Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 17, 1915, Page 6

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5 TTHE BE OMAHA, THU! 'BSCRIPTION By carrier per month, soses e TERMS OF By mall per ¥, y without Sunday...... Evening and Sunday Evening_without Sunday.. Sunday Bee only Send notice of charge frregularity in delivery of ‘address or complainta of to Omaha Bee, Circulation Department REMITTANCE Remit by draft, express or postal order. Only two- cent stamps fecelved in payment of small ae- eounts, Personal checks, except on Omaha and eastern exchange, not accepted. zmht»'rm ni uth Omaha—Mis Council Blufte--14 Lincoln—3 Little mndln Chic 1 Hearst Bulldin New York—Room 1105, 286 Fifth avenue. 8t Louis-58 New Bank of Commerce. Washington—7% Fourteenth #t., N. W, CORRESPONDENCE, nn "olnmuulrulonll relating to news and odl- al matter 8 HBee, Fditorial Department. OFFI1CES. 11 MAY CIRCULATION, 53,345 - "‘gfl‘ Neb County of Douglas, ss: PO, ] ht Willlams, gl:lm n';\oxn manager of '{rr‘\e‘ l:'-e ng eompany, being duly sworn, says that the éflfl. nylol Llfe month of May, 1916, was wamrr WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager, .:.uh-ul’:d .,'f.‘; praunc« and eworn to before ‘me, une BOrEnr mwm Notary Publie. Subseribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee malled to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. Thought for the Day Mount Lassen has subsided, leaving a free fleld to our Washington eruption. Spefenenpp— Our Omaha High school is about to turn out fts fortieth annual crop of graduates. Getting to be historic. Se—— Colonel Bryan {s proceeding on the theory that he is the inventor and sole owner of “piti- less publicity.” Suppme—— ‘Well, Mr. T, P, A., if you bave not been hav- ing a good time in Omaha, it ig at least partly your own fault. Se—— The one-term plank in the Baltimore plat- form needs more than bolts to hold its place in political society, An order for 250 locomotives placed in Phil- adelpbia by Russia gives optimism a welcome boost in a glodmy’ quarter. — Belated contributions to the public treas- uries serve to ease the ‘troubled consciences of corporations as well as individuals. ——— It Colonel Bryan persists in issuing serial stories, it is hard to see how Colonel Watterson can be restrained from declaring war. E————— The American dollar always looked good to the foreigner. Today it is the most imposing coin jingling in the money boxes of the world. S———— One darn trouble follows another. BEditor Lafe Young successfully escaped from the war rone, only to confront a gubernatorial boomlet at home. — If a street car strike can be arbitrated in Obicago, why not also elsewhere? And if a strike can h arbitrated, why not other more momentous disputes? T ——— And now the lieutenant governors of the different states have been meeting in national cenference. Next will be a national assoclation of governors' private secretaries. | —— Making the back door of the federal build- fng at Lincoln the front door is not the only place where this bungling democratic adminis- tration is turning things topsy turvy. S—— Fur boas for meckwear and rainbow shoss are summer novelties lending such dazsling varisty to the procession that masculine vision i unequal to the scenery. The moving spectacle is a spectacle booster. A gold medal has been awarded the Stand- ard Ofl company for meritorious exploration and preservation of natural resources. Evidently the Federal Industrial Relations commission ‘was not consulted on the award. Brownell Hall commencement took place at Boyd's With an interesting program to launch three graduates, Misses Leils Shears, Daisy Reese and Hattie Drew. Miss Armstrong, who has charge of the musical de- Partment, assisted n the program, “and e line of Pradse is due L. P. Funkhouser for the neat manner in which he carried up and presented the flowers ™ The firet exhibition of the Douglas Hortfoulturs) soclety opened up at the Capitol rink. The officers of the soclety are A. Donoghue, president; John Evans, wioe president; W. R. Adams, secretary: John Sl mons, treasurer, and E. R. Erfling and Johw Bell, executive committee. Mias Gussie Saffelder has recovered from her ill- Beas and s again at ber place jn Hospe's art store. The policemen all donned the regulation summer hat It (s of pasteboard, with white lien covering. Jm h-ud nas had some fine plctures takem ot " the fireman's pet dog. in which “Keme" appesss best advantage. Mrs. J. J. Dickey gave u pleasant § o'clock tes party yesterday to & number of friends, among them Mrs. Colonel Henry, Mrs. Coffman, Mrs. Bruce, Mra Ringwalt, Mre. Mayer, Mrs. Broatch W. H. Motter, the grocer, has gone to Denver on . Mannatt, chancellor of the University Lincdln, is in Omabs. e~ South Omaha’s Attitude. U'p to the time of the consolidation vote no one could seriously complain of the opposition, no matter how mistaken, manifested by South Omaha officlals who may have convinced them- | selves that they were representing the wishes of the people who when had put them in office. But the returns of the election discloged an overwhelming majority of South Omaha voters recorded for the merger, the last legitimate excuse was removed for further antagonism by the office-holding brigade. From that moment their continued obstruction became not an effort to carry out the wishes of thelr constituents, or to protect the interests of their city, but merely a selfish scheme to hold themselves on the pay- roll or to deliver the goods to favored con- tractors ‘ With the pretense that the people of South Omaha do not want to be annexed smashed to fs it not high time to call off the fight against completion of the merger? If the South Omaha payrollers think they can by their smithereens, | Indefensible actions force Omaha to buy them off by giving them other lucrative city jobs, it seem® to us they are going about it the wrong way Nebraska Press on Bryan. Perusal of the Nebraska press comment on | the Bryan resignation, which we have repro- duced in condensation, discloses that the opinion of his home state as so volced corresponds en- tirely with that of other sections of the country. With possibly three or four exceptions, even his hitherto most loyal and devoted champions de- plore his action and fall to see the justification for it. Those with a disposition to favor Bryan try hard to find a way to do so without taking a stand agalnst the president. The best the Bryan papers k for him is to impress the public that he is aiming for the same object as | the president, only in another way. On the opposite end, the criticism runs from mild re- buke to most scathing arraignment of the former secretary of state for abandoning his chief in the cruclal hour. It is an interesting situation out of which are sure to grow still more inter- esting developments, Eoonomy or Safety in Ocean Service, Official inquiry into the.circumstances con- mected with the sinking of the Lusitania brought from the captain of that ship the admission that sallors of today are no longer so competent as were the old-timers. It was further established that, although the crew of the Lusitania was supposed, to be under perfect discipline, It “lacked practice,”” and could not do its work efficlently in emergency. This testimony supports the charge, fre- guently made since the loss of the Titanic, that the custom has been for shipowners too often to sacrifice safety to economy. KExperience has proven that the cheaper men are usually une- qual to the important work suddenly thrust upon them in time of disaster, and that machin- ery cannot always be depended upon. The sea- man's bill, which goes into effect next month, provides that shipe under the American flag must be manned by crews who are competent, the purpose being to secure as far as possible safety at sea; at least to provide for the human tactor in the equation. This plan was rejected by the British in the conference at London a year and a hall ago, and whether it will work successfully on American boats exposed to com- petition of forelgn boats not subject to such requirements remains to be seen. The time will come, however, when the trav- 'ollng public will not be content to enjoy the luxury of the floating palaces, unless assured the vessel is in the hands of officers and men who know their business. Sem——————— Towa Democrats Lining Up Again. Des Moines was the scene on Tuesday of an interesting spectacle, when the assembled dem- ocrats pledged anew their faith and fealty, and broke ground for the 1918 proceedings. One of the real joys of life is to see the Iowa demo- crats lining up for a national campaign. The pomp and cifcumstance of the process is most impressive, and an outsider might be fooled into thinking it meant something. Those who are familiar with Hawkeye history sometimes ad- mire the faith, while they smile at the judg- ment, of these devoted democrats. In meny generations only one has arisen to lead them into mere than local light. When “Uncle Hod" Boles assumed the mantel of “‘Shep” Leffler, of blessed memory, the unterri- fied thought they had found their Moses. Bryan smote down the Boies boom with his cross ot gold and impaled it on a crown of thorns, and the party returned to its wanderings in the wilderness. Now, it has turned its back on Bryan, and is again bappy In its leaderless con- dition. Its faith is pledged to Woodrow Wil- son, and Cato Sells has a place at Washington. Judge Wade and Committeeman Marsh are fol- lowing along a trail blazed by Judge Claggett, Ben Hall, John P. Irish, L, G. Kinne and “Jer- sey" Richardson, but the fire of the fath doesn't flash from the fqotsteps of the present generation. American Trade and Foreign Exchange. The announcement from New York that London and Paris exchange had fallen to a record low point is gratifying in the sense that it is an indication of a very large favorable trade | balance with the United States. This condition very naturally grows out of the war, and is not unexpected. The seller nations of Europe have become buyers, and so long as they are required to sustain this position, that long we will have the advantage, and unless some unforeseen turn marks the course of business, the dollar will take precedence over the pound ling or the franc. On the other hand, it may be noted that in South America, where the British bankers are in control and business must be done through London, a different state of affairs pre- valls. In Chili, for example, the “dollar ex- change” is at a rate that really hampers busi- neas between that country and the United States, and this because the business must be done through London, because of existing banking ar- rangements. It has been fairly well established that the rate of exchange does not depend on the gold supply, nor altogether on trade condi- tions, but is in a great measure controllable by and responsive to banking facilities, 1 1 Nebraska Press on Bryan Paplllion Times: Bryan's relsgnation does not ban- ish him from power. He has been killed too many times in the past and, phoenixiike, has again risen to Kreater power. So, also, he may again shine resplen- dent and In triumph over his enemies. Oakland Independent: No less startling than the resignation was the statement that, although he and the president parted with mutual regret according t) their letters, Mr. Bryan is going to do all in his power to convert the people to his views on world peace, and these views clash violently with those uf the president. That seems to foreshadow a wide splic | In the democratic party. Mr. Bryan hae evidently | started a big movement. Beatrice Express: Bryan will undoubtedly at- tempt to make the paramount issue of the 1916 cam- palgn and will try to force the democratic party take its stand for poace at any price. to Blue Springs Sentinel: The long expecied rupture in the cabinet has at last taken place and W. J. Bryen resigne as secretary of state. The resignation was promptly accepted by the president and the note goes forward to the kalser tomorrow as drafted by the president and Bryan retires to private life, that ls to scrap Hitcheock for the senate. Silver Creek Sand: It may turn out to be best, however, as Bryan has been a source of trouble and A misnomer in the office. However it may affect the personal political fortunes of the retiring secretary, !t was unfortunate that he should have chosen this particulay time to resign. Again, the country will be better off without his intermeddling with foreign af- talrs. President Wilson made a mistake when he made him secretary of state. The writer has had two fighting roosters in his pens lately, afd had to give one of them away to avold trouble. Bryan, with his dictatorial ways, and Wilson, with his schoolmaster- autocratic ways, could not exist in the same school yard any more than the roosters in our backyard or two bulls in a pasture iKearney Thnes: It is an action that all who think will approve. The only differences that exist be- tween Mr. Bryan, President Wilson and the members of the cabinet can be summoned up as differences of method. They all have the same big end in view— the preservation of the peace and dignity of the United States Central City' Republican: The great Nebraskan was a good soldier and bears an honorable discharge. He will return home and resume his old place in the councils and affections of the people. The bemefit of his great powers will be welcome even by those who are not of his political faith Falls City Journal: Bryan resigned at the very beginning of the chautauqua season and the gate re- ceipts at many a tented park will be swelldd to ses the new wrinkles in his forchead caused by the study necessary to produce those famous peace treaties, on paper, and that remarkable treaty with Columbla. Beatrice Express: Now that Mr. Bryan is out of the cabinet, the anti-Bryanites in Nebraska who have been gazing at the p'e counter with hungry eyes, fes) that the time of victory s at hand and that they will soon be enjoying themselves in pastures green. But there's many g slipt betwixt the cup and the 1ip, and the influence of the ex-secretary of state with the president is yet to be reckoned with. Hastings Tribune: 'And Bryan Is right. The peo- ple of the United States do not want war—and they are not golng to have it if there is any way possible to prevent it. Kearney Hub: Whether lie or the president Is nearest right, may be a matter of opinion, but his action is consistent and courageous, and we belleve Justified, for a break In President Wilson's cabinet is not nearly so serfous a thing as forcing a war or flirting with the chancgs for one. Blair Enterprise: The country will survive with« out Mr. Bryan's officfal air; just the same, and that gentleman has a reputation of taking good care of himself In any sitoation, so there i» nothing apparent to worry about. Wilber Tribune: Mr. Bryan las resigned as sec- retary of state. He will not be missed. He has been a figurehead In that position Howells Journal: Viewed from any standpoint Mr. Bryan's action is to be regretted. There are able men to fill the position, but the effect of h's resigna- tion upon the people of the world at large is hard to estimate, and Is calovlated to give a wrong impression of the sentiment of the American people as a whole. Scott's Bluft Republican: There are but few who will believe that Mr, Bryan's sole object in severing his connections with the adm'nistration was on ac- count of the new note to Germany, as he sets forth in his letter, as there are too many who have sue- plcloned that his relations with the president have not been the most pleasant for some time past, and also because his policy since the war broke out across the water has been Wecidedly anti-German. It remains to be seen yet just where he will light, but if he should throw his hat in the ring for the United States senate there would be one of the “dangdest” parrot and dog fights ever pulled off anywhere Friend Telegraph: The resignation of Mr Bryan Indicates some stirring times inside the democratic party within the next twelve months, either that will contest the senatorship from Nebraska against Senator Gilbert M Hitehcock op that he will become a candidate for the presidency of the United States a8 against the ection of Woodrow Wilson Ord Journal: The Journal will venture the guess that of all the men of Nebraska none will centinue to be a stronger supporter of President Wilson than will the Commoner, and that in the possible event ot war with a forelgn power no volce will be heard calling louder for the protection of our national nsti- tutions and the defense of our mational honor Bloomfield Journal: The fact that the chautauque season opens soon is merely a conicident, of course Tekamah Herald: W J Bryan has laid himself open to censure by his resignation at this time to embarrass President Wilson in this crisis of the na- tion. It is & case of the hired man trying to rua the boss Franklin Progress: Mr Bryan is one of the few | really great men of the world, and while there are democri who will gloat over the break between the president and his principal adviser, democracy will deplore it People and Events Municipal dancing is about to be added to the joys of living in St. Louts In the opinion of the Minnesota supreme court a man who steals a mule is not a horse thief. Do you ot that? Congressman Mann of Chicago, republican floor leader in the house of representatives, announces his readiness to carry the presidential banner for hin party next summer. A group of Chicago boosters promise to boost for Mann. An investigation into the books of & political “Home est Tom,' comptroller at Nashville, Tenn., developed the interesting fact that the books walked out of the city vault and disappeared. The main investigation now awaits a solution of the mysterious disappeap- ance. Students of an lndians normal school, learning that two of thelr number had achleved & secret mar- riage, initiated them into bliss by giving The Hees effer The Right Spirit, OMAHA, June 16.—To the Editof of The Bea Permit me to pay my tribute of respect to the trustees of Dundee. I note with pleasure that they are not willing lenger to prolong the fight against Greater Omaha, but announce their in- tention of joining In making Omaha a larger and better city. This wction of theirs is no surprise to me. Though I took issue with them upon consolidation, 1 always respected their | sincerity and their devotion to what they belleved to be the Interests of Dundee alone as separate from the interests of the greater city. I 414 not agree with | them In that attitude, but I had that con- | fidence In their integrity and sense of | civie duty to feel that when the fight | rad been honestly fought and won, they would accept the verdiot and ald in the | general forward movement. I am happy { in the thought that Dundee's trustecs have proved true to those highor prin- | cibles of civie duty, which I was &0 sure | they entertained all along. After all, they are typieal of the general spirit of Dundee, and the time will come when not only they will be glad they are a part of the Greater Omaha, but that Omaha will be proud of that addition to her citizenship. These compliments, owing to the splendid vote for consolidation in South Omaha (or Southside Omaha), may be paid to her citizenship Lut I regret to note that they will not apply to the at- titude of the present officlals. L, J. QUINBY. in the Schools. SPENCER, Neb,, June 15.—To the Edi- tor of The Bee: Polyglot's plea for Bpanish in the high school should de- veiop Into a regular campaign. Clubs for reading Spanish newspapers—Spanish- American—(excuse the hyphen) might be organized in every neighborhood, rural and urban. W. WHITEHORN Spanish As to Worth While Conventions. OMAHA, June 16.—To the Editor of The Bee: 1 notice in The Bee this morning a letter from “A Commercial Club Mern- ber," very complacently alluding tu the Tra: Protective assoclation conven- tion being worth while going after. He is quite right; it is worth while, and I agres with him in all that he says about the Travelers' Protective associa tion, but 1 wonder it the club member knows that the Commercial club turned down & promising opportunity to obtain the national encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic for 1916, in com- parison with which the present conven- tion would not be a side show. The national encampment would bring to our city at least 200,000 visitors and they would leave at a very conservative estimate, $1,000000 here, but the commit- tee of the Grand Army could not per- suade the club to take ‘it up. JONATHAN EDWARDS, Note~It is only fair to the Commercial club that it be known that the budget proposed for the Grand Army of the Re- public encampment called for $30,000 for promotion and entertainment expense. Stop Smoking on Car Platforms. BOUTH OMAHA, June 16.—To the Edi- tor of The Bee: A short time ago I read in your paper an article touching on the practice of smoking on the back platform of streel cars, 1 gave the mat- ter very little consideration at the time, thinking perhaps it was written more to gain notoriety than it was an lssue of reform, but from my own personal ex- perience now I will take it for granted that the writer was sincere and had a Just cause for complaint, and would be Justified in carrying the cause still far- ther. This vile and ungentiemanly prac- tice was plainly demonstrated to me Monday morning when I boarded a park car at Twenty-fourth and Seward and rode to Sixteenth and Farnam. Women and work girls were crowded on the back platiorm, some standing on the lower step, as they could get no far- ther, hanging on to anything in sight to keep from being pushed off, and three or four men, (if you can call them men), puffing clouds of smoke into all our faces. Can you blame a woman to be- come disloyal to our present condition of affairs? 1 am a heayy smoker myself, but I can ride on a car for fifteen or twenty minutes without smoking: so could those fll-principled, underfed nico- tine fiends, iIf we had a spark of protec. tion from the street car company. This is not a matter to be taken up officlally, it is merely a prohibition measure to be adopted by the railway company and en- forced as one of their traffic rules, amending the inside smoking rules and have the platform included in the pro- vision, so as to stop smoking anywhere on the ocar, A BEE READER Regulating the Jitneys, OMAHA, June 16.—To the Editor of The Bee: Why all this agitation by the city commissioners on the questioh of regu- Iating the jitneya? Why nol pass an ordinance entitled jitneys are forbidden by city ordinance to operate within the city of Omaha and let it go at that. Doea the jitney patrons care whether they leave and arrive on schedule time or mot? If one is not there when the patron /s ready to go to or from work another one will come along and take one to their destination quicker than the street cars and give a better ride for a nickel. And they are on the job when needed most, .in the busay morning or evening. What the riding public wants is service and If the jitneys don't give them value for their money then the public will put them out of business without the aid of a city ordinance ‘What difference does it make If a jitney wants to accommodate & passenger by devisting from a route? Who does it hurt? If the other passengers ure sat- isfied to have the jitney driver deliver a passenger ten blocks out of his way 1 do mot see what particular bearing this should have in contemplated regulations. Are not the streets just as open to them as any other automobiles or taxicabs. Neither should a jitney be allowed to carry more than the seating capacity of the car. It is to laugh. Is there any such regulations for the street cars? How many times have we seen people crammed and packed inside and outside the cars. Hanging on the sides and bumpers anywhere to get to thelr destl- nation and they pay their nickel just the same. For the street car company it is all right, but for & poor man making & meager living with a Forg it would be a orime to crewd on an extra fare. If the commissioners Insist on & long winded ordinance which will have but one effeot—put the jitneys out of coms mission—I would suggest that they in- corporate & provision having a minimum and maximum speed limits. Of course, they run ot a rate of a mile & minute and privately driven cars and taxicabs ‘would not be gulity of such a thing 1 am efrald the jitneys are doomed in Omaha just the same as they were doomed in iAncoln and other cities. It | SUNNY GEMS, is u new problem to contend with and the — casiest way to solve it ¢ to put them| ... o 0 (O 0 ents around out of business by suitable or Unsult- | papesr able legisiation, 1 would rather see no| “Pretty warm,” said the grocer. 'In regulation at all than to regulate them |fact, teller has fixed himself & trefich me soap boxes and codfish bar bt enuirely = “outsville Courier-Journal, W, never wastes any. Don't Know What Hit Them. Hobson—-My wife OUTH SID P e 16.=To JUTH SIDE, OMAWHA, Jun To | Hobson— It Lts edible, It goes into the Editor of The Bee: From reports, the | (na hash it it ten't, I do to city officials of the former city of South |trim & hat.—Judge Omaha, now the south side of Omaha i - & | She (at the econcerti-What do do not seem to realize that a brick wall | it (et 1ant singer? fell onto them on the first day of June, He—Well, she's rn-z—u-m.h anyway It looks as If it would take even more [ The submarines didn't keep her away than a cyclone to maks them realize what | {M the high C's.—Boston Transcript happened to them. When they pass| I hear Binks and his wile had a dis resolutions claiming 1o represent the |agreement.” Bed whil people of what was once South Omaha, Yes. The new minister called while Binks was trying to take up the carpet.’ they must be joking. It looks as if the American. people invited them (o vacate their of fices and that ought to be sufficient in ~Baltimore View of the fact that the people who | elected them asked them very em-| rhatically to vacate their places. If an- | nexation had been defeated we wonder | if they would have asked the courts to| decide whether they should hold onto | their offices? It is the opinion of most of us that if a full vote had been cast | on June 1, that at least 76 par cent of the people of the former city of South Omaha would have voted for annexation and if the eclection was held again Today it would carry by a % per cent vote. It would be the decent and honorable way The ostrich laughed uproariously. I fooled the movie men completely,' way as the good people of Dunilee are doing and show how lsrge thev for the city officlals to act the part of | he fackied. TiWhen they trieq to smap men and do as the officlals of Dundee | Which showed some almost human nre doing. It would be good politics, too, | traits.—Philadelphia Ledger. for the city officials to treat the city | B & iy | "1 hope,” sald the applicant for sum ommissioners of Omaha in the same- |mer hoard, “that you have no mosquitoes end that there v will be chicken and fresh tables alwaye on the tak and that can be It is to be hoped that the city officals | Corntomsel. - what slace are you 1ookin of the former city of South Omaha will | fur? Heav Washington Star take a tumble to themselves before mext | a3johbe—Wigwag I8 the most truth- Monday and surrender their offices in fur man I know the same grgceful manner that their pre Slobbs=Yes Wigwag has such a bad decessors In office did when they took | Piladeiphia Hacord. © ' ‘he truth their places. They would then stand on | — a higher plane in the estimation of the |, He—T really don't know how 1 have st reople who have asked them to give up | ‘She- Pou don‘t their offices to the city officlals of the ! He—No; but will yoy accept my apol ghester oity F. A. AGNEW, vT‘l"hfl:fln‘fiv‘hl’:’ ken:‘r‘»:tx what it's all about? WHY NOT Yellowstone Park? This will be a popular season for Yellowstone and for tours through the Rockies that take you one way into the Park via Gardiner, or via Cody, the scenic entrance, the other way via Yellowstone Gate- way, Salt Lake, Glenwood Springs, the Royal Gorge, Colorado Springs, Manitou and Denver. Along the Burlington’s northwest liné to the Park are the Black Hills and the Big Horn Mountains, with their re- sorts and ranches. The Cody way into the Park is through the Big Horn Basin and over the Government road, via Sylvan Pass, one of the world’s magnificent view point. The Park Tour Round Trip I"rcrm Omaha. To Gardiner, Cody or Yellowstone entrance. .. . Park tour via Cody, all Park accommodations ... . Park tour via Gardiner, all Park accommodations . % Park tour in via Cody, out via Gardiner, all Park secommo- datlons ............... $89.756 Park tour in via Gardiner, out \n ( ody, l" P-rk a(\mmmo» QBRGNS "4 0% o s dia (T ala’s Wilwid o b a o bin'alhl, 8 oxbioin slo sla aies 92.00 Side tour from Li\lngsmn. all Park’ nccommodulons cost from Livingston 53.50 Wylie Permanent Camp wnr-. '41){ wd nevan dlys. all Pnrk accommodations cost from Gardiner or Cody....$40 to $50.00 Rocky Mountain-Yellowstene Park Scenic Tour Park tour in via Cody, out via Yellowstone, Salt Lake, through Colorado, including all Park accommodations, five days in Park ..... $103.50 Park tour going out through Denver, Colorade, Salt Lake, in via Yellowstone, through the Park, coming out via Gardiner or Cody, 2ll Park accommodations, four days in T SRR A SR R TR R gio o 93.50 Organized Outlng Tours Cody, Wyo., is the headquarters for personally conducted camp ing tours through the Park; also for Hunting and Outing expeditioné in the Absoraka Mountains on the eastern slope of the Park—a region visited by sportsmen {rom all parts of the world. These are managed by Frost & Richard and Shaw & Powell, of Cody. Publications available: ‘‘Yellowstone Park,” “Cody ay,” ‘“Wylie Way,”” “Colorado-Yellowstone Tours,” Frost & Richard” booklet, “Shaw & Powell’’ booklet, “‘Colorado-Utah * Handbook,” ‘‘Colorado Side-trips.” City Passenger Office, Farnam and 16th St. Phones, Doug. 1238 and 3580. Burlington Route SUMMER EXCURSIONS TICKETS ON SALE DAILY VIA CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE & ST. PAU RAILWAY ROUND TRIPS FROM OMAHA: | New York Oftysenenw Norfolk, Ve. .ceenee. x Portland, Me. sevan.. Quebec, Que. .venens. Toronte, Ont. . Tickets on sale via differential lines at somewhat lower rates. Final return limit 60 days, liberai stopover privileges. Reduced rates to many other summer resorts in Canads, New England, New York State, Northern Michigan and the Wisconsin Lake Country, as well as delightful cruises on the Great Lakes and combined rail and water diverse route tours to New York and Boston. For complete information, folders, ete., call on or address W, E, BOCK, City Passenger Agent, O. M. & 8¢. P. Ry,, 1817 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. Agents for all steamship lines, Rheumatism Can Be Cured Stop suffering and avoid serious complicstions bother you for‘life. Call or write for lfll-onhl:wud full ;::lce.ul:‘r': DR. W. W. BOWSER Bee Building. Omaha, Nebraska

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