Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 20, 1916, Page 14

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- - - = — T S 2—b 'HE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER SN ATER, EDITOR e Bee Publiahing Company, Propece REE RUTLDING. FARNAM AND SEVENTERNTH Daile and Runday Dails without Sunday Brening and Sunday . Frening without Sunday Bunday Bee ol B Daily and 8unday Reo (hive vears Bend motice of addres 1o o Cirvulation CORRESPONDENCE ews and et TRting i ¥ Deparment JULY CIRCULATION 57,569 Daily—Sunday 52,382 Dwight Williams ¢ PUbishing ot Average N 369 daily and WIGHT W1 =) NUNTER Notary b Sibscribers leaving the city temporarily shoula have The Bee mailed to them. Ad- dress will be changed as often as requested. Mr ¢s 15 also seeing America first Reir for \merica first, Hug ¢ casy to keep those boys asha when they get back from bath ways before vou start to Look cross a street, and take no unneces- | Yes, the ocrats usually carry Maire three weeks before the elec- ton which losec it to them. 2 was found !4 a'l who cared to Sunday, and not all the seats were taken at that One bw hig enough to hear “DBilly" House lunters also testify to the growth of ( a's population, With all the expansion due to building, it is 1ar trom casy to find a good place for rent The attendance drawn by “Lilly's return visit, compared with his origi- nal Omaha engagement, shows what advertising and the lack of advertis- ng will do. The retail credit men, who are to be with us this week, wili find Oma- ha's prosperity and hospitality alike > the cash variety, and not merely promises to oay. Omaha :en't tie only place where careless auto driving lcads to acci- dents, but that is no reason why care hould not be taken here. Safety firat is al in order. While the tax rate in Omaha is to be a trifle lower in per cent, the pro- ceeds of the levy will be bigger and the nontax levy will also be bigger. Municipal retrenchment is an iri- descent dream. Carranza has the better of Mr. Wil- son' on another point. The Mexican commissioners were named when the note was sent, and the “first chief” now pointedly but politely asks, “Why this delay:" Carranza's method of dealing with strikers is not likely to be more pop- ular in the world than some of his other notions. It is quite edifying, though, as indicating the extent to which liberty prevails in Mexico un- der the “first chief.” Governor Morehead almost has been convinced that Nebraska needs a new state house, but the old building came pretty near to falling in on him before he'd admit it. Maybe he'll be fully converted before his term of of- fice expires. Omaha is a genuine center of the | automobile industry, but watch the people turn out to pay tribute to the horse this week. Autos are all nght in their way, but they'll never evoke the thrill that comes with the brush in the stretch between well matched equine rivals for speed honors. Shackleton and Stefansson. From the opposite ends of the earth telegraph wires have recently carried word of the doings of two intrepid explorers who find their mission in polar regions. From the south first came news of Shackleton’s failure to reach the members of his party stranded on Elephant island, which meant very likely that all will have perished before another attempt at rescue can be made. The terror of the Anatarctic winter has taken toll again of the ‘daring spirits who brave its ragé in search of the secrets hidden under its awful ice. Following this from the north came the word that Vilhjalmur Stefansson was not lost when he disappeared from view two years ago, with his face set to the north. A portion of his party reached civilization at Nome, and sent in some word of their achieve- ments and discoveries. Neither of these announcements took up the space given to some of man’s other activities, but the mes- sage they contain is not entirely lost, and in time the work these men are doing may be esteemed of value quite as great as that which is now absorb- ing so much more of mankind’s atten- tion. Geography will be richer be- cause of islands Stefansson has mapped, and for his observations as to tidal currents and other data, while Shackleton has at least contributed the example of a soul undaunted by mis- fortune, | tralian g Omaha's Military Strategic Value. ategic value of our trans- poration system in an article entitled “Our Rail- o Collier's, roads and the Next War.” contriln the author, Edward Hungerford, stresses the military importance of the Union DPacific as the [ mation’s chief transcontinental thoroughfare, | After notng the tact that the eastern terminal on the bank of the Missouri river is but an overnight ride from Chicago with which it is connected by six excel rarlroads, most of them double- tracked d the turther fact that its own main stem s tracked practically the entire dis ! of 1000, mile to Og where 1t dvides | into three great hnes, to San Francisco, and to Tla a v Laos While these three hine minally sepa- ' Ta cyar t, component (RXINTI In any mih- | ey would become ex rtant patts. By the use ot these n Paciic and the supplemental nes) at would be possible to ber of troops and n N tians. | | across . section ot the Pacihe coast | witl | Gf the coast north and s ! % ich will be extended. only a suiall part ix double-tracked. | have laid | stress and constant repetition upon t ques tion of double-track, sunply because a double- track rarlroad 15 almost ten times as eflicient as a simwletrack railroad And turther on, in view of the capacity of its | low grades and douhle track to Ogden, he adds ’ Lt will hardly he exaggeration to s St that the Union Pacitic could handle a military train, bound west trom the Missouri, at least every thirty minutes. Taking one thousand men to a train, as a moderate estimate, this great ra I could dispatch nearly fitty thou- sand men a day without in any degree congest- mg self This puts it so concretely that no one who can grasp the possible military requirements of the United States, 1f called on to repel a foreign invader, can possibly As the castern terminus of this artery of travel, abso- misunderstand. lutely necessary for a military highway, Omaha has an immense strategic value on the war map, notwithstanding the fact that it is not itself ex- posed to attack. It is the central radiating point from which men and supplies can be quickly ad- vanced in any direction, an equally ideal location for reserve stores as for mobilization for the cen- tral territory. With the are having in Europe and the knowledge gained by surveying object lessons we our own military resources, Omaha's importance as a military assct is strikingly accentuated and must figure prominently in all preparedness plans, Infantile Paralysis and the Doctors. In the face of a discouraging epidemic, the doctors have donc a brave thing. They have ad- mitted that so far their science has been baffled, that research has so far been unable to disclose the cause of the discase, its cure, or the means by which it is transmitted. On its face, this situation wears the sign of hopelessness, but it is really not s0 bad as that. A science that has met and over- come other forms of plague and pestilence is not likely to retreat becau newer disease is for the moment proof against its efforts. Humanity will not be left helpless to protect its tender off- spring against the terror which for the time eludes the cure. Unnumbered discases have afflicted man throughout the ages, and these have surely been met and successiully dealt with by the man of medicine, and so in time will he the secret of anterior poliomyelitis, For the present he offers advice that, if care- fully followed, will go far towards eliminating all disease. It is to keep the premises clean, to be careful of the person, to avoid unhealthy food or drink or over-mdulgence in any form of food or drink, and to consult a doctor at once in case of discover illness. This advice is good at any time in any community. The cause of infantile paralysis will vet be found, but it will help a lot to follow the doctor’s advice alwa Mystery of the Boomerang. Many years ago the blackiellow of the Aus- bush mystified his white brother by means of the boomerang. Through some agency not yet entirely clear to the able physicists who have studied the matter, this most benighted of all savages was enabled to make his peculiar weapon do such wonderful things as to suggest the uncanny. In time he was suc fully imi- tated by the white man, and exhibitions of boom- erang throwing have entertained multitudes, but without disclosing just why this instrument does as it does. Its outward flight is simple enough, verhaps, involving the underlying principle of the acroplane, but its return flight is not so casily ex- plained. To master this, and to apply it to aerial navigation is the inspiration of a series of experi- ments being carried on by a student at Chicago umiversity. His work so far has progressed to the point where he has greatly improved on the black- fellow’s boomerang, and he hopes to unravel the entire mystery of its flight. When he does, he will have almost unlocked the real secret, and have mastered not only the art of flying, but the more important and infinitely difficult matter of alight more Daniels Warns the Women, Josephus Daniels is not only an able seaman, but something of an astute politician as well. He can peer as far into the future as any and occa- sionally he discloses what he can see waiting just a little way head. One of these occasions of prophecy came over him when he warned a woman suffrage leader what would happen to the move- ment in event the women vote for Hughes in those states where they already are enfranchised, If they do, says Josephus, they seal the doom of the constitutional amendment, as the angry demo- crats will then withhold their assent, just to get even with the ladies. Not that he wants to frighten anyone, or coerce a voter; oh nc, but Mr, Daniels wants the women to see whither they are drifting, and to pull back in time, that they may go along with the gallant party that holds the suffrage question to be one of states' rights, such as the legislature of Georgia exercised when it set a date for consideration of the bill at the next day after the adjournment sine die. Plenty of suggestions are coming forward in response to the invitation, but the better way to make Omaha bigger and happier is to go after one thing at a time and settle it. Don't scatter your fire. — Bre'r Magney's inquiry into the milk “trust” recalls the fact that he was county attorney when the legislature ordered legal proceedings against several alleged local food trusts THE Thought Nugget for the Day. I'here's a narrow ridge in the graveyard Would scarce stay a chld in his race But to me and my thought it 1s wider I'han the star-sown vague of spacc. —James Russell Lowell One Year Ago Today in the War. ltaly declared war against Turke) Germans officially announced capture of Ru i fortress of Novogeorgievsk, with 20,000 men and 700 cannon German fleet engaged Russian fleet in Gulf | German submarines reported to have sunk fourteen ships in two days This Day in Omaha Thirty Years Ago. A. Gocetschmann of this city has mven a OMAHA SUNDAY BEE | of John M | meteorie AUGUST s, By O FOLKS familiar with the formative period of Nebraska’s history, many pages written in that interesting volume are recalled by the death urston, whose career was really PAsSsing presents many At the zenith of his public his election to the United States 20, 1916. Victor Rosewater. ele- d whose nients of athet senate, Mr. Thurston was unquestionably one of » most powertul factors, i not the most power- I factor, in Nebraska's politics. When he pre- 1 | republican national convention of ch | convention of 1888 as its ter the republican pert 1890 as its s name was blazoned from end of the country to the other. lie i3 airman, | contrivance for preventing runaways, which works e ca the : was excellent] nd bids § to beconie very popular usly uy-vh\(.v'r(\. as .I\IJ(\M.H‘HK for vice prest 1o em have already been manutactured | on the ticket with McKinley, but there ire in use e the city : ed to be a star of ill omen ?’Hu"vl:‘u over Norman Leslie, whio rece wrtived here from | n which took control of his destiny \\.:v;n he (T T g here, has pur- | Guit public Tife and rescinded his avowed deter- M v and Daodge and the busi- conducted under the firm terest of rrill in the handsome o Sixtec be lie Lros Miss Nellie Plum, sister of Miss O. Plum, one of the teachiers ot the Deaf and Dumb Institute, lias left to assume charge of a school at \\ eeping Water, I'homas F. Catholie | will ness style of Rrennan, state sceretary Knights of Anierica, leaves Wood for River to estabhish a branch of the order at that place \ small ten-phund police judge has put in his appearance at Judge Stenberg's home and the older judge is figuring on resigning in the young man's favor, Inspector Spangler, and other gentlemen in the local office of postal inspection, are packing up their effects preparatory to leaving for othes posts of duty on September 1, Dr. S. K. Spalding and wife have returned from a pleasant western trip, The new map of Omaha, published by C. I Mayne, is now ready for sale by Rosewater & Christie, Room 12, Granite ~block. Price $15.00 Great Railroad Strikes in the Past. First general railroad strike in America began at Martinsburg, W. Va, July 16, 1877, against reduced wages. Lasted three months and beca extensive and widespread. Many millions in prop- erty destroyed. Strike unsuccessful. General strike of telegraphers, involving 67,- 000 men, began at Pittsburgh, July 19, 1883, for 15 per cent advance in wages. Lasted thirty days. Strike successful. General strike on Missouri Pac railroad system, ordered by Martin Irons, March 6, 1886, Lasted two months and involved 9,000 men. Loss in wages, $1,400,000. Strike unsuccessful. Strike of Reading Railway employes, began in Pennsylvania, December 24, 1887, for advance in wages. Lasted two months and involved 30,000 men. Loss in wages exceeded $3,500,000. Strike unsuccessful. Strike of Chicago, Burlington & Quincy rail- road employes, began in Illinois, February 27, 1888, for adjustment of wages. Strike unsuccess- ful. General strike of New York Central railroad employes, began at Albany, N. Y. August 8, 1890, against dismissal of members of Knights of Labor, Lasted two days. Strike unsuccessful. Strike of Erie railroad switchmen, began at Buffalo, August 14, 1892, for adjustment of wage scale. Lasted ten days. Strike unsuccessful, Strike of Lehigh Valley railroad trainmen, be- gan November 18, 1893, for settlemen. of gen- eral grievances. Lasted eighteen days and in- volved 2,000 men. Strike partly successful. Strike of Great Northern and Montana Central railroad employes, began April 15, 1894. Lasted sixteen day cttled by arbitration. Strike partly successful. General strike of employes of the Pullman company. Began at Chicago, May 11, 1894, against reductign in wages. Lasted four months and in- volved 2,000 men, Strike unsuccessful. Greatest strike in history of the country, in- volving all western railroads, began June 26, 1894, in sympathy with the Pullman employes strike. Conducted by American Railway union, a power- ful railroad organization under the presidency of Eugene V. Debs. United Sta government interferred on account of the mails and federal troops ordered to Chicago on July 3. Fierce rioting at many points and millions of dollars’ worth of railroad property destroyed. Debs and other leaders arrested and imprisoned for viola- tion of federal injunction. Strike proved unsuc- cessful and was officially declared off by the American Railway union, August 6, 1894, me The Day We Celebrate. J. M. Harding of the Harding Creamery com- pany is 29 years old today. He was born in Wis- ner, Neb., and was educated in the Omaha schools. Thomas Kilpatrick of the Thomas Kilpatrick company was born August 20, 1841, in Scotland. He went into the wholesale dry goods business in Cleveland, later removing to Omaha and finally taking up the retail dry goods business excli- sively. William Heald, member of the Omaha police force, is celebrating his 42d birthday. He is a native of Mount Pleasant, la. Christine Nilsson, for many years one of the world’s most famous singers, born in Sweden, seventy-four years ago today. Raymond Poincare, president of the French republic, born at Bar-La-Duc, fifty-six years ago today Julia Sanderson, popular actress and musical comedy . born at Springfield, Mass., thirty- two years ago today. Margaret Courtot, celebrated as a motion pic- ture comedienne, born at Summit, N. J., nineteen years ago today. Otto H. ittmann, whose removal from the superintendency of the United States coast and geodetic survey is now a subject of political con- troversy, born at Belleville, IIL, sixty-six years ago today. George E. Anderson, United States consul general at Hong Kong, born at Bloomington, 111, forty-seven years ago today. This Day in History. 1629—John Winthrop was chosen governor of the Massachusetts colony. 1745—Francis Asbury, the first Methodist bishop in America, born in England. Died at Richmond, Va., March 31, 1816. 1794—General Anthony Wayne defeated the Indians at Fallen Timbers, near the present city of Toledo. 1827—Thomas Carney, civil war governor of Kansas, born in Delaware county, Ohio. Died at Leavenworth in 1889, 1866—The war in Texas was declared at an end by proclamation of President Johnson. 1868—Burlingame and the Chinese embassy visited Boston. 1882—Suez canal occupied by British naval brigade, during the Egyptian war. 1891—Cardinal Gibbons delivered the pallium to Archbishop Katzer at Milwaukee with great ceremony. 1897—Prince of Wales and Lord Roberts in- vested with the order of St. Patrick at Dublin. 1912—General William Booth, founder of the Salvation Army, died in London. Born nzar Not- tingham in 1829, of the | mination to come back to Omaha and rest practice of law here, lor few know, he stayed in Washington, no doubt ex- pecting his great legal talents to command recog- nition, only to meet disappointment and when he finally came back, nearly fifteen years after- wards, it was too late, even if his strength had not already gone Despite his conspicuous faults, Senator Thurs- ton had many admirable traits. First all should place his intense loyalty to his friends to whom he would stick through thick and thin re- gardless of their deserts. He had come up with what was called “the railroad brigade” and the | on-hangers he inherited were dead weights all the | timie. A striking example of this loyalty is found in his recommendation of Colonel Champion S, Chase to be surveyor of customs at Omaha, To re of Chase, it was necessary to let out | Dr. George L. Miller, who had been appointed by Fresident Cleveland and who had, as a gold democrat, done valiant service for the election of President McKinley that ordinarily would have earned him retention. Senator Thurston, how- ever, harked back to the time when he, himself, had come to Omaha as an ambitious youth, with- out friends or experience, and had been taken by Chase into his law office and helped to a start at law practice. And, although Chase then in his old age (he died in office shortly afterwards) no longer represented any political influence what- ever, the senator insisted upon doing him this good turn in detiance of the clamors and protests of the horde of office seekers, In a similar way he repaid Church Howe by using his influence for his elevation to the con- sular service. Major Howe had been Nebraska's member of the republican national committee in 1888, and in that capacity he had been instru- mental in securing the selection of Thurston for the temporary chairmanship of the national con- vention and Thurston never forgot it. Another thing for which Senator Thurston should in fairness be credited was his faculty for overlooking personal antagonisms in working for measures for the benefit of Omaha, Nebraska or the country at large. The Bee and its editor were at outs, politically, with the senator most of the time, yet there was a continuous interchange of correspondence relating to subjects of public in- terest which The Bee was advocating here at home and which the senator was looking after down at Washington. Mr, Thurston claimed the leadership of the party while he was in the sen- ate, but he seldom came home without calling upon my father as the editor of the leading re- publican paper, and conferring with him on mat- ters of party policy and pending measures of legislation, In a word, he was big enough to fight his political enemies, and fight hard, but also to fight shoulder to shoulder with them for a common object and to do this realizing that in the next round they would probably be again fighting on opposite sides. As_an orator, Senator Thurston possessed what is known as personal magnetism in an ex- ceptional degree. He had a clear, resonant voice and a pleasing and effective delivery but, above all, that indescribable something which evokes re- sponse and enthusiasm. cagle hurrah style of speaking, but it was the style that was popular and it clamped to him a | personal following which I believe no other Ne- braska orator except Mr. Bryan has been able to develop solely by talking from stump and rostrum. As forensic efforts, the joint debate be- tween Thurston and Bryan in the campaign of 1894, when both were running for the United States senate, will always rank high. Someone has recently sent me one of the admission tickets used for this series of oratorical duels bearing the names in autographic fac simile, on one side “l. M. Thurston” and on the other “W. J. B, It I remember rightly these tickets were divided equally between the two speakers so both should have the same chance for applause from the au- dience and make sure that neither could monopo- lize the house for his friends. It is of record that Mr. Bryan polled the big popular vote, while the legislature went republican and Mr. Thurston pulled the senatorship. Some samples of the Thurston oratory may be interesting. Here is an extract from the speech he delivered to the legislature accepting his election as senator and expressing his thanks for the honor: “Nebraska pat one star in the azure of our flag, and New York put another, but when they took their places in the flag, they were no longer stars of New York and Nebraska, but stars of the greatest nation of the earth, shining for the protection and happiness of every American citizen. Let it be the ambition of all good and patriotic men—I pledge you, my countrymen, it shall be mine—to stand for the welfare and prosperity of the best government that has ever blessed mankind, and for the up- lifting and glorification of the dearest flag that ever kissed the sky.” Here is the peroration that stirred the country to its depths, being the conclusion of his famous Cuban speech delivered in the senate in March, 1898, on his return from a visit to that oppressed island and advocating forcible intervention: “Force compelled the signature of unwilling royalty to the great Magna Charta; force put life into the Declaration of Independence and made effective the Emancipation Proclama- tion; force beat with naked hands upon the iron gateway of the Bastile and made reprisal in one awful hour for centuries of kingly crime; force waved the flag of revolution over Bunker Hill and marked the snows of Valley Forge with blood stained feet; force held the broken line at Shiloh, climbed the flame-swept hill at Chat- tanooga, and stormed the clouds on Lookout heights; force marched with Sherman to the sea, rode with Sheridan in the valley of the Shenandoah, and gave Grant victory at Ap- pomattox: force saved the union, kept the stars in the flag, made ‘niggers’ men. The time for God's force has come again. Let the impas- sioned lips of American patriots once more take up the song: “In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea, With a glory in his bosom that transfigured you and me, As he died to make men holy, let us die to make men free, For God is marching on. *Others may hesitate, others may procrasti- nate, others may plead for further diplomatic negotiation, which means delay, but for me, I am ready to act now, and for my action I am ready to answer to my conscience, my country and my God.” | preacher-fi and agam over | | bri i | are casons which perhaps | | and all denominations can profit. I His was the spread- | SECULAR SHOTS AT PULPIT. Houston Post: Springfield Republican Congregutionalists and Presbyterians. Emporia (Kan.) Gazette: under the considerable handicap of | obliged to speak the truth, and speak it so that it cannot be questioned. D. law, Rev Y. Donaldson, brought his h down town, and passed in re- thereby le rman, pound cat view with it, ng 1o loophole for & doubt that the Neosho river can grow fift -pound catfish in & dry year. Mr. Donaldson now may be expected to preach a sermon, using as his ing home the big of the casiest ways of getting people to be- lieve you really did it. Laltimore American: The Baptists have new slogan for a campaign of church advancement, taking these words: I'he Maximum for the Master. The words striking, full of meaning, and carry with them a thought from which all churches Too often does it happen in the life of every congrega- tion that the service becomes perfunctory and instead of giving to the Master the max- imum and the best, the gift s the minimum, if not the worst. It is on account of such that the church finds to keep in lead, that it fails to make it might make under better con- ditions, and it is on this account that Sun- day ufter Sunday sees so many empty pews i he s of wors that might be packed ‘o the door. WOMEN’'S ACTIVITIES. The Yale School of Medicine has opened its doors to women students. ad I a ervices the prog The National Girl Scouts organization has vassed the 10,000-mark in its membership. Nellie C. Pierce of Santa Fe is the secre. tary of the New Mexico State Bar associa- tion. British firms that have been forced by war conditions to employ women as traveling #alesmen report that the work of the female “drummers” is entirely satisfactory. Mrs. John A. Logan, who has just passed her 78th birthday, is actively engaged in raising a fund for the erection of a Clara Barton memorial in Washington, “Lotta” Crabtree, the former famous act- ress, now in her 70th year, has taken up painting and has spent the summer as a member of the artists’ colony at Gloucester, Mass, ‘The women's section of the Navy league, having found the national service school at Chevy Chase so valuable, has decided to open three schools in different parts of the coun- try. One in San Francisco is now in opera- tion, one at Lake Geneva, Wis., and the third at Narragansett pier. A Minnesota pastor says | there will be work for all in heaven. we were trying to recruit for the land of glory we would tell them that in the other place men would have to stoke the furnace in the summer time and drive the ice wagon | in winter 1 The vote of the Wesleyan Methodist conference in England to appoint a committee to consider a plan for a federation of the free churches is an | event of importance, for it means that the | leading Methodist body is not opposed in principle to co-operation with the Baptists, A minister is being Realizing this Emporia‘s fifty-five- text the truth that ones you get is one it a hard DOMESTIC PLEASANTRIES. atning in London?® Is just going 1o n—1Is it alwnys Green—No, sometimes it or just has.—Judg “Oll Brassey keeps up his golf talk all (s anly from April to No turnace now; it from November a balky Judge. sh know how to run 1 to bother with at” replied P DEAR MR. KABIBELE A SONG WRITER HAS PROPCSED Yo ME-SHOULD I MARRY HIM? — MARGARET SAAAD GEE |F HE'S A Good SONG WRITER — TRY T0 HAVE HIM RHYME ““MARGARET % FIRST Heltor—Our 2.y every hook be cun lay his | into the fire Skelter— ar-rd hoy baby i alive! You've bred a w | = s my love for hi enough to e | makes mountain Ye work A HUMAN STILL. r GooGenongh | The snake once through Eden cr | 1sin the world today; Thiough all of time's viclssitudes ed away cts of the race, It has not pa The pramal inst Convention cannot kill— The tides of life go 1n or out, But we are human still! The bard, tha patriot end the soer Lach with his ewn good xift, | Strives from a plane of earthiin.ss | His brother to uplift— | But ingratned tendencles of life Oft bring results to nil— | when all 1s sald, we are not changed— We are human still! | Our hearts take hold on higher things— | Our souls have dreams sublime; | We beat in vain our spirit wings Against the bars of time, Life's ruthless, rude realities | “Dispel the heavenly thrill— Tha bright-winged butterfly eludes— And leaves us human still! | We clutch at wealth—we clutch at fame— Repsons've to some'law Whose source we guets; a doathless nama | Inspires us all with awe; { Th promised land—as Moscs did— | We view from Moab's hill— | Like him we may not enter in, | For we ure human still. | We strive by heaven's perfect plar | Our being to adjust; {'ro fin¢—that mortal man remains But one remove from dust. Imimortal longings stir the soul With many a magle tkrill | Ant waves divins across us rollm But we are human still! T~ DRBeno FBanew SANATORIUM Lo T4 This institution is the only one in the central west with separate buildings situated in their own ample grounds, yet entirely dis- tinct, and rendering it possible to classify cases. The one building being fitted for and devoted to the treatment of non-contagious and non-mental diseases, no others be- ing admitted; the other Rest Cot- tage being designed for and de- voted to the exclusive treatment of select mental cases requiring for a time watchful care and spe- cial nursing. il CAMPAIGNS Jas BHaynes Omaha National Bunk Buldin I\ ] At The Junction On Main and Belawaro at Ninth Kansas City, Mo. Absolutely Fireproof Personally Maraged by 4 |[JAMES KETNER lI}fillllllllII|;l;llll;llllilllllllllllll LU T T Thousands of Widows and Orphans ARE TODAY ENJOYING A WARM FIRESIDE, OWING TO THE FORESIGHT OF THE HUSBAND AND FATHER PROTECTING THEIR LOVED ONES IN THE The Woodmen of the World WHAT ABOUT YOUR LOVED ONES? SURE OF A COMFORTABLE HOME o AFTER YOU ARE GONE. NO COST FOR J. T. YATES, Secretary. LET US ASSURE YOU “TELL” DOUGLAS 1117. LU T T —— LLELRL R LT ARE YOU FOR THEM 4 EXPLANATION W. A. FRASER, President. LU R ER LT T Resorts. Why not let us assist East? Tickets on sale daily, with EXCURSIONWFARES EAST ILLINOIS CENTRAL R. R. Choice of circuitous and direct routes to NEW YORK and BOSTON. Attractive routes to all Eastern OPTIONAL OCEAN, LAKE AND RIVER TRIPS Liberal Stopovers visits at Principal Cities and Summer Resorts in the For further information and attractive literature, call at CITY TICKET OFFICE, or write S. NORTH, District Passen- ger Agent, 407 South 16th St., OMAHA, NEB. PHONE DOUGLAS 264. in planning trip affording 60-day and October 31st limits. PHONE DouGLAS 222. OMAHA NEB. —~—

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