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ITHE OMAHA DAILY BEE FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER i VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR i HE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, PROPRIETOR. . Entered at Omaha postoffice as second-class matter, TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. By Carrier month By Mail per vnr.. % ange vess_or irregularity in do u Onnhn Bee, Clnnluun Department. J 9" REMITTANCE. : by draft, expres or postal order. Only 2-cent stampe 3 ta. Pernonal checks, 1 E:"' e and’easters. exchinge, not sccepted. OFFICES. The Bee Building. Dincoin—t36 ‘Little B fding ul n 8 le's Gas Building, g. nlfilo:?lo.l. 86 Fifth avenue. "mu—uu New Bank of Commerce. ‘ashington—726 Fourteenth street, N. W. CORRESPO 'DENCE. P ~A&-¢he'--nugl:nu ml to IW‘I".UI JULY CIRCULATION. i 57,569 Dnly—Sunduy 52,3&2 -uth of hlr. ' TR core e, 5 Rl my presence and sworn hule e B85 ASSUSBERT HUNTER, Notary Publie. Subscribers lea: the city temporaril should have 'I'l:';:o mailed to them. 2" dress will be changed as ofln as requested. W TR o --rrnvmo'»n 5:. h t& | Omaha is glad to meet the master butchers, {M hopes they'll enjoy their stay here, : " " The backbone of summer lu«‘;’l another slight 3 fracture without provoking undue sympathy. © _Even one day of decent temperature is grate- x ful relief after what we have been putting up with. Measured by war territory absorbed in the . lmn offensive, the bear outpoints the lion in . reach of claws. So far as investigation goes no connection is " shown between the hot wave and the home team's h for the pennant, by fl 'alking with the governor over the telephone t to fully recompense the boys for a summer nt along the Rio Grande. 3 ——— Fiction writers ought to find much of inspira- in that chauffeur's story. Truth has generally any of man's inventions, S— Announcement of the net gains of $190,000,000 American railroads during the last fiscal year proceedings for increased rates in the joker class, present democratic congress will appro- more money, by at least $500,000,000, than former congress. And it came into power on of economy, Returning vacationists bring additional proof was not the only hot place on the map lately. Other cities have ‘had their full share of tion from the weatherman, qiut’oaolfic\ofl-hubfldnhwn one of expediency or necessity as it is of nd-uu. Both sides of the river want it, will soon find out how to get it, y —— ‘France murmurs “Me, t00,” to the British trade . Now if Americans reciprocate by cut- flMMhflu,hnmvfllM the proportion scream. l 5 Emm— WMlc the authorities are debating whether Florence bank job was the work of an ama- a professional, one fact is beyond dispute. holdup got the money and made the getaway, Sm—— While the government is in the market for m washed islands, it should not overlook to annex Bermuda to its Weather depart- The “Bermuda high sorely needs herolc t and radical regulation. Professional ¢thids. and morals alike forbid doctors from unseemly haste in render- first aid to the fractured spine of summer. e reserve stock of recuperative power shown weeks past needs no assistance to withstand Mtthm ;hock Crowds at the municipal bathing beaches ought ill the park commissioner with an ambition to them big enough and numerous enough to odate all. Omaha has plenty of water for to swim in, and it should be treated of the city's best assets. i —— ‘Visitors to Omaha continually express admira- for the many new buildings going up in the own section, but they miss the most in- part of it when they fail to get into the and see how the city is spreading itself hills. The new homes that are being quite as important from every point of are the magnificent business palaces. ST — contrast between the past and present. s of cowboy horsemanship cavorting with- ring of automobiles visions the narrowing nds of pioneer memories, and the mighty span the cayuse of yesterday to the gas wagon " today. Whatever be the reflections of fron- en and women, the cushions of their limou- no doubt absorb the shock. ; SpE—— Pnoneer‘ The democratic state con- pwl‘d to have been a “very harmo- s W& and incidentally it may be men- of the Bryans were In attendance. : It is reported that m will ot be ordered homflrom the south boundary until after election. Won- plhiu cuts in the war movements jews: That "indepndut" news- o Daily Star, is crutly mlml 3&%‘3."'15-& g ot [ e \icket again ke they did L. Kennedy is making m.h’d'?mr: li:u: the working team THE _BEE: What the Tractor Show Means. No longer does “the plowman homeward plod his weary way.” He comes clattering down the lane on the driving seat of a big tractor, which has pulled not one but a dozen shares through “the stubborn glebe,” and turned more furrows in the course of one working day than Gray's farmer would have thrown up in many years. Machinery has put the romance out of farming, but it has put the profit in. One of the greatest steps for- ward in the agricultural industry has been the adaptation of the internal combustion engine as a locomotive power, It has not only simplfied but amplified the operations, and in a large meas- ure done away with the drudgery connected with seed-time and harvest. That is why this week is given over by thou- sands of the most progressive and energetic of modern farmers to the business of watching the performance of various types of machines at the Fremont show. For the farmer is coming to be as particular about his tractor as he is about his automobile, and the variations it makes means as much to him as does the gradation in the live stock he raises. The day has passed when any sort of animal will do on the farm; only the beast that returns a sure profit is tolerated nowadays, and the same is true of the machine. The makers realize this, and between them is a rivalry as keen as any ever known to turn out a working tool that will not alone be serviceable, but which will pos- sess some quality of superiority or attractiveness to catch and hold the buyer's fancy. The greatest builders of farm machinery in the world are represented at Fremont this week, showing their machines under working conditions, and putting everything to the real test. It is an object lesson in the progress of the world’s great- est industry, that of farmin Hughes and American Labor. Mr. Hughes is showing a happy faculty of put- ting much in few words. From his speech of ac- ceptance comes the great Qlogm of the compaign, “America first and America efficient.” This terse summing up of the purpose of the republican party is 80 complete that it needs neither explanation nor extension. At Detroit Mr, Hughes stated the aim of his party as to the American working man in language as plain and as full of meaning, de- claring that “the American workman should nog¢ be regarded as a mere economic unit, but as a fel- low worker, a human being.” This has been the policy of the party from the time of its founda- tion, and Mr. Hughes merely restates a funda- mental principle in simple terms. Despite the frantic assertions of the opposition, the republican candidate has a sympathetic understanding of the worker and his problems, and under his adminis- tration will see that he is regarded as a human be- ing, and not as a mere economic unit. Working men of America have never félt under a republican administration the hardships of depressed business conditions such as they have had to endure under the brief rule of the democratic party. Mr. Hughes has simply voiced the history of the re- publican party, which is still the party of good , steady employment and “the full dinner Personal Property Assessment. The State Board of Equalization has just made a rather peculiar announcement to the effect that it will not disturb’ the figures returned by the }.oun!y assessors on the personal property valua- ‘tions, This suggests that the state has suddenly acquired an astute lot of county assessors, or that tthe state board doesn't care to trifle with the re- turns in the face of an approaching election. The taxpayers of Nebraska are not inclined to shirk their just obligations, and justice to all requires that these obligations be distributed as nearly ‘equal as possible. Experience has proven that re- markablé discrepancies in values fixed by county assessors reach the state board, and no doubt these will be found again. It is not enough that the personal property valuation be equable in comparison with other property situated in the same county. It should in all counties bear a just proportion to the whole, and that values in one part of the state compare réasonably with values in any part of the state. Some adjustment by central authority is necessary to secure' this ap- proach to equality, and this adjustment can only be made by the State Board of Equalization. If the returns from the several counties are left un- touched, injustice to some is certain to follow. — 4 Romance of Rubber. From beleaguered Germany comes a story that the wonder-working chemists of the kaiser have practically produced synthetic rubber, to be made as cheaply as $1.50 per pound. This price will sound a little high, even to the mar who is buy- ing at war prices “shioes” for his big automobile, but to the Germans, who have needed rubber so sorely for uses in the war, the figure will seem reasonable. The romance of rubber has in it some chapters that are not especially creditable to the white man. The tales of the Congo shocked the enlightened world, and later these were duplicated by accounts from the Orinoco and the Amazon. It is curious to note at this time that it was in connection with the atrocities of the rubber trade in South America that Roger Casement first began to climb to knighthood. His toilsome investigations broke up the practice, and won for him such notice as brought him to high honor, lately forfeited because of his devotion to an ideal, England has one chapter of the story to its credit, While other countries were vainly seeking for the artificial substance that would serve in- stead of rubber, the British took the far more practical course of planting rubber plantations around the Straits Settlements. Within ten years the production of rubber there has risen from nothing to more than 60 per cent of the world's supply. This has given Great Britain almost con- trol of the rubber market of the world, and has proved a wonderful source of profit. The Dutch followed suit, and from the plantations in the Kast Indies and around Singapore now comes three-fourths of all the rubber used. Millions of pounds still come down from those steaming jungles of South America at the foot of the Andes, but this supply, like that of the Congo, no ‘onger dominates, and soon may be actually neg- lected as a factor. The United States has a share in the romance of rubber, too, for it uses more of the material in process of manufacture than any other nation, but it must buy its supply abroad. Therefore, the German discovery is of interest here. ——— Directors of the New York street railways are assuming much of responsibility in turning down a proposition that might lead to a reasonable set- tlement. They show little regard for public rights in thus insisting on their own privileges. OMAHA, TUESDAY, AUGUST (ODAY Thought Nugget for the Day. What are Raphael’s Madonnas but the shadow of a mother's love fixed in permanent outline for- ever?—Thomas Wentworth Higginson. One Year Ago Today in the War. British took 1,2000 ardys of German trenches at Hooge. Teutonic allies continued execution of plan to cut off Russians in Warsaw retreat. Italians reported capture of Austrian positions in the Carnian front and the Carso plateau. Turks admitted loss of ground at Dardanelles, but claimed to have retaken it by counter attack. Today in Hisory. 1661—Charles 11 was proclaimed sovereign in Massachusetts, 1814—American and British commissioners met at Ghent to negotiate a treaty of peace. 1816—The meetings of Free Masons and other secret societies were prohibited by the king of Naples. IBIB—Remlml of soldiers massacred at the Raisin river removed to Detroit, and buried with the honors of war. 1829—Centennial of Baltimore celebrated. 1855-—~Kansas legislature selected Lecompton as the permanent state capital, 1860—Victor Emmanuel entered Milan as king of Italy. 2 . 1866—Empress Carlotta arrived in Paris to plead with Napoleon III to aid her husband, the ill-fated Maximilian, emporer of Mexico. 1870—Marshal Bazaine was appointed to com- mand the French army at Metz. 1890—Three thousand trainmen on the New York Central railroad went on strike because of the discharge of certain Knights of Labor. 1894—President Cleveland recognized the inde- pendence of the republic of Hawaii. 895—Howell E. Jackson, associate justice of the supreme court of the United States, died at {‘Igahvlllc, Tenn. Born at Paris, Tenn., April 8, 8. 1897—Senor Canovas, prime minister of Spain, assassinated by an anarchist. This Day in Omaha Thirty Years Ago. President S. R. Johnson of the water works company has sold out his interest in the corpor- ation to a Boston'company of which Mr. Wiley is to be president. Messrs. Dumont, Hamilton and W. V. Morse are to retain their stock. A party of well known Irish citizens of Omaha have gone to New York whence they will sail on the steamer “City of Chicago” for Ireland. They are John Kenne’}' and wife, Thomas Collins and wife, Jeremiah Mahoney and Jeremiah Dee. A large party of relatxveu nnd friends were at the depot to sa; Bishop {N X. lnde of the Mechodm Epis- copal church, Topeka, Kan,, stopped over in Omaha on his way to Europe and officiated at the wedding of Rev. G: M B.assett and Miss White, Bishop Ninde was president of the Gar- rett Biblical institute, Evanston, Ill,, when Rev. Mr. Bassett was a student there. 0. K. Scofield, buyer and manager of he S. P. Morse cloak and suit department, has left for New York to complete his fall purchase. H. P. Rosenbaum, who has been visiting his daughters in this city for several weeks, has started on his return trip to Germany. Miss Elizabeth Poppleton has gone west to Idaho Springs. ‘Major Roberts and family, who have been visiting General Crook for sometime, have started west, This is the Day We Celebrate. Thomas Creigh is celebrating his forty-third birthd: He was born at Lincoln, graduated from Piinccton university and, in law, from the University of Nebraska. He began practicing léva 1‘1‘1 1897 and went to Chicago with the uda Dr. Pml Ellis, physician and surgeon, is 40 years old today. He was born in Beatrice, gradu- ated from Creighton Medical school and has been in active practice since 1899, Lester Heyn of the Heyn photographic studio is 32 years old today. He is an Omaha born boy and his father had the photographic business be- fore him. S. E. Mathson is a native of Sweden, where he was born fort{ seven years ago today. He is now manager of the Booth Fisherigs company estab- lishment in Omaha. Frank R. Vierling, assistant manager of the Paxton & Vierling Iron Works, is celebrating his thirty-fifth birhday, his natal day, having been observed in Chicago. Lieutenant General Nelson A. Miles, U. S. A, retired, former general commanding the army, born n W:stmmster. Mass., seventy-seven years ago tod Freden:k Wallingford Whitridge, lawyer, capitalist and administrator of street railways in New York City, born at New Bedford, Mass., sixty-four \X’“" ago today. Henry Miller, vice president of the South- ern Railway company, born at Raleigh, N. C, forty-eight years ago today. Ig George F. Bovard, president of the Uni- versity of Southern Clhforma, born at Alpha, Ind,, sixty years ago today. Timely Jottings and Reminders. Charles E. Hughes, republican presidential nominee, speaks in Chlcl 0 tonight. The town of Fort Fairfield, Me., today will be- gin a celebration of its centennial, The Dominion Association of Fire Chiefs be- gins its annual convention today at Windsor, Women of Nevada will exercise the right of suffrage for the first time today in the general primary for the selection of delegates to thc state conventions. gather at Houghton today for a celebration of the thirtieth anniversary of the institution. The annual convention of the Catholic Total Abstinence Union of America will begin its ses- sions today at the Catholic university in Wash- ington, The fourteenth international convention of the Universal Craftsmen Council, a Masonic body, w:ll meet at Pittsburgh today for a four-day ses- sion, Formal notification of J. Frank Hanley and Ira Landreth of their niminations for the presidenc and vice presidency on the prohibition ticket will take place today at Indianapolis. Republicans of the Fourth Maine district will meet at Bangor today to nominate a candidate for congress to fill the vacancy on the ticket caused by the failure of Representative Guernsey to ac- cept the renomination tendered to him at the June primaries. A general prlmlry election will be held in Ohio today for the selection of candidates for United States senator, representatives in congress, a gov- ernor and other state, legislative and county of- ficials to be voted for in November. =\ Storyette of the Day. An old lady near Burnley called at a farm house just as the family were sitting down to tea. She was invited to take off her bonnet and join them. “Nay,” she said, “I have no_time, but I don't mind hevin’ a cup o’ tea an’ a bite o' cake.” She was supplied with this, and, finishing the cake before the tea, took another piece, “just to get thf tea doon.” This performance was repu(ed until she had heen helped to seven cups of tea and eight pieces of cake. Then, looking round complacently, she d. “Well, I think, after all, I'll tak’ me bonnet off an' get me tea reight"—London Mail. Publicity That Helps. New York, Aug. 3.—To the Editor of The Bee: As a result of your kindness in giv- ing publicity to our list of needy persons in thé war zone who are inquiring about their relatives in this country, a brother of Hersh Sherevetz, one of the persons mentioned on the list, called at this office today for fur. ther particulars, so that he might furnish assistance to his needy relatives. With re- newed thanks for your kindness, I um /% FELIX M. WARBURG, Chairman, Joint Distribution Committee, Here's Proof of the Sun’s Heat. Bellevue, Neb., Aug. :-—To the Editor of The Bee: Elliot Loom the August 1 issue of The Bee argues against a heated surfa for the sun, and gives several reasons for his helief. I shall try to convince him to the con- tury, answering his reasons in their order, 1. “As we are 3,000,000 miles nearer the sun in January than in July, taking the world over, we see no rise in temperature.” I agree with him on this point; there is not only a raise in temperature but an actual low- ering, because January is a winter month. But the cause is not as he supposes. As the earth draws nearer the sun in January, there is & rise in temperature, but this is more than counterbalanced by the tilting of the earth's axis in such a way that the sunlight strikes the northern hemisphere at a greater slant in January than in July. Now the more obliquely the rays strike, the less heat they bring to each square inch of surface. Also the rays when oblique have to travel through & greater thickness of air, which robs them of still more heat. Thus we have winter when we are nearest the sun. 2. “Were the sun radiating heat as or- dinarily supposed, those inner planets (Ve- nus and Mercury) would be burned to a ein- der, while the outer planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune) would be locked in eternal frigidity.” s \ Mercury and Venus are indeed, figurative- ly, “burned to a cinder.” Mercury always turns the same face toward the sun, and Ve- nus is suspected of doing so; therefore, the face turned toward the sun would be at a high temperature (above that of boiling wa- ter), while the dark hemisphere would be at approximately the temperature of interstellar space (278 degrees below zero). The four outer bodles are practically planets in the making, and probably are still feeble suns, not having developed a solid crust. (Jupiter is suspected to shine partly by its own light.) 3. His third reason (as to the inhabitability of the planets) I would like to take up with him in detail, but space will not permit. I would advise him to read the last chapter of Simon Newcomb's Astronomy (University edition), in which he treats of the cos- mogomy. 4, He says in substance: ing glass bringing the arc to a focus produces heat Because 8 burn- n, merely electrical festations, and that “any light or heat pro- duced by combustion, no matter how in- tense,” will produce no results if it is fo- cused with the burning glass. . He is mistaken in this. The acetylene light (gas) gives a very appreciable amount of heat at the focus of the burning glass. The reason the ordinary fire or oil light wives no heat is because of the great dispari temperature between it and the are, lene or sunlight. This difference is eru:bly over 1,000 degrees between arc and o 5. The sun does not depend on combustion for its light and heat. I agree with him there. But neither does it depend on electri- cal energy. Modern physicists and astrono- mers are practically all agreed that the sun's light and heat are produced by its gradual contraction upon itself due to the effect of gravitation. The sun on this hypothesis needs only contract 180 feet per year to keep up its present energy for 10,000,000 years to come. The radio-active elements probably have a good deal to do with the upkeep of the sun's energy, too. 6. The outermost “lighting or heating plant” does not receive the “same degree of intensity” as those nearest the dynamo. There is & progressive drop of veltage all along the line, as can be easily proven by Ohm’s law. In the outlaying districts of line to help raise the voltage that has been lowered by distance. 7. Sunspots are not holes in the photo- sphere showing the “coal dark body of the sun,” The darkest part (the umbra) of a sunspot is as hot and gives out as much light as the acetylene, and almost as much as the electric arc. It is only by contrast with the dazzling surface of the photosphere around that they appear dark. They are caused by vapors that have rushed up from the body of the sun, cooled, condensed and fallen back on its surface again. In general, their spectrum is like that of the rest of the olar surface, yet it shows several interesting differences. (See chapter 17 of George El- lery Hale's book, “The Study of Stellar Evo- lution™). WILLIAM SMITH. Rejoinder to Bremner. Bennington, Neb,, Aug. 7.—To the Editor of the Bee: In reply to the statement of George Bremner in your issue of August 4, we are waiting for the court to set a date for a hearing. The statement that there is no opposition to his place except from Brewster, Anderson, Knight, Hibbard and Evans is wrong. We are all property holders within this vicinity except Rev. Mr, Evans. The three first mentioned were born and reared here and Mr. Hibbard has resided here for he last fifty years, All those that attend the Congregational and Christian hurches are rendering a helping hand in removing this nuisance from our midst. Under the disguise of his serving chicken dinners he expects to cover up the Mniquitous doings that are done past the midnight hot are not trying to regulate his busi gardless to law, but are endeavori it regulated by law, His propert: been molested, but he cause: be operated upon those wh n pub- lie roads in hope to intimidate we who are vetting testimony bearing upon his unlawful doings. He claims our conduct is reprehen- sible, If so it is sustained by all but a few of his henchmen. He asserts we claim the right to regulate his business regardless of the law. We will make him conform to the law. We feel confident the courts will do a8 justice, REV. THOMAS EVANS, SALIS R. BREWSTER, FRANK B. HIBBARD, A. D. KNIGHT, J. M. ANDERSON. USEFUL NOVELTIES. Electric massaging apparatus which emanates violet rays has been invented for imparting a general tonic effect to the scalp and face. Gear wheels to be connected to the front wheels of automobile have been invented to make a lift its own top whenever the driver des To keep a woman's hands warm in a muff a nickel cylinder which, when heated on a stove, will retain the heat for hours, has been invented. Because red is the color least easily distin. guished by color blind persons experts have dvocated bl s with wide yellow rims for danger The rapid growth of vegetation in polar, cegions, despite the brief summers, is ate tributed to the strength of the electric cur- rents in the atmosphere. China has sent government agents abroad to study the manufacture of telegraph and telephone equipment with a view to making all such apparatus at home, To help in adjusting the bearings of car wheels when away from a repair shop is the purpose of a new device that locks a wheel firmly to the track and prevents it being moved. Forestry axperts have found that a plant growing luxuriantly in the Philippines and heretofore thought a weed is used in other parts of the far east for the production of For use in French colonial waters where rank vegetation wou'd foul submerged wheels shallow draft boats have been built that are driven by aeroplane motors and vropellers. tond lover. N that by the beat of the pulse alone the age of & person could be told Mry, Btyles—Of course! why ean't ons keep something wecret?'—Yonkers States: man, \ LOOTED LEVITY. Walter—If that ain't the limit! Here's an officer wot's been livin' in & dug-out for & year, won't 'ave this soup 'cos the plate ain't cleln!—Pullnl Show. Boy—Mother we oughtn't to be in this carriage, ought we? It's first class. Mother—Oh, darling, you mea to be economizing in wartime? Boy—But, mother, we are aren’t we? We've only got tickets,—Punch. “Am I ‘ond enough for you?" sighed the ougnt economizing, ti 1 aldly, u're not. | sald the girl cans ly, "yo 4 e i are too good for any other girl'"— New York Times. THE APPROACH OF AGE. i, Beorge Crabbe. Six years had passed, and forty ere the six, When, Time began to play his usual tricks; The locks once comely in a virgin's sight, Locks of pure brown, displayed the ‘en- croaching white: The blood, once fervid, now to cool began, And Time's strong pressure to subdue the DEAR MR.. (ABIBBLE DOES A POOR GIRL ,WHD MARRIES A MILLIONAIRE:, BECOME-UNHAPPY | AD GEY A DINORCE P ¢ —HRNP GHHEON man. I rode or walked as 1 was wont before, And now the bounding spirit was no more; A moderate pace would now my body heat— A walk of modernte length distress my feet. 1 showed my stranger guests those hills sublime, But said, climb,” At a friend’s mansion 1 began o dread The cold, neat parlor and the gay glazed The view (s poor, we need not “Darling, if you had 1t to do all over agaln | would you still went to marry me? doaur, if 1 had it to do all over again ocidod \u o y, you would be the one trolt Free Press. bed; At home I felt a more decided taste, And must have all things in my order placed. I ceased to hunt; my horses pleased me lesa— My dinner more: T learned to play at chess. 1 took my dog and gun, but saw the brute “Do you know that the mercury now at 107 dogrees In the shade?” yah!" he indifferently answered. "But the kind husbandmun for whom I toll does el me to stay in the shade. Hi-lo!| was disappointed that 1 did not shoot. —Kansas Clty Star. My morning walks T now could bear to lose, Y And blessed the shower that gave me not “De moind yez don't git hur-rt, Pat,” said NG Ahaess: Bridgst, “It's dwngerouy a-workin' i that |1 fact, I felt a lunguor steuling on; quarry. The actlve arm, the agile hand, Were gone; “That's ahl rolght, Biddy,"” sald Pat. Ol've borrowed $2 frim th' foreman, and he don’' | Ang pew dislike to forms and fashions new. lot me do wny dangerous work anny more " | { loved my trees in order to dispose; —Ounward. 1 numbered peaches, looked how stocks : arose; Told the !lmc story oft—in short, began to pros Small daily actions into habits grew, Mr, Styles—It has been asserted by many eminent speclalists that there is no doubt i SR —_p MAKE Y UR PLANS NOW FOR A Vacation Trip Lakes and Great North Woods of Wisconsin and Minnesota Get a summer home in the greatest fishing country in the world, and solve your annual vacation problem. 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