THE, OMAHA DAILY BEKt SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 1. IPOS. IT REAL ESTATE CITY PROPERTY FOH AI.E. (Continued.) 10 ACRES, $1,600 fBpeelal Hee. Jan. 21, 1908.) Lies well. t' miles from P. O., south west, K mil oft Center St. Think of buy In 10 oc,rea at the prlre of a rood lot. Act quickly, v, ., Harrison & Morton, 912$flJ N. Y. Lite. Tel. Doug. S14. 113) 708 31 KOR BALE Several fine pair elk teeth, cheap for cash. Flat 1, : Karnam Bt. tlti) t3 2x 1 WANT an offer on the property 112 and 11M South Ust Bt.; two modern houses and good bare: well rented. This prop, erty la owned by an eastern party, who must sell. THOMAS BRENNAN, Room 1, New Yo4 Life Bids (U-M406 $300.00 Lot 4xl2S, fronting east on 41st, just north of Farnam Bt. F. V. WE AD, 1801 Farnam Bt. (!) M66i 1 LIST your property with Chris Boyer, 121 and Cummins; Bt. 1-J47 FOR QVICK resulU In selling or renting your property see BenJIman Real Estate Co., 3Jw Neville Blk. Both phones. . (1)-M17 Fi3 THE REF.D ABSTRACT CO., established. 111. Prompt service. Get our price, 17H Farnam 1 M1J E ISA Is ESTATB TITLB TRUST QQ CHAB. U.' WILLIAMSON. Tree. wy (.11844 FOR BALE At a bargain, new 5-room cot tage, nil modern except furnace; corner 1, paved street,, one block to car; easy terms. .... ., , . P. V: 8HOLE3 CO.. . 110 Board of Trade Bids. U9.I MS64 3 INVESTMENTS. TOR SALE-3ood real estate mortgages, netting--6 ,er cent and 7 per cent on Omaha In proved real estate and Ne braska farm lands.- N. 1 Lodge Co., 1714 Farnam St. (19)-M868 FOR BALE A twelve apartment flat building, located at 2!Hh avenue and Douglas street. Good rent. In first-class condition. A bargain. If taken t once, a LOME LAND AND INVESTMENT CO. 5oS Bo. 18th. l?t. Omaha. Neb. . . .(19)-in3uQ Feb. . FOR SALE-Eight-room modern house. with large barn, 1 Ptnrknry St. In quire 1A IF. 'Woodland. BIB Urandels Bldg. Tel. Douglas 3468. ..IWj-Mm REAL ESTATE FA HH AD KAJICH LAND FOR BALE 5 f -" Mlssenrl. MISSOURI farms to suit any purchaser. Call on us or write for list. Union Realty Co., Lnlon Wo. . tJOj-MSiO F.. PRESIDENT SPURS CONGRESS Special Menage in Which He Dis cusses Need of Action. rOWER OF COMMERCE COMMISSION Thlaks It bold Be Increased fer Ureatest flood to Country Trace to Dlaheaestr, How ever Powerful. (Continued from Second Pace.) Kekraaka. 1M ACRES of land. S miles southwest of c ity limits, adjoining Heymnre park. ill sell tor 1136 per acre If sold before rented. Easy terms. Apply to E. V. Morearlty. - 7 Paxton Blk. C!0) M&M - Uregoa. A SNAP IN OBEOON TIMBER. I will sell a two-thirds Interest In 4.W acres of pine timber Mud for 140,000. These lands hai 4f,one,000 feet of tine white pine umber, well located. Land valuable after cuttlaV timber TH1. perfect. Address W. f.nV.tonnber "Ch,n Misenw. . nVEBTERN FaBM LANDS. Ciop payment plan: two crops pays for laod" wnlli the land Is doubling In value, NATIONAL INVESTMENT CO.. WoM. Brandela Nuilding " REAL ESTATE L0AN3:. LOAiTh .on tovn"toMto WKfife O Kcefe R. E. Co.. 1001 N. Y. La mug. WANTED City loans and warrants. W. Farnam Smith Co.. 1120 rrmt. PRIVATE MONElf NO DELAY. , rB. UAKVIN BROS.. IM FARNAM. privATB money to loan; no delays. J. U. BUefwd, .fa-AT Brandelgjjd PRIVAnS- MONEY CASH ON HAND NO DELAY. J H. M1THEN. 1:03-8 1ST NAT BANK PLDG. TEL. VOVOll. LOWEST RATES Bemls, FaxtonBlock. PfU VATK money to loan on Improved real ...... N v. Dodca II Co.. 17'4 rar- " nain St. 1100 to tio.ooo made promptly. V. V. Weed. Wead Bids-., lith and Varnam.M34 ci c 1 MONEY TO LOAN-Payne Investment Co. WANTED TO BORROW WANTED To borrow H.fOO for one year from private party. Will pay liberal In terest, pood security. Address A 913 jtee, J4 MS7 1 WANTEDzJOJUY. wiNTED To buy seoond-hand furniture, cook and heating stoves, carpets, lino ijms office furniture, old clothes and ihts Plauoi. feathers, bed pillows, quilts Ind lf kinds of tools; or will buy tb. furniture ol your house complete. The nlihpr? W C-J the rljht man. Tel Dou. W71. (3a) M7.4 Feb No amount t-v uiwri ImA aacks, 'or too gmilU Wagner. l Nll CASH Pi ooond-hin4 eohln. " Ct'o7 f . K. 1U Bt. TsL Bed W W ANT to buy Stock of general merchan due for c,.h. Must bo cheap. O. W. Woodvrard. Bayard, l, FeD. 5x attack has been made with most bitterness upon the actual administration of the law, especially through the Department of Jus tice, but also through the Interstate Com merce commission and the bureau of cor porations. The extraordinary violence ot the assaults upon our policy contained In these speeches, editorials, articles, adver tisements and pamphlets and the enormous urns ot money spent In these various ways give a fairly accurate measure of the anger and terror which our public actions have raused the corrupt men of vast wealth to feel In the very marrow of their being. The attack la sometimes made openly against us for enforcing the law and sometimes wit)) a certain cunning, for not trying to enforce it In some other way than which experience shows to be prac tical. One of the favorite methods of the latter class of assailant Is to attack the administration for not procuring the im prisonment Instead of the fine of offenders under these anti-trust laws. . The man making this assault is Usually either a prominent lawyer or an editor who takes his policy from the financiers and his arguments from their attorneys. If the former, he has defended and advised many wealthy malefactors, and He knows well that, thanks to the advice of lawyers like himself, a certain kind of modern corpora tion has been turned Into an admirable instrument by which to render It well nigh Impossible to get at. the head of the cor poration, at the man who Is really most guilty. When we are able to put the real wrongdoer in prison, this is what we strive to do; this is what we have actually done with some very wealthy criminals, who. moreover, represented that most baneful of all alliances, the alliance between the corruption of organized politics and the corruption of high finance. This Is what we have dime In the Qaynor and Greene case. In the case of the misapplication of funds In connection with certain great banks In Chicago, In the land fraud cases, where, as In other cases likewise, neither the highest political position nor the posses sion of great wealth, has availed to save the offenders from orison. The federal government does scourge sin; It does, bid sinners fear; for It has put behind the bars with Impartial severity, the powerful financier, the powerful politician, the rich land thief, the rich contractor -all, no matter how high their station, against whom criminal misdeeds can be provtd. All their wenlth and power cannot protect them. But it often happens that the effort to Imprison a given defondant is certain to be futile, while it is possible to fine him or to fine the corporation of which he Is head; so that, In other words, the only way ot punishing- the wrong Is by fining the corporation, unless we are content to pro ceed personally against the minor agents. The corporation lawyers to whom I refer and thefr employers are the men mainly responsible for this state of things, and their responsibility is shared with all who Ingeniously oppose the passing of lust and effective laws, or who fail to execute them when they have been put on the statute books. "Innocrst Stockholders." ."Much Is-'saiuVin these attacks upon, the policy ot the present administration, about the rights of 'Innocent stockholders, That stockholder Is not Innocent who volun tarily purchases stock In a corporation whose methods and management he knows to be corrupt; and stockholders are bound to try to secure honest management, or else are estopped from complaining about the proceedings the government . finds necessary in order to compel the corpora tion to obey the' law. There has been in the past grave wrong done innocent stock holders by overcapitalization, stock-watsr-Ing, stock-Jobbing, stock-manipulation. This we have sought to prevent, first, by exposing the thing done and punishing the offender when any existing law had been violated; second, by recommending the passage of laws which 'would make unlawful similar practices for the future, The public men, lawyers,, and editors who loudly proclaim their sympathy for the 'innocent stockholders' when a great law defying corporation is punished, are the first to protest with frantic vehemenos against all efforts by taw to put a stop to the practices which are the real and ultimate sources of the damage alike to the stockholders and the public. The apologists of successful dishonesty always declaim against any effort V? punish or prevent it, on the ground that any such effort will 'unsettle business.' It Is they who by their acts have unsettled bust ness; and the very men raising this cry spend hundreds of thousands of dollars In securing, by speech, editorial, book, or pamphlet, the defense by misstatements ot what they have done; and yet when public servants correct their misstatements by telling the truth they declaim against them for breaking silence, lest 'values be de predated.' They have hurt honest busi ness men. honest workingmen, honest farmers; and now they clamor against the truth being told. "The keynote of all these attacks upon the effort to secure honesty in business WANTED A nloe. clean stook of h ard ware. to invoice from 3.0u0 to ttooo, will pav spot cash for Bee. ' it. Address Y :H. (351-M741 14x "WANTEDTO RENT VOirNO ' man desires room In private 7 WANTED-SITUATIONS " iiViT WOMEN furnished free of charge. Tslephon. .DougUa 1111 (.-ad U.l Ntl men de..re. place to work for i.wr4 vrme auiiiK iv ........ . v - - - - - .... ivieuhone Douglas li4. ii-Ste . . a., l N wants goo ' r.-.l .riinrv: best references .lr7.s It 7-M64 4x HtjTHfc od staple line, (ferences. Ad- EXPERT steam engineer wants position; years WHU lwiim K. S10 Bee. Address 127 MWl x OCEAN STEAMSHIPS REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS CX. AX K B Ctnil ! 'U "sVBAJiK" r-M U.W e. Bee. lara. Ml ItMSU II 0 rm THE OR I EN H rskraarr't to Asrtl IT. teas. eiU Sara, muas Ir frtM . tmlasiaa bora (kvuntua. SfdUL PBATliaa: kuteua. i .a . aui. AW. Mtiu. it Drs ta Bars M U Wei CoBustipl. tikt fUa IM Mvltr.. (. TOV'HS kCVMD TUg WORLD. 4,0 TOlMtS TO EUROPE SUM swSBratiMalt tsS ttraellTs tm ttwS, t. ti. U.aaa, tk-u tU , Mao Dltdlvt Q. A. Llndqulst and wife to Carl A. Renatrom. lot 17, block 2, Rose mil J. W. Thomas and wife to C. Georg l arlberg. lot 8. block K. Omaha View i...., Nebraska Stone Co. to same, lots 14 and IB. blo k 33. Walnut Hill James Matls to Alfred Brodegaard. lot 10 and part lot 15, Cunningham Brennan's addition Dennis Cunningham and , wife to Jamea Malta, same Warren Swltsler and wife to John Lynch, lot 3. block 1, Brigga Place Hannah J. Bennett and husband to the Hill estate, lot 1 and all lot SO, block 18, Hanscom place Roy A. Wilson to Robrrt Undberg. lot 37, EJIIstone Park Place 8arah Hewitt to Lymau Wilcox, lot S, Colfax sub .-. Liizle Hogenkamp to Jeff Harris, riU lots 25 and 2i, block 3. B. E. Wil cox addition William A. Saunders and wife to nls Cunningham, lot 10. Cunningham & Hennan's addition C. Gtorge Carlbrg and wife to Oorge Jt. Dillon, lot 4, Ckrlberg'a replat Adelaide M.. Rroughton and husband to John N. Haskell, lots 1. 3, 4 and t. block 3, and other lota. Vuuir Place J James Walsh to Jamea A. M Iters, lots 6 and 1, block 4, Mount Douglas .. David A. Moore and wife to J. J. De right, lot fi. Archer's sub-dlvislon. . F. D. Hill and wife to Clarence B. Tumey, lot 1, block 113, Dundee Place Clarence If. McElhlnny to Marv E. McKlliinny, lot 4, House! aV l ca bins' aub-Mvlsun Anna B. W. Baker et al. to Gould C. Diets, block , West Oinaha Charles O. Bomars and wife to II. E. Ne branch, part lots 23 and 24. block 7. Hansi-om Place E. F. Bralley, sheriff, to Oscar Quick, v lots In Grsnd View Total I and In politics Is wall expressed In brasen protests against any effort for the moral MH.n I Irtn nf the business wosM. on els the ground that It Is unnstnral, unwar ranted, and Injurious, and that business panic is the necessary penalty for such effort to secure business honesty. The morality of such a plea Is precisely as great as if made on behalf of the men caught In a gambling establishment when that gambling establishment IS raided by the police. If such words mesn anything they mean that those whoee sentiments they represent stand agalnat the effort to bring about a moral regeneration of busi ness which will prevent a repetition of th insurance, banking, and street railroad scandals In New York; a repetition of the Chicago Alton deal; a repetition of the combination between certain professional politicians, certain professional labor lead ers, and certain big financiers, from the dlsgraco of which Ban Francisco has Just been rescued; a repetition of the success ful effort by the Standard Oil people to crush out every competitor, to. overawe the common carriers, and to establish a monopoly which treats the public with a contempt which the public deserves so long as It permits men of such principles and such sentiments to avow and act on them with Impunity. The outcry agslnst stop ping dishonest practices among wrongdoers who happen to be wealthy Is precisely sim ilar to the outcry raised s gainst every effort for cleanliness and decency in city government, because, forsooth. It will "hurt business." The same outcry Is mads against the Department of Justice for prose cuting the heads of colossal corpora tions that has been made against the men who In San Francisco have prosecuted with Impartial severity the wrongdoers among business1 men, public officials, and labor leaders alike. The principle Is the same in the two cases, bust as the blackmailer and bribe-giver stand on the same evil emi nence of Infamy, so the man who makes an enormous fortune by corrupting legislatures and municipalities and fleecing his stock holders and the public, stands on the same moral level with the creature who fattens on the blood money of the gambling house and the saloon. Moreover, in the last analy sis, both kinds of corruption are ar more Intimately connected than would at first sight appear; the wrongdoing Is at bottom the same. Corrupt business and corrupt politics act and react with ever Increasing debasement, one 'on the other; the corrupt head of a corporation and the corrupt labor leader are both In the same degree the enemies of honest corporations and honest labor unions; the rebate tsker, the fran chise trafficker, the manipulator of socup Hies, the purveyor and protector of vice, the blackmailing ward boss, tho ballot-bog stuiier, me demagogue, the mob leader, the hired bully, and msnkiller sll alike work at the earns web of corruption, and all alike should be abhorred by honest men. Honest Business Uninjured. The 'business' which Is hurt by the movement for honesty Is the kind of bust nesa whk'h, in the long run, it pays the country to have hurt. It Is the kind of business which has tended to make the very name ''high finance' a term of scan dal to which all honest American men of business should Join In putting an end The special pleaders for business dishon esty, In denouncing the present adminis tration for enforcing the law against the huge and corrupt corporations which have defied the law, also denounce It for en deavoring to secure sadly needed labor leg islation, such usa far-reaching law mak ing employers liable for Injuries to their employes. It Is meet and fit that the apologists for corrupt wealth should op pose every effort to relieve weak and help less peopjo from crushlna mlBfortur.e brought upon them by Injury in the bus! ness from which they gain a bare liveli hood. Tho burden should be distributed It Is hypocritical baseness to speak of a girl 'who Works (n 'factory where tho dangerous machinery- Is unprotected ns having the 'right' freely to contract to expose herself to dangers to life and limb, Bhe has no alternative but to suffer want or else to expose herseii to such dangers. and when She loses a hand or Is otherwise maimed or disfigured for life. It is moral wrong that the whole burden of the risk necessarily Incidental to the business should be placed with crushing weight upon er weak shoulders, and all who profit bv ner worg escape scot-free. 'That is what opponents of a Just employers' liability law aavocate: and it la consistent that tney should usually also advocate Immu nlty for those most dangerous members of the criminal olass the criminals of grea weaun. Defense for Judges. "Our opponents have recently been bit. terly criticising the two Judges referred to In the accompanying communications from the Standard Oil company and the Santa Fe railroad for having ImDosed Iipiw nnes on inese two corporations, and yet inese same critics of these two Judges ex haust themselves in denouncing the most respectful and cautious discussion of th official action of a Judge which results in Immunity to wealthy and powerful wrong doers. Most certainly it behooves us all to treat with the utmost respect the high ornce ol judge, and our Judges, as a whole, are brave and upright men. Respect for the law must go hand in hand with respect for the Judges, and as a whole It Is true now ag In the past that the Judges stand In character and service above all other men among their fellow-servants of the public. There Is all the greater need that the few who fall in this great office, who fall below tills high standard of Integrity of wisdom, of sympathetic understanding and of courage, should have their eyes opened to the needs of their countrymen, A Judge who on the bench either truckles to the mob and shrinks from sternly re pressing violence and disorder, or bow down before a corporation; who fails to stand up valiantly for the rights of prop erty on the one hand, or on the other by misuse of the process of Injunction or by his attitude toward all measures for the betterment of the conditions of labor. f 400 makes the wageworker feel with bltterneea that the courts are hostile to him; or who falls to realise that all public servants In their several stations must strive to stop the abuses of the criminal rich such a man performs an even worse service to 3.800 the body politic than the legislator or ex ecutive who goes wrong. The Judge who does his full duty well stands higher and renders a better service to the people than servant of ttia people has a right to ex pect to be free fron Just and honeet rrltl- 435 900 1 . 300 300 2.000 22S GoO 150 600 100 3.000 4.000 3.300 111 4 any other public servant; he is entitled, to greater respect, and if he Is a true servant ot the people. If he Is upright, wise and fearless, he will unhesitatingly disregard even the wishes of the people if they con flict with the eternal principles of right as against wrong. He must serve the people, but he must serve his own conscience first. All honor to such a Judge, and all honor cannot be rendered him If it Is rendered equally to his brethren who fall Immeasur ably below ths high Ideals for which hs stands. Untruthful criticism is wicked at all times, and whoever may be the object; but It Is a peculiarly ftagrsnt Iniquity when a Judge la the object. No man should lightly criticise a Judge; no man should, sven In, his own mind, condemn a Judge unless lie Is sure of the facts. If a Judge Is assailed for standing against popular fofly. and above all for standing against mob violence, all honorable men should rally instantly to his support. Neverthe less It he clearly tails to do his duty by the publlq In dealing with lawbreaklng corporations, lawbreaklng mens of wealth, he must export to feel the weight of pub lic opinion; and this Is but right, for ex cept in extreme cases this is the only way In which bs can be reached at all. No .An Etkleal Movement. 'The opponents of the measure we cham pion slng'o out now one and now another measure for especial attack, and speak as If the movement In which we are en raged was purely economic. It has a large economic side, but it Is fundamentally an thleal movement. It Is not a movement to be completed In one year, or two or three years: It Is a movement which must be persevered In until the spirit which lies behind It sinks deep Into the heart and the conscience of the whole people. It Is al ways important to choose the right means to achieve our purpoae, but It Is even more Important to keep this purpose clearly be fore us. and this purpose Is 'o secure na tional honesty In business and In politics We do not subscribe to the cynical belief that dishonesty1 and unfair dealing are essential to bualness success, and are to be condoned when the success la modern.t? nd applauded when, the success Is groat. The methods by which ths Standard Oil people and those engsged In the other combinations of which I have spoken above ave achieved great fortunes can only be Justified by the advocacy of a system of morality which would also Justify every form of criminality on the part of a labor union, and every form of violence, cor ruption and fraud, from murder to bribery and ballot box stuffing In politics. We are rylng to secure equality of opportunity for all; and the struggle for honesty Is the same whether It Is msde on behalf ot one set of men or of another. In the Interest Of the small settlers anil-land owners, and against the embittered opposition of wealthy owners of huge wandering flocks of sheep, or of corporations desiring to rob the people of coal and timber, wo strive to put an end to the theft of public land In the west. When wo do this, and protest against the action of all men, whether In public life or In private life, who cither take part in or refuse to try to stop such theft, we are really enpaged In the same policy as when we endeavor to put a stop to rebates or to prevent the upgrowth of uncontrolled . monqpolles. Our effort is simply to enforce the principles f common honesty and common sense. Jt would In' deed be 111 for the country should there bo any halt In our work. "The laws must In the future bo adminis tered as they are now being administered, so that the Department of Justice may con tinue to be, what It now is. In very fact the Department of Justice, where so far as our ability permits Justice is meted out with an even hand to great and small, rich and poor, wenk ' and strong. Moreover. there should be no delay in sunplementlng the laws on the statute books by the enactment of further Ihglslatlon as outlined In the message I sent to the congress on its assembling. Under tho existing laws much, very much, has been acutally accom plished during the last six years, and It has been shown by actual experience that corporation and the richest and most powerful manager or manipulator of that corporation, as rigorously and fearlessly ss against the humblest offender. Above all, they have been enforced against th very wrongdoers and ugents of wrongdoers who have for so many years gone scut-freo and flouted the laws with Impunity, against great law-defying corporations of immense wealth, which, until within the last half dozen years, have treated themselves and have expected others to treat them ns being beyond and above all possible check from law. Above All, More Power. "It is especially necessary to secure to the representatives ot the national govern ment full power . to .deal with the great corporations engaged., in interstate com merce, and above all,. -wlili the great in terstate commence Carriers. Our people should clearly recognize ''that whllo there Bre dlfl'icurties InKhf course ' of conduct to be followed fn defihg.,wrth these great corporations, "these difficulties must be faced, and one of three courses followed. The first course ia, fo.. abandon all effort to oversee and control . their actions In the interest of the general public and to per mit a return to the, letter lack of control which would obtain-If they were left to the common law. I do not for one moment believe that our people would tolerate this position. The extraordinary growih of modern industrialism lias rendered the the common law, which grew up undr and was adapted to deal with totally dif ferent condition?, In , many respects In adequate to deal with the. new conditions. These new conditions make It necessary to shackle cunning as In the past we have shackled force. The vast individual and corporate fortunes, the vast combinations of capital, which have marked .the develop ment of our industrial system, create new conditions, and necessitate a change from the old altitude of the state and the nation toward the rules regulating the acquisition and untranimeled business use of property. In order both that property may be ade quately protected, and that at the sarin; time those who hold It may bo prevented from wrongdoing. "The second and third courses are ti have the regulation undertaken either by (he nation or by the states. Of course In any event both the national government and the severs! state governments must do eacli Its part, and each can do a cer tain amount that the. other cannot d, while the only really satisfactory results must be obtained by. the representatives of the national and' state governments working heartily together within their respective spheres. But In my Judgment thoroughgoing and satisfactory control can In the end only be obtained by the action of the national government, for almost all the corporations of enormous wealth that Is, the' corporations which It la especially desirable to control are engaged in inter state commerce, and derive their power and their Importance not from that portion of their business which Is intrastate, but from ths Interstate business. It la not easy always to decide Just where the line of demarcation between the two kinds of business falls. This line must ultimately be drawn by tlit; federal courts. Much of the effort to secure . adequate control of the great corporations by state action, has been wise and effective, but much of it has been neither: for when' the effort is made to accomplish by the uotlon of tlu state what can only be accomplished by the action of the nation, the result can only be disappointment, and In the end the law Will probably be deelar.Hl uncon stitutional. Sj likewise In the national arena, we who belluve in the mcusurea herein advocated are hampered and iot aided by the extremists who advocate action so violent that It would either be useless or else would cause more mischief than It would remedy. Authority Already Eiiat. "In u recent letter from a learned Judge ot the supreme court of one of tho Gulf states, the writer speaks as follows; In all matters pertaining to Interstate cuiumerct me autnorlty of trie national government already exists and does nut nave to be acquired, and the exercise of this existing authority can he in nu senbu a usurpation ut, or Infringement upon, the rights of the slates. On the coiUmry, iiad tl.a federal government given this question more attention in the past and applied a vigorous check to corporate abuses, con ditions woulld now be belter, because the states would have had fswer real or imaginary grievances and have had lusa cause not only to attempt the esverclss of authority reserved to the national govern ment, but to act without propor modera tion in matters peculiarly within their own provincn. The national .government das bn iriulas in the past, but even at this late day It can solv this problem, and the sooner the national authority U) vicriUKd AVHNG ET 1-3 ISA SAVING WORTH WHILE Xow that Hie money scare is over people are supplying themselves with the rooUs they intended purchasing last fall. Hut while normal conditions have returned, we must present some extraordinarv buying inducements if we succeed in disposing of the immense FALL STOCK left on our hands because of the general business depression of October, November and December. UNIFORM REDUCTIONS OF ONE-THIRD CREDIT ARRANGEMENTS MADE TO SUIT YOUR CONVENIENCE. "omiinatlon Ilookcos -wm. 23. ;e 75 18 Library Cases, wero $25. now (T 75 going at . . lU Sanitary Btexl Couches were $5.00, C X 75 now va j t 7 Couches, covered In Nantucket ffll C leather frame, nil .-oilng IS 10 MiiMsivr Chiffonier, extra reduc- CO 50 nous . WsS 8 lletl lifltim Suits. $45 to Ji5, ro- IT ! "X 5Q aucea to. . . uf II) Klrirant llrasa Trim mrA Iron P 75 IM'U 17 S Massive Sofa Bed Pavenport, large, heavy construction, Imported velour coverings; you're saving $11.00 to $13.00 on this article $26; 1-foot Extension Tables ua iv w r Velour- Couches, were l8, now. . $11. 95 Range, complete with warm ing closet, largo squure oven---guaranteed $26 " Massive Uockcrs, were $6.75, now priced" at. .". . $4. 25 DrcHsers, large mirror,, were $13, now 70 Dressing Tables, solid oak. cut to . $12. 50 r !:' ta 1 111 4 $1 ILEL7 Oak or jty j3 MuhoKuny ' -'enter jrto. Table hf V Turnetl, I l.aie I Ton, .Lm 1 n r r e hot blast heater, will burn any thing, full nickeled trim med, guaranteed. 87 Mi I.are Morris Chair, were $15, now $9. 75 Klegnnt Solid Vnk Sid hoards , r.$12; 75 Rcducou lor Clcaranco , Beautiful Iron Bsd (Ilk? HUH tra tlon). extra heavy posts and tuh Ing. all popular colors nf enninel, decorated chill work, extra mcc1h1 value. 1 Double lienl itiK IIhkc Hunt er, r 6 t 11 r 11 'lues, full nick eled trimmed, lare size, 'Teather your nest' r isM Ml St! 75 a 1 n sri 1414-1416-1418 DOUGLAS ST I'rlncesK Dresser, oak, mahogany or birdaeye maple, large mirror; the less apt are the states to take action which will represent encroachment upon the ' national domain. There Is a field of operations for both powers, and plenty alike tor national and state governments to do in order to vrotect hoth the peoplo and the public utilities. The line of demarca tion between federal and stste authority can ami should he speedily settled by ths' federal' courts. The fuel lhat the nutional government has omitted to exercise the au thority conferred upon. It 'by the Interstate commerce clause nf the constitution has made the states restive under what they deem corporate abuses, and in some cases has prohuhly stimulated them to go too tiir- in the attempt to correct fheso abuses, with the result thst all measures which thev passed, good or had, have been held up hy the federal courts. The necessary equitable and uniform regulation cannot ho obtained nv me separate aciion 01 uie states, but only by the affirmative action of the national government. "This Is an appeal by a high state Judge, iilarmeil, as good citizens should be alarmed, by conflicts over the matter rtf Jurisdiction, and by the radical action ad vocated by honest people smarting from a sense of Injury received from corpora tions; which Injury the federal courts for bid the states to try to remedy, whllo the federal government nevertheless refrains from Itself taking adequate measures to provide a remedy. It cannot too strongly be Insisted that the defenders and apolog ists of the great corporations, Who have sought In the past and still scek to pre vent adequuto action by the federal gov ernment to control these great corporations arc. not only proving false to the people. hut are laying up a day of wrath for tl great corporations themselves. The nation will not tolerate an utter lack of control over very wealthy men of enormous powi-i In the Industrial, and therefore in the social, 1 lives of all our people, some of whom have shown themselves cynloally and brutally indifferent to the interests of the people; and If congress does not act, with good tempered and sensible but resolute thor oughness, In cutting out the evils and in providing an effective supervision, the re sult Is certain to be action on the part of the separate states, sometimes wise, some times ill-judged and extreme, sometimes Just and damaging to the railroads or other corporations, more often Ineffective from every standpoint, because , the . fedorsl courts declare it unconstitutional. The Klnanelal Flarry. "We have Just passed through two months ef acute financial stress. At any such time It is a snd fact that entirely Innocent people suffer from no fault of their own, and everyone must feel the keenest sym pathy for the largo body of honest busi ness men, of honest Investors, of honest wageworkers, who suffer because Involved In a crash for which they are In no way resisinslble. At such a time there is a natural tendency on tho part of many men to feel gloomy and frightened at the outlook; but there Is 110 justification for this feeling. Them is no nation so abso lutely sure of ultimate success as ours.' Of, course; we shall succeed. Ours Is a nation of masterful energy, wilfc a contL-. nont for lis. domain, nnd tt feels within Us veins the .thrill which comes to thoso who know that' they possess tho future. We are not cast down by the fear of failure. V are upheld by. the confident hope of ultimate trtu'mph. The wrongs that etlst are to be corrected, But they in 110 way Justify doubt as to the final outcome, douht as to the great material prosperity of the future, or of the lofty spiritual life which Is to be built upon that prosperity as a foundation. No misdeeds done In the present must be permitted to shroud from our eyes the glorious future of the nution, but because of this very fact It behooves us never to swerve from our resolute pur pose to cut out wrongdoing and uphold what is right. 1 'I do not for a moment believe that the actions of this administration have brought on business distress; so far as tills is due to local and not world-wide causes, and to tho actions of any) particular individuals, It Is due to the speculative folly nnd fla grant dishonesty of a few men of great 1 wealth, who seek to shield themselves from tho effects of their own wrongdoing by ascribing Its results to the actions of those who have sought to put a stop to the wrongdoing. Hut If It wero true, that to ut out rottenness from the body politic t meant a momentary chock to pn unhealthy seeming prosperity 1 should not for one moment hesitate to put the knife to tho corruption. On behalf of all our people, on buhaif no less of the honest nutn of means than of the honest man who earns each day's livelihood by that day's sweat of Ills brow, it is necessary to insist upon honesty In business and politics alike, In all walks of life. In big things and In little things; upon Just and far dealing as be tween man and man. Those who demand this are striving for the right In the spirit of Abraham Lincoln when he said: Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray, that this mighty scourge may speedily pass uwsy. Yet, if tlod wills that it continue until all the wealth Tilled by the bonds men's two hundred and fifty years of un requited toll shall bo sunk, und until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid hy another drawn with the sword, ns was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said: "The Judgments of the Iird are true and righteous alto gether." With malice toward enne, with charltv for all, with firmnisn in the right, as Ood gives us to see tho right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in. "In the -work wo of this generation are $30 Suits to order for Saturday. FiebrV 1st. -1 his is tho last chance you will have to get a $30.00 Suit for $13.00 $;.no Suit to-order for 817.50 $:n.OO Suit to order for g2o!oO 37.no Mult to order for 22.50 SjUO.OO Suit to order for SUsioO $l.OU Suit to order for 82750 lji30.0O Suit to order for J53o!oO I 'or feet - tit and good work ma nsliip guaranteed. This iH the MacL'arthy-Wil-non way of Ucaxing up the slock, 0 keeping their tailors busy. and. best u all,, of mak ing luiiidredH of new custo mers. We guarantee satlsfao tlon or your- money . back. Once our customer, we'll please you so ,well you'll al ways be brtr.'ensthmwr.'e.'- ' Oon't ml as thla opportunity to get acquainted with us and the extraordinary vulues we offer. Remember Saturday, Feb. 1st, ia the last day, of the $15 Sale. MacCAR.TKY. WILSON TAILORING CO. 3fA-XS Go. 16th St. Near southwest cor. 16th und Farnam In, there Is, thanks he to'the Almighty, no danger of blnodahttl nnd ti6 use for the sword; but there Is grave need of those stem qualities shown alijie by tho men of the north und tln men of the south In the dark days when ach valiantly battled for the light us It was given each to see tha light. Their spirit should be our spirit, as we , strive to bring nearer the day when greed and trickery and cunning shall b tran pled under foet by there who fight for the righteousness that exalt, th a nation," liangerona Nuraery In the abdominal region is prevented hy the uxe of Dr. King's New Life l'ills, th painless purifiers. y,c. Sold by Heat on Drug Co. $.10 suits to order. $15 Saturday.. Iist chance. Mart'arlhy.Wiltton, 304 8. ltiih Bt. ! Pt'B.HiBf'Ji'IT't'1'f tr on. ,n . ssm. .r. -n uis 1 HEN thq snow tho beautiful snow covers the ground it also covers all the coal that is not roofed! It is worth money to you to buy our dry, clean screened coal that is perfectly pro tected by our snow and water tight roofs. Our forty big teams and forty yell-o wagons are ready to deliver an immense' number of orders quickly We bought a horse recently weighing 1910 pounds not because we needed a horse, but because we are always ready to buy extra large and extra good horses to make the delivery of coal easier. Good horses interest and attract good drivers. Good drivers please our patrons. Pleased patrons come again. This is the way we make our business grow. ' citerVnaee; Per Toll, $9.00 Ozark Grate, Suits many people better than Pennsylvania Anthracite SunderBand Our Twenty-Fifty Year Telephones i Bsll,- Dong, a&a. Ia. A 1S51, 1608 HARNEY ST. Morta Yard 1 84th and Bel Hit, Booth Yard 1 aoth and llckorr. 3C V