THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1919. The Omaha Bee DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER " VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. PROPRIETOR MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - The Aieorlated rmt, of which The Bm U a member, ll ax eluaholy ouuileil to llie uh for liiibllraiion of all iwwa dwatches endued to it or not ntherwiae errilitxl in this paper, and also tlx local newa pubilauad brm All runt of publication of our ixclal dispatches are alao rewrvd. BEE TELEPHONES i Tyler 1000 Private Branch Kxclianae. Aak for the Department or rarttrular Person Wanted. For Nicht or Sunday Service Calli editorial Depart mfiit - Tyler 1000U tlmilstlon Department ...... Tyler 10081. Adrertlalnf Department ..... Tyler 1008L. OFFICES OF THE BEEt ITnme Office. Bee Building, 17th and Famem. Branch Offlcea: Aroee 4110 North 21th (Park WIS Lee ren worth Itenaon VU Mllttsr, Ate. Mouth Side 3318 N Street Council Blufff 14 N. Main IVlnton 2467 South lth Lake Kin North 24th IWalnut 81 North aOtb Out-of-Town Office! New York City ISA Flftb Are. HVashlnxun 1311 O Street Colceto Seuger Bldg. ILlncoln 1330 B Street JUNE CIRCULATION! Daily 64,611 Sunday 61,762 Arena's circulation for the month tuhaerlbed and ewora to b? K. B. Ruin, Circulation Manaier. Subscribers leavlnr the city should hava The Bee mailed to them. Addreaa changed aa often aa requeited. You should know that The per capita production of live stock in Omaha's territory is $240; elsewhere, $66 annually. Going up local school taxes. Japan passes the buck to the president. Who will he slip it to? Why not match Ole Hansen and Jack Dempsey, and have a real fight? It is cruelty to make Dan Butler fight for his muny coal yard in this temperature. Receipts of grain and live stock at Omaha give little sign of any danger of starvation. Chicago is certainly enjoying the heated term, with a race war and a street car strike added to a hot wave. The visiting soldiers had a warm time in Omaha, if they were denied the social enter tainment planned for them. The president appears willing to make some concessions to the senate. American harmony is quite as necessary as European peace. The president has given the senate the French treaty, proof that he can be reached. Maybe some other concessions will yet be made. Champ Clark says he does not care a hoot what they talk about in congress, so they do not talk politics. Of course, he is never disappointed. Another year of Ak-Sar-Ben down town is all right, but the big show will never attain its true proportions until the new field is used to its fullest extent. Instructors at Harvard are coming in for a little comment on account of their low wages. MQSt of them are paid less than common labor ers. Here indeed virtue is its own reward. i Missouri women who are discarding skirts at summer resorts may think they are leading the way to freedom, but they will learn that trousers have disadvantages in hot weather. Henry Ford will appreciate the seclusion of the woods in company with Thomas A. Edison and John Burroughs. Eight days on the wit ness stand ought to fit any man for a season of communion with nature. j" A Chicago miser, close rival of Omaha's Mickel, has denied himself every human com fort and convenience for fifty years, during which time he accumulated $300,000. Now he is in the insane asylum. The answer is plain. The senate has requested from the State de partment full Information concerning Mexican" relations within recent years. It will get a fine lot of ultimatums, as well as the record of a demand for a salute that was never given. "Vic" Berger says he is for the "Wobblies" because they are "class conscious." And "Big Bill" Hayward is about to start a lecture tour to reduce the country to bolshevism. Some day we may get to a place where a sentence for treason will be carried out as pronounced. v" Newport fashion leaders are vieing for the privilege of having the prince of Wales as a guest. But the young man has notions of hi Ownt and very likely will decline to be made a successor to the monkey shows of America's idle rich. It is good to note that The Bee's Free Ice and Milk fund is going up to record figures, but it also must be remembered that both ice and milk cost more this summer, and it requires more money to take care of the same number of babies. It is the greatest game ever played, and it is free for all. Come in. A Simple Play's Long Run At one of the leading London theaters a play of peculiar construction has been drawing large and deeply interested audiences for more than six months. Its success has unusual signifi cance for Americans. The title of the play, if it can be so classed, is "Abraham Lincoln." It consists of episodes in the life of Mr. Lincoln, and is, above all, concerned with his high moral qualities, the benevolent greatness of his char acter, his unflinching courage and patriotism, and his elemental goodness toward fellowmen. His humor is wisely omitted, for it might be misconstrued as related to comedy, whose pur pose is quite different. Lincoln's humor amused but its main effect was to convince. If he was reminded of a story its chief application was an argument that fitted in genially on the spur of the moment. That this subject should have attracted large English audiences for so many months is a striking fact. There must be something astir in English minds that warms to Lincoln's place in history and example in statesmanship. Its leading lesson must be the power of sound manhood to be of supreme usefulness regard less of iron fortune and what is called low birth. England has occasion to be thoughtful on this subject Lloyd George was an orphan boy, who was educated by an uncle who made a ' humble living by mending shoes. The .theme of the play is manly opportunity nobly interpreted St. Louis Globe-Democrat DOUBTING THOMAS ON THE TREATY. Senator Thomas of Colorado, of whose democracy and equal sanity there can be no question, finds himself unable to agree that the pending peace treaty with its accompanying covenant for, a League of Nations, will 'ac complish the purpose for which it is framed. He sees in the "peace of force" promise of a future war. A league to prevent war accom panied by such a treaty is self-destructive, or else it destroys the treaty. "Their ways are divergent, their objects antagonistic, their details insistent," he says. "The league, inspired by unselfish and uplift ing impulses, typifies peace and reconciliation. The treaty, based upon passion and self-interest, embodies suppression, reparation, indemni ties, partition, punishment." The inability of Senator Thomas to recon cile in his own mind the conflict between the two is shared by many. Most people are agreed that Germany should be punished for enormous crimes against humanity. Also, it is a common desire that safeguards be set up against a repe tition of these crimes. The more the present document is debated, the less it seems fitted to meet the ends it is intended to secure. This uncertainty is not allayed by the assertions of the democratic clacquers, who reply to criti cism only by repetition of phrases that do not contain fact, substituting continually, rhetoric for logic. The "clarification of counsel" suggested by the president proceeds but slowly, but as it does make progress, the certainty of definitive reservations being made comes more and more into view. And the fact should not be forgot ten that the treaty is now being discussed by a body of men whose patriotism, wisdom and personal ability is unchallenged, save by par tisan blindness. When the senate has reached a conclusion and is willing to give its consent to ratification, we may be sure that American interests have not been sacrificed. How Private Wealth Has Helped. For many years one of the popular pastimes has been to rail at the possessors of great wealth. Those who are unfortunate enough to be encysted in mere money, buried deep enough to defy penetration from the outside, are al ternately damned or ridiculed by the more fa vored many who never felt the burden of an incrustation of millions. Every now and then, however, the observer encounters something that serves to justify private control of con siderable sums of wealth. Such an instance is at hand in the form of Dr. George Vincent's report as president of the Rockefeller Foundation. Tersely, succinctly, but vividly, Dr. Vincent has reviewed the work of 1918, telling of endeavors in many lands and in widely separated fields, but all tending to the good of man. War work in France, yellow fever work in Guatemala, educational work in China, anti-malaria work in Arkansas, the hookworm here, the fight against tuberculosis there, instruction in training camps, assistance to medical schools and to research work, and such like undertakings have occupied the ex pert investigators and administrators of the funds at the disposal of the foundation. The beauty of this is that the work may be carried on continuously, with a definite and as sured knowledge that the needed means are provided. No inquiry is likely to be checked at its critical point because of failure of con gress or some other private agency to make the needed appropriation. Fancy what would be the case if the work of these investigators were stopped in full flight as was that of voca tional education bureau, when the president vetoed the appropriation bill. Private control of this great work surely has its advantages, and the devotion of great private wealth to the purpose under terms and conditions that gives independence to the workers is really a splen did service to the public. Cutting Off Fool Taxes. Very soon the kiddies will be able to toddle up to the counter and get an ice cream cone, or a drink of soda water, without having to pay a war tax. The republican house has taken the first step to dispense with this bit of demo cratic economic foolishness. When Claude Kitchin was chairman of the ways and means committee, he announced his intention of mak ing the north pay for the war. As far as he could, he carried out this purpose. In his exuberant search for subjects on which to levy freak taxes, he encountered ice cream and soda water. These are luxuries. It did not occur to him, nor did he trouble his mind after the fact was pointed out, that the chief consump tion of these is among the children of the land. An impost of 10 per cent was slapped on and driven through, and for the first time in our history the babies of the land were compelled to contribute to carrying on a war, in order that the big cotton planters of Mr. Kitchin's home land might escape at least a portion of the responsibility. If the senate will now respond to the action of the house, it will soon be known whether the pennies extorted from the little folks are vital to the existence of the great American republic. Work of the Transportation Corps. The transcontinental trip of a detachment of the transportation corps of the United States army ought to have a distinct value. It has no spectacular feature, for the test given the motor truck in actual service in France was as severe perhaps, as any it may ever undergo. Ameri can highways at their worst do not compare with the shell-torn tracks over which the trucks were driven up to the very front lines. Nor is the crossing of the continent by such trains any longer an experiment. What will most likely come of the present trip, in addition to the knowledge gained of engine performance, tire endurance, and similar details, will be a "logging" of the routes, the condition of the roads, and a better understanding of what is needed to establish a great highway to connect the two oceans. The good roads movement is getting proper attention from the public just now, and its importance is. better understood as the difficulties of the existing transportation problem become apparent. Any contribution the journey of the transportation corps may make to the knowledge of highways, routes and the like will be of service, for it. will help to make1 certain the future of the nation's roads. Treasurer Jamieson of the democratic na tional committee tells the donkey's followers he must have money. That has been the condition of the party ever since it was so patly de scribed as "an organized appetite." Baldwin's Beginning From the Philadelphia Ledger. "The history of the Baldwin Locomotive works has been a series of personal romances," said Alba Johnson. "Matthias W. Baldwin's career was a victory of high character, industry and exalted motives over adverse circumstances. "The story seems always new. Frederick Fraley has given me his personal reminiscences of Mr. Baldwin. He began as a jeweler, with out a store. The house he occupied in Frank ford still stands, near Wissinoming station. "Mr. Frailey told me that Mr. Baldwin every Friday afternoon took his wicker basket on his arm to peddle the jewelry he had made in the preceding week. "Second street was then the chief retail street, and the jewelers along that thorough fare would buy Baldwin's modest output di rectly from his basket. "He was a deeply religious man, and it was a grief to him that his trade ministered to worldly vanity. "He wanted to be a printer, for he held that this was the. noblest art open to man since it meant the dissemination of knowledge. "His business prospered, and he began to make bookbinders' tools. To dispose of his wares he opened a shop in Lodge alley, where he made calico stamps. "Ellwood Pusey, who still continues the business, has informed me that he possesses some of the old Baldwin stamps. "Mr. Baldwin wanted a stationary engine. He decided to build one for himself, and ac cordingly he designed a 20-horsepower upright engine, which is still preserved at the Baldwin works and was in use up to five years ago. "This episode turned his attention to the steam engine, and his studies had created a lively interest in the possibilities. "At that time the Liverpool & Manchester railway was holding its locomtive trials, from which George Stephenson's 'Rocket' emerged triumphant. "The mind of the public was engaged with the steam locomotive, just as it was with aero nautics after the Wright experiments. "The Camden & Amboy railroad imported four of Stephenson's locomotives, one of which, the 'John Bull,' is still extant. "When the brig carrying the locomotives reachafl Bordentown, Baldwin went to see the pieces discharged. He said he could build one himself. "Franklin Peale, brother of Rembrandt, had a museum where the old Masonic temple stood on Chestnut street west of Seventh, where Sin gerly put up the three banks. He hunted up Baldwin and got him to build a little locomo tive, with a gauge of 18 inches, to run around a track in the museum. "Baldwin did not then entertain the idea of becoming a builder of locomotives exclusively. "The promoters of the Philadelphia, Ger mantown & Norristown railroad saw his little locomotive, and decided that one like it would attract excursion patronage. "So they ordered a four-ton locomotive. It took Baldwin a year to make this. He had to manufacture everything his own tubes, tires and pumps. There were then no collateral in dustries. He finished his engine in November, 1832. "It was found to be too heavy by half a ton. The railroad refused to receive or to pay for it. As a result of arbitration he received $3,600 instead of the $4,000 he asked. "The railroad, nevertheless, finally accepted the machine and advertised: 'The locomotive engine, manufactured by Matthias W. Baldwin, will run on fair days. On rainy days horses will be attached, as usual.' "Baldwin said he was through with locomo tive building; he would never make another. "He didn't realize, that there would be such a lively demand. The South Carolina railroad asked for one. Then the orders came in thick and fast. The stories of Dr. Edward H. Williams, of Mr. Parry and of Mr. Converse are likewise full of dramtic incident. "Dr. Williams was born in Woodstock, Vt., a little place, numbering today but 2,500 in habitants. His father was Judge Norman Wil liams; his mother was a woman of rare in tellectual attainments. The doctor was one of five brothers. He decided on a medical career, and made a start at the primitive medical col lege in Woodstock. "Then he became an interne at Bellevue hospital in New York so that he had the best medical education the times afforded and set tled down to practice at Proctor, near Rutland. "Almost overnight he became famous through his cure of Alexis St. Martin, the man whose skull was pierced by an iron bar as a result of a quarry blast. He used simply the ordinary antiseptic methods that are now uni versally accepted, but then the cure was sensa tional, for this was the first man that had sur vived such an injury. "The Rutland railroad was then being built. Its chief engineer, a man named Sewall, boarded in the same house with Dr. Williams. The doc tor was insatiaby inquisitive. If he went to sea he would be on the bridge with the navigat ing officer. Night after night he studied engi neering problems with Sewall. He made ad mirable drawings. "One day Sewall said: 'I have a request for an engineer to build a railroad in Canada. I'm going to name you.' "'I don't know enough,' the doctor remon strated. " 'O yes you do,' Sewall insisted. 'I know how much you know. If you stay here you'll be a country doctor, driving over the hills until you're gray. If you're lucky you may acquire a small competency. Transportation is to be the great industry of the future. Those who enter it will be the empire builders.' He painted so vivid a word picture that the doctor succumbed. "As a result he turned his back on medicine and became a partner in the firm. It was a remarkable instance of a man who had made a brilliant success of one profession shifting in mid-career to another entirely different." ITOHAV The Day We Celebrate. Viscount Haldane, former lord high chan cellor of Great Britain, born 63 years ago. Sir Eyre Crowe, long assistant under secretary of state for foreirgn affairs in the British government, born 55 years ago. John S. Runnells, president of the Pullman company, born at Effingham, N. H., 75 years ago. Julius Kruttschnitt, corporate "head of the Southern Pacific Railroad company, born in N'ew Orleans 65 years ago. John Sharp Williams, senior United States senator from Mississippi, born at Memphis, Tenn., 65 years ago. Thirty Years Ago in Omaha. S. A. Kitteridge, one of the new Paxton proprietors, arrived with his family and is pre pared to take charge of the hotel. An im portant innovation will be the immediate open ing of a cafe. A large force of men with teams and wagons commenced the work of excavating for S. P. Morse's new store. H. J. Heinz of Pittsburgh, proprietor of the large pickling works of that city, was in Omaha. The city council voted $7,500 for the erec tion of an engine house at Walnut Hill, pro vided someone would donate a lot on which to build Our Free Legal Aid State your case clearly but briefly and a reliable lawyer will furnish the answer or advise in this column. Your name will not be printed. Let The Bee Advise You. Insurance. F. M. In March, two Insurance men came to my house and insisted that I take a five year policy from them, as I could get it $25 cheaper that way than by taking for only a year at a time. I told them it was impossible for me to do so then but they finally persuaded me to sign up for it anyway, saying that if I could not pay for it then they would make arrangements with a local bank so that I could pay it any time oetween then and December 1 Nothing was then said about sign ing a note, but a few days ago I re- ceived a letter from them saying that the local bank was unable to handle my papers at that time as they had sold my note to a bank in another town. As I have not drawn any benefits from this company and they have broke their agreement without first notifying me, am I bound to pay off that note? Answer If note is in the hands of an innocent holder for value be. fore maturity, you will have to pay it. Alimony and Divorce. S. T. Could you please advise me what to do? I am a married woman and left my man for two good rea sons, for non-support and going with other women when I am true to him. He is in Canada and promised to send me 140 a month if I would come to this country to live and since I came he has only sent me $12 a month to live on. Could you please tell me how much alimony I can get. Will I have to sue for alimony. I Just got a letter from him saying that he would not send me any more money and he is making over 1115 a month. What will it cost me to sue for alimony? Could a lawyer in this state see to this busi ness for me? Please let me hear soon as possible. Answer. You cannot recover any alimony as you cannot get personal service on your husband. You can sue for divorce if he fails to support you. Division of Property. E. D. Will you please answer through the columns of your paper under the head "Legal Aid" the fol lowing question: My mother died, leaving my sister and myself two store3 and a home and we cannot agree upon the division of the prop erty. What is necessary for me to do in order to divide this property up between oursleves? Answer. You will have to employ an attorney and bring an action of partition The property will then be ordered sold and divided equally be tween you. DREAMLAND ADVENTURE By DADDY. "RAINBOW GOLD." (Peggy and Billy find the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, but Judge Owl warns them against It. While they are looking at the gold, ra farmer boy drives them oft and runs away with the gold.) The Family That Was Happy. HE farmer boy's family, father, mother, Sister Sue and Sister Jane, were gathered around the supper table, happy in their enjoy ment of the evening meal. They chatted merrily and it took but a glance to see that here was a house hold in which dwelt peace, content ment and harmony. "I wonder what is keeping Hen ry!" said the mother, looking out over the fields. She didn't see Hen ry, for at that moment the farmer's boy was behind the barn hiding the pot of gold under a pile of straw. Peggy and Hilly, hovering above Henry's head in their toy airplane, watched every move he made. They felt that as they had found the pot of gold it belonged to them and they were determined to get it back. They would wait until Henry went into the house, and then they would grab it and run away. Of course they would have to make them selves large again, for now they were just the size of the birds, but they thought that would be easy by using the Golickety charm. "Henry! Henry!" called the fath er, and when Henry didn't answer the farmer left the supper table to look for him. The farmer boy didn't like to leave the pot of gold, even after he had hidden it securely, and crept back to take another jlook. And as he was looking his rather came around the corner of the barn. "There you are, Henry! Why Personal Injuries. J. E. M. A few years ago I was injured by being struck by a railway train. I settled with the company, but at the time did not know of cer tain injuries that have recently de veloped. Does the release that I gave at the time of making the set tlement prevent me from suing again ? Answer. No doubt the release that ou signed did cover all injuries that you sustained whether you knew of the same at the tnie or not. However, it is necessary to see the form of release and know the cir cumstances under which the release was obtained in order to answer your question Divorce. M. C. Is there some way I can get a legal separation from my hus band without makng it possible for him to re-marry? Answer. You can sue for separ ate maintenance. Infant's Property. H. 8. V. I am 16 years of age and have recently been left quite an amount of property from a distant relative. Are my parents entitled to any of this money for supporting me in the past? Answer. No. ODD AND INTERESTING. There is neither thunder nor lightning in the Arctic circle. The Persians have a differennt name for every day in the month. The annual number of pilgrims to Mecca Often exceeds 100,000. Until the year 1874 the Japanese used to vaccinate on the tip of the nose. In most Chinese cities the finest shops are those devoted to the sale of coffins. The great armadillo has 92 teeth more than any other animal pos sesses. No picture is hung in the Louvre, in Paris, until the artist has been dead 10 years. The sky reflection of the lights of London has been seen in favorable weather 60 miles distant. Stags are bred in China for their horns, the horns being cut while soft each year and used in the manufacture of medicine. Men attending the pans in salt works are generally supposed to be immune from cholera, smallpox, scarlet fever and influenza. Many old houses in Holland have a special door which is never open ed except on two occasions when there is a marriage or a death in the family. In Ashanti grows a tree, re sembling in appearance the Eng lish oak, which is said to furnish excellent butter. This vegetable but ter keeps in perfect condition all the year round in spite of the heat. DAILY CARTOONETTE. I HRVNT TAKEN MY WIFE ANY WHERE FOR 5" YEARS. r think I'll ask her TO CjO To THE THEATRE UITHME? r , , m)HEDID- O 3 k 'V) Ho Was Instantly Eager to Setal It. IN THE BEST OF HUMOR. Vicar Nothing to be thankful for! Why. think of poor old Hodge losing his wife through the flu! Giles Well, that don't do me no good. I ain't Hodge. Furm and Home. didn't you answer me when I call ed?" asked the father. Henry, taken by surprise, tried to push the pot of gold out of eight in the straw. "What have you thereT" asked the farmer suspiciously. "Nothing," answered Henry, un truth Cully. "Nothing! Then why are you hid ing it from me?" said hie father, severely, striding over to the straw staek. "Let me see." "I'll not. It is nothing," said Henry. "What's this? You disobey me? And you answer me untruthfully? l ou ve never done that cerore. Something la wrong here." "It's only an old pot I found in the field." said Henry. "I'll take a look at it," said his father. Henry tried to hold his father back, and in the struggle the pot became overturned and coins poured out in a golden stream. "Ah! Money! A fortune! Where did you steal this?" cried the father, dropping on his knees and scooping the coins back into the pot. "I didn't steal it. I found it in the field. I'm going out into the world with to have a good time. "You're going to do nothing of the kind. You are my son and you found this gold on my farm; it be longs to me!" exclaimed the father. "No no, no! It is mine, mine!" cried Henry. But his protest was all in vain, for his father picked up the pot and ran into the house. "See what I have a pot of gold!" he shouted. "I'm rich, and I'm going to become richer, for I'll buy more farms and make them grow rich crops for me." "Ah, now I can have that new house I want," exulted the mother. "Now I can buy beautiful clothes," cried Sister Sue. "Now I can go to Eu.ope and be come an artist," added Sister Jane. "You can do nothing of the kind. I'll need it all to buy more land and still more land until I become the richest farmer in the state," declar ed the father, rubbing his hands like a miser as he gazed at the potful of gold coins. "You can't have it; the gold be longs to me!" shouted Henry rebel liously. "I'm going to have that new house," insisted the mother. "And I all the new clothes I want," Insist ed Sister Sue. "And I'm going to Europe," insisted Sister Jane. With that the whole family that only a few minutes before was so peaceful and happy worked themselves up into a blind rage, making such a row that a man, sneaking along the hedges, crept up to the window of the house and looked in. With a thrill of alarm, Peggy and Billy noticed that he wore a queer, strip suit and had no hat. "An escaped convict!" whispered Billy to Peggy. The convict's eyes bulged covet- DAILY DOT PUZZLE 32 31 34 35 Sb 38 AO T 41 e - Ajj y-v 24 21 a. f " J- J 48 52 -An 19 53 5 5 13 12 14 55 5b7 58 .1 I9 ' 59 t3 bl ... I !Oe . 61 7. a 64 .5 ;. 73 fe 74 2!Svsr 7T 1111 t I. .75 1 Willie said, "Come go with me, Pretty you will see." Draw from one to two and so on to the end. ously as they rested upon the pot of gold. He was instantly eager to steal it and quickly planned a way. Sneaking across the yard to the tool house he disappeared within it In another minute there was a loud crackling and the tool house burst into flames. "Fire!" shouted the convict, hid ing beneath the window. Instantly, the family quit quarreling. Forget ting the pot of gold for a moment, they ran to fight the flames. That is just what the convict figured they would do, and as they fled out of the door he crawled in at the window. "Hoot! Hoot! Beware rainbow gold!" hooted Judge Owl. (Tomorrow will be told how the con vict steals the pot of gold and then loses it.) ' Bacon Wasn't It said that once upon a ! time Home burned while some one was fiddling?" Kgbert Yps; and now Rome Is getting hot again while the peace conferees are fiddling. Yonkers Statesman. "Do you know Jones?" "I lent him a tennrr this morning. I should say I do know him." "You lent him a tenner? Then I should say you don't know him." Edinburgh Scotsman. "You must have said something dread- ful to Mr. Boptselkr." I "I merely suggested that he hire the i fellow who got up his advertisements to j write his booka for him." Browning's . Magazine. "You say you have good references?" ; "Yes, ma'am. I have over a 'undred splendid references?" ! "And how long have you been in do- j mestlc service?" "Two years. ma'am." Philadelphia , Evening Bulletin. j Harold She turned me down, but ! didn't tell me why. Wallie Why didn't you ask her? I Harold Oh, I don't want to feel any ! worse. Boston Globe. i "Why don't you get out and hustle? Hard work never killed anybody," r,-- marked the philosophical gentleman to i whom Rastus applied for a little charity ! "You're mistaken dar, boss," replli-d j Itastus; "I'se lost fo' wives dat way." People's Home Journal. "Why are so many of these former war lords writing books?" "I suspect." said the sarcastic citizen, "that they are trying to show how much better their hindsight is than their fore sight." Birmingham Age-Herald. LABOR. The whistle blows, And from the bench and shop And factory, a melting pot There comes a multitude; The youth with head erect And lithe of limb; The old and bent, alow of step, Their dally task Bear with fortitude. This is labor. Omaha. BELLBVIEW. vrrijr trie m ( is supreme L "ran onaes t-Uv?d piano in the world oar none. Ask for a guarantee from trie m alter or seller of any other piano equal to the ' Masort & Hamlin guarantee. Such a Quarantt will not e given because tt cannot d cyven. Isk us to show yenx wh M1 W MM t) maum. tstsvs The Human Equation To make our patrons feel at home; to make it easy, pleasant and, profitable for them to do business here is our fore most ambition. The banking business calls for a high de gree of conservatism and a strict regard for detail and accuracy. But these things, we feel, need not pre vent those engaged in this business from being human and regarding their patrons in the same light. The Omaha National Bank Farnam at 17th Street. Capital and Surplus, $2000,000 OUR EAST SHOW WINDOW EXHIBITS THE Tonal Resonator Have you seen anything like it on any other piano? It don't take the comprehension of a mechanic to tell that this is the device which holds the tone and keeps the sounding board perfect indefinitely. Cash Prices. On Easy payments. Liberty Bonds apply at par. 1513 Douglas St. The Art and Muiie Store. Chiropractic Spells HEALTH J. A. MARKWELL, Chiropractor. Sixth Floor, Paxton Block. Telephone Douglas 9244. Residence Phone, Harney 7118. Chiropractic adjust ments remove the cause of disease, leav ing the body in a healthy condition to properly function. Each organ being in condition to do its nor mal work means health and, as a result, happiness. I keep the machinery of your body running smooth ly by chiropractic adjustments. Individual Attention to Each Patient