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i { — o apusimis THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWAI. ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATEL., “DITOR. The Bee Publishing (‘.cmplny.‘ m’kfi“_‘_ BER RUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH Entered at Omahs postoffice as second-class matter. TERMS OF EUBSCRIPTION By carrier mmany b iy wnbo\nmnm'ny x g o, 0o, Iress Or o aday Omaha Bes, REMITTANCE. 2 ann"::fil.fl |°|' ”’Hzfllt of . l‘”— n ::?n:m“ wonal checks, except on Omaha eastern FFICRA. Oma I8 N Souncil Bluffs—14¢ North Main street. Lincoln—% Little -IMIH. Hearst luh|“ Ne' lw 1108, h avenue 10::1:— ew Bank of omm-ra “!filw- Fourteenth St., N. CORRESPONDENCE, ] comm' 14 relal to s A B hatter o Omaha._Bee, e —————— e e AUGUST CIROULATION, 53,993 of Nebraska, County of Dougias, #s: 0 l-'llm Willlams, m-.»ffi.;«‘n .n:nr:‘ur ;: ‘{h:' W‘m “ublishing company, being duly swo vernge “eircutation” for the menth of .xunn b, “G‘T WILLIAWY, Ciroulation Maneger. Subscribed In my | “cuce and sworn to befors me, this 2d day of Se.’ caber, 1916, BEI/y HUNTER, Notary Public Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee mailed to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. 5= September 16 f Thotight for the Da | Selacted by Kate M. Miles The quality of mercy 18 not straimed It droppeih as the gentle rain from heaven Upon the place bensath: it & twics blest; 1t bleaseth hiim that ghees and him that takes. «= WAlliam Shek:speare. Here's your hai, Dr. Dumba! What's your hurry? | East and west both would much prefer to trade thair hot and cold spells. | Foot ball practice -cclduh. signal the ap- proach of the '‘melancholy days.” l The anto horns and cut-outs ate not the only uninecessary noise-makers that should be elim- inated. | The,_prospective dusting of the money chests of the east is not likely to bull the mothball market. | Poor old Jack Frost is more sinned than sinning. His borrowed \mun too Fides & bull rad. b st It looks as if Sou had The famous interchange of the governor of South Caroling the of North Carolina may have to be revised. amsrp———— Governor Morehead is becoming some orator. Lut he will none the less be put in the hot-air class if he does not follow up hin charges against the state treasurer with something more tengible than words. ¢ ——— Forwer Senator Balley of Texas aghin tosses Lis hat in the senatorial ring, almost two years in advance of the election. Bailey is admittedly the only man in the Lone Star state, whose ors- tory oquals the area to be covered. $ ' — | i H i ¥inancial papers express pleasure which the country will share over increased railroad earn- in the prospect of normal dividends. Banishing gloom from railroad headquarters promises to be the greatest achievement of the year. The amenities of neighborliness are paln- fully wrenched by the charge made In an In- ¢lanapolis court that Chicago schools for politi- cul erpoks and perjurers menace the purity of Tudiana politice. Impossible, Gifted as Chi- cugo i In that line, its best work could not over- come the competition of Hammond, Gery and Terre Haute. The measures taken by the United States au- (horites to insure safety at the celebration of Mexico's Independence day along the Texas side of the Rio Grande reflect the home lessons in consetving human life. Just now Mexicans may not appreciate the wisdom of guardianship, but In time they will realize that a live member is worth wore than a cemetery of dead ones, —— Cotton colored by nature is a coming possi- bility im the south. Several shades of brown #nd dark colors have been grown from Egyptian seed. The surprise is not in the development, but in the belated experiment. The original yellow corn has grown into a family of many colors, and similar changes are possible with cotton fir intelligence directs seed selection and cultivation. Thomas Swiit, J. E. Riley Morgan, Daniel Sullivan and is ready to turn on steam ime. Rockford, Il where . Miss Lizsle, in school s :"-‘.- stopping by sepding word to Ed. o have your | o# charged by the governor, | Are the State Funds Being Farmed Out? l One of the formal charges made by Governor | Morehead against '\ the latter's ‘‘grouch” dates from the alleged | reduction over his dissent of the taxes of the [ state by 84,000,000, thus depriving the treasurer | of the control of that much money which would | otherwise come into his custody. Speaking of the treasurer’'s objection, the governor says May ft not have been a seifiah reason, as it ap pears to me that It was in the wrifing of the bond? With a great amount of money In the treasury, you could have more bank accounts and a greater political machine. Or it may have been that you could have given more ald to the banks that vour relatives are Interested in. You have stated to parties that you | | nave ate money deposited In your banks This ‘ may be correct as far as a direct deposit Is concerned but since you have heen slate treasurer, banka in the vicinity of your Franklin bank have more than $19,000 doposited with you, some of which were not eustomers before you were elected, and who now have state money. The Verdon State bank, of which your brother is president, and the Mall family own and control, has $35,000 of state deposita. Do you not think your inter- { ests are being pretty well taken cate of? | More bluntly speaking, the governor charges that the public money is being farmed out by the state treasurer for the personal profit of either himself or his family and business asso- ciates. The law does not distinguish between farming out public funds directly for one’s own | benefit and farming it out indirectly the | same end. to the penitentiary for lawlessly manipulating #tate money, and his sucoessor, with Joud trumpeting as a populist refofmer, was exposed and indieted for a deal by which interest on deposits of school money was cred- ited to his private aceount in his own bank, With these bitter lessons of past experience so well known, a new era of farming out Nebraska's public funds for personal gain, even eircultously would be to ousable, P | The people of Nebraska for some reaéon have not grasped the seriousness of this treasury scandal, nor are the law-enforeing officers keen to their duty. Unless we are mistaken, the peo- ple will at the right time want to know the reason why, and demand an accounting from all of the state house derelicts, e e Trouble Along the Border. | Some of the tales that are coming up from the Rio Grande are of a mort that suggest that the"United Btates has quite a job ahead before that section will be thoroughly pacified. How wall founded these yarns are is not easlly deter- mined, and for that resson final judgment may not now be passed. Home of them, however, | detall elrcumstanoces that are not especially cred- itable to the men on this side of the border. One is that six Mexicans, held prisoners at San Ben- ito, tried to break jail, and their bodles were found in the morning outside the town. This has In It something of the “law of the fugitive,” for the practios of which the Mexican has been 80 roundly condemned. For the sake of Texas and the people of the United States, it iu to be hoped that this and similar tales are without eerfous foundation in fact, but it is up to the men who are in authority down theres to use all 1easonable means to see that prevalent outlawry expeditiously put down. TEE—— Nebraska as a Pruit-Growing State. The exhibit at the Nebraska State Fair, con- talning more than 5,000 varieties of fruit grown In the state, must have been an eye-opener to many who have looked on Nebraska as given over to cereal and forage crops. As a matter of fact, we have lald undue stress on the great yield of corn and wheat, alfalfa and hay, to the neglect and sometimes total exclusion of other and almost equally important factors in state wealth, Nebraska has come to be one of the Teal leaders in fruit ralsing, and the growers are beginnlng to understand the possibilities of this avenue for money-making on They are securing results here ow higher than $200 an acre that not axoelled In any of the loudly advertised regions where land is held at fabulous prices, #0 far Is the leading fruit of the state, kinds are raised, and in great The t'me is at hand when the farmers of the state should make a 1 of its possibilities, aside from wheat and corn, hogs and cattle, Strategic Use of Smoke. While the economists of the cities are trying to do away with the smoke that arises from un- counted chimneys, pronouncing it a nuisance and A waste, Undle Sam has devised a new bit of strategy which will make the unconsumed prod- vets of combustion serviceable in naval wartare, It is stmply to set fast-moving torpedo boat de- stroyers in front of the fleet, these to develop & dense smoke cloud, which, hanging low over the waters, forms a screen behind which the battle line is . Under the protection of the pall the ips maneuver into position, and move closer and closer on the enemy, whose bewilderment is complete. This is turning a disadvantage to service in a most practieal way, Just a little while ago as eminent a sea warrior as Robley D. Evans, vigorously supported by Nelson A, Miles, was clamoring that the United States should take over the anthracite coal mines in order that the mavy might have a supply of smokeless fuel. It was argued by these leaders that the great volume of smoke from a battle floot was the surest way to advise an enemy of ils presence. N this objectionable smoke is to be hung as & curtain before the fleet, screen- ing its movements till the moment of actual at- tack is at hand, Another example how short is the distance we can look ahead —— What has happened to the World-Herald mathematics editor? The W.-H's, tabernacle attendance total published Monday was 130,500, and its estimate for Tuesday's attendance is , yot whon it adds the two together It makes the sum 132,000. Is the discrepancy sccldental or merely on purpose? A prominent London pastor announces that be is going to make & long visit to the battle fiont in France for the benefit of his health, This is reversing things, for ordinarily it Is the man on the battle front who goes back home for the benefit of his health. EETETE——— James J, Hill is not passing up any chance to make a market move the crops of the torthwest. Nelther years nor distance alters the Voesl strength and convincing power of the svand old boobster of the west. One Nebraska state treasurer went | who came in | inex- | 1'HE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY State Treasurer Hall is that | | biessings follow in his footsteps. Ella Wheeler Wilcox's Answer to Sunday e Printed in The Hee Last May Reprinted by Request. 1HE WORLD Is composed of many kinds of people, of many Intellects in various stages of develop- ment Thousands of people possessing good minds are yet incapable of philosophieal reasoning; they cannot think things out for themselves; they cannot read and digest what they read, and they cannot form conclu- slons of their own. Such people are greatly 4 Wow el influenced by any strong mentality which casts its beams upon their path Whether it be the lurid light from the underworld or the bright light from fairer realms. ®uch people are earlly made converts to any religion which travels by the elactric waves of revivals, and It is a blessing tv them to be converted by good influences in place of being controlied by evil ones. Mr. Dowle, & few years ago, converted mote than A million men and women, built a whole city and amassed n la fortune by his strong magnetic methods of propounding what e belleved to be the only gospel In the world. He reclaimed sinhers, ye- formea drunkards and revolutionized certain stratas of soclety wherever he went. Now we have Mr. Sun day, Who Is dolng o similar kind of service to the world, in & similay way. All honor to him, and may But Mr. Sunday must not become too conceited, and he must making himself Hidiculous. He has done this already Ly some of hie utterances, For instance, the fcllowing “The Congress of Religions at the World's fair in Chicagd was & humbug. It was as bad as Blavatsky- frm, New Thought, Christlan Science or any of the rest of them. 1t was like the doctrine of reincarnation, that tells you not to shy a brick at that tomcat on the back femnoe becauss it is your neighbor's dead daughter who teok singing lessons come back to life In another | form, “They are 3 per cent mental suggestion, 3 per cent | religion, § per ceat voodoolsm and 91 per cent hum bug." Kuch statements as these brand Mr. Bunday as an Ignoramus, and they are sire to limit his fleld ol fulhess. Once there was a blind negro, of arrested mentality called “Blind Tom.” He could not read notes, and knew nothing of the science of music, vet he possessed a marvelious gift of imitation, and he could flay sreat compeitions perfectly, after hearing them once. o gave muoh pleasure to his audlences for many years and was considersd a wonder. But had Blind Tem made the assertion that Moszart, Handel, Beethoven and all the other mighty composers and all the per- formers of immortal music who gave their lives to its study were “humbugs,” and that his method of making music was the only method, then he would have been very ridiculous indeed. And that I just what Mr. Sunday has done In mak ing this statement. It hardly calle for a reply; but the really good work which Mr. Sunday does in helping a certain type of drink victim to glve up his vice, and in turning the thoughts of the masses toward serfous things (even if only temporarily), make one who has the welfare of the world at heart sorry to see the man | put himself In such an unfavorabie light The big souls who took part In the Congress of Re- ligons at Chicago were, compared to Mr. Sunday, what Mozart and Handel and Beethoven mers to “Bling Tom.” Vivakananda was at that time a youth of W, yet he was & glant in brain, heart and soul. ¥is knowledge, his eloquence, his utter selflessness, hie broad spirit of Iiberality toward mll religions, his com- plets absorption In his love of God and his desire to help the world made him a remarkable figure and a apiritual uplift to all who had the privilege of meeting him. Annie Besant Is one of the greatest, best and most usaful women (God ever set on earth. Yet Mr. Sunday would inolude her in his category of ‘“‘humbuss.’ Meanwhile Mr. Sunday shows his appalling ignorance in his efforts to De witty at the expense of theosophy, The philosophy of reincarnation does not teach us that the mouls of our friends enter into the bodies of animals after death. Mr. Sunday has no right to make suen statements. The minds of some of his listeners may be as undeveloped as his own, and they might take his statement seriously. The writer of this article is a Theosophist, and she resents any false representation of a philosaphy which, if understood, must make every intelligent mind adore God as the Creator, love Christ as the perfect brother (who had reached His last incarnation, and therefore had hecome “one with God"), and feel limitless symn- pathy and kinghip for all created thinzs: a philosopny which utterly obliterates the thought of self and ren- ders the mind Incapable of any purpose or desire which conflicts with universal good. That is what Theosophy and reinearnation mean to those who have the brain to comprehend them. Christ taught *reincarnation. When asked who 1s John the Baptist, Christ replied: “If ye will recelve it, this is Ellas which waa for to come. He that hath ears to hear, let him hear.’ (St. Mathew, chaper xi). New Thought is a practical working phase of The. osophy. New Thought teaches us that God is all that Is real in the universe, and that If we practice “the presence of God” in our dally lives and think of Him as light, heaith, usefulness, prosperity, happiness, peace and power, we will need no other conversion. Theosophiats and New Thought disciples understand that people like Mr. Dowie and Mr. Bunday have thelr place in the scheme of the universe, just as “Blind Tom" had his place In music. But “Plind Tom" did not presume to deny Handel lozart their place also, it would be tasteful were Mr Sunday to refrain from his ignorant and misleading ;c:‘-ee- to greater minds and their grealer philoso- .. (Copyright, 1916, by The Star Company.) Twice Told Tales The Difterence. Some time ago little Jimmy Smith's family moved into & new community, and immedately little Jimmy Was selsed by a pretty young woman and hauled off to Sunday school, “James,” sweetly remarked the young woman, teaching her class on the following Sunday, “you kngw, of course, all about the Babbath?* “Yes, ma'am.”’ was the unhesitating rejoinder the youthful James ot “Good!" commended the teacher, with & pleased expression. “In what way does Susday differ from the other “You sleep later and go fishin with the air of one who knows answered James Asked the Right Man. A Louleville attorney and a railroad man who has his “‘stopover” here went to & theater the other night. The raliroad man saw & flashily dressed. red- faoed, sporty-looking individual sitting in one of the boxes. “Who s that tough person sitting in the box?" the valiroad man asked pleasantly. “He looks like o drunken burglar. “Thet.”" sald the attorney, “Is my cousin.’ The rallroad man gasped a couple of times before he could get & grip on himself. Then a mmile spread over his face as he remarked: “Well, 1 went straight to headquarters for infor- mation, didn't 17"~Loutsville Times. Dressed Wel), Amos Whitaker, a miserly millionaire, was ap- proached by a friend who used his most persuasive powers to have him dress in accordapce with his station in life. “I am surprised should allow yourself (o become so shabb: “But, P'm not shabby,” Mrmly interposed the mii- lionatre mise “Oh, but you are “that you returned his old friend. “Re- He was always neatly, even His clothes were alwaye finely tallored and of the lest materiel.” ‘Why,” shouted the miser, triumphantly, “thess viothes i've wol on were (ather's! —Lippincott's Meg- azine v JPTE beware of | I this bundie of egotism could find & re- MBER 16, o | Thanks from & Parent, OMAHA, Sept. 15.<Te the Rditor of ‘The Bee: As a parent of a ehild attend- ing the Farnam school I wish to thank whoever is responsible for stationing a traffic officer at Farnam street and Park avenue during the assembling and ais- missal houra of the school. Hundreds of small children cross this busy thorough- fare daily in going to school and have been exposed to great danger. This thoughtful actlon and the instruction to | the children how to cross the street, to- | gether with the geod work of the traffic officer, have r d the danger to a minimum. In volelng my appreciation I foel wure | am expressing the sentiments of all the other parents whose children attend the school B H 1914 Key 1o Sunday Meeting Flnances. OMAHA, Eept. 15.~To the Bditor of The Ree: I understand the Sunday committee 1 is having a hard time raising the money for the Bunday mectings. The following | plan not only will solve all financial dif- ficulfles, but will give the Omaha min- isters & chance to prove their faith in “Billy” Sunday | Let each minister give one vear's ary to the expense fund. The ministers are the only ones that will profit finaneially from the Sunday meeti- ings. We have the word of Rev. Mr. Mec- | Gaskill that he recelved three ralses in salary after Bunday finished his meet- | ings in another city, Which minister wiil be first to set an example for the rest | to tollow. J. H, 8 Near and Far Side, SOUTH BIDH, OMAHA, Sept. 15-To | the Rditor of The Bee: While I do mot | care much personally whether we get | on and off the strest cars on the near or far side it seems to me that the only logieal and sensible side 1a the far side. What do we care what some other city may do about it? What do we care if some of the auto- mobile owners want it to be done on the near side? There are tens of thousands more people In Omaha and vicinity who do not own wutomobiles than those who do own them, and they are the people who are to be considered. i It looks rather ridiculous to make peo- ple get on and off cars in the middle of | @ block and it will seem more so when we have snow waist deep, as we are | {apt to have this ang as we did last winter, At most corners there is some Kind of shelter for people to get under in stormy weather when they are walting for the street cars, but in the middle of | most blocks they will just have to stand | | and take the rain, sleet, snows and cold winds when waliting for cars. The city commissioners probably all ride in Auto- mobiles at the expense of the taxps: ‘They should take into consideration the people who do not own automobfles | are in & vast majority ang at least 75 per cent of the patrons of the street rallway would vote for the far side. 1 am glad to see that Mr. Gettem has filed a petition with 10,000 names. At least 160,000 more could be secured, F. A. AGNEW. It Maki Difference. OMAHA, Sept. 15.—To the Editor of The Bee: ®Previous to the coming of | Mr. Sunday to Omaha, and since his ar- the llquor Interests of this city used | very effort to discredit him, but thelr | questionable methods had a reactlonary | eftect and were denounced even by men | who indulge In liquor, and Mr. Sunday | | { has resented In the strongest language at his command the lies circulated about him. While Mr. SBunday objects to the lles Circulated about himself, he seems to have no seruples against using the same sort of a campaign against everybody and everything that does not come up to the subject that Mr, Sun day seems to know more about than any one olse, and he ought to confine himself to what he best understands. J. ¢ Sunday's Attnek on Mrs. Eddy. OMAHA, Sept. 15.—~To the Editor of The Bee: A quaint old chap up in Wisconsin used to say whenever there was an es- pecially atroclous event being premoted in the community, “If a man Ilkes that sort of thing, I think It would be just about the kind of a thing that he would like."" There existed, and perhaps exists now, & sect or organization known as the (Plagellants, which had for its distinctive feature a practice of self-infliction by Whipping themselves with whips and thongs. The more modern ministerial method is to employ some one at large expense to come to town and do it fer them. Inasmuch as the flagellation is not con- fiued to those who employ him, the em- ployers derive great satisfaction while rubbing thelr own sores in witnessing the sbuse heaped upon their nelghbors and friends—men and women that they have grown up with and who in private life they admire and trust, respect and love. And all of this cursing and swear- | ing, stamping and storming, and telling | of suggestive stories is supposed to be bringing the gospel of Christ Jesus to | the people of Omaha. | The writer 1s not attempting to even stemn the tide, nor would he if he could It Is one of those kinds of storms that it | s better to let spend its fury, but out of | the Bodom of riotous thinking should be found a few who will keep alive the rudimentals of sanity upon which to buila the future of Omaha after the storm has Passed. The situation is aptly described in holy writ, I Kings, 19: A strong wind rent the mountains, but the Lord was not in the wind; and after the wind an earthquake; but the Lord was not in the earthquake; and after the | earthquake a fire, but the' Lord was not in the fire; and after the fire a still | small velce. | The Paalmist saye: “Be still and know | that I am Ged.” Mr. Sunday leaves out | both the “still” and the “know.” He is not to blame, and we are bound te be- | Meve in his sincerity. So was Mahomet | sincere, using the sword instead of slang | So were the Parsees worshiping fire, S5 were the cannibals eating humaen flesh l He is stmply one of the last convulsions lnn:mu-.-tmwu-u.un. | literal hell-fire .and while he ridicules | Christian Sclence us to its teachings con- | cerning the unreality of matter in rela- ' tion to the spiritual man, yet he has no hesitation In sssuming that matter will 1 last to bum in hef-fire forever. On what meat does this man feed, who assalls Mre. Eddy coupled with language umutonfleummlum‘ Differ from her it you wish, as to her | teachings. It is your privilege, but she | has left & memory of good works and | | pure endeavor that one would think even | spectable spot to lodge. Christian Sefence | does not teach that Mrs. Eddy will come “out of her grave before the resurrec- ten. Compare the mildest “‘argumentative” | An’ expressions which appear in the daily Press with a persuasive passage by Mrs. Eddy from Sclence and Health and per [ Wfiy 'i'hat Lame Back? haps some glimmer of the truth may reach Mr. Sunday as to why he finds | tightwads’ in Omaha, while Christian | Morning 1am e Selentista without ‘beating the drums” ness sharp twinges whenj bending over, or a dull, all-day back Ache; each is cause enough to suspact Kidney trouble | are bullding churches all over the world, and perhaps, too, he may come to know that Christian Sclence I8 the fulfillment of the teaching of Jesus, and that his denunciations of socialiam and plea that salvation from sin, sickneas and poverty | o 5 S5 EF A Comes from a single source, as expounded | ... .. Help the in his pentecostal sermon, is really being | kjaneys [ worked out in actual life through the | Wa A mericans '} teachings of Christian Selence. | mo it too hard. We Ly CARL E. HERRING overdo, overeat and neglect our sleep and mm-} and A HEROLESS COMMUNITY. #0 we Are fast becoming A nation of kid- ney sufferers. 72% more Aeaths from kid- ney diseases than in 15%, is the story told by the 1810 census. It annoved with bad back, nervous troubles and irregular kidney or bladder actlon, modify the bad habits, and use Doan's Kidney Pille. Thousands recom- mend them An Omaha Case: J. Kinney, farmer, 1118 Arbor (St ma “Now and then pain came in the small of my back, Bometimes my caused annoyance by being y in Action. The kidney sectetions were sometimes too frequent in passage and I had to arise often at night, break- Ing my rest Doan's Kidney Piils strengthensd my back, toned up my kid- neys and now I can sleep without inter. ruption.” KIDNEY DOAN'S *iis 50¢ at all Drug Stores Poster Co. Props. BuffaloNY. Philander Johnson in Washington Qur.] They_say we've got no heroes down to Pohick-on-the-Crick, There ain't nobody standin’ where the #hot is flyin' thick; There ain’'t nobody leadin' us to glory in the strife And sayin’' to some conquered fos, money or your life.'" Yet we're steivin’' in the mornin' and | we're tollin' until night, Although we dig no trenches to be useful in the fight, We're givin' time an' strensth to cultiva- tion of the fleld Tn hopes the world may gain some little comfort from the yield, We're all a-doin’ what we kin to help the world along. Not murmurin’ at the taxes, even when they're comin’ rong, Nobody is complaintn’ 1f the struggie Beerny severs To keep the house and family all sscure from year to year. We've got no ammunition, but we reckon | we kin earn Tte price; an' If we éver need to uee it, we Kin learn; We'te neighborly an’ {n«mly an' to heroes down to our gether wa will stiol we don't need an: Pohick-on-the-Crick. is good for 10 trademarks toward this This Cou uaker Cooker, Cut it out. Then buy & package of Quakér Oats, ee our offer, and note bow much this means. But only one of these coupons oan be applied on a cooker, Tell Him, Madam Tellyour grocer you want Quaker Oats with its extra flavor. You will then get flakes made of queen grains only. And they cost no extra price. 1l him you want this QuakerCooker to retainthe lusciousness. Many grocers have it on display. Any grocer will tell you how to get it. Pure Aluminum 24 Qts. Quaker Cooker See it at Your Grocer’s Offer in Each Package You can have better breakfasts. You can make this dish doubly delicious. ‘These things are waiting for you if you'll take the pains to get them. Countless people send over seas to get this Quaker quality in oats. You can get it for the asking at your store. Quaker Oats 10c and 25¢ In Round Packages with Top H[ ‘1);’4; 3 FAST TRAINS DALLY St. Paul- Minneapolis Pict_ugue Way by Day Comforublevv_az by Night Popular Way at All Times SCHEDULE Ar, St. Paul 7:40 p. m. 7:15 a. m, 7:50 a. m. Note:~New steel observation buffet- car on Omaha-Twin City Limited, leaving 9:05 p.m. Dining Car Service Unequaled The Best of Everything Por dckets, reservations and further information st city officess 1401-03 Farnam 8v. (Telephone: Douglas 2740) JOMN MELLEN, Genl Ageat Lv. Omaha 7:45 a. m, 6:45 p. m. 9:05 p. m. 7:50 a. m. 8:35a m G. A. R. Encampment—Washington, D. C e e e e e CY ke ENNSYLVANIA LINES @ood returuing %o resch polat Oot. 15 Wb LINERAL Round-Trip Fare From Chicago, $30.65 Summer Tourist tiskats te Aulsstic Oty aad any at Washingten points