Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 20, 1915, Page 4

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| | i THE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWAi. ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATEL, WDITOR. The Bee Publishing Compniy Proprietor, BER BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Entered at Omahs postoffice as second-class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. By carrier By mall per month. per year. and_Sunday.. JRIF, i, e ) Evening_without Sunday..... inday Bee on Send notice of change of frregularity in delivery to Omaha Department. address or complaints Bee, Clreulath REMITTANCE. Remiit by draft, express or postal ord, received in payment ler. Onl of ha~—The Bl)fldlh B' uildmg. El Omaha—3i8 N street. ncil Biuffe—14 North Main street. Lincoln—3 Little Building. Chlm‘o—’l Hearst Bul! hH. ew York—Room 1106, 386 Fifth avenue. . Louls--58 New Bank of Commerce. Whashington—72% Fourteenth 8t., N. W, CORRESPONDENCBE, ress communications relating to new h‘rfu matter to Omaha Bee, torial S mgein AUGUST CLROULATION, 53,993 State Nebraska, County of Douglas, s hl?‘!‘v:l:m Wiliams, g{éu aflon mins £ The Bes P ' y SwWorl says A avernge circulation’ for the month of August, 1315, was 63,998 DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me, this 24 day of ltp!i-mhpr 1915, OBERT HUNTER, Notary Public Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Bee mailed to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. September 20 = Thought for the Day Selected by T. J. Fitzmorris Alas! What are we kings? Why do you gods place us above the reat, To be served, flatter'd and adoved, till we Believe we hold within our hands your thunder; And when we coms (o try the power we have There's not a leas shakes at owr threat’ nings. = Beaumont and klstcher. —_——— Mark the Ak-Sar-Ben dates down on your calendar. summer time. And in the me:;t;m-s give the Douglas eounty fair out at Benson a boost, | Should conscription come to Great Britain, due credit requires the label, “Made in Ger- many."” The Dardanelles is the last ditch of the ~'arks in Burope.’ That sufficiently accounts for the desperato Nlhw A crusade against crooks in Chicago furn- iahes a large clew to the sudden expansion of that )ine of business in these parts. It is a ‘“for-men-only” sermon when preached in the tabernacle, but for men and women allke when printed in the newspapers. A real state of preparednes will not be schieved in this country until the people are thoroughly trained to jump, when the auto horn screams. | But If Mr. Bryan is to go to Europe on a peace mission, won't he hurry home and un- limber his guns in the real fight to culminate in ‘the Nebraska primary next April? —— Experts on speed records ean make a con- tribution to the gayety of the season by marking the time it takes to carry the “break in hog prices” down to the consumers of ham. Political temperatures in Massachusetts are 1;ounting to the corn-curing altitude. The con- test for gubernatorial nominations has reached a stage where aspirants shed their coats, vests and suspenders. Rev. Sunday must look to siripping laurels. The coming congress is to be invited to give a proposed tax on the output of American muni- tion plants prompt consideration. The sugges- tion commands general favor for two reasons: The national treasury needs the money and the foreigner pays the tax. Phe convention of letter carriers in Omaha broke the record for attendance, The result is gratifying to all who worked to make the con- vention a success, Moreover, it emphasizes the advantages of a central location for gatherings of nation-wide bodies, a fact which makes Omaha pre-eminently attractive The moving finger that writes the history ©f progress long ago discarded Turkey as a Leadliner. For balf a thousand years the Turks kave recelved various inducements to move, and rhow less inclination now than ever before, It the Dardanelles is won, & vast number of Turks will be wholly indifferent to the moving con- \eyance. ¥ The threatened split in the Britidh ecabinet oa the question of conscription {s not calculated to help a settlement of the issue, for the very £ood reason that cleavage is along party lnes. The emphatic opposition voiced by the labor ele- ent, constituting the chief support of the lib- eral party, is not likely to be ignored at the pres- ent time. S— The Anglo-French borrowing commission omits none of the fine points of the game. Ob- - serving the danger of an undignified rush to get In on the underwriting fee, the commissioners ‘abandon the fee and put all subscribers on equal terms. Driving & sharp bargain is one thing; over the “ground floor” crowd is quite —— ~ The marriage license list shows that Omaha 3 Ring quite a popular haven for matri- yentures of couples from nearby towns. #o favorable, and our location there is no good reason why, otion work, a large and should not be de- Rebuilding American Merchant Marine. In his letter to the president, transmitting the report of the Pan-American Financilal con- ference, Becretary McAdoo presages the resub- mission of the democratic shipping bill to the coming congress. Mr. McAdoo lays much stress on the desirability of immediately increasing the fieet under the American flag, that it may be available for government use as part of the gen- eral defense plan. On this necessity he predi- cates his argument in support of the partial ownership of such a fleet by the federal govern- | went. His contention is that private capital will not embark in shipping, because it can find more profitable employment in other lines, and there- fore he urges some plan that will provide for | the investment of a considerable sum of money | by the government in a merchant fleet. This | plan of the secretary of the treasury has not | net with the enthusiastic endorsement of men | who are actually concerned in maritime affairs, and is not likely to receive more support in the | coming congress than it did in the last, | As an alternative plan, and one that seems for more feasible, it is proposed that the prefer- ential duty laws be re-enacted, and that Ameri- during that time In the last century, when 80 rer cent of American commerce overseas was carried on American bottoms. That this law was effective, and that shipping did prosper un- der it is certain. It is equally certain that to give it another trial would cost very little. Ob- Jections that it would Interfere with present treaty agreements are met by the statement that these treaties may be terminted at the will ot oither party The almost assured fact that the ter- by the geuneral readjustment of treaty agree- ments, makes {t not only opportune, but almost obligatory that the United States as far as pos- eible anticipate post-bellum conditions, In no way may this be done more wisely than to ex- redite the rehabilitation of America’s ocean-go- ing commerce carriers. Preference In the matter of import duties is a constitutional way for alding shipping; a di- rect subsidy is open to question. Democrats are not agreed as to what method to adopt, but the impending return of the republicans to control cf national affairs assures a settlement of this question along lines that will be effective. —— “Lonesome” Life.on the Farm. A speaker at a California irrigation con- Kress says the reason that our country life is breaking up is because it Is too lonesome for | the farmer and his wife. In part, this statement | is correct. But the proposition should have = been stated in the past temse. The farmer's | life was lonesome, but a generation has passed #ince a coroner’s jury in Dakota returned a verdict that a settler, dead by bis own hand, had ‘come to his death through blue sky and bunch grass.” \ Whatever conditions may prevail in Cali- fornia, and other outlying sections of the coun- try, nothing farther from isolation could be well concelved than the social situation of the furmer in this section of the country, where the 1eal agricultural operations of the world are carried on. With the coming of the telephone, the automobile, the phonograph and other agents for the amelioration of a detached life, the farmer has been enabled to take the ‘“eity” home with him. Moreover, he is seldom more than a pleagant half-hour's run by machine from a moving plcture show, and the neighbor- hood club has come to afford him plenty of op- portunity to evade anything like tedium for the little time he can take away from work in a busy season. As to the busy season, on a modern farm it lasts the year around. The ditference is it doesn’t take all the farmer's time. He adapts his business to a schedule that is adjusted by the application of machinery to the accomplish- ment of tasks that once were toilsome, and finds that he has plenty of opportunity to enjoy the good things as well as the toll of life, Suc- cess on the farm is only to be achieved by une remitting Industry, the same as in other call- ings, this industry being no longer the drudgery of past days, but work scientifically directed and certainly rewarded. Nowhere in all the world is life more real and nowhere does it hold more cf Inspiration than on a modern farm. The farmer Is not lonely, he's just busy. —— Way for Mr. Underwood. Democratic wiseacres at Washington are busy organizing the senate committee on finance 10 make a place for Oscar W, Underwood, who will enter the august body as senator from Ala- bama when congress reconvenes in December, Just who is to retire to provide the necessary vacancy on this coveted committee has not yet been determined, but it is hinted that Shively ot Indiana or Stone of Missouri will graciously step down and allow the great revenue producer from the southland to bave the same prominence In the senate that he had in the house. It is now admitted by the democrats that the revenue laws will need serious attention. Even the most obtuse could see this when the deficit for the fiecal year 1916 on August 31 amounted to more than $31,000,000, or a little more than half a million a day. This presages a final defielt close to $180,000,000 for the year, a sum that must make even a democrat reflect and wonder it his party is on the right track. That is one reason why they want Underwood on the senate finance committee, so he may assist in devising new forms of “war” taxes to meet the current expense of running the government at peace with all the world. — The mystery of the war alarms and invasion &cares so frequent in the east is now satisfactorily explained. “It is distressingly clear,” says a let- ter writer in the New York Post, “that a large percentage of brainy people are afflicted with very defective co-ordination In the working of their psycho entities, whether from the gang- lionic centers of the cerebral contex, or from the Lasal ganglia.'” In the presence of such an af- fliction, sympathy muffles the scoffer. e —— Buggestion is a powerful factor in shaping youthful minds for good or evil, That which is €vil may come from older heads, too, shrewd to commit the offe.se themselves, or from reading siuff unfit for impressionable minds. The two instances of vouthful depravity in our neighbor- ing ecity press upon parents the necessity of Lreater vigllanee in counseiing chilgren agalust bad associates and dangerous readin; < - THE cun bottoms be given the support that prevailed | | riination of the Buropean war will be followea OMAHA BEE MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1915, Talk Across Home Plate Literary Digest FAVORITE delusion of the average base ball enthusiast is that a constant warfare is kept up behind the plate at any league game, and that the players and the umpire are continually exchang- ing words of wrath, contempt, and mutual vitupera. tion. There may be Instances wherein this is true, extraordinarily queruious players, but George Wiltse formerly of the New York Giants, and now pitching for the Federals in Brooklyn, insists that this is rare indeed. To prove what good-tempered people thoy | are behind the plate, and how wrongly the fans in- | terpret the conversations in which they Indulge, ho | ‘mives us a specimen of this talk in Judge | No umplire was as fond of talking with the men while play was going on as the late Tim Hurst, and here 1s a sample of the kind of gossip which went on at the plate and which the fans, being unable to hear | | in the case of particularly bad-tempered umpires and | | | tt, erroneously thought was an exchange of sentl | ments of 1l feeling | Mr. Hurst—One bawl! Catcher—Hey, Tim! Pipe the good-looker over there tn Box 2—the one with the blue hat? She comes here every day to see me, Batter—Get out! If she comes here to see you it's because she's fond of dumb animals Mr. Hurst—That's one on you, Jimmy. tainly got you that time. One strike Rooters—Robber, robber! Get your speca! us a square deal! Batter—Was you up to the menagerie on Sunday, Tim? Mr. Hurst—I were not Batter—I thought 1 missed you. empty Catcher—Ha, ha! Ho, ho, Tim! got one below the belt! He cer- Give And why? Your cage was That's where you Mr. Hurst—Fow-ull bawl—two strikes! Jimmy, was you at the banquet at the Hotstuff club last night? 1 couldn't get around Rooters—Horsethlef! Catcher—I was there. Mr. Hurst—Two bawls! ferty make a speech? Catcher—No, but he talked a lot Chauncey Depew fellers he's a shine, Mr. Hurst—Fow-ulll Ah, too bad! Rafferty is so fond ot talking, but nobody wants to listen to him. Batter—You ought to hear me tell a few little after-dinner jokes, Tim. 1 make 'em laugh so they can't eat. Mr. Hurst—Three bawls! Yes, I'll bet you're a good speech-maker. About as good, 1 guess, as you are a hitter. Rooters—Look out for him, Bill! Jesse James! Catcher—Let's see you connect with this one, you poor fish! Bat—Bamm! | Mr. Hurst—Fair bawl! Rooters—Good thing for you, you horsethief, thut | he hit that one! About one more rotten decision and there'd been something doing around here! Twice Told Tales A Soft Answer. A tramp approached a certaln Downs home the other morning, rapped on the back door, and When the woman of the house appeared he began to clear his throat, preparatory to telling his hard-luck story “(jet away from here,” sald the woman. “l never feed professional bums.” “But, madam, I am not a professiona! bum,” sald the tramp. "I am a psychologist traveling in the lo terest of science. I read character at a glance. In looking into the soulful depths of your beautiful eyes, I read there that you are by nature a kind-hearted, gentle, gencrous woman. It Is these noble impulses and the contemplation of charitable deeds that kecp | Doormat grabber! Soak him! It sure was a great racket Tell me, Jimmy, did Raf- As one of those He's related to you looking so young and handsome.” “You poor, tired, hungry man,” sald the woman. “Come Inside and I will give you some breakfast.”-- Downs (Kan.) Times. Am 0ld Man's Fate. A confederate veteran's wife, whose shrewish tem- per was well known throughout the state, demandod that an old servant, who had served with her husband in the civil war, be dismissed, “Sam,” said the old man, “go to your room and pack your things and leave—go away."” The old retainer clasped his hands to his heart with dramatic joy. “Me—I can go!" he said, in an ecstacy of gratitude. Then suddenly his manner changed, as with the ut- most compassion he added: “But you, my poor old friend, you must stay!"— New York Times. So Cousiderate, It had been thelr first separation, and during one week the young husbund had sent his dear little wifs ten letters, fifteen picture post cards and four tele- grams. Why, then, this touch of coldness in her welcome on his return? “Dearest,” he whispered, as he drew her to Ris manly bosom, “what i wrong? What have I done to upset my ilttle ducksy-wopsy?* *Oh, George,” she replied in broken tones, “you didn't send me a kiss in your seventh letter!” George thought like lightning for a moment oe- fore he replied: “1 know I didn’t, petsy, but I had steak and onions that night for supper, and yéu wouldn't like me to kiss you after eating onlons, would you?™ —Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. People and Events One item of news from New York may be accepted without question. It is to the effect that a “father was dased at the mews of the arrival of girl triplets in the family.” Involuntary change from retailing to wholesaling Is some shock. Reposing the utmost confidence in his mothery taste in the matter of wifé-choosing, Rev. W. H. Me- Cracken, Presbyterian pestor at Washington, Pa., weat to his old home in Ireland and married the hane- picked bride on the spot, What do you Know about this? Down in Boston the president of the Woman's Homestead association Mrs. Charlotte Smith, advocates the passage of a law requiring nographers in offices be placed In wire cages. I know,” says Mrs. Smith, and this is what she knows: ‘‘Just as soon as the stenographer enters the office the employer ogles her, draws out a box of candy and draws nearer. A young girl can't (¢ anything but bear it. Many a girl is afraid to resent it on account of her position. The old sinners take advantage of it. It's got to stop:™ Major General Schofield, commanding the army ai- wvision, with headquarters at Chicago, came in and stopped over on his way to Rock Springs. He was accompanied by General Tompkins and Major SBanger of his staff, and was met at the Bluffs by General Howard and Lieutenant Guy Howard. Rev. Willard Scott inaugurated services again at the St. Mary’s Avenue Congregational church, preach- ing for the first time since his return from his va- cation. Augustus Soards, an evangelist from London, con- duoted the Young Men's Christian Assoclation services st the jall, where the prisoners listened to him with closest attention. Oliver P. Morton, jr, son of Indiana's great war governor, arrived in this city to meet his mother re- turning frem San Francisco, and called during the day upon Mre. Elmer D. Frank, to whom he ia ais- tantly related. Mr. M. O. Lewls and bride of Bay Oity, Mich., who hi been visiting Mr. Lewis' father, Cheplain Lewis of Fort Omaha, have returned home. Frank Meyer left for Reading, Pa, in response to a telegram m“)lllll Eim of the death of his sister. The Pees LeSer Easter Lilles in the Fall. OMAHA, Sept. 18.—To the Editor of The Bee: 1In your paper recently ap- peared a short notice concerning an Eas- ter lily that a lady in this city had in | bloom, having set out the bulb and | cared for it, to learn the result and was “ thus awarded A lady in Denver recently wrote of a simiiar experience When we left here for that place a fow days ago there was a lily plant in | the garden full of bude that promised | blossoms. On return T found one large bud that has since developed into a beau- titul My, 80 people can have Easter lilies at other timed of the year than at Easter time if they will take pains to set out | the bulbs and care for them while they are growing CHARLOTTE 4622 Seward Stre B. GRAVES, De France Professes Innocence. SIDNEY, Neb., Sept. 18.~To the Editor of The Bee: Referring to your Lincoln story entitled “Light is Thrown on Bond- ing Deal,” permit me to say that I, to qualify as state accountant, procured bond through Judge W. H. England At the time I made application to Judge England for this bond I was not aware that he had supported Governor More- head, or that he had flirted with the bull moosers. The knowledge of these facts st the time would have made no differ- ence to me one way or the other. I have known Judge England many years and regard him as a friend. No man can truthfully accuse me of lobbying. At wo time during the last sesslon was I in either legislative chamber to exceed half an hour at a stretch, and I had nothing to do whatever with any other insurance measure. The _efforts of your Lincoln corre- spondent to discover a conspiracy for purchasing bonds from Judge England are rather amusing; but I must decline the honor of being classed as one of the conspirators. CHARLES Q. DE FRANCE, State Accountant. Verdict of a Traveling Man. EN ROUTE, BEATRICE, Neb., Sept. 18, ~To the Editor of The Bee: I was an admirer of “Billy" Sunday for a number of years; In fact, I would drive overland or ride on the cars niany miles to hear him preach and for the opportunity to do personal work among the hundreds seeking God. But the time came when Mr. Sunday went too far In abuse, slang and vulgarity and I could not listen to Mr. Sunday without leaving disgusted, and being driven further away from God, rather than drawn closer. Why the preachers of Omaha will per- mit the pulpit to become a vaudeville stage, with “Billy"” Sunday the feature act I can’t understand, and I am only one of thousands that is asking the same question. As an actor, he Is great; as a preacher, a fallure, for he preaches ‘Billy” Sunday and not Jesus Christ. If any vaudeville performer on any stage would use the language—such slang, such abuse, such vulgarity and expressions . with double meanings—they would be hooted off the stage, arrested and fined by the board of censorship. Yet the ministers of Omaha, the finest board of censorship that can be gotten together, permit Mr. Sunday to have full swing, to say what he pleases, and to sit in their seats, laugh at his show and say “amen.’” It's a disgrace to what they profess. Bvery God-fearing christian reads with shame the remarks Mr. Sunday made on Christian Science and Mary Baker Eddy. “Every knock is a boost,” and this is another boost for Christian Sclence. As a traveling man I have traveled from New York to San Francisco, and have heard of (and seen many) the heal- ing of every known disease through the understanding of Christian Sclence. I have never heard of anyone being healed at a “Billy" Sunday revival or by reading any of his sermons. The command of Jesus to his disciples wes: ““As ye go, preach, saying the kingdom of heaven is at hand; heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, st out devils; freely ye have received; freely give." Matt, x:7-8. 1 have traveled many miles since read- ing last Mouda; Bee and talked to hundreds on this subject, and the proof of it Is that the public at large is grow- Ing disgusted with the uncalled-for abuse, vulganity and slang of “Billy" Sunday. WILLIAM B. BROOKS, 2258 West Adams Street, Chicago. Wants Far-Side Stop. OMAHA, Sept. 17.—To the Editor of The Bee: Speaking of the far side stop, I'm for it, and strong, believe me. 1 think Mr. Getten deserves a great deal of praise. 1 am told Mr, Getten is getting this petition up solely for the people. I for one belleve it, for upon investigating it I find he has a cigar store on Four- teenth and Famam, where the cars stop right in front of the door. So you see he loses in one place more than he can gain in the other. Mr. Getten seems to have been the only man with nerve enough to buck up against the Auto club, thereby probably making many enemles. And the beauty of it is he has the tenacity to stick to it regardless of what a few people may think. Why can't the commissioners help the people by repealing this near si stop? Remember, it's the people and not the autolsts alone who elect the commis- sioners, and we are the ones to be con- sidered. FOR THE FAR STOP. Interest in the day Campnixn. GERING, Neb., Sept. 19.—To the of The Bee: Criticisms appearing in The Bee anent Billy Sunday pro and con have nbt aroused me until I mote the remarks of one who censures the newspapers for the amount of space devoted to the Sun- day meetings. I want to commend The Bee, us well as the other Omaba papers and the State Journal for knowing what the people want and giving it to them. Although about 5% miles from Omaha, 1 am in a position to know absolutely that there is an absorbing and widespread interest in the Sunday campaign. It is evident that many representatives of com- merclalised wickedness whose toes are being pinched are slipping into print with censure and inuendos, while few of the great majority who wish Sunday godspeed in his work do so, But the people of the state have thelr eyes on Omaba to no small degree, and you are right in going the Umit in space. I hear dovens out here dally talking about the Sunday meeting. 1 know that dosens of homes iu this community are devoted to the Sunday reports In The Bee as a regularity. And these are they whom the ordinary sermon would not reach. Personally, I believe in Billy Sunday. I Believe In him as a man. I believe in his methods as a means to the end, although 1 don't agree that he preaches the full gospel. And 1 detest the bigoted and begowned class which critielses him because thelr Christianity fsn't even skin ooking woman. “But he couldn't woik deep, and whose churches are merely | {0OURE, NIOAR 1" mikhe s well keep hin social organizations which countenance| at home and tind fault Wwith him mysel? frippy and laxity to the limit And I 8as turn him over to strangers.—Wash- despise such sepulchral old blatherskites| NE'OD Star a8 Lucien Stebbine, who is so small and| I hear that Bilter's aaughter eloped soured and soclalistic that he couldn’t|With his chauffeur.” " y Y Biiter wired his_forgiveness detect good In a saint from heaven. And| . mat dig be Ao that for? I am not ashamed or afraid to sign my | ‘He sald he thought now there might name to these sentiments. The Bee is| e & chance for him to use his car.—~New right. Give the Sunday campaign every | York Times. inch of space you can afford, and the "lnd!l; a first class postoffice?” public wil Y g *| quired the stranger. will appreciate it. A, B. WOOD. 'l‘.“. vou'll find In these as as * retorted the native with justifi- focal prids.—Buffalo Express. MONDAY MIRTH. “Can't you persuade your husband » work ? “] g'pose 1 could,” replled the weary- in- | Barts Invite to Train School Students. |20l OMAHA, Sept. 18.—To the Editor of | The Bee: Well, well, so the cat is out| of the bag, the grave where our training 8¢hool 18 laid to rest is still fresh, and *he flowers strewn on the mound have not withered yet, when the announcement appeared that the University of Omaha | opened night classes for girls who wish | to obtain state certificates to be eligible to become teachers in our public schools, But why night classes? Is the day light glare shedding too strong a light on the reason for closing our own train- ing school? The reason for abolishing the train- ing classes, while masked with high phrases and lofty ideals—"the best inter- ests of the schools, the children, etc.”— is too palpable and visible now. I was present at the meeting when the death blow was administered to.our training school, asked permission to say | a few words as a father and taxpayer| in defense of the training class, but was as rudely shut out as the class Itself. FRANCIS GOODALL. 2768 California Street d : MR KABIBRLE, 5 MY FIANCE SAD X AM HE OMIY 7N HE TVER KISSER, DO Voo “You seem to enjoy the heavy Wag- nerian numbers on the program?” “1 don't.” | “Then why do you | strongly?" “I want to hear the pretty little pleces they always play for encores.”’—Washing- ton Star. applaud so “Yes, we went to California.’” “Did your wife enjoy the scenery in her trip across the continent?" “I don’t think she looked at much scenery. But she enjoyed herself, all right. She looked at hats in eleven dif- | ferent states.”’—Chicago Post. Fast trains daily from Omaha arrive La Salle Station and Englewood Union Station, most convenient locations in Chicago. “Chicago-Nebraska Limited” at 6:08 p. m. “Chicago Day Express” at 6:30 a. m. “Chicago-Colorado Express” at 4:10 p. m. “Rocky Mountain Limited” at 1:09 a. m. Automatic Block Signals Finest Modern All-Steel Equipmen?' Tickets, reservations and in!mmaflon at Rock Island Travel Bureau. Phone, write or call Phone: Douglas 428 The Great Western Is First Into St. Paul and Minneapolis Through steel trains every morn- ing and evening connecting Union Depots with popular through trains for the north, northwest and Canada. Lv. Omaha ...........8:30 p.m. 7:29 a.m. Lv. Co. Buffs .........8:50 p.m. 7:50 a.m. Ar. 8t. Paul ..........7:30 a.m. 7:40 p.m. Ar, Minneapolis .......8:06 a.m. 8:15 p.m. Glisteniny new steel club cars, and coaches besides steel sleepers, through on night train. Day trains carry through Buffet Parlor cars and coaches. P.F. BONORDEN, C.P.& T. A, 1522 Farnam St., Omaha. Phone Doug. 260.

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