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DAILY BEE. THE OMAHA JEE. FOUNDED BY VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. DWARD ROSEWATER Entered at Omaha postoffice as seoond- class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Daily Bee (including Sunday) per week Daily Bee (without Sunday), per week....lve | Dally Bes (without sunday), one year Daily Bee and Sunday, one year..... DELIVERED BY CARRIER Evening Bee (without Sunday), per week..b¢ Evening Bee (with Sunday), per week....1v¢ Bunday lsee, one year . = saturday Bee, one ye: Address all complalnt delivery to City Circul OFFICES. LW 160 rreguiaritles in lon Department. Omaha—The Bee Building. But Colonel Roosevelt has insisted King Victor Emmanuel and Queen| or perhaps they have simply ex-|this ‘appeal: south Omana—1wenty-fourth and N. om- | Hele: roved to Italy and the world 0 “When General Crook was hemmed In Sonurs - 15 Sebit mirest. from the outset that no partisan dem: na p y changed luck with the grocers’ and By the Bloux on (N REUA. reservation pald on certificates running for twelve THE BEE: No Place for Partisanship. Representative Carey of Wisconsin could scarcely have thought up a more embarrassing situation for a friend than that involved in his proposal that the insurgents in congress go in a body to greet former President Roosevelt as their leader on his return to New York. It Is encouraging to note the general disapprobation accorded this plan. The insurgents themselves, even if they had the right to an exelusive claim on the former president, could not embarra him ‘more than by carrying out the Carey program. federation, is also the only represented in the cabinet What more complete victory could Oom Paul Kruger have achleved? Aad this rearing of an apparently crushed people into a great vitalized govern- ment is not only a most remarkable example of constructive statesmanship, i but it stands as an everlasting monu- | ment to the British sense of justice and humanity and will always reflect an overshadowing honor upon the name of Great Britain. A Queen, a Woman and a Mother, OMAHA, THURSDAY, JUN forgets to pull enough mileage, and the failure of the passenger to put it back. It's a poor rule that won't work both wayi | Omaha retail grocers have agroed among themselves to close down for a half holiday every Thursday during| the summer months. Let mere man take warning and prepare for a cold- victual handout twice a week Instead of only once a week as heretofore. —_—— Those High school cadets evidently forgot to square up with the weather man before getting into the game. E 9, Washington Life The Imsugural Orowd, What Will Cost, Years of Metired Presi- dents, and & Budding Statesman. Senator Dixon of Montana has the unique distinction of upsetting an adverse-com- mittee report by a combination of eloquence and hustle. The question was a grant of pensions to two Crow Indlans who fought with general Crook In the Rosebud fight thirty-four years ago and were wounded. When petitions for pensions came up in the senate and were in danger of defeat, Senator Dixon came to the rescue with The report made to the comptroller under date of March 29, 1910, shows that this bank has Time Certificates of Deposit $2,034,278.61 3% % Interest Lincoln—=81s Rittle Building. onstration be inflicted upon him; that|on the occasion of the Messina havoe butchers' pienie. eral Robert K. Lee to the effect that Grant|dispute as to whether the Roosevel y{s e ¢ y pe e oosevelt policy | “‘You say your boy Josh is a dreamer. 42,810 20. distinguished citizens and former |, ...co.o 1 must go. It is my place as & el was without a superior in all history as a |is being carried out would seem from this|8sald the literary lady. “Does he write 'l :’l chief executives, who has been absent |woman ‘and a mother. How people have eaten bread made | commander of armies. to be at an end. "‘f:fi;"v-°',.:;,’{:,;“";f',:;;,,'., MO - "ta 2. 43,740 | MOTE than a year, receiving from for- Those were eloquent words of Queen of bleached flour all these years and| NO sooner had the newspapers pr.m(od The late Havemeyer is being unfairly don’t write anything. But he jes' natch- N elgn nations and rulers the most|Helena. They will burn their way |, .4 g simply astounding in face of the story, reports the Washington Times, | credited with deeds that were dark and ’vlv" h;rhm- 2. e, P il 9 o'clock j 26.. auspicious demonstrations ever ac-|deep into the hearts of monarchies and |y Lovolations scientists are making “I:’;"."u"l':‘. ‘:;'I‘l:*:’:"“:lit‘lfl‘fi‘“;“l “u'"ll BCOTe | tricks that were not vain, or he escaped | ' rinston Star. o6 ey didn t belleve Lee ever|the jurisdiction of the court just in time ‘But those “extremely wiolent women :: corded an American. republics alike and exalt the crown and | ;3. Kansas City trial. sald it They said it did not sound like| 5 o' b eUOR OF O cour J\»u n ;n O R AR S g ., ennoble the scepter. They will serve Lee, und thatif the greatconfederate had S i liwysr ADPRIIUSEN N SR Chicago—148 Marquette sullding. " ew York—Rooms 110l-11z No. 34 West Thirty-third Street. Street, Ni W. to the whole country. enough to leave their throne and min- The election of John A. Dix as chair-|two Indians. Old Bull Snake's leg was w“hm“x""n:i—(:kw;s:g‘j::&‘uu.r"' " 7"| has made for himselr in the hearts of | ister to their afiction—to share their | man of the New York state ddmocratic | shatered in the fight by a musket ball. he is above factionalism and belongs The place hel that they love their people genuinely —e— he sent couriers to the Crows for help. They sent 120 of their young men, and these months. o 0ld Coyote' 3 Communications relating (o news and |the American people is as a citizen of | sorrows if meed be. No danger dared|party instead of the Honorable ‘.F,':’-:}‘““:l;.;:’:;"\‘_’::r:"‘l:‘:"":"‘l o e > 7y a J | “ " el b r 5%'.1’;‘."3.;“:#.'&..::":‘I-".'Eumfm the United States, jealously workihg|their devotion, no peril vainly chal-|“Fingy” Connors leaves the latter in| g agged over the country without pension, lrst Natlondl REMITTANCES. to advance the common good of lh(‘i'fllx(‘d their sympathy and not a sub-|a dickens of a fix politically. | without reward of any kind from the gov- Remit by draft, express or Dul‘l_ll order payable to The Bee Publishing Company, Only 2-cent stamps received in pavment of country at large. It just so happens that a democrat | ject was beneath their solicitude, Now in the last catastrophe in southern New comes a New York erudite with ernment. Both of them are very old men at this time, and I do think $20 a month Bank of Omaha | mail accounts. Personai checks, except off 3 3 evelt, | Under these circumstances is certainly & ' Orhaba or aastarn exchange, not accopted. |18 at the head of the reception to be |italy royalty is again touched for its|this assault upon Colonel Roosevelt,) o, yiCol "y IMHIEC L cclemiment e g T accorded to Colonel Roosevelt and the | people and the world is given a spec- | “Homo sum; humani nibil & me|(;, roger 1o these two old men who were STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. State bt Nebraska, Douglas County, 58 'he Daily, Mmuii und L printed during the was as follow: complete copie Evening and &ln“m month of May, committees on arrangement and detail partisan ‘allgnment. Certainly any other course would be impossible since Not Through with Expositions. tacle of heroic love such as it has sel- expecting to go alone, but he is denied that distinction by hig noble queen. weep and die. In the south Italians suffer; alienum puto.” Just wait; he will take It is to be noted th Reformer Elmer Thomas is fronting bravely for instead of going himself. shot in battle.” Senator Borah of Idaho the other day made a speech before the Americus club Ex-Senator Spooner says he never claimed to be a statesman, thus explaining to defend a colored prisoner charged with **'The rst re. | care of that case, all fight. Enough was said. The bill passed the il u«l.:: uinrsggmy'xm::rsho“,um are made up without the l\?molasl dom beheld. The king, at the fi “ankte in #pite"ob tire committes report. PERSONAL NOTES. TAPS ON THE FUNNYBONE. | that the actual number of full and [thought or suggestion of political or| port, rushes to the scene of suffering b o “Why don't vou perfect a melon with a handle, 8o that people could carry it con- veniently?" 630 unconscious! y oor e . W 41,300 :: 43, this 18 to be the home-coming greeting | As my presence fs necessary at all fosti- ZI: o.l: :‘Lib({:e“m::lc::v;:h]g::n::: M it Wivaiee dl, cant BUARY \men(nlz:::mny why people accorded him gh-“h:r‘fi"cl\?nmuf ‘3\:.":1 niT‘:‘m!n.1h:naw::‘:;: -48,450 N of the American people to one of their| a!% 1t must not lack where the people y 88 the course of this address he quoted Gen-| “Bully!" exclaims President Taft. The| ¢™ With whe —Kansas City Journal, - S - 'hat's an idea of the new superintend- I 29.. to convince a skeptic world that royal| mhe man who threw a can of beans ""“;;':r;‘:‘ K:“;s‘:“:""l""““‘"u:":"-“l‘ “i";'l" "‘l’ murder secured acquittal, but by so elo- 8" y loi In o fin out. b et 1 :\; While we have had & vast run of ex |robes and diadems cannot hide a great| ¢ the German crown prince is on a|gn (ne whole,"the ,:m,‘,,."_" discredited | 2Nt ® #peech that people wonder whether | «yes: he had the: straitjackets made up 110e 01,306,810 positions in this country in the last seventeen years, we are evidently net heart nor dull the steel of human sym- pathy. More than all, they will en- par with the St. Louis woman who once tosded a pancake at an American pres- the senator's authority for the quotation. It has now developed, though, that old or not the accused was guilty. Miss Melva Beatrice Wilson of New York in the peek-a-boo st o." —Puck, “I wonder where young Riffles got his f .| has been commissioner to do the sculptured |ro pne r: 1, union idiers re d l thi o remarkable energy and endurance in his Returned cozies .. 9,988 | through with them yet. In 1893, one |throne Ithn intangible instinct of & qent's wife. "‘; -:‘:‘n l:‘r:‘;L !xo :;;\I::; \uhlnllie: :u‘.:l TRM fot dbe’ Wl Oxthaite oktnedrgl i IR e e ey s whi === year behind schedule time, the World's | mother’s love, to which the world has - 3 Y St. Louls. The frieze will represent four-|Of AR athlete.” Net total +044:1,316,226 - h i id tribute; that intrepid attri SR oa dred of them have written (o Senator e life of C! “No, but his mother was always the first Dally aver i .. anjges | falr was held at Chicago, then came|ever pa ; P An Unrestrained Critie. Borah to tell him what they think about|t®¢ scenes in the life of Christ in @' marked-down bargain sale counter GEORGE B. TZSCHUCK, the wonderful Transmississippi exposi |bute of thedivine in the human that Chicago Record-Herald it. They say that Senator Borah just con-| Chicago's oldest resident in the senes Crush.’—Baltimore American. Treasurir, Subscribed in my presence and sworn his 3ist day of May, 1910 gwidie: s M. P. WALKBER, Notary Public. tion at Omaha in 1898, following which Buffalo held its Pan-American and St. Louls its World's fair, In the inspires real heroism and impels per- sonal eacrifice™where there is human pain and the opportunity of alleviat- Chancellor Day thinks too many men are keeping automobiles instead of sup- porting wives. The chancellor evidently hiis no stock in any of the automobile celved that fdea himself in an effort to smooth over the rumpus which Senator Heyburn, also of Idaho, stirred up over the position of Lee's statue in Statuary that no other person has lived go long in Chicago, is Fernando Jones, who reachod his 90th birthday last week. When Mr. Jones settled In Chicago, back in 183, the Macduff was laying on lustily. ©1 don’t allow any man to swear at me," he exclaimed. For at that time there had been no ecourt decision to the effect that the word used meantime San Francisco had gone|ing it. factories. hall. One or two of the letter writers re-|Nei8hboring tribe of savages taught him Macbeth was not profane.—Chicago o P T Y T through with its Mid-winter fair and| Italians everywhere should hail S oo o g called that Senators Borah and Heyburn :’:; u:‘:‘:“\’“::-“ ‘:lf(:\l':::" ;‘(l'ln il"'fl:l “:;1 ubscr! ¥ Mention ern rted ways on the Lee Issue. 00C h en it had only “Have yi 2-year- S ng an ueen with adorin, part ¥ 3 Have you heard that 12-year-old plano porarily should have The Beo |Jamestown later had its celebration, |their king and aq 8 Cleveland Plain Dealer, Now the westerner has come to the' con- | Phabitants—the difference in municipal | prodigy Who is oreating such a sensation? d to them. will be Some of the experiences of the past|pride. Italy is a better, a stronger na-| y¢ 410 chairman of that proposed inter- population between then and “As for Omaha and the tributary have been such as to suggest the wis- dom of holding these national and in- ternational gatherings at greater inter- vals, but the people of several large tion because of their rule and example. In Virtuous Lincoln. Occasionally we get an inkling from national court of arbitration is to be Theodore Roosevelt, it will scarcely be necessary to indulge in any speculation re- garding the names of the other members. clusion that when civil war subjects are being even calmly discussed that it is im- possible to please any of the people any of the time. now being some over 2,495,000, Experts on hoodoos and spooky things are at liberty to explain why Saturday has been a’fatal day to the rulers of England. “'Yes, I heard him in Berlin thirteen years ago."'—Cleveland Leader. THE ROAD TO RENO. Ellis 0. Jones in Judge. The appointment of Representative Gor-| William TII died on Saturday, March 8| 1 remeimber when I met her country, The Omaha Bee has full |American cities do not appear to have|unexpected sources of What is happen- Se ;rlll lrclx‘c;’l;lnn;lflo(ed. don Russell, democrat, of Texas to be fed. | 1702 Queen Anne on Saturday, August 1, T yks. I the 1ong aeo. ! i ringtiel can. » " 4 S 3 . . swing. The Bee is remarkably good shared in that bellef. At any rate, we|ing in virtuous Lincoln, where every: r're-memp'r:(‘r. epublican. deral justice ends a unique contest for this | 714 George II on Saturday, January 2, It was on the road to Reno, newspaper and universally re2d.”— Joseph Edgar Chamberlain, staff cor- have three proposed expositions of world-wide interest coming up. New York wants to lead off with a world's thing is dry. This time the moving picture is thrown upon the canvas by atement “that of the great men who founded this tountry, who defied the power of England and spread high office. Judge Russell a few weeks ago went to the White House and proposed the 1520, and George 1V on Saturday, June 26, 1830, George I just missed Saturday by two hours, dying at 2 a. m. on Sunday and the Somewhere west of Kokomo. It was In the gladsome springtime, And the tulips were aglow. a large display advertisement in a Lin- | the seeds of revolution and independence|Name of Henry Marsh, a distinguished | oo "ho o pao 'y i 1 It was in the gladsome epringtime, ; i R Y 3 g Edward breathed his last just r KL i respondent of the New York Evening |¢air 1n 1913, Baltimore proposes an|coln paper announcing a sale of :n:: .;m:nr’:mo;n:: r;nsnl:::uns“ol civil e:’u,. h::"?;.:ol h:;nlsmxe:idm:: x;t:zf:;:fi! \::r a quarter of an hour befors midnight, Fri- 1 wallgthe eori ng of Icnul‘!:mnxs;o 3 i, g " | erty In [ v, nearly all were edu- 2 2 y Sh o . ‘ Mail, historie exposition In 1914 to com-|“police damaged goods” by the prin-| Sty In this country, mearly wll were edu | | 0 T 00 e cause of nis triend, |48Y DIEht, May 6. It was'on the ToT Lo, Rono, eSS memorate the turning back of the Brit- | cipal druggist in the town. The ad-|{ e, barring George Washington, Ben.|the president turned around in his chair ana ELEVATI THE STAGE. Where the alimonies grow. | Do we draw any sdmmer this year|igh at North Point, which is regarded | vertisement reads: Jamin KFranklin, Robert Morrls and sev-|%aid: % “Tarry for & while,” I murmured, at all? a8 the pivotal event in the War of 1§12 Sale commences at 4:15 p. m. sharp, to- | eral others whose services could not be| “All that is very good, Russell/but It 18 | ypentrical Boomers Break Into the ? Pleasure in every form has its serl- ous side, even joy riding. -Chprl A. Towne says he fears war At any r:l:, Eng-l;nd i8 not so mad and the defense of that city against the subsequent naval attack which in- spired the writing of ‘“The Star Span- gled Banner,” while San F‘rnnogco and New Orleans are contesting Tor the in 1916. 8o there are three great fairs in al- day, s0 as to commemorate the event which occurred just one week ago When our store was entered, doors locked, busi- ness suspended, the proprietor arrested and store taken in charge by the honorable Excise board chrough their gallant Chief was ordereg by Capfain McGuire to re- main at his office desk while he and his ignored. Millionaire Smugglers, Baltimore American. The crop of smugglers that Uncle Sam is having of laté are: not of the class the duty, some in the millionaire class and of a social position which would too late. I have already made up my mind to appoint you to this position.” “But, Mr. President, I cannot allow you to consider me. As long as Mr. Marsh wants the appointment, I am for him. I cannot allow you to regard me as his op- the president. Friends of Judge Russell heard of the Ranks of High Finance. New York Evening Post. In an age of glant finance, our theatri- cal managers loom up splendid as the loftiest Titans of them all. The air of late has been thick with the tens of mil- been flinging at each other's heade. The “For I'll soon be back, you know. Walt_until I've burst my bondage," Thus 1 whispered soft and low. But she shook her wavy tresses, As she gayly answered no. It was on the Road to Reno, Where the merry widows grow, Where the widowers ™ Who remain in statu quo, i e oges | | | with Japan. What Is he afraid of? Malone, Officers McGuire and sevpral po-|Who need to save imoney. On the con-|Ponent,” replied Mr. Russell. lions of dollars which the warring ele- Softly come and softly” go— fall prize of holding a Panama eXposition ||icemen and plainclothes men. Riggs | trary, they are peoplo well able to afford| “Well, we will think it over,” concluded | ments fn the amusement business have| O ‘WniCidnunknown to husbands 1 | announcement of a $100,000,000 hippodrome | at the colonel that it has begun to cut most a8 many years in slght. Admit.| exDeTt €ops would complete & search by | SUEest both full appreciation nd moral | conversation, and wind of it Kot to Mr.| organization. which Ja to turm. tha mase SHORT STORIES, oft the doctors’ degrees Sine M1 tfie’ wirtuse of.tha American | Y/TlUe Of @ search warragt sworn out by understanding of their act—in short, the|Marsh. The latter immediately withdrew | pall parks’ In all the large citles into v Wonder if old John L. would allow anybody to call him a forier boxer instead of an ex-prize fighter? spirit of boost and the resources of the American pocketbook, which seems to be especially plethoric for such occa- slons, ag well as indulgent, there is Chiet Malone (an officer “pot bonded or responsible) to seize and take all patent medicine, spirituous, malt or vinous liquors which dontained 18 per cent or more alcohol. of very class of all others from whom exam- ples of consclence and patriotism are naturally expected. LITERARY GRUBSTAKE WANTED from the contest and yesterday's-appoint- ment was the resuit, Many of the women tourists who would visit the White House are always disap- amusement parks by night, fs only the latest item from the scene of epic war. A syndicate which is a trust rushes to bat- tle, flourishing chains of theaters and opera houses, and is met by a syndicate T'll tell you as short a story As mortal e'er could pe There was once & man who fell—in love— But he soon got up again. I know another story, A man who fell or tumbled— People of Lincoln, imagine if you will the — pointed whem not permitted to roam over|which is not a trust, waving contracts| 88 after many a timely hint So far as we have heard all the|still the same old question, which in|spectacie, Here they were: Results of Prot. Wallace's Reaearches | the private residence of the president, [for a hundred new fheaters and opers|Hs didmt sty lone where b Bcied hir sweet girl graduates of Bryn Mawr are | our soberest mood must strike us with| Mr. Policeman to Mr. Plainclothes Man— in London. even to the innermost closet. They want| houses. Here an intrenched vaudeville| For I've heard it seid since then 2 “regulars’’—mnot one insurgent. That was a cheap bluff the railroads made, but the president called it just as If it had been a strong hand. force enough to demand attention, of overdoing a good thing or playing the game too fast. Briton and Boer United. What's this? Plainclothes Man—Let me smell stells llke Vini-Garlic—but it ““Hexamethijlenamine-Tetremine." taste it! Policeman—Not me. I just had an ex- perience. it? It reads— You A jug of concentrated ammonla Chicago Tribune. Spurred on by the discovery of ,Prof. Wallace of the University of Nebraska of hitherto unknown documents relating to Shakespeare's life in London, Parliament has ordered a report from the record office of the British government which s intended to know how house is kept In the execu- tive mansion, and they imagine that this is their right as American citizens. They are permitted to see the east room and the east wing, together with its basement rooms and its exhibition of old White House china, but it requires a card to see manager fires round after round of cir- cults and bookinge, and there a producing manager volleys forth dozens upon dozens of the world’s greatest stars and play- wrights. It s all cataclysmic, and the innocent playgoer can only wonder that his humble dollar should be worth all TEat he found the only girl in the w And she pulled him up again, T "o And here's another story, I'm eager to relate— A man went to see his flances And he was told to walt; He sat him down upon a chair, Where pins were put—and then— W oric figures sta - ; h Two historic figures stand out con-|, L0 TR o K L of business. But you're | tO 80rt out and classify the tons of docu- { l i Hou-ecle:nlnl at Oyster Bay is just getting under full headway and it has been in progress for a month, too, —_— Out in Cs ~, cessive heat. Heat! that? The closer the Water board gets to “immediate and compulsory” purchase of the water works the less eager it seems to be for it. 1f, as that Boston sclentist insists, we will all be crazy in 265 years, it will not be worth while bothering about a safe and sane Fourth. The mikado's brother, who is visit ing in this country, is sald to be the handsomest man in Japan. ought to see his picture. Council Bluffs may be the back door to Omaha as viewed by Senator Cum- insists on keeping its place on the politica) map. mins, but nevertheless it The mikado's brother and his wife le In New York the other day, which must have glven some new ideas about the open attended a bargain counter door. “Where Mr. Bryan made his mistake was not to stop after his first defeat, ventures. a. correspondent. if he had? e e Have you had your bill for ecity taxes this year? And did you see the formed separate republics 47« now hump? 'The hump is part of the merged into the strong commonvealth, | bunco game which our Water board has been playing. it Congressman Hull {8 retired from public life und vacates his place as chajrman of the house comittee on military affairs Fort Omaha and Fort Crook may hope to get in again on the same level with Fort Des Moines. Among other 'Euhflu“ of the office which retary governor's Junkin forgot to figure in the nu. merous free feeds and dollar dinners all over the state which the chief ex- scutive is permitted to down without soutributing to the gate receipts. ll?ornll the raisin crop has been damaged 10 per cent by the ex- Did you get And you Where would his financial standing have been spicuously in the consummation of the new nation in the Transvaal—William E. Gladstone and Oom Paul Kruger— and It is pre-eminently fitting that the son of the former should be the first governor-general of the South African Commonwealth and the commanding officer of the latter's army its prime minister. For.next to the military tri- umph of the Boers under Oom Paul the largest influence leading to the na- tional independence of these sturdy Dutch was the magnanimous treatment accorded them by England In their final defeat as typified in the whole at- titude and conduct of Mr. Gladstone. It s a mistake to say that the Boers have accomplished in peace what they could not in war. What if they had not revolted In 1899? What if they had not vanquished the British in the first war and inflicted terrible penalty |upon them in the second? President Kruger’s fight was not in vain, because the equanimity with which Mr. Glad-| stone recelved the news of the British defeat that enabled the establishment of the Transvaal republic was proof | enough of England's respect of Boer| prowess and the ultimate outcome ef- faced from the British mind forever any doubt of the Boers' ability to gov- ern themselves. They had shown in war what they could, do In peace. It is, indeed, more than probable that the | estrangement between these countries | for one hundred yedrs would have prolonged indefinitely but for t resort to arms. | All the South African stal7s that| peen | final with the Boers practically in yreme control. True, Viscount Gladstone oc- cupies the position ot. governor-gen- eral, but Louis Botha, the man who only eight years ago surrendered h! sword and signed the terms of submis- sion at Pretoria acknowledging the Briton as the Boer’s conqueror, is the! prime minister and, at the instance of Mr. Gladstone himself, has formed the cabinet, And this cabinet is composed entirely of Bfer leaders, so that Mr. -| Gladstone’s position is Jittle more thar nominal, while Botha is the real head of the new government. Still more sig- nificant is it that Natal, the only dis- jcampatgn. right, It's alcohol, 18 per cent. Take it along. 7 For four hours or more, whilst our store was locked and customers clamoring to get in and out to get thelr prescriptions and medicines, and during the busiest part of day, & loss of over $160 in actual sales, we were subjected to this outrageous tre ment In the city of Lincoln, state of N braska, which boasts of her educational institutions and of being Bryan. Can' you vicious? Why don't they pull all the drug stores If It's a crime to have medio'nal liguors on hand? From good authority it's remarked that in the last year certain ex-saloon men have been favored and been permitted to sell, in fact, job out liquors, and without a license or permit. Why this partiality? Does not Jim" Malone board know this? and the Exclse I never have been convicted of selling any liguors fllegally. I am a law-abiding citizen and I only ask for falr treatment. If any rank outsider, and particu- larly if any intruder from Omaha, had tie attentiun otherwise, quns by accident, “‘the home of Brya the varlous political take orders from th:m sound up their own candidat of a platform they want to run on, more than the exact milea senger is to travel. tinctive British member of the new ¥ the home of imagine anything more And now, in conclusion, in all these raids given yublicity to such a tale he would, of course, be denounced in un- measured terms. But inasmuch as the above advertisement is accepted and printed at regular rates by the most virtuous newspaper of the virtu- ous town which bars from its columns everything of suspicious veracity, we feel fully warranted in giving it full faith and confidence and calling it to of people who might be in danger of going astray while visiting The threats of aiti-Saloon league spokesmen as to whai they will do if parties do not very much like the talk put up by Mr. Gom- | pers for his American Federation of Labor just before the last presidential Tho prohibitionists have & politica) party of their own and there is nothing to stop them from putting on any kind The State Rallway commission inti- mates that it may start proceedings to make an example of some railroad on which a conductor carelessly pulls the pas- It says nothing about the conductor who carelessly | ,ng sdmitted to the bar since 1% ments, hundreds of years old, which lie in the archives of that department. This is an undertaking which, under Engllsh methods, will undoubtedly be well done and with great deliberation. ‘It will re- quire many years, infinite research, and a large fortune to determine what these records are which are now piled pell mell in the vaults and to discover what rela- tion they bear, If any, to English history or to any of its great characters. That /s remained for an unknown Ameri- can scholar to reveal to the world the un- discovered chapter in Shakespeare's life was & matter of pride to the former's countrymen, as it was of some humiliation to those of the latter. It is understood by Mr. Wallace's friends in America that he is In position to make further discoveries of a still more important nature it he can find the means to remain in London an- other year and pursue fils researches. His university s doing what it can, but it s not an endowed Institution and cannot spare funds which are imtended for the more practical courses of popular educa- tion. It would be greatly to the credit of American scholarship it what Mr. Wallace has already done could be supplemented | by still further discoverles and if the funds for this purose could come from those having the honor of our scholarship at heart. Does this not appeal to Mr. Car- negie? Our Birthday Book Jura 9, 1910, Charles J. Bonaparte, attorney Beneral under President Roosevelt, was born June 9, 1851, at Baltimore. By collateral rel tionship he 18 of the family of the great Napoleon, and is now again practicing law in Baltimore. James Stillman, the blg New York banker at the head of the National City bank, is just 80 years old today. He was born in Brownsville, Tex., and is on the boards of so many corporations that he can hardly keep track of them. Eugene Hale, United States senator from Maine, was born June §, 186, at Turner In that state. He is one of the oldest members of the senate, and has just announced his forthcoming retire- ment at the close of his present term next March. George C. Junkin, secretary of state for Nebraska, is celebrating his fifey ond birthdsy. He was born in Salina; 1a. and located on & farm in Gosper county which he represented in the legis- lature before being elected to his present office. Gerald M. Drew, lawyer, officing in the Board of Trade building, was born June 9, 1875, at Pattsmouth, and Is a graduate of the University of Nebraska law depart- ment. He has been in Omaha since 136, sec- 1 the other rooms of the lower floor of the White House, and then one is only per- mitted to peep into the rooms, for the doors are barred by velvet cords. But the women would like to go up- stairs to look at the bedrooms and so on. | And they use thelr tongues when dlsap- pointed. “I have always supposed that this was a fres country,” they often retort when politely refused. But it they cannot get inside they will stand gazing Into the windows, and the least detall visible interests them. ‘There now!" remarked a woman the other day, “I at all events, have seen a maid ironing." Speaker Cannon went over into the sen- ate the other day when LaFollette was making a speech on the railroad bill Cannon engaged Senator Cullom in an animated conversation. LaFollette wis annoyed. (Except when he is upon the| chautauqua circuit he's one of the gost easily annoyed persons that we know ahout). And so LaFollette turned toward Cdnnon with an ugly look. Said he: “As soon as the conversation nearby ceases 1 shall continue. What I have to say on this important matter is for the| benefit of the senators.’ “The man whose health does not permit of strenuous office labor, the man of mod- erate income with bookish taste, the re- tired capitalist, the superanuated bank president, all have a hard time in obtain- ing sufficient hum panionship,” com- ments the New York Post, “This Is par- ticularly true of retired army and navy officers. A fixed day, their 64th birthday, tinds them promptly shelved. They give up their regiments or the command of de- partments or of fleets at the stroke of noon | on the fatal anniversary. They wander homeward to the towns they came from only to find that after the first week's| {ssue of the Dally Watchword recounting their galliant services on land and sea their friends can hardly conceal their jm- patience if these veterans appear a second time 'at thelr offices. Hence It Is that for the retiring officer Washington Is a Mecca. He cannot walk down Connecticut avenue without meeting a score of men he knew in the service. Colonel, general| and admiral—one of these titles he ap- piles to almost every nfan he meets. The Army and Navy club or the Metropolitan always have thelr occupants. Somebody @ to ask the veteran how he swam ashore In that gale at Samba or charged down the road n the Wilderness the time poor Harry Smith got that bullet brain. The human touch that whole world kin is there. Lively elo . Pittsburg Dispatch The government seems to have a lively suspicion that railroads cannot boost thefr ratss simultaneously without & common undertanding about which the anti-trust in his| makes the Well it ain’t on record what he sald— these furious alarums and excursions, But Ho 8005 poban aeain i Hozsaa-, The Parallel Betwee! Avertisin In some of the previous talks com- parisons have been made Dbetween teaching and advertising. These com- parsions have not been used merely for the sake of simile, but bgeause there are principles which are com- mon to both advertising and teaching. Advertising is a broad term. A great deal of advertising 1is merely published for the sake of giving infor- mation and not with any definite idea of creating a favorable attitude in the public mind. The mere announce- ment that a school is to open‘on a cer- Teaching and its value to those who are already in- tending to attend a school or college, but it stops at this point. Ip the same | way a person may obtain information trom books on any subject, but the teacher would not encourage this as the best method of developing the mind or securing an education. The successful method adopted by the teacher as evalved by some of the world’s greatest thinkers is based on the fact that our memory retains those things which are repeated again and again. Such things as the multiplica- tion tablé and spelling become 8o firmly fixed in the mind as to be al- most instinctive. Advertising, to be successful, must accept this same psychological fact as its pasis. Let us consider, for example, how one is taught to speak German. Suppose you devote two hours, each day for a year, to this study, you would unquestionably ac- quire some knowledge of the language; but, it you merely devote an hour or two & week, for the same period, little would be accomplished; cr if you devote two hours each day, for three or four monthe, then stop three or four months, begin again for similar period and diseontinue your study again, your mind would retain com- paratively little, by following such a plan Follow the latter plan in advertising and the public will know little about your school. Follow the former plan and. at the end of the year, they will have a fair knowl- edge of what you offer. Suppose you kcep up studying German, two hours each day, for a period of three years. At the end of act may have something to say. that time you will have acquired such & Talks for péople who sell things tain day glves informafion which has . knowledge of the language, that it will be really a part of yourself. Keep up an ad- vertising campalgn, persistently, for three vears, ‘and the knowledge of your institu- tlon will be as much a part of the mental make-up of the regular readers of the newspaper, in which you advertise, as the German language would be of your own, after consistent study. If you continue to devote some time, each day, year after year, to speaking, or reading German, you will retain what you have acquired and Atrengthen your ability as a German stu- dent, . Keep up your advertising, vear after year, and you will gain the same tve effect oughly well 3 cumula- Your institution will be thor- Known; it wil Suppose a student does study German each day for a year. Does he know it all? CAn he stop; No; he has only begun. Sup- Ppose the advertiser advertises, daily for year. He may accomplish little, the few months, but at the end of the year he sech fair results. Can he stop? No: he has hardly begun. It may take a German stu- dent several years to really i language and it may rake tiser, tion a tirst master the you, as an adver- Just as long to make your instity thoroughly well known. Suppose the student stops his practice in speaking and reading German. Gradu ally he will lose the knowledge that he has acquired, while by devoting some time each day, he could have retained his knowledge, Let an advertiser stop advertisleg and It is surprising how soon the public loses sight of him, There 18 both an art of teaching and o science underlying |t There Is an art of adve'tis'ng and 2 sclence underlying it Both, to be successful, must influence the human mind. Much can be accomplishea teaching, by appealing to the emotiona side of the student, It is lkewise true, th In advertising, it Is possible to play up: the feélings of the In both, ho ever, It is necessary to take Into conside tion how knowledge Is acquired. Thing which are done over and over again, fina become, apparently, automatic. In acqu Ing an education, the student has the same things presented to him, time and agaln first In one way and then in another. The advertlser must present In a varlety of ways, but must depend upon ex. ly the same meihod. The most important thing to be reader his case remem bered, in order to make & success of ad- vertising, is that it takes time and con- stant repetition to secure results of real value, No lasting good can be accomplished In either teaching or advertising, in any other way. Frequent repetition, egimduy over a considerable Ume, s absd] R necessary, Pl )}