t SUAilANTEEB j THE REPENTENT MAGDALEN. A few months ago Annie Wilson, formerly mistress of a bawdy house in Omaha, offered to the city her mag nificent residence property in the "Burnt District" for a hospital. Im mediately the holier-than-thous of Omaha raised a storm of protest. Bat the city accepted the gift. Last week Annie Wilson died, and her will dis closes that she has left to various charitable institutions upwards of $230,000. And without exception the managers of these charitable institu tions announce that the bequests will be accepted gladly. And why nott Have we not ac cepted temples from Rockefeller and libraries from Carnegie? This news paper holds that money secured by pandering to vice and lust is just as clean as money obtained by bribing legislatures and corrupting courts. We hold that a hospital endowed with money secured as Annie Wilson se cured hers is just as serviceable " as one endowed with money wrung from the public "by the purchased power to tax. If we remember our Bible aright, Jesus of Nazareth did not thrust Mary Magdalene aside when she kneeled at his feet to annoint them with oil, yet there were some in Omaha and else where doubtless who were so much better than Jesus that they shuddered to even think of accepting the gift of the Omaha Magdalene. We opine that the sick and the maimed whose suf fering hours will be shortened by rea son of Annie Wilson's generosity and repent ence will, at the final judgment, be mighty good witnesses for the de fense when Annie Wilson's case comes up for triaL A FAITHFUL SERVANT. When William McLaughlin was elected county treasurer upon his splendid -record' in that office a few years before, he appointed William Mc Cormick to be his deputy. Later, by reason of ill health, Mr. McLaughlin was forced to leave the affairs of the office almost wholly in Mr. MeCor mick's hands. How well Mr. McCor mick has fulfilled that trust is a mat ter of record. And upon that record Mr, McCormick is asking the voters to elect him to the office of county treasurer, which office he has filled to all intents and purposes for the past year. By promoting him the voters The Man Who Judges That's the man we want to interest the man who selects with care and taste, and then considers price and quality. Further, after considering price and quality, considers timeliness. That's a big thing with us. We not only sell the output of the best clothing manufacturers but we adhere to the policy of giving our patrons the ben efit of the "bargain prices now." In other words, we be gin on prices where others end up after the season is over and the selections picked out. You can get the goods now at the bargain price and you wear them while they are in season. Think that over. At from $10 to $30 we give you exceptional suit and overcoat bargains bargains for the men of taste and judgment. Buying for three big stores we are able to secure inside prices all of which are passed on to our patrons. Everything that men wear we sell and sell right. And we make an especial feature our lines of union-made goods. We can outfit the union man from hat to shoes and all between in articles bearing the label. Speaking of winter underwear notice our complete line. Especial attention called to our line of Munsing underwear mostly union suits. Prices from $1 to $4.50. Nothing better mighty few so good, and none so good at the price. You c.--i't get better value for the money than the Clothcraft Blue Serge Special No. 4 130 aX $13.50. s SPEIER & SIMON On The Corner Tenth and Streets WE SAVE YOU MONEY of Lancaster county will be showing appreciation of faithful and efficient service in the most important office in the county. There is not a single blemish upon the McCormick record. Ilis ability and his integrity are be yond question. He is a young man ambitious to render faithful service. He has earned an election at the hands of the people. UNION ENDORSES HYERS. Haveloek, Neb., Nov. 1. To the Ed itor of Will Maupin's Weekly, Lin coln,.. Neb. : Gentlemen We, the un dersigned committee of the Haveloek Machinists lodge 564, desire to en dorse, regardless of party lines, the candidacy of Gus Hyers, one of our own members, for sheriff of Lancaster county. Mr. Hyers has lived in Have loek eighteen years and is one of the active members of our order. We have confidence in him as a true and faithful member of the union and rec ommend that organized labor honor him with their support. He has done all in bis power to assist the laboring class in Haveloek and has always worked with the state federation of labor in forwarding the interests of the laboring people. (Signed.) FRANK J. BOEIIME. J. F. STASTNEY. E. E. ANDERSON. RAYMOND J. ABBOTT. One of the democratic candidates for office of district judge of Lancas ter county is Raymond J. Abbott of Lincoln, who is a member of the well known law firm of Price & Abbott. Mr. Abbott was born and raised in Saline county, and with his brother Lysle J. Abbott of Omaha, read law in the office of his father, Judge Ab bott of Crete. That this was splendid training will be recognized by all who remember Judge Abbott as one of the strongest men ever practicing law in Nebraska. Shortly after being ad mitted to the bar Mr. Abbott came to Lincoln and entered upon the prac tice of his profession, in which he has been signally successful. He has been connected with some of the most im portant cases ever tried in Lancaster county, and the records will show that he has measured up to every oppor tunity. Mr. Abbott is not a candidate from choice. It was only after earnest so- On The Square licitation that he consented to become a candidate, and those who solicited him were not all of his party faith. Men of all partisan affiliations asked ' him to become a candidate because they knew him to be thoroughly ca pable, thoroughly trustworthy, ' and a man who, would give to the faithful discharge - of duty every energy and every ability that he possesses. Those who know Mr. Abbott best are his staunehest supporters, and this of itself is ample evidence of his fitness for the important office of judge of the district court. FRED'K SHEPHERD. There is not a member of the Lan caster county bar who stands higher than Fred k Shepherd, one of the democratic candidates for judge of the district court. Mr. Shepherd has been reared among the people of Lancaster county. Quiet, unassuming, but dili gent and earnest, he has made a repu tation as a lawyer that is second to that of no other lawyer in this section of the country. He is a student who loves the work in which he is engaged, and who perseveres to the limit. He possesses that judicial temperament which enables him to measure men and things without haste and without bias. His standing as a man and as a citizen is equal to his standing as a member of the bar. He knows men because he has studied men, and he would see to it, if elected to the bench, that all men received equal and exact justice at his hands. On more than one occasion Mr. Shepherd has been asked to become a candidate for the bench, but until this fall he has steadfastly refused. This year he yielded to the demand, though with reluctance, and accepted the nomination. Having accepted he has entered upon the campaign with the same energy that characterizes him in any case which he accepts. As a judge of the district court Fred'k Shepherd would be an honor to his profession, to the beneh and to the people. Fifty-two consecutive weekly doses of Will Maupin's Weekly is guaran teed to cure the worst case of "blue devils," "srrouch" or "mullygrubs" ever known. Price for the full course of treatment $1. USED TO BE. I love to dream of the dear old days, Of the old time friends and the old times ways; Of the old home scenes and the old home ties, Of the joys of youth and its Bright blue skies, So oft I sit in the gray twilight And dream the dreams of the old days bright And. dreaming roam in my fancy free Through the good old days of Used to Be. Down the village street on my way to school, Or through the woods to the swim ming pool; Or o'er the hills where the nut-filled trees Their welcomes sent on the autumn breeze ; Or further still, on the winter's night, With rocker skates with their runners bright, And ever on in my fancy see All the good old days of Used to Be. And a maiden sweet as a dewy rose Adown the lane with the dreamer goes; Once more the tale that is never old. And ever new, is again retold; And the sweet vows made in the clear moonlight While the future holds forth a promise bright. From the good old days of Used to Be. Ah, the visions sweet as they come But the dreamer wakes from the pleas ant dream To find at hand are the joys supreme. For his eyes behold all the sweet3 of life In home and children and loving wife; Tn quiet rest when the day is done And the joy of home is a goal well won; When children climb on my waiting knee Joys greater than those of the Used to Be! Will M. Maupin, in The Commoner. FACTS ABOUT NEBRASKA. Labor Commissioner Guye has just issued a bulletin, "Facts About Ne braska," that is full of mighty inter esting reading. We quote the follow ing: "Nebraska has 6,14-4 miles of main line railroads within its border, com prising seven trunk lines. "Nebraska has the largest horse and feed market in the world. "Nebraska has the second largest "Nebraska has the third largest live stock market and packing eenter in the world. "Nebraska has the largest cream ery and is the greatest dairy produc ing state per capita in the world. "Nebraska produces one-thirteenth of all the corn, one-fourteenth, of all the wheat, one-fifteenth of the oats, one-fourteenth of the hogs, and one eighteenth of all the cattle of the en tire United States. "Nebraska is the third largest pro ducer of sugar beets and the first in poultry and eggs. "Nebraska's averaged sized farm is 298 acres and yet the most successful farmers in America are located in Ne braska and the size of their farms are forty forty and twenty acres respec tively. "Farm Bulletin 325, by J. A. War ren, United States department of agri culture, says Mr. C. E. Beadle oper ates a forty-acre farm in Saunders county, Nebraska, off of which his sales were in one year $1,942.50 with an expense of $436.50, leaving him a net income of $1,506.45 or $37.66 per acre, this being his average yearly in come. "The forty-acre farm of H. F. War ren, in Adams county, shows similar results, while the twenty-acre farm of Arnold Martin, a Swiss farmer, lo cated in Pawnee coounty, shows even greater results." Nebraska needs interurban railroads. But Nebraska will not get them until she abandons the suicidal policy of enacting laws to prevent capital from investing in such enterprises. KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE Nebraska has more things to be' proud of than any other state. She ought to be making every one of them known to all the world. Nebraska is remiss in her duty to herself when she fails to advertise her resources and pos sibilities to the remotest corners of the earth. Nebraska has some mighty hig things, thank you. She has the largest creamery plant in the world. Her largest eity, Omaha, is the great est butter market in the world. She has the third largest paekmg center in the world. She has the second largest smelter in the world. She is the third largest corn pro ducer. oiie js uie uura largest aairymgw state, and promises to be the larsrest inside of ten years. Her annual egg output is worth more than the gold output of any state or territory. Her annual butter, egg and poultry output is worth more than the gold and silver output of any two states or ter ritories. Her annual output of corn and wheat is worth more than the nation's am-Tial output of crude petroleum. Her annual output of grains and grasses is worth more than the coal output of Pennsylvania. Her annual corn output is worth more than the nation's aim-nl output of copper. If one year's product of her farms were loaded in standard freightjeajei and the ears made into one train, the train would reaeh from St Petersburg, Russia, to a point in the PaeiSe ocean nearly a thousand miles due west of San Francisco, crossing the Baltic sea, the English ehanneL England, Ireland, the A tl an tie" ocean and the United States. She has nearly a million acres in al falfa, and the acreage is increasing at the rate of 10 per cent a year. She has more than eight million dol lars worth of interest bearing securities in her permanent school fund, and school property, including school 1xd, worth $40,000,000. She has 49,000,000 acres, three fourths of it fertile and less than two fifths of it under cultivation. She has a climate unsurpassed, soil more fertile than that of the valley of the Nile. She offers more opportunities to th honest and industrious home-makes than any other state or territory and she isn't doing a blessed thing to make the fact known. WE DON'T BELIEVE IT. Senator Bailey of Texas mumbled in the supreme court the other day and was sharply requested to "speak right up." Texas never dreamed that it would see the day when anything like that would happen to Ba3ey Des Moines Register and Leader. FISH AND FLESH. The western man who takes a little firewood or grazes his cattle on the publie domain is sent to the peniten tiary, while the Wall street gamblers and trust magnates who steal millions are permitted to go free. That is the kind of justice meted out by the courts that Taft says are the things that he loves. How long will the peoples' stand for that kind of justieef W need the reeall. Tekamah Herald. . Mnnmr o x n r. wxxixixus. Bill Maupin, a full-fledged citizen and voter of Lincoln, Nebraska, and also an ex-o freeholder, has stated that his preference for the Democratic non ination for president is Champ Clark, of Missouri. Say, Champ, old man, you're nomi nated. Eastern, Pa. JournaL When we become state sn peri n tMid ent of publie instruction one of "our first acts will be to compel the teach ing of Nebraska children just how great a state they live in. With your feet in a pair of Nebras ka made shoes and your brain work ing under a Nebraska made hat, yot may go far and fare well. ft V