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THE B OMAHA, TUESDAY, JUNE 7, 1010 | betore adjournment, whenever that [her observance of woman suffr, 19E OMAIA DALY Bee ! Oontrol And Not Destruotion . Ihe fallaey of the theory that de-|may be. The people may rest reason- [ have no time 1o vote after 1 have done = VOUNDID WY BOW AL WOARWATEI | oooa aostenotion of the whole insti [8bly sssured now that they will secure |my duty to my children o whom | _,/\__._.—_—E—rr“y GOSSl The report made to the comptrolle: VIRTON HOSEWATER, KINTOR tution of private propetiy as & menns [the enactment of laws on these sub: [ have devoled my Iife There s & P Matters of Interest On and Back of the Piriag Tine Gleased from der date of March 20, 1910, show! Jectn. This s an assursnce which (he | morsl in that 1 wo-called seonomie Justics I that it W ol e 1 pltered at mahe pospttios us seoond |l ingividunl woslth as beyond [Ant-administration organs were not | e e Army ang Wevy Wegister. that this bank has control, thereby imputing to govern- | Wiling to conceds u fow woeks ngo urivurnln. 10 face (hat jndgment for h 3 . TIHMA OF B ESEIIPEION . | ment an Inherent wenkness it d not | when thay were (elling the people that |86.204,206.49, President Parlow of | 14 I* undersibod (Hat the authorities at " b iy Wew ntluding Bunday) per UER Y the Walet board says the nest prob the mounted service school at Fort Riley lc‘ Linily Bes (with Bunduy), per week ':; PoORRen In the firet place, all the |they need not expect congross Lo glve I |have been experiencifg some trouble with 1eH) BBe ANe Handay s yoat;:cee: WO | abuses of the laws of supply and de-[them any eaflroad bill, any conserva (lom will be (o And the best A 10| 1, clase of officers which some regimen- DBLAV KD WY CARIIION | mana have not been dus 1o private[Uon or postal wavings bl but the | mAnAge the water plant for the eity, | i .',m.....m:.,u --enmmen:::rfn:‘ nm]fll Dc ‘t s 03‘ 278 ol Yivanin Heu (wlihot mandap)oper waek 4 | property a4 an fystitution, and in the | rafiroad bill in on the way and the[Mow can there be Any problem about|at the school under the beilst tat the NS| ¥ Mo ¥ | naxt phnce, 1f they had been, socinliem | conservation bills probably will e | that when everyone knows the whole) 00 poor riders can be taught to stiek .- wtindey “Hie, p .,,...H.m.--'m would not necessarily be the panacon. | voted on before many days, while the |sehemea from Ia inception was de-| . 50 o the ime was, perhaps, when Aclivery (o iy Clraulation Deprtme Thin republic 16 not ready 1o dmit ite | Others will come in short order wlgnea to N Into the Job one R B.!ihe mounted service school was of this 1 Qi LONRO Inabiiity to control weslth even when| By the time congress adjonrns and [ Mowsll, who hae been the chlef actor |character, but that time has passed, and 3 /’ (o) n eres‘t "k h the members Ko home to sesk sndorse- |10 the bunco game? 1t in not & ques-|!'* present aim is to turn out officer-grad- organized in glgantio forms has ustes competent to mct as instructors for | 00 Ml fn 1 Beoit g | . pald on certificates running for twelve Bih LALLe MON | grupplea with ang brought to complete ment at the polls, there will In all|tion of the best man to manage the| fafiments tn remAentaI il sehivols, & L] Tion Wit g o AN permunent solutlon problems | Probability have been written upon | water works, but of the only one Who |y ju contemplated that only tha finest i s bonina APl [ tueh mors formidubié wnd 1t muy be|he satite books at Washington ample [¢8h MANSKS ft-—the man who has all |horsemen be sent from each regiment. and | | material in the form of long demanded | the other members of the Water board the regulations require regimental com- | oy depanded upon not to il here INLINC G | manders tc o Coummuniontions Ing o new 1t In prop wane regulation rather |1Aws to warrant iy member who | hypnotised, and who Is only waiting "u:e:‘"";:‘l:e":‘he‘l; r‘:’::’m:’:m:ml m; o . . ) oLy ST R (han abolition of wealth that is wanted'| helped writ them there asking « [for them to persuade him to sacrifice | neir work and special adaptability for ad- Omuha B, KA1igeial Pagartment Nialilikli WML AN G wnd which we will have in the United | Vindication from the voters ;"'"‘""" vanced equitation and horse training, and | by gt bxpionn or postal o6l g ey gl (he vagaflous theorists to e b TR excellent, physical condition.” 8o stren- | Fivn W Wublinning Company 2 | . ) evelt might cite wn | uous Is the physical fe e c | 1 7 Soueint athtpa, Ponalvea the contrary notwithstanding, This | What Ails Royal Europe HLARSEIORIPOR. ‘, : ':" it e e el e B AL -1 Pl A TR s claarly outiinkd by Prewident Tare| The recent death of one Muropean |9efense not only the fact that he was| O 3 Tt T8 et Jinaha of sastern axahung | h given the freedom of the city, but that 1 10 accompany the regimental com- | ; : “ [ in hig Jackson, Mieh,, specch, when he | ONATCh and the serfous Iliness of Ssy 31 the Loslon § tatns Gettired mander's Indorsement { " vutiren At O PPTTLIT, ik " o ed, e M O CHIC UL ATION, [says the fssue ts buing feamed with|three others prompis i solloitude of ,,“"WIM b’”" tho wd‘ ites 1t rM e e Hate F Nobraska, Dudins County, w8, | respect to the Institution of private Prouder scops (han - just - personal ot R 4 e i T.| Despite the fact that the War depart- o degrge ¥ Dl teanurer v Tha roparty” and’ diasents from those |SAXIety. 'The possibiities of so much [Roosevelt should leave us without|ment has adopied and promuigated a policy G OMAHA. Pk e (e e e and gt " it g hiywlenl nllme spenking to the English people and|*hich places the joint army and militia - S R A N iy Mo, | Who charge all the économic eviln to physieal aliment among the browned oesking quite plainly what he has to| TANTUVET CATDS of this year on & very Fremont Tribune: Omaha i looking for| “Anvthing unusual about her wedding™ " f'kf"“n by e printed during e [ (he ahuse of this power and advocate | PORAK Are not pleasant 1o contemplate D % q P y 0| practical basis, with the minimum amount |*" ®4%Y place o light. The Bee tries to ‘;v’,:.. was 1" oty ok Mg, 1010, was e "' saies0 | I8 destruction ms the only way of es | 9/ther th continental Burope or abroad, (#7 of them and their work here and|of construction at thewe places, numerous |PO/Nt Out that the surprise Wi} be it the| The fact that it was her wedding ; b ::':: ‘,. 44 E 40,080 | (bIishing A8 equilibrium batween the | f0F 1aIK A we will about the nominal | Abroad S0 far as I8 known the|requests are being received in Washing- | ®"*U® shows more than 10,000 ouston Post Lo W vensiss 00000 masses power of (he throns, it commands an |BPectator bas found no room to com-|!on from the army quartermasters in Broken Bow Beacon: The supreme court| .. Brother (who has just been giv. aqpn 80, se s vson AOA00 - fhod 4 .| plain since the Guild hall speech, {charge of camp construction. It is quiie |Bas decided that Omaha shall take its |some candy)—if I were you. I shouldn ] oo Ma010 prer+ Thers 16 no danger that spetuliam | 1PfI0Ence wnd sustaing o relation whose | @vident that the expense in that particular | ¥ater works from a private corporation |take sister yachting this afternoon ".'.'?& ¥ AVase | will ever triumph w0 long s the peopls | FANSIEr (0 othor hands produees in-| . o CEEEEEEDEIS ke | W1 be only slightly less than it has been |8t AN appraisement of $,23,26 and O | e I L ¥ Tie s 1o FRAR v, ) 40,140 | keop thelr falth in & popular governs | COnveniont offects It will be & long| 4 JAYSI) {In previous years and it will still be within | '* #ick of the deal. She will experience on | Littje Brother—Weil. I heard her tail O:Ji: 1“ s arvipin/ S popuinr gov [time Before Grast Briteln Wilisbe sb |those In Ohlo, Indlcate almost com-|the restrictions imposed by the secretary |® !ATEe scale something of what Broken ér this morning that she feared ;‘m» bt Seoee| ment ho full of opportunlly tor fndl-] FIE BEEE Coom e e oty | Pléte victory for the so-called regular |Of war, who desires that the eamp shaii [ BO% ad 10 experience In taking over its |L2HL 10 i ba bty 10004 40,600 AL “"n‘vlllunl SR SRR SHIE D1, SO |ostimnte of the result upon nlllunll;".p“"”'.n" (88 CNAREROL SOVINE But :‘m’m . JANTIY. A SO e, ot | T S | Nodd—Mourn for me, old man: T me " sadas | o y e | tions fe v . Gr dent " » —Mou or re Lo inines Ao Dlarrisers 49400 LION" menns groping for a Inst rosort, SI0IR ot 'the King' "8l1 4 single look-in in Pennsylvania. ';"ll-. Jh“n lu,)’uld prevall In the field ot P -Mf l‘-’llnd Ind-yanl' nt: The 'ldml ek & Somen With sbeolutely 50 sense of Voonadon o A,000 " L AB000 tenns wenkness and dospulr, nnd we Aify OF the ng's death and even T, With an abwence of what may | *ons of the man Erdman, at Omaha, of |piv 7 Pennsylvania, too, ig the home of the his connection with other crimes, enacted | | Baturday Evening Post. and contemplated, are sufficient to stamp | be called camp comforts and only such con- venlences as are nece 1,000 f Todd—That's nothing to my eroes. 4 ' 0 ‘ " are not glving up In Uhis country to-|PEIVALe business has not yet been able Nodd—What's that? r v :; 1,600 100 | AnY; we ate not placing o pramium on to rolapwe Into normal condition since —_— camp manitation and the ypr'r:'(';:':.'r',":f'.:.z him as a strange sort of a reformer to be| 10dd—My wife hus one—Life TP 1t numan wenkpess, bt an personal | N0 sad evont, The democratic state committes|P®alth of the troops. The officers who are |A#0ciated with Eimer Thomas, attorney | Houston—tow do you zuppose the L [T e affort und organized grit, and we nye| Toduy the ecrown prince of Bweden | quoiutes the advice to democratic ,,,,_}::":_"":';-: Iln- program of exercises will | .'nl'l".'m:':”'l"l':’:" league -}rd kindred or-| Egyptians managed o get the prramids Wotutned 4o low oo ‘ showing considernble progress n enrh. |19 conducting the affairs of the nation | yiative candidates to sign up under |, Bave. LIEMGH OF e ivcressty ot ]S s b e i g Mulberry—Oh. thelr congressmen prob- bocaune King Gust ) | ar 10 have everything on a work-a-day| Papillion Times: Omaha recelved a final|ably franked them.—Puck Noh. sotad Ing and controlling, directing and regn & (Justavas In (0o wiek L0 Ao | the Oregon plan. What has the dem-|basis. By this means the militia commands | knockout decision in the city water works | g BT S Iting, ‘the powerful weoumiintions of | %0 Bmperor William of Germany 18| ocratic state committee got to do with | ¥hich are o participate In thews camps |Affalr when the United States supreme |pars et Sas tioniatibs oves io dreating the | GROWE B, 7 t/'ul:"u. worlth and making them contribute to known to be In very uncertain hnullml,l anyway? Let the people rule. will derive the experiences which would be | Court declded that the ecity would have fow do you mean? h | Mobraribed. in iy, yrasbrica and ARore 1o |the development of oMr nationn! )ite)"0d Was obliged to delegate some of | thelr lot I€ they took the field in the pres- |t0 buy the plant from the private ownees | WY, when ahe rébd e story about, th ! Wetor e thin Dike g ol WY, ) wnd Industries as ageheles of nseful | P18 Offieial functions to his eldest son| Not a single ex-governor at the g i e At the appraised valuation of $5,29,26.49. | wore a costume of maroon, and at her lec | LV, WAL ' h 1 —_— 8arpy county's court house bonds for §100,- |ture on Celtic wit her dress was trimmed ] Hotaty Pubile. | noss rather than n mere mechanizm of | 707 ® time, while the young King Al-|funeral of ex-Governor Mickey, al-| The intantry officers who have been giv- |00 looks rather smail beside these stag- with Irish point.”—Baltimore American "_' ' ] iy A R s R oppression, onso of Bpain in reported to be alarm-| though Nebraska has five llving ex-|In& attention during the past year to|&ering figures, Britanhla Was ruling the Waves. | HUWapriiers Isaving the ety tem- Ingly 1. Added to all this sickness | governors. Nebraska's ex-governors “'am-muvmnn and apparel of the foot | David City Pre Omaha will have to| '‘Wonder ",’, alan’t u;u me t;mwnlk ! I r ) ; soldier, have beei # A ‘em or get off 'em.”’ she remarked. | pornrlly ahould Wave The Bew The Example of Darius Green, of royalty fn the news that Prosident | are scattored almost (o the four quar-|n G JV0 heehl much Impreased with a |pay $2.263,26.40 for' the water plant. This| “jerewlth she feit she had escaped t | Y L aeld it 6 Fallioren of the republie of KFrance |ters of the globe . which s the mubject of |is the decision of the supreme court af-|worst.—New York Sun ! e/ ‘" ‘ ,r‘ 4 According 1o the mother af Charlos | o H O TR IEAE s of :;':wmn m-:lvm by the surgeon general of |ter five years' litigation. This was the i nt kige Siaten lashenilame \ ChEnRYE Hn altam ae reus o ne " " | e army from British military sources. | price put on the plant by two of the th [ e g 5 o iR . | K. Hamio! ne of the ambitions avi-|, bealth, and that M. Brland, prime & Up at the Fialoh, The . new.shoe Spdesrs Lo Gh¥IRLe Komto of price p piant by two of the three id you, Bobby? Here's & quarter for IR FEET NS e T June may yet warm Denpalt not! [TRURLE Perhaps that Guild Hall spssch Wik Just & triok to sos If ho could mrouse the Knglish, tolln of the future, Thomns A, Kdiso elhor I the power Chloroform next. e Now Rudoiph Mpreckels suys he will An gomplotely as he roform Chinako, reformed Han Francineo? Unold Bhm sooms 1o have put thiv $ o = us ball on those rallvond rate yainers just betors they touched the plate, B ] Kentuokiang think oong Alftarent (o Hle requonts hecause it doos not glve g dum for Green river l Iight now In the time to nek If the Intorstate Commerce commisston will have vontral of the airehip tramo, l Wil ndt some lover of solence put up A prise for an aviation trial from Luopun, N. Y., to Falrview, Neb.? Anyone else want to buy §6,600,000 of Omaha 4 per cent water bonds run- Don't all upeak at ning thirty yeara? onee. that too ine Ators who wijl compete tn the tlight from New York to 8t Louf for a prize of $40,000, her son was originally in wpired by the story of Darlus Green wnd Hin Flying Muckine, and all hig Ife haw been dreaming and working aver alrships, 1t may bo thet ather of the (wentieth centary avintors, pow wibly the Wright brothers, or Farnem, or Curtiss, or even the forelgners, Ble- rlot, Paulbhan or Hantos-Dumont, got thelr first natlon of aerial navigation from the same simple gourco. At any rate wo may admit that this orude per- sonage In his nulve way has sent i Intluence on_down through history. fo be felt 1o the enlfghtenod, progrossive Age of the twentloth contury, nd o wenulne boon to solence and world Qoonomy But befora wo proceed too far in our marvellng over the wonderful fonts that are belng accomplinhed, 1t might be well to go back Into history wnd wee If the advancement of the present day In altogethor unproce dented, Botween 1828 and 1IR30 Rufus Porter made u cigar-shapoed dirigible halloon strikingly like the one in which Hantos-Dumont nchieved auoh fame, and Honrt Gifford, the Frenoh Inventor, constructed a ateam- propelling alrsbhip which was A orude model of the modern machine, Nor will the man who succeeds in flying OMoers of the Anti-Baloon lengue|from New York to St Louls be the rofuse 1o he diverted, They are con. |fIret to travel that distance n aie. In Upuing (0 sAW (wood and colleot the latter ‘60w a flight was made money, from Bt Louls to a point 1,200 miles e distant In the state of New York In Governor Harmon should take cour- Men always fall In the estima- tion of Mr. Bryan when they et the LLL presidontial fever, A man traveled from Germany to o 8 seven And onehalt and then stood down on Water stveet Ohle and wondered why. The present status ralaing business s another reminder that sometimes government by injunes of ton vomes in right handy B The preacher who uses signboards o advertiae his chureh probably aocts on the soriptural Injunetion of making the works of Batan to praiwe the Lord, 1t remalng to be ween whether that | long distance telophone will work be- tween Grand laland and Fairview well an {t did between Falrview and Denver, A Olnolnnatt giel elimbed down o PORR L0 rench her lover and get a tew lines 18 the paper, while Dorothy Ver non drew & whole book for a similar oAper Rome yoars slnce e The proseoution of the Beef trust Will ROW aek the supreme court in New Jersey to dissolve that combine, ROt Wake the fequest of the packers? They would, doubtiess, grant it with RrOAL ploasure. Thomen K. Wateon says he ls again & demoeral, Thowae 'K, Watson.. And congress 18 not ready (o adjourn Wab-Thomas, Ko, yes, we have|oven yot. Bofore that time may be Bim, He onoe ran for viee president Secretary of Btate Junkin has that no the ral days [ a Why Just twenty hourn, Bo that the present human birda have really some proetty falr records to break, Mt of course there In a vast differs ence between what ls belng done today and what was done three-quarters of century ARo. Then men merely wallod somewhere through space by means of balloons, while today thoy are working toward the perfection of ayatematio aerial havigation, bringing thelr alreraft under definlte control with a view of making them practical means of tranaportation. And yot the power of the example of the Darius Greenn in folt through every triumph wo are achlevin L e A Qongress of Aotivity, The present congress will go down In history as one of the busiest and most prolifie of resulta. More actual constructive legislative has been on aoted during this first regular wosslon of the Taft administration than fs usu- Aally enacted in three years, and the groat feature about It ia that the over whelming part of this legislation s that the people have been clamoring for it For the benefit of those whe belleve congress has been indolent it might be stated that during the present wosnion 28,897 bllla have been fntro. dueed In the house and 8218 In the wenate. It Is fmpossible for' the lay mind o concelve, without study, the detall comprehended in these fgures of ings bank bille Tl e | ministe + may wucceod Him, The question must force iteelt “on hive hin own reported statement that neomn that wome wort of contaglon had wiruek the throne and glven new signi flieance to the old waylng: “Uneasy ocratie contemporary that the signing of "Statoment No. 1" s to be the new tewt, and presumably the only test, of the democracy of aspiring candidates for the leginlature. All demoorats who sign “‘Statement dinreputables in the late Douglas dele gation may reinstate themselvos as aemocrats in good standing by swal- lowing a dose of “Statement No. 1. Any lar whose word s at discount and whosoe bond Is below par can float hin paper an a loginlative candidate on the demoeratio ticket by signing up for “Btatement No, 1." “'Statement No. 1" Is the new polit- feal divining rod that will.tell the true democerat from the false, the real arti- In Towa, The political spotlight Ia right now on lows, where the Impending pri- murios will soon tell who's who In the Hawkeye atate. Although the pri- marios are to determine the make-up of the tickets of all parties, the inter- congross who have been standing with the regular organisation, The per- wonal participation of the two United Htates senators from lowa pleading for a repudiation of the regulars endorsement of thelr own insurgency has drawn factional linea sharply and diverted the issuss in some measure from the personalities of the opposing candidates for primary preforence. It remains to be wseen, however, whether lowa republicans will vote to retire the men who have represented them longest in the house and have the best records of public service to their oredit, slmply because they have refused to enlist under the insurgent banner and to take orders from the wenators rather than from thelr own ot constituencies. The demoerats natu- rally rogard the factional fight In Henntor roads must tall a wtandards. In this fashion are the hopes of democ- blighted as they bloom. The eagle eye of the western kill-joy Like death the reaper, he cuts them down; Iike the gravedigger racy The aetion on (he Kalser's request of salary seems to be & further recognition of (he high cost of lving. The bar of dresser, Temple Bar, & relio days w court ost In contered almost wholly on the| peoause his republican slde of the fence, and there | penitent sinner h on (he ronomination of members of [ ernment, Mrs n|IDg manager and owner, With her ehildren, of one of the largest dopartment stores in the world floor space, Out of association was New York World Cumming now says that Four business meén #elected by bhusiness home and curse the professional politicians who will reprasent them in tho leglxlnture, / begin’ to wuspect that reports of our prement prosperity Agmeratod nreatly ME GATHERS T hin faults, fow IN. doubt of his courare. One of thews days the painful discovery will ba made at Lincoln, Neb., (hat Mayor Gaynor, although a great Any « Inches short Activities of “the Weatern Kill-Joy’ other gentleman Jetfersonian tendéncies who chances to be elected to high office will be likely also to of the Bryan he gathers them in Prussian John Ca 360 persons. one of two Parli England has rier, costing the goyernment §1 conscience hufts him any loves his country he will suffer in The store covers 15 a represents an more than $15.00,00 and employs upward writ ol from the countorfeit. PERSONAL NOTES. on, - If wo had only had this infallible | ugien men of letters have treated teat before the “sting of Ingratitude” | Roosevelt with eonsideration, but Kipling Kot in its work! threatons to write & poem about him. ament's lost to whose shop bt London in the merry Henry VIIL relgned, came each duy Junlors, K. O's and judges of the high Mo dled recently at the age of 78, consolence ent 2 conts to the gov- flicial recording of the episode It the fellow's hurt him, more and Charles Notcher of Chicago te aot- nve ment ral hundred papers submitted to the international congress the one of & woman dootor of Chicage, Dr. Hoosen, was chosen to be read before the its meeting In Budapest the Engiish JAnguage that were chosen, the other being the production of an eastern doctor of dis- unction, on in Our Birthday Book he will| ox and good wan, I8 upon them favorabla for & raiso ita hair- Bertha ven in new shoes while soldlers are on a cam- vote for the administration rafiroad bill, as | pal By the arrangement a moldier may the publie ‘mlml. What has gone | amended. Up 1o date his favorite occupa. [ re-nole and heel his own shoes. The new wrong with the official heads of %0 | n rolling rocks on the track Lype has four woles. The outer and middie miily Woropan. SRAERE o odkel wolew are constructed of compressed and o Lty Apubila Y | enn Men and Pablie Office, #peclally treated leather, The outer sole Iy Il republican, Fallleres, we Mt Paul Dispateh, removable and may be easily atlached. The heels are also interchangeable and are ho wishes simply to retire from public|™*" 1:; run the logiulature In Indiann, | corstructed of two stout layers of spe- Witw, but § @xcuned themmolves on the ground that!clally treated leather compr it In the caso of the royRlty it|iney were too busy. Ho they wiil stay At gl pressure of 10000 pounds to the square inch. The expert who makes the comment on this subject says: “When we consider !l the large number of people who wear their Lamentatlons Now Due. routs the head that wears the crown.' Indianapolis Journal, heels down unevenly, the advantage of be. — With the sdpreme court sustaining a L':'f,,:m:‘:";:"(: ".'::'l'":'m"“".‘l’l"’&?:: ";"“ " D " orn : . prd n Natioe fu gtvon by our amiable dem-|yiirand bill il ‘#hot to places, tha rafl.|\'CiS POOIA are alro treated by u wpeclal process which makes them extraordinarily roft and flexible, and aiso absolutely waterproof, and what is still more remark- able, no amournt of souking In water makes them lose their flexibility on subsequent drylrg, even before a fire. ‘The military authorities have before them No. 1" will look alike to it and be W ""_ 'k '\“f"lz"‘; this week an interesting question sub- commended to the confidenco and i SV, i Q8 arid. [dem.), mitted from the United States military When the late Governor Johnwon of Min-|pison at Fort' Leavenworth. 8 t favor of democratie voters. \ [nesota’ wan in the. flesh Mr. Bryan held|money of 8 aud B respectivels. were o Vo, 1" 0 o ed only 4 ko = 1 hihs Juat sign “Statement No. 1" and all [him {n high rex tempered only by &|taken from two members of the prison past misdeods will be forgiven, KUAWING fear that he might have some|guard, being “ccelved by them In con- The mnotorious boodler nnd the M:;:‘:';-r:ln'.'r r.‘.":‘:' ¢ Ohl tideratlon of surreptitously conveying svernor Harmon of Ohlo is now con- sonviota, . AOtHer . chronle grafter may have an immunity | gpie ) 8 NOW COn-| money to convicts. Another sum of $9 wes splcuoun enough to merit and receive the |tuken trom a corvict who had received it bath by immersing himself In “State- [ same distinguished attentlon. Mr. Bryan|from u clvilian for delivering newspapers ment No, 1." looks with fawor upon this great demo-|gn the prison reservation. The money was All the corporation cappers or other | Geus "I but hie entortaine u sickening | conflacated in each cse and (urned into the convicts' mess fund. It has been sug- weated by the Inspector general of the army, who 1cported the facts, that a rule could be wdded to the pr regulations to authori#e such action men have been punished in the regular way and It is held by the War department that the confiscation and disposition of the money was unauthorized by law. It will be necessary, therefore, to return the money to the men ficm whom Jt was taken. The commandant of the prison has ample au- thority to punish prisoners for infractions of the rule in resard to the unauthqrized recelpt of money wnd he has full authority to take into his oustody and hold for the conviets' beneflt fund any money which he may reccive while In prison from uny source. 1 is held that the money was the property of the soldier from whom it was taken. Were it not for such ownership, it would not be possible to dispose of It In the manner reported, of treatment In the last illness of Major Ed- ward Chynoweth, Seventeenth Intantry, who dled at Fort McPherson, Ga., has re- sulted in the promulgation by the secre- tary of the war of a rule which has been generally ohserved, although not formally prescribed. 1n (he case of the late officer w clvilian physician of Atlants, Ga., was calle din and the treatment was entrusted to him, although there were on duty at Wort McPherson three Army surgeons avallable for this service. The sudden and critical fliness of Major Chynoweth war- ranted the family of that officer in their action, but the government, by a decision of the comptroller, to which reference has been made In the Army and Navy Register, has disallowed the claim of the Atlanta civillan physician for the medical attend- ance rendered. The point hinged on the fact that Major Chynoweth was removed to the hospital in Atlanta. A difference of opinion was evident between the cheif sur- geon of the department and the surgeon general of the army concerning the ability of the local army medical officers to treat the case. It has been decided that the facilities and equipment at Fort Me- Pherson were sufficient to perform the 1| operation and the transfer of the patient to & hospital in Atlanta, under the circum- stances, relioved the army medical officers of the professional responsibility and the government of the Habllity for the expense of medical attendance on the part of the by he of ot the difficulties which arise from breaking | The unusual clreumstances attending the toached It has some of the Most|lowa as grist to their mill and are said Vitally important measures 1o diapose |1y bo lending assistance to the insur- Chief among these are the rallroad | gents, whose success they feel sure conservation, statehood and postal sav-| would be to their advantage. who have m: e e It that I8 the case, republicans looking ¢n as 1t I well that the republicans and | unprejudiced outsiders would proter demoorats have come o & working | (o see the strong m Agresment in taking up thewe Measures. | the Jowa house delegation a positive ‘The democrata have consented to defer | jnfluence, renominated, re-elected and Inmediate action on the statehood Il | xept In the forefront. #0 A8 10 give precedence to the coms PervALion Mmeasures, securing the prom- iwe Lhat statehood will be acted wpon Mrs. Grover Cleveland returns fro Burope with her children, saying as to e e e e e June ¥, 1910 Ralph K Valentine, assistant manager n Omaha of the American Surety com- pany of New York, was born June T, 7, at O Kan. He 18 & graduate of Washburn coliege and of the University of Kansas. He was in the bonding and rea! setate business from IS8 to INK when he wmoved to Omaha, going Into partnership with Philip Potter m the same business e Badward A, Smith, attorney-at-law, with | Atlanta physician. e e Speculat Futures. Philadeiphia Record Insurgent republicans take much comfort trom the letter of Mr. Roosevelt to Rep- resentative Hamilton Fish. The mighty hunier wants to see “Ham” as soon as he arrives in New York: from which it is as- sumed that Cannon and his cohorts of stand-patters will come in for a lambast- ing. Wasa't It rlsky, though, for Repre- oftices 1n the Neville Dlock, Is just 3. He was born here tn Omaha and greduated in law from the University of Towa, and has been practioing here for more than ten yoars, g e s sentative Fish 1o make the receipt of that lettor public? Greater men than he have been consigned to the Ananias club for less offense. apprajsers In 1906, the appraisers having been appolnted in 108. After a little more litigation to determine when the sale be- came effective, and what the earnings of the water company have been, the mat- ter will be settled, which ought to bé before Halley's comet gomes again. Beatrice Kxpress: Omaha, like most of the Nebraska towns, has come to the con- clusion that she was expecting too much of the fcensus this year. Dissatistied with the government enumeration, the Commer- cial club of that city had a private census taken, with the result that it was found there were several thousand less people cally all the other towns of the state lead to the conclusion that the census ten years ago was padded considerably. Battle of the Titans. Indlanapolis News, A battle of the Titans Is in prospect un- less the government “lays down.” On one side the combined railways of the country, representing the greatest mass of wealth ever unitéd (n a common cause, directed and controlled by the ablest captains of in- dustry and the most astute legal talent in the country. On the other, the government, which somehow always seems to have the hardest kind of time to make headway against the powerful interesta; perhaps for the reason that it seldom Is able to com- mand as able and devoted counsel as the interests; or to work with the directness and singleness of purpose that they dis- B o ‘ Expectath Chicago News. On the other hand, with the perfecting of the arts of railroad building and of rallroad running and with the large in- orease in the volume of traffic, one might reasonably expeet rate reductions. Follow-Up Systems. 1 remember a song that the College Glee club used tp sing, which went something lfke this: “I owe ten dollars to O'Grady, And you'd think he had & mortgage on my life; He duns me every day in the morning, And at night he sends his wife.” 0'Grady may not have been familiar with “follow-up systems,”” but he cer- tainly had somé of the elements of & good one. A mail order catalogue house figures on receiving orders from 25 to 60 per cent of their inquiries. Your school needs the same careful business man- agement as a mail order hbuse. When a mail order house receives an inquiry as the result of an advertisement they are not satisfied to send one letter or circular In reply and then stop. Un- less they receive the order the inquirer hears from them with as many as from six to thirty letters or circulars before they give him up as a possible buyer. It is not sufficient to send a letter and a catalogue and then stop if mo further reply is received. A series of six or eight letters should be carefully prepared, courteously, but insistently, putting forth the reasons why your goods should be bought Don't try to tell the whols story letter. A good fllow-up letter should never contain more than one page. Make one or two points in & letter. It should be written in good, plain Angio-Saxon, that the most simple mind can under- stand it. Don't talk above the heads of the average man or womat. The educated man will not misunderstand good terse English, but what you say should be plain to the uneducated man or woman as weil It is & good plan 10 have small olroulars, or booklets, for enclosures with letters, each strengthenifig your mala argument The first lecter bring no returns: the third may bring ho returns: the fifth may in one 0 Thanks. And then 1 saw you kiss the maid In the hall.”” “Great Scott! Here's $!"—Life. “Miss Gabble is & remarkable {1sm't she? “I should say. She's o Marathon talker. |She can cover three paragraphs and six- [teen sentences without taking breath."— Cleveland Plain Dealer, THE QUARREL. Roy Farrell Greene in Leslie's. She had begged and beseeched me change my position, To view the atfair in the same light that talker, to in Omaha than was counted on earlier in she the year. The gain over the 1900 census |Had done but I vowed under no such will be «mall. Similar results in’ practi-| Could I be Inveigled with her to agree Then she argued the question at issue with A eiabhasized ‘strongly her And emphasiz strongly T “darling” and_ “dears.” . But, seeing that none of these tactics would serve her, She used then a woman's perogative— tears. She had scolded me sharply, with sarcasm cut me, She'd flayed me with ifon's torturing tools, Ana vowed if her wish was respected they:d shut me In some close asylum for obstinate fools! But seeing that none of these things seemed to move me, And keenly discerning with only deaf eart I'd Msted her outburst, she sought to re- prove me By sobbing her heart out in copious tears And then—(what would you do? it sincerely! I pardoned her he Wi That been a brute, but that loving h dearly 1 oould not get mad at & thing she mi s For it's al ling, And it's easy to list an arraignment thaf sears, But show me & man who's so cold and un feeling, He'll not yield a point to & woman it tears! 1 ask it temper, and owned, t sy to turn from a plea that't up each inquiry. Suppose that after lowing up twenty Inqulries, in making one sale out of twenty as a re sult. This would put the cost for your sales on a profitable basis Don't use cheap stationery and circulars 1t you are not located In a large city, & 10 the nearest large city and go to the best printer-you can find. Pay a little more for good work and be proud of it The first problem in a mail order busi- ness—in the land or real estate business-- for schoels and in many other lines ever, I8 to get inquirles. Rut the inquiries will be of no value unless you are pre pared (o take care of them when you celve them. It is a ecomparatively simple matter to get Inquiries through a publica tien like The Bee, but it takes patient study and good business management to turn inquiries into orders. A man succeeds not because he adves tises his business, but hecause he lives ff; because he eats it, sieeps it, dreams It builds air casties about it Put your name to the front: (&) your own personality. This is a tremendous force in advertising. People like to know in- dividuals. They like to feel that they are being served by men: not simply getting their goods out of the hoppér of a tread- mill. And If people have any Kicklng to do —and the American people enjoy kicking— they prefer to kick individuals. It ts mighty unsatisfactory, for instance, to kick an express company of a raliroad or Brown, Smith & Co. One can't hit the bull's eye. Advertisements are written to appeal to live people and nothing can get into beart of humanity so easily an another heart § The man who never bullds air cast never bullds casties of any kind. ¥ Breathe the breath of life intafour ad- vertisements. It is safe 1o s&y that nine out of every ten advertisements which we see are as dead as Egyptian mummies They are beautifully decorated: twined around the with fine linen: draped and boxed for burial They have eves and Nose and mouth, but they neither see nor speak They don't even smell. Thelr faces are either made of puity or are chiseled out of beautiful marble. There is no throbbing Pulge If you have faith in your goods and the bring no returns; but the whole serfes of pudiic has faith in you the circuk om- six. taken together, may do the work plete The advertisement is af the What wiil this cost? Possibly 3 cents in ransmitter (hrough which your postage and printed matter for following operates. u succee € . A