THE OMAHA DAILY DEE: SUNDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1904. 10 The Omaha Sunday Bee K. ROSEWATER, EDITOR. PUBLISHED EVERT MORNING. TF.RM3 OF Hl:B3CRIPTION. Dally Bee (without 8undajr. one year..W W Dally be and bunday. on year " illustrated one year ; fllinrlAtf llAA AHA - - - Z Baturday Bee, one year "J Twentieth Century Farmer, one year... l.w DELIVERED BY CARRIER Dally Bee (without Sunday), per copy.... c Daily Bee (without. Sunday), per wees...: Dally Bee (Including Sunday), per weejt..lc Sunday Bee, per copy ' ?: Evening Bee (without Sunday), per weeK ic Evening Bee (Including Sunday), Pr, Week 1-C Complaints "of irrVgulnrlties In d'Hvery should bo addressed to City Circulation De partment. OFFICES. Omaha-The Bee Building. South Omaha City Hall building. Twenty filth and M afreets. Council Bluffs 10 Pearl afreet. Chicago ltrto Cnlty building. New York-2-r Bark Row building. Washington 601 Fourteenth street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communication relating to news and edi torial matter should be addreaaed: Omaha liee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, cxrress or postal order, payable to The Bee publishing Company. Only 2-cent stamp received In payment 01 mall accounts. Personal cheeks, except on Omnha or eastern exchange, not acceptea. THE BEE PUBLISHING! COMPANY. 8TATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. Btflte of Nebraska, Douglas County, as.: George B. Tzschurk. secretary of The Bee Publishing Company, being duly wrni ', e.ivs that the actual number of full and V complete copies of The Dally, Morning, Evening am! Sunday Bee printed during the month of November, 1904, wan a fol ic: l.t 31. .11(1 t JSD.400 t 29,1 no 4 3(1,4.10 ( 4o.no 3T.400 7 40.100 wi.nno 41,100 10 B4.100 11 O.KIM 12 ai.o.to 13 HO.OB0 14 sin.noo 15 IS 20,350 17 21),310 IS 20,340 1J 20,300 2C 80,270 21 2D.BS0 22 ;. 211,000 a 2tt,40 24 20,200 25 2D,TOO U 8200 7 30,000 28 20,700 2J 30,320 CO WJtOO Total 900,030 Less unsold copies 10,510 Net total sales D4S.B14 Daily average 81,817 V GEO. B. TZ3CHUCK. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me this Suth day of November. l0i (Seal) M. B. HUNQATE, Notary Public. Logrolling does not seem to be as popular In the AUHtrlau Iteichsrath as bottle-throwlut;. That Iowa boy who set's everything upside down baa great possibilities-as the founder of a new political party. That Cincinnati girl who horsewhipped the man who Jilted her must only have confirmed his blgb opinion of his own good Judgment. The season Is fast approaching when the report of fires' open by describing how someone attempted to piny the role of Santa Claus. While the orthodox Christian may wait until Lent to use his sackcloth, it is to be hoped he will have bis ashes ready for the first slippery day. General Stoessel is evidently afflicted with the same trouble which handicaps the czar a number of subordinates who desire to do as they please. Tom Lawson may be unintentionally paring the Way for a more sensational series of articles on the 6ame subject from the pen of Mrs. Chadwlck. It seems that the different national as sociations of. postofflce employes do not all know a good thing when they have it, and they have also yet to learn to let ill enough alone. Market reporters must have over looked one large movement of gold to Tarls, but the courts may find out how much of the yellow metal Dr. Chad wick took with him. Only nine fuslonlsts will hold seats in the coming Nebraska legislature, but that will be enough to Introduce all the bills promised by the fusion candidates during the campaign. When those Frenchmen finish their duels over the Maid of Orleans they may be able to get up a flgbt over the ques tion of responsibility for the fall of man. Eve hap long needed defenders. Our modern business college will be compelled to Introduce a course of study teaching familiarity with the signatures of great capitalists if cases like the Chadwlck matter become common. As leader pf the democratic minority in the next bouse of representatives John Sharp Williams will hare an easier Uiii than any of his predecessors, as he ' IPflU have fewer statesmen to guide. After contemplating the 11,000 divorce cases pending in the Buckeye state a bunch of Ohio women have passed reso lutions declaring against the female ste nographer. The men are yet to be heard from. Land Commissioner Follmer, in bis re port to the legislature is asking for fire proof vault fixtures to protect the val uable records stored in the state bouse. When the new vault equipment is in stalled it will be in order to erect a new capltol building around It , Philadelphia newspapers are still dls cussing the last national election, and one declares that Judge Parker made the best race possible under the clrcum stances. By the time of. the next cam paign perbapa Phlladelphians will hare succeeded In arriving at a satisfactory conclusion as to the cause of he lund slide. The special attorney of the Interstate Commerce Commission asserts that ship pers of live stock to Chicago will save at least $750,000 annually by reason of tbe recent investigations of conditions attending tbe traffic. The shippers, how ever, will prefer to wait till they balauce their books at tbe end of tbe year before crediting themselves with having saved . so much money. ORGANIZATION Or TBS LEGISLA TUBS- The overpowering republican majority that will dominate the coming legislature will constitute a very serious menace to the future supremacy of the republican party of Nebraska. With a senate unanimously republican, a bouse 92 per cent republican and every executive office filled by a republican, the opposi tion will, to all intents and purposes, be yolcelcss in the statehouse, and the meas ure of responsibility for wholesome leg islation will be greater than ever before. For the wellbeing of the republican party, as well as for the welfare of the state, It is, therefore, of the utmost im portance that the legislature be organ ized In the Interest of the commonwealth rather than In the interest of the giant corporations; in the Interest of the pro ducers rather than In the interest of the public carriers. It Is an open secret that the forces that have for years controlled our legis latures for selfish purposes, to the detri ment of the great masses of taxpayers, will again endeavor to manipulate and control tbe coming legislature by taking charge of its organization at the outset so that its political agents may practi cally block all legislation they deem un favorable to their own interest and detri mental to the common people, through packed committees. The machinery by which this is us ually accomplished Is the political cau cus, that enables a minority of the whole body to dictate the officers and distribute the patroiiRge at the disposal of the leg islature. The question that every repub lican member of the legislature, who de sires to make a reputation for himself, Is, whether that object would be subserved best by the selection of officers and em ployes In the caucus or in the open? The prime object of all political caucuses Is to prevent the opposition from con trolling the political action of a legisla tive body by combining with a fragment of the membership of the majority party. In a legislature made up almost unani mously of one party there Is no rational reason or excuse for a caucus. Take for example the state senate: A caucus of that body would be made up of every member of the senate, consequently It would take the same number of votes to nominate a candidate for any office or employment In the caucus as It would on the open floor. Almost the same con ditions would obtain in a caucus held by the members of the house. The only difference between electing officers In the open and. electing them in the caucus would be In the manner of their election. Under the constitution, every member in. both houses Is required to register his vote for every candidate in the open. In the caucus, however, nom inations may be made by ballot, whereby members are enabled to cover up their votes and violate individual pledges to various candidates by claiming to bave voted for each of them. This is the most objectionable feature of the legis lative caucus. Dishonest men and trick sters can cover tip their votes and place the stigma that would attach to. their own conduct upon honest men who hold themselves ready at all times to answer for their acts to their constituency. In the interest of the republican party and good government, it is, therefore, to be hoped that the coming legislature will organize itself withou. resorting to the caucus. A QUESTION OF POLITICAL ECONOMY- In bis message to congress President Roosevelt declares that "the period of prosperity through which the country is passing justifies expenditures for perina neut improvements far greater than would be wise in hard times; battleships and forts, public buildings and improved waterways are lnrestments which should be mado when we hare the money." Paradoxically as it may seem, in this declaration the president puts himself at variance with nearly all the recognized political economists from Adam Smith down to the present day. It Is an almost undisputed part of the doctrine of economics that tbe rule which applies to private individuals with reference to curtailing expenditure with curtailed revenue, under the stress of hard times, is reversed with govern mental agencies which are expected in times Of depression to expand rather than to contract activity in the direction of permanent public improvements. The line of reasoning on which this conclusion has been based is that when industrial stagnation and financial de pression sweeps over the country, de priving its working people of employ ment and forcing them by the menace of starvation to seek to labor at any price rather than apply for charity, it becomes the part of wisdom, . if not the duty, of the government to provide all additional employment that it can. It is an accepted axiom that it is. better for the government to give work rather than relief, and our own government has proceeded on this theory at various stages of its history by expediting the construction of canals, harbor improve ments, etc., at periods immediately fol lowing industrial crises, even though the straitened condition of the national finances were produced by the same causes that depleted tbe individual's ac cumulations. On the other hand, when times are good and employment on pri vate account plenty, the necessity for furnishing employment on public works becomes less urgent because the work ing people are able to take care of them selves without government assistance. All this, too, leaves out of account the fact that the government can mtVo money go farther and have more to show for its expenditure In slack times, tu.it bring prices down, than when business is brisk with prices at their highest The whole proposition, of course, is academic rather than practical, insofar as permanent improvements are in pres ent contemplation by our government The building of tbe Rmama canal Is, doubtless, the largest single piece of pub lic work ever undertaken and its urgency calls for prompt execution. , It is a busi ness undertaking and net a charitable venture, so that good times or hard times will cut no flgura with It While the president's political economy would require the government to abandon the work, if our prosperity should .wane, there Is no likelihood of interruption, much less abandonment, under any con ditions except for unforeseen physical obstacles. In fact, should we have a recurrent period of hard times, the out let for unemployed labor afforded by the Fanama canal would surely serve the country in good stead. OOVERNMENT AND RAILROADS. Inevitably there is opposition to the proposal that the government shall sdopt a policy, as suggested by the presi dent for restraining tbe railroads in tho matter of rates. The recommendation made in the annual message in regard to giving the Interstate Commerce com mission increased powers in the matter of regulating rates that were 'found to be unreasonable was certain to be met with opposition by the railroads and by all Interests that are allied with the cor porations and receive benefits from them. These influences arc today arrayed, as they have been uniformly in the past against every morement to correct the abuses of the railroads against the gen eral public. What they are now doing today In this respect is largely a matter of conjecture and yet there is no doubt that throughout the country there Is at the present time as well-defined a policy of railroad discrimination which is in ab solute violation of the law as there has ever been at any time in the past. The objections to the president's position In this matter are largely clue to the fact that bis policy of correcting abuses would Interfere with the well established habits of the corporations and this Is Just what the general public wants. Those who criticize the view of the presi dent are the people who demand that the very conditions which now prevail and which are unquestionably antagonistic to the public interest shall be main tained. In opposition to this Is a very general popular sentiment and in this the presi dent of the United States concurs. He believes that it Is the duty of congress to protect the public against the im proper exactions of corporate monopoly and he points out how this may be done. We believe that the general popular sentiment Is with the president, and we hove no doubt that it will be found that a majority In congress will be agreeable rto the proposition that the govornment should assume a larger supervision than It liajJ already assumed over the corpora tions, particularly the railroad corpora tions that are engaged In Interstate com merce. It seems to be an established fact that in the future there is to be a greater surveillance over corporations of all kinds by the federal government than there has ever been in the past and the expediency of this Is being more and more recognized. THE )S0tTIIERN REPUBLICS. There is no mutter concerning the people of the Ci'tcd States of greater in terest than their lelntlene to the soiitr em republics of this hemisphere. We are as a people Identified with the Inde pendent countries of this hemisphere more closely than with any other portion of the globe and our political interests especially are moro bound up with tbcm than with any other part of the world. This was very definitely proclaimed when the Monroe doctrine was declared moro than eighty years ago and the re lation Is still recognized. It is proclaimed in the last message of the president of the United States and in terms that ought to be absolutely reassuring to every one of ,the South American repub lics. The statement of the president that ought to be reassuring Is that this coun try has no land-hunger, that there Is no desire on the part of the United States to absorb any territory of the country south of it. That represents the uni versal American sentiment We want no part of the countries south of us. We seek no lands of the independent repub lics that belong to this hemisphere. On the contrary the purpose of the United States is to see that the independence of those republics is preserved and that they shall be given every opportunity and advantage to build themselves up and adrance in the scale of civilization. Yet at the same time it Is essential that tho United States in its essential part as a protector of all the independent coun tries of this hemisphere should insist that those countries shall do their duty as nations and perform their proper ob ligations with respect to the other coun tries of the world. It is a perfectly le gitimate demand on the part of the United States,. when assuming as it does a protectorate over the southern repub lics against European aggression, that they should conform to all the principles of- international law and obey the prin ciples that are recognized as binding upon civilized nations. That Is all that President Roosevelt suggests in his ref erence to this matter'and It Is absolutely fair and proper. The Idea that there is any "big stick" in bis proposition Is ut terly absurd and unwarranted. It does net in the least imply any hostility to the southern republics. On the contrary It should be regarded by them as a re newed assurance on the part of the United States of friendship and support so long as they give proper recognition to their Internationa obligations. That is all that the United States can ask of them and its position in this respect Is absolutely legitimate. President Roose velt has not gone in this respect a single step beyond what a majority of the in telligent Judgment of the country be lieves to be right. We are anxiously awaiting reports from the Philippines chronicling and de scribing the home-coming of the natives who have been brushing up against American civilization at the St. Louis World"! fair. It Is not difficult to linsg ine that their tales will be received by those they left behind very much as were those of the first American Indiana who were taken to Europe by the Span ish discoverers and brought back to this country after having been exhibited in the various courts abroad. If anything the dazzling splendor of what the Fili pinos saw at the exposition must bave appeared more miraculous and will carry less credibility than the display of roy alty sprung upon the sixteenth century red men. To trace the effectof this ex cursion In after years will surely be most interesting. Governor LaFollette has been criticiz ing Iowa's educational system that gives It so many small colleges and no great one. "Iowa would be better off, he de clares, "If the State university and the State Agricultural college were consoli dated into one." The same criticism, while not applicable to Nebraska's State university, applies nevertheless to the normal school situation In this state. If anything, the last legislature made a mistake in providing a second normal school, and thus dividing strength that should be centered. It is probably too late to retrace the step, but every prop osition for more normal schools and there will probably be plenty of them should be turned down at the coming legislature without ceremony. The supreme court has declared un constitutional the section of the new revenue law which provides for the as sessment of insurance companies on the gross premiums tif the preceding year. This leaves the insurance companies so that they pay no adequate taxes what ever. When the legislature comes to patch up the revenue law it should not forget to fill out this hole and to do It In a way that will stick when tested in the courts. Whatever the merits of the contro versy precipitated by the election of ft new president 6f Bellevue college, the people of Omaha will hope that it will not Impair the usefulness of that Institution. Bellevue college can in time be built up Into a strong secondary college and Its adjuncts developed into parts of a true university with proper administration and reasonable support. That is the task before the president and trustees. Lord Curzon's promise of a "friendly understanding from L'Hassa to Kaboul" may be a warning to certain Asiatic people to prepare friendly greetings for British commissioners or strengthen their defenses, and before making their choice they 6hould contemplate the Jour ney of the late Llama who is now trav eling in foreign lands. If President Itoosevelt orders the law officers to proceed against the rebate- giving railroads, the railroad managers will be more convinced than,ever that he Is not a safe man to occupy the White House. Time (or Improvement. Chicago Tribune., When railway accidents become so nu merous and deadly aa to form the subject of comment in a president's message It Is time to apply a course of corrective treat ment. Room (or Expansion. Chicago Tribune There la a general feeling that the presi dent, while on the subject of railways, might bave penned a few strenuous thoughts concerning the passenger who in sists on occupying four seats. Rising; to Its Opportunities. New York Tribune. Panama has reduced Its postage and tariff, and In many other ways is preparing to do business on a friendly plan with the United States. The new republic is small, but It seems to be able to rise to the occa sion. Master and Servant. Stock Market Bulletin. The following figures are very Interest ing, by way of comparison only: The net public debt of the United States Is less than 1,009,000.000, which is $500,000,000 leas than the total capitalization of the United States Steel corporation figured at par. Think It over! Now Watch the For Fly. Baltimore American. The Women's Army and Navy leagues are to Join In the petition to congress for the restoration of the canteen. The Woman's Temperance union, which was mainly Instrumental In abolishing the same, will fight the petition. And the contest between the two feminine organizations will be one of spirit in more ways than one. Great Place (or Fencers. New York Sun. Hawaii Is the place for the man who wants to be on the winning side. Six hours before the polls closed on election day the voters In these Parlflo Islands knew that the republicans had triumphed on the mainland. The Hawaiian could't vote for a president, but they elected a republican delegate to congress and re turned a solid republican legislature for the territory. The men who hate to lose should move to Hawaii. THE GKMIS OF CONTEXT. Facilities (or Happiness Greater Than Ever Before. St Louis Republic There are natures which resist gratifica tion, which crave agitation and sourness, which cannot enter into sympathy with the ennobling conditions of life and which are Incapable of responding to the higher sen timents of mankind. If there were not such natures, In these times content and hope would be felt unanimously and there would be no manifestation whatever of dog gish affliction. Facilities for happiness never were greater than they are now and In this country. The average man has more lux uries than a prince had only a compara tively short while ago. Society aa a whole Is well off, and is so organised as to pro vide the individual with unrestricted liberty and with ample encouragement for effort. The highest positions are open to charac ter. The opportunities for spiritual and mental advancement and for material pros perity are not only unlimited, but are ac cessible to the very humblest person. The man who complains about his cir cumstances in this country, who cannot ap preciate the freedom and blessings which he enjoys, who cannot reconcile his heart to the existing order of affairs, and who In bis soreness longs fur a state which never could be, can only be looked upon aa the victim of some disease of temperamelit It Is uot tbe country which Is WTong, nor the people who are wroxig; the malady Is of bis own Datura. WBAT WAS SAID AT TBE CONFERENCE. OMAHA, Neb, Dec 11, 1904. To T. J. Maboney, President Civic Fed eration: Last Tuesday's conference between yourself, Mr. W. T. Graham and Gov ernor Mickey, in which I participated by invitation of the governor, was held within closed doors, and was, therefore, regarded and treated by me as semi-confidential. For that reason I refrained from giving publicity to the acrimonious discussion touching your relation to Jo seph Bartley, the state treasury embez Kler, but you have seen fit to give out to Omaha newspapers your own garbled version In which I am made to appear as completely cowed and silenced by your denunciations and threats, thus compel ling me to make public what actually did transpire. You opened the conference by the dec laration that the Civic Federation had within the last year succeeded in clos ing the largest gambling house In Omaha through a mandate of the supreme court, caused the suppression of wine rooms in the lower part of the town and was mak ing a etrenuous effort to bring about a strict enforcement of the Sloeumb law. After giving your views of the powers and duties of the police commission, with which I substantially concurred, and without the slightest provocation you launched out Into a personal tirade in which yon sought to class me with ha bitual law breakers. To this I retorted that It did not be come you to Indulge in such crimination, at any rate not until, you had turned over the money collected by you for Bartley, which by rights should be turned into the state treasury. You flew Into a rage and pronounced It a damna ble He and malicious libel without an lota of fact to back it. You declared you had never had any financial deal with Bartley and never handled an I. O. IT. belonging to Hartley. Yon were admonished by me to cool down. I said: "What I published may be false, but it. was not a malicious in vention. My Information came from Judge E. M. Bartlett directly nnrTirom Joe Bartley through another person, whose name I will not disclose. I never knowingly published anything about any man that I did not believe to be true. I may be deceived sometimes, but I al ways have Information that would war rant me in making the charge. If Judge Bartlett misstated the facts you must settle It with him. My information was that you were one of Bartley's attorneys when he was on trial In the criminal court and that you had afterward real ized on one or more notes handed you by Bartley for collection and that you pock eted the whole amount, between $4,000 and $5,000, claiming It as your fee." "This Is absolutely false," you retorted. "I was retained by Bartley for his de fense and charged him $500, which was not too much." (Judge Bartlett declares since our interview that it was only $400.) Continuing, you said: "I also col lected some rent for Bartley from prop erty that he owned In Omaha before he was sent to the pen, and I handled a note for an eastern party against a con cern in Holt county with which Bartley was connected, but I have retained only n small fee and paid over the balance to the parties. I don't owe Bartley a cent. and I warn you never to connect my name with Bartley again unless you want to invite a libel suit." I was not very much flustered by this implied threat and simply advised you to settle this matter with Judge Bartlett and Bartley. who were the sources of my informotlon, directly and indirectly. Then you turned in and asked me why I was hostile to tbe Civic Federotlon. "I am not hostile to the Civic" Federation," was my response, "but I do not like the methods by which It Is trying to do some of its work. I cannot comprehend why Walter Molse and his man Friday, I. J. Dunn, are being projected as reformers. It is a matter of notoriety that Molse was the clearing bouse of grafters and crooks during the exposition, and in the prosecution of saloon men Dunn was only doing his bidding as was evidenced by the fact that be protested over 190 saloons last year and, then withdrew his protests as soon as the Board of Police Commissioners bad granted Molse licenses for his saloons." "Molse and Dunn do not in any shape or manner represent the Civic Federa tion," exclaimed Mr. Graham. "We have nothing in common with them and can't comprehend why you should assoclato their names with our work." "Because they bave cut a big figure in your crusade," said I. "Didn't Mr. Ma honey at the very outset of this confer ence tell the governor that the Civic Fed eration had closed tbe biggest gambling house in Omaha? If I remember rightly that gambling house, which was a pool room in which gambling is carried on very much the same as it is in bucket shops and stock exchanges, was closed at tbe instance of Dunn, acting for Molse. If you repudiate these reformers now, I cannot quite reconcile your claim, but that is neither here nor there." There was more cross-fire and contro versy, but time and space forbid repro duction. Sufflceth to say, that I most emphatically disclaim any opposition to any rational effort to purge Omaha of vice and crime, but I want all move ments in thiB direction divested of poll-1 tics, imposture and shams. E. ROSEWATER. gsservtsloa of Insurance Companies. Kansas City Times. The matter of Insurance Is one that reaches almost every home In the country. It Is fitting, therefore, that the president should urge upon congress the duty of considering whether or not the powers of the government, through the Interstate Commerce commission, msy not be ex tended to cover the Insurance business. Where such large capital, representing so great a proportion cf the people and all classes, Is employed for Investment, some times In speculation, it Is of the greatest Importance that there should be govern mental supervision tf some kind at least sufficient In scope to inform the country fully as to the private operations of the big companion. SUITABLE Christmas A Complete Wine Set-ftX! ll Sl.00 and up. A Fancy flask or Demijohn of Whiskey, 75c and up. Aa Imparted Stein, . . . SOc and A quart of Killers Wh skcy. SOc. $1. $1 A quart of Hillers Wine, J5c.S0c.75c As Assertmest ol Fancy Liquors A BOX OF CIGARS is always appreciated. from 25c to $5.00. If GREEN 0 1309 Farnam Street SERMON BOILED DOWN. Character Is the true culture. Borrowed trouble always comes to abide. When a man has fame he does not know It. The cynic gets his opinions before the mirror. A little cant can spoil a whole lot of cen secratlon. No soul was ever paved by a scheme of salvation. The crudest truth Is better than the most cultured lie. Trickery in. the pulpit does not make truth in the pews. He who will not pray for others cannot pray for himself. No man gains anything until he Is willing to lose everything. It will take more than gold-loving hearts to make the golden age. What the church needs Is not fortifying so much as filling with life. It is not hard to believe in the total de pravity of the rest of the race. You canr.ot cover sin by offering 3 per cent of the spoils to the church. If you are looking for a chance to love you are always finding love Itself. A man's ascent amongst the living counts for more than his descent from the dead. The first step toward curing a crook world will be to straighten your own glasses. Religion has nothing at all to do with life when it has not something to do with all life. Chicago Tribune. SECILAR SHOTS AT THIS Pt'LPIT. Washington Poet: Rev. Dr. Mlnot Bavago of New York, is not satisfied with the Book of Job. The good doctor is talking like a man who had a stock of Job's comforters. Kansas City Journal: A Boston clergy man says that If John D. Rockefeller will give away all his money he will make him senior deacon of his church. Tempting as this offer Is, Mr. Rockefeller had not closed In with It at last accounts. Cleveland Plain Dealer: It seems quite pertinent to reproduce what the Rev. Dr. Morgan Dix has to say concerning the an nual crusade against Santa Claus. "I was brought up under Santa Claus," he says. "and my children were, too. Why should I oppose him now?, When the children grow up and learn there Is no Santa Claus they can be told to remain children and keep on hanging up the stockings at Christ maslots of grown people do that." Boston Globe: Imagine the young men of young Mr. Rockefeller's Sunday school class standing around Mr. Rockefeller Sr. Sunday, with wide eyes and open mouths, while the Standard oil magnate said: "I was taught to get the full value of my money, and also to give the full value, and I have lived up to that principle. I was taught to appreciate the value of money, and taught to save money, and I always saved something, no matter how little I earned. The trouble with the young men of today Is that they are apt to re gard the accumulation of wealth as the one great success in life. Money Is only a trust In man's hands, and to uso it im properly is a great sin." PERSONAL AND OTHERWISE. Mr. Lawson of Boston Is giving his dear friends on Wall street practical illustra tions of his literary ability. George Ade, the playwright, Is not seri ously 111, as reported. He is taking the water cure for past transgressions. That's no joke. The opinion prevails at O'Neill that It takes an uncommonly wise man to tell by outside appearances what a bank vault contains. There Is a note of potential farce In Mrs. Chadwlck's tangled affairs. Her troubles began when she turned down a dressmaker's bill. When a Chadwicked banker admits that he Is "a dups or a. fool," onlookers can accept both as authoritative and let the characterization go at that. A bunch of New Jersey people think the world is about to come to an end and are preparing for It, New Jersey is well provided with Jumping off places. The party of Parker, Bryan and Cleve land has fallen Into such bad repute In Pennsylvania that an afflicted wife asks for a divorce on the ground that her hus band Is a democrat. If further evidence la needed to show how readily the Japs adapt themselves to civilised conditions, Prince Fushinl sup plies It. While In New York recently the prince was Initiated Into the mysteries of the American cocktail and found It I ! 9 ni ns idtikjMj Gifts... .V&Vtt.4 Hillers n p A X-MAS SOUVENIR FREE To Every Purchaser. Your Holiday Liquors, Bought at Hillers, Will be sure to please. TRADING STAMPS. so appetizing that he ordered the con fertion added lo the regular menu. The Idea of planting fruit trees along city streets is both novel and meritorious. How appropriate, for Instance, would bs peach trees In the residence streets, plum tres around the court house, city hall and postofHce, and prune trees to lend their charms to hotels and boarding houses. DOMESTIC I'l.EASAMHIICS. Mrs. Ferguson What did Dr. Fourthly preach nbmit this morning? Mr. Ferguson Well, he preached about half the congregation to sleep. Chicago Tribune. First Bachelor Suppose you saw soma beauiiful srencry coming over the Kockles. What was it like? Becond Ditto It had gray eyes and brown hair and u blue gown; it sat just across the uisle from me. Detroit Free Press. "Isn't It ridiculous to say 'Imitation Is the slncerest flattery?" "Oh, I don't know." "Well, i know that It doesn't flatter a (rlrl to receive an imitation diamond en gagement ring." Philadelphia Ledger. "It has Just leaked out that Miss Newell was married over a yenr ago." "Who gave it away?" "The siork." Town Topics. Towne My wife surprised me today bv telling me she wanted a little money to buy Christmas presents. Browne Why should that surprise you? Towne-Reoaus" UHually she tells me she wants a great dent. Philadelphia Press, "How can I make sure that he loves mo?" ask.-il the sentimental slrl. "I'iek out n nfektie for him thit corre sponds to your Idea of the beautiful," said Miss Cayenne, "and see if ho weurs it." Washington Star. Mrs. Blnks Henry, were you ever disap pointed in love? Mr. Binks Never but once, my dear. I was never In love but once. Cleveland Leader. AX OLD SWEETHEART OP MINE. James Whltcomb Riley. As one who cons at evening o'er an album all alone, And muses on the faces of the friends that he has known. So I turn the leaves of fancy till, in shadowy design, I find the smiling features of an old sweet heart of mine. The lamplight seems to glimmer with a flicker of surpiise As I turn It low to rest me of the daxzle in my eyes; And I light my pipe In silence, save a sigh that seems to yoke Its fate with my tobacco and to vanish into smoke. 'Tis a fragrant retrospection for the lor- lng thoughts that start Into being are like prrfumes from the blossoms of the heart; And to dream the old dreams over Is a luxury divine When my truant fancies wander with that old sweetheart of mine. Though I hear, brneath my study, Ilka a fluttering of wings, The voices of my children and the mother as she sines, I feci no twinge of conscience to deny me any theme When Caret has cast her anchor In the harbor of a dream In fart, to speak In earnest, I believe It adds a charm To snlce the good a trifle with a little dust of harm, For I find an extra flavor In memory's medlow wine That makes me drink the deeper to that old sweetheart of mine. A face of lily beauty and a form of airy grace Floats out of my tobacco as the genii from the vase; And I thrill beneath the glances of a pair of asure eyes As glowing as the summer and as tender as the skies. And again I feel the pressure of the slen der little hand As we used to talk together of the future we had Dlannod When I should be a poet, and with nothing else to aa But write the tender verses that she set the mulo to. When we should live together in a cosy little cot. Hid in a nest of roses with a fairy garden spot Where the vines were ever fruited and weather ever tine. And the birds were tiver singing for that old sweetheart of mine. When I should be her lover forever and a day, And she my faithful sweetheart till the golden hair was gray; And we should be so happy that when eJther's Hps were dumb They would not smile In heaven till the ulnar s kmu nau come. But ah! my dream Is broken by a step Upon the stair, And the door is softly opened and my wife im tnnrilnir thtre! Yet with eagerm-H and rapture all my visions I re.Hlgn To greet the living presence of that old sweetheart of mine. . tar CORRECT GLASSES Don't take chances with your eyes. If you need glasses, secure the best optical services to be bud. Select your optielan as rarefullv as you would your phyHlclun. fhir leadership is unqueHttoned. Our opticians are men of the highest technical rklll In their profession. Our lens-grinding riant Is the largefct aiul most complete In he West. We test yoai' eyes carefully and supply you with glasses of the tilghent scientific accuracy at the most reasonable prlr.es. Huteson Optical Co., EXCLUSIVE OPTICIANS 213 S. 16th St., Paxtoo Block, Omaba. Wholesale and Premises. Retail. Fsctory on Established I I