Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 23, 1915, Page 6

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE (o O vt scd ol Bikrarane FOUNDED BY EDWA. ROSEWATER. S-eabl L LI AL pra-dda bt N VICTOR ROSEWATEL., (DITOR Twe Bee Publishing Company. Proprietor. BER BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Fntered at Omahs postoffice as second-class matter. “TERMB OF BUBSCRIPTION By oerrier per month. By mail per year. mm oo hange address or complaints in & “'n:_, fo Omaha Bee, Circulation Remit by wa".. llANS.I' order. Oni , ex| or posta A eent ps ived in payment of small h 3 on Omaha and eastern I o ———— e et et Bolldl o . 3 18 N rre 14 ;'m in street. P "“nuEn Hiern avenve. le-508 New Bank of Commerce. 7% Fourteenth 8t, N. W. CORRESPONDENCE, R communicat! relath to A et T Gae. Bon. Hottal* Doperimenk ——— e AUGUSY CIRCURATION, 53,993 State of Nebraska, County of Douglas, #s: Iong company. being 4oty Sworn. sy (hat the €01 " D uly 0/ & Ron e month of August, IRI'. DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager. in my presence and sworn to before of September, 1915, ROBERT HUNTER, Notary Public. The - circulation ' for was Subscribed me, this 20 da; Subscribers If:vlng the city temporarily should have The Bee mailed to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. = Sevtember 33 Thought for the Day Selected by Aima Spethmann "+ Be noble! und the nobleness that lies 1 other men, sleeping but never dead. W ill vise in mafesty to meet thine own. "’ Some pumpkins—that Douglas county ' fair on the edge of a big city. — Having tried far side and near side, the only | experiment left for us is both sides. Young Mr. Rockefel er'n‘ n;bllcluul- for the downtrodden mule is really touching. —— Great Britain's new schedule of war taxes is calculated to make the aristocracy shudder. i Still, we maintain that “‘Bllly" ought to re- tract the charge that Omaha Is a “tightwad" as publicly as he made it. Smm——— _ It s still a debatable question whether the _Nebraska state house is headed for the sporting pages or the vaudeville v Uncle Sam's b. merely a renewal | efficiency of the censor. of the debate over another cup of Coffey. C— The pressure on regular munition factories is slowly shifting to the money mills. The longest purse will do the shooting presently. —— . New York’s public school registration shows slmost a 3 per cent increase. That's nothing! Omaha's school tax levy shows a 25 per cent in- crease. —— Word comes out of Boston that missionary | ¥ill come work in Turkey is dangerous to life and deficient in results. Similar impressions may be gained “from the ceneored reports from the southeastern ' Public satety would be greatly 1he Auto club will Induce drivers to slow down two- | no- accelerated if | cnsure the yield. ria in the W The long deferred but steadily mobilization of the Bulgars s under way, and the announcement from Sofia that Czar Fer- dinand has determined to cast his lot with Ger- | many and Austria prefaces the entry garia into the world-war. This is apparently part of the movement of the Germanic powers | to cirenmvent the Allies in their effort to open the Dardanelles. This movement presents a rovel spectacle, peculiarly interesting in connec- expected will call up controversies that go back to the very beginnings of written history, and will write another chapter in the long record of what ! the light of events have proven to be political blunders and military mistakes, | be determined by the event. It is unlikely that | the Quadruple Entente allles have not foreseen this move and prepared an answering maneuver, Ity chief significance just at this time is that it | brings into actual armed conflict still another | country and lays just that much heavier a bur- { den on those not actually engaged in the war. The business of remaining neutral is becoming rore important as {t gets into fewer hands Double Shift in Lincoln and in Omaha. | The good people of Lincoln are all on edge cover the decision of the supreme court uphold- ing what is called the “double-shift” law limit- Iug the work of fire department employes to twelve hours a day. To put this law into effect ‘ Lincoln must do one of two things—either re- duce the size of its fire department or incur the added expense of increased numbers to maintain present strength with the men on duty only half the time they formerly put in | * But the Lincoln people may as well make up their minds as did the people of Omaha, that it i# a condition, and not a theory, that confronts them. Regardless of the merits or demerits of the question of soclal justice jnvolved, it re- solves itself chiefly Into a matter of mathe- matics and finance. As a consequence of the double shift, Omaha has been spending per cap- ita half as much again on its fire department as Lincoln, and thirty to forty per cent more per capita than other cities in the same eclass, and Lincoln will have to move up, too, and foot the ] bille that come with being progressive, | B —— Vienna, the Silent Capital. One remarkable feature of the present situa- tion in Europe is the silence of the Austrian cap- { ital. Not alone are the ordinary matters of rorts, but even the Dumba incident failed to Vienna, trian participation in the war is important and enrnest. Its armies are present and active in the field, but nothing else is really known. The economic as well as the political situation In Austro-Hungary was reported as acute long be- fore the war, and a great deal was heard of the disturbed conditions, but since August of last year a veil of secrecy has covered all, The dual . explanation | empire must have its problems of finance and other Incidents of domestic as well as external | administration, and must be meeting them suc- cessfully. At any rate, no clamor is heard from Viennn, & fact that must be ascribable to the King Corn and the Frost King. These be days of trepidation and nights of ‘worry in the corn belt. Twice has King Corn met and vanquished the cohorts of the frost king, and other assaults impend, but the great monarch of the fields stands firm and strong, and is entering on his maturity in sturdiness end full health. The south wind has come in timely visitation, and under its caress the corn its ripening. The little frost nip has been beneficial rather than otherwise, for it has done away with the likelihood of continued growth, and the dry and dessicating breeze from the lower latitudes will carry off the excess moisture, bring the crop to its perfect state and It is an exciting race, this annual contest between the late corn and the crossings. Besides, the rule would ‘save early frost, and one that never loses its interest, 1aany a car from the scrap heap and diminish | Thi® ambulance calls. s Se—— | Nature s more generous to mankind than miankind is to itself. While a dosen nations are M'.l" destroy each other, the unravaged worth rewards the cultivator and supplies ample gm " One o the tentacles of the arson octopus stands a chance of getting the iegal ax at St | gion financlers are already talki year it is of even keener zest, but the are now in favor of King Corn, and very soon he will be over the finish line, amid the plavdits of the world No Excuse Needed. “There’s a reason” why tionists favor ex- travagant appropriations—they t an excuse for in- for another year of destruction. | oreasing the tax on imports.—Mr. Bryan's Commoner. That surely is a good one! With the demo- cratic deficit growing so fast that administra- about a bond Louis, Coming %o quickly on the heels of the | juuue in the near future to tide over the require- revelations at New York and Chicago, this mwents of the government for current expenses. ‘method of accelerating business is in danger of | no excuse is needed for any program whose ob- being excluded from polite commereial society. | ject is to bring more money into the treasury. You have to go away e From Lincoln comes word that Omaha is @bout due for another cut in water rates. Come n with your ax! Water users in Omaha are required to pay 20 cents a thousand gallons as against 15 cents a thousand gallons in Lin- 1"—. Dufloe, the in- up her lugguge and ome to hear the | 1y g that, The trouble we are confronted with is due to despite their magnificent prom- ises of economy and réetrenchment, appropria- tions made by the democratic congress have been greater than ever while the democratic tariff abandoned revenue sources which not even & war tax levied in time of peace has been able fo make good. Protectionists do not have to favor extravagant appropriations to bolster a demand for higher import duties—the demo- erats have supplied the extravagant appropria- tions a-plenty. In feeling the financial pulse of the billien dollar loan, Intimations are given that Irish- who constituted | AMerican bankers line up with the opposition. are here mo mere | This is very unlikely. They may not invest much in the loan if it goes through, but would not close their eyes to the contribution box. In the ments of the Amerjcan Irish are very much like that of the tourist, who filled the tin of a crippled soldier in London, His generosity was aroused by finding one Englishman trimmed to suit him, EETETE—— To our Letter Box comes a disclaimer from Fiate Accountant O. Q. DeFrance that he was in on any deal to place his otficial bond, in which he declares that although he has known Judge long and well, he was unaware that the judge bad come out in support of Governor Morehead or that he had been flirting with the bull moosers. Brother DeFrance may be a good wccountant, but either he is too unsophisticated to be in politics or bis memory is conveniently defective. : ‘What other effect the action will have must | | daily ‘routine there missing from the news re- | evoke -ny_:.hbl::ml,lrl;; :' :lr‘:l;:‘:v :‘:‘::‘l“::: 'A""l': | citizens working for an untold period for the foreign of Bul- | tion with the record of the region Involved. It | ! future feels the crushing effect of it all. R oA e S i S I — The Economics of War | John Bates Clark - Professor Politioal Neomomy, Columbia University PART II—Conclusion. Borrowing great sums and using a part of the procecds to sustain the fighting—putting it, as It were, into the maws of the cannon—has & further effect which must be traced. Diversion of activity from want satisfying to pain and want creating- such s the economic definition of war; and the diversion takes place, not only in the case of the men who are fighting, but In that of the men who ara making munitions, weapons, motor-cars, aeroplanes, ships, miner, torpedoes, and the like. There is a great concentration of workers in the making of tools for killing. If these were all made in the countries at war and made day by day as they were used, the immediate diversion of labor and capital from productive empioyments would account practi- cally for nearly all the ecomomic waste which the war entails except which results from direct destruc. tion of life, physical power, and property. The fact that the governments would have to borrow money to pay for the military supplies determines when and how the citizens will have to pay these bills by taxation, but not the amount of the bills nor the cause that has imposed them on the country. Future labor and capital, as well as those of the present, will be required for paying the debts; and the essence of the evil lles in the diversion of labor and capital, present and future, from a useful to a Je- structive mode of action. Munitions, etc., are not all made in the warring countries, nor are they all made contemporaneously with the using of them. Forelgn loans, as weil as domestic ones, are an element in the problem; and they signify that an indefinite number of foreig- ners, with their lands and productive appliances, are pressed into the Immediate scrvice of the states at w Imported munitions are first taken from exist- ing stocks im neutral lands, but as these are quickly exhausted, the production of life-destroying ma- chinery is stimulated In the neutral countries and the pernicious diversion of Jabor and capital extends to them. The payment for the products of this foreign industry cannot be made, In the normal and usua) way, by bartering for them other products simultane- ously made In the belligerent countries. For such a purpose labor and capital are not at present avall- able, and the fighting states must buy products of present foreign labor and capital by pledging, in payment for them, the products of future labor and capital of thelr own citizens. This is the significance of n war loan. ‘In creating capital, in prac{ising what is called “abstinence,” men forego a prement enjoy- ment for an endless series of smaller future enjoy. ments; they give up the pleasure a dollar would bring for the sake of what five cents per year through an endless perold will do for them. In borrowing from abroad the states reverse this pro. cas, give up an indefinite series of future products of labor and capital of their own citizens for the sake of a large immediate supply of products made abroad. In so doing they are often able not merely | to get and use a greater amount of war_supplies than their own citizens alone could make in’the time available, but are able to get and use a larger total amount of wealth in general than their citizens, even in peaceful times, could produce. It is wealth that will be at once destroyed—powder, shells, food, etc., and the legacy that the transaction will L gve is the binding obligation on these states to keep thelr own lenders and their heirs, One effect of war Is immediate privation, and, when this is not extreme, it has in the main, a mitigating effect on the general evil. In extreme cases it is another mode of death-dealing and .at- tacks the weak most severely, though it affects all who have not surplus resources. KHnforced economy during the war lessens the burden which woula otherwise be entailed on the future. In the famillar form in which public debts ap- pear to us they are the means by which our own @generation carries its children and children's chil- dren to the pawn sliop of the future, and there is a chance that these animate pledges may sooner or later rebel against thc fate which overtakes them. Crushing taxation will rest on peoples having de- pleted numbers and resources. This situation will afford a cogent reason for many and costly workas of social betterment, but the states will long be unable to afford more than a fraction of them. If the war shall end with no league of nations able to guarantee future peace, there will be an addition to the burdens heretofore entalled by armies and navies, arsenals and navy yards, forts, training camps and, last but far from least, pensions. They must be provided from depleted resources Though the present war should end tomorrow, this ac- cumulation of burdens would mean a serlous internal danger; but if it continues through even one more year, the situation will be grave. Soclal bettermentsa needed and demanded, taxes that make many of them impossible—here is material for internal strug- gles, and every further month of ruinous warfare will make them more imminent and dangerous. The total wealth of Burope might enable it to carry on the war for a year or two longer without literal bankruptey, but mot without burdens that, to some of the citizens, might make bankruptcy seem prefer- able. Internal security demands a measurably quick ending of the present war. There ls growing futuve perii in every additional month of it. The most enduring of all the results of a war like the present one is its effects, direct and indirect. on the humanity of the future. e war demon seeks cholce victims. The strong, the educated, the highly trained ameng laborers perish in great num- bers. Capital shrinks because the instruments that comstitute it are worn out and not replaced. There i» not tinfe enough for building cars, locomotives, fac- tories, bridges, viaducts, nor for making all manne: and machines, nor for restoring flelds, vine- orchards and forests. The whole complex mechaniam of production is allowed to wear out without restoration, and the working force of the Becduse of the depletion of productive appliances, strong and weak, young and old, men and women, are forced to work harder and enjoy less. It does not follow that this evil will nevér be removed. Within a thiri of a century after the end of the desolating Na- paleonic wars the level of life of the working classes of Burope had taken a decidedly upward trend whicl continued through the last century of our era. In #pite of the vast burden already laid by w& on the present century the same rellef may come. A glance at the figures which measure the total wealth and the annual production of Burope will show that the debts yot Incurred may be carried without bank- ruptcy and probably without revolution. But let not Ossa be plled upon Pellon. Let not another year of flerce competition in borrowing money and in destroying life and wealth follow the one that is end- ing. A wsecond year of war would mean grave in- ternal danger; and it would be herolc optimism in deed that could discover, after a third of it, a Europe that would be worth Hving In. unless the sheer de- struction of life itself should enable the impoverished earth to maintain somewhat more tolerably the rem. nant of its children. People and Events Almost & world's classic In the art of adding in- sult to Injury is the case of a Denver young man who was forced to witness the codici) disinheriting im i his uncle's will. He now looks forwand to the pleasure of appearing and testifying to his signature. That the American naval forces need a greater degree of preparedness is sorely indicated by the fate of Lieutenant Bdward K. Lang, U. 8. N, whe was to have been married to Miss Josevhine Smith of Wellington, Kan., September 3. While the navy Neutenant was off his guard his bride-to-be skipped with another man, and switched her name to Mrs. Grier Stewart, s hustling business drummer. A @octor at Huntington, W. Va, highly esteemed as a health promoter, has one distinotive soclal service fad, and that ls opposition to kissing His zeal aguinst old fashioned smacks led to fu- quiry as o the doctor's feelings on the subject be. fore years cooled his ardor. His three elderly nieces united in this boost for umele: “When It comes to osculatory pursuits eur uncle was a humdinger (n bygone days. The other boys didn't have a chance with him. He was some Kisser.' OMAHA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 1915, - The Dees LeSer, Whinings Give a 'ain. 1 | PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 2.~To the Bdi- In.r of The Bee: I am a subscriber to your paper for the sole purpose of fol | lowing the Cmana Sunday campaign and am grateful at the fullyreports and dou- bly gratifies at the wonderful success up to date. ‘The object of this ietter is | simply to call Mr. J. W. Henderson's at- | | tention to one or two things evidently | overlooked by him, Mr. Sunday’s sermons will peel the hide off of any “Thirty-year Methodist’" | | of the Henderson type. 1f Mr. Hender- son had gone to hear Sunday and con- tributed to the expense fund, the fund very likely would have been increased very little. The whinings of these ‘“Phirty-year | Methodists” give me a pafn Tell Mr. Henderson to go and hear Mr. Sunday a half dozen times and his story will be | | vastly different. As the meetings go on they will be | more helpful, the collections ample to take care of all expenses and more, and Omaha, as has been the experience of all other citlea where Mr. Sunday has held meetings, will be glad he came and sorry he left M. B. LOCKYER. Protest Agninst Misrepresentation. DETROIT, Mich., Sept. 20.—To the Bditor of The Bee: My attention has been called to an address by Dr. W, O, Henry at the dedcation of the West Lawn mausoleum in your eity, September 11, in which that gentleman is alleged to have “told of the first cremation” and of “the restoration of cremation and of Its unpopularity.’ It is scarcely necessary to | say that some of the newspaper ac- counts of the first incineration in this country, that of Baron de Palm, at Washington. Pa., at a time when public rsentiment v s ineited against the prac- tice, were grossly exaggerated and that it would be easy for Dri Henry to find one that would suit his purpose. Tn fact, about a year or two ago The Mausoleum Era of your city published such a de- scription of which Dr. Henry probably availed himself. But what has that got to do with modern cremation as prac- ticed in the erematories of the present day? The processes of incineration have undergone a great change since the days of the Baron de Palm, but the advocates of the community mauscleum do not seem to know this, If they do, I can only say that the attempt to discredit modern cremation by deseribing what took place when the movement was in its Infancy, I8 silly, to say the least. T trust that your readers will visit the Omaha Cremator- fum and learn for themseives what a mod- ern crematorfum is lke. Now as regards the charge that crema- tion is unpopular. It is said that figures speak volumes. Let me cite a few *o prove that Dr. Henry's contention is un- founded. In 189094, as compared to 1885- $9, the growth of cremation in this coun- try was 25 per cent; in 1895-99, 30 per cent; in 1900-4 ¢4 per cent, and in 1906-9, 63 per cent. This shows a steady and con- sistent Increase and indicates, I thing, conclusively that eremation in the United States is not as unpopular as Dr, Henry supposed it was, and the movement Is still growing. At Uncle Sam's cremator- fum in Panama, 5000 incinerations were performed during the last year alone. In conclusion, just one word to the doctor. 1 believe the advocates of the com- munity mausoleum are making a great mistake in attacking cremation. This can have but one result, for, as Elbert Hub- bard used to say “Every knock 1s a boost.” HUGO ERICHSEN, M. D. President Cremation Association of America. Evangelists and Knockers. OAKLAND, Ia., Sept. 20—~To the Edi- tor of The Bee: In my dictionary I learn that an evangelist is “a preacher or publisher of the gospel of Jesus Christ, licensed to preach, but not having charge of a particular church.” Association with common classes of humanity fur- nishes sufficient definition for me to ac- quaint myself with the knocker. Although I dislike personalities it is with pleasure that I read in The Bee about a man sald to be sent by God to turn the people from evil ways. He says that Naaman said “gee whiz” in his day. In a recent sermon he said James said, “faith without works isn't worth ghucks.” In that same sermon he referred to the animal from whence springs the Missour{ mule; only using a term that nome of the 200 or more local ministers present would dare use in expressing themselves before an audience of reasonable degree of re- finement. In the face of such facts is it any wonder that there are knockers like the gentleman from North Platte, et al. Evangelists and knockers, you have started something that the frosts of win- ter of 145 are liable ta overtake before the conclusion is reached. The “skates” may yet ve needed on this mundane sphere. Let knockers remember that a man who once held the highest office in the land, and who sald that he was stending at Armaggedon battling for the Lord, is almost forgotien. Lot evanwelists and knockers remember that though one speaks with tongues of men and angels, and have mnot charity, they become as sounding brass and tinkling eymbal, both of which appear in evidence just now, with this missive throwing but little light on the subject. Go to it, boys; this war is different from that of Europe and bible lands, and some of us farmers are enjoying it. THOMAS J. HILDEBRAND. Nebraska's Rank in Crops. YORK, Neb., Sept. 2L.—To the Editor of The Bee. While others are spatting over politics or religion, let us try to change the sybject to Nebraska crop and live | stock. 1 see by Saturday's paper, that Mr, Walters in his up for Nebraska does not %0 back far enough to give the state Justice as to its record in corn produc- tlon. He placed this year's crop (with good weather), near the 30,000,000 bushel mark, saylng that last year we had a crop of 17L,00.000 bushels of corn and in 1910 we bad 175,000,000 bushels. Then he tells us that those two years established & pew corn ralsing record for Nebraska to Which I wish to take exceptions. Let me state that Nebraska has not had o big corn crop since 1906, when we were given credit for 49,789,000 bushels of corn, whilo the high place was struck in 155, when we were credited with 296,599,000 bushels, and but four times i the twelve years from 1886 to 196, were we as low as what he places our high mark Now, let us go a little farther into this crop reting business and see how our comn crops have run for & term of twenty | cows, Nebraska was tenth els for that year gether, Nebraska is fourth, oat crops for twenty vears, Take the Nebraska i | fifth, and In corn Nebraska is third. Now | add all three grains together for twenty years, Nebraska is third again. We could prolonk this list to your tiring, but space forbide. Then in number of horses in 108, Ne- braska was fifth; in number of in the number of cattle it was fourth and in the two combined it was fourth, while In hogs it was third. With kind thanks for wish to advise that braska, your patience, | ‘Stand up for Ne- is & harmless byword. HARVEY POPE dny as Sonl Winner. OMAHA, Sept. %.—To the Bditor of The | Ree: open Standing as It space, does surrounded ‘n oA laee Denver public library is a center of great attraction. Very much might be said in its favor, but the inscription on the wall of one of the reading rooms speaks volumes. “Righteousness Exalteth a Na- tion.” In the library one day my attention was directed to what is said about Mrs. Jean Stratton Porter's latest book In the Den- ver Times. Certain critics of note h.d pronounced it slush as well as all her other books, but other critics pronounced them good. Yet her books are sald to have been read by 2000000 people. Then 1 turned to The Omuns, Bee and read in an exclusive corner some quota- tions from “Billy’” Sunday and was for cibly reminded of Ella Wheeler Wilcox's article In your paper some time ago, con- cerning his vituperative utterances. Quot- ing at length from them, she says that they are sure to limit his fleld of use fulness. Also I have read Dr. Al articles In your paper, and many adverse criticlsms in eastern papers and the ques- tion arises: Did Jesus, the savior of mankind use slang in winring rouls? Does “Bllly”" Sunday go to work the way Jesus did? Hs most d°nunc t ry lan- guage was in these words: ‘“Woe unto your scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites,” In the twenty-third chaper of Matthew he used them wseven times. Also in Mark 11-15, we read, ‘Jesus went into the temple and overthrew the tables of the money-changers.” It would seem as if there were a good deal of money-changing in this evangelis- tic work. Howsoever as the saying goes, he gets results, as does Jean Stratton Porter, though in an entirely different way, but results all the same. Thous- ands, yes, millions, read her books, and multitudes go to hear “Billy” Sunday. After all the most potent question is not what does mortal man think of him, but what does the Savior of man think of him. Whether these results in soul- winning prove genuine, remains to be seen CHARLOTTE E. GRAVES, £22 Seward Street Thirty-one colleges and un! ‘sities in this country give courses in the various phases of journalism. ence and power of tone. ranks third in total ! Then take tho | wheat crops for twenty years, add all to- | milch | by a‘tra tve| grounds, not hemmed In by othe- lar-e | | bulldings that exclude the sunll ht, the LINES TO A SMILE. Bdith—Miss Oldgirl save she has jus | reached the marriageable age Marfe—You don't sey. 1 wonder wha delayed her.—Boston nscript Do you think it possible to love tw girls at the same time ‘Not If they know it."~<Life. “But,” said the young mosquito, ‘‘I* not man much strenger than we?” ‘“He is,”" replied the fond parent, | we may Venture to attack him on accoun | of our” superfor mobility.”"—Puck. “Mary had a little lamb," began the et. “l once knew a woman who ownec 80000 head of live stock,” interposed the | other fellow. ““And yet this great eattic queen never got half the advertising that Mary recelved through the ownership of one lamb.” —Louisville Courier-Journal. Boak the hands in hot Cutiours Soap- suds. and gently rub the Qintment into the some minutes, Samples Free by Mall Outicura Soap and Ofatment sold everywhers Liberal sampie of ¢ach malied fros with 33-p. book. Address pest-card “Cutisurs.” Dept. 4G, Bostoa. Are wmsurpassed for their beauty of design, delicacy of touch and the rare excell- By the acquisition and wutili- zation of renowned experts in tone-produdtion, the Bush & Lane Piano Co. have produced an instrument that is a tonal revelution to the musically cultured ear. Uprights, $375.00. Grands, $700.00. Cash or payments. A. HOSPE CO. 1513-1615 Douglas Street. Lv. Omaha . . Lv. Co. Buffs Ar, 8t. Paul .. Ar. Minneapolis through on night Day trains car The Great.Westem 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. 8:30 p.m. 7:29 a.m. 8:50 p.m. 7:50 & m. .7:30 a.m. 7:40 p.m. 8:05 a.m. 8:156 p.m. Glisteninz new steel club cars, and coaches besides steel sleepers, Parlor cars and coaches. P.F. BONORDEN,C.P.& T A, 1522 Farnam St., Omaha. Phone Doug. 260, train. ry through Buffet

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