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! | THE OMAHA DAILY ” BEE | FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROEE“' TER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Bee Publiehing Company, Proprietor. BEE BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Entered at Omahs postoffice as second-class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. By carrier By mail per month. per year. fly and Sunday.. 68c. o afly without Sui Evening and Sunday Evening_without Sunda; Sunday Bee only.... Bend notice Of change of addres [Sregularity in delivery to Omahi epartment. REMITTANCE. Remit by draft, express or ponu order. Only two- cent stamps received in ment of nx 1 and eastern counts. Personal checks, urept on Omaha exchange, not accepted. Imaha—The B’ HulldInl Bouth Omh‘ street. Council Bluf nr(h Main street. LIncnln—I Litflo Bujiding Hearst Bullding ‘ork—Room 1106, 286 Fifth avenue 8t. Louls—-8 New Bank of Commerce. ‘Washington—72% Fourteenth 8t., N CORRESPONDENCE, ddress communications relating to mnews and ol aflll matter to Bee, itorial Department. MAY CIKCULATION, 53.345 State ulhi\'.h ka, County of Douglas, as: Dwi Ilml. circuldtion manager of Tl Publishi being duly sworn, sayi l":“l'l" elre nlhn “tor the month of May, DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager. jubscrited In my vrmnu and sworn to before this 24 % of June ERT HUNTER, Notary Public. Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should bave The Bee malled to them, Ad- dress will be changed as often requested. 5 June 98 Thought for the Day Selected by Mrs. Charles Belman ““There is nothing so important as the choice of Sriendship, jor it both reflects character and offects it.”’ —e e Just closing up' the eleventh month of the war. Honestly, did you expect it to last this long Our former secretary of state is headed for the west. Here's an invitation to “‘stop off in Omaha."” The soverelgné of Europe are having even poorer luck than President Wilson in maintain- ing their cabinets intact. An Omaha man has made a donation of $23,000 to the city of Lincoln to help carry out its park plans. Good! But why go away from bome? S— New York Cfty's 4% per cent bonds selling 1cadily “on the curb” at a premium carries a message of cheer to our million-dollar nhonl board. — The pinched recruiting agent of the allles on the Pacific'coast will discover presently that the soll of this country Is not adapted to raising “cannon fodder.” B, After letting all the saloon licenses be re- newed for this year without the semblance of a protest, our anti-saloon reformers would m tc he a trifle late with present complainte, B —— According to Hudson Maxim, it is more dan- gerous to ride In an auto than to fight in the trenches. Kvery man has a right to his opinion, bust most of us will still prefer the auto ride. S——— { Colonel Bryan got from ‘under just in time to avoid receiving the report on hie favorite “de- serving democrat,” Minister Jim Sullivan of San Doming Senator Phelan tells the presi- dent Minister Jim is ‘‘temperamentally unfit" for the job. S—— Chicago insists it has already nailed down the 1916 republican national convention, and is hot after the 1916 democratic national conven- tion, which it feels confident of landing also. ‘The chances are that the next president will be nominated in Chicago S—— . The necessity for recruiting workmen to work and speed up in munition factories reflects on the patriotism of British labor. Unless the sitpation is exaggerated by the extraordinary demands of war, the patriotism of a democraocy suffers partial eclipse, ,Old Amsterdam sent a new Dutch fl; to New York City, to commemorate the founding of New Amsterdam 250 years ago. Traces of the original colonists are now indistinct, but their foresight '5" thrift blazed the way to wealth and liberty for uncounted millions. — The governor of Pennsylvania vetoed three political bills and caused deep Indignation among the paliticians who pushed them through the legislature by’ steam roller methods. The incident is welcomed as a sign of competition in political steam rollers, a thing the Keystone ctate has not enjoyed since Matt Quay was a kid. The Elkhorn announces a new train between West Point and Omaha connecting also with Blair, ar- ranged so that visitors can come to Omaha, stay all day and return home in the evening. Mre. Howard B. Smith is visiting her sister at Mount Vernon, la Mra. A. U. Wyman has joined her husband here and with her children is stopping at the Millard.’ Mrs. J. M, Woolworth is in Chicago, where her daughter, Miss Mehie, is passing the summ ‘The scholastic year of the Sacred Heart school closed with appropriate exercises, among those taking part being Misses Mary Nash, Pauline Lowe, Clara Crelghton, Withelmins Lowe, Stella Hamilton Mrs. Atwood, next to John Hussie's hardware store, is selling out her entire stock of millinery af and below cost. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Ross, 24 Decatur street, are mourning the loss of their infant son H. Jacobsen has made arrangerpents to represent the Farmers ahd Merchants Insurance company ot ldnecin in Omaha, where he will open up an office rles Smith, & rising young stenographer of MONDAY 28, 1915 | Cabinet Stability. = Has the disruption of the Wilson cabinet | only begun, or s it all over? that there will be any further resignations from ‘ the cabinet,”” Mr. Bryan is reported as saying, “and I hope there will be none.” The additional expression of ‘hope” on the part of Mr. Bryan, Lhowever, would indicate a fear that his “belief"” | may, not be well founded While the change in the state portfolio is not the first in the Wilson administration, it | is the first from the inside because the McRey- nolds promotion from the attorney generalship to the supreme bench was at the president’s own instance, Previous experlence has shown the instability of 'a cabinet after it is once broken by internal differences or by successful attack. The retirement of one cabinet member under | such circumstances is naturally calculated to | stimulate efforts to ‘‘get”’ the next one who seems least strongly intrenched. The same forces thal | have been belittling Mr. Bryan have been simi- | larly opposing Secretary Daniels, who will doubt- less feel an increase of pressure from now on. The next shell-fire would have been directed niore at Secretary McAdoo, but for the fact that his newly acquired family relationship has made | him the most impregnable of all the occlipants | of the cabinet trenches. | Mr. Bryan may ‘‘believe” there will be no | turther resignations, and may ‘“‘hope’ there will be none, but it will be surprising if President Wilson finishes his term with as many of his original cabinet around him as he has now King Cotton in Good Health. Much worry was felt in this country last fall over the conditioff of King Cctton. Some of his friends thought he was going !nto a very quick decline, and a great deal of solicitude was ex- pressed as to his situation. Various panaceas, such as “buy a bnla" and ‘‘use cotton instead of sllk,” vere p.oposed and some of the subjects of the stricken monarch did a great deal of hys- | terical agitating in his behalf. Now comes a report from the Department of Commerce, and rhows that more bales of cotton were used by the mills of the United States in May, 1915, than for the corresponding month of 1914; more | spindles were running during May than t | year, and the factories had 400,000 bales more gn hand than they had a year ago. Exports of cotton are only 800,000 bales less for the ten months ending with May, 1915, than for the pre- vious year. The loss is due entirely to stoppage | ot shipments to Germany. Great Britain has taken more by 300,000 bales, Italy by nearly 600,000, and other countries by 1,300,000, so that the falling off in direct shipment to Ger- many and France has been nearly compensated ! for. Increased activity in home manufacture and the lessened acreage planted for the year will surely reduce the surplus stock from last year's bumper crop, and old King Cotten may throw away the crutches and stand on his own feet again, along with King Corn and King Wheat. Measuring the Drift to the Professions. The drift toward the professions whi¢h has long been obvious comes in for exact measure- ment in the report of the president of the Carnegle Foundation who furnishes a compila- tion showing population ratio of physicians, clergymen and lawyers in this country by decades, which will probably disturb some pre- conceived notions. The total number of persons in these pro- fessional classes has grown from 214,608 in 1880 to 414,108 in 1910, but still not much faster than the total number of inhabitants. If reduced to a ratio the increase is only from 428 tc each one hundred thousand population in 1880 up to 450 to each one hundred thousand propulation in 1910. For the physicians the proportion has remained virtually uniform for thirty years, and during the last two decades the number of ministers has also exhibited small variation. The number of lawyers, on the other hand, grew more rapidly than the popu- lation between 1880 and 1900, yet during the | last decade Increased only one-third as fast, be- ing 7 per cent increase in the number of lawyers epainst 21 per cent of the entire population. But these figures, interesting and suggestive as they are, do not measure the professional drift accurately because we have added mahy new professions such, for example, as electrical, sanitary and concrete construction engineers, charity workers and survey experts, Instructors ir new lines of education which must be ranked with the old professions. President Pritchett interprets the greater comparative stability on the parts of physiclans and clergymen as com- pared with lawyers ‘‘by the fact that young men rarely enter either of these professions without a strong sense of voeation. Their num- standards, or upon economic factors, as in the case of lawyers." What the Carnegie Foundation is trying to do is to raise the general professional standards, e#nd to exact better preparation—a very proper purpose yeét liable to be misconstrued as an effort to make it harder to enter professional life in order to limit the competition. Inas- much as success in the practice of a profession must continue to determine continuance in it, we still get back to the law of supply and de- wand to regulate distribution of young men {oto professional channels the same as Into other avenues of livelihood. Illinois and the Marriage Laws. Governor Dunne hag just signed a bill that declares vold all marriages not in conformity with the Illinois law, no matter in what state they may be performed. It is extremely proba- ble that by this action the governor and the law- makers of Tllinois have prepared the way for a good deal of trouble and some interesting litiga- tlon. Marriage is an institution in which the public is much concerned, for its civil as well as for its religious aspects. It is most important, as affecting the soclal condition of offspring, the descent of property, and other factors in modern life, and for these reasons the suffi- clency of the contract between husband and wife should be definitely determined. The legal re- quirements of marriage vary in different sta and the right of the Illinois legislature to pre- scribe what sort of marriage is legal and valid |In other states may well be questioned. This | 15 the effect of the new law, though, and in this | much it tr ds the comity supposed to sub- 1 aist belween states h ber is, therefore, less dependent on changes and | “I do not believe | | | | two weeks after the outbreak war, there in Newark Ilifework, probably more than of the European died , the man whose that of any other man of his time, promises to revo lutionize naval warfare and to cause a readjustment in the great fighting force and historic influence known as sea power e newspapegs, busy record- ing the invasion of Belgium and the war preparations of England, dismissed his death with a paragraph or two. The dead man was John P. Holland, and he will become immortal as the inventor of the modern submarine With the exception of the submarine, Holland | had only one abiding enthusiasm. IHe was an ardent Irish patriot; his one desire was to see Ireland freed from Pnglish rule and made an independent republie His two ambitions supplemented each other. In con- structing his first submarine, Holland aimed at one result: the liberation of Ireland from English rule Born in County Clare, in 1842, Holland's youth was passed amid many of the most stirring scenes in the nineteenth century Irish movement. He passed his early years in a riot of absentee landlordiem, evictions, and tenant disturbance; anti-English senti- ment, therefore, was his earliest inheritance. A boy of inquiring and Industricus mind, with a particular leaning toward mathematics and sclence, he received an excellent rudimentary education—enough to qualify as a lay teacher in a Christlan Brothers' school. It was while teaching in such a school that his mind first turned toward submarines. In 182 when Holland was years old, the nitor fought the Merrimac. FEchoes of the famous engagement reached the quiet North Monastery at Cork where Holland was teaching. The circumstance discouraged him, since it seemed to indicate a continuance of British naval power. The event signified, as the vouthful Holland reasoned, that the Iron clad was the warship of the tuture: England, equipped with a fleet of such vessels, would absolutely fasten its naval power upon the world. That meant the postponement of the cause nearest Holland's heart—that Irisi freedom, Was there any way to destroy such a fleet? Holland had read Jules Verne: he also had leard of several attempts, notably those of the Americans David Bushnell and Robert Fulton, to bulld a sub- marine boat. It was only such a boat, he belleved, that eould successfully challenge England's naval power. In his solitary room in this Irish monastery Holland worked over plans; he actually belloved, greatly to the amusement of his clerical associates, that he had solved the problem of under-water fare. Holland tried, even then, no one listened to the crazy boy war- to get backing, but In 1878 he came to Paterson, )., as a teacher in Bt. John's Parochlal school. Again submarines occupied his mind more completely than the educa- tional needs of his charges. And now the opportunity seemed fairly to have arrived. The Fenian excitement had reached its height. The Fenlan Brotherhood was a secret organization of the most ryjlitant Irish na- tionalists. Iad It mot been for the American civil war, indeed, the Fenian movement would probably have gained little headway Irish patriots in America, mostly poor working- men and servant girls, had contributed their pennies and dimes to a collection known as the Skirmishing Fund—Money intended to be used for military op- erations against England. Holland now lald his sub- marine idea before the trustees, who had about $50,000 in the treasury. They appointed a special committee of three—John J. Breslin, who rescued James Stephens, the Fenian leader, from Richmond prison in 185 Thomas F. Bourke, who had once been sentenced to be hanged for high treason, and John Devoy, who had served five years in prison for his patriotic activities —and who Is now the editor of the Gaelic American in New York, a paper which still preaches rabid antagonism to England and violently advocates the German cause in the present war. ‘This committee of three decided to use the Skirm- ishing fund to finance Holland's submarine. Holland had to bulld two boats, however, before he got one that fairly embodied his ideas. The first failed be- eause of faully construction; the machinery was placed s0 awkwardly that the vessel I in the water, the nose always resting somewhat higher than the stern. *This submarine, however, demonstrated the correctness of the principles at stake, precisely as had the unsuccessful boat of a few years before. 1t sank and rose easily, stayed under the water at the position desired, the operator had no difficulty In breathing, and the compressed air chambers worked exactly as the inventor had foreseen. The practice Irishmen were so encouraged that they decided to bulld a new boat, which would correct all ‘the faults of the old one. This second vessel was a completa success. All submarines up to that time had sunk on an even keel, an agonizing process that took ten or fifteen minutes—time enough for an enemy’s shot to send it to the bottom. But Holland's boat really dove head first—taking only a few seconds In the pro- cons. ~ Ana nmow for several months Holland kept the people on the waters around New York entertained with his experiments. The inventor had no difficulty in operating in all the waters about New York: his boat handled easily, deftly, and safely, the only trou- ble being, as always, with the engine. The news. papers, which devoted columns to his under-water voyages, dubbed the vessel the Fenlan Ram, a name more pleturesque than descriptive, as it was not s ram at all, but a torpedo boat Though 1lolland continued experimenting, world heard little more of his submarine until 189. Meanwhile mechaniclans in all countries, especiaily the United States and France, had worked at the problem and produced many boats, most of them un- satisfactory. In 18%, the United States advertised for bids for a submarine to be bullt at the government's expense. Many plans were submitted; when the best was selected it was discovered that the inventor was Holland, of the almost forgotten old Fenlan Ram. Holland obtalned the contract; and the Plunger, now tied to a dock at New Suffolk, 1. I, was the result And now began Holland's protracted struggles with government officials and other professional people who Insisted on “tmproving” his specifications. Holland, disgusted with the interference of out- siders, made one request to his new company: that he be permitted to construct one boat exclusively ou his own plans and under his own personal super. vision. He was willing to let the question of sucogss or failure be decided by this one test. His company consented and the Hclland, representing his ideas, was constructed at the Crescent shipyards at Elisabeth, N. J., In 188. This vessel is probably the most im- portant warship ever constructed since the beginning of time. When it was completed, the submarine ques- tion, which had agitated naval experts for a hundred years, was settled. The submarine was no longer a fad, toy, & crazy idea of amateurish inventors; it became, In & moment, one of the most terrible engines of practical warfare ever devised The hoat was only fifty feet long; it carried only one torpedo tube: and it amazed everybody with the deftness with which it salled. In mobility It seemed almost a thing alive: in diving skill, Holland himself sald, he had taken the porpoise as his model. This rapidity of submersion, as already noted, was the quality which Holland regarded as Important above all others: speed and crulsing radius were desirable, but the ability to come to the surface quickly, take observations, and drop below the waves before the enemy could train a gun was the prime essential to success. And this the Holland had in amaging degree It could rise to the surface and disappear again in five seconds. Its navigator had absolute control over the little Ship. So successful did the trials prove that the United States government viewed the submarine with some apprehension. Holland offered to take it the into Santiago harbor and blow up the Spanish fleet— something he probably could have done. Had the war lasted very long, Holland's boat would probably have played an important role. Life in a Large City So closely arg the wheels of active life dovetailed that the miscue of a single cog often halts progress. A flea gripped & puppy perched on the seat of a New York taxi. The purp s:reamed, madame ditto, the taxi stopped and blocked trafile on the st the dog fin'shed $ts scratch et untyl The Pees LeSer Nature's Inspiration. OMAHA, June To the Bditor of | | The Bee: The cultivated peorly, fragrant | and beautiful, may hbe the flower of Greater Omaha, but when a man takes a walk along the highways of Nebraska | | his esthetic eyes are continually greeted by the presence of the wild rose. Where the road runs parallel with the roilroad track, the philosophic vagabond—to bor- row a term from Oliver Goldsmith— | notlees how profusely this lovely flower | grows, being a sort cf feminine com- | panion for the hard steel rafls. ! It is & great treat, at this time of the vear, to go out into the country. He is & rich man, who can 8o to his tavorite place' in the woods anl there be greeted with the fragrance of mint Nature is the ally of every man who | cbeys the moral code. As the shade trees | along the country road are the places Where the traveler stops to rest and | gain fresh courage to reach his destina- | tion, so the lessons learned from the | lives of the prophets and philosophers sre man's stepping stones to wisdom and immortality. Here is what writer saw at the Derby hotel in David City: In botn the office and dining room is a copy of the same picture — President McK'nley — placed between his mother and wife. In all history there i& no nobler exampie of the constancy, courteay and chivalry with which every man should treat women than in the life of Willlam Mc- Kinley, After this ideal home man had reuched the pinnacle of governmental offices in our great republic, his mother d to write daily to “William at Wash- irgton;” while the last words of his wid- owed wife, before her passing on, were: I am going to meet my precious.” The dally Nving of such beautiful sentiments In the highest relationships of life should teach the youth of America a timely les- scn. Willlam McKinley possessed such an exalted character that to ask his ad- nirers for thefr opinion of him is like asking a man what he thinks of his be- trathed. He is a mystic who becomes carap- tured through the contemplation of moral teuuty, Blessed is the man In whom the awe of youth has developed into the reverence cf maturity. Or, as Emecrson | puts it: “Fear God, and when men meet vou they shall think that they dwell in Lallowed cathedral SIMEON BEARDSLEY. Knowing Too Little, M'COOK, Neb, June 26—To the Edi- tor of The Bee: In my daily perus of The Bee I have lately been giving a glance to the correspondence column and have come to expect something worth reading there from time to time. In the interests of good work, | want to pay my vrespects to a communication dated June 2, entitled, “Knowing Too | Much.” The author, by signing bis ar~ | ticle, ameless,” stayed In the dark along Wwith everything he said. His hazy views on “business” ethics, or indeed, any ethics, need clarifying in . the Interests 1 of the real article and of his own equili- brium. He says he knew where his pros- pective customers could get the desired work done for nothing. He therefore felt bound either to do the work for nothing or to tell whers it could be so bad. He Bid the latter, received thanks and remained fn a dazed condition as to the Did you ses where France is going to make all its fat men do military duty? That confirms the claim that tHey are going to continue a stout fight' 66—What a lovely ring! Is it silver? 0, platinum. ‘#—-You don't tell me! 1 thought it was real. What good imitations they do make nowadays' Harvard Lampocn "I see that Stenklewicz, the novelist clence of the world.’ ‘He ipeans that as a compliment, course, but I Jon't know that we want to become the conscience of the world." “And why not? You know the save that America will become the cons- of Indian fs in a hurrv, everybody knows there i absolutely no use in stopping him to tell a funnny story.”—Washington Star “William, why don’t you come forward ana give your uncle a pledge of your af- fection? My uncle's got all the pledges now T American could get hold of."—Baltimore Talker—Why do you that Smith is_such a patriotic man? | Walker—Besause he won't eveh ex- press an opinion any tmore. Iusists on sending it parcel post.—Illinols Siren COMING BACK. Henry Van Dyke. Across a thousand miles of sea, & hun- dred leagues of land | Along a path I had not traced and could no understand | T traveled fast for this—to take thee bj | the hand A pilgrim knowing not the shrine where he would bend his knee, A mariner without a dream of what his rt will be, 8o flp:ed 1 with a seeking heart until T came to thee., | O cogler than a grove of palm, in soma eat-weary place, v | O falrer than an isle of calm after the wild sea race adorned with | The quiet room flowers conacience plays a # hy fare. mighty small part in the general run e font & w5 of things.”~Louisville Courfer-Journal [ Then furl the sail, let the oar, forget the paths of foam! Developm. ST. JOHN'S MILITARY SCHOOL, (Episcopal) Salina, Kansas “An Tndian very seldom laughs,”. said | The Fate that made me wander far af the western man last has brought me home Well, I'm not sure he ien't right,” | To thee, dear huven of my heart, and 1 l!l\llrd the busy oitizen ‘When an no more will roam L —————— ent of character and individuality com- the serious work of this school. Thorough preparation for colleze or business; accredited by State University. Every boy receives careful and individual attention Special instruction in Ath- Modern bufldings, extensive campus, com- ulpment. Lower school for younger boyvs ery careful supervision. Catalog on request. MAJOR W. L. GAN! E, Commandant. Shatturk Noted for its College Entrances, le, Harvard, Princeton, , Johns Hopkins, etc. 16 BUILDINGS—200 Aml 1,000 Pt. Above Sea 50 Miles South of St. 'n‘l. Forty-ninth year. Founded and conducted on the same broad lines as the famous English Schools of Win- chester and Eton. Equally efficient in training for College, 'Business and Technical Flelds. Noted for clean athletics. Designated by U. 8. W ar Depart- ment as an “Honor School GUST For catalogue and particulars, ad- dress COL. VASA =, nmun ©. Headmaste! Fairbeult, llnn. 1872 DOANE COLLEGE 1918 Crete, Nel Oldest, best equipped, hest endowel Christian College in Nebraska. Fuli College Courses, Pre-Engineering, Pre-Medical and Teacher's Courses. A School of Music. College opens Sept. 14, 1916, Ior information, ad- dress W. O. ALLEN, President NEBRASKA'S MOST SUCCESSFUL COMMERCIAL COLLEGE Betablished 1896, The Hastin; known as the it takes youn d file “in Business College ifra; ographers, commercial ployees, etc. bookkeepers, teachers, civil servi whether he should kick himself or plume himself. As nearly as I can tell he has been doing both. Let us son for ths brother. You will notice that he didn’t choose to do the work for nothing, instinctively he shrank from that thing condemned by nature and by man—the violation of the law of compensation, of balance, of reciprocity. He could not. suppose his customer needed charity—for hs expected to pay for the work. Yet, he insulted him by suggesting that he would probably pre- fer to accept free service. That mean suggestion from such a respectable source looked good to the customer and he “went to it.” “Nameless” then com- plains that he “got It in the neck,” for obeying what he calls higher ethics than “business ethics.”" “It is to laugh.” Like all mere tasters and surface think- ers he walks around the perfectly ob- vious thing and loses himself in a maze of, confusion. His line of thought and action as he encountered the occurrences related by him should have been as fol- lows:~When he learned that his com- petitor was offering to give services for nothing to all comers he should have seen that it was not philanthropy, for that can only exist in the presence of recognized need and accompanying lack of power to provide. Hence he should have looked for an ulterior motive, and the merest glance would have sufficed. He should then have held himself pre- pared to expose the same whenever the matter came up unavoldably in the course of business. When his prospective cus- tomer presented himself and desired to recelve any pay for tha service less” should have taken the work and lodged a fair and reasonable charge for it, knowing that no charity was offered by his competitor nor asked by his cus- tomer, nor was in place on his own part. That action would have wrought no fll to any/man, nor violated any rule of business or other ethies. Hera s the whole law: “Do goed al- ways and only, but do it In nature's or- der, viz; first, do good to yourself in compliance with the first law of being. Second, do good to those of your house- hold. Third, do good 1o the neighbor. Fourth, to all mankind. . Do only good.” The ethics of business differ only In one point, viz: That reclprocity (com- pensation) is secured by specific ngree- ment, while in personal and general in- tercourse, good is done to evident need and brings its own recompense of joy; more blessed to give than to re- Let “Namel get some ideals that he understands and then, as says, he stick to them. G. B. THOMPSON, Tips On Home Topics Philadelphia Ledger: Much to the gret of some fanatics, the newspapers have refused to mussie Bryan. They are playing out the rope of publicity and he's doing the rest. Boston 1ranscript: We fear that Mr. Wilson's silver compotiers will not re- move t sting from the reflection that the Bowling Green wedding might have been celebrated in the Fast room. Pittsburgh Dispatch: No matter how strenuous (he fighting in Burope the 4 re- Attend a school with getting maximum results in mum of time and at a low cost. offered in shorthand, bookkeeping, civil service, typewriting, penmanship, the kindred subject at Washington secured. | t employ osition, (NO SOLICITORS) Hastings Business Golleg ‘The Mid-West School, Dept. A, Hastings, Nebraska. WHITTON-CARLISLE SCHOOL FOR GIRLS Primary—Intermediate—High Boarding department limited. Small enough to be a ''Real Home," large enough to be a For cl.(n“f)gue, addle;:. AOWOO%. Section A. Linooln, N OENTRAL v “OSTEOPATHY | COLLEGE OF KANSAS (‘IT\. MO. Write for cat "og and Special Terms. ie Peoples School” h‘c.ule[ people from every rank d trains them for |~ 1gh salaried Dosl! ons as expert sten- secretaries, em: a record for mini- Jourssy and for !nur catalog. Addrun; Spe- cial department for girls from 6 to 13. ne,” and “Renl 8chodl.” RPN T R AR The Nebraska Wesleyan University COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS TEACNERS COLLEGE ACADEMY CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC SCHOOL OF EXPRESSION and ORATORY SUROOL OF ART information and free bulletins, address THEE REGISTRAR, Nebraska Wesleyan University, University Place, Linooln, 'lm For Mr. and Mrs. Crosby Adu.ms Annual Summer Classes for Plano Teachers for the Study of Teaching Material Will Be Held in Montreat, N. 0., June 17-30 o stenograpners 1n | LINOOLN, Neb., July 15.28 Chicago, Ill., August 5-18. | Write for booklet, conmmn! out- line and strong letters from teach- ers who have taken the course. BOX 8, MONTREAT, NORTH CAROLINA, | SEASON 1915, | daonTE 0 Founded in_ 1850, A country school for young ladles ear Philadelphia and New York. Jay Cooke estate, 65 acres. Miss Abby A. Sulher\and Principal. Montgomery Co., Prn N v II'A'I'II Auum Midwinter home, St. Augustine, i Florida. An outdoor, tutorial \ school for boys. Every boy on a team. Address, Chas. Care Reg- is! r, Prairle du Chien, »ll ¥ ST. ANGELA'S ACADEMY, "ferris High-grade boarding school fm“! rls | Directed by sisters of the Holy Cross l Torm! $180 per year. Write for catalog College of Saint Thomas SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA Under the Control and Direction of Archbishop Ireland A CATHOLIC MILITARY COLLEGE Collegiate Commereial Careful Mental, Moral and Religious Training Seven Hundred and Forty Students from Twenty-four States Last Year For {llustrated Very Res. H. MOYNIHAN, D. D., Presideht Academic Preparatory catalogue address [ EXCURSION New York Boston, Mass. ... Portland, Me. . .. Bangor, Me. ...... Alexandria Bay, N, Buffalo, N. Y. Montreal, Que. . Quebec, P. Q. . Toronto, Ont. Kingston, Ont. . Tickets on N Yiformation and Attractive forelgn ambassadors in Washington find altogether irresistible the peaceful joys , of Long Branch, Newport and Bar Har- Yvor, * 407 So. 16th St., Omaba, Neb. Via Illinois Central R. R. To All Principal Points, Via Direct Routes: Atlantic City, N. J. Lake George, N. Y.. Saratoga Springs, N. Y Ohoice of Circuitous Routes to New York and Boston at Slightly Higher Rates, Optional Ocean, Lake and 8. NORTH, District Passenger Agent. FARES EAST -$51.35 48.85 -$47.85 -$49.00 52.55 45.30 (W River Trips. Sale Daily. Literature Freely Furnished,