Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 06, 1916, Page 8, Image 8

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    ' mrm nro. nUATTi irmrDCnAV TTTT V a lOlfl
THE" OMAHA DAILY BEE
POUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATE
VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDIt6r
THE BEB PUBLISHING COMPANY, PROPRIETOR.
Intend mt Omaha poetoffiee aa aocond-elBoa wetter.
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Send notice of change of addrru or Irregularity l de
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REMITTANCE.
Remit or draft, express or poatal order. Only l-eeii
i uk in payment of amall accounts. Personal eheeke.
eiccpi on Omaha and eaotera oichengo, not accepted.
OFFICES
Oma.ia Tha Bao Building. ,
South Omaha till N tract.
Council Blnffa 14 North Main otroat
Lincoln tj Little lulldln.
Chicago 818 People's Oai Building.
Now York Room 80s. !8 rifth avenue. . v
St Louis 101 Now Bank of Commerce.
Washington 7 Fourteenth etreet, N. W.
CORRESPONDENCE,
Address eominunteatione relating to newo mat editorial
matter to Omaha Bee. Editorial Department
. '", JUNE CIRCULATION "
57,957 Daily Sunday 52,877
Dwlgnt Williams, circulation manager of The Bee
Publishing eompanr, being dulr sworn, fare that the
average circulation for the month of June, MM, waa
S7.9S1 dailr and 52.877 Sundar. . . '
DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager. ' .'
Buhoeribod in mr praeeaee and ewom to before me
Una ad dar of July. Ml.
ROBERT HUNTER. Notary PuMle.
Subscribers leaving la eily temporarily
should hare The) Be mailed to them. Ad
dress will be chanted at eflra u requested.
Hughe.' vlewf sre true blue.
At snjr rate, the referee earned hit money.
The safest and sanett ever and itill room
for improvementl
Cemetery promotion continuei with unabated
(teal on sll war fronts. ' .
The trouble with thii wrestling game ii that
Ihere are altogether too many tricks in the trade.
The fields and .the shops, the marts of trade
pnd finance, alike point to a bumper year in the
font belt. ! (
The "safe arid sane" observance demonstrates
Its value in decreased number of funerals and
diminished mutilation and pain. - ' -
Lifting the censorship lid of British army news
brings a deluge of descriptive thrills. Corre
spoiidents are making up for lost time.
m ' ,
The Mirin debacle, la giving; Edsrar Howard
another chance to say "I told you so." Edgar
has been for both peace and intervention all the
time. , -v ' . :'
Something wilt have to be done to speed up
the Missouri Pacific track raising if Omahais to
be relieved of that dangerous Dodge street grade
crossing before snow flies. -
This is about the time to start an exploring
' expedition to, discover the whereabouts of one
Hon. John Lind, who is supposed to possess
omniscience is to all affairs Mexican.
A "draw" wrestling game may be unsatis
factory to the sports, but it must not be forgotten
that the "draw" at the box office .came up to ad
vance notices. That's the main thing. , 1
When each of the three or four local taxing
authorities persistently " underestimate , nontax
. revenues by from $50,000, to $190,000 and pile it
onto the levy, no wonder the tax rate grows to
gigantic dimensions. ,
And now; the World-Herald has discovered a
nameless member of the' republican state com
mittee who is "Sore," My, but the political for
tunes of "Hitchcock, Fanning & Co.," must be
in desperate straits I
The senior member of the firm of "Hitchcock,
Fanning & Co." traveled all the way from Wash
, ington to make a Fourth of July speech at Co
lumbus, which is in the strongest democratic
county in Nebraska. It he afraid it is slipping?
Once more the senate-cuts out the annual free
seed appropriation. Outwardly the senators spurn
the ancient congressional graft, but invariably re
cedes when the house insists. Thus the. "most
august assembly", observes the ethics of reform
.i ' L- :l '
wmic enuring in uiu eyuiu -n
The Mexican editor who promised to march
with the ragged battalions to Washington and
hang the tri-color on the staffs of the national
cspitol, evidently forgot that Uncle Joe Cannon
is on guard at one end and J. Ham Lewis at the
other. Getting by these warriors spells suicide.
It remWs to be seen whether the State Bank'
ing board can refuse a charter for no other reason
than that the locality is already supplied with
banking facilities supposed to be adequate that
believe themselves entitled to protection against
competition. If good lor banks, why not also for
other lines of business and professions?
Hurrahing Jar Hughes '
Spoiling the Sport Came,
When 10,000 or more people pay good money
to see something held out to them as "the athletic
event of the century," feelings of disgust and re
sentment are natural when, the wonderful "event"
turns out to be a tedious posing exhibition not
even good "fodder" for the movies. Whose fault
it is that "the Fourth of July wrestling match
between the Peerless Joe Stecher and Ed (Strang
led Lewis, the pride of Kentucky, Wisconsin,
Iowa and a few other bailiwicks" turned out to
be such a pitiful farce it is not up to us to say.
The shame of it is the misrepresentation from
which Omaha in particular, and legitimate sports
in general, are made to suffer. The same publicity
advance agent, just quoted, after reciting the
names of all the world's great wrestling lumin
aries, gave us this dazzling pen picture:
And yet, even they never gave us a battle
which for nerve and verve, for wild, tremen
dous thrills and heart-thumping excitement,
could hold a candle to what the peerless boy
in overalls from our own little city of Dodge
and Ed (Strangler) Lewis, the lumberjack '
Colossus from Wisconsin are going to show us
on July 4. ,
Are they not the world's two athletic
exemplars; two men absolutely physically per
fect? Well, then, is there any mystery why yotf
should hold your breath and stare? Is it any
wise dumfoundins; that the two miracle men,
Stecher and Lewis, who are to struggle to a
finish, have aroused the curiosity of the world?
Let anyone who wasted irrecoverable time on
the glorious Fourth in "watchful waiting," con
trast this with the reality.
The bane of professional sports is the money
prize. It is most insidious when the contestants
are to divide a bulging pot regardless of whether
they win or lose or whether they put up an on-the-square
match or not The only question is
how often can they get sway with it. '
wmmmmm mmmmm mm mmm
Carranza'a Conciliatory Reply,
lienor, Carranza Jias orofited bv the time he has
taken to reflect and deliberate on the character of
his reply to the last two notes from Washington.
At any rate, he appreciates the full beauty of the
proverb of Solomon, "A soft answer turneth away
wrath." In his note, the first chief points out a
way along which peace between his people and
the United States may eventually be achieved.
Mexican leaders seem to have finally realized the
gravity of the situation, and appear' not . only
willing but even eager to set about to re-establish
cordial relations with our people.
Carranza's promises sound, fair, and his re
quests are not unreasonable, but the point is how
far can he berelied upon to fulfill any obligation
he may assume'. Senor Carranza need not be
chagrined to find a reluctance on part of Ameri
cans to take his pledges at face value. HoVever,
his proposals will get full consideration, and if
his acts square up anywhere near to his words,
he will find the United States willing to meet him
hlf way st least..' -
Ord Quiz: A writer in The Omaha Bee says
"For furiosity's sake it would be interesting to
see how Charles E. Hughes would stand the test
as president of the United States." There are
many better reasons than that for electing Mr.
Hughes president, but if there were no other, that
would be sufficient to justify taking a chance on
a change ot administrations. "
Hartington Herald: Nebraska may now plume
herself upon the fact that she contributed her
share toward' the nomination of Chief Justice
Hughes tor president ot tne united Mites.
. Tekamah Herald: We believe that Nebraska
will be for Hughes by 20,000 or more majority..
Bloomington Advocate: It is very comforting
to the li.wu republicans in Nebraska that wrote
the name of Hughes on the ballot that he has
been chosen as the man to, lead the party to vic
tory this fall. There it .no doubt but what the
expression of the 15,000 voters in the state went
. s long ways in showing how strong the Hughes
sentiment was in the western and central states.
Fremont Tribune: The probabilities' are that
Candidate Hughes will mam a campaign tour,
and it may well be hoped he will do to. Nebraska
had one touch of the Hughes presence that lin
gered. When he came to the state in 1908 he
made a deep impression; His logic and hia
facile sneech were most fascinating: and convinc
ing. He will be able to arouse the country to s
fe.fch pitch; if he engages in a. speaking tour. The
people have become used to this method, intro-
iced by Mr. Bryan, and they expect the candi
cites to come around and see them, and be seen.
i
Hughes' Definition of Amdricanltm.
The republican nominee for president, to his
old neighbors on the Fourth of July, gave a good
definition of the quality of Americanism that has
made this country great. Speaking of the men
of the revolution and the Declaration of Inde
pendence, he said: '
It is all very well to talk about the declara-
, tion and the strong sentiments which it con
tains, but that was backed by men men who
v couldn't have indited it, men who couldn't have
committed it to memory, men who couldn t
have repeated it, but men in whose liver was the
incarnation of independence and whose spirit
was breathed into that immortal document.
This is the type of manhood needed today;
not the noisy man, says Mr. Hughes", but the quiet
sensible, honest, dependable men. It is on the
firmness of the moral fiber of these men, and their
full determination to maintain the right, that the
safety of the nation rests. That the country does
possess thoughtful men, and that the noisy hys
teria of the mob, excited by newspaper headlines,
is not the determining influence in our destiny,
augurs well for the future. . The sturdy character
of American manhood still dominates, as it did
in the days of Washington and Franklin.
Americans are accused of seeking after ease
and luxury; to s very great extent they do, and
no nation in all the history of the world ever en
joyed so great s measure or so general distribu
tion of the most alluring of creature comforts. It
it well that this should be so, but love of ease has
not brought with it sloth or universal flabbiness
to American's.- This government was set and has
been maintained by men who were willing to
give over personal comfort and endure hardship
that the principles of liberty and equality might
survive. Such Americanism as Mr. Hughes
stands for la npt alone the hope and strength of
the nation, but of the world.
. Fallacy of Stats Sovereignty.
Our democratic brethren look with consterna
tion on any move that in the slightest degree
trenches upon their sacred dogma of the sover
eignty of the state, except, of course, where it
makes an opening into the federal treasury. They
hesitate to concede any point in government to
the control of the United States, for fear that by
so doing, the state rights may be impaired. The
fallacy of this position has been many times ex
posed, but experience does not carry conviction
to the democratic breast. States' rights, in the
last analysis, rest on no broader foundation than
individual rights. Matters peculiar and exclusive
to the state may well be left there, but on all
points wherein the general welfare sjs, involved,
consideration must be general arrd not" special.
This rule applies to individuals, to communities
within the states, and must apply to the states
themselves. Commerce and industry have long
since outgrown state or regional lines and are
no longer restricted by arbitrarily drawn bounds
ries To continue conditions as suggested by the
advocates of state sovereignty is to perpetuate
confusion and to unnecessarily hamper progress
that otherwise is possible. The vehemence with
which the democratsinsist on their doctrine ent-
phasizes the failure of that" party to grow with
growing civilization. All material interests of
every state are welt conserved and fully protected
under the repuDiican plan, while none is per
mitted, through selfishness or for other reason, to
retard the forward movment of all, '
Our supreme court holds that the jurisdiction
of the railway commission over telephone serv
ice supersedes regulation by local Authorities. This
raises the question whether the authority of the
commission over street railways is likewise ta-
perior to the local authority. That issue, we be
lieve, is raised in some pending litigation from
which we ought to hear before long. '
With respect to rumors of Mexican raids on
the border, the reader will play safe by observing
one of two rules. ' Await official confirmation or
salt it until the freshness wears off.
Thought Nugget for the Day. "
Who gives and hides the giving hand,
Nor counts on tavors, tame or praise,
Shall find his smallest gift outweighs
The burden of the sea and land.
Anonymos.
One Year Ago Today in the War.
Germans made fierce attacks on the Russian
lines along Rawka.
British reported the capture of more German
trenches north of Ypres. 4
Germans began severe attack witn artillery
in Alsace.
Archduke Joseph Ferdinand of Austria pur
sued Russians northward after second battle of
Krasnik.
Today in Omaha Thirty Years Ago.
A nl2nt surorise oartv was tendered to
Miss Sarah Brandtis at her home on upper St
Mary s avenue. Among those present were
Misses Newman,' Sonnehill, Anna and Minnie
Rothschild; Mrs.,Heyn, Mrs. Mandelberg, and
Messrs. Martin and Simon Oberfelder, E. Cahn,
Hugo, Arthur and Emit Brandeis, Schlesinger,
Heyn and Goldsmith.
Mrs. Edward Haney and her son, Willie, have
left for Santa Anna, Cal, where they will visit
Judge Porter, the father of Mrs. Haney and
formerly a resident pt this city. :
j. ri. Millard has gone east ana win sail ior
Europe the middle of the month.
Hereafter the policemen on day duty will
wear cream-colored helmets with emerald lining
"hirh ball," u it U nBcrallr called, often
to literally burn the etomaeh wall, and lire
the liver, to be hob-nailed 4n later life, ac
cording to the ratio of water added and
food on the stomach at the tine, U none
of hia affair, and yet at one fell swoop all
mutt Buffer alike, and fermented and dit
tilled liquora go togcthe If thii step 1
once taken, the itate will regret it later.
for against what to natural no law can dic
tate. If we cannot Attend to thia liquor
question properly and make the distinction
between fermented and diitlHed liquor,
there will be many nrpriaea for m later,
and one of them will be the legislature of
Iowa. In a few years, doing that very thing.
But Nebraska will be dry forever, for here
it becomes a part of the organic law of the
state.
"It don't make any difference where H
comes from, whether 1 as arrack or spirit
made from rice in Japan, pulque from the
cactus of Mexico, or vodka from Russia's
wheat, brandy from wine or gin from Lord
knowa what, the only thing that the mod
ern column still, balks on, to the rum of the
molasses of the southland. It cannot get
rid of that rum taste no matter how high it
carries it to neutral spirit. But otherwise
everything else to grist to the column still
of modern times, and diluted and flavored
you can make anything yoo want except wine
and beer. 80 that Is what we shall
when prohibition comes. It will be the
mall package of neutral spirit to be di
luted back to high balls of different kinds
and the milder beer and wines will be a
thing of the past, as they can not be so
well sneaked in, and in secret places.
"GEORGE P. WILKINSON, M. D,"
to the visor and projected cover over the poll.
The building on the corner of Thirteenth and
Howard, adjoining the original atore, has been
leased by Brandeis & Son for a term of years.
- M. E. O'Brien, superintendent of the state fish
commission, is in town, stopping with Fish Com
missioner B. E. B. Kennedy. - (
Dr. Thomas Hill and family from Fort Porter,
N. Y., are guests of Dr. J. Hudson Grant
This is the Day We Celebrate.
W. J. Connell, attorney-at-law, with office in
The Bee building, it 70 years old today. He was
born in Cowan svi lie, Canada, and came to Omaha
in 1869, where he has since continuously prac
ticed his profession. He represented the district
in congress one term and was for ten years city
attorney.
John Alperson, cigar man, was born July 6,
1873, in Russia. He was educated in the Unif
versity of Chitomer in Russia and has been in
business here in Omaha jince 1888.
H. L. . Beard, proprietor of the Omaha
Bakers' Supply company, is a Michigantjer, just
52 years old. ' ' v
Dr. W. L. Shearer, who calls himself an
oral surgeon, was born in Fennimore, Wis.,
thirty-six years ago.. 1
Princess Victoria, sister of King George V,
was born forty-eight years ago.
RAtTmoM MrKe-nna. rhancvllnr of the ex-
chequer in the British ministry, born in London I Jj -t
John Skelton Williams, comptroller of the
currency, born in Powhatan county, Virginia,
fifty-one years ago today.
. Katherine Tingley, celebrated theosophical
leader, born at Mewburyport, Mass., sixty-four
years afffl todav.
Stephen F. O'Neil, catcher of the Cleveland.
American league base Dan team, Dorn at
Minooka, Pa, twenty-four years ago today.
Today In History. h''-X a - '
1759 Joshua Barney, who was s commodore
in the United States navy before he was 24, born
in Baltimore. Died in Pittsburgh, December 1,
1818. - '
" 1776 On the news of the Declaration of In
dependence, the leaden statue of the king of Eng
land in New York was made into bullets.
1777 American garrison, under General St
Clair, abandoned Ticonderoga, and retreated
through Vermont?
1816 Ice. was formed to the thickness of com
mon window glass throughout New York and
New England.: . '
1818 First auction sale of public lands in
Michigan took place at Detroit.
1832 Maximilian, the ill-fated emperor of.
Mexico, born in Austria. Executed at Queretaro,
June 19, 1867'. '
1844 The United States recognized the in
dependence of the Sandwich Islands.
1893 Marriage of Prince George of Wales
(George V.) and Princess Victoria Mary of Teck.
1898 Hobson and his comrades, taken pris
oners by the Spaniards at Santiago, were ex
changed. 1903 M. Loubet, president of the French re
public, arrived in England on a visit to King Ed
ward. 191-Frank Holt, dynamiter of the capitot at
Washington and who fired a shot at J. P. Mor
gan, killed himself in the Nassau county, New
York, jail. . t '
Timely Jottings and Reminders. , "
Today is the twenty-third anniversary of King
George and Queen Mary.
' The Friends' General conference is to begin
its annual meeting today at Cape May, N. J., and
will continue in session for one week.
Delegations representing the Norwegian sing
ing societies in all parts of the country will
gather today at Grand Forks, N. D., for the an
nual sangerfest of the Norwegian Singers' Asso
ciation of America. '
One of the largest 'religious conventions of
the year will be the annual international gathering
of the Young People's Baptist Union of Amer
ica, beginning its sessions today at Chicago.
- Negroes of Boston will hold a public mem
orial meeting tonight in historic Faneuit Hall for
the negro soldiers who fell in the recent en
gagement at Carrizal, Mexico.
A military training camp similar to that st
Plattsburgh will be opened today at Fort Terry,
Plum Island, N. Y., for boys of 15 years of age
and over who are not yet eligible for the Platts
burg camp. , ; : , ,v-
Where They Are Now-
H. J. Davenport, who for several years had a
law office in our New York Life building, has
just been appointed professor of economics in
Cornell university, being called from a similar
chair in the University ot Missouri.
Dr. William P. Haney, an Omaha boy is on
the medical Job in Chicago. He was in Mexico
till it became more healthful for an American to
go back to the states.
Story-ette of the Day.
' George Gordon, an old man of miserly habits,
was dying. A. neighbor who was on friendly
terms with the old man's relatives agreed to call
on the minister and beg him to try to induce the
old fellow to make a will. The minister con
sented, and at length persuaded the miser to al
low a lawyer to be sent for.
- By the time he arrived the old man was rap
idly sinking, but the will was smartly drawn up
and duly awaited his signature. He was propped
up in bed and managed to write Ueorge Oor,
then he fell back exhausted.
i An eager relative who stood by seized the
pen and stuck it in the dying man s hand.
"'D, George, d,' he urged, referring to the
next letter of his signature. ' (
The old man slared uo wrathfully.
"Deel" he snapped. "I'll dee when I'm ready,
ye avaricious wretch 1" Pittsburgh Chronicle-
icicgrapu
Thanka From Bird Levera.
Omaha, July -. To the Editor of The
Bee: For the very kind and much appre
ciated aaaiftancV which you rendered in
makinc the Bird Maague "Sanctuary" the
ueone it waa, the Nebraaka Audubon ao
eiety (by reaolution) haa directed that Hi
hearty, thanka be transmitted to yon.
JOY HIGGINS.
Secretary.
Looking Backward and Forward.
Brandon. Canada, July '. To the EdrW
of The Bee: I am forwar'diTur youStoday a
marked copy of the Winnipef Telegram. The
article brought forcibly to my mlnu an
article I read in The Omaha Bee going on
thirty year, ago, when I waa a conductor
en the B ft M. in Nebraska at McCook.
If you turn back your Sle, between 18SS
and 1898, yon will Snd, I think, an editorial
which show, your editor of that time waa
vomewhat of a prophet. -
The article Illustrated a political party
convention in which all hyphenates had to
have a position on the ticket, not excepting
the lowest position. When the question waa
naked, who he was and what nationality he
represented, they found he waa an American.
Then the cry waa raised, "Out with him, out
with him ; we do not want any Americans
on this tlcketr. THOMAS BBOWNLEB.
Speak. Against Prohibition.
Omaha, July t. To the Editor of The
Bee: At a pienie last Sunday at Child's
point, composed of Bohemian and German
families, with many also of English descent,
the following was one of the speeches,
which I have been asked to write rat and
request you to print:
' "Ladies and Gentlemen! I have heard
your felicitations that the hardships of other
days are over and that we are all happy to
ha united nnder one near. I am going to
digress and make an anti-prohibition speech,
for I cannot help but think, how impossible
It will be for ns all one year from now to
repeat these picnics, as a law-abiding people.
if the prohibition amendment carries,
N have never been able to understand
why a sovereign people cannot Justly make
the distinction and draw the line between
what la natural to nature, in giving
beverages, fermented, from those that are
distilled bv the artifice of man. It
auch m aurprise to the medieval alchemist
that he could, with an alembic or retort, get
a condensed anlrit from beveragea fermented,
like wine and beer, and yet the best he
could do waa 50 per cent spirit and the same
of water, and thia Is known aa 100-proof
apirft. Thia waa so mysterious that he did
not think of It aa of thia world, and he
called it a spirit, an aqua vitae or a water
of life. But in recent yeara the modern
chemist haa replaced the old pot-still by
the column-still and that spirit has advanced
in higher distillations, through high wines
and neutral spirit to almost ZOO proof,
to where there Is no water left, and thia is
what la known as absolute alcohol.
"It is clear to me why eoma of the nation,
alitiea that make np our American citisen.
ship feel aggrieved that they ean be de
prived of what thay know they do not
abuse, 'and that beer and wine are natural
andmade by germ, that are always floating
in the air, just the aamo aa buttermilk and
vinegar and moat grape juice, for nature
will make wine for us in spite of all. Thay
cannot understand why some race, amalga
mated with ua all. will not be educated to
beverages fermented, but prefer to dilute-
. ASK FOR and GET
HORLICK'S
THE ORIGINAL
MALTED MILK
Chun substitutes cost T0V same) talae.
Clears Away Pimples
Hay Fever Preparedness
It . vitally Important to millions of suf
ferero. Be prepared by calling on your
drugglet or writing us for a bottle of
"SNUFFINE," Cook's Hay Fever Belief,
a positive and non-injurious relief for
HAY FEVER or ROSE COLD.
For Sale at all Drug Stores or mailed
to you direct upon receipt of f 1.00.
Write for Pamphlet.
COOK CHEMICAL COMPANY,
CASPER WYOMING, U. S. A.
There it one remedy that seldom fails to
clear away all pimples, black heads and skin
eruptions and thatfpiakes the skin soft, clear
and heajtby.
Any druggist ean supply you with seme,
which generally overcomes all skin diseases.
Acne, ecsema, itch, pimples, rashes, black
heads in most eases give way to semo. Fre
quently, minor blemishes disappear overnight.
Itching usually stops instantly. Zemo is
safe, clean, easy to use and dependable. It
costs only 25c; an extra large bottle, 11.00.
It will not stain, is not greasy or sticky and
is positively safe for tender, sensitive skins.
Zemo, Cleveland.
HOTELS AND BESORTS.
WHITE MTS. (V. H.
MAPLEWOOD cSoS1
MAPLEWOOP, N. H.
High Altitude. Free from Hay Fovea.
MAPLEWOOD INN
Opposite Hotel. Capacity- 148.
' Terms Moderate.
Superior lS-Hole Golf Course SOSO yards
Motorists' Beat Radiating Center in Hte.
Booking office, 1180 Broadway, Mew
fork, also Maplewood. N. H.
sTlRgU(NHT aTeUTOSwagfa
HOTEL LOYAL
18th and Capitol,
OUAKA, V v . XTBUASX.
State Trade Specially Invited
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. With Bath, 1.60 and Up'
Cafe the Very Best
. Popular Pricea '
. STOP AT THE LOXAIi
3w
Clar Maav Jmtk-m Blti.
The Hotel
Success of
Chicago
A comfortable,
home-like hotel
in the business cen
ter of the city offer,
ing every convenience
and every service.
The best food is
served m the
New Kaiserhof
Restaurant at
moderate prices.
4SO Rooms $1.50 up
With Bath 92.00 tig
I JITHEYS,
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THE SWIFT SPICtnc CO.
ATlaANTA, QA.
TIPS ON HOME TOPICS.
Washington Post! Our idea of a proper
news eensorship Is a combination that will
render the present kind of news emanating
from the border wholly obsolete. " : v ,
Chicago Herald t The new revenue hill
gives the country glimpse of the bill for ;
preparedness- Now the -country wants to :
see a few evidences of preparedness ttaelft
Boston Transcript t If it be true, as re
ported, that Villa has lost one of hU legs, !
he has a splendid chance to invest IJa in
a cork peg and become the Santa Ana of j
modern Mexico. . - ' '' '-
Boston Transcript : The eall to arms ;
found some men evading military service on
the plea that they were married, and Others
rushing into matrimony after they had en
listed, and yet magasine writers think that
human nature is a simple little thlna - j
Louisville Courier -Journal : To Insure
health, says a physician, drink eight glasses
of water each day. There are persons who ;
Insure theirs with a health Insurance com-
pany, telling the medical examiner they ;
drink nothing but water, and let it go at ;
that. ,. i
Indianapolis News: It looks as if the 1
gasoline demand were also good In Texas-,
where the Producers' Oil company has de -dared
a cash dividend of S00 per cent. This j
ought to help the stockholders quite a bit to
undergo the demands of unparalleled pros- j
srlty. ;!
Philadelphia Ledger. Why not Imprison ,
the, American refugees who are streaming
in from Mexico T They are guilty as charged
by the democratic leaders of putting the ad
ministration in a hole because It has been
asked to protect them. Such treason to a
party ought to be severely punished. What
do we have such enterprising cititens for?
They ought to know a political campaign is
on and should stay at home.
FASTER SERVICE
TO ST. PAUL AND
MINNEAPOLIS ...
On and after July 2, 1916, Great Western trams
for St. Paul and Minneapolis will leave Omaha
and Council Bluffs later, make faster time and
arrive as heretofore: '
Lv. Omaha
Lv. Council Bluffs.
Ar. St. Paul;....'.
Ar.. Minneapolis . . .
. 8 :30pm 7 :40am.
.8:50pm 8:00am.
,7:30am 7:45pm.
.8:05am 8:20pm.
' . .. THE FAMILY., v
H Btanley Hasklns, In Ufa.
There'a a girlie upstalra In her bed eo
Ham to tne wind e-croon!
Rh.'a wraoMd In a .llvar w.h nf iIh. -
Italia In her dream cocoon: l
she heara the birds and crlckste call, ' j
, She atlra and ami Irs and lovse them all, i
But aomewhat leae than ahe lovea her
doll. . ,
Helgh-o lor the little maid I ' ,
Thare'e a laddl. asleep In the house to
night ,
Hark to the Bound of wlnga! ,tf I
Hia alumoera are filled with a soft delight
And atrange ecstatic things; .
He drearoa of brave knlghta on a sunlit
plain, - i
Of fairy Queens that soothly regln.
That wave their wands te banish pain
. Heigh- for the aylvan gladel
There's a mother of both. Hark! ahe gently
eigne,
Knerltng beside them there,
The long day ended, 'neath atarllt skies
She offers a broken prayer.
. But "out on the field, where the wild
bladea leap.
Where the ehrapbel buret and the
oeyonela sweep,
One Hm quite atlll where a trench
yawna deep,
' And the toll ot Hare la paldt
, V ' ' " "' ' "-"
- TO DUBUQUE AND CHICAGO.
Schedule of Great Western No. 6, night train
(for Chicago has also been shortened leaves
Omaha 3:50 P. M., Council Bluffs, 4:10 P. M.v,
and arrives Dubuque 2 :55 A. M., Chicago, 7 :35
A. M., 35 minutes faster than heretofore.
. . For full details about schedules to the East and
North, askx .
V p. F. BONORDEN, C P. & T. A.,
1522 Fsrnam St. , Omaha.
, .' Phone! Douglas 260.
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