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VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Bee Puhnnnlng (‘omplny. Proprietor, BEE BUILDING, FARNAM A Entered at Omahs postoffice as se: TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION By carrier per month By mall per year. and Sunday....... By “without . Sunday enitg and Sunday Evening_without Sunday. Sunday Bee only e, .00 Bend notice of change of address or complaints of frregularity in delivery to Omaha Bee, Girculation Department. REMITTANCE. Remit by draft, express or postal order. Only two- ©cent stamps received in payment of small ae- eounts, Personal checks, except on Omaha and eastern exchange, not accepted. OFFICES. a—The Buflding. ulh Omlhn 18 N street ouncil Bluffe—14 North Main street. incoin—% Little Bullding. Chicago—-801 Hearst Bullding. New York—Room 1105, 286 Fifth avenue & Louis--608 New Bank of Commerge. ‘ashington—7% Fourteenth 8t, N. W. CORRESPONDENCE, communications relating to news and edle matter to Omaha Bes, Sditorial Department, JUNE CIROULATION. 53,646 State of Nebraska, County of Douglas, circulation mnnuz.r of Th. Bee Publiabing company. betng dul t th © lnY> being duly sworn, sa . nfl" nn for the month of June, l.".l. was DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Cireulation Manager. fimfl.fl in my nnn\l and sworn to before me, this 24 day of July ROBERT HL'I\TP'R Notary Publie. Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee malled to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often gs requested, Thought for the Day Selected by Mary G. Andrews O may I ioin the choir ble Of those immertal dead, who live again In minds made better by their presence; live In pulses stirred by generowity, In deeds of daring rectitude, in scorn For miserable aims that end with self, In thoughts sublime that pierce the night like stars, And with their mild permstence urge men’s search To vaster issues. —@eorge Eliot, _ “Americans Love money." are others. Sure! But there —— Omaha again leads the world as a sheep market. Omaha has a lot of world records. my— John Wanamaker would have Uncle Sam buy Belgium for the Belgians. How about Mexico for the Mexicans? — Minister of Munitions Lloyd George appears 10 be the most successful strike-breaker who ever received the glad hand from union men. n-uémw«-qmmnoocm;- ha's population. Some of the guesses that are belug put out are so wild as to be more harm- ful than helptul i —— is just one way to keep out of debt fo the municipal household as in the private household, and that is to stop the expense bill below the revenue line, Ee————— A revolution in shoes from gay to sober colors s promised for next fall. The change will rescue from the garret Dr. Hale's famous admonition: “Look up, not down.” ' E—— Chautauqua circuits which will arrange for Joint debates between Colonel Roosevelt and Colanel Bryan will not only arouse the sporting blood, bat will require extra hands to count the e—— Grand Duke Nicholas at Moscow announces is no doubt of a final and complete Russian arms, Moscow Is 300 miles trenches, and distance guaran- HE o { li; f i;?{ ? former president of Venesuela, slnt as cold g welcome in the sub-tropical West Indies as Huerta, the former presi- of Mexico, mm in tl. temperate United States, i Just the same it would not be & bad idea for the various civic organizations who from time to time voice complaints about expensive local government to get in om the bhudget estimates THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. Neutrality Ueber Alles! The long delayed Jarring of the federal patronage plum tree so eagerly awaited by the Nebraska faithful is at last a fact, disclosing the president still entrenched in a position of neutrality. The relative strength of the battle line of the belligerent democratic factions remains un- changed except by advance of each side into ramparts evacuated by republicans Here are the political war' bulletins: Colonel Bryan has been permitted to deploy a detach- ment of his forces under Brother-in-law “Tommy'’ Allen into the distriet attorney's head- quarters, and to send a flank scouting party led by Judge Loomis to take possession of the in- ternal revenue supply depot. From the opposite side, Herr Fieldmarshal von Hitehcock has been signalled to move his fleet of prairie schooners, commanded by Ad- miral “Tom"” Flynn, into the protected harbor known as United States marshal’s point, and to lceate his personal military aide? Sub-Ldeuten- ant McCune in the customs house lookout. Honors are easy! Odds are even' No one loses any ground except the undeserv- ing republicans, and the requirements of presi- dential neutrality fully observed. In the mean while, the democratic ammuni- tion factories are working over time ghells and ink-filled shrapnel and the noise of the sharpening of the spears and the whetting of the knives may be heard in both camps, | Future of Manufacturing. | Not all of American energy is now being de- voted to the manufacture of war materials, al- though for the present that department of in- dustrial activity seems to overshadow the more iniportant and beneficial undertakings that are going forward. All lines of Industry are renew- ing life, and many that had languished because of foreign competition are coming to the front. This I8 especially true of chemicals, dyes and some other articles, for the supply of which America had come to depend on Germany. The advance in these lines will be more rapid when & very important factor has been decided. American makers are asking that they be given some assurance that their investments in new plants will not be jeopardized by foreign activi. tles when the war is over. A Michigan chemical comparly reports its experience of a few years ago to illustrate this point. It began the ex- port of a bromlide, and was informed by German manufacturers that for every pound of the American-made article exported, Germany would send two pounds to this country. And the threat was realized; Germany did send the brom- ide to the United States, paid the 25 per cent duty and undersold the Michigan manufacturers in the home market. Other American firms had had similar experience, and it is against this sort of competition they ask for protection. Plants for the making of war munitions are not. to be permanently devoted to such uses, are virtually owned by the government to whose order they have been built, and will only revert to the American companies at the end of the war. Until Buropean industry can be reorgan- ized, the United States will continue & heavy ex- perter, but when the shops of the countries now &t war can again be started up, the battle for industrial supremacy will be renewed. Even the democrats are becoming impressed with the vital necessity of making provisions for the fostering of American industries after the war, but the free trade policy of that party i# too firmly rooted to give the manufacturers the complete assurance of protection they must have. The republican party is traditionally de- voted to the bullding up of home factories, and will surely meet and solve this problem in the only effective way. Another Model Town. Anchorage,' the new town that will be the water-side terminal of the rallroad the federal government 18 to construct in Alaska, Is to be a nmodel town. At least that is the word sent out from there, under approval of the officlals in oharge of the project. Just what model it is to follow is mot vouchsafed, other than the inferen- tial information that it will not be on the lines of early day Alaskan mining camps. ‘“‘Model” on gas | THE towns are not & novelty, nor have they been uniformly successful. In far-gone antiguity, it was the easy practice of a conqueror to set the conquered at work, erecting a ‘“‘model” eity to tuke the place of the one he destroyed, and from deop buried ruins archaeologists have exhumed records that give us marvel. In modern times the experiment has not so often been tried. Con- stantinus built a model city and called it Con- stantinople, and Gibbon tells us it fell to pleces in & comparatively short time after it was brought into being. Whether this proves the fallacy of the idea, or that the builders of that time were grafters, may be open to speculation. George M. Pullman built & model city for his workmen, but later had to give over the idea, and allow the individuals to have their own way. Russia founded a model city at Port Arthur, but the Japanese interference with its full develop- ment, leaves unsettied any question that might have been attached to its future. Uncle Sam has proved himself in many ways the superior of Nebuchadnessar, Cyrus, Alexander, Con- stantinus or any of that lot of builders, and his work is generally done with more of real thor- oughness than that accomplished by Russia, so Anchorage may yet stand to the world as an ex- ample of what may be done by a government when it sets out to provide a model. EE—— The “almighty dollar” justifies the designa- tion. Tt has become the prince of world colns and is growing in importance daily. In exchange rates the dollar now Is worth $1.02 In Bnglish money, §1 in French money, $1.17 in Ger- men, $1.18 in Ialian, $1.33 In Russian and $1.84 in Austrian money. If the world war goes far into the second year the ascent of the dollar may take it out of sight of forelgn money. SEme—pp—— Old Culebra is sliding some more and mock- ing attempts to send warships through to a Ban Francisco holiday, As long as this jelly-like mountain resents the surgery of man, the Panama canal will not fultill the hopes or justify the cost. ’ S——— 1t is no surprise to learn that the warehouse luw s defective. The Influences which bur- rledly wl it inte llnn were more anxious to serve ebds than anything else. BE SATURDAY OMAHA, JULY Should Cousins Marry? Literary Digest HAT the marriage of kin, despite the conclusions of some high authorities, may be attended with no evil resuits, save when both stocks are weak, I8 the thesis defended by the late Dr ship of the University of London, paper printed in The Journal of Heredity of marriage between blood relations, he notes, upon which there has been mich diversity of opinion, Baward Nettle- doubtless often based upon the experiences of certain from individual single families. Those who object experfence, would perhaps be surprised to find, Dr. Nettleship says, that the children of cousins some- times show decided improvement upon their parents In short, upon which we may well seek more greater clearness of thought. such marriages knowledge and “The fundamental questions are (1) whether the offapring of consanguineous parents diaplay inferior or degenerate characters in larger proportions than de the offspring of unrelated parents? an effect can be shown, And (9, If such 18 the appearance of these undesirable characters attributable to something pro- duced de novo by the union of parents related In blood, but who themselves contain fo trace of such characters, either manifest or hidden? fects only a result of both parents being tainted, b | not tainted badly enough to show? “The second question Is not merely academic. For If consanguinity can produce something bad, good, or “It must be said at once that the data for answer- Ing the first question upon statistical grounds do not exist, because no one up to the present time has Leen able to obtain suffielently accurate returns of the relative number of consaguinesus and unrelated mar- riages “As 10 the second question: Are the defocts some- times observed in the offspring of comsanguineous parents due to the consanguinity as such or, on the other hand, to both parents being tainted? “In regard to the de novo origin of defects in chil- dren of cousin parentage, we find Charles Darwin stating his bellef as follows, after having devoted much attention to the mubject: ‘I hope to show in a future work that consanguinity by itself counts for nothing, but acts solely from related organisms hav- ing a similar constitution, and having been exposed in moat cases Lo similar conditions:' and ‘a recent autherity, Prof. J. Arthur Thomson of Aberdeen, con- siders that ‘the idea that there can be any objection to the marriage of two healthy cousins who happen to fall in love with each other is preposterous.’ Many similar, and also some, but I think a diminishing number of, opposing opinions might be cited. ““What, then, is the origin of the view, or at least the suspicion, held by many, that consanguineous unions are injurious as such? Without going back to the early history of marriage coustoms and prohibl- tions—a task I am not competent to undertake—it Is, I think, enough to say that the early Christian church appears to be chiefly responsible for the existing resi- due of prejudice against the marriage of cousins. The chureh put its ban upon consanguineous unions—at first in connection with the cult of asceticism and celibroy; later, hecause it was able by the sale of indulgences to make money by allowing consanguin- eous couples to break the canonical rules for a con- sideration. That this was so Is confirmed by the sub. sequent extension of the prohibitions to various affini- ties, or even accidental associations, between persons not related at all by blood. Of course, other causes have been and arg still at work in both encouraging and discouraging consan- guineous marriages. Dr. tidahip thinks that the most operative cause of hostility to these unions is the confuson between inheritance of a defect from two slightly tainted but apparently normal parents and the supposed creation of an entirely new thing by union between those of related blood. For instance, it among the children of reemingly normal cousins there should be some born deaf and dumb, no surprise need he felt if the cousinship, as such, is blamed; although inquiry might have found cases of the same malady in ancestors or collaterals, To quote further from Dr. Nettleship's discussion: “That consanguinity of parents repeated through many generations s compatible with the maintenance of a high standard of health and vigor (mental and bodily) is demonstrated by well known instances, “Of course, plenty of examples are to be found where an excessive proportion of diseased and de. generate is found among the offspring of cousin parenta. But these prove mo more than that If such degeneracies exist in the stock they may be trans- mitted. “That inbreeding. very much closer in degree and repeated far more often than anything in modern human soclety, does not necessarily lead to degener- acy, but quite the contrary, s shown by the history o? modern breeds of dJomestic animals. For it is of course admitted not only that the marvelous im- provements effected during the last 150 years in the breeds of horses, oxen, sheep and pigs—to name only the more important kinds of live stock—have been reached by careful selection of the individuals possess- in the characters desired; but that, as we are con- stantly told, the only way to securg and fix such desirable characters is to earry out this crossing ot near relations. “I think, therefore, we may conclude that mar- riages between cousins dre 48 safe from the eugenic point of view as any other marriages, provided the parents and stock are sound. “The difficulty, of course, both for consanguineous and out-marriages s to decide upon this vital point: and as for obvious reasons the family history Is more likely to be forthecomi for . pair of cousins than for an unrelated pair, we haye here a part explana- tion of the aversion to cousin-marriage met with in some families. This explanation will tell with spe- clal force If the disease or defect is relatively rare, for then It will be more ltkely to occur, though in a latent form, in two cousins than in two strangers But if the defeot apprehended be a frequent one, e. tuberculosis, the chances of the hereditary lability to it befng present In both parents and intensified in their children may be much the same whether the parents were cousins or mot. People and Events A Chinese girl who ia looking for “the perfect man™ has landed in S8an Francisco. She has the right siant, but the perfect man is already engaged. Johnny Bradley, milllonaire sport of New Yorlk, explains that he is not financing Doe Cook's Himalyan * venture. A Philadelphia editor who undertook 10 reduce ex- cessive fatness is. & dead one. He worked himselt down from 206 to 131 pounds, when the undertaker took Bradiey knows when enough Is A-plenty. him in hand. Charles Erbach of Summit, N. J., German born, has just married Miss Eunice Holmes, & full blooded Cherokee. The Teuton and the American make a great combination. The wife of a jobholder on the New York City payroll, in her application for divorce, swore that he broke & mirror on her head, chased her with & rasor, slapped her with & revolver, hit her with a ferndish and tore her clothes. Outside of these tentperamenta) defects he is & falr sort of a fellow. In a recent speech at Atlantie City, Richmond P. Hobson announced that the pins are all set to ditch the one-term plank at the democratic national con- vention, nominate President Wilson and leave the “wet" and “dry” question for state settlement. More- over, Hobson sald, Bryan would support the ticket and Richinond s a Tipping Proceeds in the usual way in Des Moines the tipsters a rus for the money, enfranchised women. Four of the law's “you must not.’ in a posthumons The subject is ons he ventures to think that the subject is one He goes on to say of Or are the de- | JheDees Brief contributions on timely topios invited. The Bee assumes no responsibility for opinions of All lettors sub. Dangerous Pools in the Parks. OMAHA, July 2.—To the Editor The Bee: Commissioner Hummel to evade any responsibility brought ot by not have enough men to look after the entire park This is no doubt a very good reason, but it seems rather queer that these dan- xerous places should be sllowed to exist. The fact that there are not enough supervisors and that children will always play jn water when an opportunity pre- ments itself, ought to have been suf- ficient warning for Mr. Hummel to have done away with these dangerous places, WALTHR SRITZER, Corn Exchange Natlonal Bank. Selence Will Change AL | KEARNEY, Neb., July 23.—To the Edl- tor of The Bee: I am a sclentist, and there is no secret so great that cannot be solVed In time. 1 indifferent that never occurred before in the | 7T JH L NS S Ane N A genealogy, then no cousin marriage is safe. But Jf it P SOUREGN IRAS (ha INFIAIEY is only a case of inherltance from bot# parents, a | %8 & £ood many mistakes. I know tainted palr who have no community of blood will, sy | 't Will not be long until an army of far as we know, be as likely to have undesirable | 200 to 0,00 men can be killed by a oftspring as I they were tainted ecousins. while | MAChine constructed from the rays of the cousins Who are free from taint will be expected to | ®Un. and electric airships will be used for | vield normal children that purpose. So T. R.'s army would not last long when this machine comes into use. J. H. CARLSON Keep the Public Library Open. OMAHA, July To the Fditor of The Bee: 1 want to commend The Bee for making a strong protest against the early Saturday eclosing of the Omaha public tibrary. The people who derive benetit from the public who are compelled to day time and who can selves of its privileges during the even- Ing. Closing the library at 2 p. m. on turday will therefore deprive a large portion of our people of the advantages of an Institution which they support lib- erally through taxation. The citizens of Omaha are proud of their well equipped library, which repre- sents an investment of more than $500,~ 000, and the taxpayers are deeply Inter- ested In seeing that it accomplishes the &reatest possible amount of good for the people. We have the plant, consisting of the bullding and the books, so why not give those who are paying the bills every op- portunity to use it. Let us hope that the Library board will see the error of the early closing iden and proceed to keep the library open as many hours as possible each day, so that those who are unable to go to the library during the day time may havo the benefit of the heavy investment made by the people of Omaha. C. A. BAUMGARDNER. the greatest library are those work only avail them: Indignant Wife's Happy Lot. OMAHA, July 23.—To the Editor of The Bee: To “H' of Council Blutfs, many thanks for the boost. You are entirely right, for I have never attended a card party in my life, and as for you betting & load of wheat, my friend, it would be entirely safé, for we do certainly enjoy our evenings together. During the day I devote my time to the care and comfort of the bables and at night they are put to bed, and my time is devoted to the comfort and pleacure of the good hubby. When the lawn needs mowing, as P. G. states, of course, I don't do it. It fsn't expected of me, but 1 do the raking and shearing around the walks, In fact, with us, married life is a business partner- #hip, In which we both have our full share of rights. Our motto is “‘Look on the bright side and be a help to each other.”” We are both only in our twentles, spend a long, 80 hope and expect to pleasant life. THAT INDIGNANT WIFE. TILDEN, Neb., July of The Bee: Brother, “Another Tourlst Printer,” has evidently been “‘Seeln’ Type- lice,” or had been “run up on the dead hook;" having become so omni-important that he has split off the United States from the rest of the globe to make a little moon for himself; thus having be- come a fullfledged Chauvinist; having on his blinders of prejudice that he, with one word denominates all the rest of the world as waste and its inhabitants as despleable ‘‘furriners;” thus accoutered he Is rounding the corner to Jingoville hooked to his Pharisaical cart, “I'm the only 1t Verily “Jeshurun has waxed fat and kicked" his mother square in the face, and is still kicking, until there is nothing left of himself but ears and bray. (For his ancestors could not have been the original Choktaws or Flatheads, for they have already accepted the ways of the white man, or he must appertain to the Digger Indian, who dresses him- #elf with sunshine and rakes his mour- ishment out of an anthill with a crooked stiek, makes faces at civilization and gurgles at progress). The most of the rest of uUs or our ancestors came over In the Mayflower or at a later date, to & land, which we are all willing to label the best on earth, for It is the cosmo- politan melting pot of the globe and has already become the miniature, for most of what we have here has been Imported, except a few trinkets that the Digger Indian has left lying around the marshes. The United States, great as it is, never- theless is the daughter of Mother Wurope, for we cannot even boast of a language of our own—we brought that from across the briny deep (except the gurgle and grunt of the Digger Indian), likewise our Jurisprudence came via the old world from the Mosalc cods, while science, art, music snd phllosophy are only appro- priated from other realms. Therefore it will not be.so easy to push this des- picable “furriner” from our decks, who has ages of history and progress be- hind him—for we who appertain to the Caucasian race find that we or our an- cestors have been emigrants—and there were none of the languages, systems or customs here when they came, except those of the aborigines. We do not “forget the rock from whence we were hewn.” There may be a fow mushrooms pop up, and call all thelr own, that they can get their feet on or survey with the green eye of prejudice, verily, “A fly sat on a chariot wheel and said, what & dust I do raise” We have no sympathy, brother, with that forelgner who comes here and de- preciates everything: we will indeed assist you in deporting him, but we have far leas regard for selfish “knownothingism™ ~To the Editor them cavorting in the waters at Manmhattan went to | that appropriates the gifts that have the rescue of an imperilled bather and brought to | been brought from all parts of the globe the dry sands the Hmp form of Jerusha Ann Maria | to the pot, proudly proclaiming June Tompkina. Jerusha was rolled on & barrel and | them as “his own™ and basely maligning tries | the coroner with the excuse that he does | during the | universal world fn | donors—"‘What hast thou, | that hath not been given thee?' We have seen a few self-centered per- sons who bullt high-board fences be- | tween themselves and their nelghbors— but they are now dead—but their ohil- dren broke down the fence and have found the children of their fathers' anathemas friends, cuvitured, and have joined in business and intermarried, and now they wonder why their parents could have been so narrow as to rob them- selves of this great benefit? | BSuch will have to “Git off the earth themeelves,”” for the spirit of ‘‘untversal brotherhood special” is on the way. “Roll | up your tepee” for the last time and ac- the © man, | cept the place In the universal family. The days of the raider, pirate and brigand are about over, every man is my brother, he needs me and I need him. Universal brotherhood and the open door. POLY GLOT. SMILING LINES. “Do you regret, nald the Judge, “havirie ) l¥l|o¢l the pedestrian ol d the confirmed player, with tears in bis eyes, T do. If he hadsit ot in the way have made that hole in one less than bogle. —J “1 think well of your hotel, Mr. Land- lord,” said the (ve visitor to the Squeehawkett Mountain house. "Now as to your table. F you any special attractions to offer “Wo sure have, gpllod the landlord, with_enthustasm. u( in the United States Vldi nl -“{m'!q' [ dlvm.flw"h & numl ___Omah Washin, returning lron. to cago and o . VL. boat to N Jnhlu. snd‘:n B n to Chlcu'o—thvn Montreu w deiphia; Baftimore, hicago ... ington and Pittsburg to Omaha ta Chie Buffalo to Montreal ,l extra) on, returning through Ro\urnln‘ vifl IQM'L to Noi k. Vl.. and b returning via Montreal, Bu Omaha to Bt 1 or stone or Glacter B!ILI 0 Heattle u»d lln Salt Lake City, Denver . Sm Francisco, Lake, Scenic Colo Any of the P35 vatation tripswith ait Variety, the spice of life. tours, tlon of your patronage and 1s83 proudly —Young® 1A nmhu:‘xanu of thunder in th‘ bR e lad CI ide a satisfactory destination, No urt of Any of v unEoided "and this AL b Hm Area ’a- of Over One Hundred Circle T.-rl maha __to leaw— H(ubnrl. ‘Wheell: ashin; luln wedalo, Now mzlnnd to Montr 0! lagara or Detm t ”2% Omaha t York, return vl?mé{hh. Baltimore lcago and home . 0—thenc t. Lawrence lown through New Enj ew York line and N astes VI8 individual toothbrush and & bottle of molarine with every siice of huckleberry ple. L Philadeiphia Ledger. A negro died without medioal attend- ance and the coroner went to investigate “Did Samuel Willlama live here?’ he uked the weeping woman who answered he_door, "Yu- '* she replied between sobs “‘May I ’L—l remains?’ ssked coroner. ‘“I s de remaina” she amswered, the ()h. IMM creaturs of the forest deep! thou reveled in the mountain eop— ’l‘hlne own true habitat—one with £till universe, n 'hleh thy lot was cast!' How hllt thou stalked the valley, head “I!h senses all alert, when whades of night Had brought the bright stars glistening overhead; The od thy the brush scarce erackling tread ; ‘neatl throat ; d blowing through thy heavy Thy glorious coat, thine own inheritance From Giver of all gifts; thp wide expanse or mounmn stream and sky thine only To have Ahd hold by right of birth and power. Oh, untamed creature of the wilderness! Thy feet no more lha ylelding earth shall press; No moro ‘shalt roam the forest, free us | Nor -.‘.k thy home in some deep jungle Thy lwlu jaws with dazzling teeth be twee Cause ‘me no terror with thelr life-like mien For never more 1I'll see thee stretch afla rise, Nor see the fire of life shine m thine eyes. Thy snarling mouth no longer fear in- spires; Thine eyes shine only with reflected Thy cumu—r-uu form can waken fear no 1t upon my oor, A rich fur rug, whereln my slippered oo Find comfort and delight and 1;ny com- plete. ~DAVID lies Gutatretched cottage Omaha. Popular Circle Tours Go one wsv. return another pursuing its policy of ‘p'ir? 'OURS. ovide these tou ond i Dew Scenss are com- fl! tional expense. via Cincinnati, Pit l'!o‘n"‘ B?alllmon to Nnflfllkhfllmwéléw Columbus. or_Baltdmore to Norfolk. via_Detroit, N\Ann F\Il land to New York, ntllrn.ln ashington, Pittsburg and 9() Bu ash- Detroit, Niagara Falls, ‘housand sl t trip land to Bos- tate - w York Cit+ Bai ‘ashington or o_to New o .IO Norfolk _to Bo.t(?n, $5 4 0 and Niagara . is—thence via Yellow- eapol rk-orvhcsn-dh.nnoe !c-nlc stone or ?)Iui-r Nuuonu hrn or Spokane, Seattle and Puge Bound to_Po; 3 Dnnvar to l'flln ntur:i e okt 454 $50.00 ence via Yellow- Vh. Ouudhn Rockles, hnd. ng'r:ninl via PR 4.45 above may A.t Ssame price—also & f nofllr clrcl. mm Ineluduu’flflv. Great sailing expenses has been infused Get in touch with us for lar ouun It is our busi- o 35 d2USh th e £ proslas oo, ence. o our oircle We want a continua- . F. BONORDEN, C.P. & T. A,, Stroet, Chic [ (lg() S, Circle Tours New York, Boston and the East —Via Rock Island Lines— Choice of Nearly Fifty Different Circle Tours to Choose From East, allowing o via the Great Routing includes principal cities, points of interest and popular resorts of the ional steamer trips es, St. Lawrence River and Thousand Islands, Lake Champlain and Hudson River; also sound steamer between Boston, New York and Norfolk, Va., and others. Round Trip Tickets on Sale Daily— 60-Day Limit Detalled information concerning rates and routes on request. J. 8. McNALLY, D. P. A, 14th and Farnam, W. w. beer of quality When you order Krug you will not only get a but also an oppor- tunity to obtain a free premium by saving coupons. ‘Phone Douglas 1880, LUXUS Mercantile Company, Din_ttibutou