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FARM November Birds Are Usually Sold in February as Squab Broilers, § WOMAN TELLS HER EXPERIENCE Huft Plymeuth Rock and Batf Wy dotte Constdered Best Rreeds as Broilers—Strictly Fresh ¥ Command High Pric November of the busiest in the year on my chicken farm' a woman who raises chickens for the big efty market t0ld the reporter. “Chickens hatched this month are sold in February as sqhab broflers and fetch the highest prices. Of conrse the price depends on the de- mand, far as my experience goes the demand in February for squab broilers far the supply. Last year 1 re- eived $1.20 a pair for all the birds T could supply during the month, According to my books 1 Jjust 54 .cents a pair to raide them ou can judge my profit “T have been in the business for six years now and for the last four have been mak ing a good profit on the capital and time invested. The first two years I was glad 10 make both ends meet. There is some- thing more than luck in ralsing chickens for market, as any person who makes the attdmpt will soon find out. “T had had experlence in raistng chickens for home tonsumption when I decided to g0 into It for profit. I invested $300 in bufldings and stock with the expectation of doubling my capital In the first year. My profit, deducting wages for myselt and my daughter at the usual rates, was less than $5. The second year it was something over §15. Since then it has been steadliy increasing until now we count it by the thousands. “For brollers 1 look mauth Rock and he very best breeds. 18 o exceeds upon the Buff Ply- the Buff Wyandotte as Any varlety of the is desirable as a market breed because of théir yellow skin and legs and their ideal market shape. I prefer the butfs because of thelr entire absence of colored pin feathers at all stages of their growth. “Squab brollers hatch from November to March, inclusive, and are ready for mar- ket from February to the middie of May. For a pair $1.20 Is as much as | have ever received and 0 cents a pair is the lowest prie ich brollers weigh from one and one-quarter pounds to two pounds, Most Popular in Feb 7. “I have heard of people who raised birds of this size in elght weeks, but it takes me rine weeks to raise the smaller birds and eleven to raise the two pounders. The smaller bird is most popular in February and March, and for the rest of the year Wyandotte or the Plymouth Rock family | | weighing two pounds bring the high est prices The smaller birds, those welghing one pound and a quarter and under, are the squab brollers and are used chiefly in high | class hotels and restaurants, where they wre caljed individual birds. The tno pound |irds are known as ‘standard brollers and {are the best seliers In the general market, | though they never fetch such high prices as the squabs. 1 prefer to sell my produet as squabs, as it empties the house soonest and so gives me room for another crop. Having decided on the breed, the next point of importance Is to see that each hen is to produce the eggs to be con- | verted into brollers comes from healthy vigorous birds. I belleve it is quite im possible to bulld up a successful broiler | business from stock that ls not perfectly | healthy and ot strong vitality. ‘A broller (o be of the first quality must be a quickly grown, juley carcass and the forcing must begin almost from hatch- ing time. A chick must necessarily have plenty of health and vitality to make it stand the forcing and at the same time keep well and happy. A chick from poor stock or even the average stock wili not stand the strain on its digestive organs and as a consequence will elther sicken or die before it has attained the required weight After securing eggs from stock the next point is to get them well incubated. As it is next to Impossible to get broody hens at the season that broilers should be hatchea 1 depend en- tirely on incubators and I get the best that are o be had in the market. “I look upon & good Incubator as neces- wary, because successfal hatching of the chicks is the very foundation of the busi- ness. Next In importance is the brooder, the number of chicks hatched has little w do with the increase in your bank ac- count as compared with the number raised. “During the six years that 1 have been raising chickens for profit 1 have trisd about every system of brooding there is. From this experience I have decided that each prospective broller grower should in- vestigate for himself and adopt the method the proper best sulted to his needs—that is, to the conditions fn which he must work. “For small establishments 1 prefer the individual brooder, but now that my plant has grown larger 1 have been forced to adopt the pipe brooder house. This gives me the best results at the least expenditurs of labor and money. Rapld Growth Necessary. “In forcing for broilers the object is 1o secure the most rapld growth possible. 1 have found that forcing the first week does not have the best effect as a rule Some birds thrive under it, but the ma. Jority become dyspeptic, and if they do not die they have such a decided backset that they have to be relegated to the roasting pan. “In other words, it takes to get back to their normal them so long health and | force until after strength t Because of they are too old for broilers this fact we never the seventh da There are several foods on the market all manu- factured for the express purpose of forc |Ing broflers. I have tried about all the best ones, and though I have found ther about equally satisfactory in producing growth and flesh, I have discarded the: because none of them is as inexpensive the food which I mix at home. “This home made ration Is composed of one part each of ground oats and bran and two parts each of cracked corn and mid dlings. This mixture should be molstened with a sufficlent quantity of bolled milk, | sweet, sour or buttermilk, to get it to the | proper consistency, and care must be taken to give only so much at each meal as the | chicks will eat up clean | “This mixture should be given them at least four times a day. I generally give It five times. Fresh water and clean grit should be kept where the birds can get 1t at apy time and some ort of green food should be supplied daily. “For animal food the birds should have green cut bone or ground meal scraps about once a week or every ten days, 1 have found the green cut bone the better of the two, but often it is next to im- possible to get “1 have known of the best results from feeding the chickens on a custard made by beating a dosen or so infertile eggs in & quart of milk and baking it slowly. This Is & good substitute for meat and where milk 1s to be had T would prefer it to fresh beef. Where beef Is used It should always be cooked. “Milk may also be used as a drink where it is to be had. In a measure it will take the place of water, as the chicks will not drink so much of the latter when they have the former. Under no clrcumstances, however, should the supply of fresh water In a clean vessel be dis- pensed with “I seldom use milk, because it would be hard to get and expensive. That is one of the points In making chicken raising pay—utilizing the food supply that can be the most easily obtained. In forcing far brollers it should be remembered that no vegetables will take the place of meat The birds must have meat In some form. | ““Before killing my chickens I let them fast from elghteen to twenty hours. While this fasting Is going on the birds must be | kept supplied with a plentiful amount of fresh water, as this is one of the greatest alds to securing an attractive appearance for the dressed stock. My method of kill- | ing is bleeding from the mouth. This leaves the bird in the most sightly con- dition to be shown in the market. An- other method Is opening the veins of the neck in such & way that the cut does not show. Brollers Dry Picked. “‘Broilers are never opened nor are their heads removed. They are dry picked. In | the ecast there is no demand for birds THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JANUA o RY 1910. t begin to |1 understand the people of the west a picked In hot water, though 80 particular Kkeeping us busy just now, 1 cannot say that | First Duty Will Be to Participate in | there ts any season when we do not have | Tobacco Trust Case, Just about ali that we can attend to. Be | sides squab and sta:dard broller I raiwe 5 2 roasters, capons and rictly fresh eges, | REACHES WASHINGTON FRIDAY | besides selling breeding stock and es8e | — | the winter and just as the price is drop-| ~ Court He Will Firat Express | ping to what the buyers call normal squab | His Opinfon on Big | brollers come on. Later come the stand- | sait. ard broilers, then eggs for hatehing and | stock for breeding These three depart ments keep us busy during the late spring | WASHINGTON, Jan 1.~Judge Horace and summer, while In the fall comes the |G Lurton, who becomes the new associate demand for roasters and capons, By having Justice of the supreme court of the United an all round establishment of this | States, arrived in the city today sort there Is never an idle season, our ex-| Mr. Lurton will make his first appear penses are reduced and out profits in-|4NCC a8 a member of the court when that Sebdved body convenes at noon on Monday. He “Often 1 have inquiries from both men Will take his seat on the extreme left of the chief justice, occupying that hereto- | and women asking Just what s necessary |y OO0 LRGN TEURYR (IR AR Jue for succeas in ralsing chickens for profit. | .o v ron comes direct from the bench | In reply I always say enoush WOrking |, (ne sourt of appeals it will ot be nee: | capital and intelligent application o the [ceeary to supply him with & new robe, s business. 1 will add that a wise beginner. |\, Lyion's garment has preceded him It such a person exists, will not start out |pere on too large a scale. The demand for| Justice Mooty will be transterred from | brotlers has always been much greater [the seat on the chiaf justice's left to the | than the supply, 50 It only one department |farthest seat on his right can be wotked on that will give the quick- | Mr. Moody is still too Il to take his place est and largest return if properly con-|on the bench at the cofvening of the court ducted. lon Monday, bit reports from him indicate “Ralsing breeding stock and eggs for continued improvement. hatehing is also & good and so far as 1| The first case which Judge Lurton will am able to judge a safe venture. Capons|be called on to hear, will be the sult of | pay well, and the demand insthe fall amli""’ government attacking the valldity of winter is always brisk. Roasters pay the|the tobacco trust. That case Is the firat least, but they are also the least difficult|On the court's docket, having besn ad gh to raise an: at any season of the y it is brofler hatching that is be sold at a d can fair profit PENTECOST GETS A TROPHY Presen Aswociates Kansas passenger ted Per City agent with Traveling Bag on His Departure for Kansns City. by ntecost, who to become for the left last night for assistant general Rock Island, will have many occasions to recall his term of service as division p headquarters at Omaha, every nger agent, with time he has to “go out on the road.” The 1 coin, Counefl worked presented ocal uny him office siaff, the men in Lin- Bluffs and Des Maines, Mr. Pentecost with a who yesterday handsome and der vai- uable walrus hide traveling bag as a testi- monial of their esteem and conveyed thelr express jon of friendship in a letter they gave to Mr. Pentecost. 8. McNaily, formerly of Omaha and for the last half dozen years cf Oklahoma City, Best succeeds Mr. Pentecost here resu Its from Bee Want Ads Some people swell up on ‘“emotion” brewed from absolute untruth. ' It's an old trick of the leaders of the Labor Trust to twist facts and make the ‘sympathetic ones" ‘“weep at the ice house.” (That's part of the tale further on) f ; Gompers et al. sneer at, spit upon and defy our courts, seeking sympathy by fTalsely telling the people the courts were trying to deprive them of free speech and free press. Men can speak freely and print opin- jons freely in this country and no court will object, but they cannot be allowed 0 print matter as part of s oriminal con- spiraoy (o injure and ruin other citizens. Gompers and his trust associates started out to Tuin the Buck Stove Co., drive its hundreds of workmen out of work and destroy the value of the plant without re gard to the fact that hard earned money of men who worked, had been invested there. The conspirators were told by the courts to stop these vicloas “trust” methods (efforts to break the firm that won't come under trust rule), but instead of stopping théy “dare” {he courts to punish them and demand new laws to protect them in such destruotive and tyrannous adts as they desire to do. * * ¢ The réason Gompers and his band persisted in trying to ruin the Bucks Stove Works was because the stove company insisted on the right to keep some old employes at work when “de union” ordered them discharged and some of “de gang” put in. Now let us reverse the conditions and have a look. Suppose the company had- ordered the loy to dismiss certain men from thelr upfon and, the demand being refused, should institute a boycott against that inion, publish it name in an “unfalr ist" instruct other manufacturers all ojer the United States not to buy the 1abie of that unlor, have committees call at stores and thréaten to boycott if the merchants sold anything made by that unton. Pioket the factories where mem- bers work and slug them on the way home, blow up thelr houses and wreck the works, and even murder a few mem- bers of the boycotted unlon to feach them they must obey the orders of ‘“or ganized Capltal?’ It would certaluly be falr for the com- pany to do these things If lawful for the Labor Trust to do them, In such a case, under our laws, the hoycotted union could upply to our courts and the courts would order the company 1o cease boycotting and trying to ruin these union men. Suppose thereupon the company should sneer at the courts and In open deflance continye the unlawful acta In & persistent, carefully laid out plan, purposcly intended to ruin the union and foree its members- Into poverty. What @ howl would go up from the union demunding that the courts protect them and punish their law-breaking oppressors. Then they would praise the courts and §0.0n earning a living protected from ruin and bappy in the knowledge that the people’'s courts could defend them. How could any of us recelve protec- tion from law-breakers unless the courts have power to, and do punish such men? 1t must do one thing or the other—punish men who persist in defylng its peace ing on the part of the organizations that | ¥ oxders or go out of service, let anarchy relgn and the more powerful destroy the weaker, Peaceable citizens sustaln the courts as Don’t Weep At The Ice H Trust know how to mass this kind of men, In labor conventions and thus cairy out the leader lChl’;lQ.? pequently @ horrent to the rank nd 'filé} =0 it was the late Toronto convention. The pald delcgates would applaud uad Sresolute” as Goempers wanted, but now and then some of the real workingmon inaist on being heard, sumetimes at the risk of thelr lives. Delegate Egan {s reported to have said at the Toronto conyention “If the officers of the federation would only adhere to the law we would think a lot more of them.” The Grand Council of the Provinclal Workingmen's Ass'n of Canada has de- clared in favor of severing all connection with, unions in the U. &, saylng “any union having its seat of Gov't in Amerlca, and pretending to be International in its scope, must fight industrial battles ac- cording to American methods. Sald methods have consequences which are ab- Worrent to the law-ublding people of Canada, involving hunger, misery, riot, bloodshed and murder, all of which might be termed a result of the practical w pow in progress in our fair province and directed by forelgn emlissaries of the United Miners of Amerl That is an honest Canadian view of our infamous “Labor Trust." A few days ago the daily papers printed the following. (By the Assoclated Press.) Washington, D. C., Nov. 10/—Character- |1zing the attitude of Samuel Gomper: John Mitchell and Frank Morrison of the American Federation of ‘Labor in"the con- tempt proceedings in the courts of the District of Celumbia, in connection with the Bucks' Stove and Range company, as “a wilful, premeditated violation of the law,” 8imon Burns, general master work- man of the general assembly, Knights of Labor, has voiced a severe condemnation of thesc three leaders. Mr. Burns ex- pressed his confidence in courts in gen- |eral and in those of the District of Co- lumbla in particuls APPROVED BY DELEGATES | This rebuke by Burnd was in his an- nual report to the general assembly of his organization, He received the hearty approval the delegates who heard it road at their annual meeting in this eity. | “Tbere is no trust or combination of capital in the world,” sald Mr. Burns, | “that violates laws oftener than do the trust labor organizations, which resort to more dishonest, unfair and dishonor- able methods toward their competitors than any trust or combination in the country.” | Mr. Burns said the action of “these so- culled leaders” would be hanmful for | vears to come whenever attemps were | made to obtain labor legislation. “The Labor Digest,” a reputable work- Ingman’s paper, says, as part of an article | entitlea *“The beginning of the end of | Gomperism, many organizations becom- |ing tired of the rule-or-ruin policies which | have beon enforced by the president of |the A, F. of L." “That he has maintained his leadership | for 50 long & time in the face of his stub- born clinging to policies which the more | thoughttul of the workingmen have seen | The court is placed in position where |for years must be sbandomed, has been | on account partly of the sentimental feel e ought not to be deposed, and the un- | willingness of the men who were men- | tioned for the place, to accept a nomina- | tion in opposition to him. In addition to thelr defenders, whereas thieves, forgers, | this, there Is no denying the shrewdness burgla erocks of all kinds and violent members of labor unioas, hate them and threaten violence if their members are punished for breaking the law. They other men “outside de union break the law. * + ref unions. The great majority of the “un- heard” union men wre peaceable, upright citizens, oftirs and the ) when they want the courts to let them go free and | ful henchmen in the positions wh At the game time demand punishment for |could do him the most good whenever Notice the above mee to “viclent" members of labor | at the last conventions, to have ‘The nolsy, vielent ones get into | him in the Ught of & martyr to ders of the great Labor of welonisi®, and oxcite & wave | of the leader of the A. F. of L.. and his political sagacity, which has enabled him to keep a firm grip on the machinery of the organization, and-to have his falth- re they their services might be needed, “Further than this, he has never failed, sation to spring on the convention st the peychological moment, which would plass canse the of sym- | nathetic enthusiasm for him, which would arry the delegates off their feet, and re- ult in his re-election, “That his long leadership, and this ap- arent impossibility to f1ll his place has stne to his head, and made him imagine Liat he Is much greater a man than he ieally is, is undoubtedly the case, and uecounts for the tactics he has adopted in dealing with questions before congress, where he has unnecessarily antagonized men to whom organized labor must look for recognition of thelr demands, and where labor measures are often opposed on account of this very antagonism, which would otherwise receive support. “There is no doubt but what organized labor in this country would be much stronger with a leader who was more in touch with conditions as they actually exist, and who would bring to the front the new policles which organized labor must adopt If it expects to even maintain its present standing, to say nothing of making future progress.” We quote portlons of another article, @ reprint, from the same labor paper: “Organized labor, through its leaders, must recognize the mistakes of the past If they expect to perpetuate their or- ganization or to develop the movement which they head. No movement, no organization, no nation can develop be- yond the intellects which gulde these or- ganizations, and If the leaders are domi- nated by a selfish motive the organiza tlon will become tinged with a spirit of selfishness, which has never appealed to mankind in any walk of life at any time since history began “It can be said in extenuation of cer- tain leaders of organized labor that the precarious position which they occupy as leaders has had a tendency to cause them to lose sight of the object behind the or- ganization. The natural instinct in man for power and position is in no small measure responsible for the mistakes of the leaders, not necessarily in labor unions alone, but in every branch of saciety. This desire for power and leadership and personal aggrandizement causes men who | ouse country in the interest of the few. The people are patient and awalting to see if the object lesson which they have been torced to glve to these leaders is going to be recognized and if they are going to conform themselves and their future work and actions in accordance theretos’ Let the people remember that comment, “The Federation stands before having been ec of Labor in particular the bar of public opinion fcted of selfishness and a disposition to rule all the people of the country in th interest of the few The great 90 per cent of Americans do not take kindly to the acts of tyrrany by these trust leaders openly demanding that | people bow down to the rules of the | Trust humiliating spectacles and even the Chlef Executive entertalning | these convicted law-breakers and consideration all Labor ing with demands that allow to plan them of gaining control and we are of treated to our the Congress listen- to thelr insolent the very laws be changed to safely carry on their over the affairs of the people. The sturdy come “martyrs to know sacrificing noble cause of labo; workers the of America truth about themselves but it's have these in the only the hysterical ones who swell up and cry over the aforesald the two romantic elderly maids who, weep- | Ing coplously, we: janitor at Mt. “heroes,” reminding one of discovered by the old non. Ve “What 18 it alls you, ladies?" Taking the handkerchlef from one swollen red eye, between sobs, she said “Why we have xo long revered the memory of George Washington that we feel it a privilege to come here and weep | at his tomb.” “Yas'm, y to exp overflo ress win' yas'm, yo' shore has a desire yo' sympatily, but yo' are at de wrong spot, yo' Is weepin’ at de ice house.” Don't who get must | tence of our people Is to be maintained. If you have any surplus sympathy It |and call a special meeting of forest school ecan be extended who continue to earn food when threat- | pleted. maudlin be punished about law-breakers If the very exis- to the honest workers | |JUDCE LURTON TAKES SEAT |vanced for early hearing. It involves prop erty $400,000,000 and more important stll, the validity of the organization. As the youngest member of the court, it will be Mr. Lurton's duty to glve the first ex- pression of view on the case, which, after | worth the hearing, rhe court retires for consuita- | tion, On Monday the appeal in the Standard | Ol company case will be docketed, but l!‘ will not be heard before March. | States Conform with Militia La Satisfactory conformity by January 21, | with the Dick militia law, so as to enable | all the states and territories to share in the amounts appropriated by congress for | the maintenance of the organized militla | 18 predicted by Lieutenant Colonel Weaver, | chief of the division of military affairs, in his annual report today to the secretary of war. This law requires that the organiza- tion of the militia by that date must be the same as the regular army, If it is to participate in the federal funds. Only the states of Pennsylvania and Delaware were | reported as not conforming, with the ex- ception of its bands, In those states and | he believes these states will be able to [ meet the conditions by January 2L | “The strength of the organized militia of the severgl states and territories last spring was fixed at 118,92 officers and en- listed men. An estimate Is made that there are in the United States, 14,074,448 males available for military duty. It is announced that hereafter two mili- tia inspections will be conducted annually. That in the spring will bo to determine the sufficiency and condition of armament and equipment of the troops. The other during the period of encampment to de- termine thelr efficiency for fleld duty. Mineral Output of Alaska. The status of the' mineral output of Alaska for the year 1909, was $20,200,000, or practically the same of the previous year, according to the report’ of the United States geological survey. of this total, nearly all of It was gold, or to be exact $19,400,000. The production of copper was $520,000, & loss of nearly 100,000 from 1908, Silver, coal, marble, gypsum and other minerals were about the same in produc- | tion as the year previou Alaska has produced yince 1880, when mining first began, $166,000,000, of which all bul $7,000,00 has been gold. The majorily of the remainder has been copper, with silver next, The coal fields are now an Important factor In Alaska. The report says that it opportunity is given to mine coal rallway | facilities for its transportation will be| rushed to completion. The exploitation of these rich coal flelds, it says, is of great importance to Alaska and to the commer- clal Interests of the Pacific states. It will stimulate manufacturing and by furnish- ing coke for smelting, make avallable for | local use the iron deposits of the west, thus leading to the conrervation of those in the east Systematic Study of Forestry, Study of forestry is to be made more systematic in the United States through the closer assoclation of the schools of forestry and the standardization of the methods of Instruction. This was the prin- cipal decision reached today at the closing meeting of the conference of professors of forestry ‘with Chief Forester Gifford Pin- chot A committee consisting of Prof. H. 8. iraves of Yale, Fiof. Fillbert Roth of the University of Michigan, Dr. Bernard E. Fernow of the University of Toronto, Dr. Richard T. Pisher' of Harvard and Mr Pinchot were instructed to draw up a con- | stitution for the government of a regular | organization of the forestry schools, pre- pare a plan for standardization in study representatives when these tasks are com- | [have been earnest and sincere in their|S"°d @nd are frequently hurt and some- | Among the speakers today were Dr. Ber- @(,,,,,.‘. In the start fo deteriorate into |'/™e# killed before the courts can inter- | nard K. Fernow, Prof. Samuel B. Green of [ mere politicians whose every sot and mt- | 'S¢ !0 Protect them the University of Minnesota, Herberl A. | | tarance i tinged with the desive t0 cater | o, e 1ADOT TrUsL leaders demund of | Smith and K. C. Carter of the forest serv |$0 the baser passions of the working ma- e, ol l‘“l'w""“i.“:; ke [itripned of |ice and Prof. Frank G. Miller of the Ul jority in the societies or organizations | AU ob .,,,‘....: n‘m.;,f. k‘ versity of Washington. e e e o e Fedomtion fop | Y the Labor Trust to quit work | “Real whi was one of the themes fur | Labor partioularly in this articls becsuse | DOt “WeeD at the lce House™ and don't | discussion at loday's cabinel meeting, In | that Aresbisation f the sely etpantas@iss |PAUMIL any set of law-breakers to hully [Order to decids what conatitutes the gén ot v ion has yet foand teatt i |OUT courts If your voice and vote can | ulne article, a commitiee has been partly | Shromt oupesttion 16 the lawe of the lung, [PFeVent. Be wure and write your Repre- |selected to draft into regulation form the [ There amntother orgunisations of labor | cntatives and Sénators in Congress ask- | views of President Taft on the whjec!‘. [ whose Taadors have made mistakes, but | M8 them not to vote for any measure to( Secretary MacVeagh has appointed Com- Hhaw Save miwdes Bont' Ibatssives. ana|Rioyont the courts from protecting homes, | migsioner of mfm.u Kevenue Cabell -md‘ heT. orsanisations within the bouads at |PFOPErty and persons from attack by pald |Becretary of Agriculture Wilson has ap- the law snd respected the rights of every | 2ECNts of the great Labor Trus pointed Solicitor Me 'ube‘ of Iv.l< ‘Llel‘urxr:l t By el g gl Bl L A e Let every reader write, and write now. the men bers uluf\e \‘-r\“\.llxl"‘.ALe::.l:‘l‘yl('c- themselves and their constituency; where- Don’t sit silent and allow the organized "’“"\l)m‘mh Ilk‘\‘ulu :‘::,lmu‘:\.t n”rd. r;‘:‘“‘b:] {86, Ahe matto of the Federation is 1““:'."',1,";:“\ Wiah.af hlsiguan itust g foreh T lan 107 Afatt. the EbUlKEADA the reverse, and unless the leaders con-|“” 88 to belleve they represent the| . E - . “ form themselves and thelr organization |KFeat masses of the American people, [L00K UP Mhe W "H“‘u',',‘l" \:\:',““: :::;:Zl in Accordance with the laws of the land, | 58Y Your ssy and let your representatives (443 With & view of £0/E the leaders and the organisation itself|'D Consress know that you do not want ‘“‘“‘A "”“‘“““we Mg - 1 kit tory, for in America the common sense in | WOUld empower the Labor Trust ders | x oy than in any other nation on the earth, | WHeFe! For whom! At what pricet What \puie® FF POIOTE and the people, who are the court of last |10 Puy! What not to buy! Whom to vot » ? y vesort In this country, will mever allow | fOr! How much you shall pay per month s Saving Expected, | any system to develop in this country |'P fees to the Labor Trust! etc ete.| Senator male of Malne, who Is acting | which does not meet with the approval of | This power now belng demanded by | chairman of the senate committee on pub- | | the majority of the citigens of the coun- |the passage of laws in Congress Tell lic expenditures, had a long talk with | | try. your Benators and Representatives plain- | President Taft this afterncon on the sub- | | +This must have forced itaelf upon the |1¥ that you donw't want them to v )r [ Ject of federal economy },eue” of the Federation by this time ¢ |80y Measure that will allow an t of The committee on public expenditures \-’ 1t has not, the leaders must be eliminated, | MeN either representing Capital or Labor |devouns lself 0 the plan of practical The organisation which they head has|!® overn and dictate (o the common |economy and Senator Hourne of Oregon, done many meritorious things in times | PROPIe, Who Drefer to be fr go and |chairman of @ subcommittee on depart- past And the people Bre always ready and |€OMe. Work or not, and vote for whem | mental expendiiures, recently subiiited willing 1o acknowledge the benefits which | they please Ihis report 1o the full committce and with their efforts have brought to thelr con-| Ever man's liberty will disappear when |Senator Hale thinks a saving of from $6, atituency &3 & whole, bUt at the pressnt |the leaders of the great Labor Trust or 00000 to $100.000.000 & year will be the ul-| time labor organisations in general, and | &Ry other trust can ride rough shod over |tirate result of the committee's work. the Wederation of Labor in particular, £f people and mass their forces to prevent #tand befors the bar of publie opiaiem, |OUr cOurts from affording protection.” “There's & Reason.” C W POST, Battle Creek, Mich | Lund Withdrawn from Entry, | In aid of proposed legialution affecting | water power aites on the public domaln, the sceretary of the interior has withdrawn I | vice prestdent OurSemiAmal /e of SHOES STARTS NEXT RS DAY 78 Tebrvsaker /i Engraved Stationery Wedding Invitations Announcements Visiting Cards Il correct for i 1| wved 1 e Dok manner and punciually Gelivered whea promised. Embossed Monogram Stationery and other work executed at prices lower than usually prevail elsewhere. A. 1. ROOT, INCORPORATED 1210-1212 Howard St. from all forms of disposition the fol lands: Along the Arkansas river in Colorado, 27,204 acres; along the Bill Willlams river and tributaries in Arizona, 6272 acres; along the Melalla river In Oregon, 5,179 acres, and along the McKenzie river in! Oregon, 98 acre: nd Rewtored to Entry. | Secretary Ballinger of the Interior de partment today restored to the public do- main 18,46 acres of land In California This action was taken as @ result of in formation furnished the Interior depart ment by the geological survey. the lands | having previously been withdrawn thought to contaln ofl aggregates 6 acres Mr. Vanderbilt as Mysterious as Ever in West Pays Second Visit to Cheyennc, Ap- parently Seeing No One—May Have Eye on Union Pacific. CHEYENNE, Wyo., Jan. 1.—(Special Telogram,)—Alfred G. Vanderbiit arrived in Chey Omaha, remained within his car and saw no visitors during the two hours he was here, and at 8 o'clock started on the return trip to Omaha. A line of guards was thrown about his car while it stood in tue Union Pacific yards and no reporters or others were permitted to enter. A week ago Mr. Vanderbilt visited Cheyenne in the ®ame manner, stopping here several hours, but being interviewed by no one so far as is known. ‘What is the purpose of s mysterions movements is not known to local rallroad officlals, according to the statements. Among rallroad employes there in gossip that a deal for the Harriman interests In the Union Pacific and tributary lines is pending and that Vanderbilt is Inspecting the property which will be transferred Alfred Millard Retired Banker Resigns Vice Presidency of United States National Bank After Thirty Years' Activity. Alfred Milard, for thirty years an active business man and banker of Omaha, wil begin the New Year as a retived private citizen. He has resigned his office as of the United States Na- tlonal bank, but will still remain 8 member of the directorate. Regarding the matter Mr. Millard said: “The report is true, for this is my last working day with the bank as vice presi- dent. 1 am still & stockholder and director, I have been thirty years at my desk and now freedom and fresh air attract me. | I am out of business life, insofar as it relates to routine work." | Mr. Millard was the organizer of the | old Commercial National bank, which h founded in 187. The United States’ Na- tional bank is a consolidation of the Ola Commercial, the Upion National and the United States National banks. The Bubonic P destroys fewer lives than stomach, liver and kidney diseases, for which Blectrie Bitters is the guaranteed remedy. e, IFoi #ale by Beaton Drug Co. "BRIEF CITY NEWS Have Root Print It. B. ¥, Swoboda—Certified Accountant, Lighting Fiztures, Burgeas-Granden Co. Rinehart, Photographer, 18th & Varnam Meyn, pboto, removed to 16th & Howard. Chambers’ new olasses Jan. 1, Dous Bauitable Life—Policies sight drafts at maturity. H. D. Neely, manager, Omaha “Try Us Pirst for Fusl” Nebraska Fuel Co., 1414 Farnam St. Both 'phones. 1§50—National Life Insurance Co—1900 Charles E. Ady, General Agent, Omaha. Investments in the shares of Nebrasks | Savings and Loan assoclation earn 6 per | cent per annum. credited semi-annually, 1871 106 Board of Trade building, 1608 Farnam, i | | | | Dnbeny FBascy, | SANATORIUM l Lol Tk This Insttution is the ouly one 1o the central west with separute buildings situated in their own ample grounds, yet entirely dis- tinet and rendering It possible to classity cases, The oue bullding being fitted for and devoted to the treatment of noncontaglous and nonmental diseases, no others be- ing admitted. The other, Rest Cottage, being designed for and devoted to the exclusive treatment of select mental cases, requiring for a time watchful care ana spe- clal nursing. nne at 1 o'clock this afternoon from | | Phone D. 1604 e—— Pains in the BACH which streak up betwesn the shoulders or through the loins and down the limbs. Very com- monly these pains are associated with a ““drawing’’ sensation st the back of the neck, YOUR SUFFERINGS These pains are searly always the result of a disordersd nervous system, and are rarely the tesult of kidney trouble, COCEX builds up the nervous stlmalates 3 normal, healthy dow of b and furnishes the organs with the energy necessary to fnsure thelr proper action. All nervous disorders yleld resdily to thiy tment and the whole system ¢ quickly t0 a condltion of Viger, Vitalty and Perfect bealth i1 thereby attained. Your Money Refunded If it Falls. PRICE $1.00 PER BOX. FOR SALE BY BEATON DRUG 00, 15th and Farnam Sts., Omaha, , smooth, satiny comp fon, and what satisfaction and mind ts possession brings, of age, worry and overwork are render- ed well nigh powerless by Mrs, Nettls LOLA MO CREME A wonderful soother, healer and proteo- tor to a dry, contracted or onwod ckin, © It Is Complexion- Insurance. Convines yourkelf of its remarkable ower by obtaining a free sample and ok OF AND 600D NEALTH® a1 sxEa 4Ny, ave, - Owl Drug Co., 16th & Nerney, Omahs. of e lnes 8 afrained Nurse $25.00 a Week portunity Is offered to men who_ wi BT eT L ene o cauir os oF b8 boss TREICISE senoola in Chicago. Reglatered ok, Graduates of this school are fears of LikImink LR pFAONOS] a0 Wb aob e of the work. 1o i arstionatier 3 physical. morg! aad e l”&. nts are carefully guarded. For partioulars, Miss CAROLINE SOELLNER, SUPT Lakes'de Hospital Training School for Nurses, 414T LAKE AVENUE, CHIGAQO, ILL. vy mewn. o sample 10c. Send for booklet free. o Madame Jole&hlne Le Fevre, 8 Chestmut - Phiinda,, Pa. S0 by Myers-Dillon D ., Beaten Drug Co. fhe Bell Drug Co., Haines lrug Co, Omaba; Clark Drug Co, Counctl Bluffs ‘Smarting Chilblains Itching, burning Trostbites instantly ri Heved by one application CHILBLAIN CURE. Cul vsually effected with one bottle. By mall s0c, SHERMAN & McCONNELL DRUG €O OMANA. NOB. ¢’re OFF! New Vear's track’s open. The race is to be run—and ‘you will run as your health gives brain and physical force. Bad bowels, liver and stomach kill more GOOD EFFORT than any other trouble. SCARETS will keep you healthy— EN you can produce results. Take CASC:\RI;:TS—k;:p‘hmud -p—you‘r liver working-—an: en you can go it for all you're worth, ey CASCARETS—10¢ box—week's treat- ment. All druggists. Biggest seller in the world. Million boxes & month. FOR ALL THE NEWS OMAHA BEE YOUR MONEY'S WORTH VCEAN STEAME Some Exoellont Rooms OLARK'S URUISE of the 000 tons, brand new, 4 superbly fitted. Rounn THE wortD FROM SAN FRANOISCO, PES. ¢ ,OBe Steamor for the Bitire LR el of near . Vi.l' 4 " ! our month; costing only $650 and up. ‘yelud all nec ROUTE: 'Japen. Chiua. Fhilippines, Bor- neo, Jave, Wurms, isdia, Oeyiow, Bgrpt, Italy, etc. O4n unususl ohance to visit unusually attractive places. ANEGAL" ORIENT CRUISE February 5, 1910, by B. 8. “Grosser " 73 ‘anys, including 24 day 'l;‘;'"l notals, fuerst,” up, including FRANK O. CLARK, Times Blag., New York Ousimloa, shore exeursions, ete and Palestine, OUK, 1684 Farsam i,