rir.R MKK: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMnER 15, 1H15. THE OMAHA DAILT BEE FOUNWCD BT KDWA ROSKWATER. VICTOR ROSRWATK1.. CDITOR. Te Be Publishing Company, Proprietor. BFB BUILDING, TARNAM AND HCVENTCKNTH. yntered at Omehe postofflc as eeeond-rlaes matter. TKKMS Or tCBflCKIFTION. ty earner Br mall par month. per year. ijr)F eed tune'ev... , Vt,.. riiy without Sunday..,, 404 FVenlng and une'av , W Fvenlug without Sunday.. ISo ,, 4.09 under only Suo t oo Pend notice nf rhar.se of address Or complaint! of irregularity Id delivery to Omaha Bee, Circulation Department. RtMtTTAKTB. PewJt T dreft, etpreaa or postal order, only two eet stamp received In payment of email -Nnirti. Perenftel checks, escept oa Omaha. and eastern ssshangw, evrt (CoepteS. Omaha The Bee FulMms. Couth Omaha 3i N afreet. Ooun-; Bluff 14 North Main strsetu. i.tneoln-S Litres Building. Chkf-eoi Hearst Bunding. New fork Room lrOR, t Fifth avenue, Bt, Lou 1. tot New Ban nf Commerce, v"ssc.tni.on 7 Fourteenth Pt., N. TV. "" CORRESPOND tNCD. llflree communications rXatlnf to news and 41 orisl matter to Omaha, alee. Mltorlel Oopartmaut. AIG1HT CIRCt I.ATIOX. 53,993 tat of Nebraska, County of Douglas, esi Dwlght WlllsMn.a, circulation manaier of Tha Mfc Publishing company, Ixlrn duly sworn, aaya that the averai circulation fo, tha month of August, 1 la, on t,m. UWIOHT tVlLLlA-' ' nfctiliitlnn Manager. Subscribed In my ..va and awoin tu before m. thla M av of .net- 19ii. ROHKltn HUNthll. Notary Public. SulwcrllxTa leaving the rift temporarily houl4 have Th lie mailed to thorn. Ad dress, will Ixi chanced as often a roqueatexl. evttaaber IS "' '' iuihiitii i-nr-r Thought for the Day A l"rc ' 'mm 11 ' atvnyi talk uhovt him- ctffn you rnl lo Ut talkiiiy uUul your ij . u.tif L. (,7mi I.V ti A- 7'wnlw.) J Another meinberahlp record hroUen by Afc "Oood-bya, girls, we'ra through" uatll tlit n tt tlm! . It is up to the hankers to cull that bllllou (iollaf Mutt. Omaha, axtfnda cordial wnlconm 10 tha Uala niea o tha Btate fedaratlon of l-bor now meeting hert. ' Sealng Sunday went to Lincoln to make tn fiiat call, It will be. up to the Llnrolnltea to re turn the vlalt, In the meantime, don't forget to give 'cmaha-raade . gooda the preference whenever il.t-rc is preference to be given. j Kvery one, ol the It. 000 vlaltora King Ak-btr-Hen has entertained during his season la a 1 inillng publicity agent for Omaha, All the weather men has to do to break into our dlallngulabed citizen clans ! to hold . il.e front off the corn for another ten days. Wouldn't It be a Joke If a Lancaster county trand Jury ahould render unnecessary uy later legUlatlve Inquiry Into tu democratic official bond ecandal at the atata house? lct those who will swear "by. the beard of Hie prophet." but for practical reauUs the I oard of King Corn la the one entitled to rtspert and hopeful reverence. It'a a fine portrait of our United State gen Mor that adorns the front page cover of Oer- II any'a subsidised American organ, The rather lund only It wears a aort of worried look. The coming training camp at Fort Sheridan ill furnish a unique teat, apart from the mili tary drills. It will demonstrate whether Cht ogo edltora will practice preparedneaa as teal ( Italy aa they preach it. LaHt year'a American egg crop waa worth marly $700,000,000. During the aame period the American output Of precious tnetala waa $$9,000,000, The great American bird la en titled to rooat high oa pluah cushiona. ' The point la made that the British and I'rcnch financiers want to borrow from tha United States without giving security other than promises to pay. The United States has been borrowing In Europe on the same terms all these years. ' The swift ending of General Tomas Urblna, officially announced by General Villa, la a uelancaoly reminder of tha uncertainties of Undlt life in Mexico. The facility with which subordinate robbers are relieved of the fruits of their industry and put beyond the possibility of kicking, chows the folly of diverting loot irem the treasury of the boss. f U " 1 "' Setting Nebraska Eight. ': For promptly aettlnR Nebraska rlnht aftalnst a statement rrcdlted to th Public ; Ledger of Philadelphia that ' Xebraoka has no ii'lllUa at all," Editor 8eet of the Nebraska City Press la entitled to a credit mark. Writing to the Ledger he saya: We ahontd Ilka te coifret that last atafmnt. Nebraska has tw reslmenta of National Oimrtl. eap elally well trained and wall offleerad. In addition It lias a signal corps, an aviation corps and some artil lery. Just a few days aro the Nsbraak City Com pany It tour home company) hroka tba world's rrord for wall scaling, eight men, burdened with thlrty-fivo pound In equipment, having a-nld a fotirtean-Tjot wall In twenty-four seconds. This waa wltneaaed by regular army men, who Inapecfd "r atate troop and complimented their officer upon tbslr efflrlenry, Thl paper t for national defanao the proter sort and It reallsas that our state militia, or National Ouard, should he about flv tlmo what It Is. We do alre. too, that Nabraeka br set right In th eyes of tha world and believe you are willing to make ihu correction nrecsry. If you will read tha history of the Filipino Inaurrertlbn you will aoe, too, that Prlvata ' Jravstiii, a Nebraska gtiardaman, fired the first shot In the wnr anil that our National Ouard played prominent part thrntighetit the Insurraotlon, This, we believe, outlines the general nttl tJde of a ftreat majority of the people of Ne braska, Brother William Jennings Tlryan and hta non-realatance prearhmentn to the contrary notwithstanding. Nebraska will support a sane end sensible preparedness policyone that pro vldea for adequate military and naval equip ment, more ro-ordlnaled militia and more wide spread military training, although It will stop short of a colosaal standing army or a competi tive race for naval supremacy. Nebraxka, un less we are mistaken, Will also back prepared ness plans worked out by experts aa opposed to ai hroprlatlon grabs by pork barrel politicians. . . . . Wheat and the War Loan. It is Just an well, perhaps, that Jauie J. IIIII should have, delivered himself of his opinion that unless a huge loan is made to the Allies, thin country will suffer for lack Of trado mtleta. He points out, to Illustrate and em llianlre his srMinent, that the 400,00,000 bush els of wheat from the farms of the weat and m,rth Ht will choke, the granaries, If we do not make the loan asked. Tbtg may be true, but it la equally true that If the wheat chokes the granaries of the United States, millions In I u rope will go hungry. While all the belllger riit rountrles. save France, huve harvested un usually heavy crops of wheat this year, not one of tlipin except Ritaala has raised enough to fued its own people, and Russia can not export Its surplus. Therefore, unleas the grain of the United States Is sent to Europe, hunger will prevail there. No one knows thla better than Mr. Hill. It is urged tuut the credit of France and England has always been good. Admitting this, vthat is the situation? long before the war British "consuls" had fallen below par, and were quoted as low as 65, while the French 3 per rent "rentes" suffered equally, as did the issue of every European government. In June, 1914, the only government bond in the-world rolling at par waa that of the United States. 1 If this was true before the war, what would be the condition now, it the Issues of the belligerents were placed on the open market. The credit of each of these countries has undergone a de cided change. No one questions the willingness of the foreign governments to pay, but their lrosp?ctlve ability to pay Is the factor that finally deoldea credit. It Is not difficult to recall the reception ac corded the United states, when in its extremity It went before th world to negotiate a war loan. It found Its credit impaired to such an txtent that Ha bonds fell to 60 cents on the dollar or lower. Facts, and not sentiment, will I'ulde the negotiations for the loan to the Allies, and the farmer who owns the wheat need not worry. h.iwi a s ii . The rity council l-t tha mayor appointment of Thomas iliuhcll nd Jacob Htltman as speclaj po- llcciiwn go through, but came bark at him by knota ing the nomination of C. A, Leary for member of tha Board of PubUo Works. .Marshal i'ummlnga has In hta poaason two pawn ticket, on for a silver watch and ona for a gold watch, hlch tha owners can have by Identifying- the ticket. , Colonel C. R. &ott of Council Ulutfa has decided to move to Omaha and has purchased a home, whlcn he wUt occupy with tils family. Cieorge A. Jloasiend, the lumber man, left for Hcotia on a chicken hunt. Nine cais of bullion cAm over tha Union PactMo for Hue snwlur here. Jacob Bolivar, father or Mis William ttarte, has ,! to Ornngcbui if, R, C, to spend lbs winter The graail opening of Falk's b-r hall, ut Deuslua Hnl. was an tinmrnM auccraa. Including a must trial In in form or a om-ert by the Musical t'nlo. bfihetftla. ciuie imiry ounaiuaa, Ly riling three hols ard of uu-glars wr.o attempted to enter the real 0 '-ii of Councilman r- V.- Bailey. What Will They Dot The Pan-American diplomats are to gather again Saturday to consider the Mexican situa tion in Ita present aspect. The Carransa reply v 111 naturally receive the most attention at this blithering, for in substance It amounts to notice to the conference. that it has meddled In some thing (hat concerns Mexico only. Thia attitude on part of the "first chief" might easily have been anticipated by the conference, w&en It was formulating its rejected proposal. Carransa has made It plain from the beginning that he will not willingly accede to any proposition for the pacification of Mexico that looks to his possible elimination. Regardless of the force or weak ness of his special pleading, the urgency of Mexican affairs Is such as to challenge the In terest of all American governments, and it is to be expected that earnest efforts will be made tu formulate some plan that will be effective. Carransa, however, remains the key-log in the jxm.' Bevolt in Russia. In the light of Information from other sources,' aud measured by eventa, the round about intelligence from Stockholm, that the Russian people are almost In a state of revolt against the officials of the country, held blama 11 for their reverses. Is. not aurprlsing. The fact that thia resentment ftnda vote in public meetings and in the newspapers only indicates how deep the popular emotions have been stirred. All the world haa goaalped these many years of corrupt conditions that prevail at St. I ttersburg, where the affairs of a great govern ment have been jnlsmanaged. The experience of Btoesael, who waa bottled up in Port Arthur, without provision or ammunition; of Kuropat kin, who lacked everything but men at Muk den; of Rojestveneky, who sailed from Riga foredoomed to defeat, la being repeated, and apparently for the same reason. Who is prlniar ily responsible for the predicament of Russia In the present war may never be determined, but the awakening of the people that sow presages political change will surely have Its effect and Russlana in the future may get what they have paid for. Wonder where that Omaha factory la where tie South Omaha packing house laborer's daughter is supposed to be working ten hours a day for 17 a week. That factory. If it exists, la violating the Nebraska slute law, which ape c'flcally limits tho houra of labor for women la factories to not more than nine houra a day, r.Ld not more than fifty-four hours a week. Rut U there any such factory? Shoes for Fall Wear " Boston transcript. The fsll reeaon will begin with the expectation of a "black' season. At the a.m time, In women's line, reasonable, variety exlnta, so whether the sea son will end a "black" one Is yt to b proved. f.ome demand haa been reported for brown kid oxford, and blue leather hoot are also wanted. Doth blue ant black hoots ere also offered with white piping and atlti hlng. affording a variation without too much prominence: and euch elaborate tyle will conatltut tho bulk of the fall novelties. Iaced boots ar ex pected to lend In the staple line, while buttons will be found In the more expensive atyln. In the expectation of a radical change In lte r ganllnr hoe-hapa, the dealera have been trying to dlapose of the f amies left over from the present sum mer business. They know that the demand for slapt ahnpe will put the recent faniie too fr In the back ground to ha salable next summer, o they mut be sold now. Price ar cut In order to clear out such property, and shoea that were to be aold at 91 to l have been put out a bargain at II to II a pair good shoe, but out of style. Thl fall will find more kid leather worn than tor a number of year. Women' tyle In gypay type will be found In fine mat kid leather; and colored kid of any tint wilt make dressy hoota nttraetlv and harmonloua. Manufacturers In I.ynn have been put ting a quantity of thl leather Into women' boots, and are trying- to keep the prlrea reasonable. Thl will help to popularl kid leather, which has been ta eclipse owing- to the popularity of fabric. Dealers sra making plan to meet a heavy demand foe tha 'Oypny" tyla of women' boots, and thl pat tern I produced In black, blue and gray, to'b fast ened by buttons, tn medium grade the short vamp will be used, with longer vamps In the higher grade, The sentiment associated with a slender, feminine foot is not to he lived down. The traditional foot of the Chicago girl ha become a myth, for vhcren tho young frontier town of two aoore years agj brought "the deaert and the own" In very cloi proximity, the improved method ef transportation, and the free and frequent Interchange of tha people tends t. produce ene standard and type of Individual, 0 tha feet of the people are becoming amaller and more haplrthanka to th graceful and comfort-giving footwear produced by modern machinery While monopoly may be eo toyed by business, th feet of the American people are comlna closer to standard because the shoes ar stendarriixed by etandnrd m ehinery. 1h tendency of the lasts for the season of IbW la conservative, but. aa graceful as poeaiblu in women' style; for men narrower toe and a swing on tha outside or the ball. Women's lines will have high heels, for hlah heel sdd to the trim appearance ol the foot. In general, the change will be moderate, turning back rrom the recent broad, low types. Twice Told Tales In Time of Troaelr. During one of th revolution In Haiti a party ot Americans made a riding- tour of the mountain. Ona morning a member of the party suddenly drew rein and pointed to a lone rldgn where an old, tatteivd Ktar and Wtilpes fluttered on a bamboo pole. MW must pay our repect," someone said. After some aeareh th found a path that stgxaRKcit up to tlie wild place. Th followed It. and at last dis covered an aed negro Hitting before M wattled hut. smoking hi (.Ipe, while he kept an eye on the flat; "What'a the flag- forT" someone asked. ''Pertectlon,' aaid the oid man, quietly, "i hcaii day done begin anudder reaolutlon. so I put It up. T, aim, 1 come here twenty-two yeah ago. an'.' haa dat flag wld me. I'm George, cook on a steamer outer Pavannah, "like de plaee? Tea, ash. Plant yam an' cofle an' eaeemvav Restitution don't trouble this nigger a-very time rj resolute yander up goes de flag, aa' dafa alt tore's te It." Washington tr. Owelty. Th man at the aubuifeen breakfaat tihli lnir4 us frern hla morning paper and said te his wlfei "Keven hundred people killed vesterdav In eteamttoat accident." "Indeed t" "Lateat accounts of the hattte In T.-.i r:.ii..i. how that W.doo have bean destroyed and 50.000 taken prisoners. "Weill" "Ht!1kels riot threaten dentruetlon of properly all over the country. Minien-dotlar fir yeaterdtiy caused by bombs." y "Cm!" "Oermany declares war on the United "tales " "Dear' me!" 1 "Here's your name In the sporting column, win ner of second prise In yeatarday'a putting- conteet." Snatching the paper from hla hand, ahe exclaimed "If that Isn't like youl To keep the only m. portent thing ror the laat!" ure. Helping; the Poodle. "I.ook hero," said a lodaer to hla landlady, "your daughter ha been using my comb and brush again " "I beg your pardon." aald th landlady, indignantly, "I never allow my children to meddle with my lodgers' lielonglngs In any Way." x "But I am ur ah has been using them." said the lodger, "for there are long, black hairs on them, and she Is th only person with black hair In tha house " "Oh. now. I remember; she did have them to comb and brush our dear old poodle." aald the landladyr "but I am quite sure she did not use them for heretdf she'a too honest to bo guilty of that ort of thing " Chicago Herald. Pcoplo and Eventa In an argument between an antl-aufrragist end ate advocate of th oauge. New York papers report thst the antl-auffragiat beat the sis with her mighty fist, which provee that militants are not all on one aide. A dietary Investigator In Chicago fasted forty days, but refuses to give up his conclusions. He rave up forty-eight pounds of weight and aaved cqnsldera'jl In meal tickets. A a enormous wastage of hucKlcberrlea Is reported In New Jersey because the cost of picking la g-reater than the market price. Canneries solve some of th food conservation problem, but there I much room for expansion. While dlapottlng , ewtmming pool at Asbury Park. N. J., 8am Ia)i waa sucked Into the waste pipe and traveled Bo feet to the ocean. II came out alive, but with both arms and ht collarbone hu. and hips bruised. His nam was Sugesta Carmine Ppota. but hla working associates called him '"Susie" and "8ul s Jeeter." which offenoe rolled hi feeling. Now he ha asked the New York supreme court for permission to make It Jess fpota. New York theater managers have signed up B agreement to protect patrona from ticket scalpers. Treating th publlo aa a friend, not aa a victim, ta a novelty down that way, but the strength of the friendship remains to be felt. The cops got him after a lively chase and without batting a lid h answered to hla aame, "A. Nutt." when called In a Brooklyn police court. A. Nutt'a eccentricity was shying bricks at policemen, xn effort to wrench $10 from him failed. "Feeding tha brute, madam, and feed him on time," is the substance of the counsel given by Chicago's municipal court to a complaining wife. Investigation after a few days' trial snows that the "brut" cheerily respopda to the treatment. Model home for th poor of Washington la to be th memorial to Mr. Ellon Wilson, wlf of iTesident Wilson, decltfed upon by the District of tviumhta aeutloo of Women clubs. There are to be 118 little homes, providing fur tM families, with an estimated rapacity t 1"X) reople Th houea will be grouped In a district Which will contain a playground, a wad ing pool, a laundry, an emergency hospital, amuse ment hall, a kitchen for rooking classes and a day nursery. Th total cost of th memorial la estimated I at i').ol. lle t.lne o ripe Dream. OMAHA, Sept. U-Te the Editor ef The Pee: Referring to the article on pipe line to Wyoming oil fields, do you not think it would he lietter for Omaha If the Commercial club Would glv up their foolish idea of Improving th Missouri river from Pt. Ixiuls to Omaha, something they never can do, and glv their atten tion to th pipe line, which would be of more benefit to Omaha than three Mis souri river from t. Ixiul to Omaha? Ask those fellow to get to work and do something that will benertt Omaha and all other towns tn Nebraaka. J. B. BCOTT. Klpllaa'a I acnaeclnaa UeaeMetlen, KKARNRT, Nb Hept. 14,-To th Ed itor of Th lies: Hitting the sawdust tiail reminds me of a quotation from that other rare genius oh the hlnlng sands of India. One upon a time, when Hudyard Kipling Waa sailing the ship Of th desert, the camel caravan, he was Inspired to say: Men bulk big on the old trail, our own trail, tli out trail; They are Mods own guides on the long trail, the trail that's always new. lant that beautiful? And it take "liilly'a" own measure to a T. Kipling fillly describes Sunday, and that, too, without conscious design. This quotation, by alight alteration, ahould be "Bllly'a" epitaph one which he Is rapidly approaching. It I not in the books that tuaa may go the paoe such as he I treading very long, tor nature la a delicate machine, where reaction in evitably follows as night the day, when a terrible penalty must be forthcoming. This winter, with its grip, pneumonia and ether infections, will find him limt right for a fatal conclusion. I am tempted to pour a little ahrapnet into "Pill Sunday's blackmailers and huihwhacktre, such, for Instance, as Lu cten Hteoblna of North Platte, whose diatribe was the limit to Christian for bearance. When a critic gets down tn cowardly insinuations conocrning a noble woman, then the coffee, etc., ahould be ordered. No, thia would be a recognition In a way. But I must rein up my Pegasus, or I loo may be claaaed among the undesir able cltisen. Long live "Billy" and "Ma." II. S. BELL, SI. D. Wotefd Hea-alate Saaday. LINCOLN, Sept. 14. To the Editor of The Uee:"Jtllly" Hunday, being a common carrier of religion for the "dough" that la in lt-1. e. he chargea all the traffic will bear, ahould no longer b permitted to run around looso aa an outlaw. There fore, w would advocate that he be put tinder tho Nebraska Railway Commission were it not for th fact that this Is of doubtful constitutionality, due to inter state character of "Billy'" "traffic in soul." Another reaana ta that our Ne braska commission la In Inubllua consti tuiUinaiis. Therefore let u petition the Interstate Commerce commission to take Jurisdic tion of "Pa and Ma," and establish e clas rate arhedule of "free-will offerings." FBUX NEWTON. MtrliMiia Has l.nrlel Laaarwasre, Te. NORTH FLATTK, Neb., Sept. H.-To the Editor of Th Bee: "Billy" Sunday" grand bandmaster has arrived, atroiur, robust, smiling like a abbath morning, good-look Ing young woman swarming on him Uke files on a molasses bar rel. Bo the papera report. Is this any part ef th Christian religion? Like hen sitting on eggs, Sunday cover everything. All parties, all creeds; the ungodly, tha Oodly, those without sin and with aln, rich and poor, vile and virtuous, with ail their misfor tunes. Sundays claims that he la com missioned and Inspired to lead thia con glomerated mass to God. When Sunday gets this conglomeration to God, God will be a good place for an ordinary person to get away from, and what does this signify? From the daya of Babylonian feaats to th present time, autocratic rulers, both church and state, have amused the common people with gladia torial strife, circuses, hull fights, ban quets and other holy demonstrations to amuse them and make them the mor easily governed. Sunday claims that rational method will not promote religion. It takea a hypnotic, clownish demonstration to draw a crowd. Suhday ta the clown and hyp notist (probably trained by th Invisible government.) Sunday can draw the crowd. LUCIBN STEbBINS. Pnlltlelans Pnlllnar lhrrh Ktrlasre. NORTH IiOUP, Neb., Sept. 14.-TO the Editor of Th Be 1 For thirty years th great Methodist church has been acquir ing more power as a social Institution among the peopi of th United Stat. With that growing power a dangerou political Influence has also been mani festing Itself In tha governing bodies of the church. That political Influence has for Ita purpose the subjugation of the church to great corporate wealth. There U scarcely a branch of the church gov ernment that la free from some corpor ate representative who purpose Is to use th power of th church to advance th Influence of some sort of a political clique by which certain claasea ef legis lation may be advanced. The Methodist school institutions In Nebraska are In the same corporate control. There are too many politicians pulling strings. Their Influence In the conferences is such that they are able to make th machine self perpetuatlng. Is there any good reason why such conditions should remain? The conference, soon to meet In Omaha, should appoint a strong commute t go to th bottom of theee conditions and rid their schools of politicians and political cliques. WALTER JOHNSON. Tltlseua ef tke arid." TILDES'. Neb.. Kept. H.-To th Editor of Th Bee: A timely movement has )ust been launched, known as "Cltlsena of the World," the founder being a trav eler, scholar, linguist. coaniopolllanisC philanthropist, humanitarian, etc.; rtro. Pro. Yervant H. Iskendsr, by conquest, aa he says, Assyrian. Persian, Jew, Cau- caalan, Armenian, Turkiah subject, and a Briton by choice. Why ahould th clan chieftains and their eourtlar aav th right to call the Inhabitants of th world, who by chance. interest or otherwle find themselves within the fading botftrs of th clans. Ouelph, Hoensoilern. Romaneff, Hap urg. etc., when any man, va though by birth he may have eeea assigned to some locadtty. yet no olan or chieftain can deprive hlra from changing hla re lationno human power can rob him of tha "Ctttaenahtp of tho World;" to hap pen te b a German or Frenchman, and that being aa obligation t obey the rhleftaln tocaln to kill and t be killed Is a faiae ideal. If th kaleer wants t kill th tear, let that te them, for there I not th allghteal fear of their doing ao; then why should the millions, who ar otherwise friend nd brethren, "tee the death grapple for them? The book la printed In Kprnto, Eng liah, German, French, Rpanlsh, Russian (and other language to follow). The ob ject I to enlighten the Inhabitant In the Interest of humanity. Ciena or govern ment must learn that to be a subject doea not carry with It the obliaration o kill and be killed. POLY ULOT. ire We Oeeednlaar II f OMAHA. Sept. 1S.-TO th Editor of The Bee: I have never before uaed this very excellent column devoted . to the utterance of the public mind and I trust you may pardon my present awkward and lengthy Intrusion thereon. I read with amusement yeaterday the "Pllly" Punday testimonials in the Be, occupying a full lae on either side ef a mammoth picture of thst great actor, caught In a characteristic pose. It strike me that of all the bouquet handed thl peculiar evangelist, the comment of the Rev. T. J. Mackay stands out as the most sensible and sane. Perhaps Sunday visit will be of bene-1 fit to Omaha i let u hope . At any rate, we can say with our sister cities, "We, too, are In the swim; we have had j 'Billy' Sunday." And we might add, I Ferrer, Mollis and the auto races. But ! a to the actual lasting worth of the benefit I another matter. We are a pretty weak race of men and women If It become necessary for u to call In a famed Word-Juggler to save our soul when w have a city full of churches and a lot of half-starved ministers, yet withal saintly, whole-hearted (some of them) God-fcarlng men, on the Job and vicing with each other all the time. J I know Dr. Mackay only by reputation, hut I mut ey that the way he sixes upj the Sunday campaign show him to be a calm head, a clear thinker, and a man of safe views. He rertalnly has It Slsed up about right and I believe the saner element of Omaha will agree with him. 1 Why not a little more space day hy Any to religious matters, when "Billy" Sunday IS a thousand mile away from here, In stead of overdoing It during these six weeks, and then drifting back to the old sickening stuff of spicy ecandala, mur der, horrors, and general corruption. Thank you. W. C. C.-INNOCKNT BYSTANDER. Tribute to Mrs. ttddy. OMAHA, Sept. 14,-To the Editor of The Bee: I am not a merrfber of the christian Science church, nor ito I hold a brief from them, but I do protest In the name of Juatic and decency against the uncalled for attack or "Billy" Sunday m his out burst of Insane fanaticism against that dear, sweet character, the founder of the Christian Sc.leno church, Mr. Mary Baker Kddy, a woman who I dead and I' liable to defend herself or her scheme of theology, a woman, who, through her beautiful character and loving kindness, haa brightened and cheered this old self ish world to such an extent that eh left the world better than she 1 found It. It la to the everlasting shame of our so called Christian ministers that they would liaten to and stand for such aa attack on auch a la,uUfull'htlet!an character Mrs. Eddy, and furthrr. If "Billy' Kin ds y has an ounce of shame In him he ought to forever leave evangclletlo win; and hang his head in shame to his dvlnS dy. JKSf E T. BRILLHART. Farnwn Street. MIRTHFUL REMARKS. "I don't e whv tht fellow I so frosty with m now that ha ia rich. 1 knew him when ho didn't have a do lar. "I'rol.ahly you never offered to heln him with a dollar." Louisville, Courier Journal. The new tndav iluatrste the old principle of th fitness of things." "In what way? ' "The l.iton ndv'ees from Mexico any thev are h"vir hot times tn the state of Tahasco."-laltlmeire American. "Who a the man with no raincoat, um brella, or rubbers?" "That's Shook, the celebrated writer on rrepnredncss. "--New York Mail. Km KABIBBLE iM KABARET PEAR MR. KABI&ME, WIEN TAUVINf TO Wf BANC at W THE PHOMP.wHO SH0W-P Y A WOMAN MS HAS THE WS7 WORD Ted She wrote asking to break the en gagement, and I don't know what to do. Ned Heed her a diplomatic reply that will keep the question open, and perhapa she'll change her mind. Judge. "Hello, Plllt Glad to see you, I Just got back from my vacation." "Korry, old man. I can't lend you a cent. I'm lust going on mine." St. ixittls IMst-Dlspatch. 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