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I'HE OMAHA SUNDAY B EE: 27, AUGUST 1916 SECULAR SHOTS AT PULPIT DOM THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEL T A e e | ) - o A FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER ¢ campaign 1al 1 \ il | IM)‘.,H, Free Press . Los :“"ff“: o M'rvn ady i vory hard TTTVICTOR ROSFWATER FDITOL st preacher s women have a perfec : AT ohnd scernitelsins TVICTOR ROSEWAT « & : | Mieht 1 pmint thelr faces if not nat- ol cunt say that. Is scom to § T T X0 RIEn R | ASATD 3 urally beautitul. The very sdea—"not | “"L{0 *1C Biiaid i Glats B S .\ - A \ to the en at homie | Thought Nugget for the Day. J naturillysbeautitul = : (|| s R LoULer, 1 does no irook! Sagle The pope’s con-| TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. ’ ks have | greatly umproved, and Gl gives every bird his Im]wl”hm‘hr loes not [ “n’\m m’,‘ ‘fy}‘:n)'x‘t.xllum priests p: «\' for the| H Apiac heanec ; Leinee (il e have weoit mto the nest. -J. G, Hollanc | success of Italian arms is a marked| @/ £ b ! ells. and i ER R s iy | to the Quirinal. As for| oot 8! Rl 4 4 = | One Year Ago Today in the War | By Victor Rosewater. . may think a lotl e, fiteatine sawed: | | waing ¥itho day ‘ COMLS v ro.Germans pressed the pursuit of Grand | X he late | Of things likely to maintain | geire Fraing mibout e I o-Germans | HRGIE | S to the career of L[.f‘ ale | it 2 Wit and ~ vears I Adrence | i ) vichobis® drmy toward Alins 1 quotation of briet o don't you b Ve s Nl s ¥ o : T R el attacks on Petrograd rail- | | - quotation a1 SEEEL ITouston ‘Dost: The un comz oY hyERdant % , A ; : LS AR | e [ s speecties seem 1o BVE |y egon “or - the' Southern sist BT 2 W "t ! ' proy o terested rs, at least to the extent | vhureh has \& L d X etited el indiectl of the | SR o eon. | evoking numerous urther inquiries. Most of these | aethadist - the i " & b L ! | 1 Sl b the piece of passionate poetry northern I oasoan ostentation i This Day in Omaha Thirty Vears Ago BTG O SO S R U b th S e T iis Day aha | papers throughout the country anc | ke a4 my 1 Leen laying the ca » o { > e A Nller i etotl 18- st of its hest cirey him the | g uy,"jflvlnm( e " w | }oa | I - 1 that this chiurch has fa v TR TN ; con i v e Ul astih i i G Ot [»AR MR RABIEALE, L o ant ot ence, the wall e Sk i | tion us said to frne reval MY FIANCE HAS NO EVENING ) 4 1 in churel it r - Cy L ATioN \ (el ot e i DRESS SUIV FOR THE 57,569 Daily—Sunday 52,382 R i ! ; . AR e WEDDING —VIRAT SHALLWE DO’ Wetkls s . e in ; M i ! Constantiople Patriarehat ~—LILLE FRIEDA b 3 ) | @ o 3 1 D It membees under won | e e e 1 : e t £ ALL IS EROTHERS CHIP W ae o n N S Armantan Holy See for HANE S5 A Sehecr e e provis: weae s j:' X ™ IS I regul e of 1,614 years; hut war ruins all IN AND BUY ONE — THEY GOV | wa wans vyt p Attt : 2% SR O QET \\&RthD %oM: DAY! ‘h‘““' L) ‘l""“"“ A At :,’"’”"'\‘f ¢ ol | It o rose: “Oh Rose! Sweet Rose PEOPLE AND EVENTS. shoule have The Bee mailed to them S SR S s el sy will be (Nanged as often as requested = \ ¢ oont e onig dte Libeschaped A 1 T e i your pertume rare, | The “oatmeal queen” of Rockford, ol Aidlovouis perals pus e 1, a bride of sixty days, has shaken Sl 5 v iigins ety vl her caten amd returned oo mother. e mEhck] et : ] R ’ | said 1o the rose: “Oh Rose! Sweet Rose! | The vomance of placing her name ey vig a st el i Purchase of Danish Islands Postponed I by the day of the apening of the fair, Con- | e s B G T O T T B N # & reftisol 1 or James Creighton distributed 100 choce n N T i I e [m!c about long as the eggsheil Im wrt the trough ftond S {in s Diis Genera « ! = : vater aelons among. the labarersion: the job ho’ yo! e B PHE ) wtory, but each satisnes 4 moderate W 4 A T liiee i : Site it e | | you wither and fade and die? DUt ot o tnsits —_— (4] : [he Turners who achieved such prosid | . el S e oG W 1 e to Denmark were 1o St it thie late fest at ;«,. Joe, \\‘m tendered | I <iid to the rose: “Oh Rose! Sweet Rose! m:} lx':\.“‘x‘.” .\\.:h{l\'\:““l”w-i\m\\Iv‘x"\v(‘r‘l‘vhr 01 s6mathink 2o dinner 3 R il el i S ML S w”{“‘m i Will you throb with my every breath; ! the pres: sibed linits ;.'.l.‘.}',,a el S il o ¢ omatter at ter an elect ! - i el "\""'”" reen ‘”'I‘: "‘l‘ { Will you give me the hliss of a passionate Kiss, | atitutional rights to “iheriy and the st ol obs f | like | n e ek ; e tret i I ~~; Werdema [,‘ occker ’ l‘”\(_‘ YIH ‘w Alheit the end is death?” pursuit of hoppine when haled into VI\‘I‘ eron them with n X AL % vk ndres, Zieman, Kunimerow an a court. judge ed thut his toston elect he veterred to the ple ior decision Viterward the president, Lams Heimrod, | Glve i lifted her stately head L i (e e | s iterward resid s 1o white rose lifted her stately head | bigh card wis chasing happiness and — = Jave heen Tookei o it oo < here thet Sceontl Infaiitry. bani at And answered me fair and true; | nssessed a8 Mue o e £pot THE CHILDREN'S HOUR. e hreakanp with the nan | G0 T R el (s s ¢ on Thirteenth street am happy and blest o hie on your hreaat Prellminary outgivines of the re- Menry W Longfellos : : | d ) | o Sithibirthdiy of Co B Nelson,real For th yman who gave me to you! port of the Kansas commission - el athe AL | HER QLGN UK eatute agent, was celebrated by a number ot his By Senator John M. Thurston vestigating the condition of the feebles | " (B LI a0 5 eginning to Tower e «ign ot the tn Go slo by foreiwn mflnence. About g ST ds R e Lo te o E Sl e nih | minded of the state iadicate a total of {0 S8 S C8E TN s accupations A S e : e nends thic GIvms | il e | 7,000 persons requir ireaiment for{E e o kiswi an ihe Cliildrenis Hous 4 & i terestas noted an a reported threat o thie trect An clegant supper was served and at the i his poem—-and there | thelr upper story. A member of anc overrun by two gra Ha g A me o remove its cod close he was presented with a gold headed cane ~ome of the parodies on this p commission says the trouble spr T in the chamber ahova me fi trcal orators fic 0 ) e \ " Wt by his frends | was a huge shower of them-—are also wflrh of | from traveling “the puce that klts.” o DRtiGy aFNLOA: tasts \ trea t v Lunacoa the sale should go through | R 7 noetic ssiona will agree % .‘ ourid a door that ts opensA e ot speech up there 1! e Tl A ey I'he Northwestern road has given out large ".” art, as every dispassionate critic 8 A “mail order bride” who Journeyed A": ut n i ; Ll PR R PR ' hie Unitee ates undertak re fortification |G s announcing that that road will be opened | who reads the following: all the way from Lucerne, Switzer- the ports of the wsland. From the s | o Lincolu, i this state, on September 25 w( land, to Nevada City to wed @ FaRCh- From my study 1 sea tn the lamplight N thetiran ® ! o Lancolu, 1 @ QEDIEHTHCT \ml to my nose: “Oh nose, red nose g o Y , 3] o 4 : K¢ s e 4 N = I ST ¢ 1504 Farna 1 | man inspected her tind for a few Dencer the broad hall stair H St 3 o i | mhabitants fearm wotheir economic position | Street has the “"! "““ ‘1!; Jal ";y“‘m’d What the lmlnhn cause in the matter was dort Theiibride SRt waa (taRbE 18| Andl SuIiR: with (goltent Hair . Ign 1s warming up” s the new proposals aceepted for eighteen years a N R i " 5 5 o A 8 LA under the proposcd plan, and it seems their ap- | D' l" e s h}il‘['\ St fhat you came to be such a sight ::J‘;ln:;:‘::yq)(:lyn::I:u}l(i ‘)':‘r\(;:!(‘l\‘ '\h‘ll:‘ulill‘l A hisper and then « sience —— peals to Danes at home were sufficient to hold | oo Cream to the bovs | [ said to my nose: “Oh nose, red nose, The Nebraska-Kansas association Thay are ; nning togethe: T T e s et bhack favorable action on the treaty. Denm — | You shame me at every turn, | of Newberg, Ore., held its fifth annual Ta tale o o e b : 'l | not pressed for money this moment, a Today in History. And whene'er [ run in the hot old sun, { plenle on the IX;‘h u\sn, and le‘»( TN s e wing, which our d wratic friends | 7 i 5 Lo y . : P aze hurn.” memorles garnish the eats and exer- dden rush hioan . S mL i this deal will wait until the Dan ple have tle [m,v;,\I\JI.\‘mL h“nwn II”II”]‘L You blister and blaze and burr DL LI DGR el ".' mM‘ P o z i jad a chance to express their view ¢ people "‘ i ~1| 13l GO S | said to my nose: “Oh nose, red nose, [ mer resident of Omitha, was elected | P00 Fones & } reducing AN burden ansted ¢ who suffered deteat, atter a we | Isi the lief in reach? | president of the assockution. Mr. Bell of boosting it. of the ilinds having apparently no voice m the | {ouagy action | s there “‘I‘l":’ et T oy is the editor of the Newberg Enter-|They cltmb up inte me turret . e | matter 1809 [fannibal Hamlin, vice president of the | Is ll\‘rre .ml\l old ln)e ha IL Mleach2® price. Oer tha arus wnd back of my chatr, S T ] - | United States during the first Lincoln administra- | That will work as a nasa W Bt L ouiean s who! senerisiod it S they surround me: | ion. horr ‘aris i died a langor, | heart aches In making a choice be- s A R e e Catholic College Development. | | '-1‘ f'\”.u Paris 1ill, Me. Died at Bangor, I'he red nose lifted nsel{ a notch tween two sisters, “,'TJH 100k the |mpey almost devour me with hisses, f cct hum, which means he know A bulletin issued by the Catholic Educational \|\1' N iboat Walk-in-the-Water, the first | And answered me “Aber nit; leap and landed a bride and a breach| Thefr srs avout 1 £ 0 SIS SNONI e L Sl S A L A ; 1f you drink less grog and more water, hog, | of promise suit from the left. The|muiT tnink of ‘ very well that banking on the demo- | association turnishes instructive first-hand infor- | on Lake Erie, arrived at Detroit. e 2 It would whiten me out a bit.” amaunt of heart halm demanded i1 In his 3o i cratic vote would find him suffering a | mation on the progress of higher education under ; “\“1 f,"“""“' ciy "" \“““‘ taken by the Brit | By Bixby in Lincoln Journal. lS#”'f-‘”‘:‘»[“""' li ‘;!:l“‘,”m ,;‘“l‘ “{c’»‘.’“ 1\11{ Dol Sol LNk 0 bincsayed banattet ¢ s ) ish, and 296 guns destroved. i e fortune annexed by one sister and 5 ¢ ¢ . S iatalishortage Cathoic auspices. The activities of the church | ™%y 5i0” Tyeai " Richmond, conspicuous as a po- | Semond lost to the other Soaanes) L 1 1 e in teaching its children in parochial schools, con- ' fitical manager, capitalist and business man, and | I said to my lunch: “Oh lunch, late lunch! Victorfa City deserves the largest| (s not a1 i Mr. Bryan is deeply pained that Me. & ignging the chiet bulwark of its growth, is a mat- | largely identified with railroad development in Wil vou lie on my stomach tonight; dot en the map of Kansws. 1L was ey J ! ! A « J ) 8 Sters anc Werned have 1 my fortres ! Hughes should criticise the adminis o, weneral knowledge. The extent of the ad- | the west, died in New York City. Born at Bar- | Will you nestle there, or rare and tear If];}l1\’:::‘;:.“>".~1uu \1“;» u).l \” e h AR s { tration because of any of its acts, v wee m eollesiate traming is not so well known :‘Hl} ol l\!‘”“' "1‘“ ‘M\I nat MeMahon d | Ina huge nightmarish fright?” | rules the hennery as mavoress, o o dntyithe ‘l‘_";ff““ H 3 5 = K I'rench under Marshal McMahon driven i [ sisted by “a perfectly lovely councii STpOS YR Attt i getting that he himsell resigned be- | and 1s now presented o detail from official | pack from Ilcaumont by the Prussians, with | 1 said to my lunch: “Oh lunch, late tunch! | SR b 8 PREETHE R eha And there will T keep vou forever, ! cause he couldn’t go along with the | oy great loss Will you thrill me with aching pain: ! ent Victoria City without creden-| 'y dberia - ) | president’s policies. ¢ wocolieges 1880-~Twenty-third national encampment of | Will your fits and jerks bust my stomach | tials w‘nd‘prvvhnm\.n:\ inspection. He ! gy all crutbls to ruln, ’ { —_— e the Grand Army of the Republic met in Mil- | works gets the hook Sualgaaay ! As usual, prospects are Tl W e ke, el . o | So 1 never can lunch again? S i - - \ Omaha's streets to be all i up | i wl P s ,-\\’,“ ‘,‘”‘I. b IEAMERAS S ety | said to my lunch: “Oh lunch, late lunch! B R T H i KO0 nin ; \ I recent a ) dies | President Cleveland's signature. X | ! bt e = i ust at the time we entertain the b | 1 conteen collees, a1 recarded as | 1896—A British fleet hombarded Zanzibar and | Willlvougthishilikefaistonshruiase fas = s { crowd of out-of-town visitors here | o ) : | studies, | eposed the usurping sultan. ! Will you double ";’ "‘7(‘ '1" pm‘ SO DAR S N = | 5 10 ¢ vcoming lead protessional stuc 7 el 5 | = = | for the Ak-Sar-Ben festivities—unless |y - - e I) 1898—The czar’s proposals for a universal | And fill me with grief and w = E e enrolln tor ollege year of 1918 8 4 ¥ = . o A R T o = | those dilatory contractors are speed- | 0 § e ouflese year of BRSO | peace conference were announced. And my late lunch gave a dyspeptic hump | 2 WHILE THE IRON IS HOT z { T AT | totaled d exclusnve of summer school stu- | 909--National Conservation congress, repre- And answered me fair and true: = TO GET RESULTS = ! I dents. According to eport of the federal ing thirty-seven states, met at Seattle. “I'm onto my job and T'll throb and _;L;X‘np" = Y f : commissioner of educ the total collegiate en- Till the air with your cussing’s blue = = 14 Because the British government is comnusniong S N 1 i y = - 14 ; 5 e T‘h ar taxes | Follment in the U States during the same | This Ts the Day We Celebrate. By Will Maupin in World-Herald. = K«* = soaking its subjects with war taxes | : : = = i > | TRy ) h Harte, contractor and builder, is 62 — = = S S vear was 190278 o Catholic | Jobhn 11 Harte, , is 62 = . S VOTIR HEAT " 5 . = we should repudiate part of the debts quota to be one-sixth ot th RS | years old today. Fe was born in Louisville, Ky., | I said to J. M.: “Oh John, dear Jo E WHILE YOUR HEALTH WILL PERMIT = 3 we owe to Holland investors who iR H i : : | and has erected many of our substantial buildings. | Whatever impelled you to do it? = MEMBERSHIP IN THE = have loaned us their money. That's | ¢! "“‘“”‘” o ‘\‘\“} i : th 0f 1000 | He has also been president of the builders’ ex- Had you known in time the fate of your | 2 = ] 4 % € | or over, the highest being Bo e with an | change. | I 'z 2 a fine argument for our democratic a g = E rhyme, " = = et o at ) | enrollment of 1910, Creig university ranks | Rev. Charles F. Aked, formerly of San Fran- You wouldn't have lived to rue it = OO man 0 t e or = enat 0 p el BEwitle 4 total b1 191 fos the | 41890 who recently resigned the chairmanship of T Tonnd ] = = = i A Y the Ford peace committee, born at Nottingham, I said to dh John, dear Joht = The Lincoln Star says that Henry | 145t schiool year » | England, hity-two years ago today. { How sad is du life of a poet; £ GIVES RESULTS BY ASSURING PROTECTION TO DE- Richmond “has no more to do with | in the ten-vear period, 190710, the bulletin | (\I\\f:\ _lnl:vm\wvv. n;!l!n{l of n\;mrrnus popular | Did .(:u think of the woes when you sang to PENDENT ONES. B S . B eports an increase ot 1219 per cen 1 college at- | ne Is. ho! g 3 V- 3 e rose Keith Neville's campaign than the of ‘u an increa )y « college at- | 'q:\‘l‘ll'l\ rinin New York City, thirty-eight years I‘rrll\aps S e N S PHONE DOUGLAS 1117. = T . iacet | tendance, or an average wal increase of 4g0 toda ’ ’ = - i Ahkoond of Swat” Now we object! | : o R ( les ¥ ¢ h - = O = | It 1 indignity o M. | Der cent, compared with 47.2 anl 59 per centy | pighorns iAo el one of the mew |y fyid 0 J. M.: “Oh John, dear John. £ NO CHARGE FOR EXPLANATION { t is an undeserved indignity to Mr Rl + | bishops of the Methodist Episcopal church, born Will v Mot e = X i 5 = i Richmond to mix him up with such | Fespectively, for all colleges and universities in | at Allegheny City, Pa,, hity-nine years ago today. Y oUr eV ERICo b A En, Z ). T. YATES, Secretary. W. A. FRASER, President. = i ichmond to mu | M | 3 5 o0 = : When you sing to the rose, pray do it in | S = an unfamiliar brand. e ied atcs : |l chatloa G DanctinominentiGhicaga banker prose— i 00000001 { — Ihe authors of the bulletin are justified in ex B d There'll be no parodies then. Lincoln people enjoy the benefits of the only public-ownership dairy | supplying householders that we know of in this neck-o'-woods, only the 1% dairy is owned by the state and run in connection with the University of Nebraska School of Agriculture. In- cidentally, the state farm is delivering its extra quality milk produced by prize-winning cows to-Lincoln people at 10 cents a quart, which price has not been changed for many moons. Treatment of War Prisoners. Various agencies seeking to allevi- | ate the condition of prisoners of war interned fatrly in coun- treat- John and aliens enemy tries report 3 ment and Dr. 3 R. Mott, representing the Young Men's Christian association, after vis- iting a large number of prison camps, vouches for the satisfactory tions observed. Reports of character have come through diplo- matic sources. These as n gratifying as far as they go, but they are necessarily based on surface indi- cations. Only those have ex- | perienced prison life are competent | witnesses. One of the number is the | noted scientist, Max Nordau, who | has been given ircedom after eigh- | teen months in a French camp for | the “crime” of Teutonic birth He; is one of thousands interned in en- emy countries for the sole offense of alien antecedents. Men of the high- satisfactory surroundings condi- similar ces a e who est culture, Mr. Nordau states, “lawyers, physicians, cholars, churchmen, artists and men of let- ters are classed and treated as crim- inals. They are degraded and stripped of every trace of liberty,” denied all human rights, sub):cud" to jail discipline without cause and “forced to do coolie lab: All this | and more supports a scathing indict- J ment of human brutality which Nor- | dau draws against all prison camps. | The brutalities of active war are | shocking enough, but hardly surpass 3 :he barbarities visited upon the in- uocent and defenseless | ment based on the growth of preparatory semi i the desire for profit, | emulation by pressing gratification over the progress made in | ten years, and the assurances of future advance- naries, an unfailing source of colleges recruits for Catholic Protection for Wild Fowl. An order from the Department of during the week put the Agriculture movement a quictus to re-establish the wasteful practice of spring | shooting in this part of the country. It favors | Nebraska hunters by changing dates for the open | time on waterfowl, so that the scason begins and | ends later, thus giving the sportsmen a better | opportunity to take advantage hght of the | birds from the nort th th On other | points the ord Juite as fave for the ¢ is q to the true se sportsman, whose love is not ter nor by new order is | 1 its faithful | tinctured with the impulse of slaug! al, conservation In ge in the line of truc ohservance will have the eflect of increasing the flocks of \long w this order comes | from Washington the news that the Canadian government has ratified the treaty that will unite to those of the United States in atford protect on birds. This treaty is now hefore the senate at Washington, and an ! effort 1s be to migratory 1g made to secure its ratification be- fore adjournment. \When it goes into force, the | wild bird be given some measure of security | on both sides of the border, and so have at least ‘ a sporung chance’ for his little life, while the | d because he will not bhe permitted to destroy what is not his source of | pleasure. hunter wiil be protecte The Lincoln Star has discovered that Kansas boasted park tem is due to the gener- ¢ of public-spirited citizens who have, time to time, donated the land in order “to leave something to tell their posterity that they had | lived and prospered there,” and gently hints for | wealthy Lincoln folks. Not a bad ! idea either for Lincoln or for Omaha although, Omaha stands more 1t 1 other things than parks. from just now, need of some | Mexico’s first chi opposed to the uplift in any direction but his own. 5 first apearance of a scrap of fat on railroad freight | The f appears hopeless] rates brings down the paw of Carranza railroads, however, nain in session o Marietta, O, hfty-one years ago today. to practice law once in Lincoln. William Louden, infielder of the Cincinnati National league base ball team, born in Pitts- burgh, thirty-one years ago today. Harold Janvrin, infielder of the Boston Ameri- can league base ball team, born at Haverhill, Mass., twenty-four years ago today. Where They All Are Now. W. D. Cocke, who, in the early days used to be one of S. I s, 18 in business for hi He used | of Oma- Morse's trusted em- 1self at Bridgeport, Jay Singer, on old Omaha High school boy, is | in charge of the gas plant at Syvracuse, N. Y B H lzard, once presiding over a hotel here, may be found out in Broken Bow. Charles R. Crowell, formerly in newspaper work. 15 now connected with the Williams & Cun nyngham Advertising agency in Chicago. Will Maupin, who has hung up his hat in | Omaha several times between other en | ments, is running the York (Neb.) Democrat. Lewis A. Groff, judge of our district bench | many years ago, is still practicing law out in Los | Angeles. was in the law partnership of Groff & Mont- Before he went on the bench here he | gomery NV (Beach) Taylor, real estate man d ! promi t E1k when he was in Omala, is now to be tou 1 Chicago William E. Taube, former western representa- | tive of a watch company with headquarters in | Omaha, 1s doing the same stunt with postniark | at Butfalo Timely Jottings and Reminders. Speakers frowm five countries are to be heard d R the ten-day Bible conference. which is to at Cedar Lake, Ind., der the be ope today, u ;m‘r\ s of the Moody church of Chicago. very redhead in the muddle west has been invited to attend the annual reunion of the Society of Indiana Redheads, to be held today at Broad Ripple park, Indianapolis. Storeyette of the Day. It was his first campaign, his first political speech even. Although the county comniittee had sent him into a rural district to try out his ora- torical wings, he was encouraged by the warm welcome of the local committee and the elaborate preparations for the meeting that were evident on all sides. the stand in the public square for half an hour be- fore the speech. Finally the great moment ar- rived. e chairman stepped to the platform rail and addressed the crowd. Fellow citizens,” he said, “we have with us | today a voung man who is destined to make his ranks of our party. He comes to tell ning issues that confront us, and his ator has preceded him. He will now when he has finished the band —N York Times mark in th us of the by address you 1S an ¢ and will call There was even a band that played on | | it is presumed, thought that when Judge Savage | found Then J. M. lifted his manly brow, And said to me fair and true: “The rliyme of my rose heads the tale of my | woes; I'll be if T ever do.” By Errette M'Diarmid Going back now to my former remark about Thurston's possession of an inborn proclivity for poetry. I happened not long ago to go over the | files nt our old High School Journal in which T several contributions from the pen of John M. Thurston, doubtless, then had plenty of time to indulge his fancy without in the least interfering with a law practice composed mostly of futures. What strikes me as the best of these productions is the following, entitled | “What of the Night?” taken from the January, 1875, number of that long passed periodical, and | which, 1 insist, is more than a mere prelude to the Jostroplie to The Rose: Maiden-—what of the night? “The night is clear and its joys are sweet: 1 am waiting the sound of my lover's feet, And the passionate words his lips repeat.” But the night is gone. and thy lover's tread Is fickle and false as the vows he said; You will wake from the dream with bright. For death and change stalk forth verse who, fancy at night Mother-- I what of the night? | he night is calm, and its peace is ble am clasping my boy to my swelling bre \s his spirit roams in the land of rest.” Rut the night is gone, and the rest is o'er, And your innocent may wake no more; For mothers must weep o'er their fond hope's hight the be night. 1 15t hood O'er promise obscured in the True heart—what of the night? “The night is mine. for each star gem set In the vaulted dome I can never forget; They recall where I and my true lover met.” But the night is gone, and the stars o'erhead, Like the troth you gave, are dimmed and fled; For pride shall sever each true heart's plight, As morning scatters the stars of night John M. Thurston in Omaha High Journal. By School How lie came to be called " Thurston is told by one of his biographers who carefully explains that he was never a judge. In the fall of 1875, he tells us. Mr. Thurstun ran as the re- publican nominee for the district bench, but was | defeated at the polls by a ‘ma!l majority by James W. Savage and, he adds, “Mr. Thurston is generally called ‘Judge,” not because he ever held a judicial position, but because his friends procured thr office his opponent was at least en- titled to the brevet of that rank.” OUR They wall mal(e beHer Pholo-Engraved Plaies Bee Eng ¢ Dept Phone - Tyler 1000 Ulldmg_ Omaha, Nebr. rav Persistence is the cardinal vir- tue in advertising; no matter how good advertising may be in other respects, it must be run frequently and constant- ly to be really successful. —