10 TIIE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1911. The Omaha Daily bee FOUNDED BT EDWARD B08EWATER. VICTOR ROSE WATER, EDITOR. Enured at Omibi postofflce as second class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. ftuiiday Be, one rear W 0 Saturday Bee, one year 10 l'alljr Be (without Sunday), one year.. 4 9 Lily Bee and Sunday, one year . DELIVERED BT CARRIER. Evening- Bee (with Sunday), per month.. JBc pally Bee (Including Bunoay), per mo.. : L'ally Bee (without Hundny). per mo.... Aa Address all complaints of irregularities In deliver to City Circulation Department. OmCKS. Omsha-Th Bea Bulldtnai South Omaha 2 N. Twenty-fourth St Council Bluffs-14 Kcott HC Lincoln 2 Little Building. Chlcagol4s Marquette Building. Kansas City Reliance Building. New Tork M West Thirty-third. PL Washington 725 Fourteenth Bt., N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating; to news and i o'wrm mailer anouia o aaaressea Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or ostal order, payable to The Bee Publishing Company. Only S cent stamps -wr(i in payment of malt accounts. Personal checks except on Oman and eastern exchange not accepted. JUNB CIRCULATION. 48,466 State of Nebraska, County of Douglas, ss: Dwlght Williams, circulation manager ot The Bee PuMIUiIng company, being duly sworn, says tha the average dally circula tion, less spoiled, unused and returned copies, for the month of June, 1811, was it.m. CWIOHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me this first day of July, 1911. (Seal.) ROBERT HUNTER, Notary Public Sabacrlbers leaving; the etty tem porarily sheald have The Bee lulled to them. Addreaa will be ikss(ia as oftea aa rjt4. Champ Clark is right In saying that sonvoters are a menace. The "strong arm" gams Is seldom worked by the muscular son of tell. Smelling a rat when you kUs your wife on tha forehead is no cause for alarm. A diplomat is careful not to lose friends when he cannot thereby gain points. If he keeps on Congressman Henry of Texas may become the Senator Jeff Davis of the bonse. The Los Angeles Times wants the rod restored to the publie schools. Colonel Otis Is a sturdy warrior. Two or three more such excoria tions and the lawyers will know what Dr. Woodrow Wilson thinks of them. The only thing the Irish could see In Dublin's lord mayor trailing the king through the streets was a huge Joke. "Our American forts are invinci ble," says General Wood. Then we may as well cheer up and smile in ease. Lewis of St Louis wants his trial held in October, so 25,000 women may attend it. Talk about your pub licity schemes. And now the best that former Hus band Ooodwln can draw from Edna is a sardonic, smile and a "poor old Nat." Alack! Alas! In New York the district attorney has started an investigation of tbs so called Ice trust. We have a prose cuting attorney here, too. The total assessed value of Douglas county taxable property aggregates 1201,163,815. If we had the money we would like to buy it for that. At the finish of the Kansas City balloon race the St. Louis "Million Population" balloon was "still In the air," according to reports. Quite significant. "The World-Herald, as it has said before, holds no brief for Governor Harmon," and then proceeds to hold a brief for him to the extent of nearly two columns. Speaker Champ Clark Is booked to perform at the Nebraska Epworth assembly on August 7. That may help to explain why speedy adjourn' ment of congress Is In order. What if after Investigation it is found that our John Hays Hammond, Esq., really did nudge the king? Will that become a casus belli between England and the United States? Colonel WUlla Moore of Washing ton, generalissimo of the weather forces, is striving to get back In the good graces of the people by predict ing a week and a half of cool weather, Here's success. k When the Ice barons arbitrarily raise the price 15 per cent It la little wonder that the man on the wagon sometimes . gets arrogant and treats customers as if he were doing them a favor to let them have what they pay for. ' The commission plan of government at Wichita ' has reached the stage where recall petitions on the mayor are being circulated. Omaha will have the commission plan within a year, and then our city officials will likewise have to be good or stand the consequences. Omaha and South Omaha are listed among the reserve cities still without clearing house examiners. One corps of examiners would certainly be enough for both. The solution Is con solidation with all the national banks here under one reserve designation, , and ta on clearing house Who it Behind the Wiley Charge I The people at large will scarcely concur In an premature verdict of guilty against Dr. H. W. Wiley, the government pure food expert, by a bouse committee until the accused has bad the benefit of a fair bearing. The committee recommends bis summary dismissal from the government serv ice, bat President Taft evidently re gards that as a little precipitate and, Instead of calling for the doctor's res ignatlon has transmitted to him all the papers In the case and suggested an Investigation, which the house has now ordered. The charges sgalnst Dr. Wiley in volve the diversion of money for un authorized pay to subordinates. The offense would not be heinous if proved and before passing Judgment the peo- pie will want to know who has started the movement that led a democratic house committee to this secret inves tigation of Wiley's work, which, It Is given out, has been in progress since March. Dr. Wiley has been a very active of ficial. He has done a great deal in the way of obtaining and enforcing pure food legislation. Some of his activity has offended large special In terests. It has long been a matter ot common report that these Interests bad determined to "get" Wiley. Could they have anything to do with this present move against him? That Is one of the questions the president, the house and the people will insist on having answered before Dr. Wiley Is dismissed from the service. Indianapolis and Omaha. Here Is an item from the Indianapo lis News which throws an Interesting light on the ice situation there: Of course, there Is no lea trust. There Is not even a "reasonable" one or a com bination of any sort, or tha intangible thing known a a "gentlemen's agreement." But, all tha same, yesterday a dosen or mora of the larger Indianapolis ice companies denied a report that tha price of lea had been or was to ba again advanced from 36 to 40 cents a hundred pounds, and today these same oompanieg have all advanced the price to 40 cants. It la expecting a good deal of the public's Imagination to believe that without any agreement of any sort all the lea companies decide, between two days, to advance the price to tha same figure in all cases. The mere statement of the facts may not be sufficient evidence for a grand jury, but to the ordinary hu man being it is conclusive enough. Wonder what folks would do in In dianapolis if the Ice companies should simultaneously screw the price for de livery to households up to 60 cents a hundred pounds as they have in Omaha. Probing a Gentlemen's Agreement. Those steel masters from nine dif ferent countries went about their Brussels conference with a good deal of gusto. Judge Gary announced the plans of the meeting with something more than common animation. Com ing so abruptly on the heels of our government's action with reference to the Steel corporation, It sounded something like a challenge of this government's power. Under that im pression authorities at Washington have decided to see what can be done toward checking this apparent effort toward a world-wide working agree ment in the steel Industry. It Is a settled conviction that this Brussels conference, which goes by the sweet name of a "Gentlemen's Agree ment," foreshadows nothing more nor less than a universal trust, since the national combine in this country Is threatened. If that is the case, it Is up to the United States to meet the Issue. It is gratifying, therefore, to know that the president has directed the Department ot Justice to proceed along this line. How far out into the sea the Sher man law will reach has never been definitely determined. In the case of the steamship monopoly, however, it was shown to possess some extensive powers. So it may apply to a trust In the basic commodity of steel if It con templates a monopoly of trade Inter course with American interests, which, Indeed, are to be the governing Inter ests. The administration deserves a good deal of credit for Its prompt alertness In undertaking so formidable a task. "Ware of Crime." It there la such a thing as a wave ot crime, Atlanta must be riding upon Its crest, to judge from the revelations of Its newspapers. Here is a rather grapmc Beading that surmounts a thrilling news story In a recent Issue of the Atlantic Constitution: "Reign of Crime Grips Atlanta; Po lice Defied Homes are Robbed, Negro Women Slain and No Arrests Made Eighth Victim Taken by Jack the Ripper." Atlanta is a little larger than Omaha. It would seem that in a city of that else such diabolical deeds could be traced to their source. It Is also unthinkable to Imagine that any police force could wink at crime so violent. New York and Chicago have this year had their experiences with this so-called wave of crime, and so have other cities, and each has thought that its problem was the worst. A few months sgo, when deeds of violence were perpetrated in Omaha, the old cry of the "worst city In the country" was raise J as usual It Is to be deplored that in each city these demons of death cannot be run down and brought to a Just penalty, but why should failure to accomplish this invite the milder offense of de faming one's city? It is not the city, not the majority of cltlsens, but mere handful, or perhaps one or two outlaws, who ar to blame, and the only outcry should be a united effort to solve the problem sanely, and It does not matter whether the wave of crime be regarded as local or general; the solution is local, in that it rests with each community for Itself, but what baffles the police in all cities Is no stigma on only one. Washington in Westminster. What do the people of the United States think of W. T. Stead's sugges tion that a statue of George Washing ton be placed in Westminster Abbey? Perhaps Americans would not have the final say as to such a plan. Mr. Stead's Idea was expressed In his Lon don speech and was based upon the proposition that Washington, the father of American independence, was also the father of British freedom that is, that the reaction of the Amer ican revolution upon the British pub lic life made England democratic and that therefore It would be appro priate for the two nations thus to unite In pa'ylng homage to a common benefactor. Moreover, In the mind of Mr. Stead, it would be timely to do this now, or next year, as a fitting memorial to the 100 years Of un broken peace between Great Britain and the American republic. ' Granting, for the sake of argument, that but for the genius of Washington we might not have won our indepen dence of England and that our suc cessful revolution laid the foundation for the liberal colonial policy that has extended the British empire to the ends ot the earth, we are not yet sure that England views it in exactly that light, or, if It does, that it would think it necessary to celebrate its debt to Washington in just that way. Eng lishmen have been rather slow to for get that through the military prowess of General Washington they lost the most valuable colony they ever pos sessed. On our side, too, we have popula tion elements who would resent the acceptance of any such favor from England as indicating acquiescence of England's mistreatment of Ireland. So while the Idea Is at first attractive, it will be well to go slow about It. . Note the Difference. While a dozen candidates have tiled on the republican ticket for the seven Judgeships to be filled in this judicial district, the democrats are beating the bushes to scare up enough material to make a full ticket without leaving va cant places. It is not hard to dis cover, however, that there Is a reason. The last " legislature changed the boundaries of the judicial district by taking 'Sarpy county off, constituting the district of Douglas, Washington and Burt counties. Sarpy county has usually given democratic majorities, so that its subtraction leaves the judl cial district more strongly republican than before. Democrats of Judicial qualifications willing to sacrifice them selves to such a condition naturally have to be persuaded. The Lincoln Star wants to know why the Christian Endeavorers go to Atlantic City with their convention if that place is as bad as described by former Vice President Fairbanks In his address to the convention. Proba bly for the same reason that numer ous organisations and societies pre ferred .to hold their state metings In Omaha while Lincoln was dry-! they either knew that the dark pictures were overdrawn or they wanted to see for themselves. .The attorney for the late Dr. Crip- pen of London has been fined and de barred from practice for a year be cause he employed "dark" methods In the conduct of Crlppen's defense There are some things the British courts will not stand for, even though they go as a matter of course In American courts. It 1 getting tiresome to see rainstorms passing within hailing distance of Lincoln, each protruding a ragged edge of sapleas clouds over us while pnsslng by on the other side. How can w widen th Infor mation that Lincoln has changed Its mind on th moisture question? Lincoln Star. Put a ipollceman In an aeroplane and let him run them in for over- speeding. Nevertheless and notwithstanding, William J. Bryan declares, and per sists in declaring, that Governor Har mon is not eligible for the 1(11 dem ocratic nomination. And what Mr, Bryan says in this respect is likely to go with Nebraska democrats. Th Voters' Degree. ' Washington Poet. Th colleges havs favored all our denv ocratlo presidential candidates with their first honorary degrees, but th voters will give 'em th third. Whea lanoraac Wa Bliss. . Brooklyn Ragle. Befor thermometers were Invented men suffered from the heat, but they didn't think of It so much. Ignorance must have had several degrees of btlaa about It In the older days. Shoatiasr la Wroaai Dlractloa. St. Louis Republic Instead of trying to prohibit amoklng In certain publie plaoee, why doesn't Dr, Wiley begin at th other end of th thing and us th pur food laws to prevent th sal of all sort of odorous vegetable mat ter as tobacco T Lobs naaat Forealsht. Indianapolis News. Postmaster-General Hitchcock's prepara tion for th parcels post by raising th salaries of rural carrier seems to show rather long rang foresight. Perhaps would have been more discreet to make the establishment f th paresis post and tha Increase of salaries concurrent Th Foaaas? of Prosperity. Brooklyn Eagle. Th crop are booming. They are not affected by graft nor disturbed by discus slons. With about fis.sos.ooe.000 maoufao tured out ot soil and air this fear w shall be M to bump along until coagraas finds a way of producing more wealth at leas expect sy sseass uc Its legal i chinerr. Booking Backward 1 his Day inOmalm COMPILED FROM OtC TlLtA 1 JULY 15. Thirty Tears Ago- Willie Edoln, proprietor t "Dreams" or "Fun In a Photograph Gallery." accom panied by his wife, Alice Atherton, one of he most popular actresses In her line ot business, arrived and registered at the W lthnell. They stopped over on their way from Bait Lake City so that one ot their children, who was taken 111, might have proper medical treatment. Probably the hottest day experienced in Omaha the present season. In soma por tions of the city unexposed thermometer Indicated In the neighborhood of W degrees. Max Meyer's thermometer showed 'k degrees at 1 o'clock. ' Colonel Btanton, paymaster United States army, went west. , Rev. J. B. Maxfleld, pastor of tha First Methodist church, was summoned home by telegram announcing the death of his aged mother in Ohio. Mrs. Charles Balbach, residing at tha corner of Sixteenth' and Harney (where the City National bank now towers), wants a girl for general housework if aha can give good references. Twenty Years A go Arthur Johnson Bro. of Omaha were awarded the contract for erecting the Port land, Ore., Chamber of Commerce building to cost 25,000. . fc Twenty members of the Mother's Hem association met at the Young Women's Christian association to complete their organisation. Among them were Meedames b. H. Korty, A. 8. Hall, Carrie 8hlnn, R, L. Wheeler (South Omaha), and Mias Cora B. M. Oay, secretary, and other out-of-town women. The Real Kstate Owners' association called a meeting to discuss ways and means of urging congress to protect th river from deposits of filth. Omaha's Western league team goes to pleoes and Joins th ranks of th contract jumpers. Judge Wakeley adjourned court after clearing twenty-eight cases from his docket. Father James Hoeffer, late of fit, Louis, was installed president of Creighton col leg. Thes grain men were elected to full membership In th new Board of Trad: Alex O. Knapp, A. B. Jaqulth, Bernard Fowler, Charles H. Fowler, E. P. Peck, F. C. "warts, C. T. Brown, James Walsh, Joseph A. Connor. Raymond P. May and Miss Sadie' Bock of Fairmont, were married at th horn of th bride's mother, 2626 Parker street Among those present were Dr. and Mrs. Merrill, Dr. and Mrs. W. O. Henry, Miss Jennie Berkley, Mlsa Grace Ervln, Miss Alma Ringer. Miss Berkley was brides maid and Mr. W. D. Claypool, best man. Ten Years Ago Omaha's long spell of heat was at last broken by a heavy rain. At the Den the Knights of Ak-8ar-Ben met in aplte of the intense heat and took in a nurnoer ot new victims, including j. , Sunderland, Frank Cameron and E. R Latta of Tekamah. John Miller,, a workman for the Nw Omaha Thomson-Houston Electric Light compjany, was killed by contact with a Mv wire at Fourth and Jones streets. Dr.- Oeorg L, Miller write to The' Bee te claim th distinction of being th orig inal gold bug ot th democrats. Bids tor 140,000 school bonds were opened by th Board of Education. After twenty-five years of service, W. H. Roberson, manager of the local branch of the R. G. Dunn company resigns. Sam Bear and Dick Ferris caught the Mexican fever at th South Omaha street fair. (Mr. Ferris has recently had a hand In Mexican affairs In southern California.) Steel Plating; th Ooldea Rnle. Philadelphia Record. If the world-wide steel trust should be come a fad, there win manifestly no longer be th least need of maintaining protective duties on any Imports under tha iron and steel schedule. When It Is all th sam whether th duties are re pealed or not th hypocritical pretense of protection should be abandoned for th sake of public decency. Judge E. H. Gary, with his well known love of th golden rule, would hardly dissent from this prop osition. People Talked About tXTBlOt Jltu HOSfrvsm He sails th deep, blue sea, and hi thron Is th captain's bridge of th Kronprlns eialn Celllle, modern greyhound ot th Atlantic. Chaneellor Day has not heaa crying out in th wilderness In vain. A gift of 140,000 to th Syraous university has been made by John D. Arehbold of tha Standard Oil company. John Sullivan, a 100 pound liveryman ot Chicago, after being denied admission to the probata court because he was In his shirtsleeve, borrowed a coat from Assist ant Judge Ralnejr, who weighs 104 pounds, and won his case. Oeorg Borup. th Tale graduate who ac companied Peary on his trip to th pole. nd wrote A Tenderfoot with Peary, has been chosen by th American Museum of Natural History to share with Donald Mac MUHan the leadership of a long exploring expedition to Crocker Land. Clinton Scollard has accepted th profes' sorshlp of English literature at Hamilton college and will begin hi duties this fall He was graduated at Hamilton in th class of ltn. Afterward he studied at Harvard and at Cambridge university. He was pro feasor of English literature In Hamilton college from vst to VM, resigning to devote himself to study and to pastry. Mrs. Charles CCcumU of Belfast, Ma. who retired last week from tho management of a restaurant mere, is thought to have made as many If not more plea than any woman la the country. Her average has been about thirty pie a day for the last eight years, a total of IT, 80. The places aid by side would make a line mt pie aaoro thaa eleven anile long and their crusts would, cover two acre r r ti hit i jr In Other Lands id XUg at ea What la Trans piring among th Wear and Tar sTatlone f th Barth Eighty years ago the British House of Lords blocked the great reform bill passed by th House of Common. The Issues embodied In th proposed law were re sisted and rejected by the tory peers even after the electorate had endorsed them at general election. Legislation was brought to a standstill and government rendered Impotent by selfish partisans. In this dilemma. Earl Grey, the liberal prime min ister, proposed to William IV that creation of eighty new peers to carry the reform bill through th upper house. The king reluctantly consented and affixed th royal autograph to eighty patents of nobility In blank and gave them to Earl Grey. When the news of what was about to happen reaohed th tory camp, such unwavering standpatters a the duke of Wellington counseled hi associates who were determined to die fighting in the last ditch to hoist th whit flag and surrender. The advice was heeded, the reform bill was passed and the eighty patents of nobility were consigned to the waste basket. Will history repeat Itself? Th present House of Lords Is like Its predecessor of eighty years ago. It refused assent to the famous Lloyd-George budget a year ago and forced an appeal to the country. Th liberal party and Its allies won. An opportunity to com promise the difficulty between the two houses was afforded by th conference of last year, but the tories would not con cede anything, and compelled another ap peal to the country. Again the tories were defeated. Now the upper house, facing the final stag of action on the veto bill and led by a titled Kerry Irishman, Lord Lans downe, seeks to emasculate th measure with unacceptable amendments, blindly heedless of the handwriting on the wall. Like th tory peer of King William's time, th peer of today Insist on seeing th package ot blank patents from King Oeorg befor emulating Davy Crockett's coon. Forty-three French ministries have been shaken down and out sine th republic was established less than forty-one years ago. Eight have been disposed of since th twentieth century opened. The gov ernment of Prime Minister Monis, thrown out a few weeks ago, came Into power .in March last, ousting the government of Prima Minister Briand, which was in con trol for eighteen months. Briand took the plaoe of Clemenceau, whose ministry held on for three years, a rare record a min istries go in France. The count of minis terial oustlngs does not Include six other upsetting In which the cabinet was changed but the prime minister held over. These lightning changes tn the government is naturally viewed with much alarm by patriotlo republicans, whose views are aired in a latter from the Paris corre spondent of the New Tork Evening Post. The reason tor th want ot continuity In government Is the Irresponsibility of the average French deputy. . He la a chronic insurgent In his party, If he has a party, and Is a feudal tyrant In his constituency. Personal aggrandisement Is his ruling spirit and national interests are made subservient to that end. The mere refusal of a favor by a minister, the Inability of a minister to provide an office for a heeler, makes the deputy an Insurgent, and he seises the first . opportunity to oust the ministry. So great is th greed for office among th deputies that now one voter In eleven holds some government Job. Among those who put national above personal In terests th remedy urged for the spoils evil th election of deputies on a com mon ticket at least for a whole department This system, it is believed, would bring about party responsibility and party gov ernmant in th English and American sense. The spirit moving Germany In the Moroc can and other international affairs Is ter ritorial expansion-a determination to reach beyond the boundaries of the empire in Europe. Prof. Hans Delbruck, editor of th Prussian Tear Book, voices the na tional aspirations In thes words: "Enor mous tracts of America, Africa and Asia today speak English, Bpanlsh, French or Russian, or are subject to those govtrn ments; even small states, such as Holland and Portugal, have considerable colonial possesssion. The Germans have only been able at the last minute to bring under their scepter a few fragments of Insignifi cant extent and limited value. But from th first moment when we announced such an endeavor, England, which already unite under Its crown a full fourth of the entire human race 400.000,000 souls has pur sued our effort with an ardent Jealousy and placed obatacle after obstaole in our way. Even In Turkey, where th nature of the case exoludes any German acquisition of territory, and where we sought for noth ing beyond commercial activity, with a view to the uplifting of these anciently civilised lands, England has raised so many difficulties that we have been able only slowly and step by step to advance th great undertaking of th Bagdad rail way. I th great German people to per mit Itself to be permanently inclosed within Its continental frontiers, and from behind them to observe how England. Franc, Russia, tha United States and Japan divide the world among themselves? The Fatherland must larger be, seems to be the answer to this Inquiry. Southern Morocco, with its Atlantic ports, its rich hinterland, is worth a good deal. Some day In Wllhelra-strasse th German states men may decide that It I even worth an BuropeaA war." King George and Queen Mary are doing their part to wipe out th old differences and bitternesses between England and Ireland on this their royal visit to Dublin. They revised the tactless program made by th English officers for their visit, which eliminated visits to religious Institutions that tha people of th Emerald Isle hold so dear. They attended services at 81. Pat rick's cathedral and visited Maynoolh ool leg. This wilt go a long way toward soft ening the Irish huart, for it was a broad declaration that while they are Protestants, thsy hav no bitterness against the Roman Catholic faith of th great majority ot the Irish people. John Redmond Insista that Ireland doe not seek separation from the crown; that It demands only full home rule under th Hag. Constantinople at least Is not overbuilt so reports the American consul general there. On cause of tha congestion, which Is starting a building boom and hurrying th construction of electric railways to enable the people In the over-populated dis tricts of Gaiata and Pera to get away from exorbitant sous rents into th coun try, Is given as th abandonment of the old eastern custom of permitting several generation of a family to live la the earn house. When th young men marry now they prefer a house of their own. Agadlr, which no on could hav placed on th map until Germany aent a war veasel there, Is a little Moorish town south of th Atlas mountains, with a fin harbor. It has no trad to apeak of, but it has big possibilities. It I th open door to th Sus valley, which is not only fertile, but has untold mineral wealth In Its moun. tains. It recognise no allegiance to Uorooco, for It Is Inhabited by Independent Barbara, THAT "DICK TO DICK" LETTER. Brooklyn Eagle. There Is no "Dick to Dick" letter. It cannot be found In the files. Bt have the waste backets been ex amined by an export Investigator ot the muckraking squad? Boston Transcript: That young hand some Radcltffe graduate who found a let ter from "Dick to Dick," which has stirred up various file in Washington and Cin cinnati, seems to be a modern murkraker of the first order. Do they teach such horrid thing on Garden street? Philadelphia Ledger: It appears from th testimony that Miss Abbott, who is re sponsible for the faked "Dick to Dick" postscript In th Controller Bay story, ped dled her scandal about among all the antl Taft muckrakers. and after repeated re fusals from Collier's Weekly and other sen sational defamers ot th administration found the Fhlladt-lphla North American the only one sufficiently gullible or reckless to take the bait. This extraordinary publica tion took it and swallowed It hook, line and linker. Th whole story Is a palpable fraud and could not hav been credited by even an antl-Taft conaplrator not ob sessed to th point ot Insanity. Indianapolis News: All that need b said about the opening up of lands about Con troller bay, in Alaska, and th mysterious letter In connection therewith, Is that President Taft Is determined to do every thing In his power to clear th situation He has announced that nothing will b held back from th committee inveatlgafln,. the matter, but that on th contrary, all help possible will be afforded. Th im portant feature, ot course, Is the letter supposed to hav bean written by Ryan, th man who took up some of th land opened to entry, to Mr. Ballinger, former secretary of the Interior, In which it was said that Charles P. Taft, brother of the president had used, or would use his in fluence to secure the desired action. There need be no fear that the facts will not be brought out. Till they ax brought out It will be well tor th people to withhold their judgment. Throbs of the Jlage. Chicago Record-Herald. Fear has been aroused In Washington becaus th plac at whloh Germany has shown a disposition to establish a naval bane in Morocco Is only 1,500 miles from the coast of Brasll. This, certain Ameri cans believe, may make a German naval station in Morocco a menace to th Panama canal. Everybody seems to be afraid ot Germany nowadays, a fact which I not likely to lessen Germany's ideas of her Importance or cause her to diminish her demands. Blsetrie power service eote you nothing wheat your machines are not runaing. Pay Only You !-3 At all times it is just equal to your demands. You cannot underload it nor can you over load it. You are free to expand . or curtail your business as you like, with no fixed or standing power charges to face. Just place a machine where you will notify us and we will promptly drive it with a reliable electric motor, and at any speed you wish. Telephone us. OMAHA ELECTRIC LIGHT AND POWER COMPANY i a, w evening getting supper ready. You want a stove you can start up in a minute that will cook quickly and well. i For camp, houseboat or buntjalow, a New Per fection Oil Cook-stove is the ideal cooking device. It is ready for use in a moment It saves aU the trouble Li of cutnngwood and getting in coal It does not overheat or make dirt in a kitchen : there are no ashes nor smoke. It requires less attention and cooks better than any other range. k laJMUawa wkk iWliU. The trrrirtininn Try-err OiLoofctovc LAUGHING LISES. The bore was about to bull In. of cours it's non of my business Te' are all agreed on that." ld on. of the other men hastily. . Wheretipon. they waisrti --'. Arm the bore somewhat vexeo ..." - demorallsed.-Cleveland Plain Dealer. She-And you sr a strict vegetarian? He Oh, yes. ' What made you a vegetarian?" Oh.Vve been runnln, a country new.. paper for taeniy-i y statesman. "Yes. he's my favorite dramatic author." "Fver see any of his plays . ..... k. int a.iked m to go out with him for lW -P'"""- MW machlne."-Cleveland Plain Desler. They say you r-an't keep a good man down," reflected I'nrie jerry "" Z". reckon It's so: nut you i-u man down, either. Look at om w... -Chicago Tribune. "I tell vou." said Farmer Corntf"!. beln' a sheriff around here Is a mights hard Job." "You never arrest anybody. "No. But there s an awful lot o ram alarms. Every tlm. one o' these summer girls sees a caterpillar you murder beln' committed." - Washington Star. Impatient Matron-Tou're the third, man that's been along this morning asking for elp and I t an t get any one of you to mow th grasa In my bark yard. Wareham Long-That'a right, maam ve've got a sort o' gentlemen a agreement.-. ot f do any hard work In th nun durln lie months o' July an" Orgust.-Chlcago .'rlbun. HOT WEATHER MUSIC. 8. E. Klser in th Reoord-Herald. How I love to hear the rattl of the hard coal In th chut When Its ninety-six or ssven In ths What a restful, soothing feeling through my being seem to sooot. By what pleasing, airy fancies I am swayed. In my glad Imagination I behold the driver wher , H's Industriously shoveling the coal; His ears and nock are blackened, ther Is fuel In his hair. But there may not be a stain upon his soul. To his skin his shirt Is sticking, here and there a little stream Trickles from hi chest or dribbles down his back; . From his shoetops there are rising cunning little puffs of steam. On hla visage white streaks mingle with the black. Tou may think the hurdygurdy makes the sweetest, soothing sound Or be gladdened by th pupil with the But to me th sweetest music, when the sun has parched th ground, Is the rattl ot th hard coal in the chut. for What Use ft M104 "Supper Ready ' When you get back to camp, tirea and hungry, you do not want to SDend tha t o.i.Ud. ecnpiffe cvcitW to mm Si U Standard 03 Company (Incorporated) 1 I