Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 18, 1916, Page 8

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THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1916. 'THE OMAHA DAILY BEE| _ HeFouhtsGoodpigw [ Dirw and o e Poit ] ——-————L—E—im Now that there is no longer any question of ] D‘Lrect gnd tO the P(nnt doubtful states changing the result in the elec- icago Tribune VICTOR ROSIWATER, EDITOR. toral college and President Wilson's re-election is Some of our testy critics say The Tribune is a | Thought Nugget for the Day. E BEE_PUBLISH/NG COMPANY, PROPRIETOR. _ | assured, the verdict must still be that Mr. [‘poor loser, thereby revealing an amusing notion | _Little minds are tamed and aux; = Sokered st Omaha postoffics as seeond-class matter. | Hughes fought a good,fight. The question is not | of what they were doing November 7. That day dued by misfortunes; but great min: o idate or hi i was not made notable by a horse race, a prize | Tise above them.—Washington Irving. whether the candidate or his campaign managers figfit 2 foot ball game or a billiard mateli: ' The made avoidable mistakes—for ‘mistakes are al- | efection was not a sporting event, except to some | One Year Ago Today in the War. ways made-—nor even whether the victory should | of the bettors who did not care who won so long British captured Turkish trenches have been his, but whether anyone else who was as they did not lose. by storm. within the range of possibilities at the time Mr. “The poor loser” is a convention, and there Large number of British subma- Hughes was nominated could have done better are many amiably conventional souls who, if they g:fac ddated’. Srout’ SPEL] Bes wio get hold of a phrase, think that they have arrived Germans joined Bulgarians in drive or even as well, The task which confrontgd the Chicago con- vention was to select a standard-bearer who by thought at a sound conclusion, Thought | on Monastir, held by British garrison. enters their habit of life about as much as it does Russians declared German assaults Remit by draft, express or postal order. Only 2-cent stams | ,orod the best guarantee of reuniting the two taken small accounts. Personal checks, > ¥ -.m':."J.'.‘i‘.‘ :‘u eastern -x:u-.' not sccepted. | elements which had split four years before and to grow Dead sea apples. And would e& further say to them ‘avaunt, thou pestiverous polecats; the repnbllvnr" party doesn't want you, the demo- ) b cratic party doesn't meed you, the angels in heaven weep tears for you while you live and when you die the Not an Example to Be Emulated. |devil will shut the gates of hell !n{‘ Omaha, Nov. 17.—To the Editor of|keep you out™ ED F. MOREARTY The Bee: After reading Mr. Mickle's Vi recent letter regarding the cost of liv- Experienced Workmanship. ing, I cannot refrain from replying to Omaha, Nov. 17.—To the Editor of same. His letter should be entitle “The | The Bee: I note in your Issue of Cost of ‘Low Living’ ' an@ if his rec- | Thursday that employers in the build- ommendation should be followed by|ing trades have come to a realization any considerable number of working that all labor requires skill, and that men, he would very soor find com-|the workman who is steadily em- petition for his $60 per month job.|ployed at one particular sort of task He would “bust” the sugar trust by|is continually finding ways to make not using their product; likewise, the | his work more congenial and conse- potato and beef ‘trust and it naturally | quently adding to his own efficiency follows that a reduction in their out- | and becoming more profitable to his put by reason of a curtalled demand|employer. The workman who I8 would mean a reduction in their work- | thoroughly acquainted with theé re- a parrot's conversation. on ‘the Mitau road and at the Styr *"Frank Chance used to say that he did not want | river were repulsed. any good losers on his ball team. Good losers are poor fighters, Professional base ball is | In Omaha Thirty Years Ago. OFFICES. without whose reunion defeat was foredoomed. ‘p'lnyed by men who want to win if they are to Miss Nellle Rosewater, a former | ing force; hence more men would be | quirements of his position needs no 3 That task, as we now know, was more difficult | have any chance of winning. Chance knew if | pupil of Mrs. Mumaugh, writes back | seeking employment and Mr. Mickle's | boss to direct him; he knows how his Io-"radhc h Hesi- thidah 4. the & ¢ the | his players were reconciled to losing they had | to the studio from Copper Union, New | job would soon be in jeopardy. I no-|work ought to be done and does it in CBietiot4 North Maia strest. than anyone then thought and the loss of the | jo00 4 ofore’ hey began to play. York, where she Is now studying, that | tice he falled to include one Impor- | the easiest and most expeditious man- 3¢ Littie Bullding.. deciding electoral votes of states like Ohio and Even in sports, in Which nothing is involved | fhe 18 being relentlessly drilled in | tant item in his list; namely, salt. I|ner if given the opportunity. A good m—cl People’s Gas Building. Kansas and California is plainly due to failure P! 4 M both d loser black and white and at present is | suppose he would “bust” the salt trust| workman is handicapped by having ub-—‘n- uuu Fifth avenue. oo A goit 4 4 ;"“ t fl]‘PflFY or P"!“_'levfio‘;‘ 0f 'h‘ BOo! teg‘? working in charcoal on the inspiring | by not using their product, doubtless|an officlous or nagging boss around. New of to weld together again the forces that had in | has his limitations, The fighter who wan 0 | subjects of blockheads. eating his beans and oatmeal without| 1t is an economic waste for an em- ' 5 Fourteenth street, N. W. kiss the man who had put him out and have him John Howard and Miss Carol B. to dinner the next evening would not go far in | Fuller were married at the residence the esteem of men who want to sce all the fight | of the bride's mother, Mrs. Minerva there is in a man, - | Fuller, 124 North Twenty-fourth A loser must take his medicine, but he does not :vm'f Miss ]:.y d“&“::"pel"“{,:‘ "‘v‘h.: have to pretend that he likes it. Certain sports eno:,:a';“‘:; e Rev. Willard Rcott, are taken out of the real intensive struggle of life » * which gports generally represent. . They present a chivalrously, scientific aspect. Two tennis players, with their egotism subdued and their skill at its utmost, try each other's game. The loser is a good ‘loser. What was sought was an ascertainment of the relation of one man to the other. The loser would prefer that the result was different, but he accepts it without a grouch. He wants to know where he stands. 4 The chivalry of sports has grown up about "abrln“ nlxch I:l fieldhgamc:. tennis, golf and pos- sibly polo and yachting, gut what has an election to do with a sporting ;fl,‘:d:":rzlhl:; ?:'t:g:m";h:l‘:: l'g:; ; event? It is not a fierce competition of muscles | The employes of Tootle & Maul, for | of charge. I doubtif Omaha contains| Women and Emotional Voting. nor a chivalrous competition in skill. It is a | whom the groom is cashier, sent a | another citizen with such ideals as| Auburn, Neb., Nov, 16—To the submission of opinion to the electorate. The | magnificent bronze pedestal, one of | Mr. Mickle expressed, and I would re- | Editor of The Bee: I do mot write counting of the votes does not change the issues. | the finest ever seen outside of Tif-| gret to learn that we had any other | to send lines of condolence to Colonel the use of salt. loyer to refuse experienced work- His home life seems to be clearly g\en the compensation to which expressed in the statement that his|they are plainly entitled, and put in } J 1912, become more antagonistic and hostile to one another than to their common enemy, the demccratic party. But who else than Mr. Hughes could have succeeded to the extent that he succeeded? Could Roosevelt, who was the alternative offered by th progressives? That is at least open to question. Could Cummins, or Weeks, or Root, or Fairbanks, or Burton, or' La Follette, whose names were the only others commanding a modi- cum of following among the delegates? It seems hardly open to argument that any one of them, under then existing circumstances, could have commanded the cordial support of both regulars | Belgium conquered still sticks like an undi- and former bull moosers in the numbers to which gested security. y they rallied to Hughes, 5 i When we look back, Mr. Hughes has a really —— . Some day the price boosting bubbles ‘will | wonderful achievement to his credit for being burst and smother.the boosters in their own gas. | the instrumentality of reinstating the great his- oldest daughter has left home nOW | their places workmen who are in no that she Is earning her own living, | way acqualnted with ‘the work re- | a course the rest of his children will | quired of them. Changing forces usu- doubtless pursue as soon as they reach | 4|y entails financial loss. the proper age and, should his wife| The strike of the bullding trades survive, I will venture to say there will | |3horers some time ago for better con- be no: family reunion until the chil-| gitions seemingly proved futile, and dren gather at their father's last rest- | many of the strikers, skilled in their ing placé and then how curious they | |ine, were compelled to leave the city. will be to find out the extent of the| Now one of the building contractor, bank' account he seems 8o eager to| pyplicly intimates he would be glad t! create now at their expense. His let- employ those men at increased pay ter suggests another reason for his|if he could get them. ability to save. He states, “I hap-| 1t would have been hetter for all pened to find a copy of The Bee three | ooncerned, including the public, had or four days old containing the article| the employers done their real thinking on the cost of llving.” Krom this it| previous to the strike rather than would seem that he does not spend | geier “I. J. COPENHARVE. em——— toric republican party—the party of nationalism, | It gives them merely a temporary berit. fany's, and Mr. Maul sent a bronze | citizens of that type. R. |Frank Agnew,' who mourneth be- The details of the Chicago accommodation t0 | of constructive progress, of undivided American- Bne campaign starts the moment another has | "3y ; S cause his counsel was not heeded h i | : : ey i ph Meyer, who started for St. Eager for Detalled Information. | when he declared that th . China carries the intimation that the flag will | ism—to its former position of supremacy. ended, if there be any sincere conviction behind | Louts about & week ago, was snow- | gmatc Nov. 17.To the Bitor of | Were too oo i e I A i ers and who can now point to the, fact that the women voted for Wilson be- cause of the cry, “He kept us out of war.” It is apparent that the gen- tleman ‘is doubly displeased with the women because they did not vote as\f the opinions. If there were no sincere conviction, | bound in a dugout settlement for two " then the advocates of certain policies were bunk- | days and has returned a hungry and }“',‘:kfi‘f"‘ ylmf:":ltz: :;%‘:,:} !AYI'UEBY; ln: the people for campaign results, If an indi- | disappointed man. interested. 1 would like very much vidual could meet the defeat of his ideas with the | Mr. and Mrs. George Sternsdorft | 4 ™ ynoq’ some things about his contented remark that after all everything was :‘r‘," ";"{"‘"“ from ':“" "“l‘“ method. well, then he had no business to have ti» ideas, | t¥'D and have gome to housekeeping. | ' what does he pay for beans? How H lly had th A pleasant impromptu euchre party | goes he cook them? What does he | ne did. 'Tl;'?':ufi?“y of. th T:‘ R e S was given by Mr. and Mrs. BE. L, season them with, 1f at all There is one argument for female [ y e republic, y i Q: Shipman, in* honor of Mr. and Mrs, ‘What do they eat on their day-old suffrage; this; It is right for our cratic form of government, rests upon the willing- | James H. Thompson of Chicago. bread? Where can you buy day-old | mothers, sisters, wives and daughters ness of the losing side to accept defeat. Certain A surprise party occurred at the | preaq for $25 a dolenyhavu); ” who are as greatly interested in the forms are provided for contention and they con- | home of Miss Katie Hay on Farnam How does he cook his cornmeal? | affairs of the government, the well be- trol. But to profess contentment when a violent | treet. Those present were Misses | yow much does he pay Yor that? | ing of the young and the good of so- campaign has come out all wroing would be to [ Mary Albinesius, Emilia Mets, Caro- | * wnat do they eat on their oatmeal? | Cléty as are the fathers, brothers, hus- confess that there was no excuse for the violence, ;’"":h:,{.“{;':f:.j s't‘:c“g;eg";;“"’- g“‘:g Of course, we can't all find a grocer | bands and s3ns and any question as to . / e with ‘which party they will vote is a that nothing really, mattered after all, that things | MeGahan, E. P, Moore, T, A. Cabry, | 1i1g,"08 oatmeal for sale with weevils| 0 o\ijon R T sl would go Rong oy ey just as well as another, | Frank Albinesius, Clem Dohle, Tom | " How does he cut the pound of| DY, for and of the people. and that an clection was only a sporting event | Schafer, Gus Tharspecker, William | cneese so that he can get A pleces | The emotion worked up by the cry intended to discover which side could cozzen | Dure and George Weinert. out of it? Long ways or crossways? | that “he kept us out of war” might the _lpeople ost successfully. T wish he would give me a full de-| have been merely emotional had it not he Tribune is as much for a nationalistic | This Day in History. tailed statement of at least two days' | Deen for Candidate Hughes and °N o : menu; just how it is cooked and ev- | Candidate Roosevelt, who in .thel awakening bf the American people now as it was | _1776—Fort Lee opposite Fort | Menh; i ot b toiiigont | Speeches denounced the steps in d ~ the loan. — probes are bound to furnish en- if the consumer fails to — Belgium Appeals for Intervention. The direct appeal from Belgium to the United States for aid in thwarting a German plan opens ther and even deeper phase of the diplomatic tion connected with the war. German mili- tary=authorities are frankly enforcing labor of Belgians, have deported the able-bodied men from certain localities and are using them in Ger- many. This course is supported by the state- ment that otherwise the Belgians are, idle, ate charges on charity, and consequently are dete- riorating. To give them steady and useful em- ployment will not only assist in solving the problem of their support, but will aid in restoring them to a condition of self-respect and maintain them in decency until they can be properly placed ubious in established society. before the election, and if a good lgser has to | Washington, evacuated by the Ameri- 4 e gl plomacy taken by the present admi e change his convictions, then The Tribune is the | cans under General Greene. Ahe Wy BOGE cRWR e whSTR e O LT L ton and emphasisad the werd Neutral bread baskets | Against this the Belgians urge they are forced | L U808 “C0l® Sigh it decaat, 1783—Louise J. M. Daguerre, tnven. | feed bis family on 3196 & week. | \fFA7oR 400 SHPLACS, the Bordly ‘We were for nationalism, pru?undnen, com- g;n::r g &':‘“;":9';‘:"!‘;" :;:‘:T:;'}“;f a great many things in her menu that| ¥omen in any state in the union voted ulsory military service, restoration of order in Fran are of importance to know. for Mr. Wilson hoping that péace and %l'uifm. for the dignity 1:-!ndhlecurity of ‘Ameflrc‘"; T i itk MRS. JAMES M'MILLAN. | 800 Wat WOUlG b e Sammendabie e, for measures to hold the respect of powerful 1814—United States sloop-of-war nltiong for measures to intensify the importance | Hornet arrived in New York, after The Religous Issue. than being voted f°':' b}'{ oAt Db)t.g“' of l?:ix( u:- American dlllzen. for measures to ::viu boldly run the British block- nOn;;ehu. ?l'ov. ::;t—?no the izdm;r u!;f § USRS I okl P ; is e, & e: ow 6 smoke of e mal merican lif¢ morally sound and economi~ i E RS R, SUNNY GEMS. cally secure, battle which arose from the heat of appearance as a tragedian at the “Old | the recent political ‘conflict has faded | s Andrews—Has Mrs. Tompkyns any We are for these policies now, intend to re- " main for them, and intend to continue talking | 2 ypas. mru il py Sans catabs | the American poople ha been condered | ol e . i she has sho con- about them, lished between Milwaukee and Chi- | you will pardon me if I should com-|ducts it surreptitiously, in the absende of u’o. A . | ment upon some of the tricks and de- | her husband.—Life. 1852-+-Pablic funeral ‘of ‘the:Duke | vices resorted to in order to prejudice| .. poreas—As soon as we got the batlot I » ‘ l of Wellington in London. thé minds of the voters before the|wetiretorm politics, 1886—Chester A. Arthur, ‘twenty. | rendition of that judgment. Under| b Att ¢ the thi Sm Sp‘u‘ Ha’d WOfk first president of the Unlv.éd States, | our statute tampering with a jury is wou‘n’:u;umzumflev-amn e»ialn:“l.l 3:71'1 Charles M. Schwab.: died in New York City. Born at Fair- | a criminal offense, but through the need reforming.—Life. 5 : e fleld, Vt, October 5, 1830, tol of th le tampering with effect on neutral opinion,” something for which For thirty-six years it has been my for- ,‘}‘;,_’_‘_’mm ,';:5,5, 111"'",, dethroned m:‘:}:fi. of :n’:":.z‘:" goes “f,wn, all the belligerents have so far exhibited a lofty e o watch most of the leaders in industrial [ emperor of Brazil, sailled with his | ished. Until I saw many sample bal- * Notes may be exchanged, but in the life rise from the ranks. These men are not nat- | family for Europe. lots {ssued by & few Omaha biggots ‘a8 into labor of benefit to an enemy, that the work| the Germans require is the production of muni- tions, which is tantamount to forcing the pris- orers to fight against their own country, This is a roundabout way, they insist, of doing some- thing contrary to modern usages of war, and forbidden by agreement. International conven- tions, however, have been of little service in the nt conflict, and will find about as much grace |'in ‘this as in other emergencies that have arisen. - *'What our government will do isnot indicated but it has instructed the: charge at Berlin to rep. ‘tesent to Von Bethmann-Hollweg that Germany's course in this “can not but have an unfortunate tution for this nation that made it possible for every man to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience, I regret deeply the fact that this erowd o(b ll:lg‘ou :t;.lmtlll:l: moflg l\; ! the republican pa: n county. am g Roman Catholic and a republi- can, and I am at a loss to know what SOME PIANO ::“ h d]ol: sealo d:d % “m: Price $600 at they labor so ously seel ri its ruin. I do not know wlu'tonl.me o8 Up they masqueraded under, but do know Cash or Time what name I would give them were I given that privilege, but will say to 3 them individually and collectively that the republican party is not a dark os e o P lantern party, it was not born in ig- . norance nor nurtured in bigotry. It } 1 is a party broad of vision, tolerant 1513. Dou, ¥ and free from fanaticism, and that #1318 glas St Nebraska soll is too fertile on which st £ urg! it ‘won i , | at the recent election I had led ‘meantime the Belgians will continue to work in '|,~,.,nfr§,d y ink J}‘:.‘.'a th,;..mm ge::‘al;mj.fi;! pnl)\,dod'l-u_.y o.-m.:..ffifi '.rgm' ,.',"::‘,’ :nyulf with the.chllw! flmu::lt“:h:t the German quarries and cement factories, The men who miss success have two general | Petual lease to the United States. the spirit of intolerance which in the ’ | —— libis. One is, “I am not u genius;" the other, | 1906—The Norwegian parliament | early '90s spread its blight over this ' . : alibis. One is, genius;” the ot Art and the National Life here are not the oppostunities today there uged | BRaRImOutly siccted Prince Charles of | SmuneY, (04 PO SRS Srpnee A ~ N ' -y ni ng o ay. y e verdict jo! ‘ot~ | Pragments of Colonel Roosevelt's address on | 1. crint: toneemnoin o oln, e it Is beside 1005—Richard Watson Gilder, poet | estants, which at that time was ren- “y 8 % At 50 Literatire” indicate that point; the second is altogether wrong. I do|.and editor, dled in New York City. dered against it, but_ I found that it ationalism ate that | not believe in what most people call “genius.” | Born at Bordentown, N. J., February | was resurrected from a grave where it his deep-set Americanism has not been tinctured "}‘ha‘t :-:l I believe few successful men are so-called | 8, 1844. e aIe:?'.‘ :unr:‘add,n mn;g. Rfl‘.’; ?:#:‘; i natui geniuses, 4 54 - it a8 ! ¢ product in art and | jn puginess can possibly make is to give all his | ~ Russell Harris is just 36 years old. ;;c;e";‘;n s it S literature a8 in industry or politics and demands | time, all his energies, to work—just plain, hard | He was born in Chicago and grad- | ¢ i1 heiped to trame o consti- a devotion from his country to strictly national | work. After a man’s aniti'on s assured; he can | UALSC o, clyll ehginaering from the | ideals here as in everything else. While he gives indulge in pleasure if he wish W. L. Masterman, the tea man, is Th ho 'has d best has di his criticism a quality more corrosive, perhaps,'| overvthing. The man who hes d e as han e | just 56 years old. He was born at Marengo, Ia., and has built up W, L. than others who have labored to the end he seeks, | best has done nothin, Masterman & Co. in & most successful theéolonel velees'asutiments that arefonlly held | | Nothing ia:mbre Jefal to Success than takdng ] tee aad soffes businees the better friends of all that is i i< | one's job as a matter of f more- s | Ed Mauer, who runs the famous : " k some one would have to remind them to go out | 32¥: No one has to ask him twice to have developed'by this time a completly, rounded | to funch, there would be more happiness in the | 622 that he was born In Germany. d that those mem- | .t of our own, but we have the beginnings. Our 1 i J. Manly McCarthy is celebrating his who have failed to fill | yiiers h:;g won a place among then .:m?;. l"l::t:nf'l‘)g .".'1'.,&'5'.’,'. ::t:'::;k. s e ol 2::?:.':‘;":? n.".‘"é‘,‘;.‘.’f.. ’%3.1:..5..“.‘2 “ffi;flmhh; mate- | oreat: some of our painters and sculptors are tnn!e lllmlhvt yet Qobhelr mhin:nnt‘:‘e rher:‘ ;ni'for- tompany, L. ; .4 March, Remem! 2 4 i P Is: a man because he worked overtime. aro! 4 , secr £ n that It:eh:;’ t!:e :l:';{"::'n"::i:: m T s h“h::';’.‘:. know lots of ‘instances where is hit men w'l.x‘o did | state for Beoflu:c:l ll‘:nflm lgguehhrymlx- of the requirements | geen had for our dramatists, although we have not. itsry, born fifty-one years ago ‘today. The man who attracts attention is the man | Riccardo Martin, celebrated oper- a8 yet given to the world no truly great play. Our national life, given over for the great part to who is thinking all the time and expressing him. | 81ic tenor, born at Hopkinsville, Ky., ::" li“ h'.i"l' "I‘Y‘- 3 h.d man :“pr‘“‘"‘:l" to ‘”fi‘.fi?;'i‘i!‘&?mfi%n‘."flfix’sa Boston Nefkding Waste'1pikces. of- RABIS RAGI: bobiudas zzle his employer by doing the spectacular is tion, to building up cities in the wilderness, to wresting from forest and mine the things needed banker and philanthropist, bern in bound to fail. ol New York, eighty-two years ago today. . Don't be afraid of imperiling your health by Elizabeth M. Gilmer (Dorothy Dix) giving a few extra hm,m to the company that | well known writer, born in Montgom- by man in his material growth, has expanded pays your salary, Don’t be reluctant about put- 3 to some degree along the softer lines of art, and W{'fil jt ”“le"u:yqu:l:::llm :lhi‘t: our people have responded in respectful and Arei thl'mti(ht Solslk prévatly, even liberal admiration if not with the fuller 2 ee——————— ‘and energy of the Prettiest emphasizes: the value of co-opers- didential districts. Home surroundings attractive plans bespeak the char- the owners. The joy of living is en- The sqlun i o extension telephone Leslle Mann, outfielder of the Chi- than kid gloves. Be thorough in all things, no'| S®80 National league base ball team, matter how small or distasteful. The man who "counts his hours and kicks about his salary is a self-elected failure. i The real test of business greatness is in giving born at Lincoln, Neb, twenty-five years ago today. John W, Coombs, pitcher of the Brooklyn National league ' base ball team, born at La Grand, Ia, thirty- ery county, Tenn., forty-six years ago. ting on overalls. Bare hands grip success better appreciation that comes from understanding, It is, perhaps, because we have followed the colonel's | oonortunity to others. Many business men fail | three years ago today. order of things, and have developed strength, A Waave they are thf’:'tkin( only of pelr- sz All those steps saved \ courage and justice first that we are lagging in | sonal glory. . Timely Jottings and Reminders. for a few cents [] other ways; yet even this impetuous advocate of Integrity b All evangelical denominations are a day, to observe the week beginning tomor- s alesmanship, Next to integrity comes person- p up things for ::"‘" to be done, whose impatience bursts forth | ayjey_that Kwd finable chlrm‘ that gives e men | row as “home mission week.” t b i8 & native son. Oh, | in termagant speech at times, must know that | what perfume gives to flowers. If you have per-| The claims of Arizona to the loca- Sulzer says it is hhmmy and vindica- | the real fiber of Americanism lics much too deep | sonality, cherish it; if you have not, cultivate it. ;‘::k:‘:fll‘ g: the proposed farm loan no further, Bill did and is far too strongly knit to be weakened by Nothing is so plentiful in America as oppor- Presented to the Farm 'D. M¢Donald, attorney of |« sofngr i k. A 3 Loan board at a hearing at Phoenix (o,, awaiting m:: flifim;l’! 2k 'servility” in art, and that America will lose little is A ¥ tunity. ere are more jobs for forceful men | {5aay. wife, lost out in his campaign for by not hurrying on to something that must come g than there are forceful men to fill them. The annual convention of the Cath. b h All successful employers of labor are stalkin; St § e D_h trial begins next Monday. slowly if it is to be worthy when achieved. .| is soheduled to meet ot Kearney. Nebs HNnkafes Bil- SEm——— men who will do the unusual; men who think, | is scheduled to meet at Kearney, Neb,, men who attract attention by doing more than is | today for a two-day session. expected of them, These men have no difficulty | ¢ TWo hundred delegates represent- in making their worth felt. They stand out above | 08 branches throughout the United f fr . K States and Canada are expected in »:2:"“‘[:'2?“1: until their superiors cannot fail to | 5 UES today for the openming of the The Belgians argue that their employment in elector | non-war industries in Germany, by releasing for m‘;‘l?‘wrl‘odi military service German workmen otherwise RESIDENCE EXTENSION sporting coin;, but dotes on needed for these jobs, amiounts to making them A college man is worth no more to his em- Efi:}":o,:"mn.‘;:fl" g0 the Reopie's TELEPNONE RATES ¢ B /fight against their own countrymen. On the | Ployer than a common school or high school boy, | * The drawing for the opening of the same theory, workmen in neutral countrics, em. | WnIcss he takes a position in which higher educa: | Fort ' Assinniboine reservation, em-| J With extra bell, ployed in making supplies for the warring nations “fl'“': .:!"“:l eflrqylhoyech o ‘:cfl s hhl A b :w:::‘l‘ > “'5 35"2: . i o l i 75 cents t}ll_ / | . % v | adj imself. Higher education has its chance | tural lands, is to take place today at i i / Cicn o e e o e i | M S e Bt o | T = = ent tha ey have released others for | minor details of the ess. 5 l military service. That is an argument that go:: Real success is won only by hard, honest, i et gl -2 ‘m“ Wimew.v het N - AETRN B T beraioweat Sl Usless Jian gets sccus, | Phairson MacPherson was a Scots- | g 50 cents a month. e . xte ) ¥ GO, WS 5D W tomed to that in school he 10 have a hard | TaD: | Aleo he was a Sre mehahy, — [) A hundred policemen, i === ime getting d Also . e was K % u"b’:d the nl}m Creater | 1t the mistakes miade in locating the Federal e At Ao 5 et A nebls e andlAhe knew. Rimi o | o — k to ba the richest man in town. But —‘ + VN aintaining order and g the | Reserve banks are to be corrected, as the Chicago she @anted to be quite sure that'he DT e i o do fl‘& it ‘&“x‘ The women | Journal ia advocating, Omaha should have the Mo Come by (iU bi money” bonestly | - | . Ik e bus or, 5 City before she decided to marry him. TGRS — ) ; ; ”“' gw Mm Kansas poli ‘::fl:“% :rgm us ;‘H(mi ut‘r} tl‘nt ye qléo!e the lowest WS i n : through its superior tical . 'But Omaha prices in the toon, and make reduc- R __ b will not get anything without going after it. The. first national convention of opponents ;’:w.':z:‘ ::;'{“‘;ufi"’fi::{[‘,‘,’ yet —_ e l And if it is worth going after,.it is worth going [ of woman suffrage in the his of America | asked. i3 P = AN after right,” | h"bb:r“ called to meet in Washington in De- H;‘:;Veel. it's P;hls way,” explained = SRR cember. n M rson i der- \ 7 necessities soaring, that | . Miss Hortense S.' Stollnitz, an | 18-year-old | o8¢ ‘LA;:,?*;C";"*D ‘:“}':":{ anyone | §—] -= 3 by \ ¢ h € see, % ; school should come in | New York girl, is the new international ama- | two'ehiliings Wt hedane: & G SRR ; teur typewriting ¢! on, having won the title | ig a fr " mi d th AR in competition. h\_:\:mdfl words_a minute Mf‘tw:‘l:‘n:dr:‘dn'.el;;t a J:'L'ul‘.‘.?.'é: ¢ for thirty I'm a freen o' hia!"—Liverpool Post. 3 bow to fly in such loity

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