Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 12, 1915, Page 6

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE ROEEWAT'R. i VICTOR ROSEWATREL., “DITOR. The Bee Publishing Company. Proprieto: . BEE RUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEE at Omahe postoffice as second-cleés matter. | TERMS OF IUB'CRIPHON By urr‘I.- By mail per mon a6 notice lof chai delivery to omnhu Bee, i, R‘"flANf‘l‘v - G Remit ax or order. wo- RSt s o Gomern O I nal checks, except on aha and eastern not sccepted. OFFICES. h. The Bilhfln‘ h Omal IR N street. \‘v\lmll llun»-u North Main street In—3 Little Buildl urteenth 'mmm CIRCULATION, 54,663 "wmu-c"r:n on e ot S 1 e i !hlt om W'ILLIAHI Circulation Mannager. ember, .WM %R nd sworn to before , Notary Publie, Subscribers leaving the city temporarily _ should have The Bee mailed to them. Ad- a-mumu-m—-nq-—«d ‘Ootober 13 § | Thought for the Day 1 Selected by Mignonette Cook “Jn words, as fashions, the same ru'e wirl held Alike fantostic if teo new or old: Be not the first by whom ths wew ia tricd; Nov yet the last to lay the old aside.” It is not too late for another installment of 1he Indian summer that makes Nebraska famous. ‘With the iy clumpod down, Chicago has nothing on Omaha in issuing its {nvitations for week-end stop-overs. Yes, but just what was the. “game” those folks were playing that ficld.d the masked ban- «it such a handsome ha gee————— Automobiles command just about as much tespect in railroad passenger departments as iftmeys do in street raflway circles. S—— If the Ak-Sar-Ben governors want to make # hit they will cut out the street falr next time, ufilehtmmnmmtmmmt of uk — here, oh where, were all our ‘‘Welcome- ruabia” committees when John D., jr., struck numlolnohmnm»nn men only? ——— + “Billy” had over 18,000 trall hitters in Ipterson. Less than 5,000 in Omaha so far, ~ With just two woeks of the campalgn remaining. “Hit 'em up! S—— 3 Qur English cousins will have to do better i1 the enforcement of their no-treat law than &e do with ours in Nebraska if they want to ce results. b3 comm— o ‘nu Whlu House wedding eannot come too #oon to suit the horde of applicants for the fed- .orgl Judgeship vacancy in Nebraska vatnly seek- ing the president's attention, ——— “There are mean thieves and sneak thieves, porch climbers and come-ohs, but neither class is the Infamy of the unknown thief who s the campaign literature of New Jersey suf- - Under the direct primary, political prefer- is for the man who goes after it. The r-light-under-a-bushel statesman s out in advance. It's the man with the fire tho commands attention and corrals i | 4 1 E ] business due to Increasing automobile . At the same time they are striving the courts to advance rates and drive mgre business to thelr competitors. Automobile dealers are not kicking. . The Rockefellor industrial plan is accepied by & large majority of the referendum vote of tke mine workers. The only way to find out ‘how it will go is to give/it a fair trial. If it pjvu even & partiel success it will be a big ~gredit mark for young Mr. Rockefeller. The Miller-Boyd faction carried & hotly contestu) primary over the Brown brigade. The win- he police, the fire «uml. the gradiag gtflnfl and & blg campalgn barrel.” ~ Newly elected officers of the Young Men's Christlan sssoclation are: Prosident, Warren Switsler; vien w. Himebangh; secretary, C. B Reynolds, secretaiy, G. A, Joplin: treasurer, C, Jobn L. Kalu‘y. First My- United Presbyterian; William Morri 5 m Frank Fosbenrer, 8t. Mary's Avenue onun Kountse Memorial; O, P. Seward, Baptist: G. k. in the evenlng ot (b ~ Jay Gould and his party arrived in Omahe in & spo- 4 his son, . Gould was met at the ' driven about the city fur honor of bis Cuughter, Muws | v’ Work Ahead for Carranza, Venustiano Carranza has been tacllly recog- | uised by the All-American conferces as the THE righttul head to the Mexican republie, and for- | mal action by the several governments wil very likely follow soon. 8o far as the United States 2 eoncerned, it could, and perhaps should, have taken this step long ago, for no more reason for the recognition of Carranza is visible now than ! wa® a year ago. It har only been the “watch | ful walting'* policy that has delayed so long this approach to an adjustment of Mexican affairs. Mr, Wilson might have properly taken this ac- tion at a time when Carranza had the united | support of elements now arrayed against him, | and thus have made the pacification a much | sasler undertaking. | With recognition as the head of Mexico, Car- | ranza aiso is called upon to assume quite a bit of trouble and responsibility. Tt ig still a man’s iob to restore tranquility to his country, and it should not be lightly undertaken. He should pursue diligently and relentlesely the disturbers of the peace of Mexico, (o the end that order be restored as speedily as possible, and his people be again employed in useful productive effort. The nations represented in the All-American conference hdve some responsidility in the mat- ter, too. They should give to Carranza all | reasonable assistance to the end that his task be not made more difficult through outside in- | fluenees, but the real work is up to him, Street Fair Has Outlived Its Wsefuiness. Every man, woman and child in Omaha is proud of every feature of the Ak-Bar-Ben fes- | tivities but one. The ons feature of which no one 18 pround is the so-called street fair, which I? never mentioned except in a tone of apology and with a sense of humiliation, The street fair has been continued so far year by year by the board of governors, and tolerated by the people of Omaha, only because | relled on to bring in the money needed to pay ru the beautiful street parades, which one and | @il are Invited to witness withont cost. In the | beginning the street fair had some instructive | and educational values, it included displays by | our local merchants and manufacturers, and the ! exhibition of agricultural products of the Doug- | 1as county fair, The merchants’ booths dropped | cut long ago, and the county fair was crowded | out by the chdnge of location, so that nothing | now remains but ordinary sideshows, cheap fakers, sure-thing games and rough-house con- fotti throwing. There is nothing distinctive { about it except its coarseness, and even as a | moneymaker it has seen its best days. i We know we volce the sentiment of the vast majority of the people of Omaha and of the Ak- Sar-Ben visitors as well, when we say the | street fair has gperved its purpose so far as Ak- Sar-Ben is concerned, and that we have all had enough of it. We know aleo that the board of governors would gladly embrace an opportunity to let go of the street fair if only given a help- ing hand and in this laudable purpose they #hould have every encouragement. e e i Great Britain’s New Tariff. \ Reginald McKenna is travel over the road followed by Lloyd-George and all his pred- ecessors, who have had to “raise the wind” to meet the British budget, and is finding it, as did all his predecessors, quite rough. In addi- tion to the time-honored Income and excise taxes, the land tax and other measures for ob- taining revenue, Mr. McKenna has added import duties on tobacco, tea, and a number of other | articles, The protest golng up is such as the Rritish taxpayer alone knows how to make, when some one of his traditional privileges or exemptions is trenched upon. In this instance he is hit in & number of places, and isn't yot quite certain which hurts worse. For Amerioans, the main interest will be found in the fact that England is coming to adopt the protective tariff, Since Richard Cob- den won his tight for free trade, by the repeal of the “corn law” In 1843, the United Kingdom has been devoted to free trade. Canada and Aus- tralla have adopted the protective tariff system, while the mother country has rigidly held to the policy mow belng abandoned, England has been the one country in all the world that could well afford to leave its ports open to the world, but events have forced it to withdraw a policy that has been |Ivn over by all great powers. The rage of the tree traders will be of Mttle avall agalnst the urgency of the war's necessities, and the McKenna budget will open a new era in Great Britain, Spp—— Omaha as & Manuf; Centexr. Omahe's high rank as a manufacturing cen- ter is confirmed by a bulletin, just issued froy: the census bureau, covering the growth of the five-year period, 1809-14, and showing a steady 4nd satisfactory growth in all lines. Bvery {trm shows an increase, save that of “number of establishiments,” which has dropped from 432 to 417. This is accounted for almost wholly by the decrease in a single industry, to- bacco, ‘which lost seven establishments, In- cronsos of $3.1 pér cent in salaries paid, 20.1 ! per cent in wages, 16,6 in salaried employes and {11.2 In averige number of wage earners em- ployed are noteworthy. Capital employed, cost of raw material and selling price of product, with value added by manufacture, all show sub. | #tantial gains, The report is confinkd exclusively to indus- | tries carried on under the narrow definition of “factory,” but gives a total output of $67,863,. 000 for 1914, To this must be added the | South Omaha total, which is considered by the census buresu separately, and has not beem re- ported upon. The showing is & most creditable one and will be a surprise to a lot of people who lave not seriously {bought of Omaha as & men- ufacturing center. With $51,264,000 capital cmployed, and a pay roll of $8,564,000, this | town begins to leok like an industrial center, try is kept in mind. Another five years of similar growth is now under way, and an even better exhibit of im- pressive totals will then be made. All lnes of industry are locally active, the pay roll is gen- crovs and regular, and the future is bright with promise. Way for the Greater Omaha' War's havoc on national revenue is put for- vgrd as g reason for continuing the tex om ! For the present the democratic dream Meau- | . segar. free sugur remains a troudled Gream. kile the democratic cgae raisers of the south w. chile und take Wore sugar ! dally by the hundreds, BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, What Every Householder Should Know About Milk w8y ERNEST XELLY. HIE 12 an age of pure food agitation. Consumers are constantly admonished te make sure re- garding the character of the foods they purchase. The housewife keenly scrutinizes labels to see that she s not buying cheap imitAtions, or foods with preservatives or colored to imitate some superia® product. But what does the average person know of care about the bottle of milk left on the doorstep in the early morning? The comeumer is disturbed 'f there does not appear to be emough cream in the necls of the bottle, but heyond that his interest ceases a matter of fact, the amount of oream in milk '+ com- paratively unimportant when considering its whole- someness. Freedom from dirt and bacteria is much more Important. Too little cream may mean the lose of some food material, but teo much dirt may mean sickness Unfortunately, the consumer ix not able to lell for himselt much about Whe purity of thé milk dellvered to him.. He can ses the weevils in the fiour; he can feol the grit In the sugar; but the impuritles in mil% ean not be so readily detected. To be desirable, milk must conform to certain physical, chemical and ba e teriological standards. Physically, milk should he fres from lumps or particles of dirt, and should not have any unpleasant taste or odor. From a chemical standpoint milk should contain the mormal amounts of the various nutritive slements and shou.. e abso- lutely free from preservatives. Bacteriologieally, milk should contain only a small number of bacteria none of whith is capable of producing dlsease in the human system. Such & mik s safe, scomomical and palatable. The consumer should know in what ways milk may be contaminated both om the farm and in the eity. In the past, consumers have done a great deal to block pute milk campaigns by refusing to recognize the fact | that it costs more to produce and handle milk f the best quality. The purpose and method pasteurisation should be thoroughly understood. Cou- trary to the belief held by many, proper pasteurize. tion does mot Injure the chemical or nutritive qualitied of the milk, but does kill all of the dangerous bac- teria, thus rendering the milk safe for human food, If the constimer buys pasteurized milk be should make sure that it has been properly pasteurized. Mifk should recefve the most carefu, trestment In the home, as many of the troubles emcounter.d with milk are due to the lgnorance or carelessness of the consumer. It should be kept cold at all times and should be protected from contamination. What can the consumer do (o ascertain whether he is metting pure milk? Every housenolder should frequently examine the milk to see whether or not there is sédiment in the bottom of the bottle. The presence of sediment is evidence of carelessness, and #hould be brought to the attention of the dealer. The milk should have no disagreeable flavor or odor, and it properly refrigerated, should keep sweet until the next day's supply s delivered. Karly souring is cavsed by excessive numbers of bacteria or by Improper refrigeration in the home, These are a few simple tests, wut for complete and reliable Information the consumer should fearn to confer with the health department which should be in position to furnish data regarding the cleanii- ness and safety of the milk from any dairy, Last of all, the careful housekeeper will vikit the dailry from which she buys milk to see for harselt that the utmost pains are taken to safeguard this important food, Side Swipes at Sunday Nebraska City Press: People who juat love “Billy” Sunday and can't help It, who belleve implicitly in everything he says and does, who are firmly con, vinced that he is Christ's ambassador on earth, ought to read John Reed's and the Boardman Robihson's description of him while he was in Philadelphia last spring. The article in the Metropolitan Magszine. Reading this article, written by a news- paper man with an open mind and lllustreted by one of the best cartoonists in the country, mey not con- vince, but it will enlighten, People who have the rather vague, indefinite idea that “Billy" Sunday e n soft of & Christ himeelf will get thelr eyes opanad. “Billy" s very, very human. Hepeolally is he human in respect to grabbing the coin. Thet much will be amply demonstrated, before he is through with Omaha. Just watch ly's” smoke, to use a Bhakesperian and Sundayesque expreasion, If the final day's collection doesn't came up to the expee. tations of the evangelist. —— Beemer Times: Having rum ous of cuss words and slang phrases, I feel It my bounden duty teo go to Omaha and tank up. I have realised long sgo that T sorely nged new equipment along this Une and 1 1l leave this afternoon for Omaha to “hit the trail” and get In a new stock of “Billy' Sunday's cuse words. 1 might jssue a warning that Beemer people have heretofore got off emay, but just wait till T get back from Omaha. This papor is just & handout this week, but I will have a full hunk of Limberger, cat- and pay up and stop your paper before the next fs- thinks they can't stand the us, kindly call in and pay up and stop your paper before thd pext is- sue. Dosens of people have asked me what I thought of “Bllly" Bunday and hia style of preaching. 1 have refrained from expostulating on the subject, but I will hand you & full program next lesue. Lexington Ploneer: “Bllly” Sunday etlll coatinues to lambast the cohorts of matan in Omaha, hin fis'd being & fruitful one. And he is landing the sinners tly to the satiifaction o; professed Christians to the discomfiture of the ungedly, some of whom fly into print and deaoun e him, among the latest to do so belng ex-Senatoy John M. Thurston, But the ex-star ball player contiriues to flail the air and steal bases on Beslsebub and ling the saw dust trafl with men, wumen and ohildren seeking salvation. Results count regariless of methods. People and Events A Baltimore court tue other day sternly rebuked hearsay osculstion by fining @ yo woman for throwing & kiss. In matters of this kind only direot evidence is admissable. New York's public employment bureau reports 1,00 Jobs for as many boys and girls to do factory wark at from 4 to % & week. The termas are not rc- garded as symploms of inaustilal heart enlatgemen colored youngster in Amite City, whe Charley Cantwell, & yardmaster st Wilmington, Del., on retiring after a service of fifty-two years, was presented by his associates Witi o carload of loll_ The unique gift is a miplature mahogany car fillegd with forty-five haif eagles. The Berkeley (Oal.) club of bachelor girls has dis- Aftér elght yours of stag exlstence, during hileh ite membership of seveuty dwindled to less than \ there was nothing else to do. Four recent ofiln- spunded the knell of doam. with a novel artistic temperament o De- decormted her body with tAttoo marks such gorgeous designs that male friend “weht iuto rapturks” over the exhibit. jie I OCTOBER 12, i ! 1919, The Pees " Case of Police Bratality, OMAMA, Oct. 11.—To the Editor of The Bee: 1 am & reader of The Bee and, being & traveling man. I was particularly Interested in the recent discussion of the morals and general deportment of trav- eling men. In the first piace, 1 wish to remind our crities that the traveling man is subject to temptations to which the ordinary business man is lmmune; he is away from home, no wife or neigh- bore to watch or criticise; aiso he has 8 good deal of time on his hands to dis- pose of, and as he is generally conaid erad a sport, everyone expects that he will travel on high. Therefore the local highfiyers in towns or around hotels al- | ways pick him an a companion. Ifow- evar, travellng man is merally, intelloctually, and even physically, keeping up with the trend of civilization. But let me turn to a subject 1 wish | to discuss, and that i% the extreme bru- tality of a certdin policeman whick I was compelled to witness the other even- ing. 1 have neticed time and time again in various citiea that occasionally an of- ficer of the law will upon the slightest provecation brutally attack a chvilian who his a sort of down and out appear- ance. The case I refer to was this Friday ovening on the carnival grounds & man, slightly under the Influence of llquor, got inte an argument with an officer, and aithough 1 did not hear the exchange of words, I saw the officer slug this man iIn the mouth with terrific force, no doubt loosening or displacing a number of teeth. The offender was then bundled into the patrol wagon and taken to the station, where heaven knows what happened to him. 5 T am positive that this attack was en- tirely unprovoked and will say that I could see this officer given forty lashes with absolute compesure, not to say pleasure, and I would be extremely gratified to see all officérs who are sub- Ject to much violent attacks of temper removed from the force, as they are in- capable of the judgment and control which a police officer should have. A 8 M Last Darys of Armenia. OMAHA, Oct. 11.—To the Editor of The Beo: Allow me to insert these few lines in your most valuable columns as an ap- peal to your innermost feelings of human love to open wide your pages for expres- slon of protest and indignation in an earnest manner against those unheard- of atrocities that arc being committed upon an old defenseless nation, the Ar- menians, the old people of Mount Ararat, the wery first Christians of the world, by those unspeakable Turks, who seem to be encouraged through German and Austrian influances to keep on tnelr das- tardly actions without fear or hindrance. I believe that the press in the United States has been the foremost bell ringer of protests and indignation, whenever and wherever uh inhuman act was com- mitted upon any subject nation, without any slightest mark of distinction of religion and race, by another cruelly in- clined, despotic country. And now.once more the press, the pure and principled press in the United States, is face to face with a problem thet has direct relation with the first principle of human law. Acknowledging that The Omaha Bee is one of thoss courageols sheets that do not hesitate to condemn an inhuman act, therefore, 1 appeal, through these hum- ble lines to you, déar Bee, to the press in general, to the clergy, to the laity, and to the people of Omaha to raise their mighty volce and demand through the medium of our beloved president, an im- mediate cossation of those heart-rending butchierias and massacres that the civ- llised world is sick and tired of wit- nessing. Let us make our protest audible not only to the neutral coun- tries, but to the kaiser himself, who is able to stop those atrocities as a friend and ally of the Turk. These he last days of an old nation that stood the brunt of Turkish yataghans for centuries, that gave 60,000 of its stalwart sons to help the Austrians to stop Sultan Pa- til's mighty army from entering into Vienna. Let us not be Christisns only by name and by fancy preachings, but real ones, ready to ralge our volces to sympathize and help our fellow men, no matter how remote they are. I emphasise the fact that no other na- ilis upon the face of this world has suf- fered more through the hands of fanatic and barbarous Turks than this nation of old Ararat, who was once a mighty na- tion. There is no nation today more In need of & nelping and lifting hand than this poor, powerless people of the Eu- phrates. 1 trust that those who niay happen to read these few lines, olergy or laity, will feol an inner impulse of that noble feel- ing which stirs our hearts and souls to stretch out our hands to our fellow creatures, no matter who they are or where they are. B. A—~AN ARMENIAN. Jordan's Sign. vStormy” OMAHA, Oct. The Bee: 1 am told that at his meet- ing on Sunday afternopn, Rev. Dr. W, A. Subday told of “one honest salpon keeper,” and repounted the atory it was “The Road to Hell" For the sake of the truth, I would like to make e correction. As a boy 1 played around the union depot where “Stormy” had his place, and had many a drink at the pump in his barroom. His famous sign was painted on an ordinary opaque glass gas globe, in letters scarcely larger then dome nowadays used for news- paper headings, and resd: ‘‘The Road to H.” When quizzed on the tople “'Stormy” Invariably an: Questioner might suit h it elther “heaven” or * the initlal of beth. He had another equally waell known to travelers, ose Paint,” in modest ground, It was his custom, when =« patron ssked for “a little of the best you've got," to set out a glass of water, accompanying it with advice to stick to water; if the customer demurred “Stormy” would snort: “Well, if you want whisky why in hell don't you ask for it?" When a minor lined up in front of the bar, the word would come across: ‘““The cow hasn't come up yet, sonay, but there’s the pump.” Kigsey A. Jordan had many admirable traits as & man; he was not a church member, but both his wives were (he married in #uccession sisters, daughters of one of the old families of the town), and he died & poor man. Whatever clse he wmight have been, he was not in any sense a hypocrite. T. W, M'CULLOUGH. Yor instance, | I firmly belteve that the average | of | “Stormy” Jordan's sign over his’ssloon | at the union depot at Ottumws, saying | red letters on & white back-' | ars _he's been throu it's t’:lonl around bome and watch |fi th {men at work, '~ Birmingham Age-Herald. car mive you muech| 1 gon't stdestep all his bills. SUNNY GEMS. Does your motor wes how young Bentley can trouble?’ ‘Trouble!* excipimed Mr. Chuggine, on- oean't; he midesteps the colladtor.” thusiastically. “1 should say so' Why, | _Loufsville Herald | repairing that car when it gets out of | order s about the only teal fun I get| The youngster had a grievance, which | Out of life."~Washington Star. ‘n.. confided to her mother. ‘Mother, you know the way ms an Mre. Orabshaw—How dk your husband | Johnny ith play I'm Indian and he's take care the house while you were | soidiers?” r vacation Yos, dear; what of y—The. only room cleaned | el T ABHL 160 Mm Mok me avéry wine cellar.—Life. time we shfl be sayve | ain’t patriotic” — Century Magazine. Krotchett—Say, ol man. 1 want to apoic P —— omize ihe {emper 1 displayed iast night. Your wife and sister must have THE UNTAXED ONE. | thought me crasy. | _Goodson-—No, they dian't. 1 fixed that - | all vight ik " , That was very good of you John O'Keefe in New York World | Thanka! T met & hobo in the road _And heard him loudly laugh; way his #pirits overflow: r split his head in half, Why thus reiolee In merry voica?" Ked the man of glee. everybody must settle a tax, sy the burden is breaking their G.—1 told them you were drunk.—Boston Transcrint You're taxing the careful and taxing the [ ax, ) But nobedy’'s taxing me! His clothes wero ragged and his face Had hunger on it writ, \nd lll he moved with airy grace fairly seemed to flit. “You have no care? I asked him there, And mayly answered he ‘They're taxing the poor and they're tax Te the rich; Lo BgAT @ o= | James, can vou toll me what com: mandment Adain broke when he took | The golfars that golf and the pitchers tbe forbidden ‘ that pitch; | “Please, sir ‘wagn't no command- | They're taxing the tallors who sweatily | monts then, air Philadelphia Evening | stitch; e Ledger But nobody's taxing me! “What's the trouble over the tele- Ho! all you many millioned men Hent by assessment's care, Behold one happy citizen, With tangled beard and hair! While you dig deep And wail and weep, Hark to his cadehoe free. Your wife is having a bridge party Every lady owes several other ladles and i# owed by some IB( jes. . “Well, what of it? ‘“They want you phone ? “ I to send up an expert hookkeeper to straighten out their ac-| “They're taxing the wicked and taxing counts.’ —Louisville Courfer-Journal. {he pure; — The drivers that kill and the doctors that ‘Does your boy take kindly to farm life, cure; now that he has finished college The halt and the blind they are taxing, “Oh, . yes,' replied “He ma that after it's sure But nobody's taxing me Barmer the Cobbles. sirenuous fou is good for 10 trademarks toward this Qunm This COII Cooker. Cutitout. Thuh:‘ is kage of Quaker Oats, see our offer, and note haw mtch ::fi-. But ognly oae of these coupons can be applied on a Cooker. See This Cooker Many grocers have on show this perfect Quaker Cooker. Every packageofQuakerOats tells you how to get it. It is made to our or- der to cook Quaker Oats rightly. Toretain all their flavor, all their aroma. To make this dish- doubly delicious. Quaker Cooker See it at Your Grocer’s Offer in Each Package Itis for Oats users—for house- wives who delight in extra quality. Don’t ;y&l‘mo.;n g-':el for it. We n# of the queen only, discarding two-thirds of emx. Most grocers supply these Inscious flakes without extra price when folks ask for them. Quaker Oats 10c and 25¢ In Round Packages with Top }U‘AK‘EF To the South Winter Tourist Fares Jacksonville Fia Miami, Fla. ... Ormond, ¥la Augusta, Ga......... 4978 qum.m St. Petersburg, Fla | Havana, Cuba. Tickets to Florida via one direct line, nhnh;vil another direot line, $3.00 higher than fares above. Effective October 15, 1915, |Auraclive Circuit Tours to Florida Indirect Route One or Both Ways. | JACKSONVILLE, FLA,, going via Chicago or St. Louis, direct lines to Jacksonville, re(urninc via Washington, D, O., and Chicago or ‘ . o $61.00 1L~To the Editor of | JACKRONVILLE, ¥ Ay -In; vA. Ica.n or St. Louls, direct lines via Pittsburgh o Wurlnfla-. D. O, thence to Jacksonville, re- | turning via direct routes l JACKSONVILLE, FLA, going via St. Louis and New Orleans, returning via mrmln(hun CTE R RO s TR | JACKSONVILLE, FLA., going via Chicagn and mmlnm-. re- turn via s-vuunh Atlanta and Chicago. . 53.68 JACKSONVILLE, FLA., going via Chicago, (].clmu .ml returning via Mont, y ond Chicago .............c000000 JACKSONVILLE, FLA,, going via St. Innln. Memphis and M-lllm. returning via Birmingham and St. Louls The Trains to Use: St. Louis Special at 4:30 P. M. Kansas City Trains at 9:15 A. M., 4:30 P. M., 11:05 P. M. Chicago Trains at 7:15 A. M., 3:45 P. M., 6:30 P. M. Winter Tourist and Homeseekers' Fares to many other destinations, southwest, south and southeast. Liberal stop-over privileges; write or call for publications, information, etec., and let me help you plan an attractive tour of the south. J. B, REYNOLDS, City Passenger 16th and Farnam Sts.,, Omaha, Neb, Phoues Doug. 1238 and Dous. 8580, Builinaton { Route

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