THE BEE : OMAHA.) FBlDAt, SEPTEMBER 6" Bounded by edward rosewatep VICTOR ROSkWATER, EDITOR. 'EEEBnjit)lK'q, FARNAM AND 17TH. "Entered at Omaha Potoffice aa second class matter.' , ' , r, Sundav Bee. Oh year Saturday Bea, one Vear.. : $1 w pally Be (w thbut SanflaJT one i ear.$J Daily Bee. and Sunday, one year....!. tELVERED BY CARRIER. Evening B (with Sunday ,per m....Sc lal!y Be Oncluding Sunday per mo..t3c Datlv Bea (without 8unday), per mo.. lac Addrew all complaints or lrregula.it e in delivery to City Circulation Dept. Remit by draft, express or postal order, pavacld to The Bee Publishing company. Only 1-cer.t Stamps nee ved in .payment ot small accounts. Personal checks, ex cept n Omaba and eastern exchange, hot accepted. " '' ' ' . .. . .. OFFICES. bmaha-The Bee building. . South Omahaail N Bt Council Blufrs-14 No. Main SL 'Lincoln ft Uttlo building. ChlcagolOil Mafquetts bulldmg. Xanaas C.ty-Rollanc i building. New Yoik-S4 West Twenty-third. Ft. Mul-44S Ptin-e bu'Mlng. -.' .Washington Hi Fourteenth Bt ?. w. Method in Their 'Madness. ' ' While in every other state the colonel k insisting oav third 4 party tickets, composed tclusiyeiy 'of his followers, in Nebraska the bull moos ers have accepted and endorsed, al though not without much wrangling, the whole republican state list, at least half of them being outspoken against ' the colonel.' But there Is more method in their madness than appears on the surface, , as is dis closed by inquiry into what they -are trying to do. Here in Nebraska the bull moosers ate -endeavoring ta. iseiie and . hold the republican name and organiza tion, and to use it against the repub lican national standardbearers. At the same time they want to have their preferred candidates apnear on the official .ballot a eecond time un der their true labels. "The success of this conspiracy to disfranchise re- uVIUamm nriA want tf Vfttfl tctV ft fP- r---T-r- ijuuiitaiia n u - v i w vw -w- - - tommuniAVions WaUnB to and j publican president ia menaced at ser editorial matter Should be addr-isco Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. " ;.i AUGUST CIRCULATION. : 50,229 ' Stats of Nebraska, County of Douglas. s. Dw'Klit Wllllajiis, circulation manage) of The Be .Publishing company, bemg duly swprn. says that the average dally circulation lor the month of August. IJU was 50,229. DWIGHT WILLIAMS. Circulation Manager. Subscribed In my presence ami sworn to before me this 2d day of September, mi ROBERT HUNTER. (Seal.) Notary Public... J: Subscribers leaving ' Hie elty temporarily should tkave The Bee mailed to them. Addresa Will be chanced often fc quested. Our Lincoln frldnds are invited to return the compliment Alt-Sar-Ben Week. .." ' '', ' Contractor may refuse to turn tlje new Court bouse over to the countywhat a bluff! v i'The Nebraska State fair has made A new .. attendance record. Note; hbwever, that it took Omaha to do it. eral turns , by questionable legality of their right to a place on the ticket for the new party, and also by the doubtful status of the bull moose committee pretending to be fepub lican. It just-happens that to estab lish their claim a prima fade case must first te madd before the secf fr iary Of state,' who ordinarily acts on advice of the attorney general, both of the officers being candidates for roeie'ctitm as" republicans, and not no hull moosers. Because' a ticket made W exclusively .ot. .Roosevelt men would have had to leave these tf o off the shrewd bull moose man agers have waived a third ucitet in this state and sought to honey the secretary of' state and the attorney general with duplicate nominations, SUPPOSea lO noiu OUl iy mom a. - Ednal advantage to construe the law In their own favor. - This explains why the bull moose Program In. Nebraska reverses the bull; moose .program in adjoining states. How awfully thoughtful of Orozco to come In occasionally nd Teport on his movements . Otherwise we might forget him. 1 ,4Mf. Hearst iable trom! Europe hie opposiUon to ttbtoltttng1 the tinal matter to 'The Hague tribunal. . Thie ought to end &eirgumeatr :H 1 Accordfnlo reporte from Lincoln many s'tate fair visitors were unable to ' find' fdom to lleep In. - Better move the fail back to Omaha. A' third ticket lii low., A third ticket in 'Missouri. A third ticket in Illinois. A third, ticket in Ohio. Steal the ' republican label in " Ne braska. " Wheat movement Is taxing the railroads to. the . utmost Just now; what sort of fix i they be in when King Corn geU teady to go to market! ' '" 1 ' .. Let us hope the era of good feel ing between Omaha and Lincoln lasts till another etite fair- rolls areund. By that time the habit may faavt be come Jlxed. , "' s v -J Much Joy. is expressed by the bull meoseri. because the Vermont vote shows them to be the third party In iteac of the fourth or fifth of sixth. The republicans continue to be the first. A long list of honored lowans who gloried la the republican party nd were 'a part of its greatness must ' have Wished they were living again ft they witnessed the proceedings at Dee Moines. , is not stealing to sette a party or ganization and turn It over to an op posing party? . , , his wife because she was a poor busi- An Era of Good Feelintf. Omaha did so handsomely by the state fair, both In Intention and performance that nobody, In, Lincoln .can doubt the gdod faith of the metropolis in warning in build ud the state and net on the best nf trms with Its DeODle. The visit of the Lincoln folks to'Omaha, on Monday flight came at an . unrorunat .time to snow what this city really thlnka of the nelgh harlv overtures from nf there. A little later Ik may be ftosslble to make a fuller rierrnlnBtHtHnn bt What this city thinks of tho Hew feeIlng.-Ltncolh Journal. .. ' The time is unquestionably ripe tnr an era of toed fccllne between Omaha Ind' Lincoln. WTifethef ' It lhall be cultivated and made perma nent depends, we believe, more upon Lincoln than upon Omaha and largely upon the ' newspaper who have been constantly ; fomenting prejudice against the .tnetropplls, in order , to; eubeerve all soru-ot eo tlonal' end' political' echemes' Ap peaW by Lincoln newspapers to" the reat of the state to oppose whatever Omaha nrayV favor Just because Omaha favors It Is hot calculated to cement friendship between the two cities. Lincoln has. also deluded Itself with the Idea that ... Omahas trowth Is at Lincoln's expense,. re fusing to lee that what makes One row makes the other grow, too. Omaha ha been pulling with reason able steadfastness and consistency for the prosperity nd growth of the whole state;, and would be glad , to hive Lincoln pull along on the same rope. ". ! : . .- 4 ' vi7tt If tia tint. tnnnRirt will bd nvuuot a- i i-.. .v. . ftaiiv construction aula .to vuttfiuv iuo w I u they convinced themselves that It Js tor . """" Business Condition. ; Perhaps the most encouraging etgii 6f th times 1 the demand for labor. The Agricultural weBt and the mdustrlii east' Join In a elamot for help. It Is hot only the unskilled but the skilled workmen are being sought after. . v Harvest fields and . railroad are holding , forth hands are not ' well' trained ' to ; the nee ot tools, whjla factories nil ovef the country are taking on, men trained In the finer processes of man a wealthy Chicago man who chlded ufacture. All lines are affected by the condition; building trades, teSi- I. nnnr auhloct toltlU mills, stfipl WOrkB. &hd the VHS UUW uB"& d " " . - i ' - , tt.nrl nnsf caused bt her com- cellaneous crafts are looRmg lor men mittlng suicide. Some women are so to fill places In the industry of the 1nMisMoratfl. . . nation. , .' tt''. This Is not a sudden boom, but la t hk BnYinnt hnted 'I11 tench at. ..tt.'nM nf a. .(tiintlnn (hot h.la 1 1 lite ovwww. kw. u ..... w IVIlUftllvll u. v v--" - .1 SrhVera who make 1 fn envarAl vonra. For at . ... all.!. .4. t..,i4 A. a Speculative mas ana men vioi 10 jpast seven years tne inausinat ei- let Out Of their Bargain wncn mey fort, of the Unltea states nae oarejy t&t tn flint th . dpal 'before the I ton with thn ronsuniotlve re- Ana, w - - i ni'it t" T 7 . . , money 1b paid, it will do a good Job. 1 quirement. ' Very little expansion has - - - 1 , i j chief among the grietancee Ot th riotoui convict in the Mlcnigan penitentiary is that they Wanted 15 cents per day for theif work, In stead of the 16 cents allowed them. Trying .to keep up with the Increased cost of living. ' New York is much disturbed by a threat of Police Commissioner Waldo to publish the names Of all Owner 6f property used bJtaipSers And other dleorderly persons. What a stir we would have If such a list ere published In Omaha! j i -'-..trr.l .tri ,; ' Governor JTohnsflHj of .California gives this testimonial to Governor Aldrich of Nebraska; who entertained him as his guest during his stay in Lincoln: , ; - v,;'i , Nebraska has a right to be prai-d ot Us governor. Any state In this wholl na tion Would do Itself honor to have him as Its governor, and lie would do any f-tate honor. .. .... ! , ! Thanks, Governor Johnfon. IVs up to you, Governor Aldrich, to pas back a few posies. locliiRBsdlaWard Tl . fCJ t 1 ihBUav mumana i . . . v - 1 r 1 j e 1 1 " ' SEPT. 6. Tlilrtv Veare Ag The Union Pacific' hava "secured O'Day. the pitcher, bt the fcpaulding club. Th .ih win maka a tour playing eighteen games In Cheyenne, Denver, Leadvllle, Georgetown. Junction, Kansaa City, Law rence. Leavenworth. St Josepn anu Omaha. Nebraska Engllne company "No. has elected these officers: Jacob Houck. ...if wini.m tr frivrnrt treasurer; George Barnes, foreman; William' Everett and John Simpson., assistants; Claries Godfrey, George Ketchum and George; Baiter, trustees. ,;- ; At a directors' meeting WUllam H. Stcgulre WAS appointed assletaht cashier of the iew First National bank: The lot on Eleventh and Leavenworth streets owned by. Jamea .Callaghan was sold to the Union . Pacific for $11,000. This is, ot course, a iancy pnee or property." 1 The finder of a scrapbook containing. press notices, etc., belonging to Ida Liv ingstone la invited to leave It-at Mrs. Sahler'8, M7 South Twelfth street, and get reward. ' ' Dr. Ed Dledrlch start to attend the reunion of his brothers at New Yoik, and to arrange about a 'family' estate. At the Land league meeting the-Com mittee reported having sent,$S7S to the Irish World for the Parnell fund. The Crelffhtoh house is undergoing ex tensive Improvement! under the super- Vision of the proprietor, Mr. Donovan. Twenty Years Ago The republican state campaign was bpened at th Farnaltj street theater under the-ausplcel of the Afro-American Civil Rights club with a rousing rally. Among state candidate present " were Tom Majors, George H. Hasting?. Eugene Moore. A. K'. Goudy and J. C Allen. Others who occupied Seats on the plat form were T. K.- Sudborough, D. H. ercer, B. H. Roblson, Colonel A. A. Jones, John C. Thompson, A. C. Boweh, A. D. White, Dr. M. O. Ricketts. V. L. Bitnett and Hdwrd Wauoii. John M. Thurston was the orator for . the occa sion. - -Mrs. Joseph Pogue ot Madison, 111., waa the guest of Mrs. Joseph Griffith, 1043 1ab l....H,tA am atcitug. Mrs. Etta Matheson, clerk In the post- office, returned fr6m Salt Like City, wn ere she spent her vacation. Robert ' Downing presented ' Julius Caesar- at the Boyd theater in- a con scientious manner, "though measurably less than great." : ' The will of the late George E. Hmme showed an estate vaiued at J20.000, left te the widow and the four children. The following delegates are to repre sent the local associations at the conven tion of building and loan associations bt Lincoln: T. J. Fltsmorrls, 'Eltner B. Bryson, Thomas H. Dally, George M. Nattinger, Joseph W. Carr, Fred J. BorthwicR, Frank -J. Kaepef, k. W. Birtos of eouth Omaha,1 Judg ' Jacob Levi and David Anderson. Tea Years Ago , .. v A big red automobile called the 'Red Devil," belonging te the- WKittm.4n Aetb- mtibile company, lew "ttp" on" Farpam Street, hear Thirteenth and 'only. the running gear1" was hea af hand when the enploHioh had completed lt work The machine had been driven by Harry Sharp, 3033 D6ntlas sti-eet: A,' I. Root And a ouple of other employes of th auto house who had gone Into Mahrer's tot luneh about :10 at hight when the accl dent happened. " -.j , f A' Very tight game 'of' ball 'at Vinton street ark between the city couneltmen and members of the board of education resulted In the even score of SS to T In favor of the councllmen. The big bright star of the day waa Councilman Lobeck, who had really been' a" ball player in hla day. City Clefk Elbourn was a busy player. The others of the council team ware: Stock ham. Westberg, Whltehom, Lynch, Scott. ZSmman and Hoye, Th bdard's outfit consisted of Superintend ent Ptarse,: Prof. Nathan Bernstein, Prin cipal : Waterhbuse, Theodore , Johnson, Burgess, W. F. Johnson, Homan, Bob Smith, J. J. Smith, Stubbendorf, Wood and Flnlayson. - i. Jordan Dickey, Son of 3. J. Dickey of the Western Union, died fct the fam ily residence. ; ' John Buck, foreman of Stort brewery, bade hts frlohds goodbye and Started Tor "der fatherland," intending to stiily any new methods of making beer he might discover. " ' 1 " ' ' The new Brandels bank opened with fci accounts aggregating deposits of 116,000 the first day. . v ' . . People Talked About POLITICAL SAINTS AND' SINNEES . . ..- A Study of Xaft and Eooievelt and the Editor'. Conclusion, . ,.., t,. OW'llle. (Wash.) Gstiette-. ' "' " : .1 Taft said in his Winona speech that the rayne-Aldrich tariff Waa the best ever, and was damned for it Roosevelt said In a signal art'ete In the Outlook thst,the Payne-Aldrich tarift waa bette? than any of Its predecessors, and was applauded as an authority. Taft prosecuted the trusts and was branded as a fool politician and atool ot the Interests. Rdosevelt exonerated Paul Morton, a self-confessed rebater and violator of the Sherman anti-trust law. and ie Stopped the prosecution' of the harvester trust, and for these things tie was acclaimed as A friend of tne people and their one great savior from 'the designs of the money power. " ' Taft Initiates, secured and consistently defended the Canad'an reciprocity treaty and was repudiated . by . the farmers of the country as a consequence. . Roosevelt at first approved and advo cated the. treaty, praised Taft for secur ing Its passage, then a -little later de nounced It and made It an Issue against the president In hla preconventlon cam paign. For this he was given Increased devdtlon. , ;' Taft carefully examined the records in the Lorimer casei asked several senators to do likewise, urged Roosevelt to help to rid the senate-of Lorimer, and for his pains he was branded as a- supporter of Lorimer before the convention and then rebuked by th senate for endeavoring to have the Illinois senator Unseated: He la considered to have been weakly, pusil lan!mou8ly and ' Ignomtnlously wrofti throughout ' ;:" ' ' ' ' Before examining the record Roosevelt dramatically t-efused to Sit at a banquet with Lorimer, agreed with the president to help unseat him; then denounced the president aa a friend of Lorimer, and when Lorimer was expelled from" the senat glorified In the fallen reputation like art executioner over the dead body .of a vic tim, shouting without rhyme or reason, "I did it. it was my fight, and l Won " For which he is forever Immortalized in the mthds of his Countrymen. Taft secured the corporation tax law, the maximum and minimum tariff pro visions In the Fayne-Aldrlch tariff law, th; tariff board and the publication of campaign contributions lw, and was de riounceS as a friend of privilege and sub servient to the bosses. For seven, yes.rs Roosevelt dodged the tariff, ridiculed Bryan's demand for the publication of . campaign ' Contributions, then later praised the present tariff law aod the tariff board as the Only proper solution of the tariff problem, and is hailed as the enemy of privilege and the one champion of the people s against the bosses. ' .;, .- As secretary of war, Mr. Taft went Into Oklahoma at the request' of Roosevelt and pleaded "with the people to reject a constitution that provided for the in itiative, referendum and the recall ne subversive of representative government. A a president he vetoed the Arizona state, hood bill on the same grounds. For this people say that he betrayed Roosevelt and Roosevelt policies and has changed from what Roosevelt thought he was to some monstrous sort of being. . Roosevelt sent Taft to Oklahoma to de nounce direct,. legislation and said that what he thought about the constitution that contained the provisions of that kind wasn't fit to print. He ridiculed Bryan's slogan of "Let the pe"opl rule." Later he went into Arizona and opposed the recall of judges, and a few days afterward In California approved "the same provision. Then In his Columbus speech' went fur ther and demanded the recall of judicial decisions and adopted Bryan's former plank of "Let the people rule." Now, peo ple say that Roosevelt hasnt changed, but that it Is Taft who- changed and that Is why Roosevelt is fighting him .and why he ought to fight him. ' , Taft . changed a big deficit, in the na tional treasury to a surplus In three years, lifted the postal department out of debt for the first time In years, and se cured the establishment of postal savings banks, ' and 1 branded as an Incapable executive. " Roosevelt plunged the country ihtd debt, th deficit growing larger , each year, failed to improve . the postal service or secure postal savings bank.' in seven years, and Is acclaimed the greatest ex ecutive In the history of the country. Taft preached against war and nego. tinted peace treaties and is. regarded a an Inhuman monster. , Roosevelt has glorified war and op posed th peace-' treaties and is looked upon as a godlike benefactor of humanity Roosevelt built a steam roller and ma nipulated It ruthlessly in 1904 and 1908 to gain his ends, then handed It over to Taft Thereby he Increased the popular respect and admiration accorded hlra. Taft used that Bame Steam roller just as h had been taught by Roosevelt, and he Is branded is a thief and a receiver of stolen goods. . . ' t But What's the Usef These corhpail sons could be continued ad Infinitum and you, Mf. BUlt Mdose, would find In them nothing but evidences of Roosevelt's salnt-llke ch.ara.cter and proof of the In delible sin of Taft So what's the use? PUBLIC BENEFITS OF LEGISLATION Great and Manifest Improvements Hake for Better Life. ; ; ; ; ' . 'Wall Street Journal. When. . Congress . abolished railroad f upon to bear. Some handicap may be paasea.it conferred favor, upon, the rail. roads much greater, than .the actual sum saved. The pass, In principle and effect, was a bribe, "-Where It was not a bribe It practically amountsd to blackmail. 'The actual money' lost waa considerable, but th Unhealthy. 'conditions' which It bred 1 the demoralisation of the-public and th rftiftoad'statf were evenmpr fy JeSUOhable." The mifroaa are'- Aowt abU toconduut" their business With seif-re-Pct. and the honest traveling public I th gainer. .... ; , , V , tn the same, way, when contributions to campaign funds by. corporations are made iHegal, the corporation themselves aire the fainera. They, were Ml victims, to a greater or, less degree, nd It goes with out saying tbt they did. hot give some thing , for,, nothing. . Every, 'contribution was supposed to be return to theiri in legislative favors, nd the relations es tablished between politicians and corpora tion mangers Were of the most bbjection abl ohareter. In th long run nobody was satisfied and the public pdld the bill. Doubtless regu'latlbn is occasionally burdensome. The requirements of the In terstate Comfnerc commission ate not always entirely, reasonable. 'A public regulating . body Is not always the best Judge of the prospects of a new railroad enterprise, of the amount of capitalisa tion Which it may be reasonably be1 called conceded, Ut the gains in, security to the Investor, in efficiency of management. safeguarded by publicity, and lrt the cbllt of the railroads, easily compensate for the occasional tendency to overregula tlon. . . - r , Probably, never, in the future Will th politician' be able to blackmail corpora ltons as he has .done In the paat. That 'most cosily pf graft is eliminated. Whr no corporations; pay. blackmail, all will be treated allker The number bf diBhoti- est lob6y riiigs In ' Washington and at state capitols Js sensibly decreased... Fa vors will no longer be for sale when there are no purchasers. ' There Is some dis position "among oilr politicians to take their revenge In 'gratuitous' attacks upon the railroads and, jarge Industrial, cor porations.. .This , Is a toutse, however, which will wear Itself out; and thre is every hope that t new men come1 into public life unfettered by th old graft traditions, our ' politics will share th. erjormoua moral Improvement which the past, decade has witnessed in corporation and private business.-' - " At a time v,Mn agitator are telling us that the country ... la .owned, by the cor porations for their own corrupt ends, It Is well to reflect upon thee great and manifest improvements. They represent something Incomparably, more permanent and Valuator in the country's life than large exports or bumper crops. ' ABOLITION OF THE 0EDEAL By ThomaB B. Grefory been undertaken, and all business has beett on the basis of "immediate npmand." For months the .predic tion .has jeer) eonrnon .thai'aa foon as the DreB8Ufe;Ot WniKs. was re moved, trade' ould show tf peat up lift. .But trade , has not waited for the process politics; It is. expand ing in all 'rttrectlots without regard to the Issue orthefampatsn.-v .',; . Railroads have found morO than ever pressing the urgency of increaa- lflg their facilities; "thU is ut a, sin gle significant feature of the sltua tlonrfor transportation Is a" Great fac tor in the commercial and industrial activity of the nation, and when At e railroads set about rebuilding and r equipplng their lines, it means but on$ thing. Busing? is setting better. . An actress with 200 dresses, a di vorce ' suit aW a "'record as'co respondent, has landed, at New York for a month'a slay, with the an nouncement that, she proposes to fly while In America. Surface lndlea tions are that she is already some flyer. The weatht-r man scores handily lit re calling' fh decision banishing straw hats otl September 1. , . A directory count of Chicago's popula tion foots up 1S2M00, Including the pro prietor of a saloon and dance hall who dodged taxes for seven years on th claim that his was church property. Winston Churchill, first lord of the Rrlttah admiralty, has "postponed his pro posed visit to Canada pehdlng a settl thcht of th naval question between the Dominion and th mother country.- ' Mrs. Harriet Chalmers Adams has just returned to Washington city after another exploring trip In South America. : Mr. Adam has now traveled more than 40.000 mile on th South American continent, i Edward ilorrl! , Jr., eon of the Chicago packer, hasJust completed eight months ot humble labor In rattle, sheep and hog pens in the stock yards. II did this to lam the busing from the pigpen up., One of th September mgaines give it out that Colonel Bryan scoop in 130,009 a year on the Chautauqua circuit. In th art ot enif.mg' pH:aea into money, Coio nl Bryan has 'em all knocked over th ropes. - ; In the last nine years thirtylght womon. charged with murder hav been tried end acquitted In Chicago. In twenty cas men were the victims. Only seven oonvict-'onS vof women were had in th same time. ' r Governor Cole Bleas of South 'Caro lir.a. In a voice cf.ciied with emotion, says, apropos, to hs r arrow victory In the primaries that "God In Hla allWIs Providence has protected me and through the voice of the people, which 1 th voice of God,, has given to m the greatest victory - vr f . known to th world." The vote cast snows an excess of 70,000 ever th vote for president in iscs. . ' Th abolition of the ordaal as, th mean of establishing th guilt er Inno cence of accused part es wai brought obout In England six hundred and nine ty-four years ago today September 6. 21. At least that was the beginning of th end. th' real endJbf, omi much" later. Th prevalence ot th Ordeal through out Europe forms one of th most r markable features of the middle ages. ' It wa Universal, It wa entered Wto with the heartiest sest and confidence, ano disappeared at last Only after the stub bernest sort of a' reelstance against the growing intelligence of th time. : ' " Th Ordeal was a direct appeal to God, and took various form fir, water, hbt Iron, the combat, the swallowing of poi sons and so forth. ' " . If th accused wa able,'' W th iafetj to ass through a hlang fire, to be thrown Into th pond, river or ocean, tt flip his hand Intd botling water or tnolun Uad, to swallow po'Son or to, down -his adversary in combat h wa Innocent, but tf the fire or hot lead burned him, it th Dolson took hold of him, ir,upon b' Ing thrown Into the lake, river or. ea. he sank, or If his adversary got the bet ter of him In battle, he was guilty. Such .Waa the - i'Apoeal to God," th famous system of .Ordeals, wh'ch obtained throughout Europe for many centuries, and to which England ha the high hortoi of having given th first effective blow, It was, of course, very ridiculous, and is to be etpialned only by the fact of the stupd Ignorance of the time. For a thousand S'ears "nature and fiatute's law& lay hid In night" Ignorance and super sUttlon were rampant, and the benighted human mind was as full of delusion at the darkened old barn or eave is of bati 'and wl. ". ,;-.; j Th ignorant man is ready to "believe' anything and It Is riot to be wondered at that all through th middle age the Or deal flourished like a green bay tree.' It never occurred to them that the" Who! thing was nonsense. "With God all thing were possible,' and by appealing ,to Him H would vindicate thilr Innocence-; in spit of fir, water., poison: or the furj of man.': '- . ' .... - : . - . , - Of court "God'dl4 no vh thingnd we shall never ' k row - how , many, -nao-cent ene perished r how - nauay- gu'.Itv ones 'cam out 'succeasful In the courst ot th ''Appeal to, God". As a matter of course, th law of nature kept right n about their business through it alt the poison killed them, the hot Iron ond. lead burned them, "the water-drowned them, the strongest and most : capable fighter prevailed over hi opponent ana the poor fools Were never tthe wisar far It But th time came When the Scales be gan to fall from men'. eyes. Intelligence was reborn from Greece; 'the motherhood Of civilisation. Into the lethargic mlhd of Europe, beginning !ri Italy and wol king up to -Its first practical results . In Eng land, the literary revival poured a flood ot light and the m'ddle ages were doomed with all their vagaries, that of th Or deal among- the test. Beginning in Eng land tho time Indicated, men, In matters Jud cial, began turning from the "Appeal t God" to' the appeal to reason and tacts. REPt-BLtCAIf OR PROGRESSIVE t t . .. Followers Of Boll Mo Moat R , paiiiate the Old "Same. . . Washington Star.,' Colonel Roosevelt Beems determined, In terms of his spcechmaklng at least, to cut loose absolutely from the old repub lican party. Friday at Morrtsvllie, Vt, In the course of hi . speech some one asked: "I this the progressive re publican party T" "Immediately the third term candidate replied: 'No; it is the national progressive party. Some bigot would not , vote for Lincoln when he left the whig party and some bigots wouldn't .vote for us now, Do you get me? We have come, to the point where to 'be loyal to the, principles of the republican party you have to re pudiate the name.;. , , . , . Nevertheless, U Is to b nc-led that the third partyt manager In most- of the statfg are doing their best to hold on to all th usufruct ot the republican party, to its prestige and even to its name tn point of nomlnatlohs", and In Kansas have Just succeeded In getting the third-term electors put, o,n the officii, ballot as re publtcat to the exclusion of those who represent th dslr of the.twoplc fr the r-lectioa e Taft. Ju would seem that Colijnl Tposevelt '.Warning -..wtti desire t Bjeatt SLwijr,roifr4 tht eblloaf) party eVrywhcre';,8A'' tn sthose p'taorai. 'Where hhj- voiee jVtonnrt;iif;i;or ih, Immedlit holif 'of dcftuuclatio'n and-kfeu'ss. -I. . SAID Df FOTr.1 The Ddctor--N'atural endowment aoea k great -Way. I grant you; but It- take edu cation to make a man of parts , xne rroressor Yes. but monkeying with a buzz saw will, do it quicker. Chicago Tribune. ' "Say, you can't Join this club' of au thors unless you've written something, and you've done nothing but raise pigs." -wen, isn t tnat making my living By my pen?" Baltimore American. "The eirls don't like to inotorcvele with Porky Simpson." wny not? "He's so fat they can't put their arm areuna him ' -Cleveland Plain Dealer. 'U man should nver undertake to ftwrt anything he can't pay for, said the thrifty citizen. .,?"nBea'!e" replied" the election expert. Did you ever hear of a candidate wait ing till he could produce his own cam paign fundr-Washlngton Star. "Now. Noguchl, in tli matter of your wages," said Mrs. De Rich tn th. candi date lor the office of Japanese butler. -uoney no object." smiled Noguchl. "Oh. indeed! Haw n'" aA Mr a Rich, "You mean that vou will work tnr noMng?" ,.o, no, no: cried NokucM. "Me mean me no object to monv ." Haroer'a Weekly. "I'm tfrpll nf aMi-kinr . K complained the country youth. it in ramer sticKy, - returned the city board gaafng 4t the other's" ,sh6ein "Why don't you get th old man to hav th farm paved? "Chicago Record-Herald. '.-'. , '. , '. I-.. 'ii,'. . 1 A GENEROUS C0NTKIBUT011. : I'm feeiin' purty easy with a conscience " that is clear v AS I read th allegations-when election' tlhi draws near. ' I've given freely to assist th party that," I serve. I've given lot o' Speeches an' I never . lost my nerve, I've given tlm to people who would ask - lire iv cajicuii, I'v given all I had to giv in energy, n' f brain., , - But, I draw the ilne. emphatic. I kin say ; with hone8t gle Nobody's campaign fund has had a filcket -,out of ri. - ,v There's no. one who kin hint' that I have' helped along the tricks That might be tried whn Mammon Is - turned loose in politics, . : I'm able to stand up an' wait the out--. come of the race , ' .- - - - -. Aft' look up my check book (If I had 6ne)ri boldly in the face, ' - " 'j X never helped to raise th cash that mebbe might be spent ' In temptin' candidates from methods pur. . ana innoceni, My wealth of intellect t gave, nor Waited , -' to b dunned, ; - .'. ; But I never gave a nickel to nobody's campaign fund. , Bro "A NATIONAL INST if UUON ' wnlee, MMe Co FQft iffcW.'BOTS AND CHILDRBI' 1S4S una a-, : . X: 'Vi , . ... ".. t For Men, Boys and Children - INSPECTION INVITED Every g-arment giaranteed-Sixty-Tbree Years1 of Clothino;.. Experiencd woven into everything ;'we ' make. , - ' - "' ,y ' '. ; .,. i argest Variety of men's fall AND WINTER STYLES EVER SHOWN ' For School and College Wear Special Sack Suits and Overcoats iV Young Men, .' ' " 1 $15.00 to $30.00 Boys' Double-Breasted Two-Piece Suits, "f $5.00 to $15.00, , Boys' Single-Breasted Norfolk Suits, . , $5.00 to $15.00, Boys' Long Overcoats, with new style collars, , " $8.50 to $20.00 ; SCHOOL AND COLLEGE FURNISHINGS AND HATS : I B?y? CapB4 ;50c to.$.00 ' Novelties in Boys v and 'Children's Hats, 2' to 18 years,'' $1.50 to $6.00 Smartest Kind of Boys' Neckwear, Shirts and Gloves. , SPECIAL DEPARTMENTS DEVOTED TO OUT- ' FITTING YOUNG FOLKS.. BROWNING, KING fk CO. Geo. T. Wilson, Mgr. 15th at Douglas Sts. ' H " Tfrr,- T.fT r-.l.-l. .... . I- wm n , .r.-'il, Wi.at . I- 1 . ..... ILPiiiu l id Incomparable for Iced Tea ONE TEASP00NFUL MAKES TWO CUPS. Published by the Growers of India Tea. aniji'ii')l""iilliJi m , - . J"jl 1 , Nothing fore ties ' ,; ', After a Cay f Work cr Flay Becaue OLS AOS has all th goodn that maater brewer, tin put Into it .. health, strength and th rtal pleasur 'that always go with th drinking-of .-good beer xJ..-.v.. - : -St6rnixd Ambr Eottlg - tOTTTK OUABA - ' WILLIAM JETTER 8803 H. Ktrt TUphoae Bonta 8 ... Counotl BluXfi wOld AfH 8 1818 80 nth 8th BtiMt, Yhoa 63 - ' OMASA . ' IHUGo dilz 13a Soogls Btr t, Fhon Ooog. 154g JETTER QREWIIIG CO. nut: Sknith Amk. ir.vu.v. . i f m ,.1 fi I -it' r7 - n 1 r-r '", " .:: I -v.'