Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 11, 1909, Page 12

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THE O AHA SUNDAY BEE PRIL 1 1, 1909, FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR Entered at Omaha postoffice as second- 58 matter. | B::ly Bee (without Sunda; | Dally Bee and Sunday, one ye | DELIVERED BY CARRIER. gu’ ly Bee (Including Bunday), per week 15c | Dally Beo (without Sunday), per week.. 10c { !:.-.fllhl Bee (without Sunaay), per week 6o ing Beo (with Sunday), per week.. 10¢ funday Bee one vear... $2.60 | Baturday Bee, one year ssesvene SO0 complaints of irregularities in | Address all delivery to City Circulation Department. OFFICES. Omaha—-The Bee Building. Bouth Omaha—Twenty-fourth and N. Council Bluffs—~15 Scott Street. Lincoln—51s Littlg Building. loago—io68 Madquetts Building. ew York—Rooms 1101-1102 No. 84 West Thirty-third Street. Washington—i25 Fourtegnth Street, N. W. | CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to news and edi- torial_matter should be addressed: Omaha Bee, Bditorlal Department. REMITTANCES Remit by draft, express or postal order, | piysble to The Bee Publishing Company, nly 2-cent stamps received in payment of il accoun ‘ersonal checks, except on tern exchanges, not accepted. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. Btate ot Nebraska, Douglas County, # Qeorge B. Teachuck, treasuter of The B Fublishing company, being duly sworn, says that the aciual number of full and complete coples of The Daily, Morning, Evening and 8unday Bee printed during the month of Mareh, 1909, was as follow: Smaamames unsold and returned coples. Net total . Daily average ............ 38,617 GEORGE B. TZSCHUCK. Treasurer. SBubscribed in ‘my presence and sworn to before me this 1st day of April, 1909. M P. WALKER, (Seal) Notary Publie. _— WHEN OUT OF TOWN, Subscribers leaving the eity tem- morarily d have The Bee majled to them. Address will be nged as often as requested. The small boy will readily agree with the conclusion of congress to put a tarlff on shingles. The flowers that bloom in the spring, tra la, have nothing to do with the | case. ' R — A sentimentalist announces that one touch of spring makes the whole world good-natured. But for all that no one loves the umpire. A Massachusetts man has invented a machine which he asserts will im- mediately detect an untruth. It is not & political machine. It is to be noted that Nebraska's su- preme court commission has gone out of business, but not until the salary appropriation had lapsed. A man named Kouwenhovenberg re- cently won a clay pigeon shooting match in New York. Probably the name struck them foreibl Presumably no one will take a chance this year on sending a complimentary case of Nebraska brewed bock to the executive mansion at Lincoln, Debts no bar to matrimony is the decision of a California court. It they were the market for American heir- esses would be seriously impaired. The tariff bill as it stands retains the duty on menu cards. If it will deal gently with the dinner the aver- age man will willingly dispense with the menu cards — “Lucky” Baldwin he was called in life, and now his will, disposing of $20,000,000, has been probated with- out a contest. Who says there's noth- ing In a name. — Here is a chance for the purchasers of foreign titles. Make Uncle Sam a present of a dreadnaught for the navy, It would be cheaper than buying an lmpoverished count. ———— | ————— After all the efforts of the legislature in creating jobs for democrats it is au- thoritatively stated there are still 47,- 821 hungry ones in Nebraska who can- w0t be provided for. —_— A charge of insanity has been pre- ferred agalnst an lowa school teacher because she wants to get married. On that basis will not lowa be working the allenists overtime? —_— For a city which came out west at the League of Municipalities meeting to tell how a model city should be run, Baltimore is doing right well. It h only developed three municipal scap.]Miclous political activity of dals within the last month. Chairman Norman E. Mack's pro- posal to publish a monthly magazine as the officlal organ of the national democracy looks like lese majeste to Mr. Bryan and his Commoner. Who constitutes the democratic party, any- way? A party of Chicago men accused of swindling by the collection of $20,000 for a de luxe edition of a book are #aid to have jumped their bail bonds. What the books were does not appear, but the price has a decidedly de luxe | | eharge of the Appearance It Omaha's worldliness has been keeping the good people from the rest of the state away, the 8 o'clock clos- ing law should remove all objections and bring us a big influx of country cousins soon as it takes effect. Walt and see. | Omaha lare properly represented in the legls- | 1ature | trade territory and to cement a feel- | ing of friendship with the cities and | towns and rural districts of the whole | state. | not only of this city, but of the smaller | noy Time to Wake Up. It is time for the people of Omaha, and especially the business men of to wake up to the necessity of seeing to It that this city and county Omaha every year spends hundreds of thousands of dollars to cultivate Omaha holds its annual Ak-Sar-Ben festival for the express purpose of en- tertaining visitors from surrounding communities and making them feel that we appreciate their confidence and favor Omaha has projected and carried on successfully the National Corn show, designed to help educate the farmers to more modern methods of agricul- ture and insure prosperity on the farm in which the city will later share. Omaha sends out each year several trade excursions to return in person the friendly visits we recelve from the merchants an trades people who pur- chase goods here. Omaha annually entertains a score or more conventions and meetings of gocleties or organizations interested in special work in commerce, education, social reform and religious propa- ganda and tries to keep in touch with what is being done in these lines throughout the state. And then after this tremendous ex- penditure of time, effort and money to get closer to the people of the state, we permit a bunch of disrept tables, self-seekers, corporation hirelings and notorious grafters to go down to Lin- coln as our accredited representatives in the legislature, to undo in a few short weeks what we have laboriously accomplished in years. The Bee does not hesitate to say that, with not to exceed two excep- tions, the Douglas county delegation in the.late legislature could scarcely have been worse. Instead of making friends for Omaha and shaping legis- lation to benefit their constituents, their disgusting behavior and brazen subserviency to corporation masters antagonized and alienated the decent membership of the legislature or- dinarily disposed to be fair. Assuming that the roustabouts and tricksters constituting the Douglas delegation were truly representative of the people who sent them there, and that their flagrant misconduct was typical of Omaha as a whole, the law- makers from the outside districts simply refused to give Omaha any con- sideration whatever or to place any dependence upon the Douglas county gang. Advocacy of a measure by the delegation from Omaha came to be equivalent to its condemnation either as a boodle job or a corporation scheme, The Bee hopes the sad and costly lesson will not have to be learned again soon. It will take a long time to repair the damage done to Omaha by its misrepresentation at Lincoln this winter, even if the reckless ex- periment is not repeated. Home Building and Prosperity. No better evidence of the perman- ency of the prosperity which Omaha and this section of the west is enjoy- | ing could be had than the amount and character of the building operations, towns and surrounding country. There is not a single structure being erected which is intended to house a purely speculative enterprise. In the commer- clal world we have evidences of ex- pansion and enlargements innumer- able and new enterprises along well established lines, but these are simply | responsive to pressing demands. The most notable feature is the erection of homes, providing not only accommodations for more people, but | quarters more and more comfortable than before. The poor and those who | used to live in squalor have not been | altogether eliminated, and it would be too much to expect that they will ever be, but the conclusion is driven home to all who will observe, that the peo- | ple generally, are year by year, on the average, living in greater comfort and enjoying greater household con- veniences —_— More Light on the Kealing Case. The tender solicitude recently ex- pressed by Mr. Bryan in his Com- moner for the United States district | attorney who “showed himself willing | to resign an office rather than to en- | ter upon a criminal prosecution which | he believes to be unwarranted and dangerous to the public” gets somse new light from the-report just sub- mitted by the special committee of the National Civil Service Reform league which devotes a paragraph to the per- federal officials in Indiana. This Is what the committee says about Mr. Kealing, the “honest lawyer,” over whom Mr. Bryan hes been shedding crocodile tears i In Indlana the republican organization has been for years controlled by what is known as the Falrbanks machine. The head of the machine all the time has been Joseph B. Kealing, United States district attorney. In the seven years during which has held that office devoted much time and effort to building up and strengthening that muchine. It covers both state and federal politics. It forced the mation of the recently defeated candi- for governor. Kealing was a delegate last national convention had Falrbanks candidacy. A con | siderable of fed officel in Indiana are opposed to the machine On one side or the other, in the governor- ship nomination, nearly every federal officeholder in Indiana in the unclassified service was desperately engaged, and their activity was of the same kind and nature and included the ste of public he he has date to the and same |advantage time and contalned same element of over citizens, whose the private time was not pald for by th as In the case of Mr. Keallug. Mr. Bryan evidently thought he could make some political eapital out of the Kealing incident, but, again, by jumping too hastily at conclusions has plainly gotten off on the wrong foot. The Easter Festival. Easter sentiment as symbolizing the reawakening of nature is as old as the race and with each recurring Easter festival that sentiment grows stronger in its hold upon hurhanity It has its origin in the inborn instinct that the hopes, the aspirations, and the little of accomplishment of the few years given to us on earth are not the whole purpose of the creator whose wisdom is exemplified in all that surrounds us. The symbols of Easter are but re- flections of those changes which ia- ture unfolds with the coming of spring when whatever was apparently dead once more becomes instinct with life and the bleak landscape again takes on its dress of green. In the beauty of the budding flower nature renders its dumb tribute, while in songs of praise man gives voice to the hopes which nature teaches him are well grounded—hopes not born of philoso- phy or beyond analysis, but grounded on the concrete evidence which nature furnishes of their truth. The symbolisms of Easter and the thoughts which they engender must be elevating and Inspiring. The universal observance of the festival furnishes government conclusive proof that the modern-day | world is not wholly centered in sor- did and temporary things, but remem- bering the uplift of the past is still seeking constantly for what is better. Stopping Waste. Until within comparatively recent times the people of the United States have been living and acting under the hallucitation that the natural re- sources of this country were boundless and have drawn upon them with a prodigality born of that idea. Fortu- nately the awakening has come before impoverishment and we are realizing that the fertility of the soil must be preserved and that slipshod and waste- ful methods of farming cannot be de- pended upon indefinitely to support our population, The opinion once common that our timber resources were sufficient in per- petuity has given place to a certainty that the forests must be protected and restored else in the near future the country would be without lumber, to say nothing of the damage from denu- dation of the forest areas. Probably in no one direction has the national habit of waste been 8o predominant as in the use of timber. In the earlier days of the lumbering industry only the best was taken and the remainder burned simply to get it out of the way. Rallroads, once among thé worst offenders, are taking the lead in re- forestation and are also employing scientists to treat artificlally varieties of timber previously considered value- less in order to make them serviceable and also to increase the life of ties and other timbers which they use. A re- cent discovery promises a process which it is maintained will render val- uable the hitherto worthless gumwood | of the south and make the short- leaved pine of that section equal to the more valuable species. The former waste of the coal mines is being utilized, the packing houses and petroleum refiners have brought to their aid the acientist and there is | | into between various railway companies in now little waste product in these in- dustries. All sooner or later the idea will permeate the American home, which is without doubt the most wasteful of all. great country of ours can soon become many times richer simply by stopping needless waste. Relief for a Suffering Public. come to the relief of a long suffering public which has borne none too pa- tiently with the injustice forced upon it. The court has declded that simply placing one’s baggage in a car seat does not hold it for the owner of the baggage while he occupies another seat with a friend or calmly reposes on the cushions in the smoking com- partment. In other words, because the owner of the baggage has paid for one seat he cannot legally duplex him- | self by utilizing his baggage to hold | two seats while some poor, tired mor- tal stands up and waits for a passen- ger to get off at the next station All hail the court of appeals of New York. It has opened up a field of re- form in judicial decisions which scarcely knows a boundary. The prineiple involved, carried to its legiti- mate conclusion, will correet more of the ills of present-day humanity than any judicial pronunciamento since it was officially determined a passenger had no right to snore loud enough to wake the porter Under the ruling ‘“one fare——one seat” not only has the passenger no right to hold an extra place with his baggage, but he is prohibited from holding an extra seat with his feet He can no longer look deliberately out of the window while his overcoat rests peacefully on the outer end of the cushion and the tired woman holding a baby patiently and sadly waits for the friendly nod which bids her shove over the overcoat and be seated. Even the weary strap-hanger may get in the benefits. No more will the stout women be permitted to spread out and absorb the space just vacated by a third, for the legal principle has been fixed that available space belongs to the available passenger. The faith of the American people in their courts has been once more justi- fled. Hail, all hail, to the court of ap- two | remedy is usually more fatal than the | tal | Britain should prove interesting: lines of manufacturing | | are alming at elimination of waste and This | The New York court of appeals has | 18 seriously suffering from having to pay | has peals of the great state of New ‘York, which has blazed the way to this great reform Dust and Tuberculosis. Problems of human life are lems of dollars and cents to the insur- ance man Nothing which adds to or detracts from the sum of human exist- ence is overlooked by him. Of the diseases which afflict humanity none compares in the number of vietime with tuberculosis, and the investiga- tions of one of the big life insurance companies as to the causes of this mor- tality disclose some interesting infor- mation. The company classifies deaths from this disease by the occupation of the victim and the figures obtained lead to the conclusion that one of the most potent, if not the most potent, causge is the dust which finds its way into the lungs of the victim. Federal statistics and those of the insurance company indicate that of deaths from all causes of males over 15 years of age 14.8 per cent were from consumption. According to in- dustrial insurance statistics in those exposed to metailic dust the rate was 36.9 per cent, 26.6 per cent in those exposed to mineral dust, 24.8 per cent among those exposed to vegetable fiber dust and 32.1 per cent in those exposed to animal or mixed fiber dust. If these figures served no other pur- pose than to fix the rates of life insur- ance in the occupations involved they would be of little real service, as the industries of this progressive age will be carried on no matter what the toll in human life. The same investiga- tions, however, disclose the fact that this startling death loss is in a great measure voidable. It is pald today because so many factories are f{lly ventilated and without provision to prevent the dust which the worker is compelled to breath. Bxpert opinion holds to the belief that intelligent methods can reduce the consumption death rate among wage earners from 2.2 per 1,000 to 1.5 per 1,000, which would mean an annual saving of 22,238 lives—a saving surely worth striving for. prob- Trusts in England. In the stress of effort to throw off oppressive burdens, people in one country are too apt to overlook the fact that other countries are suffer- ing from the same ills, often in greater degree than themselves. So vital and absorbing has been the contest in this country to curb the power of the trusts, great industrial and railroad combinations, that we have largely overlooked the fact that other coun- tries have the same problems and none has yet attacked them with the same vigorous effort. { The solution in this country is ad- mittedly only in its” formative stage, but a good start has been made. Some abuses remain to be corrected and thinking men concede that they present a difficult problem, on whose right solution our industrial future in great measure depends. The political moun- tebank can fix it all with the wave of a hand or by a stump speech, but his disease. To those who are impatient at the seeming slow progress of governmen- efforts to control and regulate these combinations in the United States the following from a report of the Manufacturers’ assoclation of Great Manufacturers regard with increasing anxiety the working arrangements entered t Britaln. Ne adequate steps seem to have been taken by the Board of Trade to feguard the interests of manufacturers | and traders ana the assoctation will closely watch developments and collect evidence bearing on the matter. Likewlse in ship- ping there continues to be a growth of “rings” or “conferences” which aim at the complete elimination of competition in trade with certain markets, with the in- evitable result that frelght rates have gone mal figure and British trade | Gre: up to an ab; more for transport to distant markets than the foreign merchant and manufac- turer. Perhaps before long the European governments will help us develop the true policy of dealing with big busi- ness organizations as chief of police is the | Mason City, Ia., will world. Here will be an opportunity to demonstrate whether the most pronounced critice of present methods of dealing with municipal problems have a more effec- tive method for their solution. A minister novelty which present to the The Swiss government is debating | the advisability of outlawing the merry widow hat. When the first one was jimported and an attempt made to | bring in another it stuck out over the | border and threatened international | | complications: i It has been a standing problem in | this country what to do with our ex- | presidents. The only one possessed | by the United States just at present is | solving the problem without waiting for the aid or consent of any nation on earth. Democratic politicians are figuring | {out How long it will be before Ne- | {braska will have another democratic | Turn the job over to the | more accus- legislature astronomers, they are tomed to dealing with magnificent dis- tances \ A new law adopted in the state of Washington makes tipping a misde- | meanor. Evidently it is intended that Seattle exposition visitors shall be able to retain enough of their money to get out of town after seeing the sights. One after another come the rail- roads with announcements of addi- | Landman tional trains to handle trafic incident 1 to the anticipated heavy tourist move- ment. If this traffic, carried at less than the 2-cent-per-mile basis in costly sleeping cars, is worth the eftort to secure it, it would not appear that the roads in this section at least could consistently object to carrying local traffic in day coaches at the 2-cent rate. Mr. Bryan's misslonary work in Texas in behalf of bank deposit guar- anty s yet to bear fruit. It Texas fails to enact the law demanded by Mr. Bryan, he may retaliate by selling that farm and moving back to Nebraska. When the executors of an Ohio es- tate turned over $1.44 of a bequest of $40,000 to the institution for which it was intended the grand jury decided that is not a fair divide. What do Ohio people want, anyway? If Medicine Hat will keep a little of the freshness which it is now sending down this way until July and August it will earn the gratitude of the man whose winter overcoat is becoming a little threadbare. According to a professor of agricul- ture an acre of water can be made to yield more than an acre of land. Pos- sibly, if judiciously injected into stocks and sold to an unsuspecting public. Knowing his favorite pastime the women who discussed stockings with President Taft were doubtless smart enough to revolve the discussion around the golf variety. Might Have Been Worse. Philadelphia Ledger. Navy officlals, crippled through obeying the order of ride horseback, should be grateful that the order did not require them to walk the tight rope. Big Leaks in the Tanks. Chicago Tribune. It is estimated that the profits of the Standard Ofl company amount to $60,000,000 a year, but a considerable portion of this probably finds its way tuto general circula- tion in the form of fees paid to high-priced lawyers. Man’s Persistence Sure to Win. San Francisco Chronicle. ‘The difficuities of aerlal navigation prom- ise to surpass those experienced on the high seas, but the persistence and ingenuity of man may be depended on to overcome them ‘a8 successfully as he has those of the deep. At least there Is an ablding faith that that will be the outcome of the present struggle to bring aeronautics to a prac- tical basis. Let Us Be Cheerfu Chicago Record-Herald. Mr. Harriman Insists that he and his as- soclates are anxious to obey the laws, and he declares that he Is not angry at people who have begun suits against his railroads for violations of the Interstate commerce act. All good people should join in general refolcing over the fact that Mr. Harriman is not provoked because of a faflure on the part of the government to extend special privileges to him. Small Frog in the Puddle, Philadelphia Press. The unspeakable Castro is beginning to learn that your Uncle S8amuel has a long arm, and that the dignified old gentleman has ways of his own for resenting an in- sult. Castro, refused -a landing on British colonial sofl because it would be disugree- able to the Hon. Samuel Starzenstripes, will surely begin to realize that an ex- director of Venezuela Is like a small frog in a large puddle when he gets away from home. PERSONAL AND OTHERWISE. ntle Spring brought its overcoat along. Wise In the absence of nature's handiwork, Easter hats will serve as visible signs of spring. The winner of the last Marathon is a Frenchman and a waiter. Chasing tips de- velops uncommon leg power. One advantage of a belated spring Is worth noting. The open car and the end- seat porker are still in the woods. Nothing so effectively takes the starch out of a star-bangled American patriot as to drop Into a town where horse cars adorn the scenery. Philadelphians appear puffed because the ountry has not observed that a Marathon was pulled off in that vicinity. It is really worth while noting that the Quakers are going some, Owing to the extreme mildness of the winter and the unusual hardness of the ice crop, Chicago dealers announce & raise of 10 per cent, summer dellvery. It Is a polite way of saying, “We need the money." Great happenings spring cau A Chicago man issued a defl to the clements by coming out with a straw 14 circled by a green band. Then a storm began that shook things from the lakes to the Atlantie. SECULAR SHOT AT THE PULPIT. Boston Herald: Requests from the pulpit will be likely to fail in materially cutting down the forest of flowers and plumage next SBunday. Full joy without the Easter hat is unthinkable. Philadelphia Ledger: been advised by the bishop to pay their debts. Possibly this will spur congrega- tions up to the point of providing some- thing to pay the debts with, Cleveland Leader: A Philadelphia min- ister says he can “take a $100 bill, a pad and a pencil, and make a fortune in Wall street.”” Other innocents have thought the same. Hence Wall street's prosperity. Baltimore American: There Is a Chicago minister who says he is going to try and save the souls of milllonalres. Religlously speaking, he puts them In the same class of needing missionary work as hoboes and drunkards New Yi from slight Pastors have just rk of Herald: According to Rabbl Philadelphia, King Solomon but wise, his forte lying coining phrases and It seems a pity that is too far in the past libretto of the was clever not in “solving riddles turning proverbs this gifted monarch to write the light-opera future. Baltimore divorce per Aemican ns to measure on which ther will be various opinions, but the m mendation of the remedy emphasizes the fact that it is effective in cases which the law cannet touch. There is no doubt that If osttracism were applied to many high financial and soclal sins, the problems now arising from them, would settle themselves. It is @ weapon which reaches the strongest man and plerces the thickest hide, Bishop Doane wants be socially ostacized. This is a drast re employer? to Cleveland Leader. most of stop to wipe his fee hours. COMMENCING TOMORROW (Monday) A revolution in jewelry pricing— a tempting selling ef high eclas wares from a legitimate jewel- er's peerless ock of nevelties. SEE THE WINDOW—It Tells the Story Specimen items below—the sale include Waist Sets—Belt Pins—RBelt hundreds more as good. Buckles—Scarf Pins—Cuff Butlon»—!}fllhh'm Pins—Watch Chains—Lockets, Umbrel- las—Plated Ink Wells—Salt ‘and Pepper Sets. Solid Silver Almond Dishes—Novel Leather Bags. Silver Combs— Ebony Hair Brushes—Spe Rings—Nickel Watches. acles. Eye Glasses—Solid Gold Cut 2 — lass Dishes—Brass Vases— Cold Meat Forks. @ Triple Plated Knives, Forks and Teas, (Rogers) —Brass Candlesticks—Berry Spoons—New J el Boxes. New Rose Hat Plns—Back Combs—Silver Shoe Hooks. Silver Blotters—Gold Fancy Hat Pins—Silver Nail F Plated Neck s—and the ik Ete. Ete,, Every piece at a formidable reduction—every piece of that high quality one would expect of a jeweler of ‘‘Mandelberg’s’’ standing. Regular prices have been forgotten; undermined—'tis to be a sale of wonderful values—at $1.50. SERMONS BOILED DOWN. Pickled plety always makes a vinegar disposition. Self-love keeps the life tramping around in a circle. No church work them. He who consults only expediency sllences consclence. A man Is quite likely to consclence by his suspicions. It takes more than sharp angles to prove that @ man lives a square life. The drudgery we call a drag may be the counterpoise that helps us rise. When the conceited man sees his shadow he thinks It Is night for the world To use a great truth for wholly ends may be to make a great wins men when it secks to soon disclose his selfish lle out of it You éannot tance betwi later income. Many whb are proud of their flow of ideas forget that a half empty bottle tlows more readily than a full one DOMESTIC PLEASANTRIES, Mistress—Why measure a its early the and dis- its lite by on poverty did you leave your last Applicant—Gee! You didn't bring her along wid me, expect did yer?— but mar- men are born free an equal, ‘em get over it by gettin’ ried."—Los Angeles Express. “All “Thelr honeymoon lsn't over yet." “How do you know?" “Well, it was raining when he home tonight, but she didn't make -Houston Post. came him He—I suppose if 1 kissed you, you would never speak to me again She—Why do you always look on the dark side of things?—Boston Transcript. Maud (at reception)—How wonderfully composed_Ethel looks this afternoon. Belle—Naturally. It took her two Boston Transeript over He—My dear, 1 should think you could rallroad that job of hair-dressing. She—What do you mean. He—I notice you manage it by means of switches.—Baltimore American. [HOW CATHEDRAL CHOIR SANG. They sang of dark Goethgemane, The anguish, tears of biood, The music sighing solemnly pidke winds through dreary wood, hey told how they tool i2ld’ ey took Him, led Him The 3 . the scourging, the cross! The organ. mourned as mourns R Who grieves over her first-born | They sang the Crucifixion hour, The agony and death The music seemed creation's woe, In wailing, sobbing breath They told how that God so loved the world, He gave His only begotten Son save the lost world, and, as waters whirled, The music' told how the nr “ould ye not watch with Me one hour: ‘Forgive, they know not what t why hast Thou forsaken Me thirst’—the Passion words through The song of the singers and organ tone We heard, oh we saw the Savior di Then out of the silence the music moans. “Is It ‘nothing to you, all ye that pass by T world was won thrillea v, When He divided nations, As shepherds do the sheep, These pass to right rejoicing, %® | 1t_will not be nothing to you and me, And those to left that weep: The story the choir song told will be The story of glory on earth, in sky; Will be all, all to you, all ye that pass byt Omaha, April 10, 199, LU B. CAKE. SALT SULPHER WATER also the “Crystal Lithium® water from Excelsior Springs, Mo., in b6-gallon sealed jugs. 6-gallon jug Crystal Lithia water., $2 6-gallon jug Salt-Sulphur water....8$2 Buy at either store. We sell over 100 kinds mineral water. Sherman & McConnel Drug Co, Sixteenth and Dedge Sts. Owel Drug Co. Sixteenth and Harney Sts. Hallet-Davis, the Cable-Nelson, the PIANO BARGAIN WEEK At A. Hospe Co., 1518 Douglas Street The very best Planos, the fin- est cases, the newest styles, all at bargain prices. Beginning Monday, we place the Kranich & Bach, the Krakauer, the Bush-Lane, the Kimball, the Burton, the Imperial and the Hospe Planos on sale at bargain prices and bargain terms. New Pianos, full size, regular style at, $150; the $325 style at, $189; the $350 style at You pay all cash or from $5 per month up. 80 on up the grade. BIGGEST BARGAIN W Many standard makes go at pr prices $250, go at $139; the $300 $225, and JEK ON USED PIANOS ices less than competition can equal. Come early and get first choice, over 200 pianos to select from. A. HOSPE CO. 1513 Douglas Street ‘Western Representative for the Apollo Player-Piano. The greatest and only\ complete Player-Plano. e ————— R B e e ST E—— et W e

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