Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 10, 1915, Page 4

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P e — THE BEF: OMAHA, FRIDAY, JPTEMBER 10, 191 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE “"FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Bee Publishing Company, Pronrlato_r.__ BEE BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Entered at Omahs postoffice as second-class matter. TER OF BUBSCRIPTION. - By carrier By mall per month. Per year. and Sunday. RN e 98,00 ‘without Bes only.... o udh e, ks 2..' notice changs ress or complaints o m:m to Omaha Bee, Circulation REMITT. ived ks, ANCE. drafe, or postal order. Only two- S e & Fil s S &. not scoepted. P g, mefl ffe—14 i;‘lrm Hm street. earst Buj X Room 1106, 386 avenue. Fresd S Y CORRESPONDENCE, commumicati. w and B Rt o Cmane Do Pepariment. AUGUST OIRCULATION, 53,993 of Nebraska, County of Douglas, se: } SR Smiiuy Heniel s T B com 0 y avera circulation fornfi!a month of August, was hm'?‘l"'r WILLIAMS, Clrc::luol u':'u:im hacri| in 08 Al sworn to vyl '?fié xm& Notary Publio. Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee mailed to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. —_—————— Dr. Dumba also bad to learn by experience how dangerous it is to write letters. — “No more made-in-Omaha teachers” is the fichool board’s edict. Stand up for Omaha! e Idnooln is hereby invited to reciprocate by attending Ak-Sar-Ben's festivities in full quota. ork: — Ye that have straw hats to shed prepare to shed them mow. Storage room in the political rng is ample. EE——— A 33,300 tag day for Omaha's Visiting Nurses shows how one worthy charity strikes the popular purse-string. The Texas schedule of $2 a vote 8o far ex- ceeds the democratic maximum in Indiana as to smack of prodigal extravagance. e—— Dallas takes the next letter carriers’ national convention, Dallas is a live town, but still it will have to hump itself to keep the pace set by Omaha. ' Highly proper and most becoming are the of visiting nurses. The cordial glad of the tagged public conveyed well de- served appreciation and encouragement on good fp———— Alabama’s legislature has rejected a proposa) altogether the sale of clgarettes within the state. Nebraska is'still one of the few places where that fool law remains on the statute book. ‘ Those high-up postal officials at Washington sbould have come out to the letter carriers’ con- vention Omaha, They would have heard that was good for them, although ‘might not ke it. e SEmp——— Democratic leaders are wasting valuable time in thinking up new issues for the Nebraska campaign. typewriters’ batteri the state have so thoroughly covered the lssue field that there is not room for amateurs to butt in. G Emm—— It is evident from the Berlin report that the German submarine which torpedoed the Arable returned safely, to its home port. The confi- dent assertion of destruction put out by London mewspapers proves to be a vain delusion. e — Great Britain’'s labor congress unanimously approved the government’'s course in prosecuting the war. At the same time the congress let it be known that any attempt to get the members closer to war by means of conscription will start “t p—— of witnesses at the trial of politi- in Texas help to explain the whoop- democratic majorities for which the Lone The excess of party zeal to the extent of paying out real money for waking the vote unanimous. ar supplies grow by leaps and | Maladroit Diplomacy. ! Some in connection with Dumba incident give the affair a much graver significanco than at first appeared. When it was understood that Dr. Dumba was acting on kis own initiative, the conclusion was that some- thing of an excess of zeal had induced the Aus- trian ambassador overstep the bounds of diplomatic propriety, and that his action had been taken in pursuit of a patriotic impulse that led him to risk some blame in order to secure an advantage to his country. His statement that he was acting under instructions from \ienna puts a very different color on the situa- tion and gives it a gravity that must make the action at Washington, yet to be determined, of utmost importance. Interference by one gov- ernment in the domestic affairs of another is not an unheard of practice, nor is it to be lightly tolerated. Not only is the dignity of the United States concerned in this, but its whole oltitude of neutrality is Involved, and a proper respect for ourselves will require firmness in asserting disapproval of Dr. Dumba’s course. Another feature has arisen, that of the abuse of the American passport by an American citl- zen, Becretary Lansing’'s notification to Arehi- bald, the emissary who was overtaken with the dispatches to Austria, that he must return to this country will be enforced by the fact that his passport has been taken up, and that he must come back or be sent to an English prison for detention during the wi His conduct is most reprehensible, but the only punishment the law can visit on him is to put him on the blacklist at the State department The maladroit diplomacy disclosed by this miscarriage of plans is not likely to improve a situation that was apparently clearing up to the satisfaction of all. disclosures to How Motorists May Help. Omaha has been singularly free from serious automobiliug accidents during the summer, a condition that is ascribable only to the fact that drivers have been careful and have exercised ordinary prudence In the operation of their cars. On this they are to be congratulated, and may be assured they have the thanks of the publie, Yet some of them are not quite as care- ful as they might be In the observation of some of the regulations lald down for the control of vehicular travel, in the interest of safety first. One of these rules is that of slowing down speed when passing public schools, The vacation time, just over, brought about the suspension of that rule, but it is again effective and should be more scrupulously observed than any of the others. The careful driver will not find it hard to slacken his speed when pass‘ng a school Louse, and all drivers should be careful, S — Russia’s Change of Leadership. No more startling news has come from the war front recently than the announcement from Petrograd that Grand Duke Nicholas had been removed from the supreme command of the Icussian forces, and that the czar would take command in person. It is the more surprising because of the fact that for weeks the world has been sounding the praises of Nicholas be- cause of the high grade of military skill he has exhibited in a most remarkable retrograde movement. It has been admitted all along that the Russlan army is short on all the needful accessories to carry on a campaign, having plenty of men only. Stories of empty cases sent to the front to supply men who needed ammu- nition, of soldiers in the ranks walting for a comrade to fall in order to secure a rifle, and similar incidents, have been frequent as illus- trating the plight of the Russian army. That the commander-in-chief was able to withdraw such poorly equipped forces over hundreds of miles of retreat, pursued and harassed by the greatest army ever organized, officered and equipped in & manner never before approached, would seem a feat worthy of the highest com- mendation. In retirement, which means disgrace, Grand Duke Nicholas will be followed by the sincere admiration of even his enemies, who see in him @ soldier of unusual qualifications. The czar's assumption of command will be merely nominal, for It is not expected he will show any of the analifications for military leadership. Tt is significant to the other members of the Entente that the influence of the old Russian ring is still potent at Petrograd, and that calculations for future campaigns will have to be made with that understood Wealth of a Mighty Empire. / Figures from the Department of Agriculture, baving to do with the crop yields for the current year, will not carry their full significance be- cause of their immensity. It is difficult to grasp the full meaning of the statement that the wheat crop of the United States this year is set down at almost a billion bushels, and that the corn yield will run to almost three billions, with oats at a billion and a halt, and other yields niounting high into the hundreds of millions. Sach statements briefly tell partially of the wealth returned by the farms of the United States, and to take no account of the lesser crops, the live stock, the dairy products, the fruit and the many minor items of production that nowadays make up the sum total of the farmer’s annual output. It is wealth beyond understanding. Nebraska's share in this is notable; for corn, the September estimate is 203,000,000 bushals; for wheat, 75,000,000, and for other crops sim- llarly impressive figures. For Omaha even deeper interest will be found in the report, for it gives impressively the importance of the region for which thig eity is the market town. Of the entire wheat crop of the country oue- fifth is grown in the fields of Nebraska and Kansas, while Jowa, Nebraska and Kansas pro- duce more than one-fifth of the entire corn crop of the United States, These figures spell pros- perity for the people of the country surrounding Omaba, and presage business for the merchants and manufacturers of the Gate City. S——— Ta the old days robbing Indians was a pale- face pastime. It was as easy as taking candy from & babe. Bxperience and education and sovernment protection were hopefully expected to put the Indian wise. All these safeguards fuiled the Indian who dropped bis roll to Mex- icans. To be trimmed by white men is not so hurtful to the red man, being used to it; having the operation performed by Mexicans humbles uative pridd to the dust. the | Re Polite to Your Children “—wLaura Spencer Portor in Mother's Magasine... . | HE bad manners of American children are notoi- I fous. Obviously it Is not the children who can be held to account for this. Certainly the re- sponsibility must rest with American perents You will hardly find anywhere people who more ambitious for their children than we Americans are for ours, more desirous of having them “get on in the world” as we say. Yet any one who thinks of the matter at all seriously must realize that to be rude, fll-mannered, is one of the serfous obstacles to success, That man is not welcome among people of €00d breeding or attainment who blunders against, and goes counter to, those common soclal rules on which human soclety has for its own safetysand betterment agreed are What we are pleased to call good manners is not a mere accomplishment to be scoffed at by the down« right and the independent, but it is deep rooted in human needs, in human kindness and In human justice. We may go counter to the rules of good manners if we like, but in doing so we go counter to some of the strong bonds and instincts of humanity, and we shut ourselves out from much that is beautiful and broad- ening. So, also, children who are rude, thoughtless, inconsiderate, are shut out, automatically almost, from @ hundred helpful pleasures and benefits. The child whose mother is gentle and polite has A place already awaiting for him in the world, and there Are hands already extended in the future to help him. FFor no one who is really well mannered herself wiil allow her children to grow up anything but polite, and the child who goes into the world with gracious and gentle manners, has already won, in part at | Teast, the world's approval. It takes time and patience, of course, to train a child to be well behaved and con- #lderate, but the child who is early surrounded by gentle and kindly manners, soon forms the habits of gentleness and kindness, It In true, also, that a child brought up in very good surroundings, and trained to gentle behavior, not in frequently picks up at school or elsewhere manners of speech and action which are contrary to all his train Ing. But this s no serlous matter it the training has | been mound, With all this in mind, let us come back to the fact that the American child is notoriously bad man- nered. We may as well face the issue squarely, Onur children are bad mannered mainly because we in au- thority over them set them such striking examples of bad manners. Yet, we are not as a people fli man- nered. Strangers visiting our land have borne witness repeatedly to courtesy received and kindness observed. It cannot then be sald—speaking very generally, of course—that we are wont to behave ourselves with discourtesy toward others. So, it is not usually from his observation of our treatment of others that the child has his lessons in bad manners; he has them, rather, from a source more likely to tmpress him; he has them from the had manners we practice toward him. To others he sees us kind and very courteous, With a special courtesy. He notices that we are mark- «edly polite to visitors, noticeably considerate of guests or casual strangers His mind, making its logical do- ductions, reasons that manners and courtesies are things to put on and off; to be assumea at need, or neglected at will, and, since it is others who reap the benefit of them, and not himself, he acquires, logically enough, a distaste for them, and looks upon them as | @ffectation more or less, and Insincerity. To discard or scorn them himself {s, then, a kind of virtue in his eyes; and to have nothing to do with' them is warrant of hls own downrightness. This, more often than not, is the real basis of bad manners in our chil- dren. Jf the child were spoken to with the same gentlencas and courtesy with which he finds us peak- Ing to strangers and visitors, he would like good man- ners without doubt, and would imitate them. Few of us, I think, realtze sufficiently the sharp and striking contrast between the manners we offer to the outside world and those we intlict on_our own. To realize this contrast fully, it might be weil to imag- Ine ourselves transposing our manners toward our children and our guests, Liot s take, for Instance, some of the phrases com- monly used in dealing with an average little boy: “Tommy, shut the door!" “Will you ever learn to wipe your shoes on the doormat before you come into the house! 1 declare, it would keep any one cleaning uUp after you the whole day long." “Whe§ did I tell you!" “Don't do that." “You are a troublescine bad boy." “Don't let me have to speak to you again.' “How many times have I told you not to do that?" “Go and wash you hande” “Come to dinner.” ;'“'hare have you been?' Didn't I tell you not to be nte " These are by no means extreme. They are, in- deed, rather mild forms of crudeness and rudeness compared to some that many mothers us¢ But to get the full meaning of such things ana to >alize the effect they must have on the sensitive =nd impres- #lonable and imitative nature of the child, 1 only ask you to imagine yourself dealing In some such manner With a casual visitor, even one, let us say, who is a good friend. The situation becomes immediately ludicrous, of course, but illuminating. Imagine the visitor or friend making the same blunders that the child has made. She leaves the door open, let us say, which you would prefer to have shut. In a sharp tone she is greeted: “‘Miss Wentworth, shut that doo: Tt is a rainy day. bit of mud on them. That fact also recelve your sharp attention. In a tone not to be mistaken, for it has positive anger in it, you say: “Will you never learn to wipe your shoes on the door- mat! I declare, it would keep any one cleaning up after you the whole day long." The lady, somewhat confused by all this faultfinding. perhaps trips over & hassock. Quick and ready comes your taunt: ‘““There you go! What did I tell you?" She puts heF rubbers on the hearth, which has just been washed, and where you especially do not like to have them. You snatch them up: “Don't do that! You are a troublesome, mischlevous person!” “Go and wash your hands," and then, “Come to dinner. Where have you been? Didn't T tell you not to be late?™ Ludicrous? Yes. Yet this and worse than this is the manner assumed again and again—and without apology—toward our children, and then, forsooth, we wonder why they are boorish, impolite, crude, ani their manners absolutely not to be counted on. that T know of to teach #o0d manners, that is, that are not mere polish and Oone way, and that is—Oh, #0od manners ourselves. There is but good manners to worth the sham and hyproe! stmple formula—to People and Events Kansas City and Portland, Ore., talk of making Colonel Goethals city manager at $£65,00 a year. The | proposition has not passed the talk stage. A South Dakota judge holds that the legislature has power to repeal a law enacted by direct vote of the people, on the ground that the power of repeal of & statute must lie somewhere. The case goes to the supreme court. At the age of 107, Mrs. Mary Sage of Glen Fulls, N. Y., has joined the suffragettes, at the shme time fervently declaring: “My one ambition is to live long enough 1o cast a vote, snd I think I will” She is esteemed the Mathuselah of the cause. Just what he did is not mentioned, but he was the only physiclan in the town of Hamms, Ill, and a sentence of four months in Jeil besides a fine brought screams of indignation from the sick and the well. | Fifteen hundred citizens petitioned the court for his freedom. The court relented and prescriptions are | again circulating hope and happiness. | A number of critics have taken Miss Jane Addama to task for assserting that solMers on tne western firing lines are given coplous draughs of boose to stimulate fighting pep for a charge. John Kendrick Bangs comes to her defense with an explanation that explains. In years past, he says, British soldlers were armed with Martini rifles. It was said truthfully enough that they went into battle armea with Mar- tinis. People un in arms got the idea that the soldiers loaded up with cocktails instead of rifles That's why evil report persists. The Pees efler, Our Earliest Frost. i BENSON, Sept. §.~To the Editor of The | Bee: I have noticed in The Bee of late items about frosts in August. I came here in the fall of 189, and jave had a chance to observe the weather since. On August 23, 1863 we had a frost that killed nearly everything. 1 well rexsllect it, ae I was on the jury In a criminal case, the trial of Cyrus Tate for killing lsaac H. Neft. ELIJAH ALLEN | “A Greater Ak-Sar.B | CHULA VISTA, Cal., Sept. 8~To the | Bditor of The Bee: Your editorial of | September 1 on “Ak-Sar-Ben's Growing Greatness” is timely, as the organization i« now of age and should put off its swaddling clothes and by publicity be- come semi-national, or even national, in importance and attract to Greater Omaha thousands of guests each year to view be inaugurated along commercial and ed- ucational lines. Within a circle of 50 miles of which Omaha is the center there are 10,000,000 people, and by active pub- licity a large attendance could be assured for a period of at least one month during the fall season. A Greater Omaha de- mands a Greater Ak-Sar-Ben. Yours for succes. H. J. PENFOLD. Sunday's Religlous Despoti NORTH PLATTE, Neb, Sept. 9—To the Editor of The Bee: You are right to curtail a personal immaterial discussion of religlous questions. But upon fund mental principles, as set forth in this “Billy” Sunday movement, it would seem that Christian courtesy on the part of | Rev. Sunday would make it proper that an ordinary citizen might talk back to him. On the contrary, Sunday fortifies himaelt behind his self-assumed authority from God to tell the people what to do, and no one can talk back. This is practically religlous despotism. The question now arises, Is religion des- potism? Does it destroy a man's indivd- uvality and render him the mental defend- ant upon some other? If so, for what purpose? All history shows that all re- liglons have been the prime factors of every despotic government. A government may be representative in form but des- potically administered. This depends upon the individuality and ability of citi- sens for self-government. *No citizen can possess the intelligence and individuality that qualifies him for a competent free citizen whose mentality s controlled by any other man's religion. There are now approximately 100,000,000 people in this country. “Billy” Sunday is one of them, and “Billy” Bryan is an- other. By what authority does Sunday presume to be a religious dictator? Ts it the intelligence and logic that he demon- strates on the platform? If religion is not intelligence and logic, what is it? 1Is it myths and riddles to amuse an easy people and make them the victims of a despot's hypnotic power? the Ak-Sar-Ben exposition, which gould | There are in this country, say twenty different factions of the Christian religion that do not agree. If they agreed they would be united. “Billy" Sunday pro- poses to bring them all to Jesus. How does Sunday know they are not already there? Is Sunday wiser than God, who organized these different factions when he was “doing all things well?”" Does the $50,000 that Sunday geta for redeeming Omaha represent the salary of Jesus? Do the poor and lowly from whom Jesus came pay any part of Sunday's $60,0007 They do indirectly, after the religious plutocracy of Omaha have jackscrewed it out of them. Does ‘“Ma’ Sunday's smiles and silk dresses bring any comfort to the bonest workingman's wife who tolls early and late to pey rent and take care of a family on her husband's wages of 2:50 a day? How many families in Omaha would embrace themselves with joy unspeakable It want and sickness and suffering were driven from thelr door? Sunday polses himself in air and damns those who do not accept his dictation. It every one accepted Sunday's dictations one day Sunday would be out of business the next., Sunday don't want to convert everybody. He just talks about it and takes up collections. Sunday damns the underworld that gave him a Christ to talk about. Whe 350,000 Sunday receives from Omaha, the diamonds the Sunda outfit wear upon their saintly bre: represent so much blood money wrung by religious plutocrats from the underworld, LUCIEN STEBBINS. Tips on Home Topics ‘Washington Star: Berlin editors who thought the United States government was “bluffing” are not profound students of the game frpm which they quote Boston ‘Transeript: Among curious references on the ingratitude of republics file Cuba’s use of the site for the Remem- ber-the-Maine memorial to bulld a prize fight arena. Brooklyn Eagle: England's chestnuts are not pulled out of the fire, and our fingers are not burned. London dissatis- faction with the Washington-Berlin entente is very easily explained. Baltimore American: Russia, badly. in need of something to stop the Teuton advance, should not overlook the fact that at Plattsburg the strategic employ- ment of an ice cream vendor checked a rookle drive. New York World: A well-known woman writer has filed a voluntary petition in bankruptey, giving her llabilities as $20,- 3% and her assets as 3415. That Is quite as weill as any mere man author could do and helps establish the equality of the sexes In a new fleld. Springfield Republican: “It is not that the college turns out old maids, but that the natural old maid goes to college—and often becomes an extremely valuable member of the community,” is one college woman's contribution to the discussion of the alleged low birth rate among gradu- ates of women's colleges. Another woman “wonders how low an education is quite harmiess, and why no scientist has esti- mated how far we may safely go, so that we may stop in thme.” The whole dis- cuasion Is an echo of the time not so very | long ago when any book learning at all for women was considered improper. Springfield Republican: Under the new Jows law against the taking of tips a bar ber has been arrested. He defends his con- duct on the ground that the law is un- constitutional, being in derogation of the | inalienable right to ask for special service and pay for it, or words to that effect. What the courts will decide can only be guessed. To the man in the street | 1t would look as if the tip system, being . & nulsance, ought to be subject to abate~ | | ment. Mininwum wage laws are o an ' experimental state: but, elther by law | or otherwise, the employe of a barber | or anybody else ought to get his pay n his pay envelope and not depend upon the philanthruple or terrorized customer to ehip ta 'I | Editorial Siftings Cleveland Plain Dealer: Now grape juice has been banished from that the diplomatic dinners it may be hoped that neutrality diclous use of French Sauterne Pittsburgh Dispatch: The American Peace and Arbitration league has selectea as honorary presidents Woodrow Wilson, W. H. Taft and Theodore Roosevelt leaguo will have sufficient employment arbitrating at home. St. Louis Globe-Democrat: Paris being nable to dictate the fashions, owing to circumstances over which it has no con- trol, women are wearing skirts exactly the way they want them—convenient and comfortable—and they're wearing them short. Springfield Republican: It Is sad te hear that the blockade has caused a shortage of golf balls in Germany, but will be maintained by a ju- German Rheinwein and one had supposed that the only links to| be found there in war times were the drill sergeant’s “links—rechts”” as he gets the recruits to keep step. Is there really lelsure for golf in a war on three or more fronts? Baltimore American: Stuck manipu< lators in New York are having the time of thelr lives using the war reports to knock securities down or send them soar- ing. It is a pleasant and no doubt a profitable game for those on the inside, but for those who are mot, no greater danger could be found. It has all the ear- marks of a card game, with the paste- boards stacked against the player. wise man keeps out of it. Kansas City Globe: The fact that the attorneys for the gas company have looted it for upward of $200,000 reminas Harry Chin of a Balle Waggener anec- dote. The story goes that Balle had a student in his office. One day the young man looked up from a deep reverie and sald: “Mr. Waggener, do you think a fellow can be a successful corporation at- torney and an honest man?’ “It's never been tried,” was the prompt reply CHEERY CHAFF. During the course of a temperance ad- ‘The novelist s small boy had just been brought to judgment for telling a fib. His sobs havi died away, he sat for a time in silent thought. “Pa.”” said he. “how long will it be before 1 stop gettin’ licked for tellin' lies an’ begin to get nald for 'em, like you do?"'—Chicago Herald, Mrs. Exe—Doesn't entertaining give vou a lot of anxiety? What do you do when the conversation is flagging” Mrs. Wye—I take it for a signal to serve refreshments or ask someone to sing.— Boston Transcript. "It must be glorious to he put Into a novel. Wouldn't you like that?’ ‘'Yes: 1 guess it would be pretty nice But I'm satigfled. I'm meontioned Bradstreet.'—Baltimore American ‘A platform is a very important thineg,” #aid the statesman. “Yes," replied Senator Sorghum; platform sometimes enables a man show, by disregarding it, that he is su. perior to his party shington Star. rtling item.” M “‘Here's a s “What is I Tt says the oyster has not increased in ce in twenty-five years.' Hum! Looks like culpable negligence somewhere,” —Louisville Courier-Journal. Donald—I'm tryin' feesh, Sandy. It's an excellent brain food, ye ken. Sandy—Fine! But, man, in your case it seems a pity to waste the feesh.—! ’h‘llllcrlpg. ‘4 e Boston ‘A _succeasful resolution for a club din- ner s different from any other kind of a motion." on. . “How is that?" “It is carried and laid on the table at the same time."—Baltimore American. WOOING THE MUSE. Charles Elkin, in Judge. Deep in the wood the wayward muse I sought gl ‘Whom Horace wooed, the Sabine dells of yore, yore, And won: but I w limping sore, And cursed a root T caught. Then, aching, sat I on a veaceful clump— To tune my lute as bards had done who Wi The fair—to be right badly glued. Upon a fresh pine stump. At last 1 sank upon a gentle hill Nll'l‘v perfect for the tryst with her to But I arose with mudden leap, As red ants sought their fil. A spider and a snake came forth, to see A wild-eyed lover—scared, but pleading there Till, as T breathed my passion'd prayer, T found—a low-brow bee! Within _sequestered walls I'll woo my T .pllr'-d her smil b t o Dl er les on me; or by greal Rom e And all its Gods! I'll stop at home, To live, without her, qu|:8 HE PACIFIC LIMITED Equipment has every re- quisite of pleasure and travel comfort —consists of library, obser- tourist cars Persistence is the cardinal vir- tue in advertising; no matter how good advertising may be in other respects, it must be run frequently and constant- ly to be really succcessful. The | The | in | to | Don't Say, «] Want a Box of Matches” Ask for Safe Home Matches and you will get the very best matches that money will buy. Non.poisonous—don't spark— don’t sputter—don't break —a real safety strike-anywhere match. Inspected and labeled Ly the Un- derwri Laboratories. o Sc. All grocers. Ashk for them by name. The Diamond Match 1 Company BRACES THE ERVES | Weak, unstrung nerves—a “‘shaky’’ feeling, agitation and excitability, resulting from mental stress or suffering-—caused by lack of phosphates in the nerve cells. Renew the nerve-force, and brace the nervous system by taking HORSFORD’S Acid Phosphate (Non-Alcoholic) . Keep a bottle in your home l There Is No Better Beer o CHICAGO Leaves Omaha, daily at 7:50 p. m., ar- rives Chicago at 915 a. m. via the and when you consider the val- ue of the LUXUS coupons, the cost is no more than what you pay for ordinary beer. Save coupons and get free prem- jumes.. ’Phone Douglas 1889 Luxus Mercantile Ge. Distributers Fred Krug Brewing Co. and HE EAST Ry.

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