1 310NDAV, ri:i5IiL'AKV .. I'M 7. PLAITS M O UTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAI vac.:: i. f--"v k Plaits stsoyf b journal i lliLiySIKP n;li.Vi:i:KH AT I'LATTSMOITH, MCllHiSKA. Ka(f.-eat t I'iRtt.-mouth, Neb., as second-class mail matter. R. A. BATES, Publisher f lESnUi'Tl VllUlZx THOUGHT FOli TODAY .u 'i s. t- wl.u I'm- essential . . liU.-'.v t obtain a little tempo- I- r;ry .-aiVty rieerc neither lib- v r:-. : i f I . Bcnj. Irrtnkliii.- .t" I.iberly Long -iK- : inc. rood t nirj Lo plan on. v. rac a mil. 1 . , r ;:: i -. ; t u;-.-- il'i the !i g- ther eorr.e." :o:- ::t;i.i i.ol i-.n.o i P.u,r woman, j I ' , ... . .... '-la.'' i . I . ' - j ihh ru. th j . j . i ... . r ,i-,.tA ; : j, i.;-.!- . at 'a'ac . for leg I l . . i . i . i : .- i - r-.: has a cure t-r..ati in. th-- p. ice of eggs. ( 1 r.Va tweiity- 'MO. d -d that J 1 )-.,'!; al pur- a; i i . "aatioii in the a l Av horre ,.-. . . -i ). :i!.a : n ; a.i ;;..- per cent. .-t :: i:ttTi in a few .'av viva! - f the M.-Mullva iias introdrt vd a a .I-e -tata .-.s;ate makhiv it an pa ' ;.. !,;.- a r.'ie f from : tV.- aai- a. '-Idle h' Ivors to ( a. ia a:: intoxicated con- . T; ' i- a' - i a prison sentence om ''. e to six na.aihs attached ; in i.'aciii that if the i..rea:i i -, estaliii-hed. .f the York ' W 3' ?. .r r; . . ea - ii to taK't I !; r'ovt ! !! ; cot Id -it t I I . ; o ! t!,c a avaaa i . . t r t a i aav w --.v I'ear as can-( i e cow exactly i . r . a. A-d v.. :.- a !!.i .' ab'-. o v.a - a .-ar. Fn-land vvoulda't " . . v.o.'.M hi- an injury to the crop, ,e.x o .'ii :ta;:i ray p, coos'tioii. i ! eeits miv. will r,rovr ero vr K.o w (io!i 1 i it., iv ,'i '. .1.. r ' : i .1 i.i i i . : j . ?t i o! i.i' ' a. Tie- f.dt'-d Sat.j - : i - i . i '.ia.- I'o'.adj a 1 a . po -ad..- Ka;ria!,d al- c - hi- a V1 "d '. a! to say, t..t -. it e ar.. - '. ;it;htin:r, she expfc'..- r oi :; to r 1 i I : t 1 1 the soldier.-. .'.M, ,-.' iat rod tired a i di ia tiv i : ' : arc ';i inu;: would -be hu - '.,,,!. ',. j---- a pli; -iaal exan.iiialioii ... ton i t- i- pear iia-d to ma ry. aad : .. iave !ia"'a s taara-l be is-aad t'. a, apu'i aat uz.til !'." : est r.'.s a e er : -i i.rv that ho is free from i.'i f . : iv of Mi-.r.;-;, di -ese-. Couh- I i. br; mo;-" ;aac tlian that: i.ralt::;- d,t ; not huanad, and ,a ,. ;.. J . ;are'.-' she tiht !l't t 1 ' " ?:!tt: ry. S'ut hei e is . . ..; via a't 'ca the lev , !-iv m i:h i! ITU YLiAU I.N ADVANCES HOW CONGRESS WORKS. Some farmers at a local hotel were t.iscus.-mg tne ciuaioriness oi (guess a liil cue of them asked: "Why , i 11.. .- - ...... ! in the name of common sense do they not pa.-s the needed legislation and p h mo?" Another asked: "What do they do all day in the house and sen ate every day ?" A glance at the Con gressional Record will show how they . -pcrd their time. At the opening of the senate the chaplain offers a pray er. Then Mr. Smoot, senator from Utrh. says: "I suggest the absence of a tp-orum." That-is the opening re mat k almost every day. The vice pr.-ider.i orders the calling of the ; roll and when that is over and the sc-nuto: s explain the absence of some i i of their fiiends. he says: "Fifty-three s.'v:itc:-s to: whatever the numbei may be) have answered the roll call ; r-.ii a quorum is present. The secre- la y will lead the journal of the pro- cceoio;. .- v i ii'.e 'i veveui.j; M-stiuii. But th-- - crvtaty was never known :i lead th.e journal, lie reads u sen- '. - or two at? th.cn a mat ion is a iv and car: ;" ! to dispense with j ti;:-1 waste of time. Tia :i a large number of petition.' r e prc-ented and referred to appro priate committees r.over to be heard of avails, except a few that are or .!ed printed in the Record or in pamphlet form. A lot of local bill.. i wr.;.j!i no eojections are maue are p:a-S"d. After that mat y resolutions u o f'fered, which often is simniv a - ,. , . clier-.' ror announcing a speech. .A j !.;".- :,'.iml'vr of bills arc UMadSy in- i:-i"! :ce I at thi time ar.d amendmeiits 1 -sed t bills pending in th.e com mittees. That sort of thinc jroes on. for about two houi-s and. the "mornin.u: j ..a-incs- wiiicii in-e.i;i.-. ;i t noon, come; i ta an i iri. There is ahvaws a lare j Jamooit or pr.ntin of documents or- deied duri.'iv that mornin.v hour, and sonu time bills (,f imjortance a!'C passed by common consent dtuintr that t'ar.e. but never one to which any sen ator objacts. The routine in the house is some what -imilar and that is all the iren e;al j.uidic sees. Rut the real work is n-.it dune on the fioor of the house ami senate. It is in the committee w'.eie members toij day after day and aften iicarly all nivht Ion perfect in.1? tne legislation and listenny to repre ser.tations made by different interests Woji.i-IIerald. :o:- Tv-'enty-tw) decrees below zero. Is .-ome winter, thank vou. :o:- '-r,t- s 'd fellows never would be able o rccoirnize tl.emselves as fools if -" . 'i- in c Jtin III loe'. t a .- . i 1 .. r.. 1 1 : i may !e a trentleman, or she may have 7:'o a . i;i ner o'.vn name-. I ; h' avy coating of ice on the !'.!:;.; fields whieli snir.i' thr.n.rfit -"-j -:o: Tin re ate plenty of "leaks" ail over '! e,,ant i y, vdy tliey have not been ante e'liou-rh to find out where they are. Scveial could possibly be found in Omaha. :o: 1 a reformer were only half as i;eo J :i - (,,. would have you believe he as he would be wearing wings. Rut I he mo-L of them, when they get to themselves, take a good loud laugh at how they fooled the people in their work. -:o: Why not get our people interested in putting up a papar mill in Platts raoa'.h. Jt would be a big thing for the old town. One that would also manufacture -draw board. We have the straw; we have the water, and all tl.- t i -: needed is the inclination of our people to assist in such an enterprise. How do you like it, so far. The weather, we mean? :o: ; The man who is not occasionally ex ercised, is generally a dead one. :o: Better have it now than in the spring time. So come on with it. :o: This cold wave makes a fellow think of what has become of his last win ter's overcoat. :o : Model husbands, says a lady at out elbow, are those who haven't been married very long. :o: A man is not necessarily innocent until proven guilty, just because the court takes that view of it. :o: Pneumonia to some extent still pre vails in this city, but there seems t be but very little diphtheria. :o: The election of state and county superintendents shoukl be non-parti san, but can it he that way : :o: Those who trust implicitly in Provi dence should remember that Provi dence will not do all the hustling. :o: When a man goes to the devil, he generally takes a woman along with lim. That's what some people say. :o: "The women's new hats have searee- y anything on them," says a fashion editor. Evidently he overlooked tho price mark. :o: Paste the man one who hails you on the street with "How do vou like this cold weather?" It isn't supposed that anybody likes it. :o: There will be no shortage of dia monds this year, probably because the ultimate consumers of diamonds are not enormous. : o : Anyway, the man with a cheap car doesn't tempi the friends who ride with him to act as though the car be- onged to them. :o: When the honorable judge tuled that golf is recreation, ar.d rot amusement. ic must have known something of the price cf golf balls. :o : If some of those handsome gent mil wealthy maids who advertise for mates are all they claim to be, why- do they have to advertise? :o: There is much talk about a six- man jury. Well, what s the matter vith that idea. The smaller the jury the better the chance for an innocent person to escape conviction. :o: Representative Norton has got a il! before the legislature to reduce the legislature to one body of sixty members. That bill will stand about as much show of passing as a snow ball in hades from melting. :o: Wi ll, Mr. Groundhog e'ould not help but see his shadow vesterdav. Rut vt can content ourselves anyhow. c will have to take the weather just as it comes, so what's the use of wor rying. : o : The people might expect fewer and jetter laws if it were not for too much laying of politics in the legislature. Jut that has been the great evil ever since Nebraska became a state, and we suppose it is too late to stop it now. :o:- From present indications there will be a movement started before the ad journment of the present legislature for the removal of the capital to .some point near the center of the state. If the capital is to remain at Lincolm the best plan it to have the legislature make an appropriation of $3,000,000 for aiew building at Lincoln, and put a stop to the matter of removal. :: We must give Mr. Hughes, the late republican candidate, credit as a man of sound judgment. He is standing by President WTIson, on the present situation with Germany, as every American ought to. There is no poli tics in dealing with the critical sit uation, and should not be. The time is here when there should be Ma union of hearts and union of hands," with all Americans. A HALF-BONE-DRY MEASURE. In many if not most respects the bill prepared by the special legislative committee oh prohibition seems excel lently adapted to the purpose. In some important particulars, however it is open to legitimate criticism. On the question whether the state- should be made "bone dry' the com mittee plainly has lacked the courage of its convictions, or else it has wob bled from side to side without acquir ing any convictions. The result is an illogical compromise, arrived at by at tempting to combine conflicting prin ciples and policies. Either the legislature should strive in good faith, to make good on the dry" promise to the people last fall not to let prohibition interfere with their personal habits or it shou'd frankly repudiate it. A "half-bone- dry" measure is an absurdity. Better chop off the elog's tail neatly and com pletely at once than do it I y inches. The committee bill permits importa tion of intoxicants for personal use. as a recognition of personal rights and a concession to personal habits. This i- in conformity with the theory and pledges on which the campaign for the prohibition amendment was based. Quite properly, in doing this, the com mittee places it limit on the quantity that any person may import in any one month, and requires that a public lecord be made of it. Without such imitation and requirement bootleg ging would receive such an impetus that not all the myrmidons of the law combined could hope to overtake and suppress it. "But the limitation is such that it is aimed at more than bootlegging. It is aimed as a blow at the very per sonal habits which are apparently re ferred to. The limitation is, for any (.nc family, o,ne quart of whisky, or t ao quarts of wine, or two elozen pint. cf beer, per month. It is made an of f3r.se to get, or to have in one's pos session, more than one kind. If a man has whisky or wine in his home he may not order beer so long as a dro of the whisky or wine remains. Then are many families that habitually use two kinds, or various kind-, of intoxi cants. They mut stop it. No more brandy sauce for the pudding, no more wine sauce, no more frozen cix-mx. if there is a pint of beer in the house. There are a plenty of families in which are several beer drinkers. Whether one or a half-dozen in the family, ,the limit is twenty-four pints per month. When such short rations are provided what mockery to insist that other sumptuary inhibition .against hospi tality to the stranger, or friend, or encle or brother-in-law temporarily within the gates! Now it would be perfectly logical and consistent to say there shall be no intoxicants of any kind admitted into or consumed in any home. It would be logical to say that only enough "for medical purposes" shall be permitted. But here it is attempt ed to say that intoxicants shall be per mitted as a beverage, that "personal liberty" is to be recognized, and then an arbitrary and unreasonable limita tion is imposed that does violence to the very principle which the permis sion is designed to establish. If "personal liberty" and "the hai its of the people" are to be recognized at all in Nebraska of the new dispen sation they should be recognized sub stantially and fairly. To chop them in half is both ludicrous and crudely un reasonable. Better "bone dry" at once, bravely and candidly, and be done with it. World-Herald. :o: The exponents of the "twilight sleep'' system of treatment are miss ing a good bet when they do not ex tend the field of its usefulness further. The system is the result of much study and experiment, designed to furnish the motherhood boon that has been sought through the ages. Why not go further and administer the treatment to the great army of disgruntled poli ticians and office seekers? . ! :o: Why is jt the thieves steal mm , Ford cars than thsy do any others? Are they easier to get away with, or is it because they are swifter in elud ing pursuit? LOSSES. Of the live principal nations en gaged in the European war, Great Britain has suffered the emallest num. her of casualties. It has frequently been said, by way of commenting on Biitish inaction, that England was ready to keep on fighting till the last Frenchman was killed. All of this really goes to show the colossal nature of the conflict. British participation has not in " fact been slight, even in the land lighting, and measured by any standard set pre vious to this war, the British losses are .staggering. Yesterday's dispatches convey the information that since tb.2 opening of the battle of the J'omme, last July, (n e at Biitain has last ,'-7 1 men in killed and wounded. The eni.ire losses of the noi th in the civil war, in killed am! wounded. mounted to about o.aU.OOo men. and those of the south to about 170.0OO. Since la.t july. therefore, (5; eat Biitain has lost more men in killed md wounded than both sides lost from the same causes in tne four years of our eavu war. The British losses in killed and wo untied since August, are m excess td 1 .'Joo.Ooo. Tha' is 450. oao more men than the confederacy put into th.e field in the civil war. If the whole force i.ii-ed i.v the north in four yea's. nhorinv, ox en ue of i e-ea'.i.-tnier.' a, slightly ve L'.noioOn men, was t - ha placed at one time int. the EuroH'-a'u war, it could hold just about the front which (heat Biitain i- holding in Fran-.-c. and in four months its hisses would be t'pa-d to the losses susiaiaed in four years of the civil war. (ieneral Sarrail, at Sah-aiki has an army large--- than the cor, fe.h i aey put int the lie'd at av.y ore tin:-.-, aad within r.o.oui) of lOiMinO of the total number of confederates who fought in the entire civil war. But what nature do-s Sarrail cut in Europe? liumania's casualties in battle ait, greater than those of the southern con federacy. Serbian casualties are greater than great battles of the civil war. Ilussia has lost over tw ice as many men as paitieipated in the civil war. liussia has captured more soldiers sii ce last June than surrendered in the last year of the civil war. includ ing all confederates who laid down their arms at and after Appomattox. The only branch of horror in which the civil war can claim any superiority is in the losses incurred through dis east. Disease claimed fully 50.00:: li as, w hich may be more than the to tal deaths from such cau-e among the soldiers of, rhirope in this conflict. Yet this is not at all ceitain. The typhus epidemic which swept Serbia carried off about 200,0(1(1 people, many of whom must have been soldiers. San itary and medical conditions m the Russian army cannot be considered good. Pneumonia and dysentary are potent enemies of all men in the trenches, even if typhoid fever is not.. The nation includes casual lie.-; from sickness in its reports of losses, so it is impossible to find a basis for com parison. But at one lime, when a re port of British losses wa.s being read in the house of commons, a member asked what the losses from sickness amounted to. ami was told tht-t at that time 100,000 soldiers on the (Jailipoli peninsula were incapacitated. Some of these men must have died. When the war is over, and the pow ers of Europe no longer have any ob ject in minimizing their losses, it may easily be found that in spite of the wonders of medical science, sickness has claimed men by the hundreds o thousands. In all other respects, at any rate this war completely destroys tiie value of previous standards of meas urement. The civil war would be but a skirmish in it. The Crimean war would not measure up to the minoi campaigns fought in the Balkans. Our Spanish-American war could be dis counted in one day on a five-miL front. We think of this as a war without a naval battle of any magnitude, yet the losses in warships are greater than the total tonnage of the navies of either Japan or France. The ships which have gone down could have whipped all the navu-s of the woih j m-eeii iai ago. in s .uo.nes t.eaue.. -i :o: COMPARATIVE PRICES. The bentht of quoting comparative prices in advertising or on placard.; in stores has long agitated th' minds o.; progressive retail merchants. .Many of the best stores in the coun try contended that compaiative prices are expected by the public, and an necessary for cniighte-nir.g buyers as to the real or alleged vaiues being of fered them. On the other hand, there is a grow ing family of merchants in differed cities who have come to the conch;. sion that compaiative prices are poo; business both for them and their pa iioa and who hea. e therefore entire!;, tliminated from their ads the u.-uad -L'.fs- now sl.X.V and merely give a de-vipt ion of the article with th', I resent price, vvheiher it was eve: i-ieher or not . "i he latest addition to this family is Bu.-ges --"a.-h company, Omaha. Fol-'.ow-ng the plan of Ma'-shall Fiehk, and Carson Pirie Sct.it of Chicago, ami aua.it six other huge firms in middh. v. esie: n oitie-, B.ira-s'--Xa-h have an i:oa;avii that hereaf i e.- they would ei tireiy eliminate all comparative prices ": om their advertisements in the store or ia Wsuaners. Th"y ay however good the mer ; ::a: -t.-' intentions are to tell the abso lute truth. .vcr-.ca!aas department h't-aas and hone.-t erroi-s ru e responsi ble for misleading comparative prices; and thai to their mind the only v .r. ?u be iu.ie of not misrepresenting pi ices to the patrons of th.e stoic b o intircay eliminate all comparisons. The WovU-ilerald as an advocate of honest advertising will watch with k; interest the working of this new j palicy in Omaha Whether- Omaha people, who hav : een tiroaa!.. up on comparative p'K-e-, will respond a readily to th advertisement that doesn't tell just a av m tic n they are .going to save on each item they buy, must have been q .c.-;on , vital nnpoi -.ance in ine ('.le a iiinaliort of .iris policy. It takes courage to break away iron '. he beaten path thai has proved suc cessful in getting business, but the in oi tiui;. c.oes ii ut cause ll ocneve.- .1... : l i .1 - to ie tne r:gnt inmg to no. is en- tit led to commendation. Comparative prices in advertising pave been much abused. Manv honest ;i:ms use them and do it as Irani mately and squarely a.- human!, yos.-ibie, out some firms unfortunate! v ride a willing horse to death, with t: const'. luence that the public is in. dim to be skeptical of a!! price comp.i: : ens. Worl.l-lbuald. . :o: Th.e temperature goes up. ; o : "Bono-dry," and be done with ;: The weather newt r gets too cold tV a bill collector. When the knockers arc bu-- , :! 1C do not spare even their bo. I fi icr. Th.e future looks - ci t hmg bat erood. Th.e situation i alarming. ai;o broods no good to America. :o:---- The jig is up. and we will h.ive ' tc fish or cut bait." We are rood holier, and we never did like fo cut bait. -:o: From here it looks as if this "leak" investigation is just one of thevc things that simply has to happen. :o : A break with (dormany no doubt thaws nearer, if something does not accur in the next few days to re tard it. :o: They are .supplying soldiers who lose their sight with rubber eyes. A wick ed one asks: "Will it eliminate rub- her in. -mi- It is really more assuring to the American people, that Americans are for America, when such republicans as Charles E. Hughes, tax-President Taft and Elihu Boot declare their undivided siippoir of President Wilson in the present cirsis. "WHOM THE GODS ABANDON. In these days of hiph papr cva-t-and keen competition it is no business of ours, of course, to advertise a con temporary; but we pause to advise all strong men and fair women who are in doubt about the republican outlook to consult an editorial in yesterday's (.lobe-Democrat. It shows exactly how much can be seen from the "reg uiar" republican watch tower. It be gins as follows: "The best thine; the republican na tional committee can do is to preserve a discreet silence and maintain a harmless inactivity. The campaign is over and the debts are paid. There i no pationage to distribute' and it i to early to begin considering the call of the next national convention. The congressional campaign of 101s. will be conducted by the emu rcssiona , committee. It is to be hoped the re publicans of the house and senate will be in such accord on all questions that that campaign can be waged in a uni to.m manner, at least to an extent that wili permit the preparation f a campaign text book that can lie gen erally used." In nil the literature of pa; ho-, we remember nothing more poignant than this. Tlie vision of the future which it voice- reminds us of a hoard anacdote of two men who arrived late at The inn of ancier.t type and were assigned to a room with but one window, which opened into a provi-ion closet. In the cotuse of the ldght on..- man aske-u his fellow to look out of the window and t.d! him the state of weather. !! threw up the sash ami declared that it was "dark as Egypt and sm-l!ed like cheese." The republican case ment, ju-t r.f '.v. affords a like prospect with a like- savor. It reminds us a! o of a hue fiem Geo ge Mt i editii's great po.-m on Fianje in !s70: "Whom the ju-i go. Is a t an 1 on have no light." Thr.i touch about the camra'.an boo'; stirs emotions that he to dee lor tears. St. Louis Jicpublic. :o: The bti! nir.t: love letter si! ways be t ontes a high power ep: .-ive uia. ii it fa-ils into the wrong hand-1. :o: The man who t tes a gtia ar.d u --.--it on the sli-j'-.test pr... oca' ion, is a criminal with whom the ceuit- cannot .leal too severer., :o:- Ingenicus farmers make their auto mobiles do all kinds of wo-k on th-fa'-m. thus lightering the burdens of tlte hired man. : o : Mode: ate wva'.hcr is predicted for ta. ;c: three or four days. But pro a's avo even the weather, v. to c images. : Viv.criran citi. cn. irrespective a:' p. r-cs: a iir.cnf . is standing by -en in ins tforts to pro - of America. . .-is ir.ii.'.e iccenily in th 'ai' of i epri sentativ es to the adbyist. Yes. tire w;'.h both feet. N. . ,1 ai'i- w ; ; -. . ;o: Point the Work. .; -.oc. Noel, Mo., writes. A. Vhomas llog Powder ' or. t- ti.Mno the vK down in tins part ,;. of tin' we; Id. It proved to be what . wo needed to prevent and cure hog cholera ami expel worms." II. M. Socnnichsen. Puis & Ganscmcr. Stop! Look! Listen! You may need an Auctioneer if so s still in the ring You will fin,! on the Murray Exchange. Reverse Al! Gails! SatisfactionCuarantccd Rates Reasonable Address ssnoulb, Nebraska. Hcute No. 1