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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 23, 1910)
Tim BEE: OMAHA, FIJI PAY, SKPTKMHKli 23. lfUO. 'Hie usfAiiA Daily Hee KOLXUEU BT EDWARD ROSE WAT EH. VICJKU 'llOSKWATER. EDITOR, Enterfd at Ooi.ha pualoffke second cU matter. TfcUMS-OF HUBSCRIPTION. Dsily l!e iin.-ludlng Monday), ir weekl Duly He (without Sunday), per week..!. Deji' Re (without SuritlHy ). mie ear..o Day Lea mid Hunuey, ne ye.ir ) VbjL.1 V EH ED BY 'CARRIER. Kenlng Be twithout eiundayl, per week c Menui Ht (with Hun1), per week..lc Munday live, one )ear. ti.M BMluinirr iiee, mie yt-ai.-. 1 M A. Ulrica all complaint nf Irregiilaiitiea in iellveiy to City Circulation Department. OKklCES. Omaha The lira Bulluuig. pouth Omaha l w-t nty-fourth and N. Council iiluffs j Bcott street. Lincoln l Dlttl tu4ldlng. t nicagol. i Alarum He liulldlng. New rtrk--r;uuins IJUI-IIUI No. 34 Weal Thirtv-tmrd Htreet. , i Washington Fourteenth Btreet. N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Communication relating to news and ed itorial matter ahoulil be addressed: Omaha e. Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, expies or postal older payable to 1h He I'ubltshing Company. Only -cenl stamp lecclved in iiuyiiieut ul mall account, I'ersonal checks except on Omaha and eastern exchange nut accepted. STATEMENT or CIRCULATION. Bute, -ot Nebraska. LKiiigias County, ss.; George h. Tsschuck. tnaaurer ot the Bee rublmhitig Company, ueing ,u'y Hum, aays that the actual number or lull and complete copies of The Dally, Mom ma, Evening and Uunday Wee printed dur ing the month ol Augual, lilt, was aa fol- iows: i a,c7c ' S .....fl,4M 1 42,470 4 48,510 40,800 : 48.S40 T 40,000 ' ' 1 48,800 - 45,830 r , It 48,730 " " : ; 48,700 1 43,480 j 43,340 ID 42,800 Jl 40,100 12 43,540 J J 43,880 14 ! -43,480 16 43,300 II ...43,480 IT ...43,480 11 40,100 It 43,880 10 43,440 ll 43,880 11 48,780 12 48,640 II 48,730 14 as.soo U 48,81 la 43,100 Total ....1,38.U Returned Cor'ea... 14,887 Net Total....,,......, 1,318,443 Dally Average 48,433 GEORGE B. TZSCHUCK, Treaaurer. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me this let day of September. 110. M. B. WALKER, Notary Public Sabsarlbero leavlasj tfei city teas yararlly ahenld kart The Be aaallea tv taeat.' Address will fee chaase4 as afteej . reqaeated. -Has anybody ' here seen J. Lewis? - ' '- Ham. Chicago is making & brave effort at taking iyr census pleasantly. That lone, policeman of Los Angeles ought to make a hit with the "boys." And yet Undo Joe Cannon Insists he is enjoying life in the same old way.' ' ' "V The Leaning Tower of Pisa Is a new- hat style. Kllamanjaro comes next. . ,. : At any rate, the Elklns-Abruscl matter seems to be temporarily ad Justed. ing (jeorge v. is earn to De a great orator. Why not bill him for the Chautauqua route? Eugene Debs did not leave the re publicans and democrats anything to return the fire with; he exhausted the vocabulary. A woman of 81 has become a stu dent, at the University of Ohio. She will not have time to memorize, the Greek verb. Those British courts are, brutally frank in holding both Crippen and his Hilly girl victim for the murder of the doctor's wife. It probably would not be regarded aa impertinent to Inquire .why.. Mrs Bellamy Storer decided to revive that affair Just now? That Union Pacific train robbery has not i yet passed into history.. The squabble over division of the reward Is still in the courts. The Chicago Tribune asks if Ne braska hasn't a favorite son to bring out for the presidency this year. Did somebody push him back? That leper who escaped . and has been restored to quarantine borrowed J 15 while abroad. Now, who will be willing to take that tainted money? This prophet. who tells that England will some day conquer the United States must be one of those who were forced to pay duty on bis diamonds The World-Herald ..has assigned to Itself the task of setting Mr. Bryan straight. If it ever accomplishes this it will have achieved certain claim to distinction. , Cleveland's population of 660,000, with St. Louis and Boston failing to reach the 700,000 mark, Is mighty suggestive as to the possibilities of the next ten years. Mr. Bryan t skill at splitting hairs grows with the passing" days. He can see the difference between tweedledee and tweedledum more distinctly than any other living Nebraskan. Senator Burkett is now waking up the people in western Nebraska and Is making a campaign tnat causes tne congressman from the Second district even more anxiety. It remains to be seen what Hearst will be in New York, btltbe Is a dem ocrat this year in Illinois. His papers are advocating the election of the dem ocrats in Cook county, though admit Una- that- Rotter SulUv48 still boss. . . .-v Uniform Bate Regulation. 1 The conference of governors, mayors. and business men called at Topeka by ' t uovernor mho us ot rvansas 10 maae plans for preventing railroad rate in creases is one of the really big move ments the west, has undertaken In late years for the economic welfare of the whole people. . It ought to be produc tive of great good. The underlying principle of this movement is a uniform basis of rate regulation that can be brought Into complete harmony with federal laws and plans. Such a system should be all that Is necessary to establish equity and Justice between, the railroads and the people on the one hand and the state and the nation .on the other. Let us not Indulge any sophistries about a conriict between state and national authority. The Increasing complexity of our political and industrial systems has even taxed the combined resources of state and federal powers, when it comes to that. This matter does not affect federal control, except insofar as state regu lation goes to strengthen and support the powers of the central government. It is simply a matter of each state discharging its own .duty and exercis ing its own right to deal with private corporations doing business within Its boundaries, but along lines that rein force and strengthen the efforts of all the other states. Until such a system is established, we shall never reach the point of safe and sane rate regula tion. For the 'safety' and sanity of the system the experience of Iowa, which for twenty years has been reg ulating freight rates, is all the reas suring evidence we need. With chief executives of states and cities and business men bent on the one purpose of establishing a fair and reasonable basis of rate regulation In the various states, this meeting at Topeka. which looks as much to the conservation of railroad property as to the rights of the shipper, certainly should result in great benefit, not only to the west, but to the entire country, which has. been looking to the west of late for examples in such leader ship. Shift in this Cities. The census of 1910 as thus' far dis closed has effected several changes in the relative standing-' Jf 'our largest cities, and if some rates of .increase achieved in the past decade are main tained In the' next, still greater exchange of places, will- be apparent by 1920. In 1900 the ten largest, American cities were New York, Chicago, Phila delphia, St. Loui?; , Bostop, fialtim'orei Cleveland, Buffalo, San Francisco and Cincinnati. So far as the census for this year is given out the ranking does not change until we get to Buffalo. Buffalo drops from eighth to tenth place,: according to early reports, being outranked by Pittsburg and Detroit in turn. San Francisco, which was ninth, Is believed to have dropped out of the largest ten, though final results may show differently. Had if not been 'for. Jts earthquake and Are it would, undoubtedly, have maintained its standing, if it did not advance it, and under the circumstances it hag done very well. Cleveland and Detroit have made the prodigious growths, . and should they maintain their, rate of Increase for another ten years and St. Louis, Boston and Baltimore do no better than they have done in the last ten, Cleveland may have some chance of going ahead of all three of them. Cincinnati Is entirely out of the run ning with the ten largest. It probably never again will rank as high as It has. By 1920, however, some of the new comers in the ten largest class may be surpassed, for there is Los Angeles climbing at a startling rate. In 190C it had 102,000 population. It claims today 350,000, but the census is ex pected to show at least 300,000. That city combines all its powers and energies on this one object of at taining a large population. Of course, there Is such a thing as a reflex action In this sort of ambition, and thai; re flex action Js more likely in the case of a city like Los Angeles, which is al most entirely without industries, than one that has something1 more' substan tial than tourists and sick people on which to depend for expansion. " Slaughter of Human Beings The reports of the tVolley car col lision near Fort Wayne, ; Ind., are ap palling. Out of sixty persons in one car every one was .killed or injured the list of dead being. thirty-nine. The other car was empty. As usual in such cases, those who ought to be responsible are evasive in their explanations. "Somebody made a mistake," one of the carmen said Then it appears upon Investigation the mistake was in exceeding normal speed limita. The men in charge of the empty car turned on their full power, attempting to niake-a certain distance and reach a switch before the other car. came. The collision was the result. , Such nistaket are entirely too seri ous to be pat6ed over. The some body" ought to be dealt with in such a way as at least to set up an object lesson against such reckless, crlmfnal disregard of human life. And if the company does not lend every aid in Hi power to placing the responsibility so. that the law may deal with It It will fail to do its duty. It is lanothei tragic reminder of the necessity foi more efficient management of rail ways, electric as well as steam. Com mon carriers often complain at the aeemlug. injustice .jot publii. criticism. but at such times as this, wbeu humar lives are sniffed out in a moment be cause some speed-craze.l employe trips to see how fast he ran run bis ina chine, we Imagine the men at the head of these corporations, themselves, wll admit that, after all, public criticism is nonejoo severe. It has done a vast amount of good, especially with refer ence to steam railroads, which are en gaged in a systematic effort to keep down the list of accidents. They art making splendid headway, and the electric lines should fall In with the movement. After all the explanations of tlx Fort Wayne horror are offered, we still a re confronted by the fact that there was no excuse, and therefore no explanation, for it. It waB"a useless, needless slaughter ot human belngt that would have been avoided had all the carmen been thinking as much ol the safety of the passengers as one, or niavhA m npp. w-erA thlnklne- nf hronkN J " - , - - . ..... ' - V.HM ing a speed record. Have we not gone about far enough with this speed mania? Will we not rllow such catastrophies as this to check us in our hysteria? It is not confined tc the rails of electric or steam roads either. Not a Political Question. One of the reasons urged by the op position to Senator Aldrlch In the pop ulist committee consultation w?.s that endorsement by the populists of a re publican candidate l'or governor might possibly effect the legislative reap portionment, which is due at the com ing session of the legislature. This reason Is so far-fetched and so unsubstantial in its general nature that it would not ordinarily be given any consideration, but there is always the danger in a campaign such as is now being waged of serious issues be ing determined by trifles. For that reason It should be made very plain to the voters of the state that the long delayed reapportionment for legisla tive purposes is not a party issue in any sense of the word. Both the great parties are pledged, directly and Indi rectly, to redistrict the state along such lines as will give to the people the representation they are entitled to. This ought to be accomplished without any question of partisan politics enter ing into its consideration. It is merely a matter of Justice, and as such should be approached by the legisla tors for the purpose solely of doing what is right by the people of the state. The School Bond Issue. Much heat is being engendered in the discussion over the proposed issue of bonds by the school district of Omaha for the erection and comple tion of new school buildings. This is unfortunate, for. if any question of school ' government; tshould be ap proached calmly and judicially it is that of the public schools. ' The Board of Education and the superintendent of public schools have prepared a very ambitious program, and it may well be questioned if they are entirely justified in their proceed ings. On the other hand, the opposi tion is mistaken in its effort to prevent the issuance of any bonds. The city is pledged to provide properly for the care of its children while they are re ceiving their educat.ii. nal training at the expense of . the public. A number of Omaha school buildings are of the obsolete type and should be replaced. Some of them are positively danger ous and others are merely temporary makeshifts. The shifting of popula tion In Omaha during the past two or three years has brought about prob lems that are pressing in the matter of properly housing the schools. The needs of the High school are inade quately provided for. It is not enough to say that certain fads and frills of an educational nature are being accom modated to the exclusion of other branches. The public schools must be kept abreast of educational progress, and to do this naturally Increases the cost of maintaining the schools. It Is certainly wise and prudent . to place some limit on the policy of introducing new features into the curriculum, but it Is not good management to bind up the system into a strait-jacket. Some temperate consideration of the ques tion will doubtless lead to a better un derstanding. Portions of the school board's program are indisputably necessary. This should have fair con sideration and the balance should be deliberated without passion. San Francisco boosters are going about in the most practical way to se cure support 'for their proposed expo sition. They have raised a large sun of money, more than waa ever in vested in an exposition in America, and propose to pay their own bills without tapping the government till. This will commend San Francisco to the public. Forty per cent Increase in the price of a down town corner in one year Is fair proof 6f the development Omaha is showing by "actually selling the property. The fact is, Omaha Is grow ing better than even its own residents realize. The growth of the South Omaha live stock market is a most encouraging sign. It proves the wisdom of the lo cation of the yards and the correctness of the policy pursued by its manage ment. The conference of governors at To peka ought to be given much more consideration tban It Is likely to re ceive. The fact that such a confer fneeia necessary shows clearly that Honesty From the I. There Is nometMtig Insultingly gratuitlouj In the reiterated auggpstlun that Governor rhallf iibertu might. If he had ao choeen. have uncovered a whole lot of fraud In Douglaa county. If anything were JieoOetl to (iipprvive It the remilt of the recount tnere ought to be sufficient. But that I not the only evidence we have. After having lonked Into the situation there fully through counsel and with the aid of friends In the metropolis, the gover nor himself declared In his statement to the puli'lc. a-, the time he conceded the non.lntitfu'i to Mayor Dahlman. that their search of the ballot boxes had not disclosed any material fraud. Speaking of the re count, he said. "It lias be, n a great benefit to Mayor Dahlman and the rest of the stste ticket. In that It has satisfied my friends and the people of Nebraska generally that the many rumors alleging frauds and unfair nfss in Douglas county were untrue, hlle it Is possible that I might 'still hope to the uiatier of railroad control by the states is not yet settled, and that the issue of the present campaign in the west is not narrowed down to a single question. Some sane men In Kentucky on both sides of the political fence regret the reappearance of Caleb Powers In public life. Even though In some cases willing to concede his Innocenct of the charges of murder lu the Gpebel case, they fear his campaign may re open the old fight and lead to compli cations anew His district is nor mally 15.000 republican, so his nomi nation practically means election. But there will be many in Kentucky to re sent sending a man to congress who spent eight years in prison and was thrice convicted on the charge of mur der. The question naturally arises, Was. this vindication necessary? If the question of annexation !s to be submitted to the voters at the com Ing election, it muBt be divested en tirely from any political significance. It Is a matter that concerns all the people of both Omaha and South Omaha and should not be entangled with the fortunes of any political party. The Lincoln charter committee is already busy framing a new bill ot rights for the government of the capi tal city, which enterprise commends Itself to Omaha. If we are to have any changes in the city charter, it is not too early to begin consideration of the same. "' In one way foot ball leads all other studies at college. The coach invaria bly has his team out for practice long before the other professors have their classes organized. This may argue something as to the relative impor tance of college courses. A Georgia judge has taken the posi tion that even if there is such a thing as platonic love between a married man and a married woman, it dees not exist when the man gives the woman a pair of silk hose. Um well, he may be right. The Record-Herald calls attention of those disappointed that Chicago's growth was not larger to the fact that in seventy years it has come from 4,000 to 2,185,000, which, we admit, is coming some. The limit of American audacity seems to be reached in a mass meeting of Chicago waiters protesting against the small sized tips they now receive. This Is a case of liberty becoming a license. It is a 100 to 1 shot that if another Balllnger investigating committee were to be appointed no power could induce Senator Nelson to accept the chairmanship of it. An I nooniforlable Position. Cleveland Plain-Dealer. Nearly every political bosa has his ear to the ground all right, and the public has its foot on the other ear. A Nonpartisan Mnatnate. Washington Herald. George Gould expresses the sapient opin ion that business will improve whether success alights on either republican or dem ocratic banner. Another middle-ef the road man. Who C ares I Sioux City Journal. The new nation Hum, according to the latest revised definition, "means nothing but an efficient application to new condi tions of certain old and fundamental moral ities." Does that allay the apprehension in YVaJt street? Hnw Times llavo Changed. Chicago News. Railroads are planning to cut to still smaller dimensions the lists of those who are to receive passes. Yet it was not so long ago when many a man was prouder of his railroad pass than of nis blood bought right to vote. Fact sal Assertion Mix. Philadelphia Record. The Fall river mills have been throwing, their operatives out of work on the ground that cloth prices were too low in propor tion to the price of the material. But for the third quarter of thla year their average dividends were 1.64 per cent, a little mure than a year ago. It would have been bet ter to let a little ot the loss tall on the shareholders. Plarlnar with Death. Dea Mo' nee Capital. Ha has a strangely perverted idea of the proper use of the life which God has given him who will devote It to trifling with death. The man who shot the rapids at Niagara Falls Monday in a motor boat played the fool. If he had been unsuccessful be would have been branded as such from one end of the world to the other. Because be man aged to come out alive he Is made the re cipient of a certain amount of unthinking and hysterical applause. There are hasards enough In the legiti mate occupations In whloh men must en gage without Insulting Divine Providence by a wanton gamble a lib death. Pays Best incoln Star. win the nomination in a leital battle be cause of Irregularities and technicalities shown the recount in Douglas county. I do not care for a victory that Is to be wot. In that manner, and I think more of the welfare of the party ard of the many friends of mine, who are candidates) this year, than 1 do ot any personal anilntiun of n-.y o'Vli, or disappointment becauxo of a seeming repudiation of my administra tion." If there had been fraud in Omaha, does anyone Imagine that Governor Shallrnber ger was not In the hinior to avail himself of It? When he did not find It he stops the mouths of all honest men from assert ing it in political discussion. Surely Omaha has enough to bear If It answers for the faults that are actual, as lias any other community. It does Lincoln and Ne braska no good to be 'constantly endeavor ing to arouse false ai.d damaging political Impressions about the citizenship of the metropolis. PERSONAL AND OTHERWISE. Caruso's, voice thansferred to canned music nets him almost $."O,00fl a year. I '1 umhera pulled off a national con tention at 1. I'aul wTihout any delegate guing back to hla shop for a forgotten tool. Mayor Gaynor's voice has fully recovered from the shock the would-be assassin's bullet, but his vocal remarks with a pen are as clear and robust as ever. The barbers In convention assembled suggest a no-tip standard and the eleva tion of their calling to a profession, with a degree of T. D., abbreviation for "ton- sorial doctor." If not the best seller, certainly the larg est literary output or the season is to be credited to Missouri. The record of the Hyde trial, containing l,30G.3O0 words, fills seven bulky volumes. If the Chanler custom of distributing In come In blocks of tJO.000 per year beiw'een the wives of progressive matrimony were universally followed It Is not difficult to see where the divorce practice would dis cover Its limits. v Cheer up! The threatened wholesale sur gery of words Is dwindling down to a gentle shaving of the cuticle. A comforting word comes from the simplified spelling board, which Is "serene amid alarms." "These doting friends," says the board in one of Its printed spells, "May be re lieved to know that all the proposals for additional simplifications" that have come up for consideration "have been received without alarm and considered without agi tation." PEKILOl'8 COMBINAT IO.. EstortloaT Inflated Prices for Sieves anrles of Life. Cincinnati Enquirer. There can be. no difference of opinion as to the baneful, the injurious, nay, they can be classed as criminal, effects of combinations formed to restrict the supplies of food of the people of any district, any nation or any continent. The fact that these combinations are classed as commercial or trade associa tions gives them no license to produce their excessive profits at the cost of our citizens, either collectively or Individu ally. For more than a year past our people have offered protest after protest against the. exorbitant prices of living in the land of plenty, but their protests as yet have produced no relaxation In prices for supplies of the staple articles of their daily food. i It has grown to be a menace to our entire industrial situation, to our peace and prosperity in the cities of our land and to our ability to transact business abroad in the outputs of our manufac tures. That these combinations to exact un due profits do exist there Is full evidence, and yet despite the activity of state and national officials, rw relief from their exactions has yet come to the masses of the people. Dear food makes dear production and finally .kills business that employs large numbers of people. Dear foods may exist under natural con ditions sucb as are iound in unproductive, Isolated districts, as mining camps, pioneer Btations or In countries swept by virulent disease where Inhabitants are unable to ob tain supplies. That the people of the United States, in the very nildst of the harvests. In the very center of the most productive region of the globe, amply furnished with transportation facilities, free from pestilence, full of energy and vigor, are held up dully by trade combinations, forcing them to pay unprecedented prices for the products of the land they live in, is almost past belief. Yet that this is the case the household bills of every family in the cities of the union give full and direct testimony. It Is high time, full time, that the food supplies of our people' he freed from the control of these combinations, which are paralyzing the. industrial population of the country and threatening the peace and prosperity of all classes through their avaricious exactions. Our Birthday Book x September 83, 1810, George H. Crosby, freight traffic man ager of the Burlington system, was born September 23, 1855, at Hlllshoro, III. He has been in various positions In the railroad world since 1872 and was at one time t 1 - J . IUCWIBU hi iimuw. Meredith Nicholson, novelist and author. Is Just U yeara old today. By nativity he Is a member of ,the Hoosier school of fic tioniNts. Omaha, figures as the scene In "The Main Chance," and his marriage with the daughter of -the late Herman Kountse has made him a frequent visitor here. Abraham Lincoln Reed, president of the Bryon Reed company, real estate, was born September 23, 1WS, right here in Omaha. He succeeded his father In this pioneer real estate firm, and was alsd one of the executive committee managing the famous Omaha exposition. Edward M. Martin, lawer, offlcing In the First National bank building, is just 39 years old today. He waa born in Dela field, Wis., and was educated at Iuwa col lege and the University of Nebraska. He la now a member of the law firm ot Far rlah & Martin. Dr. C. O. Robinson, physician and sur geon In the Brandeis building, is just 6 years old today. He graduated in medi cine at the University of Pittsburg and is also a post-graduate of the medical school at Chicago. He has been in active practice since ltDl. Edward Updike, vice president of the Updike Grain company, is , celebrating his 70th birthday. Its was born In Dutch neck, N. J., and was in the banking- and grain business at Harvard from 1WI to UMC, when he removed to Omaha. ' Edgar N. Bowles, one of Uncle 8am's veteran letter carriers, waa born Hepteinber 23, ltM. In New Hampshire. He baa been In the postal service since ISA. LINES TO A LAUGH. "Horses are verv sympsthet.c anlml" "In w hi't reect "". "They are generally resixmslv to a cm.II of Vho:' "- r.Hlitmore Anierli-sn. "Wlint make you ausoect thut ltricrlns Is behind on his hoard bill?" "The fact that he shvs thank you' s.nd looks perfectly pleased when he cets 1lie rteck and wing of the chicken "-Washington Star. Friend Is your plnv up to rlt"? Author-I'p to date? Whv, the soiihr -tte In It uses a vacuum rU-aner' f'oton Transcript. "Is Mrs. Gausslp a friend of yours?" "No: shea a friend of my vlfes." "Isn't that the same thins? ' "Not at all. She feels verv sorry for mv wife." Pittsburg Post. "Dentlstrv la a profession which logically ought to make all Its followers hard up." "I don't see why." nut think! Isn't a dentist's Mvlng nl wavs one of hand to mouth?" Half more American. "So you en.toy belntr married to a suf fragette?" said one nin. "ThoroURhly." replied the other. "In stead of keeping me awake with curtain lectures, she puts ine to sleep readltiK her speeches." Washington Herald Truth having been crushed to earth asHln. lav helpless. "What's the use!" exclaimed Truth, mnk- Talks for people Ibis might properly be called the Age or Advertising. Advertising has helped to baild some of the biggest business successes In the country. It sells eastern :,'oods in the west and western goods In the eaBt; it has brought north and south closer together commercially. It bus done more to educate the peopld in values than any other one force. The advertising columns of the dally newspapers are the family market place. People no longer go about looking for the things they want they go to their newspapers as to information ks to where they are to be found. Women, before they start on o sl'on- ping tour, read the advertising news in their home paper, learu exactly where to find what they want nud go there to get it because it saveB time; because they have learned that they can depend upon advertising firms to live up to what they publish, that they will not be asked a cent more than the goods are worth, that they will be given fair and courteous treatment. Merchants tell me that many women bring the advertisement with, them and make their turchaBes from the list of articles advertised. If you will consider the question a minute, the reason for thl public In terest in adverlUiug will be tlear to you. s The first Interest of average men and women are to clothe themselves and their children as well as possible, to have-ihe best and purest of foods on their tables, to furnish their homes as comfortably and pleasingly as pos sible, to give their children every-ad-vantage of education, culture and pleasant surroundings that they can afford. There is nothing more important to at least 125,000 people in Omaha than 11 lb I' Th Style atut Adieus Collegian Clothes avoid conspicuous extremes, of fashion. These are the representative, modish clothes of America. Decidedly above the average in quality, rityle and individuality, they are the earments preferred by men who know the requisites of good dress and caretuuy discriminate. Foremost dealers in all sections of America are showing our overcoats, suits and raincoats at $15.00 to $35.00. Our style book wm inorougmy post you. David Adler&SonsClothingCo. sk V a . 8 miss iNODDy Glomes Makers :na no effort to rise. "1 shan t trv to aei in. until nfier Ihe election. 1 c.in't uol aint a million campaign Ik-el Ti it-tine. Chicago rrald. . a hasit'l r J VANITY OF WICHES. I ! Since I.- I-(,- iii ihe Record-Herald ... !,.,.. a millionaire ma hasn't .., ml Ml last .winter she was In the south; shs I goln' to Japan this fall; She went to Kurope In the spring and spent the summer over there She tavs next viar she's goln' back: shot never happy anywheie. 1 have to Slav at home he-.ause 1 need to go to school, yon know; -It's often lonesome, und 1 wish ma wouldn 1 1 cure to travel so; ,.t him 1 see her: She sits twslile him at his desk. and. some how when ma starts away He doewn t' sim to kick at all or care how long she wants to stay. ( I wish that things were different and we'd get poor again somehow, t used to go to public School; hut gee. they .wouldn't let me now; Id rutlier have the little flat that we were happv In before, With ma to cook the meats hrrsrlf and pa to eat st home once more. . who sell thinas knowing how and where to spend their money most advantageously. There Is nothing more natural than that they should read the advertising column of their home newspaper for information, to see what you and oth ers have to offer them. How else should they find out? Not from heresay, surely, not from going from place to place making com- parlsons. ( Nfsir, that is not the way people spend money nowadays; there Is an easier, surer and better way than that. and the people have learned it. cure to travel so; i Phe savs next year sties goln' down toy Porto Rico and Hrss.l. J And when that trip Is done I s'pose shall I want to keep on gotn' still. f Pa doesn't seem to mind a bit; he's got 81 girl stenographer J That's voting and beautiful, and when I ,1 ini news I inow n ' People are Intensely Interested advertising because It gives them nev of absorbing interest, and they kr that before a reputable business mu publishes anything over his name he is going to make certain that it is the truth. Women and men, intent on purchas ing something that will add to their comfort, convenience or pleasure, are far more Interested in the newspaper columns that tell them how and where to spend tneir money advantageously r ' than they are in the columns that tell them of the last record in automobile racing. The advertising columns of The Bee are the market place of over 40,000 families. One hundred and twenty thousand women and men look In the advertis ing columns of The Bee every day for news and information women and men vho are willing to pay for good merchandise and good service. Will ycra tell them the frank, open, honest facts about your goods, and why you can and do give good service? Is the good will and custom of 120, 000 people worth considering? Is a service of frank, open, honest Advertising Copy worth looking at? Is the help The Bee might render worth a telephone call? yet meet all the demands Mailed upon .application. Milwaukee 4 7, XT 1 1'J jiii.v. .