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THE OMAHA, SATURDAY, MAY 1916 B S 2 THE 01\1 A DAILY BEE] Democracy and Its Pledges. o———————————————— IS LAUGHING GAS. AL interest = | : | e Dees . e Shouting for the Wilson administration, the Thl‘ee German Gener&ls Bes R [ an, oapecially & LR oD o FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. World-Herald asserts that “The democratic [ ters, R e | Warki T, —_—e e —— - | York Ti G have gur that ~ VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. party has devoted itself to making good on its Alfred G, Gardiner in Atlantio Monthly. errer: | (b do you obiect to my bill?" aaked | [ see that the Germgns have gun —————————————— e " 3 . ‘ ! ell from the ba platform pledges. It hag by abandoning most T IS to the appointment of Falkenhayn as chief | Because it seems intended to help That's nothing el The Bee Publishing Company, Proprietor. T I of the general staff and to the emergence in the Sufety First. ‘;;mthm}ns\y..h;\,,f’h"\;}, :\‘flfi..'h,rf fo re- \’»’:fi’»‘;u?.’,"'“\hi’; o n“‘;;ll.,:dd:ymn n BEB BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Principal of its promises in its Baltimiore fleld of Generals Hindsnburg and Mackensen that | OMAHA, May 12-To the Editor of | o sl iz By, oo Entered at Omaha postoffioe as second-class matter. P the remarkable revival of German prestige during 1995 | The Ree: Does our city look the | ‘“‘How are you getting on with your | 1 you any aches or paiis : iatler. | platform was retrenchment in government eX- | way due Of these thres men, not one was in a DPosl~ | keeping of our brothers? How y “‘rlg:r':u HUCEe e A A Jm?y:"g:-;?;?". ye y } TERMS OF HLB?:}“L-I:E,IQ.)»‘\' By mag | PeBSe. It has violated this pledge by continu- | tion of great authority when the war began. Indeed, | dangers and unsafe places are left neg- | “Only we haven't quite “',",, ,,""’“,f‘,f"v Patlent—Yes, doctor it hurts me toLr kY por month per year ally Increasing appropriations, each succeeding | only one, Mackensen, was in active servics at all. | Jeoted in our city? This is a waming | I8 io be worked. I thought ft would |breatheTin faot. the o0y A athing. aily and Sunday.,.. ] vee$6.00 N Hindenburg was in retirement at Hanover; Walken- | for safety to someons else. The sewer | [° STeAt exercise for my boys and my now sec S rght: Il glve you 80 gwy without Sunday s %00 | budget providing for record-breaking totals. Tt ey ‘wa 15! the potitioa) Rosthion. af SAIRSHAY of WRT.| hoile kleng' the strest Brirotectnd ts Zv;a)ltl)nlnk it's going to be great exer- ‘hlht“tl‘l'l‘)l"l‘l 'wm' TR g Rl 3 Evening without #unday pledged its-candidate to the principle of & sIngle | and Mackensen was in command at Dunsig, Where ho | ithe public, and many women and men |\ - . T T esiington Star burgh Fost. Bunday Bee only...... 0 . 2,00 | term, and now proposes to renominate him. Its | had come into serfous collision with the crown prince | haye fallen into them, and also animals Eminent Specfalist—Yes, madam, vour - T— Shot v B y o , YOUT | pyeiness Caller (looking at D} Daily and Sunday Bee, three years in -A'\:n‘z‘xr. $10.00, leaders admit its experiment with the tariff was | 4nd was in consequence under a cloud have been injured badly, Just for the | Nu8band s suffering from temporary | e ) This ia & picture of Mrs. Peck Send notice of change of address or irregularity in P bt aberration due to overwork. The form | fyefol ™7 suppose? delivery to Omaha Bee, Clrculation Department, REMITTANCE, Remit by draft, express or postal order. Only two- cent stamps received in payment of small accounts. Personal checks, except on Omaha and eastern ex- ch not_accept CE———— OFFICES, Omaha~The Bee Bullding. Bouth Omaha—2315 N stre Counell” Bluffs—14 North Tincoln—646 Little Bulldin Chicago—818 Peoples Gag Butlding. 'ew York—Room 1106, 288 Fifth avenue, t, Louls—5603 New Bank of Comimerc Washington—725 Fourteenth street, N. W. CORRESPONDENCE, Address communications relating to news and edi- torial matter to Omaha Bes, Editorial Department. L AL LR LA ] APRIU CIROULATION. 67,808 Daily—Sunday 52,223 D t Williams, circulation manager of The Bee Publishing com, , being duly sworn, says that tae average circulation for the month of April, 1416, was b7, 508 [Z¥ unday, ngfi'fiT fih LIAMS, Circulation Manager. Bubscribed in my presence and sworn to before me this & day of May, 116, ROBERT HUNTER, Notary Publie, a blunder, which they are now trying to retrieve by going back to the republican principle of protection, b The democratie party ‘‘brought prosperity to the eountry” up to the outbreak of the war by closing down mills and factorles, checking all enterprise, disturbing business of all kinds and foreing us to the verge of a panic, only averted by the elreumstance of a world-conflict which has brought artificial inflatlon along cer- tain llnes to meet the needs of the Furopean armies, The democratic party promised to reduce the cost of living, but necessities come higher today than ever, It promised to protect Amer- fean shipping by exempting American vesgels fn coastwige commerce from Panama canal tolls and went directly against {ts promise, a miserable surrender to the demand of British ship owners, The democratic party found a surplus of $85,000,000 in the treasury accumulated by the Of the three reputations made by the war, that which has had far the greatest reclame is probably least important. Hindenburg's victory in the Masurian lakes Alstrict was certainly one of the few decisive incidents of the war. It was a victory in that complete and final sense which has become so unusual under modern conditions, It was a victory, too, due entirely to superior gemeralship, Hindenburg had been mome- thing of an oddity in the army owing to his obsession on the siibject of the military importance of the lalke district of East Prussia. When it was proposed to drain that reglon he fought for his marshes as a wild antmal for ity young, and finally stampednd the kaiser himself on the subject by the energy of his advocacy, The reglon had heen his favorite theater of study and in the maneuvers there he unfaflingly engineered his foe into the marshes, “We're going to have a bath today,” was the saying of the soldiers when “old Minderburs” was against them. But when the war broke out Hindenburs was neglected, and his ap. plication for & post was ignored until the Russian in- vasion of the sacred soil of Fast Prussia spread panic in the capital and throughout the country, Then the boycott collapsed. “Suddenly,” he sald, after he had become a national hero, “‘thers came a telegram in- forming me that the emperor commissionsd me to command . the Bastern army. I really only had time want of an iron grating to cover them, before the city will have thousands of dollars damages to pay for broken limbs and persons to be made cripples for life. 1 have been one of them, and badly hurt; not the first time, but many times. winter when covered with snow, I have fallen into them many times. 1 others to wateh and be careful, partiou- larly mothers with children. MRS. G. W, ‘Why Re Pestered with Dandelions? LINCOLN, May 12-To the Kditor of Permit me to suggest that the only certain way to be rid of dande lons In the lawn 15 to sow and maintain some of the clovers, preferably the white clover, with the blue grass. Burn, sell Instead If the sofl this need not be Many of the Kentucky blue grass fields are not pastured during the spring and summer; when the seed is ripe the farmers gather the seed with a stripping some of them run by hand. The Bee: or give away the lawnmower; use some fine stable litter. is rich with humus, done. machine, In AHLQUIST. |ing Peckington—Y es; {p—ar—getting her picture taken.- of his mania {s quite common that's her when Wife—Yes, he insists that he is a mil o Phil loinaire, ¢ |:mxnun;ws;;pr1.|m,_mn he wants to |delphia Press. pay me $00 for my advice. Wa'll have | iSSP . to humor him, you know.—New York | SUSANNA SEMPLER'S SAMPLER mes. Youth's Companion Susanna Sempler sighed and sald | 7Y would a sampler make, But from so many erny things 1 don't know which to take My grandma took the alphabet, f‘;ul T'4 like mine, you see, 2 | Unlike what any child has made f.anderstand you are pow one of the | Ajs different as can be” officials of Crimson Gulch.” ‘ Yep,' replied Hroncho Bob. “I come | When Sue next day the gircus aw he had a happy thought in of the prohibition ticket." And how s prohilition Working out?” | “What it these Very animals Tn sampler could be wrought? “Pine. We've got 1 fixed mow. so {hat nobody but the gl'll(‘"!u friends of us | Then quick as flash she found her thread guthoritles can buy or sell a drop."— | And, on her canvas new, With needle very deft and bright Washington Star, These circus pletures drew Wife (with newspaper)-Tt says here that men grow rmrd because of the in tense activity of their brains, | Hub—Exactly! ~And women have no | whiskers because of the intense activity of thelr ehins.—Boston Transcript. {Her brothers and herself she showod When watching the parade; o And then the animals in rows Bhe very quickly made. The elephant and camel, too, And then the tall giraffe; And last the clown astride a horse | Who made the children laugh DEAR MR, KABIBBLE, The llon and the ostrich big, | The dog with funny tricks, The leaping goat and cockatoos The pony jnmping sticks! When these she had portrayed in lina Bhe worked a horder fine, And—'neath her name—in rose design Her age, exactly nine. THE DOG. They save and sell the seed to us at a greater profit per acre than any other crop we, or they, can grow; then they have the crop of green grass left, which in more profitable for feeding purposes than the same land will produce in any kind of ensilage placed in a silo. Stock will eat it, and any amount of trouble and labor will be saved, When we mow this young blue grass in the spring, or any other time, we destroy the lungs of the plant through which it inhales the to buy some woolen clothing and make my old uni- form presentable again. Then came sleeping cars, maloon cars, locomotives—and so I journeyed to Kast Prussia like & prince. And so far everything has gone well."” It had. On the ground that he knew so thoroughly Bubscribers leaving the city temporarily should have The Beo malled to them, Ad~ dress will be changec as often as requested. republicans, so roundly denounced because of extravagance; within eighteen months this was turned into a deficlt of $65,000,000, a net change of $160,000,000 for the first year and a half of democratic administration, It has i i . Xiow oA devised many new forms of taxation, and yet 6 maneuvered Samsonov's army in & sWamps al achleved the most sensational victory of the war, He the ordinary expenditures of the lovnrument' became the savior of his country and in the popular are running ahead of its revenues, Imagination overshadowed every other figure, He had Its wonderful achievement in the way of | the whole nation at his feet, and belg rather & breesy, simple-minded man who had never before known what e ———— 1t Lincoln is entitled to a new Union depot, “What do you think of traf o n gy millary v . training girls In “They dan'? need it. Why , they take 1o fight as instinctively as a duck takos to water, I know plenty of women who have never had a minute’s military train- ing In their lives, and yot look at them E——— At any rate, Mr, Bryan can prove an alibl on that brewery air tank explosion. American Field I've never known a dog to wa His tail In glee he didn't fee et e o J Yor qu ime friend to (g i - constructive logislation ends with the passage | T /00Tl Tt W e he revaled in the sun- | OXY6en and nitrogen of tho air; that | In the meetings of women's patriotic so oL s e Ry 'Why is democracy strong?"” asks the local | of a banking law, based on the Aldrich bill, | i "0un the frank enjoyment of a schoolboy. feeds the dandelions and keeps them o altimore American. | o yellowest eur T ever knew democratic organ. Oh! the answer is esay. It | denounced by every democratic leader until e Illr;mu, 1t w:.kfll or w;:]kec‘ the dande- .v-,,,. ,,I,m ,,,",t,’, Tather busy.” Was, to the boy who loved him, true ; n enemy, the perenn. uegrass, or ‘Yes. ‘'m writing a love lette; b, " k fen't, taken up by the president. It has sought to But grest as the achievement was, it was not 80 | its nurse crop, the clovers, we are sup- | "2en working on it for more B an | %¢ naver Known & 061> i) __ abandon the Pilipinos to the mercy of colony- | great as the public estimate, Inflated by the panio ure' ~ | hour. 4 | TRy indar man to know plylng nature's requirements for the pro Why take such pains?” y seek a kinder v Those Texas militismen would doubtless | grabbing world powers. Its promises to pro- ;"mz )'vr'l';ul";l i r"nc'lvuv'd it to l*;'. M!t'!m:n vmo motion of the dandelion's activition. 1| I wart te feel wire that 1f this letter | .0 | Bl R ave followe o campalgns on the rn frontier v ead in cour: won't o | The hpmbus B L u glady walva thelr constitutional guaranty | yvide for the defense of the country are heing [ur FRI0wer T8 SERIANE 8 O LT tton | oo riod out thia proporition both i1 | laoklike & fool A Blrmingham Xge-Har, | Was. (o tho man who loved him, trus | y ald. against belng sent outside the borders of the | proved as hollow as any of its other empty Dre- | yn aoiail have a hisher resard for the genius of | whereor I speak, Cut out the lnwnmower | Lt [ 'ye never known a Aok to fake country, tenses, And the biggest joke of all is its dis- | Mackensen than for that of Hindenburs. L4ke Hinden- | uo'copibit with nature's laws. Let ag | _Mre. Catterson—T am sotually atmid to | o\ yiifction for a present e, get my bank book bal have made a mistake. Mre, Hatterson—Why don’t you do as T do? T keep on drawing the money out burg he was ignored at the beginning of the cam- paign. His troubles with the crown prince at Danzig had culminated earlier in the year in a request to the kaiser that either he or the prince should be removed. Mackensen remained and the prince was recalled to Berlin; but when the war broke out it was the latter who was in command of the central army in the weat, regard of itg specific sacred pledge guaranteeing anced, for fear I that all its platform pledges were to be scrupu- lously kept. The president himself has changed front at least once on almost every important issue since entering the White Hou: Yes, indeed, the | Rome little favor to attain 5 I've never known a Prince or Spot That seemed to be what he was not not be Bourbons, never forgeiting nor learning anything, but simply take the dandelion by the horns and throw him | [ do7 T kesp on t out of ourm and into the Jawns of our | } 5. they won't let me have any more.— nelghbors who need exerclse and are in ] — viting trouble, Yours truly, “What became of that candidate for R. B. GRINSTBAD. | Your sister’s hand?’ If Omaha sends a delegation to hear “'Billy”’ Bunday at Kansas City, it will do better by Kan- #as City than Kansas City did by us when Billy” was here, But T have known a dog to fight \ With all his strength to shield a friend, And whether wrong or whather right, To stick with him until the end And T have known a dog to lick Urgent calls for assistance in supplying the while Mackensen was left to cool his heels in ob. “He won out. And say!” The hand of him that men would kick rd of promise-making and promise-breaking v 9 “Well 7" | necessaries of life for war-ravaged Poland | °°°T¢ © P 8 » scure tasks, Not until some months had passed with “He hasnt redeemed any of his nu-| And T have known a dog to bear A of the democratic party is one that challenges | their tale of disappointed hopes did he emerge as the merous pledges.”—Kansas City Journal Starvation's pangs from day to d With him who had been glad to sl fiis bread and meat along the way No dog, however mean or rude, 1s guilty of ingratitude. plainly indicate that conquerors are indifferent *to the fate of the conquered, socond In command to Hindenburg on the Russian front. His name first cama into prominence by his skiliful extrication of his army when its envelopment east of Lodz was regarded as complete; and thenceforward overy task of critical Importance was committed to his hands. It was he who belleved that smashing blow on the Dunajec which opened so sensationally Dr, E. R. Baldwin, president of the Na~ | the now and most formidable phase of German attack. attention, which it will receive from the voters in November, Mra. Flatbush—8he got all her furniture on the installment plan Mrs. Bensonhurat—Are you sure? Mra. Flatbush—Positively You Tips on Home Topics Combating the White Plague. Some encouraging prokress s from the “firing line” {n the war on tubercu- losis. tional Association for the Study and Prevention | The serles of operations that followed by which be reported 100 forced the Russian left back to the Privit marshes of hm::h" Y fi:cl::t :;d‘ '0 ,0::0 re: d a grim power not inferlor to Hindenburg’s from an insurance eompany » ety, alS0 | .na a constructive subtlety which, except on the calls attention to the fact that the sum of money | ground that he had studied all his lifetime, Hindenburg expended in the United Btates along the lines | has not rivalmjl;' = bating senso The campaign in Serbla was on a smaller scals, of oom the 44 oo risenitn tan but again the strategy was of that fresh and origina) years from $5,000,000 to more than $22,600,~ | .paracter that commands the respect of the student of 000, During this time the death rate in the | war. It fs, I belleve, true to say that no campaigns larger cities has decreased, in some of them | In connection with the war are being studled by the from 20 to 30 per cent. This shows advance against the scourge, and is creditabie in some see, #he's been married five times and she Kot a little furniture with each hus) —Yonkers Statesman The country is reminded by a raid on a Cali- fofnia town, which netted $20,000, that Mexico has no cinch on the bandit business, Home talent in that line Is not wholly out-classed, T Mexican raids across the border indicate more systom and regularity than is possible among scattered bhands of handits, It would be highly interesting to know just what interests are back of them. S—— A special congressional election in a West Virginfa district which last year gave a demo- crat 3,000 majority Has just resulted in the choice of a republican by approximately 1,100 maJjority, Straws point the wind! Pittsburgh Dispatch With the ral- roads going into the hotel business, pos- #ibly the Interstate Commerce commis- slon may solve the tipping evil. Washington Post: Speaking of the op- erations of the civil service law, wouldn't it be dreadful if congressmen had 1o pass a competitive examination? Louisville The dog is listed with the dumb, nd, No volee has he to speak his creed His messages to humans come By faithful conduct and by desd He shows, as seldotn mortals do, reported “Isn’t it wonderful how {rrigation will make a thing grow?”’ exclaimed the man' A high ideal of being true. Bed Sale! Bed Sale!| - One Day Only! e e e Conrfer-Journal: Mother, may I put on long skirts? Why, yes, my darling daughter, but when you get as old as ma maybe you'll wear 'em shorter. Boston Transcript: Why don't the Henry D. Estabrook and T, Coleman Du Pont presidential booms economize on headquarters rent by using the same tele- phone booth? Indianapolis News coming to St Every Bed in this sale represents RAYMOND QUALITY and MARKED LOWER than our every-day LOW PRICES. military experts with so much attention as those of Mackensen. Like Hindenburg, Kluck, Bulow and most w A of the German generals, he is nearer 70 than . He il Mr. Bryan, Louwls a3 & newspaper re- . b ' ¢ N i 3 ‘ : H : . H v : 5 s H . H 4 CS— degree to publie iIntelligence. No medicament | won the Iron Cross in the war of 1570, and the Lron Siitar akh ia WY denwsvti, Seme-Big : A steady advance In co-operative insuranee | of efficacy In treatment of tuberculosis has | Oross was relatively a much less famillar reward then | Lo 'y00 vous with him? Tt s & regular : g ! In Nebraska is a striking feature of the insur- | heen discovered, so that any lessening of its ::::".:."w“:‘: "I"';"‘]’"’:"‘":::‘:‘:“:I"“"“m':' "::: ":::;‘d"‘:‘ bolo, It your shopping day does pot happen (o be tomorrow, MAKE 3 ance commissioner's report. Increased business | revages is ascribable to better I1ving, brousht | geed, thers are few things more significant of the | Boston Transcript: With 0 beautiful the sacrifice of your time and CHANGE IT and come to Raymond's i s+ sharply reminds “old liners” to make their | ahout by clearer understanding of the condi- [ change whicy has come over the temperament of Washington soclety girls moblilzed in a RED AND BEDDING SALE. THREE OARS OF IRON, STEEL % rates reasonable or suffer an evergrowing loss. | tions that produce or foster attacks by the | Prussia than the contrast between the parsimony Smoing ontED aNAY. [elwhen LI, HAAN AND BRASS BEDS TO RE S0OLD IN A DAY. : e e prirspsdi (1, Intensive experimentation is | With Which decoratiohs were given in 1570 and the ‘;}:“ g m:“:»;)m'm.r sebi b :mr : = " - » . erman's definition of war were revised : Mr. Bryan has beén commissioned alternate- bac! Py gt g e lavishness with which they were given in the early wE ; d . E to be carried st urther, in the hope of di8- | phages of the present war Indianapolis News: Carranza may hesi- } at-large to the St. Louls convention, apparently | . oering some method by which the white Unlike Hindenburg, Mackensen is m man of silent, | tate because he fs afraid that he will say 4 without his aid or consent. That Is the per- plague may be entirely eradicated. Whila this | almost morose habit. It Is popularly attributed to the | something that he will be sorry for after- The hed here ‘s verse way things too often happen—you are 2 t a blow which the loss of a much-beloved wifs inflicted | ward; but he ought to remember that ne | icasacelt s This bed is 3" Gsaisd whet you want and handed what you Is being carried on, the means mow at hand | . "\ "hi it ts in reality the natural habit of a | may be a whole lot sorrier afterward for equipped in 4 9 v * should not be neglected. Overwork, nunder- | singularly absorbed and self-contained character. His | not saying something a good, sub- the illustra § (dob’t want. feading, poor housing, and neglect of sanitary | brevity of speech is the expression of a ruthless tem- | phjladelphia Ledger: Americans wiil stantial s Sl o : S —— rules induce tuberculosis. Where these condt- | Per and in the severity of the demands he makes on | not he hated abroad while they are capa hrass hed— i on s . ¥ v » Il who come upder his iron will, as well as in his | s . . ¢ ! : The same democrats who have heen clamor tions do not exist, the scotirge is seldom found. ,.“1,;I,:...|r.'."," ”::I vl Ahu:‘":' S Nm‘m!n:‘ ‘r.r ble of “the y-}\ nflt h m»n{n generosity Thare are box spring— ! ing to fix a date for Uncle S8am to get out of the b and quick action” fn the work of reliev many others iz 3 \ s Lord Kitehener. Miracles have been performed by | fng the miseries of war with which Mr, | ASK TO 3 Philippines refuse to fix a dato to get out of Politics and Mexico, soldiers and civillans allke during his advances, not | Agquith credits them | oqually 1ow SKE THESE % Mexico. There is nothing more inconsistent in The conference between General Scott and because of the affection they have for him, but be. Nt sty Areit =iy priced. . : ever, than {n most of the administra~ cause of the fear of his merciless hand. He has besn bR ey = : $Uas, how 4 o s Minister of War Obregon over the border rela~ | yug (with what truth T do not know) to hava Scops [ % MUIC 107 onoufh the kick wilt he forth- | This Brass Bed, 2-in. Posts, $6.25 § Siena: moves tions between the United States and Mexico, | blood in his veins, but in all his characteristics he fy | COPNAKS AT 070 Mavs 10 BOCHCS, TORK | s Bras s y 90 H e e o enough 1 be stung ter Mr " : : 2 . especially with regard to the status and future typical of the Prussian mind, manner and thought was a candidate for p! nt thres times | : Consumers of hard coal are given due no- | Lol o0 ihe punitive expedition fn pursuit | his party wom't even send him to.a na- | Iron Beds stee' Beds § tice to lay aside an extra b cents per ton for It has ended In no {OPmaL; ar oot Bt the true key to the resascence of the German | tiona e A | : ¥ of Villa, has ended in no formal arrangement. " - Bnameled in colors K1.85 3.75. $5.25. $5.75 I next winter's fuel. Mine owners tearfully an b gy causo after the tafiore of 1914 ia to be found tn Falken- | prookivn FPagle: Jacoh Schiff gives 4 . $3.75, $5.26, $5.75, $6.25 \ H It {8 hinted, however, that “an unwritten akreo- | | . Aetd chiaial-niltl a1 the Sall - s Enameled white . 82.10 ) % nounce that they are unable to absorb the e A ayn, w 8 appointed chief-of-ata! n the fa $50,000 to translate and perpatuate in Ens- | Fnameled Vernis Marten and y H Sabibde sl ment” has been reached, Carranza holding off | or oltke Falkenhayn fs, apart from the royal lead- | jb the best Yiddish classics. This (s the | o - 2 n Heavy Steel Bed, light as i wage increase of §4,000,000 a year for four | . o gBiinet uynderstanding because of its | ers, considerably the youngest of the mensrals in &b | sonversa of Frank K. Stockton's pro Jalte fheae 82.50 ol s % years and must pass it down the line, even possible effect on the politics of his country position In the German army. He ia B4-the sama age | soinnr who gave his Iifa to translating ki Rl mrs':l "o BRASS, Z-in. posts...87.75 ! though necessity wrenches sympathetic hearts. RIght there is-the kernel of the entire cone | ** General Halg. Mo fa & man whose ambitions are | pooyio dosiel (o Tatin and Gresk 1o S L g e . ! However, it i belleved the barons will survive i gl ancpet ., unlimited as his powers to achleve them. Four | .\ tnam from oblivien. Bome scholars B ass Beds . 55 Chaitioh troversy eaders on he sldes BOUEBME | voars or #o ago he was unknown to the German | .\ 0 1he only Immortal langungs I8 » r to play polities, Mr, Wilson, on taking up | publie, and his promotion from an ohacure provinelal | 4004 nde. and they will naver be eon . B | ", s - | e rovared he oner o b prodcasor | Commnd o o bt o Pt iy ot | 11"l ew $6.25, $8.75, $13.75, S14.85. All 2-inch Posts Right on the threshold of the battle for % e _ | 1x supposed 1o have beery the result of one thoss court | — Brass Dads In square drawn tubing, in smartest patterns and the presidency hopes of a real old-fashioned 1o the. ombArRO o Arm Mr, Bryan, following | \ o icues which play a part in Prussian public lite heavy 2% and 3-inch, post. All substantially reduced N o the president's lead, entered (nto Intimate rela- | y11a nad family influence in the kaim household and - campalgn are shattered by the suffrage an- tons with Villa, and finally Mr, Wilson gave | ha advancenent was not uncouneated with that fao | OddS a"d Fndfl (et our avery day Mattress Prices and ask to see the FELT W¥ W, i pouncement of watehful neutrality, The absence s (nfluential support to Carranzs. The petty | Put be had brains as well aa Influencs, and an ag 4 & USE and don't guess at what your mattress is made of. Ask to sec % ! * of & suffrage standard bearer from the fleld de » mressive personality disguised by the arta of the e the $9.75 box spring=—THE LAST BPOKEN WORD (n bad comfor ” ! : [ try of the chief pleturesque fea- intrigues by which the Mexican mess Bas DOOn | L oy wnd far-sighied fntriguer is & Raymond Bux Spring. Sce them as they fit on the bad S Jrives the couatry brought to it present odoriferous stags make | pram his advent (o the ninistey of war he set him Jen Molnes offers & novel example of i ture of every campalgn sinee Nelva Lockwood s E ssit & waderssing Milé 1t beman 16 be hinted that | T™okless wastage of money. The capiia one of the most remarkable chapters in Amer ! sssayed the role of carrylng the banner of lib tead Dibtovy Molthe was “get that the genersl stafy | ©1ty and & wa 1 s dry as last year's L ity aud equality On the other aide of the border Carranta has | Meo's * R by iged freseeer . ) ; ‘ ' | i | alse been busy with polities His Incapacity ia 4 > ° hats A ! G admitied, the insineerity of his supporter ar s d . 2 ) s 1813-1818 \ b ) ' talnty that he will be unable (o pacify | " ace of the hesitation of the 7. bt o inae am 18 ‘ This Day in Omaha oy b sl Whher sur presiiens will 00 | e s oy A B : . — | fortunsale lo “muddie through™ with the border . & WAL GAING waa Molthe wha vemained i ancath his T ‘ i plied From Bes Fiies. [ inabie he has 460e 86 Much 00 orats tomains . which FRkesharn had st bia hear B S i B O BAGRau ahe 04 U AN DRONE. PR | o ) Dot 1t has Already been established v B > g g b | proud of William Maibroaw, age ¥ | of Ovnalia laves Wedneadar for o fow montpe’ | 10 seen, bu Molihe'n meanire, Naew Thal b was us o g b I tha east that palitica on both sides 1n reapansible for the | y oot s Mralegy sng Melglum e > ~ ou & o the M . ARy, has ved with Vies i i . . aad Sind p . R h d l . Prsaident Stephens, and whi tomain hore €vring 8 | Womancs 1 seteemed sosmop - ey mass b & Indiopuinbie that b | o' ersistence is the cardinal vir- Wb thnitation of race or previous \ \ . wl N A . .y nu'.».‘.w. §8 Nusth Ntuet orvet |ap of the Untted States. T de progerty My iy . A . ‘-' - e = v il ) P N - 1 “s N - e waihe o g aad movwss Youreonth siront | SlaTis o4 Pricadabip, N. Y., provesds : i 0 e Salisirn of wata | Sreasm from fremin 2t thad e how good advertising may be o Parsas siret 10 Love, Vi, thenes 10 Kissimme, Fia S Shend A \ nihg | sends ah st - i N 3 \ e ! The feak bebih W Ahe fesadation bee wew | turne westward (o King, Ark { reaches Mia ) awed (he Naleee gl e . h 2 ’ h i Shiminy of Cummares MWiding Me boos oMt | aostination at Parsen, Ky. l1deal teads ail ¢ . it wat 10 1he fraime of wind 1 fap- | shovelad wait by tha was in other respects, 1t must be 3 AGSIER Mupnt hae wimesded bn seonrter Mt | way, surfaced with tmaginstios ot v war .: and et | A oo S S A Banh Biwards, of the fumens Mendebssn b, b | me———— B Jotpmant, ool PRSP Nos and | aad oeetions g run frequently and constant- oy . "’“:." o o " . :"’“’ by vy |"% The Des Joine In the protest agslest dis . elinetuel e v o B - < q ) nst which ‘o shan Pran will povalde o4 the Ay " . crtmination agalnst Omada by the pamenger he poa Aamter of miline y wh frem A s RRTe ' \ . to ¢ rea h] ~CSstul, 3 T Barker Wrothers aie Bow haibding an «legant rateamakers and dispensers of stepover privi “",""' - ‘l : . el % & " y y succe e el Dlding on the RAfIRwest saenar of Thin | lages. Omala b ealitled o libesal consider Morssan Pollack of Piiteburgh travels I8 watige :\ ol Lage Rl .-N- Sosnih And Jenas aleesta I0 B be be Aheee wieries | Lion o any olher ralitead geteway and should | VY wenh for 1he peiviioge of attonding Ma favanie | S A000L TR T U SRS © Butelh W Claveiand Neal photy, & raliread pass, or oy T e and el By W holght mensare @ by . » hatal . on having I\ | S The eorh will be aduit bo N vole What Bapgens the mare