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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Bee Publishing Company, Proprietor. BER BUILDING, FARNAM AND FVENTEENTH. Entered at Omahs postoffice as second-class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION By carrier By mall per month. Per year. and Sunday... JRR” .80 ] : without Sunday E ning and Sunday e vening _without Sunday.... Sunday Bee only < poss cas o e 2.0 change of address or complainta of Eend notice of irregularity in delivery to' Omaha Bee, Clreulation Department. REMITTANCE Remit by draft, express or postal order. Only two- cent stamps tecelved in payment of small me- counts. Permonal checks, except on Omaha and eastern exchange, not accepted. OFFICES Omaha~The Begpe Pullding @outh Omaha—3i8 N street Council Bluffs—14 North Maln street. LAncoln—2% Little Buflal Chicago—6n Hearst Bull '.“ New York—Room 1105, 386 Fifth avenua Bt. Louis--508 New Bank of Commerce. Washington—13 Fourteenth 8t., N. W, CORRESPONDENCE, vy ‘Address communications relating to Bews a: &fld mum"l‘o Omaba Bee, !aurm Department. JUNE CIROULATION. 53,646 State of Nebraska, County of Douglas, ss t Willlams, circulation manager of The Bes Publishing company, being duly #worn, says that the rage circulation for the month of June, 1915, was DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Cireulation Manager becribed ""J -e':n.m and sworn to before f 3 BERT HUNTER, Notary Publie. mo, this 24 Bubscribers leaving the city temporarily OMAILN, TUFSDAY Carranza's Best Opportunity Another turn in the wheel of Mexico's for tunes has placed the capital city in the hands | of Carranza, and thus gives the “first chief” his best opportunity to make good as a leader. " he is of sufficlent callber he may now bring peace and order to the affairs of his distracted country. He has a splendid advantage in the support of Obregon, who seems to be the near- est approach to a real soldier of the many who have engaged in the turmoil. Carranza has not hitherto shown much capacity for statecraft, but Obregqn may assist him in formulating and en- foreing a policy that will bring about stability in his government. The war over, nor is it likely to be for some time, but the “army’’ now on top may prove strong enough to bring about the settlement all wish for In the meantime, the partisans of Huerta, Villa and | fean public opinion in thelr favor and against Carranza, to thwart his plans for possible peace. S—— Another Problem Ahead of Omaha- The flooding of buildings by a downpour of water in such volume as to overtax the facilities for draining It off directs attention to another problem which Omaha will have to take up before long. In this particular instance the trouble seems to have been purely local to the area affected, and a small area at that, and per- haps such an exceptional rainfall in so short a time cannot be always provided against. The fact Is, however, that Omahba {& taxing the capacity of its sewer system, not so much In the outskirts and residence districts in the down- town center, and this situation is bound to call for measures of relief which should not be too should have The Bee malled to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. July 13 Thought for the Day Selected by Francis S. White ' T's net what man does which exalis him, But what man would do. | ~ Browning's **Seul.” "\ =S Let the weather man please take notice that this is Nebraska, and not Ohlo. Cranks who reveal their doings appear more anxious for publicity than for execution. Lineoln’s new High school has a swimming pool. That ought to solve the washing problem. Political fashion-makers are now modeling the styles for next spring's senatorial chapeaux. e—— Patrons of the golf links at Miller park possess a working knowledge of the BEnglish lenguage and how to use it. — King George has been giving out some war views. What King George does not know about it will fi11 several fat volumes. | It there is & hole in the Dundee treasury, whoee fundls now belong-to the city of Omaha, what are our municipal uthorities going to do about it? —————— Tom Taggart's appeal for justice and a change of venue points unmistakably to French Lick as the ideal spot for a falr trial and a friendly verdict. Complaint comes from the South Platte that the Lincoln Highway is being boomed more than the O. L. D. road. Oh, there is room for both, and glory enough for all! S—— ‘That Christian Endeavor convention which yut the lid on Mr. Bryan's mailed speech ap- preciated his absent treatment sufficlently to veciprocate with “leave to print.” ———— Truly inglorious is the finish of the Ameri- can mules sent to the bottom with the Ar- menian. Pity throbs for a fate which deprived them of the satisfaction of registering a kick on the enemy. D — e — The War Cry fittingly designates a paper A printed occasionally in the French trench title honorably borne by Salvation Army lite ture thus becomes a realistic vehicle of the bus ness at hand. ——— One by one the women peace missionaries are coming home, bringing considerable per- sonal enlightenment. Never before was the suggestion, “Mind your own business,” conveyed with greater courtesy in seven languages. The Bee ventures to repeat that there s nothing whatever in the way of the electric lighting company cutting rates of its own accord 1o the extent that it indicated its willingness to g0 when the rate reduction ordinances were vending. long deferred While the superficial area for surface water remains the same, the extension of our thor- cughfares and the covering with buildings of previously unoccupied lots forces almost all of the rainfall into the sewers, leaving less and less to be absorbed naturally into the earth. Graver still s the increasing pressure on our sewer facilities through the erection of great office and store buildings and large apartment houses, which in effect multiply the area to be sowered as the number of stories {s multiplied, This expansion has been rapid of late years, and is certain to continue, and, without attempting to quote definite rigures, it is a safe assertion that the volume of sewage going through the main outlets is many times what it was when these sewers were first built. A careful survey of Omaha's sewerage system, and of the proba- ble demands to be made upon It, would be some- thing for which the money would be well spent it followed up with enlargement or rebullding of the trunk lines and laterals that are being cutgrown, ———— Scolding the Newspapers. Mr. Bryan is still indulging in his favorite amusement of scolding the newspapers, taking | the comment on the present war situation as a | pretext. He concedes the right of individuals to hold opinions, but he berates the newspaper that expresses one. In the present crisis a nowspaper cannot remain silent without being recreant. It owes to ftself the exprestion of definite views, for it {s the most efficient agency for the formulation and reflection of public opinion. None of the American newspapers are clamoring for war, but through the expressions of all runs a note that is clear and distinet in support of the position taken by the president, and which Mr. Bryan seized as an excuse for abandoning his place in the president’s couneils. Mr. Bryan's present utterances presuppose a condition that does not exist. He would appear in & much better light it he took a little broader view of the situation and did not so insistently demand conformity to his own opinions, Nature's Majestic Exhibition. Some of Omaha's citizens are of such excel- lent condition of body and consclence that they are undisturbed by the wonderful exhibition of power and majesty given by nature during the late watches of Sunday night; but thousands of others were awakened, and for hours viewed such a display of heavenly pyrotechnics at is rarely given to any to witness. Lightning terri- fies and thunder dismays many, but even the most timid could not avold being impressed ‘by the fact that here was unrolled for mai be- wilderment the scroll of one of nature's secrets. We all know that lightning s the result of a discharge of electricity from cloud to cloud, or from cloud to earth; we also know that this electricity is gathered together on the surface of tiny bits of moisture, and as these coalesce to form the raindrop the surface covered by the electricity is reduced, until the surplus is set off | In the vivid flash of lightning that burns a terri- ble white streak across the blackness of the night, and that the thunder follows because of the inrush of the disturbed air to fill vacancy torn by the electrical discharge. Who among us can form any conception of the mighty force that can generate such an elec- tric diecharge as is beyond the capacity of all our human agencies combined, and not only that, but to continue it through hours of so mag- nificent illumination as to fairly awe the least im- pressionable beholder? In the presence of this stupendous show of incomprehensible power we are reminded of the words of the Psalmist, ‘The school board committee on teachers has recom. mended the following list for assignment for the first Vacancies that may oocur: Belle Wilson, Etta Reed, Ada Jones, Bmma Fitch, Margaret L. Gllbert, Villa M. Cushman, Mazelle Bidy, Camille Elliott and Kate A. Given, ‘The boats for the rowing association are beginning to come in, and arrangements are to be made for a srand opening soon. Florence lake s getting to be quite & resort for pleasure parties. Eillis L. Blerbower and his bride returned from a pleasant month's trip east, and are stopping at the present at the residence of Mayor Boyd. Master (George H. Palmer, son of Captain Henry , was in the city today Dr. A. B. Kibbe of Shoshone 1s visiting his brother, L. Kibbe, cashier at the Paxton Mrs. W. A. Whitney has returned to her home Boston after o pleasant visit with Mise Beaton in this city. Best cuts of sirloin are selling at retall for 15 cents, rump and round steak, 12% cents: fresh tomatoes, 18 Pound; peas, 4 cents & peck; egss, 104 i “What is man, that Thou art mindful of him, or the son of man, that Thou visiteth him?" —_— It Mr. Bryan really feels the way he now talks, “that & large majority of the people will heartily approve any step the president may see fit to take,” and approved whatever the pr without so much as inquiring what was to be | proposed. Beveral hundred thousand square miles of German South Africa has been forcibly merged into the Bouth African union by General Botha and his trained voters. The fact that Hottentots esnd Bushmen, comprising four-fifths of the population, held very few of the offices renders the prospect of an appeal remote. People who worship or esteem worldly gods will accept Colonel Bryan's criticlsm with due bumility. Long before the colonel sprang upon the stage a noted frontier deacon thundered from the pulpit: “Don’t do as I do, but do as I tell you.” But trooping cares woo forgetfulness, in Mexico is not ! | the others are busily trying to Influence Amer- | the he, himself, cannot be with the | majority or he would have stayed in the cabinet | ident proposed | eI Y YA ST TR kTR S IR T SRR T IR | | Aimed at Omaha Newman Grove Reporter A short Ume afo An | Omaha man had a letter in The Bee telling how { cheaply he and his family could live. He said they only buy a pound of meat a week and that he edts | all of that because he must have it to p up his | strength for his work He has a wife and five or six ohildren. The only luxury that is bought is tobacco That takes # cents a week and the supposition i | that he uses all of that. Other folks are ing back at him for his selfishness and some ommients that are printed would now com- of the curl the hair on a billy goat. He sald that one way to save money s | for the man to do all the buying and not give hia wife an money This makes the women mad | Holdrege Progress. Omaha democrats have started A campaign to securs the 1918 national convention of their party for that city Omaha is tag enough, has | now excellent hotel facilities and a convention hall that is adequate to the needs of such a gathering. The central location of the Nebraska city, too, should be given great consideration. Some pretty strong democrats live In Omaha and they should be suc- cessful in thelr ambition to get the convention. The state as well as the city would profit immeasurably by their success Fremont Tribune: In view of the fact that two Omaha papers had leading editorfals on the new world's champlon wrestler, Tribune readers wiil doubtiess excuse it for giving editorial attention to the mame subject sinoce Joe Stecher is & Dodge county product Lincoln Star: An Inquisitive member of tha Omaha Board of Fducation has inquired why several hundred dollars should be spent on a laundering out- fit and what the students in washing will find tn wash. 1t 1« A rather startiing query and remains unanswered, although it ia strenuously urged that laundry work is an essential of the domestic economy course. Doubtiess there are a good many Omaha women who have specialized in it without any costly equipment Kearney Hub: The Omaha Hee declares that “In A representative government there is rarely any valid excuses for secret sessions of a public body,” this &eneral remark applying to the Omaha school board and the Omaha water board The Bee suggests “as a starter’ that some member of the school hoard with the courage of his convictions should pro- pose and force a vote on a rule making meetings of the bhoard and to the public Kearney. ite committees open at all times The suggestion might also apply to An Omaha paper says that a little town on the Fourth of July were drivem off their grounds by a bunch cf snakes. Tt could never happen in Silver Creek or | at Cracow, but If Mayor Dahlman was not there ‘t | might have been real snakes. Silver Creek Sand plenie party In that Ashland Gazette: The auto races in Omaha were fairly good, but not near the number of entries.were made that were advertised and in the matter of refreshments, report has it that as high as #c was charged for a bottle of pop. That sort of thing wiil have to be regulated If Omaha expeots to retain the confidence of the country at events of this kind and secure their patronage In the future. Dodge Criterfon: The Omaha attitude has under- gone a change since Joe Stecher has proven himself & winner and an honest man. Now the bunch down at the Nebraska metropolla claim him as their man. Of course it is all right and proper for them to boost a Nebraska product, but up here we sfill re- member how that crowd treated Joe a short time ago. Joe is plenty big enough for the entire state, but we want the Omaha crowd to please remember he is a Dodge boy TLincoln Journal, Not content with the splendhl prospect: of having Billy Sunday in a seven-weeks' performance for the salvation of Douglas county, Omaha is stirring itself for the democratic national convention of 1916. 1If the city becomes what Sunday will endeavor to make it, it will be no place for a democratic convention, state or national. Twice Told Tales Rouxh Tommy. The malls from home had just been recelved by a certain regiment. Not only were there letters, but many parcels from relatives and friends at home for lucky soldiers. One of the Tommles recefved a large box addressed to himself and with a triumphant yell he rushed off to the company's lines and sathered them around him to share in the eagerly anticipated contents of the box “Smokes, lads!" he cried, as he undid the wrap- pings. “From the old man knows it. An' there's sure to be a bottle or two of Scotch.” He opened the box, gave one look at the contents and collapsed in a heap. “What I8 1t*" cried his comrades, pressing around. “It's from ole Aunty Mary,” groaned the disap- pointed warrior. “Bandages an ‘ointment an' em- brocation an' splints, an' a book on 'ow to be your own surgin!'—lLondon Tit-Bits. Divine Spoke by Rote. cannot be too careful in his remarks on some occasions,” sald a young clergyman, in speaking of a tour of Inspecijon which he, in company with oldar divines, made of a penal institution. “The leader of our little expedition, a truly good man, was #0 impressed by what he learned from the story of one young man imprisoned for burglary that he felt he should offer him some encouragement, of what kind he hardly knew. So after many hems and haws, he delivered himself of the following: “‘Ah, my friend, we must not lose sight of the fact that we are here today and gone tomorrow.' You may be, sir. rejoined the burglar, ‘but 1 ain't’'—Harper's Magasine. One People and Events Muenter, alias Holt, was a Harvard A. B. and a he 1s & Corpell Ph. D. Now xus N. G. Men teachers are being tagged at a painful rate | and being sent to the short xrass country in Kansas. | A majority are women Generosity and good will oft yield trouble. Frank Cronkhite of Denver s defendant in a divorce suit his wife alleging that he s too fond of kissing her | five unmarried sisters The bug-hunting son of Lord Rothschild was ex- cluded from & share of the 0,000,000 estate becavna he preferred entomology to Interest rates and kindred rakeoffs. Young Rothey should come west and win | laurels. The wife of former Congressman Victor L. Berger of Milwaukee appears more popular than her partner. Though herself a socialist she bas the support of a majority of her party opponents for the presidency of the Milwaukee school board Gun toting in St. Louls county has been diminished | to ihe extent of 30 revolvers taken from prisoners and ordered destroyed. This will put professionals to the expense of buying new tools of the trade and boost business to that extent The report that Anthony Comstook, vice sleuth of New York, had ceased to be a postoffice inspector, appears to have originated in & change of assignment. Anthony remains on the payroll all right and is able to laugh at the expense of the enemy. The St. Louis Republic, as the result of an ex- | haustive investigation, finds two vital differences in | the makeup of President Wilson and his former sec- retary of state “With Bryan'' says the investigato:, “it s an everlasting toot-toot; with Wileon an oces- sional tut-tut.” Official admirers of the uplift in lowa note with | surprise that widow pensions reach widows who have near relatives well able to provide for them. In of the county superintendents of schools ve n Strong Candidate. 8IOUX CITY, la, July 11.—To the Editor of The Bee: Nineteen hundred and sixteen s not far away the office seek the man” is a good idea to preas int when so many favorite sons who are pushing their own claims are springing up. 1 have covered Iilinois, Let now lowa, Kansas and Nebraska in the iast year and have consulted hundreds of | ®ood republicans as to our duty in 1916 | Almost to a man they say away with | this favorite son business. ( e us Jus | iee Charles tHughes or Elihu Hoot | Nefther of these great men will enter into a scramble or contest with those politictans who can see no further than | their noses. They say it we do not in- | struct those who go to offer the nomi- nation to one of these men, then they mean to vote for Woodrow Wilson. Wil- ®on has grown in the estimation of the people and will never be beaten by some yellow dog. C. 8. HAMMOND. Insints He's Henpecked. VALLEY, Neb, July 11.—To the Kditor ot The Bee: Here's dollars to doughe nuts he's henpecked, and out of the 4 cents a weck she allows him, he buys tobacco and has plpe dreams. And in these pipe drcams, the infernal mascu- line ccmes to the fore—and he dreams that he is a king on his domestic throne, that his wife i& a meek servant to do his bidding; that the best of ever: thing is laid on his piate and through the thick clouds of tobacco smoke (¥ cents’ worth of them) he sees troops of little ohildren sewing on his buttons and mending his socks; and then, when his pipe is empty, he gets up and washea the dishes and does the chores and then sits down again to darn his own eocks and sighs for—for—well, perhape for more tobacco So don't let's jump on him, but rather lot someone ask her to increase his al- lowance. A SYMPATHIZER. Quentions A OMAHA, July 11 Bee: Pleass tell me 1. Vhat is the Ashburton treaty with the United States and England? Why out the War, To the Editor of The was it made? Dia England search 158, why? 3. Why does England put an embargo on foodstuffs to Germany? 4. Can the United States send mer- chandise to Germany ? A READER. 1. The Ashburton treaty was negoti- ated between the United States and Great Britatn by Daniel Webster and Lord Ash- burton at \ashington in 154z It adl- justed the boundary between the United States and northeast Canada, the United States securing about ‘seven-twelfths of the territory in dispute 2. The right of search was one of the causes of the war of 1812 with Great Britaln, but was not wholly remedied by the treaty of Ghent, which ended that war. In the succeeding years up to 1860 both the United States and Great Brit- ain exercised the right of search for the our ships in purpose of suppressing traffic in Afri- can slaves. 3 England's embargo (In the nature of a blockade) on foodstuffs to Germany Is in pursuance of a policy of “‘economic pressure” as a factor in war. The avowed object i@ to force Germany to rely wholly on its own productive re- sources to sustain its people throughout the war. 4. Goods may be shipped from the United States to Getmany or any other warring_country, at shipper's risk. In Defense of Palm Reading. COUNCIL BLUFFS, July 1L—To the Editor of The Bee: I would like to reply to what Horace P. Holmes, M. D., says in today’s Bee regarmding his so-callod demonstration in palmistry. In the first place, he claims to have become so impressed by the reading of a noted palmist that he determined to mas- ter the art. But because he falled to learn, he winds up by saying there is nothing to it. Now, to f{llustrate the absurdity of a claim he makes, let me tell you a lttie story. On July 3 Mr. Brown with an open letter in his hand comes into the pres- ence of his wife and daughters and makes this statement: ‘“Listen here, this letter says that Brother Tom and his wife and family will be here this afternoon on the 4:20 train. and will #tay over the Fourth with ua. Now don't you think that his wife and daughters flew about pretty lively pre- paring for their company, till one of them happened to see the letter. which really read as follows: BLANKVILLE, July 2-Dear Brother: If John Smith happens to pay me the $50 he owes me, which 1 don't think he can, and he woundn't if he could, and ¥ the children, who are all down sick with the measles, get well In time, we will go to see Vou tomorrow. arriving on the 4:% train, and will stay over the Fourth with you, providing Sam Jones will drive us the rallroad station. six miles from here, which I don't see how he can, be- cause one of his horses s lame and the hack is broken down. Yours truly, TOM BROWN Now, in describing his investigation, Dr. Holmes says: I have Cheiro’s “Lan- wuage of the Hand” before me. and re- garding tho life line it says of full length, it promises a long life; if it were brokenm, it meant death according to the position of the break'.' Now, the way it really reads, page 0, In Cheiro's “Language of the Hand." Is as follows The line of life shouM be long. narrow, deep, without irregularities, breaks or crosses of any kind: euch a formation promises long life: ete. Note (he varied and many attributes which a long life line should possess if it signifies a long life. Neither Cheiro nor any other of the numerous authorities on palmistry claim that merely a long life line signifies a long Itfe; there must be other favorable markings. The so-called lifo line i= in reality more of & health line, while the bracelets of life tell the length of our natural ltves One cannot learn all of palmistry from the books Cheiro has written, but should wlean truths from the half dozen other #ood works on palmistry T have scarched the libraries of a num- ber of cities for certain points in paim- istry which I have falled to find: but is i\ not so with any deep subject—one must lieep on wseeking knowledge® Often people seeking readings are very unreasonable and almost expect the palm- ist to tell the oolor of thelr grandmother’s eyelashes, or how many forty-second cousins they have. But a scientific palm- ist is not & clairvovant nor spiritualist nor & witen, but a student of one of the most wonderful “truths to be proven" that this old world affords. LETTIE F. BARTLETT. _— Was Original Salt Creek. Boston Transcript: Sclentists have dis- covered that Nebraska once lay at the bottom of the sea, thus conftrming the diagnoais that the Platte was the'original Bak Creek. I it was | | | " “What was his defense : That he was hot." Nebraska Editors Then the Judge did right to put bim in the cooler. —Baltimore American Fditor J. Frank Lants of the Hildreth LIBERTY BELL. Teleacope. acoompanied by hie wite. has | . . - Sy sl ik ’ o in West V ve only one story. I've only o kone to his old home in West Virsinia | g0\ o, hear it, my children, when pass for an extended vacaticn teip. He says ing along? this f& his second offense in nineteen | Did you hear no faint echo of thought that depicts years. Those long ako days of Seventy-Six | The Chadron Journal last week printed | & fine thirty-two page illustrated edition |1 Wa8 born in those days when men B8 4 pag were oppressed reviewing splendid progress made by | When the hearts of the nation were | Chaa Py ty in the few filled with unrest sy Bhcse Mmoo Bhogge Ml .| When your ancestors bent 'neath the years of their existenca. Among its many | Coe of b Finee: good features s a And knew not the joys that liberty well written history | | of the county, illustrat with portraits brings. of nineteen men and women ploneers. | Byt tyranny's yoke, growing heavy at who are still residents of Chadron Wl et 150 2 declare that the day of oppres- Grand Tsland Independent: A newspaper | TneY declared the . & man of Blain has become Involved in & | That freedom wasa' right; by that right o unple > y mersly by they were free; lot of unpleasant notorlety merely by |y tidl"Rould be land of man's Iib- reason of the fact that some thieves | sy selected his automobile as the object | s ERAe of the activities and the unfortunate | 1\"’1:'“'}";:(';"(‘“ bt €% ot o) et editor is having a series of spasms in | gent the first word of liberty out throuzh efforts to explain how he became| o theland. o U0 ow they ch e o possessed of it In the firet place AL L BB Enraptured they hung on the words that 1 spoke! LINES TO A SMILE. And T rung out in clarion tones. How I rung' I spoke Boss (to new boy)—Your're the slowest voungster we've ever had. Aren't you with the orator's silver-tipped q k at anything? tongue. s g Boy—Yes. sir: hobody can get tired as| 1 raised my voice gladly, and to all the quick can.— ranscript world, i e e Far out on the air the great tidings [ hurled Tt was carried from city to hamlet and | town. | Through valley and plain, up mountains and down; This greatest of words they entrusted to me My volce spoke the word and the nation was free I stand for the plans and the works of your sires I stand for vour country, your hopes and desires I stand for a future when every man's son | Shall 1ive in the freedom that 1 saw be- - | gun. You say that this lad's dog bit | Will you relate to the court just [ And when vou are singing “The Land of Judge you. what vou were doing when that event | the Free,” took place? | Remember that freedom was first voiced Book Agent—Your Homor, I_wae cover- | in me. g territory.—Pennaylvania Punch Bowl. | And my tongue, thoush silent, forever ey | depicts “Here's an mccount of a man who was|The hearts of the people of Seventy-Sx arrested and fined for stealing fce cream, | Omaha DAVID. Heat» a Menace to Lives of Old Folks Sickness and Misery Are Caused by Constipation In Hot Weather Peaple of advancing years should be very careful of thelr health during the hot months. One has only to follow the mortality record of elderly pecple as re- ported in the papers, to realise that these are the hardest months of the year for them. It 13 most important to the mainte- nance of health and vigor at this time to avold constipation, with ite accom- panying headaches and muscular and blood congestion. This can be best ac- complished by the timely use of a gentle laxative, such as Dr. Caldwel's Syrup Pepsin, an ideal remedy that is pleasant to the taste, easy and natural in its action and does not gripe. Its tonic prop- erties bulld up and strengthen the sys- tem. Flderly people should avold strong physics, cathartics, purgatives, salts and pllls as these afford only temporary re- lief and are a shock to the entire system. In every home a bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin should always be on hand. It is inexpensive and can be obtained in any drug store for only fifty cents, For a free trial bottle write to Dr. Cald- well, 43 Washington St., Monticello, Iil. S LTS Spend Your Vacation in the CHEQUAMEGON BAY DISTRICT of Lake Superior Chequamegon Bay is one of the most delightful out- ing sections of Upper Wisconsin—the Apostle Islands and shores of the mainland are dotted with cottage colonies. Nearby are the cities of Ashland, Wash- burn and Bayfield. There is good trout fishing and delightful excursions among the islands—and the finest place in the world to Just rest. HAY Immediate relief—just board a Chieago and North Western train for Chequamegon Bay and say good- FEVER bye to Hay Fever. Ex i $21.75 from Omaha to Bayfield, Ashlani | CUrBIOn 40 urn and réturn. Ieave Omaha 6:45 Fares P. M. or 5:05 P. M. and arrive at Chequamegon Bay the following afternoon or spend a few hours fn the Twin Cities and Jeave on the Twi- Aight Iimited arriving at Chequamegon Bay in the evening For accommodations and any detalled informa- Accommo- {107 “Girers L. A Herriow, Secretary Commer. Olub, Ashland, Wis., or Mrs. D. O. Bell, dations Bayfield, Wis. | Our Outing Booklet Upon Request [ JOHN MELLEN, Gen, Agt. Pass'n Dept. 1401 Farnam St, Omaba, Web. 5 A SRR ARRER AR RERRRER RO RO il OLD RE LIABLE DEALER AS 222. OMAHA NEB As well be out of the world as out of style. HORLICK'S| The Original MALTED MILK SR AT The advertising columns of The Bee constitute a continuous style show.