln-Law Tom Alien is said to
bo certain of taking down the Job of being
United States attorney for Nebraska, with the
nice, fat salary attached to the place. Let no
one doubt that Allen Is a shrewd and resource
ful politician, aa has been made manifest In his
management of the state campaigns In behalf of
Mr. Bryan. Ills pretence in the honor list will
not promise much for a statewide campaign for
re-election of the senior senator from Nebraska.
Another Bryan worker of approved quality. A,
S. Tlbbetts, comes forth aa temporary postmas
ter for Lincoln, and the supporters of the sens
tor look on aghast as they see the rush of the
cohorts of the late premier to gather up the big
places. The matter is not all settled, though.
and there may be some pretty lively skirmishing
yet before all the Jobs are permanently nailed
down.
In filling the position of city school superin
tendent in Hastings, membership In the Ne
braska Schoolmasters' club is satd to have been
a factor la eliminating a number of candidates.
It will be remembered that the aame club's op
position waa a factor in electing our present
xtate superintendent of schools.
Issues of the Great War
"tafa" Toa la Xelie'e,
1IIAVB called the preaent war in Europe ' Tho
American-European war." From the rampalsn car
ried on In "The Statea." I Judge It la more our war
than anybody eleo'e. The Vnl'ed Ftatee la the only
country that telle the truth In diplomacy and atatide
for a ree'ilt after ware are over. We are the onl
people who anend money In behalf of other people.
It la auppoaed that t'nrle Bahn la rl-h enoiiRh to Rive
every man a farm and alao to help pay the eipenee
of other people's were. Therefore, I have chrletenej
thla the Amerlran-Buropean war.
We are feeding the Rclglana at a coat of mll
llona. We are donating automobllea at a coat of mora
millions. We are Bending Red Croea aurceona and Red
Croae nureee Into tho remoteat part of the war sons.
We are receiving1 circulars by every mall from many
of tha count) loe that are at war. aektne- for contrlbu
tlone. A majority of the people In Europe pretend
they hate the eight of an American. They dlacuas
hrm spitefully when he haa moved on. Our very con
tiibutlona to the aid of thoee In dlatreaa are cited as
evidence that we are a mean, speculative, unsympa
thetic, undeserving people.
Thla European war haa been Ilka the typhoid fevnr
to the human frame. It haa diecloaed to every country
lta weaknesaea. Germany la a aealed book. Wa do not
know what Germany's internal weaknesaea era. It
seems to stand aotldly together. But all other countries
have their ehorfomtnge.
When Aiutrla calla out an army, from the eight
een different rarea under Its flag. It has no Idea how
many will respond. Great Britain la finding out lta
weak apota. They were auppoeed to be In Ireland.
but they are dlarovered to be right at home. Canada,
Auatralla and the other colonies are all right. But
England, the home office of Great Britain, la finding
out the things that It did not know. Many of the
countrlca have given up drink to help alotur the war.
The Brltlah man has So far declined to do so. .Die
dlatlllcra and brewers ralaed the cry that It woull
Injure their bualneaa and that their bualna was Im
portant. It waa auggceted that horse racing should
cease on account of the war, and the voices of the
horee racing fraternity immediately said that It would
ruin the horee Industry- They aald that horse racing
promoted horae breeding. The worklngman, .who lovca
England and who would not remove to any other
country, refuaea to co-operate In the manufacture of
munltlona of war. Increased wagea only Increases hla
Idleness.
Great Britain, If we are to Judge by the literature
that cornea to the United Rtatea, feels that we have
some part In the war, and I shall be prepared to rea l
In all European newapapera, after the war la over,
no matter what the result, that the United tSatee was
to blame for It all. We have been making ammuni
tion snd selling It to whoever wants to buy, and in
some directions thla la unpopular. Our ammunition
will be found to be fatal after It Is all over.
But who Is to blame for this war?
I anawer, this war Is a cumulative answer of
Providence to the inefficiency, selfishness and greed
of the old world.
The strong European powers hadv for nearly a
century been tiding over their difficulties In the
Balkan states; been trifling with fate; trifling with
Justice; lying to each other: trying to deceive each
other; none of them trying to do the Christian act of
seeing that the Balkans had good government and a
fair chance for development In manufacturing. In agri
culture and In everything else.
80 the present war Is a cumulative settlement of
European crimes of omlaslon and commission darin
the last century.
Add to these events the commercial rivalries of
Great Britain and Germany In relation to tha control
of tha seas snd you have the cause of the present
war. One other element enters In, that is the absence
of n, free press In ome of the countries concerned.
The people may say what they please about the evils
of a free prees, but If there had been a free press In
all the countries of Europe, there would have been
no war. The peoples of Europe are not getting the
truth at the present time. ' In some of the countries In
volved, the masses have been lied to so persistently
by their rulnrs that they have a misconception of the
war entirely. Lawsuits often change In the course of
tha trial. Thla Is also trie of war. At tha beginning
of the war It was the fear of a. Pan-Slav empire on
one side and the hope of it on the other. Now, the
question Is which of the countries Involved shall sur
vive and which shall be destroyed?
It Is a struggle to the death between Germany snd
Great Britain. Or. It Is a struggle to the death be-
tween militarism and the opposite. Or, It Is tha open
ing battle which shall sometime bring all Europe
confronting Russia,
Just figure out what you think Is at stake.
If Great Britain should lose, It looks like the death
of Its government If Germany loaea. It Is the death
of the military Idea, as the foundation of a greut
civilisation.
If Russia loses. It will be about where It waa be
fore.
The fate of Austria Is tied up with that of Ger
many.
It would be dlflcult to foretell the fate of Franca.
if the allies should be defeated.
When the wars are over, a great many Issues that
were not In the esse st the start will be in the Jury's
verdict. The Briton will awaken snd learn to know
that he Is not a child of Providence to be taken care
of without effort. The German will find out that a
great civilisation ran not be built on militarism. The
essona to Prance and Austria will be Incidental. They
are a kind. Industrial people snd their wish Is to be
let alone. Whatever shall be achieved for the right
will be accredited to the valor, statesmanship and di
plomacy of Europe. Whatever In the verdict shall be
evil, will be, with one accord, accredited to the United
States.
Twice Told Tales
No Blaek Ilaad.
A stenographer a as out of a Job. He waa dia
rupstng the best wuya and meana of rehabilitating
hla ebbing bank roll with a friend who also was listed
among the unemployed. Said the friend:
"If I were you, I'd write a letter for money."
"I have," replied the stenog.
"For how much?"
"Oh, W.OuO."
Well T" asked the friend In astonishment
"Well," repeated the shorthand man sadly, "the
letter aaklng for the $3,000 Is all ready to mall, but TU
be darned If I can think of anybody to mall It to."
Louisville Times.
Rrllcloaa Progreii.
A clergyman had taught an old man In hla con
gregation to read, and found him an apt pupil. Call
ing at the house some time after, he founds only the
wife at home.
"How's John?" asked he.
"He la well, thank you," said hla wife.
"How doea he get on with hla reading?"
"Nicely, air "
"Ah. 1 auppose he can read hla Bible comfortably
now?"
"Bible, slrl llleaa you. he was out of the Bible
and Into tha sporting pages long ago!" Chicago
Herald.
Balled It.
Jones, who appreciates a Joke, but. like many
others, cannot repeat one with any degree of suooeas,
heard for the first time the Joke about tho dog being
the moat musical of animal a, "because he wears a
brass band around hla neck." and determined to aprlng
It on the first party of friends to which he was In
vited. The time came and Jones electrified his victims
with the esclamatloa. "I say, I've a really good one!"
lie aaked. "Why la a dog the most musical of ant
mala?" They gave It up.
"Because," announced Jones, triumphantly, "he
wears a brass collar abound his neck." Pittsburgh
Chronicle Telerapff
nversiBaeat Aid for 4e4 Roads.
WASHINGTON. D. C, July 10,-To the
Editor of The Bee: I have received a
clipping from The Bee regarding the
financing plan auggested by former Sec
retary Bryan for the Pan-American re
publlca, and earlier auggested by me for
financing the several states of the union
In the construction of permanent high
ways. The copy of my suggested plan
was not sent to you by me. nor did I
know it had been sent to you, but sm
glad you have had opportunity to read
its provisions. If It Is advisable for the
United States to assist In securing low
rate loans for South and Central Amer
ican republics. It is certainly much more
advisable that the United States aid the
several states In a matter aa Important
aa that of extensive construction of per
manent highways. I wish you could sea
your way clear to endorse the plan I
suggested snd give It the support of your
Indicated in your editorial, the plan
Is not entirely original with me. Great
Britain has a somewhat similar plan em
bodied In the Irish Land Purchase act
but In order to give the states an addi
tional Inducement to take advantage of
the plan, I have provided maintenance co
operation In addition to the setting aside
pf ono-fourth of the Interest aa a sinking
fund, and have also provided for a na
tional academy of highway and bridge
engineering which would be of great aid
to the statea
JONATHAN BOURNE, JR.
Ciood Idea Domestic Animal Too.
OMAHA. July 14. To the Editor of The
Bee: That's a good Idea for a Domestlo
Animal Zoo even if the Idea doea oome
from Missouri. Just the place for it
would be In Cartr Dark, Inasmuch as
Rlvervlew haa the wild animal soo and
we would have all the water needed for
ducks and geese and water fowl. We
make a lot of fuss about baby bears and
baby buffaloes, but to children, and
grownups, too. calves and colts and baby
pigs are Just as Interesting. I would
wager that the domestic animals would
prove aa attractive as the wild animals.
M. H. Q.
A Scissors Hold an the Palplt.
FREMONT. Neb., July 14,-To the
Editor of The Bee: In the afterglow of
your recent limerick contest. I hasten to
submit the following comment on Rev.
T. J. Mackay's classic application of the
Ou tier-Steelier wrestling event
"WlAle Our Sundays fight satan with
whlzsar"
It looks to us cynical qulssers
As If brother T. J. (la that surname
Mac-kay?)
Might be really the man with the
' jtr I nwor. ' '
ISAAC A. KILGORE.
1304 West Military avenue.
Llacola Highway m Nebrauilus.
OMAHA. July 14. To the Editor of The
Bee: To arbitrarily designate a road as
a highway In the sense of a Kentucky
macadamised pike does not make It one
and Is apt to fool the unwary.
So far as Nebraska la concerned, there
Is not much difference In the road, now
called the Lincoln highway, except that
part known as the Dodge street exten
sion, barring the bridges and a few
streets In a very few towns, than It
was thirty years ago.
Like the Union Pacific, It too, follows
the level valley of the Platte and on a
sandy soli In great part.
It la nothing other than a country road
and as nature made It. Improved a bit
by modorn methods of dragging and It
also has the advantage of no hills. There
are many places that are not sandy, but
are more or less gumbo and this spring
and summer these plaices have been quag
mires on account of the rains.
The red, white and blue rings on the
telephone poles guide the tourist also
through the business streets of the towns
and cities ou the route and occasionally
through tha residence districts also. In
some of the counties these colors have
been practically eliminated as the paint
evidently did not have much white lead
In It
One wonders why under the circum
stances that now that It has been given
thta high sounding title and must be a
help to the places that it passes, to sell
gasoline, to be fixed up in garages, to
stay In hotels for days at a time on ac
count of the roads when Impassable, that
the towns do not help out more.
One will have a hard time to find where
any sand, gravel or clay has been hauled
to the gumbo places. For Instance, In
the town of Waterloo Itself, Is one of
the worst places that a mule would get
mired.
The approaches from the east over the
bottoms to both Fremont and Columbus
are a disgrace to each. Last week there
were counted twelve automobiles mired
In the mud at one time In the SUver
Creek, Clarks, Central City and Grand
Island country. One, a six-cylinder Max
well, was towed to town and sold for
$250, and the owner was so disgusted that
he took the train.
Rich people only can do that kind of
thing and It is said that there will be
automobllea sold this fall In California
for a song, as many will not attempt to
come back that way.
A mixture of automobile and mud la aa
Incompatibility and a sorry sight as
well.
It must be confessed that the towns of
Nebraska are very pretty now and while
a few years ago tbey were of frame, now
they are of brick and atone, but that
Lincoln highway Is Just about the way
fet always was and all tha way to Jules
burg and beyond.
It la a' great compliment to be on an
ocean-to-ocean road ejid It would seens
that those along tt ought to gat busy and
make It. farmers and alL worthy of Its
name. GEORGE P. WILKINSON.
A Great Scholar aa4 Statesman.
NORTH LOUP. Neb.. July 14,-To the
Editor of The Bee: In a recant news
note the writer saw the following:
That the farmers should bold back
their wheat to prevent Wall alreet ma
nipulation of prices aa wail aa the usual
hurvest-Ume slump Is the oiliil.n of Julio
W. liookwalter. owner of tha Boukwalter
lands. Through Ms agt.nl ha has sent
a letter to hla Nebraska tenants advlatng
them to hold their wheat and offering to
loan tlirna momjr to euable them so to
do. The money will be loajied through
local bankera at the rata of 444) par cent,
pa) able In ten months or when the wheat
Is sold.
In another news note of the sun date
appeared the following:
Probably the largest amount of monev
ever taken in at any one timet by tue
state treasurer of Nebraska will come Into
Treasurer Hall's bands July 1 when the
state of Idaho psya over f,600 with ao
ertivd Interest on a pert of lis borvta
vlitch were puniiasod ten years a-o aa
an tnveknint for the educational trust
fund cf Nebraska.
This writer met Mr Book waiter many
years ago and wished with hlra a day.
He haa been In about every hamlet of
Europe and la thoee parts where early
civilisation nourished, studying the actual
conditions. He fluently talks several
modern languages and Is a profound stu
dent of history and economics. I believe
that he la one of the great scholars of the
age. But how about our Nebraska states
men who assisted In making the law
which sends the school funds outside the
state on 4V4 per cent Interest, whereas
that money might be used on farm loans
at that rate? It haa the appearance that
the farmers, who pay four-fifths of the
tsxes, cannot be trusted thst Is. the men
who made the school fund cannot be
trusted. Farmers wlU awske some time
end find thst we have the wrong rises
of men In office. To Mr. Bookwalter be
longs a monument
WALTER JOHNSON.
Bryan and Editors
Boston Transcript: Mr. Bryan believes
that editors should sign their own edi
torials, but why give them a prerogative
not always enjoyed even by secretaries
of state?
New Tork Post: Let's see. Is the Mr.
Bryan who demand $50 for a lecture on
peace the same Mr. Bryan who wants a
law compelling editor to make affidavit
that they have no financial Interest In
any cause they may advocate?
Springfield Republican: Mr. Bryan
wants to have editors compelled to show
any financial Interest they may have in
policies which they advocate. Would the
probability of enhancing their drawing
power on the Chautauqua droult be re
garded as a financial Interest?
Philadelphia Ledger: It la easy to un
derstand why Mr, Bryan ahould hate ob
scurity and why he should Impute base
motives to those who have no especial
admiration for him. His suggestion of
a law compelling editors to "disclose
what pecuniary interest they had In gov
ernmental policies" Implies his inability
to conceive of any other motive for crit
icism. As a matter of fact no reputable
newspaper, whatever Its own convictions,
bestttates to give both sides a fair chance
in lta pages. Considering the space the
press has given to Mr. Bryan, It la moat
ungrateful of him to Insinuate the con
trary. In a sense the newspapers are
already bipartisan. What Mr. Bryan
really means Is thst they ought not to
criticise him.
GEIJT3 A5D GH0AX&
"How can a man be as stnpld sa that
fe.low and live?"
"Some of the men at the club have a
theory that he was raised on a vacuum
bottle. Judge.
tutor?" W tnnk' mT on 7T,U rteeil a
No, Indeed, dad. That new auto horn
of mine la a tooter that beats the road.''
Baltimore American.
KABieae
(CABARET
WftlMk- VTH m 15 OWOWC
TOT
"What VOtl VlMwf In !.! . Jk -
rMi2 ranser. "Is more optimism."
Gulch, replied Broncho Bob. "There tsn t
..ma2 .w l p,aoe wno lBn t an optimist
during the first twenty nUnutes of a poker
game." Washington Star.
'STILL IT EAT5TS."
William Allen White In Emporia Oasette,
O the corn is on the blink
And the wheat Is full of rust
The alfalfa's turning pink
And the creek's about to bust
Out on the plains.
O the oats Is out of sight
In the water, and the beans
Are blown hlgher'n a kite
By the pasalng submarine.
And still it rein!
Wow I It rains.
On the panes
Pitchforks, rasors and chilblains.
Colored Infants and remains
Of oats and dogs and aeroplanes'.
And it roars
While it pours,
As the farmer does his choree
In diving bells, and bores
Poetholes In the atmosphere
To find his gates and doors.
O It's grand to be a farmer and poko
around in an ark.
To fare forth to feed the chickens in a
stanch seaworthy bark.
O it's fine to be a farmer and grow
goose-webs on your fwt.
And to buckle on your armor and swim.
out to cut the wheat.
O tha mermaid In the kofflr and the sea
cows in the dell.
Ail the Joys that make a salve for what
would otherwise be hell.
And now the drouth is broken, let's be
Joyful tn our gains.
Lets kyoodle, whoop and holler for these
million dollar rains!
isininniM
3
trzz
gsr--e
3
t3
Spend Your Vacation
in the
CHEQUAMEGON
BAY DISTRICT
of Lake Superior
Qiequamegon Bay is one of the most delightful out
ing sections of Upper Wisconsin the Apostle Islands
and shores of the mainland are dottea with cottage
colonies. Nearby are the cities of Ashland, Wash
burn and Bayfield. .
There is good trout fishing and delightful excursions ,
among the islands and the finest place in the world to
just rest.
HAY
FEVER
Excursion
Fares
Accommodations
ts-wea
ST3
Immediate relief just board a Chicago and North
Western train for Chequamegon Bay and ssy good
bye to Hay Fever.
Itl.TI from Omaha to Bayfield. Ashland.
Washburn and return. Leave Omaha 4:43
P. M. or :8 P. M. and arrive at Chequamegon
Bay the following; afternoon or spend a few
hours In the Twin Cities and leave on the Tw.
eight Limited arriving at Chequamegon Bay
In the evening.
For accommodations and any detailed Informa
tion soklreas X. A. Merrick, aaoretary Commer
cial dab, Ssklsad. Wis or Kxs. Z. O. BeU,
Bayfield, Wis.
Our Oating Bookltt Upon Rtqumat
JOHN MEIA.EN, Gen. Agt. Pass'n Dept.
- 140X ramam Sjt., Omaha, Wsb.
' C IL MacRAE, Cenl Passenger Agent
ST. FALL. HUSN. D
SWaiasi
E3
era
!!!a!.I!!0i!!.:B
TSe
rooaunnKf i r
NowHsUns;
Delicious
Digestible
ABB mm
CWs
Railed ILake
Emmer
Outings
VIA
Illinois oiitral 11 D.
Choice of circuitous and direct routes
to New York and Boston. Attrac
tive routes to nil Eastern Besorts.
Optional Ocean, Lake and liver Trips
Liberal Stopovers
Let 'us assist in planning trip affording visit at
Principal Cities and Summer Besorts in the East Long
and Short' Limit tickets on sale daily. Information and
Attractive Literature Freely Furnished.
S. NORTH,
District Passenger Agent,
Phone Doug. 264. 407 South 16th Bt., Omaha, Neb.