Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 6, 1909, Page 6

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THE OMaHA DAy BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR Entersd at Omaha postofffics as second- matter TERMS8 OF SUBSCRIPTION Bee (without Bunday), one year Bee and Sunday one year DELIVERED BY CARRIER Datly Bee (including Sunday), per week . 15c Dally Bee (without Bunday), per week 10e vening Bee (without Sunday) per week 6 Svening (with Sunday), per week 10¢ Sunday Bee, One year... 1.5 Saturday Bee, one year.. 1.60 Address all complaints of irregularities in telivery to City Cireulation Department OFFICES Omaha—The Bee Bullding > South Omaha—Twenty-fourth and N Junell Blutfa—15 Scott Bireet Lincoln—518 Little Bullding Chicago—1648 Marquette vaflfl_ml New York—Rooms 1101-1102 No Thirty-third Street & Washington—12 Fourteenth Street, N CORRESPONDENCE Communications relating to news and edi- tarial matter shonld be addressed: Omaha Hee, Editorial Department. REMITTANC draft, express or postal order The ilee Publishing Company. Only 2-cent stamps received in payment of mall aceount Personal checks, except on ymaha or eastern exchanges, not accepted. $4.00 ey .00 Daily M West w. Remit hy payable to STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION State of Nebraska, Douglas County, #a: George 5. Tzschuck, treasurer of The Bee Publishing company, being duly sworn, says that:the Actuai number of full _and Morning, Evening and Sunday Bee printed during the month of April, 1909, was as follow . 39,260 41,030 37,130 . 40,380 40,620 .. 40,410 . 40,4600 40,380 40,640 43,450 | T 19 20 45,860 | 45,580 .. 45,880 . 45,35 45,360 1,338,410 11,303 1,828,807 TZSCHUCK, Treasu er. 15 16....\ Keturned coples Net Daily total. average. * GEORGE B. Subscribed in my presence and sworn to betore me thix 18t day ot May, 1909, P. WALKER, Notary Public. fled to them. Addréss will be anged as often as requested. The score stands four against the lions. to nothing A city clection makes the street- sweeping fund fly, At any rate) the weather man is en- titled to a vote of thanks. —_—— You can meet the man who ‘‘told- You-s0"" on every street corner. Well, now! I8 it, or Is it not, a re- buke to Governor Shallenberger? Nebraska wheat sends greeting to Broker Patten and informs him it is doing tolerably well, It is up to the railroads to run spe- cial excursions from Lincoln.to Omaha at frequent intervals Wheat is going up again. Never mind, it will soon be the season when we can live on greens. A few more davs like this and it will he safe to haul out the straw hat and put the overcoat in storage What is the use of a tarift putting cloves on the free list just after so many places in the country have gone dry? g Out of twenty-two places on the icket the republicans take eleven and the democrats take eleven: Call it an #ven break A campaign of misrepresentation sometimes wins. Note the success of the water bonds in running the gaunt- \et of the election Another Indlana student has won the prize of the Interstate Oratorical association. Senator Beveridge must '00k to his laurels. The falldown of half the democratic ibers of the city council can hardly be construed into a popular endorse- ment of the city council’s reco; The officers of the War college at Washington are going to take a ride over the Virginia battlefields. It is an casier journey now than in the '60's. Samson has fixed the dates when everybody is to come to Omaha and have a good time. Mark the days on your calendar so you will not forget A petition in stockings has reached Washington to leg for a lower duty on hosiery. It is not of record whether the Missouri members insisted upon being shown A bill is pending before the Wiscon- sin legislature to regulate the contents of Wienerwurst. It is a wise legisla- tor who knows what the little red sausages contain ——— Don™t be Impatient about Nebraska weather. There I8 one Colorado rail- road which ha been blockaded by snow all winter and has not yet sumed operations. — And now It is a Georgla girl who wants $1,000 damages for being kissed. Tn a few years from now it is possible she will be willing to make a material reduction in the price, —_— Venesuela again has a minister at Washington. He can furnish his old friend Castro with the information fhat the capitol bullding has not gone re- o rack and ruin since the former dic- | tator gut pur acquaintance complete coples of The Daily, | | The Outcome of the Elestion | 11t is true that the people of ev | community have the kind of cit ery gov = |ernment that they want, then the re- election of Mayor Dahlman by a largely increased majority over the vote he polled three years ago means that Omaha is to have for the next three years just the kind of a chief executive {t wants Mayor Jim boasts that he represents specially the common people, and ! there is no question but that the com- | mon people are largely in the major- ity If he will now take advantage of his experience during his first term in | the mayor's office and avoid during his | second term repeating gome of the per- | tormances which he¥himself, doubt- less wishes had been left undone, he may at least give us @ better adminis tration during the coming three vears As to what factors contributed to bring about the defeat of the repub lican candidate, who, in his personality was unobjectionable and in ability out- ranked his competitor, will be a sub- Ject of all sorts of speculation. Mr Breen proved to be a weaker foe to Mayor Jim than did Mr. Benson three | years before, with this exception, that Mr. Breen by comparison has run stronger in the lower wards than in the upper wards. It is, therefore, not the downtown element that has in- creased Mayor Jim's majority, but the outlying residence districts; supposed to be inhabited by the more intelligent and wealthier classes. On the rest of the ticket we have a partial repetition of what happened once before, namely, a vote for mayor 80 strong as to pull through a large portion of the democratic ticket with it. The republicans, however, have made good gains in the council and have elected thelr city engineer and police commission by decisive majori- ties. This gives them just half the offices filled at the election. Had the voting machine been used instead of the paper ballot the desire to re-elect Mayor Jim would unquestionably have pulled the straight lever so fast as to make a clean sweep for the democrats. Prevention of Disease. The proceedings of the Nebraska State “Medical society emphasizes the present trend of medical science to- ward the prevention of disease. Not that the profession has in the least re- laxed its efforts for discovering and perfecting cures for disease, but this |most important duty has been co- ordinated with that of prevention. TIn this regard the medical profession has of late made even more notable ad- is performing a great service in edu- cating the public up to the knowledge and importance of observing the rules for sanitary living. By literature and lectures the public is getting the ben- efit of modern medical knowledge and there is no way of telling what the life saving influence of this propaganda has been or will be until new mortu- ary statistics are compiled, but the fact that insurance companies are realizing the necessity of revising their mortuary tables emphasizes the results. Whenever some distinguished geon saves a human life by a | velous operation or a skillful physi- {clan Dbrings a noted personage back to health from the brink of the grave this praises are sounded on every hand, vet in the person of Dr. Gorgas alone there lives a man little known outside of the medical profession, who has | without a doubt saved the lives of more | people than the busiest practitioner | has ever treated. By his courage, sci- | entific attainments and patient re- | search he had practically eliminated | yellow fever from districts in which it formerly claimed thousands of vie- tims. Yet Dr. Gorgas is only one of the many devoting their lives In this | manner to the good of humanity. | The public is often slow to take up | with innovations in methods of liv- ing, especlally where the results are not immediately visible and material, and for this reason the work for health preservation is met either with | Indifference or absolute neglect. There s evidence, however, that in many di- rections people are gradually realizing | what is being done to lessen the sum of human misery, but the awakening is all too slow for their own good sur- mar- | From the most unexpected sources are coming encouragements for the uplift of the negro in the south. When negro education was first instituted in | the south through morthern influence | it met almost with universal hostility | there. The results of the work of the | ploneers in this field have opened the | eyes of the real thinkers of the south {and made influential converts ready to extend a helping hand ‘The latest recruit to this class, Sen ator Clay of Georgia, has seen, what all men of foresight must see, that the laborer of the south is of necessity the {negro. He is there and physically fitted for the task, but his past condi- tion, not through his own fault, has rendered him ineficient.. This was first realized when it was sought adapt him to the work of the factories of the new south and the task of his industrial education commenced. Sen- ator Clay, looking farther than this, understands that the south’'s greatest resource is agriculture. days the master thought for the negro and directed his movements where 1o- he must think for himself to be eftective. Under umskiliful and neg- lectful treatment the soll of the south- ern plantations {8 impoverished and | tails to yield the return which is nec- essary If the south is to retain su- premacy in the fields of agriculture { which it has previously dominated Senator Clay is therefore urging upon his state and the rest of the south the vances than In curative research and | | Industrial Education of the Negro. in old slavery | education of stopping the the negro in agriculture dritt of the negro away from the farm and adding to his pro- | ductive capacity as the south and the suring permanent whites and blacks It encouraging sign for the solution of the south's problems when men Senator Clay's type begin to approach them from the standpoint of | reason rather than prejudice the only salvation of means of in- prosperity for both is an of The Late Dr. Amador The death of Dr. Amador recalls the important part he played in one of the world's great affairs. So far {the public knew he was the central figure in the revolution in Panama which was the opening wedge toward rendering possible the construction of the canal, which, when completed, is expected to revolutionize the transpor- tation of the new world and great influence on the old While as a man Dr. Amador was not possessed of qualities which under any conditions would have rendered him conspicuously great, he was the visible agent of an Incident of such far-reach- | ing consequence that he will occupy a | position in history which many a | reater man could never have attained Almost as suddenly as he flashed into | the public came his subsidence, | and nothing but his death has served have a eve | was the man for the time, the place | and the hour, and with its passing his | usefulness in a larger sense was ended, for greater men and a greater nation were needed for the completion of the glant task. The Turmoil in France. crisis which confronts cabinet and incidentally nation is a most confusing those who have not followed the trend of events in that On its face it is simply a labor dfs- turbance, but in reality it is much more political than industrial he | state of political equilibrium in France | is generally unstable and the slightest | discontent in any quarter is taken ad- | The | French the the to closely country. one | whatever faction happens at the time to be in power. Minor discontents {among the government employes have | been seized upon to foment strife, | Which has become 8o acute as to be a | source of worry for other European | nations. It is pressure from this source as well as self-preservation for |the mintstry which has induced | Premier Clemenceau to take stringent ‘meflsurfln to meet the emergency. | It would seem that a people so frugal and thrifty as the French and where almost everyone is to a greater or less extent a capitalist would be |less glven to excesses which threaten | even | ment, but the instability of French | character is beyond the comprehen- sion of the less impulsive Anglo-Saxon lor German. In the present instance |a vast army of government employes | have been made dissatisfied over pro- | motions and various working condi- | tions, and so persistently have the | agitators operated that the entire pub- lie service is threatening revoit. | Removed as we are from the scene {of disturbance the interest of the | United States is not direct, but both anarchy and turmoil, wherever they ! exist, have a widespread particularly when those conditions ex- ist in a nation strong commercially and politically. But France has weath- ered many storms more serious than the present and will doubtless find a | solution for the present difficulties. is | Nothing stands in the way of an ap- | | peal to the supreme court from the de- |cisions of the district judges on the | ballot question involved in Omaha's re- | cent city election, but with nothing at | stake it will hardly be worth while | carrying up the cases. The fact is the | decisions of the lower court in both | instances were so inevitable from the facts and the law that the palpable purpose of the talk about appeal was | simply to confuse the public mind and make political capital for the candl- dates. turns out that the heaviest suf- the disuse of the voting ma- chines the judges and clerks of election, compelled to put in from elght to twenty hours additional time without increasge of pay. It is a safe guess that the election officers would vote unanimously to the ma- chines. It ferers by are restore The annual reports of the United States land offices in South Dakota show that a large number of new set- tlers have gone into that state during the vear and that the movement is still continuing. At the past present rate government land in South Dakota | will soon be a thing of the past Twenty thousand Pittsburgers passed through the art gallery to view a picture recently hung there and then demanded that the art work be re- moved or the gallery closed. That fs | taking & mean advantage of the curi ous who were unable to get in on | opening day to | District Attorney Jerome of New [ York suggests that once in a { while it {8 & good thing for voters to ! quiz ofcials. The trouble is the offi- clals too often take refuge behind their | statutory rights and refuse to incrimi- | nate themselves every A Philadelphia minister has decreed | that take the rear pews. What Is the use | of wearing a stunning creation if you must sit where people canuot see it? A Tariff Brace Washing Star that Winfield Scott tor | The tact | was Hancock htlessiy ridicuied his state- as | :ln bring him again to public view. He | vantage of by agitators to undermine | the continuance of the govern- | influenct, | women who wear big hats must | ment “the (Arfe is a loeal lasue” ma of the courag statesmer whose some present views are with limited re Matertal for Pruning Brooklyn Bagle Dreadnoughts are Austria's contri peace the world. When that aword shall b pruning hook what a lot matertal the jew will supy Raw [ Seven bution time beaten of raw the comes the into the A Thriving astry. Bost ald gra Aetivit Sundays or five, flood pressure a H The in this country {day industry that wliday s pension never ceases Earth 18 one night quake, massac what not never stops. A Introduced 112 from own Warning for ¢ Baltimore Amer | The which meditate violation | the law have no comfort find in J torney General Wickersham's speech. Th | wint ctacular fight against them without foundation. but if ihey | tempt practices which | been inlawful the Washington senator biils, & or the fow private days ago one pension IoH an of At trusts to be no sp o carry clearly defined on " | partment of Justice will get them If they | [don't wateh o Tari® Vaciations in Parties. New York World do party distinctions n wame day MeCumber. | republican from makes a | speech in favor of free Jumber, and Senator Fletcher Plorida, makes another for the retention of the Dingley Autles lumber? The republican can justify himself as being pledged to tariff | reviston, but the repudiates his | party pledges and obstructs revision in the | Interest of the consumer f Younng America. uls Globe-Democrat | willing to wreek any- | thing but his pride and his independence |'The worst of it all 1s that, after he is | #poiled in such ignoble strif>, he loses his | balance and his sense of discrimination, and (s bad-mannered everywhere and at all times. even toward women. If bad manners among voung men and boys of this country are springing out of evil | soctal conditions it would pay those respon- | sible for such conditions to correct them | For bad manners make bad men rust of Trusts, Springfield Republican, One of the heaviest of household burdens )ll the coal bill. In that pariicular we are {in the grip of a power as relentless as fate. that ordains a high price and makes us ail meekly pay it or frees: As it is In Phlla. delphia, o it is here and everywhere. The retafl dealers in that eity, “in accordance with thelr annual custom,” have voted to advance the price 10 cents per ton each month from May 1 untll September, at which time the price will have reached the minimum winter rate. To death and taxes has long been added an inexorable top notch winter price for coal. This is th trust of trust roun | What when the Senator orth Dakota a demoorat from demoerat Defects St L Young America is the Bankers on the Run. Cleveland Plain Dealer. On Monday of this week the former head falcation caused ‘the bank's ruin, was placed on trlal. The hearing lasted two days. The jury after deliberating an hour returned a verdiet of guilty. On Wednesday, two daye later, another for grand required for minutes were ugree {his trust, was placed on trial larceny. One dAy ‘only was this trial likewise and thirty sufticlent for 7the!fjury to verdict of guilty. These two trials es promptness ‘perhaps qriminal history. Moves for Income Tax. 8pringtield Republican Some of the wealthiest members of the United States senate favor a federal tax on Inrge incomes and will support the Cum- mins or Balley bill. One of them is Mr Guggenhelm of Colorado, whose wealth | runs into the tens of milllons, and who would pay a personal tax than $100,000 under the Cummins bill is Senator Stephenson of Wisconsin, spent over $100,000 In his campaign for election. Washington has a story that sey | eral senators favorable to an income tax along with Justice Harlan of the United blished & unique in record of the local of more who re States supreme court, dined at the White | House Saturday night and talked the mat- ter over with the president. It will be recalled that Justice Harlan wrote an extremely vigorous dissenting opinion when the Income tax law of 1894 was overthrown by a bare majority of the court. SMALL TOWNS IMPROVIN Betterment of Living Condit Modern Communities. Wall Street Journal A striking characteristic of the improve- ments which are steadlly being made by hundreds of prosperous municipalities of the country is seen in the many issues of bonds for school buildings, for or Installation of lighting plants a better and more abundant These three fundamentals | videa for of the aceumulutsd which the country has derived t of good crops, of prosperous and of mctive trade The larger towns took the first step, the smaller ones aspired to do as well for their inhablita The cugincer profession and the financiers began to ¢ o overcome the difficulties management. At ot talent works. But witn th and for water suj ply are belng pro out N years industries, own s ot cor first 1 perat this operate struction and was a searcity | small-sized public been Iargely that small towns of the country and south, are enjoying public in the larger cities. In fact of wmervice is often | the large cities, where the preferment Impairs fhe efficlency re the has resul west overcome cast d A of tandurd that of evil of political of public quite as service these lines as ran superisr t service. This widespread tendency proportion of the populat busls of intellectual and { than the country has ever vas put a large 1 on A scunder welfare known before physical [ This Handsome Tesspoov oiven for a metal top from a Liebig Company’'s jarand 10c. in stamps lor expenses, Itis ull sized and exciusive Rose Partern, very modish and beautitul, finished in fashionable French gray )ike the iatest | solid silver. Made by Wim. Rogers & Son, Get the genuine LIEBIG £5522 % neer with blue sigBature, the most delicious! and far-going : X teaspoonful makes a bee/ tea and it i 1 just as for coukin < When you get the spoon you will also want this fine gifi fork, to match i = P The fork will be mailed for a Liebig top and e, in stamps. Address. CORNFILLE DAVID & CO., Dent. 8. 120 Hudson St.. New York. taritf trouble | of a private bank in Cleveland, whose de- | Cleveland banker who had proved false to | wpon a | Another | extension | wealth | Washington Life Sketohes of Ineid: and Mark the Short ou tags Events Statue erected to the memory of Henry W. Ik In Wasghington 18 the by the Longfello It shows the Ameri book in his hi Bonacard cost $10,000, The monument ard H. Warner tion, President in an A bronze will The f twelve g fellow monument labor tomo culmination ¢ Memorial assoclation seated with & built of Scotland congress. an poet The pedestal brought from was donated by will be presented by Brafn marblc and treasurer of Taft address posed of prominent general public will accept it be and iha sesemblage, cc corps, the cabinet | officiala and the with fore a diplomatic government tef Justice Fuller will preside at the exercises, | made by Bishop General A w and will e Mackay-8mith of Philadelphia w 1 8 A. and Hamilton Mabhie. rddresses Greely Eagle correspondent is maiden speech of Sena North Dakota in varlets not It the Rrooklyn to be believed. the Martin N the senatn of dignificd been talking niore he had Not that Johnson trving amusing hecause he presented such a funny fignre In the logue very little make-up irregularly distributed and he wears steel bowed spectacles which he fs constantly putting on and taking off of| those big, shiny affected by the song Johnson of week, provokéd a emotions than three Johngon had minutes when everybody laughing was to b T mono- vaudeville cireuit, with His hair fs short and is angular first place resembles A artist of t his face Johnson Prince and dance When to speak it haiting, apologetic manner. fumbling books and papers on his desk in the mean- He eradually own the of seats until at a desk about twenty feet from whers he started. During all this time turned his back on the vice president and talked to the democrats on the back row of seats began fulking with a ferky de- livery, hardly Intelligible, the while rub- bing his nose, with the long finger of his right hand. He presented such a quaint, unusual figure in the Algnified senate that there were broad smiles all over the cham- her Everybody was surprised when the North Dakota man began to talk about what happened in the ways and means commit- tee when the Dingley bill was drafted. He spoke as though he had been there all the | time, and gave away some of the inside committes room secrets. He seemed to have such an accurate knowledge of the wears Alberts much one man began wis with & with wandered he brougit time row up he Johngon the Dingley law that a suspiclon was created that he might have heen present On turning to the Congressional Directory, it was found that Johnson had been a member of the Fifty-fourth and Fifty- | fifth congresses and was a member of the ways and means committee when Dingley was its chairman. Nobody seemed to know about it before Johnson began to speak The precincts of the senate were in- vaded Friday by two strangers, but the grave old sticklers for the exclusiveness of that chamber were not aware of the de- secration until after the two men had de | parted. A doorkeeper Is having nightmare in fear of the wrath of Colonel Dan Rans- dell, sergeant-at-arms and guardian of | the sacred room 7 The strangers were taking in the sights of the capltol and, seeing the main ' door of the senate invitingly open strolled Into the chamber, sat down on one of the com- fortable gofas in the rear of the senators’ desks and listened to a prosy tariff dis- | cussion for half an hour. Tiring of the 1 they took thelr departure debate, | A newspaper man having spied them, and not recognizing them as members of either house, or as distinguished personages en- | titled to the privileges of the floor, asked | the doorkeeper, as they passed out, who | they were “They are members of the house, 1 guess,” answered that employe. The news- paper man then accosted the strangers and asked if they were congeessmen. | Discovering that they were not, | wanted to know how they happened to get {on the floor of the senate, a privilege ac- corded to only a few hundred of the - 000,000 of American eitizens. They sald the { door was opened and they simply walked {in. The sofa looked good them, {and they concluded to stay a while. The | enjoved the joke with the newspaper man and gave the latter thelr names as J. M. Hartzell of Philadephia and T. of Harrington, Del quistly he cozy to Rev of Adams | A west other republican senator from the middle bustled the White House the day filled with the idea that the r publican party would g0 to the bow-wows the president hand in the | tartfr fight. The westerner was one of President Roosevelt's right hand Heuten ants in campaigns for reform legislation He found the president calm and serene Mr. President [ anout this | wen president with unless took & you must do something tariff the shail 1« 2 Rleam hurst out visttor the ment in his what Inquired Bond reaponded (he Tha president looked his visitor ov mess 10 congress,” promptly wenato r from merry Taf handshukers in the head and then the Taugh wan heard by adjoining office PERSONAL NOTES. the palac Abduls Belng forcibly pie counter the now obliged to work Star state proposes $10.04 with separated from Mrs former are Uving. o The Lone to pat that w0 in Mars the order ecessary mmunicate Since Texas wat | may ¢ that ree fine it of has its collected grown utterly in respect finances. Jo: papers M at who used to sell ond ph etta news In King Twenty-se street and diana avenue, Chica of Italy as a soldler. His him_at (he of ing the ather ceeeded newstand, w when 1 paid 814 In was safe worried ad ble tolls to learn that dotng his duty at | wim from the sold in Carrie of which venir | campaign | hatchets against the purchased an land in Boone county, Ark.. on which to spend the remainder of days. Poultry, pigs. pigeons, peas and ples will be ralsed in quantity by Natlon, according to the anmouncement her agent Miss Mary ceived a for her women steamer Na saloon lon has extensive her ap- Mrs of | expects McCann, medal heraie offorts and childrer Genarul & *d in honor who re- congress lives of on the time 1t has been «G nurse from the training school of certificate to practice gir! from saving were the River of in wha cum he East at was destr Florence Crittenden | Washington and a | has been given hen be unveiled large hut | happenings connected with the drafting of | Dominte, | the earthquake | more tasteful, healthful and nutri- tious when raised with The only baking powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar Made from Grapes ;WEBBASKA PRESS COMMENT. SMILING REMARKS. “Is Reginald as literary as he used ta Grand Island Independent: Mr. Bryan | comes out in a belaied editorial endorsing [be?’ said one young woman T Yes,' answered the other. “Only | the daylight closing bill. The bill has been | RS, SNEREIC A, Before we were ma {on file in the legislature since February. | yjaq he used to recite Omar Khayyam. Now | That is why 1t may fitly be said that the | he recites Poor Richard's maxims. '—Was editorial comes a fittle late. Mr. Bryan |Ington Star ; evidently insists that Mr. Snallenberger | .wuu she hurt wher -6 ‘was | shall have no advantase. frem tho automoblier™ " chuyle e et WIS le ure ope. She landed on her head." Schuyler Fre Lane Thi: legislaturs ithout el & any & et session is in marked contrast with that of | iavi Ot Srashed & rol & dolible row two years ago and will do the democratic | of puffs and seven rats!—Cleveland Plai: party no good as & comparison. That was | Dealer. considered the best session the state ever | | had and this cinssed as the worst. Two years ago the democratic mindrity was per e o partic o proC ings perimitted to partiolpets in the procesdings | Cuie ™"rane time When nest you are and claimed @ share In the honors, but { (0% " S nal: take time. this year the republican minority was not | Convict—Wot yer talkin’ about? That & | much &nd ho doubt but | wot 1 dld take—I stole a watch.—Baltimore permitted that it is glad to not share in the disgrace, | American of the n thrown | wvisttor (to convieth—My unfortuns triend, want of thought is the cause much crfme. Temptation could be bette resisted if one paused to consider the | Neligh Free Lance democratic Columbus Telugram criticises I the Omaha Bec for its alleged treat- | ment of William Jenuings Bryan, and the | democratic press of the state generally takes it up in me too éeticles. The ex- pressed sentimont is that election I8 over now and Bryan Is defeated and he should be let alone. Now, that would read well if that were all there was to it, but the fact is that while election is over and Bryan has taken his regulation beating, but he has not retired as a private eitizen He not only discusses public men and meas ures each week in his Commoner. but in hie Intefviews given to the press he goes the same way. Not long since he was pub- [ lely expressing nimself as prefering defeat !to election by the class who voted for | Taft, this really slurring the presjdent | But according to the Telegram The Bee any other paper must say a word In eriticism of the Peerless One, no difference what he may say’ through his own publica- | Luller But hes auch =« tion, through the public press or on the gt ") 800 lecture platform. If Bryan had retired to| Young Mother—On the contrary, we private life after election, then continual | lieve it will have the effect of making and persistent editorial comment of The ,'f;,‘r::f,‘ ARy ot te oW, up fo It Bee would be properly denounced, but as 1t I8 it 18 but proper. However, in the mind HOUSECLEANING TIME. of the Telegram editor and other demo- vy crats you must not say aught adversely | Detroit Free Preas to the immaculate Bryan. The sickening | cannot find my romor strop, hero worshiping of such fellows makes | Tll"l‘\xtftll;\lllk mug iy off the sl one weary. If the Telegram editor could | Thire's not a chalr for me to drop each morning be privileged to kiss the | one shirt must last me through the week hem of the Peerless Ome's garment he| One collar do, though thick with grime would imagine he had a halo about his head | the laundry she forgot to send- Once me e . the rest of the day. more it is house cleaning tim: The editor What sort of u carpet beater is bes(~ Ao Mine is baid-headed and rather stoi but | wouldn't go so far as to say the best.”—Houston Post he bad “8o she loved and lost? yes. lie spent @ll her ork Times money. " New “Do your constituents write to you about the taritf?" 1 should say ®0." answered Senatn | Sorghum. “And T must say that if I were | A% selfish In my politics as some of m orrespondents, 1'd have heen sent 1 to private life lon.g ago.”—Washington *“Fhey had no suitable gloves In the stora we went to. And that is a most extra nary proceeding.’ “Why extraordinary?"’ ““Because In the nature of things, glo are something which should always found on hand."—Baltimore American | | | I i Caller—What a pretty named him yet? Young Mother—Yes christened Montgomery Caller—But he's such a baby! Have vou nor we have had Alfred Nathar Ifttle fellow lke the call for fresh q WESTERN MORTGAGE STATISTICS b “Just wehr theél o Ahe, ‘I've had no time for darning hose 1 wish you wouldn't hother me. My pipes have disappeared from view My books have vanished from my den, The 18 no comfort in the home, For ghe is cleaning house again My favorite armehair now holds Three statues and 4 roseleaf jar- pon the couch six portieres And heaps of laundried curtains aro There I8 no place for me to rest At 8 o'clock the stairs I climb And find my bed upon the floor | Because it Is house cleaning time. ded sogks b youtstfuve s s | |1 } One Stage in the Movement of Pros- perity Clearly Shown. | Chicago Record-Herald | Ten or fifteen years ago the farm mort- | gAge in the west was synonymous with | | ruin. That was because the rapid develop- ment of western states by men with little | or no capital had been checked by a series | ! of years of crop fallure combined with nation-wide Industrfal depression. Only |too many of the borrowers found them- selves without to tide over the | hard times. Then came a perlod of recu- ! peration on the basis of splendid crops for | _There fs no curtain in the room, years. The debtors put |80 T must shut off all the Hgnt all thelr energles at work to pay off thelr | And aul tpieing, ea. oM nd as 1 tumble into hed creditors, and some of the western states| I think some poet ought to rhyme got themselves into such a condition that| Of womans inhumanity =~ !a farm mortgage was almost as hard to| U M€ about house cleaning time find as A farm without a mortgage had ~ ~ been u few years previously | When that stage had been reached the | ) | fortunate farmers, along with the towns- | people who shared thelr prosperity, r..\.na; Hea“hy FDOI"EIS, work themselves accumulating funds which | needed investment. Purchases of adjoining | 1ands sent land values rapi upward, | i and In many cases farmers hegan to pur- Digest Your Meal You Can't |chase cheap lands still farther west [ Do Much Work. their sons. In this way Nebraska and Kan- 5 sas and Dakotu are engaged in doing now | VW WAAAAAASAAARSA AT what Iilinots and Indians and Ohlo did &| The power to overcome all the aiimen s generation ago. Such purchases often In-| of human life, and to'meet al ‘the diff volve temporary debts, and so the farm | cultles which )fe presents is, witain mortgage now begins become @ little | province of every individual, says more frequent, but with a different signit- | Wwriter of authority . leance from what it was two decades ago. | He might have added with equal truth The Nebraska Bureau of Labor and In-| most of our ailments we bring uponour- | Qustrial statistics reports that last year | Selves, and very often we alone ‘are re- the farm mortgages filed amounted to a ®ponsible for our difficulties. Wrong liv- | total of 88440000, as against $30.70,00 re- | In® causes many ailments. - Rich, greasy | leased. a slight increase. The city real! foods at all times=day or night, caust eatate mortgages filed amount to almost | *tomach disorders. which must vitally af $14,000,000, A Against $9.000,00 released, | f*C! part of the system, becoming | which indicates an era of home buliding, | 9'ckIY chronic I partly due to farmers moving into the city | Stert ”"’r 4"-‘ right - with a sensible { same time keeping their farms as a source | '+€ TL0¢ S o Rl 1‘vynyl :;. of Income. Chat mortgages filed | |2 ° s e L S amounted Lo $34,400,000, as against $19,000,000 A ? strength without overloading the diges- released, a large part of which may prob- | & 0T RAENRED O Teh T aeh hay | ably be attributed to appearance of | poon’ restored to health . by, EggaDefies tenants on the farms which the owners are | oo (UL favan of corn or whant | ceasing work with thelr own hands.! gorveq with zood milk or cream and § | This mortgage extension is one stage In the | 1jitie fruft of some Kind movement of prosperity. There Remember it 1s the original and Jusiis dications that Nebrasku famous Kgg-O-See process that makes the Kansas can ever again suffer such depres- | E.C Corn kes and Fgg-O-See Wheat sion as that of the '80s | Fiakes 80 nice and erisp and hesithtul esources I note the window shades are gone. many successive > It It Takes Your Strength to * one ol o town le the to are no in | — : — | ~ Nothing Better For the conservative taste no fabric surpasses the blue or black serge for summer wear. It is light in weight, genteel in ap- pearance and durable in service. Our Serges are all wool and fast color and will not become shiny. ! $18 to $30. - Browning, King & Co f B K 15th and Douglas Sts f ., R.8.WILOOX, Mgz . 'Y 1

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