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PHE ©MAIA DALY BEE | Down to Brass Tac | Much progress has been made in |late years toward turning the tide of |life from the city to the farm, but much more must be made before the UNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. Entered at Omahd postoffice as second class matter. some 1ding. ) West 2 16 Total Returned copies Net total Daily average GHEORGE B. TZSC s Treasure: Bubscribed fn my presence and sworn to before me this 2d day of May, 1910. M. P. WALKER, otary Publie. onditions that provoked the cry = | “Back to the farm,” TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION | Daily Bee (including Sunday), per week.lsc | Overcome. The government has done Laily Bee (without Sunday), per week..ioc | v Daily Bee (without Sunday), one vear..}4.0 & vast work ia settling thousands of Daily Bee and Sunday, one year. 6.0 | people upon homesteads in the west DELIVERED BY CARRIER. A Evening Bee (without Sunday), per week and private enterprise has lent Evening Hee (with Sunday), per week... 10c aid; agricultural schools have accom Bunday kee, one ycar e 5 | Baturiky Mie, Ohe! you? %1% | plished splendid results in thelr cru- Address all complaints of irreguiurities in | o delivery to City Cireulation Department. sade for more farmers and better OFFIC | farming, but they have room for still Omaha~The Hee Bullding. v South Omaha—1wenty-fourth and N | sreater work Council Bluffs—15 Scott Street Consumption is getting « too far et Borevete RS {ahead of production In this race of PRIy hid Bt L0 economies for the safety of the coun- Washington— 2% Fourteenth Street, N. W.|try. Whether those students who say CORRESPONDENC! very few ye: s Communications Telating 1o news and|thAt 10 & very few years we il Be editorial mat should be addressed: | buylng abroad instead of selling are b dece R partment | right or not, certainly they have some Remit by draft, express or postal order|ground for their apprehension in the sayable to The Bee Publishing Co Y, it St ecalved in pasment of | Present cost of living, to say nothing mail unts. Personal checks, except on ort a Omaha or eastern exchange, not m»cr-mefl.:o' the reistive volume of exports off " s o | imports. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION | " this of Nebraska, Douglas County, ss.: But it 1s one thing to say:that the George B, Tzschuck, treasurer of The|young men muet stay on the farm, or Bee Publishing Company, being duly sworn, e ways that the aetugl mumber of full and | those In the city must go there, and mplete ecoples of The n.n_\.a M'!mlr:l.'qu“y another thing to get them to do Eve and Sunday ted during the | ..Qu.‘a'i."f,f':{‘:n:x‘,"lgfo). ] fll?un“u‘.',r ® ™1 this. 1t is often valn to get the other 1 L1 048,800 16 fellow to see that this Is his duty, and ? ee ‘.::: "); |it has not yet been possible to talk 44,400 19, | down the lure of the city even by try 48,770 | ing to blind your man with the dazzle :v::: | of potential wealth on the farm. This " sa890 is one of the most serious phases of . 43,080 the problem and one to which Secre- . :m | tary Wileon, James J. Hill and other e | pioneers in this crusade may well af .. 43,000 ford to address themselves. o) T Before we come to this obstacle, however, why not proceed to the ut most possibility with the more simple problem of intensified farming, of making two blades of grass grow where one grows now? It is admitted | that American soil should be made to double its production. This work is going on under state and national su pervision. Agricultural colleges are achleving splendid results in it, and in Subscribers leaving the city tem- are substantially | THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY | the guilt be located and punished. It is gratifying to know that the prose-|four yearg ago will understand what |euting powers are going about the|this meafis. The police authorities |case with apparent determination and |should not hesitate to apply whatever | sincerity | remedy thay must to avoid as much of !me danger as possible uly. Cftizens who remember the day Get Together. | The advocates of municipal owner- |ship have nothing whatever to fear {ffom the demand that is belng made |\ Oy U BP0 FLivantion’ shniiol for ‘a better and more ample ORI |, o Sooa otk this distados, Bat it ’n{ water for Omaha’'s users. That !he‘dw“ Prove« the “ohsistency nr' “pro people of Omaha are committed 'olh'b"m““ | public ownership of the water plant s g |established by the fact that two large | fssucs of bonds have been carried bY | xoyhranch's pronouncement on Bryan decisive majorities. It is no d““""‘pullclnn‘ All of which shows that for the present condition to assert| yqre g room for reasonable difference that “‘powerful enemies’” are underr;m, opinion as to the sanity of the | taking to defeat municipal ownershib. | .. .o less leader's” paramounts. ‘.\'o such intention is entertained. | —————— What is desired is that some action Governor Gillett puts the prize fight be taken looking to the rellef of the | up to the preachers, which is another present condition. Medical experts| way of saying that California wants | have condemned the water supply, and | the money the ‘‘dead game sports’ are jother experts have added their con I‘wllnnx to pay tg see two bruisers bat | demnation. The water company and ter each other | the Water board have agreed that the — | service is not what it should be, and| The rift in the democratic lute in | vet the supporters of the do-nothing ! Nebraska is growing so wide that very | policy urge that Omaha’s citizens re-|soon the Bryanites will have enough Beginning next Tuesday, Lincoln will enter on an era of being public |dry and privately wet. What change —_— Editor Metcalfe doesn't like Editor |main patient under the ‘hardships” of their own affairs to occupy them | | they have so long endured. This advlcoiwnhom bothering about republican might be available if the impending |conditions. decigion of the United States supreme | |court were to be discounted. If the| » |decision is in favor of the city, the|¥ho I8 regarded as Mr. Taft's double work of appraisal must begin "nm.‘ln not the officer who used to hang If it is in favor of the water com-|Aaround the White House and finally pany, the city must accept the plant asj married the cook. it stands. In either event the ex-| tensions and improvements required | must be made. 8o long as this must be done, and the only thing in the way of doing it |is the failure of the Water board and |the water company to agree on a plan, it seems that to urge them to get to- Sfoux City Tribune gether {s not an unreasonable course.| When Mr. Bryan says he is “in good The question of municipal ownership |health and in fighting trim” he convevs a |ts in no wise involved. It is merely | e**#uring word to lecture committces. la question of furnishing water suit- | able for domestic purposes and suffi- Good thing the Pittsburg policeman The fact that two counties .are con- man charged with legislative bribery in Illinois ie some indication that they mean business. | - | Alno to Kicking Senators. | A Cosmopolitan Colonel. Washington Herald The Colonel is a Frenchman in France, a tending for the right to prosecute the| porarily shomld have The Bee mailed to them. Addresses will be changed as often as requested. By the way, has Jeff make it a sane Fourth? decided to Leuve them on a while longer. not be deceived by May smiles, Do It will be difficult for the Irish to twist his name into O'Roosevelt. Come on, girls; scientists have dis- covered that kissing does not spread germs, Mr. Carnegie confesses to $42,000,- 000. And confession, we are told, is good for the soul. Mr. Ballinger has restored the “short and ugly” word to our viril vivacious vocabulary. Nobody in Denmark asked the colonel to show hig records, but the king was not at home. Towa now rises to dispute Minne- sota's claim of having the best convict poet. Come on, Kansas Illinois has chosen the right month for its legislative housecleaning. Now let it make a thorough job of it. Colonel Roosevelt showed his con- tempt for spooks by walking the ram- part where the ghost of Hamlet trod. New York seems to take the view that Mayor Gaynor told the cold, blunt truth in his controversy with W. R. Hearst, —— Denmark and Swedent could not have made a bigger hit than they did by turning loose their dogs of war on the water, If congress should adjourn tomor- | row it would be further ahead in ac- tual accomplishment of any other con- gress in history. The Washington Post thinks it worth while to observe that the colonel has not played a one-night stand yet. But who supposed he would? It remalned for 4 St. Louis man to g0 up in a balloon to greet the comet as it approached that city on rounds. True show-me spirit. The French people seem to be los- ing interest in politics, There were only 3,000 candidates for the T offices at the late general election One of the best things that can be said of the democratic leaders is that they have refused to take Hearst's proffer of peace seriously or otherwise. It would be awful if this Ballinger. | Pinchot controversy should resolve itselt down finally to nothing but an honest difference of principles and policies Just as soon as Pa Rourke took hold of the reins the team begins to win. Other Western league town will please take notice that the ‘“old man" is on the job again. Edward Payson Weston has finished his journey, Paulhan flown the chan- nel, the eomet grown old and congress reached the last lap, so that only the ball game remains to divert attention from the colonel's review of Europe. San Francisco expects the returns to show a population for that city of. 460,000 as against 342,000 ten years ago. If it does it will show one of the most phenomenal examples of western pluck apd progress ever recorded, for we must remember the sarthquake that leveled the ecity, its | census some cases railroads have taken it up. It could be made, it seems, to answer the purpose untll this tide of youthful migration could be turned around. And, in the meantime, the problem will not be solved so long as farms in old eastern states capable of producing good crops and selling at $15 an acre are neglected or abau- doned for places in the newer west, where land is worth from $100 to {$200 an acre. New York@railroads lare finally awakening to the peril of this situatfon and organizing educa- tional campaigns. The problem is a |large, complicated one and will de- mand the best thought of large men lhelm-e it is properly solved. | - The New Insurgent. The Honorable Bill Stone, senator from Missouri, slipped on his gum shoes and tip-toed into the senate to remark, quietly, in the midst of an ex- citing debate on the railroad bill, ‘dn not concur in Senator Rayners in- | vitation for the republican insurgents {to come into the camp of democracy. Indeed! “And who could have |imagined he did concur? the originator of insurgen a natu- ral-born fconoclast. He was the man |about whom the popular ‘‘show-me’ | phrase became identified with any- |thing or anybody Missourian. He | never concurs in anything. Senator Stone's remark | prise to everybody, for the | matter had, been old for days. |the Missourlan's strange move carries its meaning, nevertheless. He added, | “for the democrats can do more good | where we ar More harm, more | mischief, he really meant. He meant they could play more politics than they could by co-operating with any number of sgenators in a serious effort |to enact needed legislation. From the first the democratic pro- gram has been to obstruct republican measurns, measures the people de- manded. They have succeeded in bur- dening the railroad bill with so many amendments that it may sink under |its own weight. But the democrats have not been able to do this alone. They have had the help of some repub- | Hcans, who, if more earnest in their intentions, have not been half as wise |or wary. They have played into the }hnndu of democrats and helped them | manufacture campaign material. | The country wantee a rallroad biil ! passed at this session of congress, If it doos not get it, it will look with d | eriminating Inquiry for the cause and | those responsible will nave a dificult | time evading the consequences. | Up to Senator Lorimer. 1 Many interests are vitally concerned |In the charges of bribery in connec- | tion with the election of Senator Lori- mer of Illinols. Every member of the | legislature, regardless of party affilia- | tion has a duty in alding the investi gation for the facts; the citizens of | Nlinols should give any help that lies within their power; the ment should stop at nothing short of the most complete inquiry; the sen ate may have a duty later, but over and above all Willlam Lorimer owes it to himself, to the legislature, people and the senate to give his most | vigorous support to every fair means of getting. at the facts in this case. No consideration should deter him. He has solemnly declared to|the pub lic that the charges preferred against bis personsl and/official integrity are false and based on attempt to ruin him in public life. If the senator is right, his accusers are wrong and | should be punished, Defaming pri- vate character is a serious crime, so is the betrayal of public trust. i vhole | Why, he is | was not at | all germaine at the time, it was a sur- | Rayner But | the | A President at kome, governorship of New York when Mr. Hughes goes to the supreme court, says it has been the one dream of his life to be chief executive of his state. Champ Clark says that as.a boy hie Utopia was a seat in the national house of representatives and Garfleld is said to have hoped that he would some day be president. The inspiration of American life is its equal opportunities to every man and the virility of its citizenship is its restless ambition. Boys and young men do not have to see a president to know there is one, but helps them to realize the possibilities that lie before them. It is a most wholesome thing for the president to go about among the people, come in contact with them, let them see him and know him. President Taft him- self strongly believes in the wisdom of this idea. its citizens to be president of the United States has just a little better right to be proud than those cities and towns less fortunate and when the president lays down the great duties jor two and visits with his fellow |townsmen the effect must be exhilara- ting. Tt is then the Young America can appreciate as he never could be- fore what it means to be a ‘‘barefoot boy with cheek of tan' in this great, free country with free institutions and equal opportunities. It must be an {unimaginative boy who under such circumstances cannot in his youthful dreams picture himself sitting in the White House as the head of his na- tion. It is a good air castle to build. Its construction will exercise the im- pulses to lead to noble aspirations, that inspire ambition worth while. It helps the boy to look up, to hope and maybe starts a train of earnest thought that will help him to attain, if not the presidency, at least some high purpose and station In life. It makes for better citizenship. It is, indeed, desirable from every standpoint that the president, whoever he may be, should as frequently as the duties of his office permit leave Wash. ington and get out among the common people, the boys and the girls of the land, as well as the grown-ups. Omaha's Theological seminary been holding an alumni dinner, an evidence that it has not existed in vain. This institution has gone quietly ahead, developing on safe and conservative lines, until its strength |is well established. Its growth is much greater than the citizens gener ally realize and its influence in ex | tending not only intellectual and spir itual enlightenment, but increasing | knowledge of the good name of | Omaha, is far-reaching. It is an in- stitution of which the city may well be proud. The refusal of a democratic county | commissionar to allew Mr. Bryan the | use of the court house for campaign | purposes is a most Interesting indica. tion of the feeling that exists in Ne- |braska. The pitcher has gone to the | well too often. officials | charged with the work of law enforce- | Present indications are that the re publican dinner in Omaha next Mon. day will draw together an enthusiastic |assemblage of confident republicans. The forces in the state are rallying In a way that is most disheartening to democrats. —_— By a vote of 8 to 3 the Omaha city council has defeated an anti-fireworks ,ordinance, and left Omaha open to the cient for protection, | seeing him | The city or town that sends one of | of his office and runs home for a day | has. | Dutchman in Hollana |be a German mit the kaiser, | cormopolitan Colone!! and will no douht Wise and Horace White, who succeeds to the | . Louls Globe Democrat If the rafiroad managers are smart they will not ‘nerease their schedules of freight rates until after congress has passed on the new railroad bil Belated Reform. Butfalo Express. The judiclary committee of has en steps to put an end to the “third degree” as well as the espionage and Intimidation of witnesses in the crim- iral jurisprudence of the United States. It was high time for reforming this abuse, Malefactora of Wealth Passed Up. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Roosevelt declines to act the role of lion |or tame bear for the millionaire American | emigrants in London, who seek him as a chief attraction for thelr dinners and re- ceptions. Let every one place ome great big credit mark opposite the name of -Col- onel Theodore. '’ the senate Pa Spend New 'York Herald. When the construction of the Panama canal was begun it was a great military measure. Then it was said the navy must be strengthened in order to defend the | canal. Next naval bases and harbors were found necessary ‘for the warships defend- Ing the canmal, and now $15,000000 is re- quired in order to protéct the canal, the naval bases and harbors. The whole thing sounds like ‘“The House That Jack Built" ' ——— \ PERSONAL NOTES. Reno's @fvorce’ colonists refuse to give the census man their names, because most of them are trying to get rid of the names anyhow. Willlam Allen White recently entertained Governor Stubbs of Kansas, Mrs, J. Pier- | pont Morgan and Miss Morgan at his |home in Emporja. In an intervieww the next day the governor characterized Miss | Morgan as an ‘insurgent.” Expressing confidence in his ability to plant the emblem of the Explorers’ club on the top of Mount McKinley, Prof. Her schel C. Parker of Columbia university has left New York for Seattle, where he will organize the latest expedition for the ascent of what {8 belleved to be the high- est peak In North Amerlca. Dr. Elihu B. Thomes, aged $3 years, father of Augustus Thomas, the play- wright, dled in St. Louis the other day Dr. Thomas—veteran of two wars, legis- lator, orator and editor—was closely con- nected with the stage in earlier years, and it was largely through environments that his son developed into one of the most |sucecssful and famous of modern play- wrights. What attracts Sir Ernest Shackleton to |Canada as a place for his future home is |the vast unexplored subarctic and Aretic |territory of the Dominion. He yearns to |tramp all over the snowy wilderness and | discover its mineral resources. "I am eager /1o be at it he savs. “Once in a while |1 should come back to the clvilized world |for & rest, but my future will be ever in the work of searching out new places that sclentists know nothing of at present.” Pole hunting, however, the explorer has | entirely abandoned. ?| Our Birthday Book | May 5, 1910 Theodore P. Shonts, the big railroad man, was born May b5, 1556, In Pennsylvania. He was with the Burlington for some time in lowa, and jater in railroad construction work until appoinied chairman of the Panama canal commission by President Roosevelt, from which he retired to take charge of the subway transit system in ew York. Hubert Howe Bancroft, the California historian, s He I8 related also to George Bancroft, the historian, and has made a speclal study of Pacific coast his- tory. He was born at Granville, O., but has lived for many years in San Francisco. Charles B. Hanford, the actor who played in Omaha last month, was born May b, 1869, He s & native of California, and has supported most of the great American tragedians of his day Frederick Trevor Hill, lawyer and author, is 4. He was born In Brooklyn, and still lives there. He contributes to the maga- | mines ‘on’legal topics Charles W. Sears, lawyer in South Omaha, was born May 5, 1812 at Onawa, |1 He i a graduate of lowa State uni- versity and also of Nebraska State uni- versity and came to Omaha about ten Let | menace of an unrestricted Fourth of | years ago. MAY Around New York | Mipples on the Ourrent of Life [ #s Seen in the Groat Amorioan | Motropolis from Day to Day. | In the money “in matter to of getting next strictly legitimate way New York woman has made editors soclety columrs beaten a mile mor She an agiesable, original and inu- ating person, talents partly acquired and polished up In the newspaper Her line is “writing up’ ambitious women who desire to shine in the society columns. There Is no charge for the write up; th newspaper woman, so-cAlled, Was per- fectly satisfied with the space rates paid to her by the varfous leading organs of | pubMe thought that “‘used” her “matier But if iy lady desired her picture—a beau tiful half-tone engraving, which would ap pear clear and attractive, no matter how | many revolutions second the perfect- | Ing press was gullty of—to appear along | with the “eading matter, that would cost a | modest sum, say $100 up, or as much as the traffic would bear—the more the better, of course, so long ag the vietim would stand or fall for it. If the photograph in ques tlon was attractive enough—and usually it wag, because the victim had sat for It especially — then the artist-photographer | would be glad to furfish any number of | them at #o much per do: and the rake-| | o | 18 profession. off on these was the customary commis- sion. Thus the various sums upon the enterprising young literary | question subsisted, 1f not equally by the society paper, social aspirations and the grapher, were nevertheless contributed to by each; which makes it all merrier than could otherwise have been the cas which woman in contributed | the lady with artist-photo- | The saleswomen in a bakery on Madison avenue are so aocomplished that they are {the envy of other proprietors, who have | often wondered how such competent women | are found. The proprietor of this bakery told the secret the other day to a customer. “When they have given a customer what | has been ordered,” he said, "It is customary | for them to ask if anything more is wanted, |T always try to find oud when a girl is taken on here what it is that she especially | {likes. It may be salted almonds or crum- pets or jelly cake, but she is sure to have some preference. So I say to her that she | should always mention that after she has served a customer. ‘Anything more? The | salted almonds are deliclous today.’ She is certain to say that with o much apprecia- tion and such unction that few customers are able to resist her, and if they don't take almonds it's ten to one that she will | interest them equally In something eise. So it pays to find out what a girl likes and have her try that on customers.” Edward tssue of Hungerford contributes to the Harper's Weekly for April 30 an article descriptive of New York by night We are taken on a tour round the city “There are more than 1,200,000 separate gas meters in New York City,” says our guide. | “There are 40,000 street lamps in New York |New York has nearly 4000 miles of gas mains, to which may be added nearly 2,50 miles of service pipes—leading fiom the mains to the Individual meters. He points to one of the dull red gas holders or re { volrs that raise their ugly bulk in the vard just without. ‘You could plump that In | the middle of Madison square and not have | mueh spare room on the sides,’ he says. ‘My boy, that gas holder reaches within leight feet of the height of the Flatiron | building.’ ar There is an undercurrent of growling go- Ing on In one of the big downtown lunch- ing clubs. Ten cents per member or guest served I3 to be charged hereafter for bread or butter. Both of these have been free from the day of opening. This recalls the incident of the man who paid a visit to Conev Island. He looked over the menu and said, “You make no charge for bread and butte You're on,” sald the waiter. nd none for mashed potatoes il of “You may bring me some mashed pota- | toes and bread and butter,” gravely said the man from New York “You'll tind de county poorhouse up de line,” sald the waiter. things are progressing,” said | Men around yesterday | company asking if there | | was anything the matter with our gas| range. We hadn't sent for them, understand; they just came around on a| house-to-house canvass to see If there was | | turder “Certainly a hoseholder. from the gas you anything that needed doing and to do it If fhere was; to put the range in the best | possible working condition. Fine buiness this; looks like trying to please their cus- tomers, and I think there might be noted |in these days various signx of enlighten-| ment on the part of public service cor- porations showing a desire to get quainted with and to deal fair with those with whom they hold relations, Certainly things are progressing.” ac- | A West 8ide matron proudly exhibited the lock of her front door to the afternoon | caller, It was an Intricate looking n{{nh.‘ resembling & gum machine more than it | |dia a door latch. “You turn this,” ex- | plained the woman, pointing to a tiny | knob inside the door, “and you have fixed the bolt so it can't be shot back with the | Kkey. To release the tumblers you've got to drop a& coin In the slot outside. The | only plece of money that will fit Is a five- | dollar gold plece. The idea Is my own. | { A locksmith downtown worked out the mechanical part of It for me. Every night at 10:30 I adjust the coln attachment If my husband {s out after that hour it costs him $ to get in. He stays home | evenings, as a rule’’ On one of the cars going out on a subur- ban line is the usual glass case contalning an ax, & saw, a sledge-hammer, and a col- lapsible canvas bucket. On the glass are the words: “In case of accldent, break the slass."” The other day the denly. A man stuck his head out of the | window, and when pulled it In again, remarked, “An accident to the engine.” With that, a wild-eyed man sitting on train stopped sud- CORSETS Model A67 is a new one, A t, honest, cream of Made from Grapes. Contains not a grain M of injurious ingredient ™ up, picked up a | the seat behind jumped heavy bundle he carried, and smashed the glass of the tool cas Then he went back to his seat and sat down, satisfied that | he had done his duty fully. | | proeaiisiindin Bryan in the Dry Belt | Springfield (Mass.) Republican The extent to which Mr. Bryan pro- poses to become a prohibitionist {s made clear by bis statement since his home. most of them are m by the legend that ot of gold at the end of it r or ve y rainbow ather—What became of that miss sgctety &/ fow months ago? Mildred—It and we finally had in th selv the slums washe v ins s.—Puck to Know, as soon as we got th up | return ‘ | National prohibition does not Inter- | . est him in the least and he will have none | Phelan? of it to the to support the movement for statewide pro- hibition In Nebraska, too whatever sume, pany in ical man of the tucky when the subject Is mentione, e Sniff: blood strike rie Shank—lia! ha! That's the comic ment simply I didn't land *That Jobbins' Is What ““There are ator hear whom v liver troublo said one of the “Don’t believe all you h doctor. trouble body’'s Yot e him he was doing time for forging hands.” —~Baltimory Second Within state lines, he will be oo 3oston limit, it scems, for he “dry” | has agreed enough Gerald in Missouri with volce and pen he will fight “the trade" form the campaign On this issue, Mr with some of his most devoted polit- end ginning with Mavor Dahl- | Omaha. One can easily imagine, | of Olile James of Ken- | may as- | together Bryan parts com- |! 1| On san CHEERY CHAFF, doctor, that my friend Brown, Ave been treating so long fo) has died of stomach trouble,” physician's patiencs * replied the a man for live: trouble."—Eve Now eve We fanc; An adme “When 1 Re he dies of Magazine, treat liver It's *“Mof or Or “Arbd Oor T And each barbarism of it makes my Just look at this picture of a | The bo ipple you're looking at. Those boys are putting their grandmother M the ndianapolis N ews. It's “Ral Ard I And “Hel ad anything of Bjornstjerne I wanted to read some of his but when I went to the public library know how to ask for it."—Cleve- Plain Dealer And no While t u_ can reu or voung fellow, old \ a capital penman was a_bright on, and s ahead? The last time 1 Leave fo Bay heard of 0 for a d Like th A bright 7 A day S A" day tr tha American. is a political rainhow chas various kinds,” replied Sorghum, “although I suspect 4 Gerald—1 | everything ‘Apple Day"” or every Laborer—How Laborer Transcript. are for ine you 1t you Judge. d O'im all right, know that I am that you girls were so intere had_a_horrible dish and i ted on joining the society you w not AN UNTAGGED DAY, Chlcago Inter day led of nd and sea ry day Y we can see nition of the ther's Day' or or Day y for i day o Needy =in Day day for ro Day’ nd A and t a one ime w nnot 1 5-pos e at ke freak! day 0se a fair, a J and nothing hat does not by a simple d Like bargains in a s the liung somewhere in the day “Father's Day,” “Prunes’!" Horse's Day,” Loons!" has its service meet And it peculiar times! Ocean. simple day, yore! | The Iind we used to while away and shor | The Kkind that wax itself a And not a ®omething more! ne a label has, And when the sun doth rise ‘Drama Day, > &N day we knew of yor yiul day Whist," usage ‘Day Why lengthen out the list? Three hundred days and ;lvlyrllve— is missed! Why didn’'t someone think to say s still to speak: of every day juent intervals— second week!" ro! L ore A tag Book About Laundering-Free ON THE INSIDE OF THE WRAPPER which surrounds every cake of Lenox Soap wyou will find a lot of valuable information about washing clothes. IT WILL PAY you tb read it. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION is given in “Approved Methods for Home Laundering,’” » book of 68 pages by Miss Vail, a well Known authority on the subject about which she writes. THE BOOK 1S ILLUSTRATED and cost 7 cents a copy. But we will gladly send one to you, free, if you are a user of Ivory or Lenox Soap. Ad- dress your letter to The Procter & Gamble Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. Lenox Soap-Just fits the hand The report made to the comptroller under date of March 29, 1910, shows that this bank has . Time Certificates of Deposit $2.034,278.61 2% Interest paid on certificates rinning for twelve months, 1 / irstNational Bank of Omaha Washir less influer and T agree as well we ‘shall get along beautifu ston L on