THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE:, JULY 30, 1916. THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE Founded by edward rosewater. ? ' VICTOR ROSE WATER, EDITOR. The B ritblliiilnf Comaaay, PrepriMor. .REX IUILDING. FABNAJ1 AND IKVENTKNTH. soured at Omaba poatoffloa si cond-clut sutter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Br carrier By snail per moot per war. IHlly and Sunday Me 6.tl . Daily without Sunday..., 45o 4.00 XvMtfif end Sunday 40e .oo Efonitu with owt Bund . . .15e Sunday Bet? only 20c 100 -ally sod Sunday Bet. Oirse yeara in advance. .10.00 vena nonet, m nun or uarm or lrrriuianu n yln to oroaoa Bet. circulation UfparuoML REMITTANCE." Itpnrtt by draft, uprea or postal order. Only l-ont MtamiM dw red In narBtent or amai. amount, rer- . aonaJ ctavrka. except oq Omaha and aasurn exenancta, uw acoopew. , OFFICES. v Omaha Th Bee BuHdtni. ' - South Omaha 2318 N atreet. fotinrtl Bluff-U North Hatn attest Lincoln 5S8 Utile Buildin-. v Chko S!8 People'a Ga IMitlding. ' Near York- Boom 1108. SM Fifth arm, t ImiaM3 New Bank of Com mere. ; Wiahiniton 723 Fourteenth Kratt, N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. - Addnes ewnnniairattflni telaUns to sews and attt tnrlal natter to Omaha Boa. Editorial Dttpartaeat. iUME CIRCULATION. 57,957 Daily Sunday 52,877 llwtrbl Wllllama, drculatlrm taanaaar Th Baa PnMlalilnf company, Wnc Sulr amm. Nfl that th. - amitc crlculitlon for th. month of JttM, ISIS, M H.W nallr ana m.ntt BUnaar. nwlOHT WILLIAMS. Clrealaiton Ifanatrr. BiinarrlhMl m m preaanot and mom to befoav . OM una M oar Jtujr, ll. . ROBKRT HUNTER, Kotarr Public. SubacrHMr. laavtns th. city temporarily ahagla tun TH. Bm auilaa t. thaaa. Ad am, will a. duttftal .a aft., aa reauaattai. As an induitrioui rumor factory Amsterdam has Rome beaten to . dumb standstill. . "Hands Across the Sea" remains the motto over the door, but the grip depends on a thorough in spec tion of the hands. '. Although riot chronicled in Holy Writ, King Solomon has nothing on Judge Landis in the unscrambling of mixed-op mpthers. My, what a lot of coal shoveling could be saved if part of the sum mer'i heat could be interned and re leased in the winter timet , , The presumption is" the White House would go tenantless If the landlord did not have a Mayflower, or some other boat equally as good, : to go with it i President Poincare of France an- ' nounces that the allies can t'be beat. ' The central powers express like con- ' fidence in ultimate victory, Mean ' -.t- :t- al. i.:ti: - j - . Willi. III. Killing fIUl.CU. Willi nu : prospect of an early decision, v According to the boot makers, wo - men's shoe tops are to be lower, but . nothing has yet been heard officially from the dressmakers as to' skirt lengths. We insist that this is place i demanding team work. One of the apologists for demo . cratic unpreparedness is quoted as ' saying, "The soldier boys on the bot " der mast not expect) summer resort quarter nor Waldorf-Astoria meals. , No, and it s a cinch that they will not : aj.a anviut The estate of the late , J. Pierpont Morgan appraises at the! pittance of ' 178,000,000, "exclusive of property outside of, New York state." which , cannot amount to mucti. in a word, he was only an imitation Croesus, many time outclassed. How disap pointing 1 v Losses by fire In the United States and Canada for the first half of the year foot up $125,776,420, compared with S9Z,SSl,UUU tor the tirst halt ot 1915. The great difference in the figure : suggest that lean months ; make ,. poor fire economy and fat -months go to blazes. , There is just one sure way for Omaha to land that federal land bank: Let our democratic United States senator step up to the counter and say, "I want that bank for Omaha; I must have it and if I don't get It, I . will take it as notice that the admin- ' istration does not want my help for anything else." - The railway commission of Cali fornia criticises the allowances for ' services in connection with the re ceivership and sale of the Western PniA railrnart An attnrnftf'a imm ftf $172,000 for sixteen months' service and $7,000 to the man who read the , notice' (ft sale may appear extrava , gant to plodding workers, but the .commission forgets that receiverships 'are designed to fry th remaining fat. FuDiicitv ana uooa Koada. ; . .. Tt. frMlnn nf . a., V..'.t. ....... commission is the first indispensable step Nebraska must take to become eligible for th state's share of the federal good -roads fund. That will be an -important task for the legisla tors chosen next- fall Little can be aone omciai v until i tne legislature I .L - 1 ; , 'an. auu iuc ctHiuiii.iioncrs arc . chosen. Assuming the legislature takes favorable action, eight or iweive montns win eiapse oetore the "stat buckles down to the serious busi ness of permanent' road ' building. , ...L:!. t. i , , Aiv.iiwuiic . iiiukii' irciiminary worx might be done in thoroughly ac quainting the people with the neces . sity and practical value of this pub lic work. Taxpayers are entitled to advance information on the cost While the federal law fixes at $10, 000 per mile the cost limit of which it pay one-half, the actual cost may ' exceed the federal limit, and the ex-; , vcb muai oc oorne oy tne state or tH rnttnit Aimt r j.Ahm-k.j a .. ... - - vu.iv.i i.m. vji educational campaign for a compre hensive system of permanent roads Is essential id k full understanding i what the movement involves. The nor thoroughly the people under stand the. issue the quicker wilt favorable action be had and legisla tive friction avoided. Two Years of the War. The second vear of the war iA Rttrnn inat closing, 'teaches one thing clearly. At its outset man tnougnt he knew his capacity for endurance and the limitations of his powers of destruction. Events have proved otherwise. Predictions freely made by experts before the fighting commenced that war had been made too terrible to last long have been swallowed up in occurrence so shock ins: that sensibility haa f,.n ff,i11iH .nf ,h an nouncement of new agencies of death and devas tation mor awful than any dreamed of are ac cepted as matters of course. Men by millions are sent against other millions, each force equipped with scientifically contrived instruments for slaughter: whole battalinna arc nhllor,,. k. chemical blasts, anit rfirimin,. anil hflngn.. out, demonstrating the accuracy of calculations maae lor capacity of modern weapons to destroy, and confounding all theories as to man's capacity to defy destruction. This is the one lesson of two years of fighting on the most stupendous scale imatrinable. Other possible results are yet speculative. Much of rea soning has been logically applied, but the postu late is Dresumotive and not nnsit ive ann1 .a h conclusion is necessarily guesswork. Evidence is plenty tnat peace would be welcomed by the bel ligerents: this is not within reach iintll an. the other side has gained an advantage, and the indecisive character ot results so far achieved .bi,.. viuic. Hum cmurcing us oemanas. now much longer the strita-trle mav an !. most as uncertain now as it was two years ago. limit win be reached, but how soon or where none can say. Partisan bias supports most ex pressed opinion, which is consequently worthless. Human endurance is beintr tested tn thai ana on u depends the outcome. Th Spirit of Nationalitm. From the birth of the remihlle iU. .nirla f nationansm has been the propelling power of its onward march of progress. It is this spirit that cemented tne colonies together after they had won independence from the British oppressor and it is mis spirit tnat kept the union from division through a bitterlv foutrht civil war Th. .i,.- oi nationalism also offers the explanation of each successive step in territorial expansion which the United States has undergone and which in turn has tremendously strengthened that anlri. By force of national necessity the different states mat n.d claims to the Northwest territory relinquished them In favor of the f..r.i ment and out of that empire were carved all the new states Between the Alleo-ha. mA at,. H.iu iug ... i a a- tssippi.. The acquisition of Louisiana was brought "i " uiun a wnoie ana not Dy the ad joining states, either individual! The territory taken from Mexlen hee.m. -..-. i territory and likewise purchased Alaska and war- ti(iiircu ,rorco kico ana the Philippines, It is the ironv of fate, almnat that the n.a i . . , , ...v uiw iiin,ii.ni enlargements of our territorial area have come unaer democratic administrations in direct con tradiction of the democratic firearhmen, Af .-. ngnt. ana anti-imperialism, and If the Danish west inoies now come under our flag, we will oave anotner illustration directly In point ' ''The soirit of nationaliam ... -.....j V.IIIIUI vv rT;- pressed where the welfare of the American people requires' the concerted action of all Th. c..:c. - " - .lint railroads would never have been built at the time tney were needed except for the federal land grant and subsidy and the eonarrtirrion nl ah. Panama Canal would be still lagging had not unci, jam texen it in Hand, sn ... ........ passing laws for land hart Ira feto aa,s- child labor, for good rotdi, and other subject!. lurnicriy ciairoca ai belonging exclusively to the tatet, because there ii no nthsr wv t a v. J wa liVSMIIlK with them effectively and efficiently. The spirit vi ii.uuiiaiiini cannot ana will not stop thort at artificial state lines merelv uiscreauea sentimental theory of states rights. ," Th Normal Child In SeJiooL ' MaasachuaeHa aimlaH . ....! ... -' anetung BDOUt an inquiry, tne UlllltV Ot whii-h m.a, h. ....a: J J w.aiuiicu. The quest is to determine th. nAln, .a . L .'-L .l abnormal child may be detected, the purpose be- ii iv give tne unusually talented youngster the full benefit of his excess of intellee'tn.l m. plan will, it is supposed, supplement the special ..wri mat nai long oeen made in behalf of the subnormal child, whose lark of f.-..t... i... dered him an object of special care and solicitude m an. puouc acnooi. when It is worked out the backward and the forward children will be cared .for, but what of the great mi of y0ung,.ert who have the misfortune to be Just normal boy. nd girlsf . ; ' Our public schools the intellectual needs of the children of the "aver age" American home. The . -a ltv i vi c in. conKientious school teacher should always be- i I """"" m y meet the requirements of these boys and arirls. mo.t of .h :n ... - w. will JJtJl no other schooling than is to be had in the public harm I at TLa, .tt . t a . T a.uc ,;1Ior, .noma not be to locate the especially gifted, but tO f fatal frit at. mm.m. iL.a the apt and energetic will find plenty to do, while ... qu.iuiea re not neglected. The tub normal and the abnormal usually discover them selves, so that the problem of the teacher con tinually hea with the far greater number. It is still a mooted p6int whether the substitu tion of practical for cultural aii. .... . 4. , . f in nuoi is the wiser plan. So-called technical training in schools specifically instituted for the "work, is indispensable. But it mav he well noh..j : at. pseudo-vocational training now undertaken in many of our nubile school, i. of , , . , - v. .jr rc.i service. Out and out trade schools have a purpose as de fimte as that of the technical, and should be .up plemental rather than t part of the purely cultural school. These mattera are far from t.i .,. fixed in our school system 'ho....... .t . effort will still be wasted in experimenution be fore the crystallisation of oni.:n. a.i nent I form. In the meantime, however, we submit ...,,,,,,,, m prodigies is of less real serv ice than giving a clear traclt o h. . .i .hiu ... T " : aver- Thought Nucra-et for the Dav. An idler is a watch that wants both hands, As useless if it goes as if it stands. , ! William Cowper. One Year Aa-a Tadav In the War. Holland passed a law increasing her trained soldiery from 330,000 to 550,000. , y Reported that Austrians were repulsed with heavy loss in attack on Italian position before Gorizia. Germany, Austris, Turkey and Bulgaria held :i .t. .... . f w.i ivruiiiii uu mc i.ic ui .oiiBtantmupic. This Dav in Omaha Thirty Years Atro. The trustees of the South Omaha Land Syndi cate ncia a meeting witn Closed doors at their office in the Millard hotel. The following were present: Messrs. swan, raxton, ller, Murphy Kok. mwtA r .t Fifty couples gathered at Ancient Order of Hibernians hall in response to invitations to a farewell party in honor of the Misses Annie and 11" I. ( II I II- . V trmt m.gajic virroit ana wr, jamcs renney. ine Misses Carroll go east next week and Mr. Ken- ncy leaves ior ureen niver, wyo. Mrs. Louisa Mohr, wife of B. M. Mohr, 418 North Sixteenth street, has returned from New VorL- ...I. ... .t. t-. v.. i -- . v. ..in. ,ia. vccu vi.iliiiu uci .istcr. T. W. T. Richards has gone to San Francisco in company witn nis Old companion in arms Senator Rif.hon. I W. V. Morse and wife have gone to Spirit Lake to join the Omaha colony there, which now I. ino iiuiiiLtci. over iuu, Miss Nellie Bassett of Galesburg, III., i visit ing Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Whilmarsh. Dr. H. Gilford of 1404 Farnam street became cxnausieo wnue Datning at Manhattan Beach and .... . .. t... .. -t. D..l. 1 1 . i n " ...cm. iu- an. ' a .tiiiu xaou.e, wnere ut, Hfailrfv twho h.n h..n -.J ... r-i.L- " " ' " -'- ..mi awiiuiiuiiau jiuiii w lli.ll., stated that he woittH eom. amnn .11 ...l.a k... mat u waa a close snave. -' N - - Today In History. 1609 Firearms first seen by the Indians in ......... .iwt,.w,. ... u v.ii. iiiii.in a iuii lowers near Ticonderoga. ';. 1711 An English expedition sailed from Bos ton to attack Quebec and Montreal. ' 1822 William T. Adams, author of the "OH. ver Optic" books, born at Medway, Mass. Died at Tlorrh..,.. a.a. VT k -ST I DOT . ...-.., ... .up,, aw.ivu a., 1(17 . 1830 Charlea Y n.noa.l .- ak. .1 -I aaaa nvfvvtis WUS 111V till UUC Jl rrancc, 1866 President Johnson replied to the mes- o v.ie.wm..iivii itvvifivi tiuiu yuccn vie tona on the completion of the Atlantic cable. lfi7J ArM-v,-. Afm-A Ul D.,. .a, t : pool, in the first professional base ball match in Kna-tanit 1887 The great railroad bridge over the St -awrcnce at x.acnine was completed. 1891 John Dillon and William O'Brien, the Trial. laarlsr t-sljai4 " lit - tion of their six months' sentences for advising ah an ten. u 19 noi io pay rem. - 1ROA Prk.i.t.nr ri.,..i..j 1 .j nAfl a-vf urapntnif fi.kM 4II!t...a.A. , : 1898 President McKinley, through the French ambassador, stated the American terms for peace with Cnaln ' 1900 Kin HmKtr it Tralw ......... . a th MMwaiuaicu a, 04.UIIC.sl, 1900 Farfrtnti.l,.. in A.A J I 7 "t- w wsw uiu ci uia tkfttfrx K.snew k... J--a i D-r k.iw MtSMaaf, pia.UMlljr UCtfUDCQ. A Centenary for TranaertL .v-"'f , ' ; - s' '" -'- Full-lenghth trousers were Inrented In the year 1816; and the first social light to approve them openly was the duke of Wellington, a man Of lmn narva a nr. -vnnmm. J.-I-. D I less of the consequences the duke wore a pair us ui vui va me iircci; ana irom tnat day his unpopularity grew. As compared with aatin knee hreerhea. trona.r. .-. ....J. j . .. . wlv mimic .tiu nniovciy. Sculptors rage at their graceless appearance and iciii.i . auom mem mat cannot be re peated in mixed gatherings. They are, however, the only known form of garment which can suc cessfully withstand the stress and strain which result from modern business in its various rami fications. A telegraph linesman, for instance, would enjoy all unpleasant time if he were obliged to go about his business clad in satin knee breeches or the togs of the ancients. Since the vear 19lr i th. r......... - .t. t:..i. . .... '...... j vi me mi in oi trousers, every trouser-wearer in the world might ...u.t ciiumciii .nu practicality Dy purchasing a new pair of trousers at some time Hn.in. ,k. year K. L. Roberts in Life. Thi I the Dy We Celebrate. Charlea F. MrHr.u, t.i. i . ivuicu uniiKcr, 1. JUSt 60 today. He was born at Mt Pleasant, la., com- ......v.... .,,ms Business in IBs at Alex andria. For ten vears he w.a atat. n.,io..i t.i. commissioner. , Arthur C. Crossman, investment and real estate broker, was born'July 30, 1851, at Bur- llnatnn Vf H. (...! ' '.:j'j '.?. . M.l T t . in.iuca t Atkinson, Neby from where he removed to Omaha in 1906. Henry Ford, Detroit automobile manufacturer and peace advocate, born at Greenfield, Mich., fifty-three yeara ago today. John Sharp Williams, United States senator from Mississippi, born at Memphis, Tenn.. sixty two yeara ago today. . ' hl.hRon R,'li- t?,rtat' D- Wilm. EpuKopal Disnoo of Michiflran. hnm mt R.I .,.. t ctL- y - v"k v usj, v.. Ill LV" six year ago today. . - ' 7 Tir Dura C h...!. . . Tt t r . prestueni or Chicago Theological seminary, born at Wheelock. Vt nftV V..r. .Bro i J J - IVM.J1, f,on!!nr7i A" Du.Pont. United States senator from Delaware, born near Wilmington, Del. seventy-eight years ago today. Dr. Henry Louis Smith, president of Wash-ins-ton ann I... I... . M r ...... iV, outn at ureensooro, t ! "v"J?ven ye,r" toiy- Julia H. Gulliver, president of Rockford (III.) today1"' " " Norwich Conn - ,ixty y" ago S,tngel' M4tr of the Brooklyn National league base ball team, born at Kansas Uty, twenty-six years ago today. A large part of the monev j ' - . uu roaa im- provement in Nebraska heretofore ha. been vir. i...wn wayvcvery dollar of the good roads appropriation from the federal treasury should be made to, count in a way that will eon- . ... .. """'" nPi and permanent to a scientifically planned and romol... ..j ystem This money must be spent for the bene fit of the whole state rather than Tor any favored ,,.1 group ot tend ,pecuiltorM That's what "Ed" , ...u, iui noi oemg good six years ago t j . . Wtwre They All Are Now. ' C C Wriirht ..k. k . . - -( '"" ...uiant general at torney for the Northwestern lines west of the Missouri river, and before that city attorney, ia now in charge of the Northweatern's interest before the Inter.,.,. . eated in Chicago" "TTTr jame 8; Sheean, who waa assistant attorney of the Northwestern, is now living in St Paul. Whart nf la cr.n.c 1 a..,,...! ii - Storyette of the Day. 1 During the recitation of a college class in natural philosophy the professor observed a tall, lanky youth in a rear seat hia head drooping, hi body relaxed, his eyes half-closed and his legs encumbering an adjacent aisle. , "Mr. Fraier J said the professor. ' The freshman opened his eyes slowly, but did not change hia pose. , ". , "Mr. Frazer. what I work?" ' " ' I!f v'ry,hInB ' work-'M w A drawling reply. . . ' 1'.med th professor, "do you mean to tell me that is a reasonable answer to my ques tion T r ,;'," 1 . '... .. . ,"Yes, ir." . - ' .- i "Then I take it that you would tike me and the class to believe that this desk is work?" "Yet, sir," replied the youth, wearly; "it is woodwork." The Christian Herald. Qrvdt SyvfarvAn-Aajj y Ylctor mowwatt. TX7HO NOW, after two years of fighting, pr'e " tends to keep up with the literature of the war? When the war books and pamphlets began to roll in, shortly after the outbreak of hostilities, this war stuff was my regular diet and, if I read one, I read fifty of them, almost without stopping. These early war books were in a class of their own. They told how it happened and who was to blame and what they were fighting for and how the map of Europe would be redrawn at the con clusion, but no one is excited by this guess work any more. Then came a literary output' of per sonal experiences of those who happened to be marooned in the war zone or caught in the lines or who had chance glimpses of the mobilization and early fighting, with descriptions of the ruin and havoc being wrought, but these, too, are now snop worn. I he war literature ot today is mostly in the fiction class, stories with the war as a background, entertaining and interesting many of them, but with a tense war flavor which, in large noses, is not pleasant to tne literary palate. J he real histories of the war art yet to come and the first histories will be warped by too close vision. After while we will have the personal narratives corresponding to those of our civil war like Grants Memoirs and the stories of Sherman. Mc Clellan, Sheridan, Logan and the other military leaders, providing, of course, that the guiding spirits of the present European conflict are not hrst killed oft, as was Kitchener, without an op portunity to give their observations to us for posterity. ' Talking about books, the readers of this column will remember a reference some time ago to the unique Children's Book Alcove which had been established bv Mrs. Matthews in the new book store. Mrs. Matthews launched the idea into a broader field by reading a paper on "Women m" Bookselling" at the big national convention of booksellers in Chicago this spring, and her ac count of what she had accomplished was gener ously treated in. the "Publishers' Weekly," the standard trade paper, with a consequent result that the story of the children's corner in Omaha now comes back all the way from London in a chatty book column in "The British Weekly." To use a pardonable slang expression, "That is going some." At the time f originally commented on this subject, I believe I offered some sugges tions along the same line for making the children's department at our public library more attractive and serviceable by furnishing it like a lounging room and eduinDing it with comfortable chairs and desks and lamps and window hangings, and making it so homelike and cosy that the children would prefer to spend their leisure in its book and picture atmosphere than any other place that might tempt them. By doing something that would make the children's room its most striking feature, our public library, too, could draw atten tion from strangers as welt as home folks and have ita fame spread far and wide. - We Omaha neorjle are lust hearinntnar to an. preciate our parks and to see the beauty and ad vantage of them, but not everyone harks bagk to the ComDarativetv short time aoro when most of these narks were either ravines filled with tin. derbrush or sunbaked cornfields. A drive through Elmwood park the other evening impressed me with the tremendous improvement it has under gone and then-the verv next dav I received, al most by coincidence, a letter from my old friend, John T. Bell, now living out at Newberg, Ore., to remind me that we owe the possession of this park to the homely industry of "pickling cucum bers." Let me give Mr. Bell's story in his own words and they will require no further explana tion or comment. He writes: "I take some satisfaction In the reflertion that I had something to do with getting Omaha started in securing a system of parks. Driving about in the northern part of the city north ern part as it was then along about 1884, I stopped at the market garden of Henry Hurl but and Henry B. Wiley. It was on land owned by John A. Horbach. They -were putting up cucumber pickles'. I said I though there ought to be money in cucumber pickles. They said there was and that if they had some more capital they would go into the business exten sively the next year. I suggested that I buy a third interest in the business. The proposition was accepted and shortly afterward I Was a partner in a business I had no experience in and I found it a very fortunate investment in deed. Messrs. Hurlbut and Wiley were experi enced market gardeners. Before locating on the Horbach land they had been engaged in that line out on the Big Paoillion on the old mili. tary road. I had nothing to do with the opera tion of the business, but my investment brought me the biggest dividends I eyer received for the same amount of money. "A vear or .o l.t.r Vf - Unvk..k .-..j t: - -fJ -w '--' ... i.ui uatu WaaillCU 1113 lana ,n. ..b.J.h.. . . .1 . ...... .v. .v.,uiiug put fuses miiu wc went out west of town and bought quite a tract of land n t t:.- 1 1 : i i - . ui a mrtc mmcuaugn, a portion ot wmch land we .ft.rivar mill o ,k. - t. I - ... J - .... ... uu.u ,v iu ovtlll men WI1U pi.LlCU the West Side addition, of which seven I was one, the others being Silas H. H. Clarke, John M. Eddy, M. H. Goble, Frank Murphy, John A. McShane and Nathan Merriam. We then bought seventy-five acres a little farther west and there ?'--- o r u "i baiucu un aut;ccss ully. -Aabeautiful stream, fed by springs, ran .uu.. una ianu, ana on ine ooroers ot it were many targe trees. ' "T axomalail a. Hf- U...IU... , lr- ur-e - ."Bo..-"! w .Mi. aamiuui anu jur. wiiey that, as this stream cut out several acres that could not he ua-ed for hardening purposes, we give it to the city for a public park. They at once agreeu anu auer discussing the matter, we concluded to ask some property owners above and below us to. join in the plan and thus make the trart of rnn.Uar.kl. .... TL. . ..... v. W.I..UVIU1..1 ei.e a lie property owners we had is mind were Henry Snyder. T .nn. D i-l 1 - 1 t i l . . --v luuiaimuu uu Leopold ana manes Dflll. "Af V r.foll.i-tinn Im ak.a I . . ........ w,i 10 inc. , Hum our garden property we donated twenty acres and that the o,h. .n.l.!k..l I . L . I ., ........ .uihuuitou cnuugii to maxe tne entire tract offered th. ...... ... r v.. nuj-iiru aun. 1 wrote the offer of the land and-was exceedingly care ful in the penmanship. We all signed the docu- ... uaiiueu it over to tne city council. A roimr-il f-ommii.. ...... . . . . . .w.....,.vj went uui to view tne property, in order to see whether it was worth accepting as a free gift, I suppose. Newspaper men went along with the committee, and I re member that one of these was my esteemed i .t a ,i "pouonoge, men- city editor of the Herald, and his story 6f the attractions Of rhr nrr.iV,tArl n.rl .a. t i j t , ui grapnic order. Of course, the offer was accepted and , 7 v:TVU. tuPy " resolution ot thanks from the citv government "Soon afttrurat.sl kJ iwi.u proposition was 1 tubmitted calling for $400,000 to be used in buy- "i .r. i T J 1 , . ,n ,ne vicinity of the land donated (and which took the re- u. uur garaen property), a tract north of us, another between the latter property and the river, anrl .,!! ..Aak a. -t- .....V -". ...uuici iu me soutneast ana ii t"uS on "ver The bona cTied and ... ...c.c a..t,. were oougnt, options on them n . vm or he.n ..i... A .a . ..-.-J . . t j " .mica price oeiore the bonds were voted. "It it not a atretrh of ak. .1. . , -- - - ...... v. i. mi. iu aay mat the Omaha narlr ...1.1 1 t . , . .. r... .;,,,, "uuiu nave uccn de layed in installation, if installed at alt, to its r . ,or ln incident of putting UD Of the nimaih. .I.kl.. al . j . r of Hurlbut and Wiley for the express purpose w. .uuivivnai tapuBi m oracr to put up more cucumber pickles the foUowing year. That r. e; . n we ildn Put UP cucumber picklea the following year nor in any other year." BRIEF BITS OF SCIENCE. Waterproof manta will lift scrap iron from tht river bottom In aalvage openitioiu. A Franeh Invtmtor tt mak.nr gmi piixa from paper, oomproaacil, dried and var nished, f Among the various eeonomie produeta of the plant knigdom th pith, of th aun flowcr atalk ii by far the lightest The average weight of the Greenland whale Is 100 tona 224,000 pounds equal to that of eight elephants or that of 400 bears. Selling seaweed Is one of the functions of the PhHtppin fishermen. ' 'Th native women BiaV use of t in the preparation of dessert much Hk gelatin. Aluminum is on of the moat abundant of metals and ranks third among the ele ments which compose the crust of the earth, being exceeded only by oxygen and silicon. Lighting dangerous waters In which noouna reezs, rocks and shoals has pro Tressed from wood fires and candles to oil vapor and electrle lamps. The earlr light houses were lighted by wood or coal Ares turned in open trailers, and later by can ilea inclosed in lanterns. LINES TO A LAUGH. Mellndy, bert-avtd of her husband, con mlted her young mlatreas on the proper wear o disclose her grief. "Ah wants a black hat, an' a black dress, n' black shoes, an' black gloves, an' a whole ark hank'chlef, ma'am." "Oh. Pfi MoMrtfly." bn- mta'iir, protested, "not ft solid black handkerchief!" 'n . . mtrkd -a Ind . imaaivlv. "when ah mourns, ah mourns f New Tork .ui.lng foal, A Uft-SrNER AND M ICE MAN ' tturME-WICH SW A. XAMErT? tHBR to NO CHOffi-lrfty - OHU EASM A UVIN( IN -SUMMER TIME Mra. Ooodley t suppose drink waa th cause of your downfall, my poor man. Bill Boozer Tea, mum. I took a drink of water wot had microbes In it, an' I ain't been a well man since." Boston Transcript A DESERT MEETING. And grim red rocks against th blue. And then upon th sun-atatned desert town The great through train come thundering down. All day th blue, unchanging sky, All day the great red rocks, until th train goes by. And then against th windows of th ears Are eager, childish faces pressed To see th people strangely dreaaed, Brown-faced, with black eyes keen Ilka stars. Wrapped la the blankets of thalr race, A quiet scorn upon their lips. The Indian women sit and watch whsr allpa From out th train, '! fiie erowd of curloua travelers from th east. And here upon the parched and dazsllng plain A moment meet the two whose wars have ceased Amid the mighty rise of cities; the grim feast Of conquest finished and the board swept clean, .Save where on lifp-fortmken lands like these A little remnant of the vanquished waft. in dun n-mL-uiajraiice or a once more spien- dtd slate, Taking the crumbs and lees, And watohinB their Inexorable fat. JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY. Gone! Can it be that that tender hear so sweet, On the joys and woes ot earth has ceased to beatT Can It be that the lips beloved the world around Ar dosed forever now, devoid of sound? Can It be that the mind and pen so eloquent. Whose wo. as so oft ths souls of men hav bent To happiness, contentment or to grief. Are stilled at last; that he has found relief ? Or shall we aay relief ? For h. It seems. Found Joy supreme In memories snd dreams But greater joy In aharlng all of these With youth and age alike, and strove to please, And In the striving greater pleasure found. Did not then happiness and pence abound In such existence? Was It not a bond ' That bound him, mortal, to the great Beyond ? -How shall his epitaph be writ by man? Who of our host of bards and singers can In worthy sentiments the praises sing. Of him, who even In th plainest thing. Found beauty of a rare and touching kind To soothe and comfort troubled mortal mind. How can we on his stone of marble white, Words that will please his humbl spirit write?' Had w not better In his own tender way Write In his simple pathos, this, and say; "Well, goodbye, Jim! Take good keer o" t yerself." Omaha. RALPH T. WILSON. SUPERIORITY IS DECIDED TODAY JUST AS IT WAS DURING THE DAYS OF THE OLYMPIAN GAMES THE SUPREME PRESTIGE IN THE FIELD OF MODERN LIFE INSURANCE ENJOYED BY THE Woodmen Of the World WAS ATTAINED ONLY AFTER YEARS OF FIERCE COMPETITION I RING DOUGLAS HIT NO CHARGE FOR EXPLANATION J. T. YATES, Secr.tary. W. A. FRASER, Pr.tid.nt. A word to the buyer of office space Yo buy kaxao.. YOUR NEED b to farabk mt patrons with S.rrlo. and the lv.tt.r year ! is to than, Ik quicker they raip... t your MrM. THE BEE BUILDING "The building that Is always new" limn tin bawl th.ra is ia leaatloa, aaac of aeaata, mT.ai.Bc., taf.ty, att.atioa, llfkl aaai air. wkiek an th. but aid to aarriea. Tka beautiful arakltostaral Haas of Th. Baa Balldiai taaaa araatl. ia yaor butiaaaa. OFFICE ROOM 10 1 It takes GUMPTION and CONFIDENCE to spend mone y ad vertis & ing for a position ;The' weak-kneed, incompetent kind of workers never think of advertising their services-they wait for something to come to them-and it rarely ever does. Many wide-awake men and women se cure positions : through the "Situations Wanted"; columns of The Bee. Employers know that only live, energetic workers spend their money advertising their services. v Persistence is the cardinal vir tue in advertising; no matter how good advertising may be in other respects, it must be run frequently and constant ly to be really successful