Nct:becattseit is Mr. Cochran, nor because of any views .he may hold. But his candi dacy was sprung' at the wrong time and un der the-wrong circumstances. , 'It was too muchlike ''snap judgment" against men who were entitled to some consideration. Of course it was done with the best of intent, but the surrounding circumstances were such as to seriously handicap Mr. Cochran's candidacy. This much must be conceded in view of the fact that the men who made Mr. Cochran a candidate have since given pal pable evidence of seeing some things in a broader light. Don L. Love is the only candiate ad mittedly backed by the "dry" element. The clement, opposed to the "dry" policy, to gether with other elements that are not in terested in that question to any appreciable extent, .but interested most vitally in the business life of Lincoln, have three men to select from. Lincoln is normally a republi can city. Mr. Love and Mr. Armstrong are the republican candidates. The "drys" will see to it, if possible, that Mr. Love is made the republican candidate, and the weakest of the two "wet" democrats nominated against him. The "wets" will be divided, while the "drys" will be united. That is the danger to Mr. Armstrong's candidacy. And the sorrow of it all is that so many people are going to lose sight of the fitness of can didates, the commercial welfare of Lincoln, in a fight over a policy that should be settled wholly on its merits and without regard to the personal opinions of the. candidates for office. Why .should we elect excisemen on ac count of their views on a question that has no part in politics? And why politics in a municipal campaign, anyhow ? If by chance "dry" excisemen are elected to enforce a dry policy, it means petty annoyance, inter ference with personal liberties that are un questioned, prying unto private affairs and a further growth of animosities and bicker ings. If a "wet" excise board is elected it means entirely too much "personal liberty" and a growth of evil influences that should be minimized more and more each suceed ing year. Will Maupin's Weekly will not support any candidate because of that can didates views upon the excise policy, nor will it support any man who will not pledge himself, regardless of his personal views on that question, to carry out to the full the policy decided upon by a majority of the voters. With this newspaper it is a ques tion of what is best for Lincoln, commer cially, educationally and morally. Most men believe the saloon is a social nuisance and a social outlaw. Few if any defend the saloon as a business institution. The ques tion, then, is : Shall we have a few well reg ulated saloons, doingr business in the open . and under the watchful eyes of the law, or shall we banish it to the alleys, the byways and the blocks, where it is unseen, unregu lated and practically unbridled? Let 'us settle that question all by itself. Let us settle the question of officials purely upon their. merits as capable men of affairs amply able to take care of the city's manifold busi ness activities. Taking everything into consideration, and .without being' influenced in any manner whatsoever by personal likes or dislikes, Will Maupin's Weekly believes that the in terests of Lincoln as a city of homes, or ' growing .business and' of -future possibil ities, will be best, served by the nomination . and election of Alvin H; Armstrong to the office of mayor; that the "dry" policy should be continued insofar as it pertains to "the licensed saloon but modified so as. to, pro vide for the legitimate demands for spirltous liquors; and that we agree among ourselves that as soon as the'election is over' we( sink, all of . our personal differences on the 'excise question and work together, whole-heartedly-and unanimously for a' bigger and better Lincoln. Let the Babies Die! The children of the dependent poor might better die in their infancy than survive to fight the uneven battle of life under the present social conditions, according to Jo seph Fels, millionaire single tax advocate. The little Jewish soapmaker who had much to do in causing the peers of England to tremble, made that assertion to a company of social workers at the Thomas H. Swope Settlement yesterday afternoon. In the same speech he called his hearers "goody goody ' reformers, who believe they were doing good in saving lives, but really were doing only harm." "You may say I'm hard-hearted," he said. "I'm not. I'm simply advocating the course that would mean the most to mankind in the lorg run. You save, perhaps, two or three hundred babies here in a month or. in a year, say. You merely reserve them for a worse death. You save the boys that they mry slave in the mines or sweatshops of the rich and you ' save the girls to be the prey of temptations when they shall reach the age, where they are open to them. "And to save them you, use driblets from the fortunes the rich have wrung from the poor. Those pittances are thrown out as sop to the people, who have lost their birth right the right to an equitable share in the wealth their labor produces. "Better take the money and expend it in bringing about a display of the child vic tims of the iniquitous system. Exhibit the coffins in a public place,- for instance. That would show the people the awful price they are paying merely to live. "True, you are saving lives, but you are not-getting at the seat of the evil. If you have a leaky boat, you may be able to save it for a time by bailing out the water, but the logical thing to do is to stop the leak. Charity is - like" bailing-. You have to keep at it and you just make the objects of those pdfts dependent; You pauperize them. You besmirch their manhood and womanhood. I'll never give five cents to charity. - It's wrone. "The answer to it all is the single tax system of Henry George. The land pro duces everything in the beginning, and therefore it should pay all the taxes. Make it pay them and no vacant land will be held for speculation and taken from the people. Nature hs provided ample means -for. the support of all. The landholders have -kept the people from their God-given rightto have the benefits of . the land, and penury and want is the result. Tax the land arid make it necessary to use it all and there will be work for all and want will disap pear. ' .-: '. -: :' "- -. - "I had an experience myself r that? shows how speculation in land works. Some years ago I bought eleven acres of land in Phila delphiaclay bank it was then for $22,000. I let the land stand LJle. Streets were cut through and three thousand houses were built in that vicinity. Today that land is worth $125,000. There's $100,000 that" I j earned and all I did was to go out and look at the land two or three times. "Of course, it's my money. Why, cer tainly. It just increased in value that much. But why did it increase? Because the peo ple came into that neighborhood. Their proximity to the land made it valuable." Then they earned it, didn't they? If they, earned it, it should be theirs. I have no right to that increased value. I ought to have to pay it in taxes for the benefit of the people." A Great Date. , "What great event of national importance happens this month, and upon what day?" asked a Lincoln teacher of her grade last Wednesday, "On de twentieth!" shouted a small boy. "Why, Johnnie, nothing of importance is due on the twentieth of this month." "Well, I guess yes," exclaimed Johnnie. "No, but on March 4 congress adjourns sine die, and the new con " "Ah, w'ot's dat compared t' de twentieth, de day dat de Antelopes have t' report f'r spring practice?" shrieked the young bug. The Real Reason, Perhaps. "I was just wondering," mused John Gavin, after reading of the petition to enact a law against coursing meets in Nebraska, "if the protest is not made by people similar to the old Puritans." "How's that?" queried a friend standing by. ; "Well, I've read that the old Puritans for bade bear-baiting on Sunday, not because it was cruelty to the bears, but because it gave pleasure to the men. The protest against coursing meets may originate from the same source." WILL MAUPIN'S WEEKLY A JOURNAL OF CHEERFUL COMMENT Dollar Year Fifty-two doses of Nebraska Opti misma dose a week for a whole year. '' ..T-."' . Send the Dollar to Will Maupin's Weekly Lincoln, Nebraska. P. S. Send the Dollar Today. ,