Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 30, 1916, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30 1916.
THE OMAHA DAILY BEE
FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER
VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR
THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, PBOPBIETOB.
Entered at Omaha portofflce aa aoeono-elaae matter.
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OFFICES.
Omaha The Bee Buildin.
South Omaha 2118 N atreet
Council Bluff. 14 North Main atreet
Lincoln 626 Little Building.
Chicago til Feople'a Gaa Building.
New York Room in, 280 Filth avenue.
.St Louie 108 New Bank of Commerce.
Washington 72S Fourteenth atreet N. W.
TARBESPO' 'DENCE.
Addreaa eommunlcatione relating to new. and editorial
matter tt, Omaha Bee, Bfltoruu uoponmein.
JULY CIRCULATION.
57,569 Daily Sunday 52,382
' ' Dwight Williama, circulation manager of The Baa
Puhliahing compear, being duly eworn, eeye tnat tna
aeeraga circulation for the month 01 July, trio, wi
7,689 daily and 6J.882 Sunday. ,,.,
DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager
Subecribed in my preeenca and aworn to befo- a
thU .d da, of Aur." huntER, NoUry Publlv.
i 3ubcribr learinf thai city temporarily
.hould hav The Be mailed to them. Ad
Jreaa will b. changed often a requested.
.Thpv nani Dick Croker could not come back.
Hi; it on the way. "
i' Dangerous crossings are not confined to the
country districts. Several in Omaha sob for a
traffic cop or safety signals.
iA divorce speed record o( twenty minutes is
far: from a topnotcher, but it insinuates that
Omaha courts are going some.
(Cotton took the toboggan with wheat. As an
iriloor sport the vagaries of the market sorely
Iras the nerves of professionals.
n, . :
L ;)Gyptiea in Missouri and Texas are discarding
; lilt horse tor the auto.- anis is not so mucn
knjell of the horse as a possible clue to kidnaped
linjousines.
..--It is almost useless to seek a line of business
i irhjnune to the stimulus of the auto. Even hos-
i ptt'gls draw a prosperous outlook from the pulsing
? pep, of speeding; " ' '
j lithe entrance of Roumania into the war game
i fitted in beautifully with the usual month-end
shakedown of the grain pits. Any old excuie
serves nowaday. .. .
: ;! Chicago's millionaire' recluse defends his right
1 to, spend his money in any way he pleases'. - Sure
! thing.. But it is important to observe the speed
j limit of police regulations. '
'"-Idaho's would-be kidnapers blundered in num
; beta, as amateurs usually do. Such eminent mas-
i tecs of the art as RaizUli and P. Crowe achieved
I distinction by playing a tone hand.
t hNow the administration shifts responsibility
; for its early blunders and shelters itself behind
Use flimsy defense: ; "Bryan did it."; Wonder
what Nebraska democrat carried the headline to
Washington? .
J !?The big fist of Uncle Sam separated two
. Porto Rican duelists bent on shooting at each
other. While chivalry is still a tradition under
American rules, in practice its exemplification is
restricted to shooting off the mouth. "
JfThe recent forced sale of farm land in 'John-
son county at an average of $155.75 per acre
i fairly measures the rising value of farm holdings
in Nebraska.'-The price ts below the average
value of good land in the eastern counties. But
the figure is high enough to show how rapidly
farm ownership is becoming a question of capital.
! Tear and heart sobs marked the latest fare
well of Tdme. Rosicka Schwimmer to America.
Before sailing the peripatetic peacemaker spoke
sadly of Jienry Ford as one who oitce had a great
visiorr, whose radiance dazzled the world. -But
Rosicka, try as she dk, could not get within range
of that vision and its radiance failed to radiate
as .before.' Henry saw her first.
i ,i : - .
'jntimations come from Mexico that the Car
raota government intends restoring confiscated
J estates to the owners as a peace offering. The
J dream of a division of the land and ownership
(by fhe tiller will remain a dream to long as the
nrit chief, ho ds power. Carranza is one of the
largest land owners', in' the country and self-in
terest forbids a policy of peasant ownership.
ffe
Shafts Aimed at Omaha
t. Kearney Hub: The Omaha Bee suggests that
the! Lincoln Journal's defense of the old state
house 4s due to the fact that Lincoln would rather
have the old building than take any chances on
losing the new one. Maybe sol .
i :Tork News-Times : A coroner's jury in Omaha
recommends that the driver of an auto that killed
a woman while getting on a street car be held for
criminal action. A few such prosecutions against
reckless drivers would undoubtedly impress some
autoists that pedestrians have some rights on the
highways: -..
i Friend Telegraph: Omaha is sending out in
vitations to the editors of Nebraska and Iowa to
visit the city on September 4. No indications
'jcyond a dinner at the Fontenelle and the Ak-Sar-Be
in the evening has been intimated, but the
day will undoubtedly be filled in with something
iloiBg every minute. There is no city in the west
thai take so much pains to entertain the news
jiaaer men of the state as does Omaha on these
occasions. These hospitalities come in such won
derful showers that they are not liable to be for
gotten by the recipients.
I t Edwards' Advance:. Omaha business men
aremhe most persistent fighters on earth. After
showing their business record to the Treasury
department and being informed that they were not
good enough for a federal reserve bank, they have
banded themselves together to fight for one of
the- banks to be established under the farm loans
bill Perhaps if they would -abandon the ques
tions of business and financial standing of their
rjity and ahow the administration how they were
(going to roll up a democratic majority which
they will not be able to deliver) they would have
isosrte show of getting one of these new banks.
,1 h chances are, however, much better for Mis
souri to get another bank thart for Nebraska to
get one.
I I
Threatened Railway Strike.
The issue between the railroad train and
enginemen and the managers of the roads seems
to be made up, and a deadlock reached, the solu
tion of which is to be referred to a general
strike. So far has the matter proceeded that a
definite hour for beginning the strike has been
fixed.
Whatever of principle may be involved as be
tween the men and the managers, their persis
tency in clinging to the position assumed has gone
to a point where public interests are concerned.
The obvious fact that no matter which side wins
in the end, the public is the chief sufferer, has
been before the committees all the time, and while
each has made appeal to the public for sympathy
and support, neither has felt moved to concede
a jot or tittle of demands made to the end that
the public be protected in any of its rights. Now,
'if the ordered strike comes as promised, public
opinion will hold both sides guilty. Proposals
and counter-proposals have passed, but without
an apparent effort to find the reasonable ground
on which both men and managers could stand,
at least, while a permanent adjustment could be
formulated.
What congress may do to avert the calamity is
not plain. The several proposals outlined do not
indicate the presence of an effective remedy. Ob
jection is raised by the men to compulsory arbi
tration, and by the managers to the eight-hour
day as a basis- for calculating wages. Should a
law embodying these .features be passed, its en
forcement would be a difficult matter. Seizure
of the roads by the government is beyond the con
stitutional .power of the president, unless he
should take the advice of Senator Newlands, and
declare a state of civil war. This expedient is
remote, even with immediate legislative action.
' Unless a change comes over the spirit of one
or the other of the contestants, the strike, with all
its serious consequences, appear inevitable.
rrnrwTi
Thought Nugget for the Day.
Who does the best his circumstances allow
Does well, acts nobly; angels could do no mora.
Young.
One Year Ago Today in the War.
Germans attacked bridgehead on the Dvina,
southeast of Riga.
Russians claimed notable successes on the
Strypa in East Galicia.
Italians stormed Cima Cista and captured
trenches on road to Trieste.
England agreed to lift blockade to extent of
letting out German shipments contracted for by
Americans before March.
This Day in Omaha Thirty Years Ago.
Contractor Lillis is putting concrete into the
excavation of the cable line on Tenth between
Howard and Jackson. This concrete is formed
into a tube through which the cable will run.
Block & Heyman held a grand opening at
Shutting Out Little Grain Gamblers.
A rule just adopted by the Omaha Grain ex,
change will go far to eliminate the evil of gam
bling in food supplies. The controlling board has
issued an order putting the margin on wheat deals
at such a figure that the small bettor are com
pletely eliminated. While thisstep seems dis
criminatory, it i in the right direction. The
board should follow it up with another rule that
will do away with gambling entirely, and put the
market on a legitimate businesa basis. Purchase
of wheat or any other commodity for future de
livery, at a price that may have some relation to
Conditions existing at the time of delivery, neces
sarily partakes of the nature of speculation. So
long as this is permitted, the element of chance
tan not be entirely eliminated. This form of
dealing is quite legitimate, but the abuse to which
it is subject quickly brings it into the worst form
of gambling, that of betting if the price goes up
or down, with the fictitious sale of billions of
bushels of grain that does not exist, and deals
being closed without regard to delivery of a ker
nel of corn or a grain of wheat. The new rule
will do away with the participation of the small
fry in thi branch of the market, and is of service
to that extent.
Weakness of the Farm Loan Plan.
No man is better qualified to speak authori
tatively of the problems of the farmer of the
United States than Henry C. . Wallace of Des
Moines. His life has been devoted to considera
tion of the economic and social aspects of the
agricultural-industry, both through practice and
m theory, and he knows whereof he talks or
writes. His criticism of the farm loan law. just
passed by the democratic congress and now
sought to be put into operation, is that of one
who understands what is required, and who knows
how far the present measure falls short of reach
ing the farmers who really need help.
'The law do.es not reach the spot," says Mr.
Wallace, who points Out that as it is now framed
it wihVhetp only those who really 'do not need
help, and for whom the borrowing of money is
already a simple matter. This is exactly the posi
tion The Bee has taken from the first In all the
consideration of this measure, the needs of the
small farmer, the tenant, and the young man
struggling to become an owner, have been
ignored, and only the interests of the established
land owner have been looked after. While the
democrats have made great pretense of taking
care of the farmer, and boast they have placed
him on a level with the merchant and manu.
facturer, they have done nothing of the sort. The
merchant or manufacturer can borrow on their
credit, while the farmer can only borrow on un
incumbered land, which must be appraised, and
then only to 50 per cent of its value. The mer
chant or manufacturer can borrow on short time
notes, but the farmer can not borrow for a shorter
period than five years.
The law as it stands will not helo move crona.
will not help out through the planting and grow
ing seasons, ana will not give any heta to. the
tenlnt farmer who is striving to become a land
owner' rn plain words, it is a mockery. ,
-.New State House Is Needed.
,With the old state house tumblins about his
ears,' Governor. Morehead still hesitate to-take
tne responsibility of recommending that a build
ing suitable for housing Nebraska's state govern
ment be erected. He will refer to the next legis
lature a proposal that the dilapidated and danger
ous east wing be torn down, and that a more sub
stantial structure be erected, to become, in future
time, part of a real state house. Whv
the governor come out frankly and tell his people
what he well knows, that the old capitol building
not oniy antiquated, but Is actually dangerous;
that It is expensive to maintain, because of its
lack of appointments, and that it is entirrlv i
small to properly house the different departments
of the government? The next legislature will
have to give careful consideration to the problem,
and the governor should see that it is furnished
with all available data, based on careful inquiry
by qualified experts to the end that its work
will, be facilitated by having facts to start on.
The Bee agrees with Governor Morehead that he
has a more comfortable office in the state house
than he does in Falls City; not a governor of
Nebraska has "ever occupied private quarters as
spacious arid as well sppointed as those furnished
for him by the state. But this is no mine lm
other departments of the government should not
be well provided for, and given safe, comfortable
offices in a building that is designed for its pur-
Some day, possibly, this great srovernmenr r.f
ours may give, a thought to the welfare f ,!...
toilers struggling for a home, tnd consider them
wormy ot snaring national credit with farmers.
their new clothing store on North Sixteenth. Over
500 people were present.
Among those who have left for the Grand
Island encampment are Senator Manderson, Gen
erals Crook and Sandford, C. E. Burmester and
Chris Hartman.
Miss Blanche Withnell was married to Will
iam Williams of this city at the residence of the
bride's father, 412 South Fifteenth. The cere
mony was performed by Bishop Worthington.
Sol Smith Russell is booked to make his ap
pearance at the Boyd theater in his sparkling new
comedy, "Pa."
Mrs. McKaig, wife of Rev. Thomas McKaig,
was struck down by a delivery team on Sixteenth
and Davenport. The wagon passed over her body
and she was carried to Frank Barrett's drug
store and attended by Dr. Dinsmoor.
Dr. Peabody and H. W. Yates have gone out
to Clarkes to meet the festive prairie chicken
early in the morning.
Senator M. Helm of Iowa City is the guest
of M. Helman.
Lew Johnson's Black Baby Boy combination
of minstrels have gone south on the Missouri
Pacific and will return to play Omaha in about
two weeks.
This Day in History.
1730 Jonathan Belcher became governor of
Massachusetts and New Hampshire.
1776 General Washington withdrew his forces
to the city of New York from Long Island.
1781 French fleet arrived in Chesapeake bay
to help the Americans.
1850 John W. Webster was hanged in Boston
for the Parkman murder.
1852 John Camden Neild, an eccentric Eng
lish miser, died, bequeathing $1,250,000 to Queen
v ictoria,
1856 Admiral Sir John Ross, Arctic explorer,
aiea in London. Born June 24, 1777."
1861 Missouri was placed under . martial law
Dy general i'remont.
1862 General Kirby Smith defeated the union
troops at Richmond, Ky. -
1866 Michigan republicans met in convention
at Detroit and nominated a state ticket composed
in great part of returned soldiers.
1870 A part of the army of Marshal Mac
Mahon was defeated and driven across the Meuse
by the Germans under the Crown Prince of
rrussia. ' , . 4. '
1877 Turks defeated in a desperate sortie by
the Russians at Plevna, v
1906 William J. Bryan arrived in New York
irom aDroaa ana was given a popular reception.
The Day We Celebrate.
Clarence W. Chadwick, practitioner and
teacher of Christian Science, was born August 30.
1865. at Rensellaerville. N. Y. He wn enWaterl
in the Franklin Polytechnic and Worcester Poly-
tecnnic scnoois ana is a graduate ot the Massa
chusetts Metaphysical college with a degree of
t,. a. B.
Charles S. Hamlin, governer of the federal
reserve board, born in Boston, fifty-five years ago
today. , '
; Henry F. Hollis, United States senator from
mew Hampshire, born at Concord, N. H., forty-
seven years ago toaay.
Fritzi SchefT. orominent actress and vnrotiat
born in Vienna, Austria, thirty-six years ago to
aay.
J. Alden Weir, president of the National Acad
emy or Design, Dorn at west romt, N. Y., sixty-
luur yctra Hgo toaay.
Marion LeRoy Burton, president of Smith
college, born at Brooklyn, fa., forty-two years
ago today.
Luther E. Hall, late governor of Louisiana,
born in Morehouse Parish, La., forty-seven years
ago today.
Thomas G. Seaton, pitcher of the Chicago Na
tional league base ball team, born at Blair, Neb.,
twenty-seven years ago today.
William D. Perritt, pitcher for the New York
National league baseball team, born at Arcadia,
La., twenty-four years ago oday.
Likes the Letter Box.
Council Bluffa, Aug. 28. To the
Editor of The Bee: Like many new
comer who are not Interested In lo
cal news, aa they are not familiar
with the various people mentioned,
my reading of The Bee is largely the
eaitorlal and the public letter box col
umns, so the personality of some of
the writers naturally la of interest
One somehow feels when one reads
the public letters that one is reading
uncensored news. I would like,
therefore, to have you say in this
column If this Charles Wooster is a
pen name. . I have seen several let
ters from him since I commenced
three years ago to take Tho Bee. I
would also like to know why a se
ries of letters by someone called the
"Helde" has been discontinued. He
also was a personality that was most
Interesting.
This letter is of no public interest
and Is suggested in a spirit of curi
osity, so you need not publish it. I
will say that both the editorials and
many of these letters display both
a literary style and an originality
equal to a large Pennsylvania paper
which reaches me daily.
A RECKNT SUBSCRIBER.
Note: Mr. Charles Wooster is an
old, respected and Influential citizen of
Sliver Creek, Neb. "Der Heide" may
write again.
Timely Jottings and Reminders.
The annual meeting of the American Bar as
sociation will be opened in Chicago today with an
address by the president, Elihu Root of New
York.
The twenty-eighth annual Western Pennsyl
vania exposition will be opened in Pittsburgh
today and will continue until October 14.
The parade of veterans, the spectacular fea
ture of the annual national encampment of the
Grand Army of the Republic, will be held in Kan
sas City today.
Beans from all over the country are to gather
today at Hampton Beach. N. H . for the twentieth
annual meeting of the John Bean association of
America.
Democrats of New Mexico will meet in rnn.
vention today at Santa Fe to place in nomination
a ticket of state officers to be voted for r th.
November election.
The farm loan board, created under the new
rural credits law, is scheduled to hold s hearini
today at Sioux Falls. S. D.
The German Baptist churches of North Amer
ica will begin their eighteenth triennial general
conference today in Detroit, the sessions to con
tinue until September 5.
The republican national and atate campaign
in Maryland is to be formally opened at Rock
ville today with a rally at which Senator Norris
of Nebraska is to be the chief speaker.
An exhibition and sale of nearly $500,000 worth
of. rams is to feature the fifty-third annual con
vention of the National Woolgrowers' associa
tion, opening today at Salt Lake City.
The Charlestown (Mass.) navy yard is to be
the scene of an interesting ceremony today, when
the keel is laid for a torpedo testing barge to be
built for the United States navy.
The nineteenth annual meeting of the Ameri
can Astronomical society wilt begin at Swarth
more college today and continue in session until
the end of the week.
The new advisory committee to the republican
national committee is to hold its first meeting to
dsy at the national campaign headquarers in New
York City.
The wedding of Miss Frances Breckinridge
Steele, a granddaughter of General John C
Breckinridge, and Captain John R. Horton of the
United States marine corps, is to take place this
evening at the home of the bride's parents st
Midway, Ky. ,
This and That.
Avoca, la., Aug. 27. To the Editor
of The Bee: Momentous question of
paramount issue are before this na
tion today as never before in the his
tory of this republic. '
It was but recently when a war
started in foreign countries where na
tions invoked divine aid to win their
point. They were so earnest in their
belief that they were right that glis
tening steel and rusty shotguns were
brought forth in evidence and mil
lions of unnumbered dead He in un
marked graves as peace "memen
toes." ,
But this Is across the ocean. Let's
forget It In the home land there are
religious bodies who claim to be fight
ing satan's forces. They are going to
organize that they may get proper
recognition, and that, too, under a
flag that we all love and once had a
meaning peculiar to thi nation. To
the minds of many of us it was as the
rainbow after the gentle and refresh
ing; shower of aorlnKtime whose Cre
ator designed that never again should
aestructive nood encircle the earth.
Sacred history tells us that a bra
zen serpent was lifted up for a be
knlghted people in a wilderness. We
can now draw on imagination and
see that in the beauty of holiness, but
we or toaay are stemming; the ' stem '
of stern realities and must arise to
conditions demanded by the age we
live in. Instead of sneering at things
of vital importance let us peer into
them, hopeful of being helpful to
those about us. We have a railroad
strike confronting us that threatens
disaster or serious nature if carried
into effect and what Is the reason ?
The operative force says wages are
Inadequate to meet the present high
cost of living, with working hours
bordering on slavery. The giant cor
porations appear obstinate to yield
to demands and the president of the
great United States is being invoked
to aid in amicable settlement with
due consideration for all concerned.
Over in Nebraska the liquor ques
tion has some ot the democratic
forces and others guessing. The saloon
keepers and breweries are fearful lest
the vote will knock the financial props
from under them and thev gulf of de
spondency appears to be getting their
goat. The dynamic forces of a great
statesman and the "Dahlmanic" forces
of the metropolis of that state,
with an evangelist of world-wide
fame over in. Michigan lighting the
"devil to the last ditch," causing us
farmers to cast a wishful eye to our
sister state.
Let us arise as one man and sing
"On Jordan's Stormy Banks" and
"Blest Be the Tie That Binds" with
spirit and understanding and the
world will get better. T. J. H.
One Man's Drink Another's Poison.
Omaha, Aug. 27. To the Editor of
The Bee: The nutrition laboratory
of the Carnegie Institute has come to
the conclusion that past research
work of sclentifio nature concerning
alcohol is faulty and had better be
done all over again. It declares there
exists much speculation and theory
and a minimum of verified facta, and
that "ninety-nine words out of every
100 written have been inspired by
prejumce on one sine or the other,
rather than the plain, unvarnished
truth." The proofs of analogy and
empiricism are not enough for science
nowadays, and it demands identifica
tion by controls, etc. When Brown
ing affirmed "God is In heaven, all's
well with the world," as a proposi
tion in deductive, speculative logic,
inasmuch as the major premise is
founded on a universal or self-evident
truth, people say it must be so, al
though to the finite mind there Is no
positive evidence or as we say scien
tific evidence. That kind of old for
mal logic led to many a religious war.
So, too, thus to make statements
about alcohol In a priori fashion, like
above, or by analogy or empirically,
doe not satisfy this generation. -. One.
might declare constipation to. be the
cause of more , of man's ills , than all
other cause combined and be would
not be far from the .fact But to
make propositions atlck It .will take
more than that kind of logic to prove.
So with alcohol; It is said to be the
cause of rheumatism, gout, arterio
sclerosis, . Bright's disease, headaches
and a hundred other things. But by
that kind of loxic const I nation can be
shown to do the same and with even
better prooz. Some people do not
drink milk, for it "binds" the bow
els: some no coffee, for It makes
them nervous and sleepless. No one
ever accused alcohol In moderation of
doing any ot the three. Indeed, many
use wine and beer to guard them
against such Infirmities. ,
It would be hard to say which Is
worse, the chronic drunkard by al
cohol, or "drunk" by the poisons of
one's own secretions; to be unhappy
and melancholy, sallow, aenemlc,
crabbed and for all "envy, hatred,
malice and all uncharttableness."
What the institute Is going- over are
the experiments of Atwater, showing
alcohol to be a food In the sense
somewhat like sugar and water. It
produces heat and energy, but cannot
be converted Into bone and- muscle
like the protein of meat, CKgs, milk,
etc - The experiments ot Chittenden
and Reld, declaring It Interfered with
the function of the liver, by lessening
It power to destroy poisons; its ac
tion on digestion and whether it re
tards appetite. The experiments' of
Kraepelin on muscular work with and
without The lifting of weights by
the Italian Mosso, especially by the
Index finger. Those of Metchnlkoff,
aa tending to lessen the power of the
leucocytes to ward off disease. Those
of Hodge on kittens and dogs and
those of Lauder Brunton. Then,
whether It helps or-retards brain work
and also the statistics ot Gautier,
showing that several million people
receive In their daily diet more en
ergy in the form of alcohol than as
protein, and many others.
Like too much beat, It seem all to
he a question of the amount and kind'
Ingested. A man will hurt himself
if he repeats his Christmas dlnnei
too often, whether the pudding has
wine In It or not - It hs stated that
the institute will be some ten or twen
ty year at work at thla difficult aub
Ject OEOROB P. WILKINSON.
NO PLACE TO GO.
Edgar A. ducat In Detroit FrM Press,
f h happlMt nlEhta
I aver know
Are thoae when I've
No place to go.
When the mluus stays
When the day la through,
'Tonight we haven't
A thing to do."
Oh, the joy of it.
And the peace untold,
Of alttfng 'round
In my slippers old
With my pipe and book.
In my eaay chair.
And the thought I
, Needn't go anywher.
Needn't hurry
My evening meal
Nor force the em Ilea
That I do not feel.
But can grab a book
Prom a nearby ahelf,
And drop all eham
And be myaaif.
Oh, the charm of It
And the comfort rare; -Nothing
on earth
With it can compare;
And I'm sorry for him
Who doesn't know
The Joy of having
No place to go.
man aa he gated down the road, 'if It evtr
hits him." Sacred Heart Review.
Violet Adele la such n economical little
body!
Ia Rose Ah, yea! She'll trudge for tnlles
from one law office to another to save $10
on a divorce. Boston Globe.
"The pen Is mightier than the wordi""''
remarked the earnest' cltlsen.
"That used to be the case," replied Mr.
Chugglns. as he wiped hts hands on his hip
pockets; "but what counts now Is a monkey
wrench or a pair of pliers.' Washington
Star.
"Tea, I courted ray wife on a balcony,"
quoth Romeo, "and It was a mistake."
"How so?"
"Bhe has never gotten over th habit tjf
looking down on me." Louisville Courier-Journal.
MIRTHFUL REMARKS.
Murderer Is thla the guy who la to de
fend me?
Judge Tea; he's your lawyer.
Murderer if ne should die could I have
another?
Judge Yes.
Murderer can "I aee him alone for a few
minutes? Boaton Transcript.
W HUSBAMt) HM bESStTtP
ME m NN SEVEN NBKOlft
VAJHT SHALL! bo
A TWm6WfT
raAew4
SPAHK TttE W WHEN ME
tfc to- Wftmr TILL
?fPA CoME H0M i
"By Jove, old chap. Polly Is an awfully
bright girl. She has brain enough for
two." .
"Then she's the very girl for you, old
man." New Tork World,
'TIM Veil laB U 1-1. a - a
-"- wsss. vvmvup ion oi ner
adventures th last time she was in Eu-
"Oh, yea; how they were held up In Italy
hr kaiissllaa. ai. . '
,uu ( oniusrinna came near
falling down a cravat." Baltimore Amer-
lflMkl nirln't T 1sai ael. ... I
w juu any aW-
ary check the first of every month?
Mrs. Meeker Tes; but you never told me
that you got paid on the first and fifteenth,
you embezsler. Judge.
aa,.Vw tustv lll7 aUlOHlOOllB Will
dlflOlli.ee the hortus?" natti-aif, iha e....-u.
tlonal young woman.
it will, anawered -the nervous young
HOW MRS. BEAN
MET THE CRISIS
Carried Safely Through Changs
of Lif e by Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
Nashville, Term. "When I was going
through the Changs of Life I had a tu
mor as large as a
child s bead. The
doctor said it was
three years coming
and gave me medi
cine for it until I
was called away
from the city for
some time. Of
course I could not
go to him then, so
my sister-in-law told
bie that she thought
liniiillllliiHIIiiilllllllll
IllllllllUsSSUalllllllll
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound would cure it It helped both
the Change of Life and the tumor and
when I got home I did not need the doctor.
I took the Pinkham remedies until the
tumor was gone, the doctor said, and I
have not felt it since. I tell every one
how I was cured. If this letter will .'
help others yon are welcome to rise it" -Mrs.
E. H. Bean, 526 Joseph Avenue, -;
Nashville, Tenn.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound, a pure remedy containing the
extractive properties of good old fash
ioned roots and herbs, meets the needs
of woman's system at this critical period
of her life. Try it
If there Is any symptom In yonr
case which puzzles you, write to
the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine
Co., Lynn, Mass.
MINNESOTA
the Land of hiawatha
Your nearest and best vacation land almost
straight north with ten thousand lakes and hundreds
' of square miles of great pine woods; fishing the finest
in the world, besides bathing, canoeing and tramping
in the .woods;-hotels cottages, . boarding houses or ''.
camps, Whichever you prefer; you can get board and
lodging for about $10 or $12 per week and frequently ;
less. A Minnesota vacation will relieve, if not cure,.:
insomnia, .nervousness, hay fever, indigestion and
"grouchiness." See how low the round trip fares are
from Omaha via the Chicago Great Western:
MINNESOTA VACATION FARES.
Aieler, Mtaa....J
Alexandria, Minn . .
Annan del a, Minn. .
Baekua, Mina . . . .
B.ltle Lake, Mine.
Bemidji, Mina....
Buffalo, Mina....
' Detroit, Minn....
Doraet, Mina
Duluth, Mina..:..
Elyelan, Minn.
Jeakiaa, Mina.
' La Parte, Miaa
..$28.33
. $23.77
..$19.97
..$2S.6S
. $25.93
. .$2S.SI
. .$1JI
..$29.78
. .$26.33
..$23.13
..$18.42
. .$24.93
..$26.51
Madleoa Lake, Miaa. .
Deer River, Miaa,.
Mina.)
Miaaeapolla, -Mina. . . .
Nlaawa, Mina. .
Payneevllle, Minn
Pelican Rapid., Miaa
St. Paul, Miaa
South Haven, Mina.
Spicer, Mian
Walker, Miaa,
(Case Co.)..
Waterville, Miaa. . . .
. .$18.42
(Marcell
..$28.33
..$16.95
..$2448
..$21.51
..$26.99
:. $16.95
. .$20.21
..$22.33
.$28.33
.$13.42
Write and let me give you free descriptive folders
and booklets, telling you where the big fish are, hotel
rates, etc.
P. F. BONORDEN, C. P. A T. A.,
Phone.: Doufla. 260. . 1S22 Farnam St., Omaha.
(Emphashe the 'JCreat")
Gmsider the Mothers Health
after childbirth by taking
necessary precaution be-
tore the trying ordeal,
of using "Mothers
Friend" to assist na
ture In preparinc
her for the nhr-
slcal change.
Mother's Friend
T- , - I xor many years has
Aauuwuy ui been the means of sir
ing relief to thousands of
mothers. It Is an exter
nal remedy with unex
celled merit., and ahfmM ha
la the Bone of everf expectant mother. Drnrtrixt eell It.
Bad for free hook on Motherhood. Arirlmaa The DnHIUM
Regulator Co, Its Lamar Bid, Atlanta, Ga.
Persistence is the cardinal vir
tue in advertising; no matter
how good advertising maybe
in other respects, it must be
' run frequently and constant
ly to be really successful.