Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 28, 1909, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

i ] ] - i e - 5 b ¥ s THE BEE: JULY 28, 1909. OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, THE OMAHA DALY PBre FoUNt AT VICTOR ROSEWATER, ¥ Entered at Omaba“postoffice TERMS OF 81 Rl Hee Her DK Be Daily Dally Daily Daily City Circulution i OFFICE » Bee Building Councll Bluffs—15 Se Lincoln—G18 Little Bullding aro—1M8 Marquette Euild York—Rooms 1101-1102 Thirty-third Street oy % Washington—7% Fourteenth Street, N. W CORRESPONDENCE Communications relating to torial matter should be addressed ws and eil Omaha g~ | Ing business and bullding up a higher or Remit by diaft express or postal order|der of soclety. The democrats relish the to The Bee Publish Company | epectacle of the republican party finding ayment of on d nt stamps received ir ! mall accounts. Personal checks. excep! Omaha or eastern exchanges, not accep Gtate of Nebrasks, Douglas County George B. Tazschuck, treasurer Bee Pubilghing Company, heing dnly eworn mays that the actual numoer of full and complete coples of The Dally. Morning Fvening and Sunday Bee printed during the month of June, 1000 was a8 follows: 8. t ¢ 18.. 19 2... a1.. 41 850 41,760 44,640 veo 41,790 41,670 Net Total.... Daily Average... GEORGE B, TZSCHUCK, Treasurer. Subseribed In my presence and sworn to|more political capital for the enemy of July. 1900. M. P._ WALKER, Notary Publie. Yefore me this lst day (Seal) ving the city tem- porarily should have The Bee mailed to them. Address will be changed as often as requested. Subscribers 1 President Taft might try a 'possum dinner on the tariff conferees. — e Senator ‘Aldrich is said to be suf- fering considerable Payne in the clos- ing days of the tariff contest. The Moors may be poor, benighted heathen, but are demonstrating that they are first-class fighting men. —_—e 8ix men“nrrpsmd‘in (;lxé night for wife beating is a sextuple argument for the Institution of a workhouse. —e It the Kansas professor is.correct that a man's big toe wiggles when he tells a lie, some men have come close to ereating perpetual motion. [———, The county assessors in Nebraska saised a pretty good crop of corn also, having discovered nearly 42,000,000 bushels in the hands of the farmers. m—— The Spanish prince who has been panished for marrying after accepting the advice of the king is now a full- fledged Knight of /the Double Cross. e———— The Indiana bank cashier who took all the money in sight cannot be ac- cused of neglecting his opportunities, whatever other case may be made against him, ——e Indications are the revolution mi- crobe has started work again in Mexico, but past experience does not warrant a bellef the disease will be- come epidemic An tern paper announces that it will send several of its patrons on a western trip, going all the way to De- troit. The editor better buy a map of the United States. e e With the Glidden tourists snow- balling in the Colorado mountains and St. Louls balloonists caught in an aerlal snowstorm, it was certainly a chilly day for the sports Emerson Hough will have to admit the Weather bureau is doing a more accurate job of forecasting than the men who have been guessing when the tariff bill would be passed. The avalanche of wheat from the Kansas and Nebraska flelds broke the price, but King Patten, from his re- treat In the north woods, sends back word, “Never touched me."” Omaha statistics generally show up well, but the divorce figures published in a Chicago paper, while they put us a lap ahead of Sioux Falls and Reno, are not a subject of local pride. — The Douglas county democrats may not be technically in contempt of court, but they certainly very little respect for the judges wording of their local resolutions. —e show in A New York woman has discovered that she married a bogus count. Pru- dence would dictate having the ab- stract of title passed upon by a com- petent expert before women invest in such things Another big coal company has been made to disgorge lands illegally ob- tained. By the time the administr: tion gets through with the land grab- bers they will not have much to show for thelir operations. It has been discovered that livery of liquor to private residences, and that if the occupant wants the bever: he must rush the cen him- self. Evidently the mulet law con- Aalos more jokers than a funay paper. | | and | | compromise differences and unite to carry on its general polic This s wiser | than conceding more kness than exists, and virtually inviting the vislonaries of 41,060 | the opposition to assume the reins and 41,650 | take possession B 40,000 | hragka s a republican state because 41,570 | t8 people belleve in republican prinei- 41,660 | ples and policies, and they are more 41,720 | concerned 41 030 Measures carrying out the republican ,o:la‘nrugram bring than they are in 41.790 | pergonal ambitions of rival politiclans 1,247,300 | today suffering more from back-fire 1,336,080 | Papers that are quoted as republican 41,999 | have assumed the role of captious the | | when they are misrepresentatives.” In |selves republican without belng repub- lorder to be quoted in the democratic Timely and Well Put. The re publican party in Nebraska needs to brace up. get together and fire its en- husiasm for union and victory. There I8 too much of a dleposition on the part of vield to eriticlad# without making umgartanted conces- opposition, wHich Jatter has t when in power, and which nothing to republican principles largely aided the stabllity and of the country. If the repub- party’s idea of government is wrong. n to American industries should out, If free trade would keep ip while reducing the cost of com- d It evervthing a man has sell \ be made to go up while every- thing he buys can be made to come down, e should not only declare themselves epublicans due groand ns to the to shown no m mcedes vhich have aperity wiped modities, in sympathy with the democratic party, but put that party inso absolute power. The possible faults of some public men belonging to the republican party should not be conceded by the republicans as weakening their entire system of policles unless some party can produce Infallible men to carry out principles that would be of wnore practical value In strengthen- fault with itself and threatening divisions over a few things to the possibla overtnrn- ing of the whole party system. It is up |to the republican party to get together. Beatrice Express. This 1s well timed and well put. Ne- In the prosperity which the seeking offictal places. The republican party in Nebraska is than from front-fire Certain news- fault finders, and are manufacturing than the newspapers that are openly democratic. In the Commoner this week, Mr. Bryan, rveferring to the Charleston News and Courler, says: “It calls fitself democratic without being demociatic, just as some legis- lators call themselves representatives the same way we have in Nebraska some newspapers which call them- lican, and their chief object seems to be to attack the republican party in press. An out and out democratic organ, fighting in the open, would do the republicans less damecge than a self-styled republican newspaper con- stantly giving ald and comfort to the enemy. By this we do not mean to say that the republican newspaper should not attack abuses and frauds in its own party. That s often its duty, but there is a difference between exposing corruption or opposing unworthy can- didates, and undermining the prinei- ples and policies of the party by mak- ing out that all its leaders are selfish and unscrupulous, and all the opposi- tion leaders patriotic statesmen. Political Unrest in Mexico. For some time there has been signs of political unrest in Mexico, which threatened to break the long period of stability brought about by the wis- dom and strong personality of Presi- dent Diaz, and these developed Mon- day intp violent political riots. The president is growing old and must necessarily relinquish office before many years. The vice presidency, which is looked upon as the stepping stone to the presidential succession, is the disturbing element. President Diaz is favorable to the candidacy of Ramon Corral, and, while the president's per- sonal following s strong enough to. make any opposition to himself im- potent, it is not so easy to deliver his friends to Corral. Reyes, governor of one of the principal states of Mexico, has a powerful following and his can- didacy for'the vice presidency bids fair to be successful. It has been hoped that the strong government of President Diaz, under which Mexico has been practically free from political disturbances and has made a wonderful progress, might have weaned his people from the revolution habit from which other Spanish- American countries suffer, but present conditions are not reassuring. One of the regrettable features of the Reyes' campaign s that it has rallled to its support the anti-foreign element, which is dissatisfled with the oppor- tunities offered foreign capital. As mil- lions of American money are invested in Mexico the ascendency of any man or party favorable to that sentiment might easily embroil the United States in difficulties. Republicanism in the South, The first real fruits of President | Taft's policy of encouraging a repub- lican revival in southern states is evi- denced by the activity of the party in Virginia. Whether it will result in breaking up the solid south is not so material from the southern point of view as from a party one. The south appears ripe for breaking away from |the free trade policy of many of its |demoecratic leaders, democrats them- selves not being united on the ques- tlon, as demonstrated by the votes on the pending tariff bill. Manufac- turing is becoming a strong factor in southern development, and there is the | mulet law in lowa prohibits the de- | | reason to believe that political divis- |ions there can be brought about along {the same lines as in the north if the | proper course i pursued. From a political standpoint, it is the opportunity for republican growth, but the move has a more far reaching and beneficial object. So 10fg as the south was dominated absolutely by the demo- cratic party, without at least a strong Jority iIn check, political conditions there could never be fdeal. A strong minority, which at any time might become a majority, Is essential to healthy political life. Party divisions along class or race lines are also harm- ful. The move to vitalize the republi- can party In the south, therefore, is a good omen for the south itself. It 18 also bad for the natian to have | lines | party divisions along sectional and In times of stress might easily lead to serious consequences. The cam- paign in Virginia will be watched with interest as the first effort to vitalize the Taft policy and while it would be |too much to expect a political revolu- | tion in one or two campaigns, the Vir- ginia experiment should be an entering wedge in a new political area. Brewer on Judicial Reform. Justice Brewer of the United States supreme court in a recent address torcefully seconded the stand taken by | President Taft for simplification of judicial procedure. He pointedly called attention to one of the most glaring evils when he sald “‘the revers- ing of a judgment by an appellate court on the ground of a mere techni- | cality when substantial justice has been administered, is an outrage.” The law's delays were also severely criticised, but a great portion of these evils arise out of technical rulings. The taking of several weeks to secure a jury also came in for a rap as well as many other abuses the public has complained of. The objections d by Justice Brewer are not new, but have been re- fterated many times in recent years. The one stock reply has beén that none but lawyers understood these things, and the public is unable to appreciate to what simplification and expedition of judicial procedure would lead. This answer will not suffice in the cases of President Taft and Justice Brewer, however. Both are lawyers of high at- tainments, and wide experience, and no man now living has had a wider ex- perience on the bench than Justice Brewer and his ability as a jurist is unquestioned. His long service on the supreme bench would naturally tend to make him conservative, and, in fact, he has been classed as one of the most conservative of that body. The evils must be glaring, indeed, to bring such a scathing criticism from a man llke Justice Brewer. A few more converts of the Taft and Brewer class and a few more decisions like that of the Missouri court giving a convict a new trial because the word ‘‘the” was omitted from the indictment may pro- duce results. rais No matter what name is eventually given the beautiful body of water that Omaha is about to improve, the pub- lic will enjoy it as much. “Cut-Off" is not a wonderfully euphemistic title, but it has a descriptive quality that none of the suggested substitute .lp- pellations provides. The tardy recog- nition of the lake's attractions should not operate to deter folks from en- joying its advantages to the fullest now that they are within easy reach. Recelpts of wheat at primary ma: kets are such as to justify the posi tion of the Department of Agriculture in fits recent controversy ~with the grain gamblers. The drop in price is also an evidence that somebody was conducting a corner. Mother Nature doesn't care whether the price is up or down, but it is a good thing to follow her tip. The mistress of the White House during President Taylor's time has just died, and this recalls the fact there are a number of surviving mis- tresses of the White House, but the only living ex-president i{s Roosevelt. The social life of the capitol after all does not appear to be so strenuous as its politics. Winnipeg is talking about having an exposition to commemorate the centennial of the first effort to settle the Canadian northwest. The modern day resident of the northwest is cer- talnly going a pace which would startle his predecessor and might show people something worth seeing. Interest in the corn show is grow- ing at a rate that astonishes even the enthusiastic advocates of this national exposition. The success which at- tended Omaha’s first venture in this line was such that makes it certain that the next show will be the great- est of its kind, John D. Rockefeller Insists he is not responsible for all the views of all the professors of all the colleges he has endowed, John D. has been cen- sured for a good many things, but his bitterest opponent would not think of putting such a burden as this upon him. The Fremont men who visited Ak- Sar-Ben Monday night expressed the sentiment that is heartily endorsed in Omaha. In Nebraska there is room for all of us and wore, and a little closer working together will be a good thing for everybody The Persian government has offered the former shah $25,000 per year if he will stay out of Persia. The shah has not indicated what he will do, but the world is fnll of people who would be willing to accept the money on those conditions. ch the Knocking. Vashingtol The income tax 7 started on its way nevertheless will be set Herald. position has We elegant way beer suspec hurdles that so up along that A Negleeted Hunch, Sa. Paul Pioneer-Press. Now It comes out that France was figur- and militant wminority to.hold the ma- jug on listing steel common on ihe Bourse = —— o 3, | provided the people of thie country would | |8rant tariff concesstons Is 1t pnmhv-l that the Steel trust neglected to speak to Uncle Nelse about it? l G Men & Chicago Record-Herald | Senator Brown of Nebraska declares that | Justice Brewer's remarks indicate sentlity | How unanimously our great men succeed the Current of Ldf in the Great American from Day to Day. —_— n | |in disagreeing. The Indignation caused by the Sigel atrocity in New York's Chinatown was | Fire 'Em Out. short-lived. Business in that locality s as | New York World | great as ever and Caucasians pay the bill | Fitty thousand able-bodied men are|It I8 & mecca for sightseers and its res | wanted in the west to help harvest the | taurant keepers are reaping a harvest by |crop of wheat, oats and hay. Still, the dispensing chop suey, “China's national park benches are occupled to their full | dish.' That delectable mystery is one of capacity, and there seems to be a hitch somewhere in the law of supply and de-| mand. the many pips dreams of Chinatown's. New York prices range from 3 cents to $3 and $4 & bowl in the Chinese Delmoni cos, where small change is ignored. While the chop suey establishments are reach- ing out with the new decorations and dishes and a general alr of prosperity to attract the wandering custom of novelty seckers, they have & well established clientele, which {s numbered up In the thousands and can be absolutely relied A Joy Riding Essential, Indianapolls News Don't forget to take an ample supply of | petrol along with you on your automobile trip 8o that there will be plenty left after lunch. Then, fn an emergency, you can use It on a hot box, or, by melting it, re- | plenish your supply of gasoline upon. —_— | 'Sunday night ts the gala time of the | Better ek Ne ome. { chop suey places. Outside the streets are Philadelphia Inquirer. filled with pushcarts and venders of vege- | We advise Senator Aldrich not to go west| tables, most of wWhich come from the | until the tarift bill is signed. He may know | farms at Astoria, L. L, where Chinse vege- | more about what the west needs than does | tables are raised—the small Chinese mush- the west itself, but they don't believe it|rooms, bamboo sprouts, strange varieties |out there, and are spoiling for & fight. | of cabbages and herbs that the American | Keep on this side of the Alleghenies, Mr.| housekeeper wots not of. Aldrich. — —_— Father Knickerbocker s 28 years old, .00ks That Way. {but he is still learning things about Baltimore American: | women. His latest experience may be of Dr. Eliot says that the new religion of | value to younger and callower citles, so this century will have as its cornerstone geclares a writer in Success Magazine. the love of God and service to our fellow | Some time ago Willlam G. McAdoo, who men. That, if true, will diepose of &nY | has bullt up a thriving little business under future tariff agitation, but it i 10 be| ne Hudson river, running trains between feared that the world as a trlumph of al-| Noy york and the United States, set aside trulsm fs still an iridescent dream. |& spectal ear for the exclusive use of Reaching Tor Bome of the Cream. | ¥Omen. The people hailed the Innovation e Toute ReBadlie, | with joy. Here, at last, women could ride, The State department did the right thing | %3¢ from jostiing, seat-grabbing, tobacco in insisting upon the admission of Arm-r-;:“k""“r‘:““'J"."':‘(a Rl o B T el e ican bankers cipation in thal ol Cnimese: rattmay ot ot gotms | 81y SuRgeations about mirrors, and per- to claim the Pacific ocean as an American ":;:';}r -;;“AF;'“"’" '"‘h’"":vd"“: :“:‘::’lz lake, but no E combination can O i T % s e g u:::":un door In the | ®Pirited business man and a perfectly orient. lovely gentleman. Polite uniformed at- tendants at the stations informed women of the special car and everything went beawtifully. There was only one drawback to the scheme. The women would not use the car. Glving the uniformed attendants, oh, such a look, the women crowded Into the For Caucassians Only. Brooklyn Eagle. The sallor whose father was an English- man and whose mother was half Chinese and half Japanese finds that he cannot become a citizen of the United States. Citizenship follows the condition of the the United States, for naturalization takes ordered the women's car discontinued. effect on Caucasians only. Urgent Need of Simplifying Present Methods. Brooklyn Eagle. Whatever one may think of Justice Brewer's opinions on woman suffrage, im- | perfalism or commercial honesty, there fs | one subject upon which he Is an expert and in regard to which his word s con- clusive. That subjeat s the administration of our courts. uniform and posed as Jack; and those who | have seen the pictures declares that he is even homeller than Jack himself. Worse vet, the imitator cut up a lot of antics before the camera that no self-respecting wireless operator would perform, even though a ship were not sinking under his feet. It is Binns' intention to push the suit. ‘When, therefore, Justice Brewer says that “There is a cumbersomeness in our| It 18 told on high authority on the Rialto legal procedure which has resulted in great | that there are 10000 actors registered in | delays, much expense and some times in-|the agency books of this ecity, and that Justice, and there Is no duty more im- perative upon the bar and the bench than to do what they can to simplity matters and put technicalitjes out of the way, and of these, fully 9,000 have been in town dur- ing July, or are still here, looking for en- gagements, The further fact Is stated that the man- “r:'fm:“’"';‘_.‘."“l'.y"r"":’:‘"':’r:" ‘}::‘\',':'"::m‘:" agers and their representatives are putting | upon the need of reform in court procedure, | °ff the making of contracts 50 that emphasis shall be put upon justice |!ONE as possible. This sinister res and not on technicalities, may regard their |BIven: “Every man and woman who is as proved. looking for a job is now asking a salary Justice Brewer adds that some of the|three times as high as the same person justices of our higher courts ‘‘are re-|will be willing to accept in September.” sponsible for not a little of the delay. He 18 not alone in his demand for reform of court administration. Before his elec- tion President Taft addressed a body of lawyers in Virginla to the same general effect and pointed out details in which procedure might and should be simplified. Justice Brewer has faith that Mr. Taft's administration ‘‘will be productive of great and beneficial results” in the national judi- clary system, but that would be only & beginning of needed reform. Thousands suffer through the delays of state courts for one who meets the same treatment In the federal courts. Not until the lawyers awaken to a sense of their re- sponsibility and secure changes in the state laws can the reform be properly accom- plished. And as those changes would re- duce the importance and opportunities of the lawyers it is hardly to be expected that lawyers will lead In bringing them about. And yet until they help in that work It will be impossible to restore the prestige and dignity which once attached to their profession. The later the date, the greater the scare. the less to pay. There is weariness without end, disap- pointments without number, calls without results, the climbing of stalrs and the | haunting of corriders, as these thousands | of men and women are chased by fleet- footed hope from one agency to another. Some of them are looking for fame, soft Jobs and riches. But the large majority are looking for work. Morely for some job during the com- ing on that will give them food, cloth- ing and a shelter over their heads. There 1s a pathetic side to this quest, but the agents cannot afford to see it. 1t fs their business to engage a man who cap make money for his employer, and not merely because he is “good to his mother." PERSONAL NOTES. Always speak respectfully of cork legs, which make splendid life-preservers when their owner puts to sea in a Galveston hurricane. Captain Joseph Kemp of Ann Arbor, Mich., & civil war pensioner, has just re- Celved from Washington a bronze medal authorized by congress in 1864 for bravery at the battle of the Wilderness. A bust of James J nate, cast SAVING M LIONS. Recovery of Grabbed Coal L Their Sale. Chicago Tribune. Uncle S8am has coal lands for sale. But they are no longer to be bought on the 0ld plan. At least some of the profit from their exploitation is to reach the United States treasury instead of all of it going to enrich shrewd speculators who discover rich coal veins underlying government |1ana, but keep quiet about it until they | buy for a song. The Department of the Interfor an- nounces that certain unappropriated areas in the Evanston land district in Wyoming | have been classified coal lands. In | some cases the price per acre has been made $600. That represents a marked ad- vance over the $10 and $20 acre price pald | by buyers under former arrangements. A | township sold under previous rates brought | $469,000, approximately, at the maximum | price. The same township, under the new | rating, 1s worth more than $8,000,000. During the month of June coal lands were classified and restored to entry which had previously been withdrawn. Under | the old ratings they were worth $7,650,000. Under the new they are listed at §18,500,000 Such figures indicate the positive results |of the inquiry which the government has | been making in connection with its west- ern lands. The amounts are relatively small when the “billion dollar sessions” of congress are considered. But they are large enough to show the value of the in- vestigations which have been made. | The principle involved is more Important | than the money savings. It is a prretical | application of the idea of conservation of natural and national resources. It is an indorsement of the views of ex-President A Roosevelt, as he expressed ther) again and Hill, rallroad mag- in bronge and weighing 1,700 pounds, has been shipped from Willlams- burg to Seattle, Wash., where it will be mounted in time to be dedicated on Min- nesota day, August 3, at the exposition. Secretary James Wilson “has no recrea- tions,” sccording to John Lorance; Secre- tary MeVeagh takes the air in a looking” landau; Secretary Meyer the saddle at sun-up; Secretary Dickinson walks, rides and drives; Postmaster Gen- eral Hitchcock prefers an automobile; Sec- retary Knox golfs; Attorney General Wick- ersham puts in much of his lefsure time at the Chevy Chase club, and Secretary | Nagel's evenings are spent at the Metro- politan club. In egmmemoration of fts anniversary of existence, the Spokane | Spokesman-Review has lssued a splendid special number. FEditorially and typo- aphicaily this special number is highly | praiseworthy. Its appearance and con tents are creditable alike to the Spokes- man-Review, to Spokane, and to the won- | derful Inland Empire country, composed | ot eastern Washington, 1daho | and northeastern Oregon. Of this section of country, Bpokane Is the chief city and the Spokesman-Review the chief news- | paper. As an advertisement of the re. sources of this fertile and productive sec- tion, this special anniversary paper could | not have been surpassed, twenty fifth northern Economic Mistake, ew York Tribune ! again. There is every reason why the gov-| With the War department calling ror| ernment should get a falr return from the | more men, the ranks of the infantrs sale of its valuable possessions. If this|cavalry, artillery, engineer, signal and| | prineipie had been put Into practice many | nospital corps all being short of their ful) | years ago many a fraud upon the nation | quota, and with the wheat and corn flelds and there were | - co-educational department, leaving their mother, Neither a native of China nor a speclal car halt empty. After three| native of Japan can become a citizen of| months' trial the gallant Mr. McAdoo has| Whenever, wherever, however you see an arrow, let it point the way to a soda fountain, and a glass of the beverage that is so delicious and so popular that it and even its advertising are constant inspiration for imitators. Are you hot ? sy Coca-Cola is cooling. Avre youtired? ww====y Coca-Cola relieves fatigue. Are you thirsty? @==e Coca-Cola is thirst-quenching. Do {ou crave something just to tickle your palate—not too sweet, but alive with vimand go? Coca-Cola is delicious. 5S¢ Everywhere Whenever you see an Arrow think of Coca -Cola. | willing hands to garner their store of | wealth, the congestion of unemployed | 1abor in the big cities seems an economic THE ROAD TO YESTERDAY. New York Sun mistake. The government associations and| Close by the path of every day private individuals are working together| The winding roadway lles to bring about a better balarice of (hings, | Vo hrant Mg, the Inconse of the dan to the benefit of all concerned. | And o, cloud cartains Tt and bring Old scenes before our eyes! PO gy oy vy e AN Jack Binns, the original C. Q. D. man, LINES TO A SMILE R ol Al e hassiar v y 3 . & . A sound of bell on summer eve Every advance in our boasted -civiliza.| 188 asked Judge Bischotf of the New York pelfiond A" Breath of Viowets Nlbom. tion" seems to develop ome mew species| SUPFeMe court to prevent the Vitagraph | Winnie Wink-It is no use talking. Our|When touch of litlz clineine nand A g . ; hats take the masculine eye this summer.| Comes with the faini porfimne of crime. Pennsylvania some time ago|CcOmpany of America exhibiting moving | Mg, Manp” Bl vas Birake both eyes if| And then the Road to Yesterday passed a law providing for the payment|Plctures based on the wireless operator's | a chap doesn't dodge quickly.—Puck Breaks shining through the gloom' of wages by local authoritles to men em-|services on the sinking ship. The court “H tred ur| We catch limpse of snowy peaks ployed in putting out forest fires. But it|will sift the matter on Monday. Mr. Binns | junon: 1 mede tnem ey (&8¢ for ou | "Above ‘a ‘snadowea vale: . Do was found that such fires multiplied; and|has also asked for 25 damages P. D. Q. | “That proves what Tom said about you|Op down wome mouniains sloping -de Thvestieation . EhoWal ke TRy 'HNA Besh : " | 1ast night.’ There bloom the wild flowers pale: s A P 4 His plea is that as he has won first| g% hat was that?” Or on the far horizon falls purposely set by men anxlous to earn “an|fame in a new field he wishes to rotain| *He sald you were no spring chicken,"—| A light on sinking sail honest 1iving” by putting them out 80|t untarnished by films and unshaken by | Houston Post. . the law was repealed th st i i o Along the Road to Yesterday e moving of cititious pictures. The | I heard someone of your constituents| Lie pnldl(‘px of ugmI o Suirion B - thing that hurts him the most is that|®ay you never betrayed a trust.” And windy caves in barren lands EWER ON THE COURTS another man was ressed in an Hl-fitting | . 1t I8 doublless another of those insin-| Whereof no man has sight. uating slanders,” replied Senator Sorghum.|And strange moons round a stranger éarth ‘I never had 'any confidential relations| Draw wild tides in the night! with a trust in all my life.—Washington Star. The rond leads over munken seas And stretch of desert sands. “Wh ; The stars of long past ages ghine cavhy did your firm back out of that|The stars of \ong past ages A" 2 I, the silent partner made an awful [And there are long forgotten friends roar about It, and we had to."—Clevelund | Who once have clasped our hands! Leader. Mary Queen of Scots, looked at the basket waiting for her pompadour. s LT sulPHuR WAT R “Anyway, it isn't a military peach bas- ket." Having thus consoled herself, she sig- naled to the cutlery expert to get bus) also the “Crystal Lithium" water from Judge. Excelsior Springs, Mo., in 5-gallon “What's the difference betw, . |sealed jugs. o nallst And ‘& reportertr acked the Swes | 5-gallon jug Crystal Lithia Water. .82 Young Thing of her newspaper admirer “A " journalist,”” he responded with a fixed glassy stare and set teeth, “is a| man who gives vivid flaming word pic tures of a vast conflagration. A ‘reporter | just writes up big fires—Baltimore Amerl- | can, “What an ideal business manager old Charon would have made for a theater, | instead of being wasted on a phantom ferry! “Why “Because he could make even the dead heads pay thelr way. —Indianapolis News. | 07 OF 0% OF Quality and Fit The quali;y of the Browning, King & Co. clothing is its first recommendation. It is made to fit and to hold its shape. Our sun-defying serges and our tropical worsteds—worn with or without the waist- coat—cannot be excelled in any respect by the merchant tailors. $15.00 to $30.00, with 20 per cent dis- count, now $12.00 to $24.00. In our boys’ department we are giving 25 per ct. discount on wash suits. 20 per ct. off on all light weight woolen clothing. B-gallon jug S Sulphur water 9 Buy at either store. We sell gver 100 kinds mineral water Sherman & McGonnell Orug Co, Sixteenth and Dodge Sts. Owl Drug Co. Sixteenth and Harney Sts. Your choice of any childs’ straw hat we have left for $1.00—worth up to $2.50. Browning, King & C2 B . K CLOTHING, FURNISHINGS AND HATS, l’ FIFTEENTH ano DOUGLAS STREET Sy OMAHA. R. 8. WILCOX, Manager. Have ROO print Nt Our product and reputation are the best advertisement we can offer A. L Root, Inc., 1210:1212 Howard St., Omaka would have been prevented. | of the west fairly sirieking for able and - e st —

Other pages from this issue: