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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (March 12, 1925)
Roosevelt Glad Mugwumps Lose Power in East Congratulated His Friend l.ixloe on Election to U. S. Senate From Mas sachusetts. f Copyright, 19!5) (This Installment of the Roosevelt, f.odg*» letters brings the two frietuls up t<» 1S94. In that year the republicans hail things their way in the congressional elections, .l ust as Harrison’s admlnist ra - 1l«iD ha»l become unpopular In mid-term. .#•* now t'le\eland's drifted Into disfavor). CNITED STATES CIVIC. SERVICE COMMISSION WASHINGTON, D. C. July 29, ’02. I>.*ar Cabot: I think till* record pretty bad for both Cleveland mid Harrison, and It Is rather Walrus and rnrpenter work for a .housing between the records of the two parties; ns far ns civil service reform is concerned. In the classified service Cleveland made more ex tensions than Harrison; but on the other hand Trftey* has made a n admirable start In the navy yards—but It is only a start, not permanent, utid can not be until put under us. Cleveland had a much worse com mission: but Harrison lias not sus tained bis Commission at all, and has allowed Wanamaker** to put s prem i; ium upon the clearest violations of i the law—In which the republican i' members of the civil service commit tee hive sustained him. So I really i think it about, a stand-off here. We have put much more, of a stop to political assessments: hut the offices have been used for political purposes rrmr” shamefully and openly than even under the last administration. Altogether I am by no means ft -pleased with what our party, at both V ith« White House and the eapitol, has -done about, civil service reform. Ton fare the one conspicuous republican leader who has done his whole duty •—and very much more than his whole Z !duty—by the reform In the last three ^ p ears. • • Best love to Nannie. 4 • „ * • Ev er yours, T. R. •Ocneral Tten.linitn JV Traev, aerr.-lary of th* na\y. ••John Wanamaker, postmaster general. Sagamore Hill, July 15, '92. Dear old Cabot: My team rami off better «t polo than 1 had lloiied; the second Mea .dowbrooks heat us, but only 2 12 goal" ■/ I made two goals myself. Douglas’ c 'team whipped the crack Westchester r -team finely, and then went to pieces j,‘in a game with Morristown and lost ■j‘ thy' half a goal. I tell you, a eorpu -lent mlddleaged literary man finds .. a stiff polo match rather good exer j ccise. Edith Is probably going hack to ; Washington with me on Monday for a few' days. I do wish you were to bo thepe: hut you can do far more at ,r /liomp. As for your feeling depressed. »{why that is all nonsense. Stay In •' ^politics; get to the senate If yrm can »* jfarSd I think you will); if not. take two » |ar three more terms in the house; an 'honorable career not too short, In ‘-congress Is something of which to be always proud. Moreover, It giv°s you sj Ja right, and a power, to draw histor N leal lessons which Is no mean part T» -of your historical equipment. From '.every point of view your political ca . Jeer Is useful: and il has b"en already A 1 if great service to you. ■ Best love to Nannie, Yours. T. R. -3 3 Sagamore Hill, Sept, 25, '92. 5 fc)ear Cabot: Even In the wwst I saw by the or * oaslonal notice?) in the papers "that you wore getting the repuhllean ma chine Into fine condition In Mnstvarh ueette, and that everyone recognized the faot that your hand was on the ' throttle. I cannot help believing that • -you will win the aenatorshlp this 5 ,'tlme: if by any cause you fail, why | £t merely puts you in better shape ' Vor the struggle two years hence. Of ;| icourse you are looking with double tare after your congressional feneco. The farmers’- alliance Is giving our people serious concern in Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota; and • ditto, 1 lie C.orpiins -In Illinois anil Wisconsin. I feel 111 n making a *■ . \l>\ KKTh I'l I NX. TWICE IN THIS WOMAN’S LIFE Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegeta ble Compound Helped Her | > from Sickness to Health Ellenshurg, Washington — "When f was first coming into womanhood I suffered terribly every month. My mother did every thing she could think of, so she took me to sev eral doctors and they only helped mealittle. Mother was talking to another lady about my condition and she told mother of _Lydia E. I'ink * * ham’s Vegetable Compound. Mother - ■ got me six bottles and at the end of ’ ' the first month 1 was much better, so 1 kept on taking t until I had no more pains. When I got married and had rny first child I was in terrible pain so that it was impossible for me to do my housework. I thought of how the Vegetable Compound had been of so much benefit to me when T was a girl, so I went hi Pericr’s Drug-Store and got six bottles. It mire did help me and I still take it. I am a well woman today and I can’t sav ton much about Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound. I will an swer any letter that comes to me to f t answer about what your medicine has ** Ldonu for me.” Mrs. Wll.l.lAM Cak _Vi.ii, It. F. It Nu.'J,Ellenaburg, Waal*. I ' crusade against the latter. I wish) the cholera would result In a permanent quarantine against most Immigrant* I passed s very pleasant three week* on my ranch and on the trip south to Peadwood shooting three nr four deer and antelope—one deer from the ranch veranda! Give my best love to Nannie. Tours always, t. n. , Washington, Oot. 11, ’92. Dear Cabot; T do wish I could be with you! Al though I am being worked up to the hilt here, 1 often feel as though I can hardly keep away from you In such a canvass as this. At any rate I shall speak to the point at the meet ing on November 5. But do you know, I feel sure you are going to win—I wouldn't say this if I thought you were over confident.* As for the general prospects, T don't know what to say. We have an excellent fighting chanfe; but I think tlie odds are a little against us. Hill and Tammany seem to be pull ing straight for Cleveland In New York; and it would he comic, were it not outrageous, tn see how anxious the mugwumps are to let them have everything, if they'll only help Cleveland. The mugwumps' altitude towards an anti Tammany city ticket is art excellent comment on the sin cerity of their attacks on republican "partisanship" in local affairs. Best love to Nannie. You rs. T. Tt. •Referring to the con gresslena! elec tlon. rate to see the smash that has come upon the mugwumps or, more proper ly the new mugwump-democratic leaders, especially Williams in Massa rhusetts. You certainly have done hem up. -Russell Is the only one left. I suppose Quincy has had senatorial aspirations, hut it is evident that he will have to wait, many a long year yet. before he can so much as think about them. Tn New York of course the silly better element is fatuous in Its short-sighted delight and is ut terly . unmoved by the possibility of having Sheehan or Croker•• put In the senate. T read an article in the New York Nation the other day so foolish, so malignant, so deliberately mendacious, ami so exultant that it fairly made me writhe to think of the incalculable harm to decency that scoundrelly paper, edited by its scoundrelly chief. Godkln, has done. Yours, T. R. • Pavhi R Hill of New' York, fr.r year* * tie state* democratic ho**, who had been iri.vei nor and was to run again in 1X94 lie vn* flow senator and aspirant for the presidency. ••John f\ Sheehan and Richard Cro ker, Tammany bosses. • Washington, ,Tsn. 4. '9.1. Dear Cabot: Edith and T are too pleased for anything,* and eagerly awaiting your arrival to find out all the detaifs. As soon as your telegram arrived J tore round to Nannie, for mutual con gratuladions. Of course I was very sure of the result: but the prize was so great that T felt nervous! Well. T am glad of your triumph, first, for your own sake, next, for the sake of honest government, and been use of the premium thus put upon integrity, ability. Industry and a high standard of public morality, and. last, because of the way the worst elements, at the two extremes of the political scale, will gnash their teeth over the result. Hail, friend! Hove from Edith: best regards to your* mother. Yours, T. R. •Thl* refers to my election to tbs sen ate if ('. j4. Sagamore Hill, Sept. ?, ’94. Dear Cabot: The drift is all our wnv! Rut T wish T felt a little surer of our carrying i he next house. T think we shall get It hv a narrow huirgin, but. I am far from sure. Yours always, T. R. • Sapmorp Hill, Sept. 30, '34. I >pa r Co hot; I spent only two weeks at theran^ii. The rattle are pot doing particularly well the drouth has been very severe on everythin?. However, ' except for feelinsr a little blue, I passed a de lichtfu! fortnight, all the time In the open; and feel as rugged as a bull moose. I shot five antelope—only one a doe—and a fine white tall buck. too. T believe wo will whip Hill* readily; but he was the strongest man they could nominate. It will be a great misfortune It be wins: but I don’t think be ran. I hear all around that the workingmen Intend to vote "for the policy of a full dinner pail," as one of them In the village told my friend and coachman, Hail. It looks is if Qulgg** might be run for mayor; lie will have some great elements of strength, but I don't know whether we can get him taken seriously enough. , Kdith sends you both her best love: THE OMAHA-DOUGLAS COUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY invites the public to a meeting at the Tech nical High School s> Auditorium Friday, March 13, 1925, at 8:15 P. M. DR. RAY LYMAN WILBUR, President of Stanford Uni versity, will address the public on health matters. Admission Free. Sagamore Hill, Nov. 1ft, ’03. Den r Ca bot: Well, as to the general result J am disappointed but not surprised, save ns to the size of the majority in New York. 1 knew the west was very shaky: ami I never could see what were the facts which made ou-r people confident there In N. Y. The ray of bright light Is your success in Massachusetts. I believe that ibis gives you the senatorship practically without further struggle; and T am glad, as It has turned out, that you did run, and once more carry ynur district, and whip a mug wump there. If you had not done it, it would always have been said that you did not dare try. Your foot is on theft- nerks. Rut how It galls to see the self-complacent triulnph. of our fops' Rest love In Nannie, s Yours, T. R. UNITED STATES CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION WASHINGTON, R. C. November 1 ft, IS!)?. Hon. If. C. Lodge, 31 Beacon Street, Boston. Mass. Rear Cabot: 1 rather hop* that tile democrats get complete control of tlie senate. I want to see them have full responsi bility for tlielr actions; let them med dle with the tariff Just as much as they wish, and let them go into the wrangle over the nuances Mien is bound to come. I must say I con gratulate the pos sibility of Hill's election with great horror.* He is a most danger ous man. and now he Is only the more dangerous because It Is being knock ed into his wicked head that he cannot succeed In run ning national politics with the same transparently open vileness that he has displayed In running New York politics. It Is a great comfort to me at any When something sweet touches your teeth and a sharp ' II pain results—you are warned! U Acid Decay has begun. Use U Squibb’s Dental Cream, made U with Squibb’s Milk of Mag- U nesia, and safely neutralize the U acids which attack the teeth I and gums at The Danger Line and elsewhere. It protects sensitive teeth from further H Acid Decay and reduces the n peril of Pyorrhea. Millions 1 now prefer— [j Squibb’s Dental Cream Made with Squibbs Milk of Magnesia f tell Nannie I have something de licious to tell her when we meet. Yours always, THEODORE ROOSEVELT. •David H Ititl, state democratic knee, lTnlte*l State* senator from New York. I a e I -1 a 0 T He ran for anrornor in ISM and was defeated by t,fvi r, Mnrton. ••I.emuel K Cl i bb, local republican leader, New York City. Sagamore Hill, Oct. I, '94. Dear Cabot; Your letter has just followed me from Medora. My health improved so rapidly that I returned, in my normal anaemic slate, sooner than my medi cal advisers dared hope. It is delightful to see Bammle*; and just a* strongly American and repub lican as ever. Ever yours, T. R. •JTis sinter. Mis? \nna Kooaevelt. after ward the wife of Admiral Cowle?. Sh** had been in Lyndon wiili hei niUHin, Jhiuhw Kuottevelt, secretary of embaany.— II. C. L. Oyster Bay, L. 1., Oct. 8, '34. Dear Cabot I go to Washington tomorrow, and Edith and Bammle take the children to Vermont for a fortnight. In politics, It does seem to me that we shall beat Hill this time; all the signs are that wav: and my only un easiness is that Hill's strength has always laid In those bottom strata about which we really know so very little. Morton* Is a perfectly good eandl date, hut has no personal strength whatever before the people; he will merely get the party vote, plus the "reform" element which Is against Hill, and that all-important class of unknown size—the determining ele ment in the problem—the man with the dinner pail wants to down the democratic party. Yours, T. R. •Governor T.evl P. Morton, who bed been vice president under Jlanleon. (To Hr Continued Tomorrow.) Solution of yesterday's puzzle. mm Responsibility For 25 years Omaha homes ha^ depended on Alamito Milk. Its unvary • ing quality and reliability have made “Alamito" a household word in Omaha. Wa have a moral obliga tion to our customers which must be upheld. Omaha depends on Ala mito for the best milk at the lowest possible price. The pick of the dairy herd* of Douglas, Sarpy and Washington counties furnish Alamito Milk. Because we are Omaha's pioneer dairy, we have * been able from the start to choose our source of supply. No milk is ship ped to the Alamito Dairy. Consider these facts when you are “tempted" to buy milk just “anywhere". This Is the fifth of a series of “Facts About Alamito Milk" to kelp you in writ ing your letter “Why Our Family Uses A I smite 1 Milk." Dairy Cb Keep ■ tuba of the original Baum e Ben gurial wayaready for emergenciea. Rub it on the place that hurta and enjoy ita hleaaed relief. OFT THB ORIGINAL FRFNCH BAUMEBENGUfi (ANALOtliavi ) Rarlrarlif Bora mu#* lea Tlrad feat Neuralgia Hhtumaiiim i'olda (I hraf and head; Tl«oa.f earning & Ct%. _ Amar. Agents, N. Y. Try the New Cuticura Shavind Stick Freely lathering ^ -^Medicinal and Emollient i]| [ilf |BAk I <J»4ti k Rtlief f A plra«ant effective ayrup. I 13c and AOo site* And furmallr, utr I’lHO'S T hroat and C hast t The Daily Cross Word Puzzle --' HoiI/ontal 7. Possessive personal pronoun. 1. Religious. 8. New .Mexico (abbr.) (5. Yellow c*lay. 9. Musical note 11. Like (suffix). 12. Pleasant odor. It First month of the Jewish ca! ender. 15. Capable of being molded. 19. To shriek. 24. The, in French and Latin. 2*i. An attendant on Cleopatra ("Antony and Cleopatra.”) 26. To (lose tile eyes; blind. 27. God of the midday sun. 28. To keep away. 29. Hirsute. "0. One (Soot). • 31. Grains. 34. A bar on a guitar or banjo. 36. i’art of "be." 37. Capital of New Jersey. 38. A cavalier beheaded by Queen Klliabeth. 39. A desert dweller. 41. Sleep. 42. A hypothetical force supposed to account for mesmeric phenomena. 43. Chartered aca-ountant (abbr.) 44. One of the many loves of Jupl ter. 46. Two. 47. Fnequnl. 49. A citrus fruit. Vertical L a province of Prussia; f minus dogs are bred there. 2. Slippery. 3. Kxclaniatlon. 4. A vase. 1a. Cnrmmon name of Scandinavian m»n—plural. 11. To accumulate. 13. An opening into the Interior of an organ. 15. To mat (colloquial). 16. A lifting liar. 17. Seaport of ancient Phenicia; now Saldar 18. To "Set 'em up.” 20. To repulse. 21. The "Fpper crust." 22. A crag (Scot). 23. Severe. 32. Pertaining to the barber's art. 33. The headdress of an unmarried woman In Scot land. 34. French money unH 0° 3 rent.*). 35. The issue of light and Heat. •1f>. Two thousand. 4". A single mill. 4 6. Equal. 43. i am (contraction). * * The solution will ap|w*ar toniormvr, \!>\ I HTIS1 Ml NT I How to Make Pine Cough Syrup at Home ~ i i J?n* no equal for prompt result*. 'iakm but * moment t« prepare* ami Jou about I?. 1‘ine is used in nearly all prescrip tions and remedies lor coughs. Thu reason is that pine contains several element® that have a remarkable effect in soothing and healing the membranes of the throat and chest. Ihne cough syrups are combinations of joiie and - vi ii(i. 1 to* ‘ svruo ’ part is usually plain .sugar syrup. To make the bc-t pine rough remedy that money can buv. put i'/; ounces of Pinex in a pint bottle, and fill up with home-made sugar syrup. Or you can use clarified molasses, honey, or torn ■ vrup, instead of sugar syrup. Hither way, you make a lull pint—• more than you can buv ready-made for three times the money. It is pure, good and tastes very pleasant. You can fed thi3 take hold of a rough or cold in a way that means hu-.ness. The cOugb mar be dry, hoarse and fight, or may be persist ently loo’e from the formation of phlegm. Tlie cause is the same—in flamed membranes—and this Pinex and Syrup combination will stop it —usually in 24 hours or less. Splen did. too, for bronchial asthma, hoarsp nc-s. or anv ordinary throat ailment. Pinex is a highly concentrated com pound of genuine Norway pine ex tract. and is famous thd world over for its prompt effect upon coughs. Pi-ware of substitutes. A-k your dr.igg -f for “21 h ounces of Pinex” with directions, and don’t accept any thing cl-e. Guaranteed to giv« abso-^, lute satisfaction or money refunded. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, lnd. —————— 4 « My Lady Fair My Lady Fair a shopping goes. And here and there in every shop, In quest of finest silken hose, She’s forced in wonderment to stop. Arrays bewildering meet her gaze, And sheerer, clearer than the rest Of spring's fair colors in a maze Are LADY ANNE, in silk that's best. To match her airy springtime clothes And speed her happier on her way j My Lady hair selects this VICTOR 110SF. Completely satisfying her shopping day. ■> < ■ ■ i The Supremely Appropriate Stocking for Every Occasion SHEER AND CLEAR VICTOR STOCKING OF FINEST THREAD SILK DISTRIBUTED BY BYRNE & HAMMER DRY GOODS CO. ■--.1 I 1 ■!■■■■ JJ ' ' ■ ■«- ' SOI J) IN OMAHA BY— I AT ALL OF TllK REST STORKS I Thou. Kilpatrick Co. Gold stein-Chapman Co. Shoe Market W Thompson-Belden Co. Napier’s Booterie Karges I Herzberg's Nebraska Clothing Co. Joseph Honort $ 1 John Beno Co., Council Bluffs I i