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! z 12 THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 1916, THE OMAHA EVENING BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. The Bee Publishing Company, Proprietor. OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY OF OMAHA. OFFICIAL PAPER FOR DOUGLAS OOUNTY. JSSUED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. BEE BUILDING, FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH. Entered at Omaha postoffice as second-class matter. TERMS OF EUBBBCRIP'I'TON. v carrier per month 8fic. By mail per Daily and Sunday.... Daily without Sunday .rg of address or irregularity in delivery to Omaha Bee, Circulation Department. OFFICES. s Bee Bullding. chi Omaha—Th South Omaha—2818 N street, Councfl Bluffs—14 North Main street. Lincoln—526 Little Building. Chicago—818 Peoples Gas Building. New York—Room 1106, 286 Fifth avenue. 8t. Louis—503 New Bank of Commerce, Washington—1725 Fourteenth street, N. W, CORRESPONDENCE, Addross communications nlnm to news and edi- torial matter to Omaha Bee, BAltorial Department. APRIL CIRCULATION, 57,808 Daily—-Sunday 52,223 Dwight Willinms, eiroulation manager of the Bee Publishing company, being duly sworn, says thst the verage eirculstion for the month of April, 1016, was 67,808 daily and 62,223 SBunday. DWIGHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager. Bubseribed in my presence and sworn to before me this #4 day of May, 1016, ROBERT HUNTER, Notary Publle. Subscribers leaving the city temporarily should have the Bee mailed to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. Omaha isn’t a very encouraging headquarters for a get-rich-quick operator, Another Mexican bandit sleeps on Texas soil. Texas hospitality shines in that line. Well, only one man could get the place, but this won't make the losers feel any better, If Mr. Wilson writes the platform for St. Louie, will Mr. Bryan permit the convention to adopt it? South pole explornim; holds out the cheerless prospect of duplicating the tragedies of the North pole. derings of politicians, the country persists in hus- tling for the joys of life in the usual way, Seventy-two hours of prayer for “Billy” Sun- day fairly tops the acore for earnestness and en- durance, besides proving that Omaha’s heart beats for “Bill.” lumi;rnion' from Europe this year far ex- ceeds the low record of last year. Reasons are abundant for their coming; the wonder is how they get away. Her Majesty, the June Bride, now holds the spotlight. Somewhere in the shadows the bride- groom lingers with becoming humility. Later on his day will come. . Europe's fighting warriors must pump a better grade of pep into their operations during the next ten days if they would rival the thundering guns of Chicago and St. Louis, oEmET——— Nine of the thirteen expected booms are al- ready booming in Chicago and noise-makers are storming the lake front. Fortunate is the early bird which holds its feathers through the fray. The confirmation of Louis D. Brandeis dealt a solar plexus blow to the efficiency of organized wealth and dislocated the social pull of Boston's _aristocracy. The jolt lost none of its force by the long delay. emm—— Federal statisticians find an average advance of only 1 per cent in a month in the cost of staple foods. A brief consultation with butchers and grocers will show the figure sharps a mile behind the procession e e e Due allowance should be made for the neces- sity of Mexican leaders blustering for home consumption. General Carranza appreciates the national weakness and his typewriter is equal to the demand for hot stuff — An eclevator is a vehicle and it is not a veh- jele, according to the rulings of two New York courts. Judicial deliverances are sure hold their mystic charm so long as courts, heedless of expense, pass conundrums up the line. —— to Eighty-three thousand people witnessed the auto racers put up a speed score of B4.05 miles an hour for three hours, on the Indiana speed- way. Mechanical fittingly reaches the greatest altitude in the gas belt — sport A government armor plate plant is a night- mare to the Bethlehem steel people. In his sagerness to head off the deal President Schwabd offered 1o do the work indefinitely at a price to be fixed by the government, The tender sounds fike a bargain, but lacks vital provision of a fAxed term of years o ————e e =G ' Thirty Years Agi]n ' N This Day in Omaha — Cawmplied From Bes Files. Judge McCulloch, not being able 10 lssue o marriage license to himaell, has asked the com Bissloners 1o comm & judge especially for that purpose. The baard accordingly appointed pege Curley, the judge’'s clerk, wit) ads at OO0, Rev. Willard Scott has gone 1o Central City where be will bring to & close the sevnion of the Nebraska Sunday School convent now heing M there by » decture on the “luflvence of ihe ible ov the Natlonal Characte Mr. Hugh Thompson of the city water works Ban left with his wile and siater o vinit his par e in Ewing, Neb. From theee the family will 10 tast on & viML The Omaha Cricket elub had & moeting at the B & M. headauarters, st which thirty members 3:' snrolied and the fnllowing offeers were ped: P8 Bastis, pressdent Joha ¥ Frangis, searetary and trenanrer; F. O Wood, | Purdon e 1 Burlelgh, members of the executive cam mitter Property owners interesiad in securing the Mo tramway on Dodge street will a Patrisk's office in the Paxton building, Friday evening ' Prospectus of the Platform. President Wilson’s Memorial day speech is accepted in general terms as indicative of what he expects to have embodied in the platform on which he will go before the country asking for re-election. That speech, carefully prepared and cautiously delivered, has in it nothing indicating what the president really proposes in the way of constructive legislation. It deals almost exclu- sively with the single topic of citizenship, and reiterates most solemnly the sentiments often ex- pressed by Mr. Wilson, and concerning which two opinions cannot possibly exist, that allegi- ance can not be divided. His inchoate and unde- termined views as to national defense hardly deserve consideration, for, were they pronounced by a person of less consequence than the presi- dent of the United States, they would be dis- missed as unworthy, Mr. Wilson's suggestion for a platform is not one that will greatly strengthen the position of his party. In the meantime Chairman Claude E. Kitchin of the house ways and means committee is making some medicine that will interest the leaders of the free trade party. Mr. Kitchin is preparing a revenue bill that will contain some distinctly new and uncertain methods for pro- viding funds for the government, and one well- tried means. He proposes to levy a duty on dye stuffs of at least 5 per cent, a protection to American manufacturers! Mr. Kitchin must be fully conversant with the fulmination of the Baltimore convention of four years ago. The first paragraph of that platform reads: We declare {t to be & fundamental principle of the democratic party that the federal government under the constitution has no right or power to impose or eolleet tarlff duties except for the purpose of revenus, and we llection of such taxes shall be limited honestly and This about-face movement on the tariff is but one of several executed by the democrats since 1912, although most of the pledges made in the Baltimore platform have been ignored or re- pudiated in toto. Mr. Wilson’s utterances and Mr. Kitchin's proposals warrant the conclusion that the St. Louis platform will be a remarkable production, Bouth Bide Gets Representation. Residents of the South Side may now feel that they are indeed citizens of Omaha, one of the pioneers of South Omaha having been chosen as a member of the city commission. This result might have been achieved months ago, had not the energetic opponents of annexation secured a postponement of the inevitable till after the Omaha election was held. The choice of Mr. Parks is sure to be popular with his fellow cit- izens, he having long been identified with the life of South Omaha as a builder and contractor, active in its community affairs, and distinguished by reason of not being an office-seeker. His se- fection should be assurance that the interests of that section of Greater Omaha will not be neglected by the city commission. However, it should not be taken to establish the precedent of electing commissioners because of the part of town in which they live. Omaha wants no sec- tional lines drawn across its map. Two Impressive Ceremonies, New York’s socialist preacher took part in the burning of an American flag and pronounced it the most impressive ceremony he had ever at- tended. The following morning he was present at another assembly, where the proceedings were less spectacular, but almost as impressive. It was in police court, and the desecrator of the flag was fined $1,000. This fine ought to stick. We concede to Rev. Bouck White and his asso- ciates the right to revere the flag of “interna- tional industrialism,” whatever that is, and they may hold privately whatever opinion they like of the Stars and Stripes. But when it comes to making a public show of the desecration of the flag that represents the government under which he lives, then the reverend gentleman is coming into contact with what that flag stands for, the law of a free people. The incident is worthy of note as showing to what extremes men can carry their foolishness. “Insult” From Carranza. No especial wonder need be expressed at the announcement from Washington that the latest communication from Carranza is the most insult- ing in its tone ever sent to the United States government. It is but a continuance of the treat ment the Mexicans have accorded the United States and its citizens from the beginning. Presi dent Wilson's reversible policy in dealing with the irresponsibles who have disturbed the peace along our southern border since he took office has been rather an encouragement to them to persist in both insult and outrage towards Amer icans. Carranza is now affording perfect proof of the proposition that the nation that will not pro- tect its citizens and its rights, wherever they may | be put in jeopardy, is not likely to command re spect. We may be too proud to fight, but that will not exempt us from insult and imposition from others whose pride takes a different form Sullivan in the Saddle. Roger Sullivan of Illinois announces himself as & candidate for vice president on the ticket with Woodrow Wilson. This amounts to serving notice on Mr, Bryan that he will have something besides the platform to occupy his attention at St Louls. It is twelve years since Bryan excom municated Sullivan at St. Louls, but for some rea son the sentence dida't become operative. It has heen suspended at times, as for example eight years ago, when Bryan as a candidate for president, needed Sullivan's support. At that time Roger Sullivan, “Tom™ Taggart Murphy, “Fingy” Connors and all the delectable crew were good enough democrats It wat different at Raltimore, where the peerlesy feader put the “Indian sign” on the New York delegation and several others who were standing it for Champ Clark (for whom Mr. Bryas had been told 1o voie by the people of his state) e coming » s of the demosrats promises 1o be anything but perlunciory —————— Ihe werchant fleet of Great Britain has not bean seciously affected by the wi suhmarine campaign, Lloyd's recond shows & decreased tonnage compared with baild ing records of 1914, yot there has been an adtual despite (he 1913 nereass I Ihe lonnage aggr AR Increase nder enisting ¢ s emphasines the com el s p of the o ——— It would b well 10 remind Ceneral Carvansa s diplomatie terma that while | ¢ Sam mits walimited criticiom at home, » ot on the part of aliens will not be toleraied. Neigh John A. MeShane has come [ from the west, | borly good will has lmitations il The Mystery of the Tides By GARRETT P. SERVISS. E MAY liken the ocean to a respiring giant that stretches his vast flength around all our coasts, whose breath is the flood of waters, now poured impetuously into every bay and inlet as the monster exhales, and now swiftly drawn out again with his next inha- lation, while, coincidentally, his broad breast heaves and falls and rhythmicaliy the navies rise and sink, feeling the resistless power of the life that slumbers underneath their keels, But is is a forced breathing, this of great Nep- tune, and he would lie still as death but for two life-savers in the sky which strive without ceas- ing to save him from suffocation through the stagnation of his own waters, These Samaritans are the moon and the sun, as every school-child is taught without under- standing, just as most of us know that a pul- motor may bring a drowned man to life again without comprehending exactly how. This is the mystery of the tides, and a mys- tery it remains, in part, although mankind has wondered about it and studied it from time im- memorial. Although it had been noticed long before Newton was born that there was a syn- chronism between the motion of the moon and the tides, yet it was not until he had developed his theory of gravitation that the manner of the moon's action in producing tides became plain, The moon is the principal agent, more than twice as effective as the sun, and since they both work in the same way, it is unnecessary to intro- duce more than one of them in a simple explana- tion, That explanation depends upon three proved facts—first, that the attraction of gravitation in- creases in force with decrease of distance; sec- ond, that the solid earth yields as a whole, united body to the gravitational pull of the moon, and, third, that the ocean, being composed of watery particles free to move among one another, does not yield to the lunar tug as a whole united body, but its waters flow over the earth’s crust toward the place where the resultant of the forces acting upon them is greatest. The consequence is that they are, in a sense, heaped or swelled up in a tidal wave, and the rotation of the earth on its axis carries this wave westward, or in a direction contrary to that of the rotation. So, if you envelop a school globe in a sheet of gauze and hold the gauze so that it can- not turn with the globe when the latter is rotated, the gauze will move over its surface in an op- osite direction. Your hand, gathering up and olding the ;;:uze on one side, may represent the attraction of the moon upon the oceanic waters, . The water is heaped up by the moon’s attrac- tion in accordance with the first of the three fundamental facts mentioned above; namely, that the attraction increases with decrease of distance, In truth, it increases inversely as the square of the distance, which augments the effect. The side of the earth that is at any time toward the moon is about 4,000 miles nearer the moon than the center of the earth. But, according to our second fundamental fact, the earth yields as a single solid body, to which we may now add that the effect of the pull is the same as if the entire substance of the earth were concentrated at its center. It follows that the waters of the ocean, being free to move over their solid bed, and experlencinq an attraction greater than that felt at the earth’s center, tend to flow toward the place where the moon’s attraction is greatest, Now comes the point usually found most dif- ficult to understand. There is a tide on the side of the earth turned from the moon as well as on the side turned toward it. This is a result of the same fundamental facts. The water on the side opposite to the moon is 4,000 miles farther from the moon than the center of the earth and is, consequently, proportionately less attracted, Thus the earth, as a whole, tends to be drawn away from the water on that side, just as on the other side the water tends to be drawn away from the earth, This 1s, in substance, the theory of the tides, and no doubt it is a true explanation of their fundamental cause. But great difficulties arise when the theory is applied to the actual tides that flow around the coasts of the continents. If the eqrth were a smooth sphere, covered everywhere with an ocean of unvarying depth, there would be no difficulties of the kind. But then we should either not exist at all or else we should be fish, or whales, or sharks, and in that case, instead of astronomers, physicists, and mathematicians we should probably produce only big eaters. £ Taking the situation as it is we find that the tides play the deuce with the theory. They do not dnvravr it, but they show that it is altogether insufficient to cover the facts. The sources of the trouble are the varying depth of the water and the subdivision of the ocean into many different seas, more or less completely separated by huge, oddly shaped continents. Because the human mind loves simplicity, which is easy to understand and shrinks from complications, persistent attempts have been made to force the tides into compliance with a uniform theory, but they refuse to submit. Thus it has long heen taught, in the text | | books, that the tides are all associated parts of | one universal “world phenomenon.” We have | been told of “a parent wave," starting in vhv: broad, deep waters of the Southern Pacific, and gradually spreading round the globe, combining in its course with minor tides started in smaller oceans This parent tide has evep been imaginatively, | but with authoritative assertion, traced around | distant capes, through straits and across the | length and breadth of many seas. One text-book | writer has averred that this tide is “forty hours old" when it reaches Florida from the Pacific and nearly “sixty hours old” when it begins to wash | upon the shores of the North Sea | Now, all this must be abandoned as pure spec ulation, according to the investigations of our | coast and geodetic survey, Although, as Dy Charles Lane Poor says, “the theory that the tides are a world phenomenon has the support | of the world’s greatest mathematicians and wll the | prestige their names can lend,” the investigations referred to seem to prove that the tides “are strictly local in character and in being, and that the tides of the Atlantic ocean are due 1ot " cillations in the waters of the Atlantic lepend ent of what has happened, or may happen, in the waters of the Pacific Still nobody doubts that the sun and the \ are the causers of the tides, but Neptune, instead of being a single, appears as & multiple, gant w eathes with many watery lungs People and Events Rack In Detrait, whe wake o senty sional crooks las AN Average Sa A B & slog ago suils " pen competition, and w " eve . [ mere man od down the purse of & Goodhy! CGooadby!™ sereamed & pat parrot in the home Mes. Jenaw dlay, i ‘ " Chy, Ind he binds awakened the lamily e o escape the Are o patrot parished An # ot 0 epair department of & sore i Dayton, O, burned s way through the | le and was found hang: a the d of e » pe by the § \en ange o & k ™ wed ty Wpan e snouy all throug aylvania shows that ' OPAY ApprON mately S0 000000 & you ages 10 farm Rands al value Al YOAT A » around SO0 LAY, malisg the coat of help abowt 10 per ent of the produst .The Pees effer Makers of Nebraska History. Lineoln, Neb., June 1.—To the Editor of The Bee: Upon final examination of the university class in Nebraska history this question was asked: “What five men do you think have been most potent in our state history, and why 1" It may be of some general interest to know how this question was answered. The list of names, in the order of their numerical strength was as follows, Furnas and Morton being tied for first place: Robert W. Fur- nas, J. Sterling Morton, Edward Rosewater, w. Bryan, David Butler, Thomas J. Majors, Charles L. Saunders, John M. Thayer, C. H. Gere, Silas A. Holeomb, George L. Sheldon, Moses P. Kinkaid, John M Thurston, A. C. Shallenberger, George L. Miller, T. P. Kennard, Albert Watkins, James E. Boyd. The reasons given for the selection were both instructive and entertaining, but can- not be condensed here. In many cases they reflect inherited point of view. ADDISON E. SHELDON. For the Laborers. Omaha, June 2.~To the Editor of The Bee: The contractors don’t want the build- {ng laborers to organize. Yet they organize themselyes, The contractors don't want to pay living wages, yet they are much aroused because the strike now on interferes with income. If these be samples of pres- ent-day consistency, then consistency ceases to be a jewel and inconsistency takes on that distinetion. le person objects to the eon- tractors organizing. No ble person ob- jects to the laborers organising. It is & fight to the finish between the two, and t| quicker we recognize this the better for the community. The laborers will maintain and strengthen thelr organization, whether the contractors like it or not. The people are taking sides, and there is no doubt which side most of us will take. 1 am for the laborers. They are fighting for their families and happiness and decent existence, and not, as the contractors are, for bigger and bigger bank accounts and prestige and power. DR. BENJAMIN ISRAEL, 868-60 Brandeis Theater Bldg. One Minister's Platform. 16.—To the Wayne, Neb, June 1, 19 Editor of The Bee: 1 appreciate very much the political position you tal nd the fight you are making. 1 enclose an e the lecture Sunday night. erty to use it if you desire. Sincerely, w. L. GASTON. nation is upon the threshhold of an aitin d important politieal campaign, and confiicting sentiments forge d regulation. ity 1 ttlement an to the front for settleme For years I have voted the republican ticket. sat in the seat of the d with the progressives litical ereed som Four years ago I scornful and vote Today 1 formulate my pol thing Itke this. First—I am against militarism and Roose- velt. 4—1 am for a reasonable prepared- n ny pork. Third—In case of international eomplica- tions 1 am in favor of congress enlisting first and declaring war second. Fourth—The next president will be & Presbyterian or a Baptist, Wilson or Hughes. I am for the Baptist. Fifth—I am in favor of staying in Mexico and establishing a stable governmen 1 would buy out the landlords down there at a fair condemned price and give the land back to the peons under homestead laws. I would give 160 acres to ‘every young man or woman who would go down there and teach school for five and they would be the only America 1 would make eligible. con without Bell Defends Reporters. Newberg, Ore, May 20.—To the Editor of The Bee: I recently received through the kindness of Mr. Paine, secretary of the Ne- braska Historical society, & copy of the third volume of the constitutional conven- tion of 1871. His predecessor, Mr. Sheldon, sent me the first and second volumes. In those the names of the official reporters of n the third volume the editor, Albert Watk who, it appears is historian of the Nebrasks Historieal so- ciety, is so ashamed of the work of the re- porters that he not only refrained from giv- ing their names, but in addition, in his pre- fi to the book, flings some sneers in their direction. Four reporters were engaged by the con- vention—John Gray, John Hall, Dan Brown and myself, Soon after it adjourned Gray and 1 went into the employ of Ely Burn- ham & Bartlett of Chicago, a shorthand firm, who were the official reporters of all of the courta of Cook county, Illinois, and who had had the contract for reporting the Illinois convention, held & short time previous to that of Nebrasks. I left that employment to take a position as one of the editors of a daily paper in St. Louls. Brown was em- ployed as a stenographer by the Chicago, Burlington and Quiney Railroad company, and Hall returned to newspaper work. Hence, | it would not appear that we were the chumps one would suppose us to be from reading Watkine' comments in regard to The report of the Nlinois convention was made by ten men at a cost of §182 & day The four of us did the work for the Ne- braska convention—preeisely the same work | Al a cost to the state of $30 a day. Our pay stopped with the adjournment of the though we had much work atill ing our notes. There were then During the sessions of the | convention riters. convention we toiled far into the night, and every night, “writing up, | At the time of our engagement the con- | vention hours had been set for the sessions to begin at 10 &, m, with a two-hours' re- ceas At noon. ¢ on, night sessions were held, and these frequently continued until a Iate hour. 1 see by the book just received that it was within ten minutes of 8 o'clock when the final adjournment was taken no doubt been at work sinee previous morning | am We o'el b We used soft pencil paper in copying our notes. | have b told ¢ convention of 1878 had of seript, thousands of t pages, which had been stacked wp in the eapital basement. This handling would have | Mot of rendering the copy il wsiderable degree and doubtiess resulted s of many sheats thess three volumes snished 1o the n the & I have loaked over with much interest and am as fnd that [ Proceedin speeches should Nav procecdings, as printed n the vesord, it how f the day's werk” for mombers the priviiege of revising their Before publisation, and I b e ao. Mo Watkine o . sieniion o seeh wards for esampie salons made by the eparters I Whe Pash hurey of Aoty wark, and sueh e Ao pune apid writing Wonsands of pases of matier writhen by Ahess and WakS corvestians I8 emisslend Ihis surt &% & Watier rae one matance in the St speaker wesd e » . Neon anid bessta \ il hat sees, | moni, deenrate b, ol W . R Iy - hengh he o war oredin sing weare sk, and b Wham prceeds o Wive Whe pruger werting. Bems "we weehen o woman sulvags e shiste wunt of Whelr “yondarens proiiaity and e ohare. Mo dasavary ihat on one occasion s speaker “strayed from the predicate of his sentence.” The chances are that if that man had been warned st the time of his mishap he would have said: “Well, let 'er go; I can find another if I need one. 1 am not ashamed of the contents of these y stand a monument to the ability, faithfulness and industry of three young men who had never before had any- thing to do with a convention of this sort. As to whether the work is of a ereditable character the reader is as well qualified to judge as is this man who sneers at it. JOHN T. BELL. DOMESTIC PLEASANTRIES. “What fs your husband's name, madam?” asked the directory canvasser “John Smith.” “Plain John Smith, eh?" “No, indeed! John is the handsomest in Bingtown."—New York Times. man “We lost our cook yes line_route.” “Do you mean that she poured it on the kitchen fire?" ‘No; another family lured her away by offering her the use of a fine motor car.” —Hoston Transeript THE WIFE — BUY REMEMBER, TAKE ONLY ONE WORD, 0R THERE'LL BE ANOTHER FiGHY! s A little girl about years old was visit- ing friends. During the course of the con- versation one of them remarked “I hear you have & new little sister.' “Yes,' answered the little girl, “just two weeks old." “DId you want it to be a little girl?" o T wanted it to be a boy,” she re- plted, “but it came whils T was at school.” —Westorn Christian Advocate. “The boy wure made a fine spesch” said the old man, “an’ I'm prouder than ever rday by the gaso- | of him, but what was them languages be wandered off In so frequent?” “Well, once he slung a little Latin, an' next he hit her up in Greek.” “That's good! They'll ba fine to swear at the mule in when he gits home.'—Atlsnts Constitution. taxes so high this year?™ &s- manded the indignant citizen. “Will you consider it confidential if 1 tell you why?' whispered the clerk in the county treasurer’s office. “Yes, sir.”" “We need the mone; THE VOICE OF THE STARS. By Mathew Arnold. Weary of myself, and siok of asking What 1 and what I ought to be, At the v s prow I stand, which bears ms Forward, forward, o'er the starlit ses. “Why are “—Chicago Post. | And a look of passionats derire O'er the sea and to the atars I send, Yo, who from my childhood have calmed me Calm me, ah, composs me to the end.” | “Ah, once more” I cried, “ye stars e | waters, On my heart your mighty charm renewy | 8t111, still let me, as 1 gaze upon you, Fesl my soul becoming vast, llke you* | From the intenss, clear, star-sown vault of heaven, Over the lit sea’s unquiet way, In the rustling night air, came the answer: “Wouldst thou be as thess are? Live as they. “Unaffrighted by the silence ‘round them, Undistracted by the sights they These demand not that the things without | them Yield them love, amusement, sympathy, “And with joy the atars perform thelr shining And the sea its long moon-stlvered roll For alone they live nor pine with noting All the fever of some differing soul | “Bounded by themselves and unobservant In what state God's other works may be, their own tasks all their powers pouring, n | These attain the mighty lite you ses.” | | Oh, atr-born Volce; long since, severely clear | A cry ifke thins in mine own heart I hear: | “Resolve to be thyself and know that he | "Who finds himseit loses his misery.” e ~ Summer Excursions Round trips from Omaha, going and return- ing same route: ! Atlantic City. Detroit, Mich.... Montreal, Que.....coe0es Bar -Harbor, Me.,..r000. Boston, Mass............ SUbIslo, N W oissneven New York City.......... .+..$35.10 .$58.60 to $61.30 .$54.60 to $62.10 .$42.45 to $44.45 .$55.80 to $59.10 seveenens Circle Tours to New York and Boston: New York, one way via Washington, Norfolk and steamer, other way via Niagara Falls, $60.50 to $62.10 New York, one way via Niagara Falls and Montreal, other way via Washington, D. C.......$61.80 to $65.58 New York, one way via Washington, D. C., other way via Niagara Falls............ civeees...$88.50 to $62.10 Boston, one way via Montreal, other way via New York and Washington. .$70.25 to $73.10 Boston, one way via Montreal, other way via Niagara Y T R S S oy P e civ.......$57.80 to $60.20 Boston, one way via Norfolk and steamer, other way via 0T R B S tsisssssssinesvenws Above tickets are on sale daily with final return limit of sixty days and liberal stop-over privileges. Many other attractive eastern tours at reduced rates, including excursions to the lake resorts of Michigan and Wiscon- gin and delightful cruises on the Great Lakes. For rates, reservations or further information call on or address, W. E. BOCK, City Passenger Agent, Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. 1317 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. Phone Douglas 283. After a Chase on the Golf Links You Will Find a Cold Bottle of I Most refreshing and St THE BEER YOU LIKR satisfying. Save cou- pons and get premiums. Phone Douglas 1889 and have a case sent home, LUXUS MERCANTILE CO. Distributors Persistence is the cardinal vir- tue in advertis ing: no matter how good advertising may be in other respe cts, it must be run frequently and constant- ly to be really successful,