-T , - T . , I iNampri tor I mrnln I mm tfclBERTYS 5sr " LOUR sa LIBERTY .w 7 CC Demand Liberty Flour and take no other, does not handle it, phone us about it- H. O. BARBER & SON 0 if B ' vl? (iy j is mr.de ?n creation's cleanest cream- I: c.v rcc :i?.?3 :n::t nearly to per fect! Bettor butter catnot be made. .. Ask gosr grocer V "n if i' ar'-'-j- THE RIVERSIDE BASE BURNERS For hard coal or coke. Largest amount of radiating sur- 1 face. Improved flue construction produces more heat units I from coal consumed. Easy to take down or set ud. Three .flues, thus anording double radiation and taking cold air from 'floor. HANDSOMEST Riverside Base Burners are as good as they look, and they are the best looking stoves on the market, ERNEST H0PPE 103 Nor& lOtli Street Shamp Machine Company 317 Soatk Elwtfc StrMt Lincoln Automobile Repairing a Specialty "Welded; All" machine for all kinds of electric welding. Repairing of all kinds done promptly and at lowest prices consistent with good work. Autos for. Hire at Reduced Rates Call Bell A2779 Once iTried Always Used Little Hatchet Flour Made from Select Nebraska Hard Wheat WILBER AND DeWITT MILLS ...... RYE FLOUR A SPECIALTY TELEPHONE US IKC. O.L C f IKTr"M XT Mm , 2fc Am. 1459 I tJ Made in Lincoln I : Test of the Oven Test of the Taste Test of Digestion Test of Quality Test of Quantity Test ,f Time Measured by Every Test it Proves Best If your grocer urostof pasteurized buttcrmakers. BEATRICE frrT7 rrrnv mncoin, neor. AND BEST Nebraska 7U1 iJU, ilLUiJ. WEST'SEXHIBITOFGREATIDEAS A CONVENTION OF MEN WITH PLANS AT KANSAS CITY NOV. 14 TO 17. The Trans-Mississippi Co .-.cress. With Colonel Fred Fleming at Its Head, Will Hear the Aldrich Arguments and the Hadley and Stubbs Side, Too. The Trans-Mississippi Commercial Congress, which meets in Kansas City ov. 14 to IV, will hear ex-Senator AJdrich argue his currency reform. It is the Monetary Commission's first public declaration to the people of the West, and more than four hundred bankers and financiers from over the nation will gather to hear the author of the plan, which he claims will make the country panic proof, explain the merits of its contest. But everyone does not favor the bill, and the oppon ents will also be present to voice dis senting opinions, and express other ideas of ridding the country of its present financial tightness. For this is what the Trans-Mississippi Commercial Congress is for to discuss the things th"!t are wrons and propose remedies. It is. In fact, the COLONEL, FRED FLEMING. Vice-President of the Kansas City Life Insurance Co., Who is President of the Trans-Mississippi Congress And "Will Preside at AU Sessions Western clearing house for ideas, and the national legislators pay strict at tention to the expressions of this clear ing house. The congress has assumed such im portance and magnitude that the fore most statesmen, business men, law makers, farmers and financiers of the country attend it in order to catch the drift of public opinion. At this meeting will be at least sax of the twenty governors who rule the terri tory covered by the congress. - Gover nor Herbert Hadley of Missouri, will open the congress with an address of welcome, and in this address he will sound the keynote of the import of the meeting. Governor John Burke of North Dakota, who is president of the Missouri River Improvement As sociation, will speak on the Upper Missouri River. Governor C. A. Aid rich of Nebraska, will talk on The Regulation of Inter-State Rates and Their Relation to the Producer and Consumer. Governor O. B. Colquitt of Texas, Governor W. R. Stubbs of Kansas and Governor John F. Shaf roth of Colorado, wiU make address es Xearly two hundred government heads, senators and congressmen will attend the meeting. Darwin P. Kings ley, president of the New York Life Insurance Company, will speak on life Insurance and Justice, and Fred GOV. HERBERT S. HADLEY. Of Missouri. Who Will Deliver the Ad drees of Welcome And Serve as a Member of the Program Committee. W. Fleming, vice-president of the Kan sas City Life Insurance Company, is president of the congress this year and will preside at all meetings. Champ Clark, speaker of the House of Representatives, who is talked of for president, will address the con gress during its four-days' session, and be chooses his own subject. S. M. Sparkman, chairman of the House Comntittee on Rivers and Harbors, wfll a'.to attend. Some of the speak ers on the improvement if waterways are: Walter S. Dickey f Kansas City, president of the Kansas City Missouri River Navigation Company; Charles W. K. Kavanaugh of St. Louis, Congressman William P. Bor land and Congressman Charles P. Booher. Senator William E- Boraa of Idah and Alva Adams, former goveraor of ill Colorado, will spe on the reclama tion of land by drainage and irriga tion. David R. Francis of St. Louis, former governor of Missouri, and John L. Powell, president 6Z the Southwest ern Shippers" Association, will be among those who will talk on inter state rates. From every state west of the Missis sippi River, and from Alaska, Hawaii and the Philippine Islands scores of delegates will come, ripe with ideas and suggestions to place before the congress. From each state of the Trans-Mississippi country, will come twenty delegates, created so by their governor's appointment, and from each commercial club, board of trade, chamber of commerce, clearing house association and any other business or industrial organization so desiring, not more than ten delegates will take part in the deliberations of this con gress. It is a "free Forum" of the West, in which all peoples and classes par ticipate. Through its efforts millions of dollars have been appropriated for waterways and irrigation improve ments in the West, and scores of laws have been passed by the national con gress regulating the commercial con duct of the country. The Trans-Mississippi Commercial Congress was organized in 1891, though its real birth was in Denver in the eighties, when Governor Alva Adams of Colorado, called into ses sion the deep waterways interests. Other organizations whose object was practical waterways were also distant- The West, though it had grown into a country of wealth and promin ence, was unable, because of a lack of political prestige, to obtain appro priations from congress for improving its waterways. The East, skilled in using the power of politics, "got the money." Tiring of such treatment, Kansas struck the Erst blow for recog nition by calling a Western States Convention to be held in Kansas City, April 14 to 17, in 1S9L Men of national prominence ans wered the call, and for an infant step the move was a success. Later in the year in Macitou, Colo., this organiza tion combined with two others of simi lar object the Trans-Mississippi Con gress and the Deep Water Convention and formed the existing Trans-Mississippi Commercial Congress. Always first with the congress is river improvements. This year it is especially anxious to father a resolu- I SPEAKER CHAMP CLARK. Who Will Attend the Trans-Mississippi Congress and Deliver an Address. He is a Strong Probability as Demo cratic Candidate for President. tion which will result in congress ap propriating twenty million dollars for making the Missouri River navigable between Kansas City and St. Louis. The Kansas City-Missouri River Navi gation Company, which is now run ning boats on the river, and the Mis souri River Improvement Association are not going to allow the congress to adjourn without adopting a resolution favoring this appropriation. It is very probable that Governor John Burke of South Dakota, interested in the Upper Missouri as its president, will call a special session of the Missouri Im provement Association to meet here in conjunction with the Trans-Mississippi. This is the third time that the con gress has met in Kansas City. It got its -swadling clothes in Kansas City, and again in 1906 when it had assumed powerful proportions, it met here. Convention Hall is designated as the meeting place, though special meetings wUl be held every morning in downtown theaters. The hall wiU seat 15,000 persons. As a feature of the entertainment Congressman Wil liam P. Borland of Kansas City, has obtained governmental permission to have the Panama pictures exhibited at the congress. Lieutenant George Goethals, son of the head of the Pan ama, work, will show the pictures and talk on the canal. This is the first time the pictures have been shown publicly. As another feature of entertain ment the Kansas City Commercial Club win spread a huge banquet In Convention hall on the night of Nov. 14, in its annual celebration of the John Jay Treaty, particularly appro priate in connection with the Trans Mississippi Commercial Congress. Fif teen hundred plates will be spread. Delegates may be appointed by Com mercial Gtubs. Mayors of cities and towns and boards of county commis sioners. Reduced rates have been au thorised - by; U railroads to , Kansas Cat. LITTLE BY LITTLE The money that is working is the money that 13 doing its owner good. The dollar hid in a stocking and stuck und er the carpet does no one any good. It is only when dollars work and add to themselves other dollars that they are doing service to the owners. We make your money work for you work day and night without ceasing. We invest it for you. In other words, you cultivate the habit of saving by depositing with us weekly or monthly a part of your earnings, and we pay you 4 per cent interest thereon. That's making your money work for you. No man ever saved a fortune just by hoard ing dollars. Fortunes are made by making money earn money. Think it over. Then come in and let us explain our method. American Savings Bank 110 South Eleventh Street FIRST SAVINGS BANK of Lincoln The directors of this bank are the same as the directors of the First National Bank of Lincoln 4 per cent Interest on Deposits We gladly open accounts for sums as tow asone doOar Green The Dr. Benj. F. LINCOLN, For non contagiooa chronic rtiiniw Lrgst. equipped, most beautifully fnrmishad. if- ' I' OFFICE OF DR. R. 1 BENTLEY, SPECIALIST CHILDREN Office Hoars I to 4 p. m. Office 21 18 O St Both Phooc LINCOLN. NEBRASKA REPUBLICAN NOMINEES. Election, Tuesday, Nor. 7,1911. Polls Open 8 A. M. to 6 P. M. STATE TICKET. Judges of the Supreme Court Charles B. Letton, William B. Rose, Francis G. Hamer. Railway Commissioner Thomas H. HalL Regents of State University Frank L. Haller, Victor G. Lyf ord. COUNTY TICKET. Judges of the District Court WD laTd E. Stewart. Albert J. Cornish, P. James Cos grave. Clerk of the District Court J. S. Baer. County Judge George H. Risser. County Treasurer Philip A. Som- meri lid County Clerk Harry E Wells. Sheriff Gas A. Hyers. County Commissioner Clinton J. Mitchell. County Superintendent W. II. Gardner. County Surveyor W. S. Scott. Coroner V. A. Matthews. CITY TICKET. Sanitary Trustee Kent D. Canning ham. Police Judge Bruce FuDerton. Justices of the Peace W. T. Stev ens, John K. Lowe. Constables A. M. Bar-tram, Ira Miller. Saturday, October 28th, only day left for registration. If you have not registered this fall yon most register October 28th or you cannot vote at the November Election or the Primaries next spring'. We solicit your earnest support for one of the strongest and best tickets ever presented to the voters of Lan caster county. NEILS P. HANSEN, Chairman County Republican Central Committee. J. REID GJtEEN, Secretary. Gables Baily Sanatorium NEBRASKA SATIRIST FOR OUR SINS. 51 r. Robert Herrick has said true word in declaring America's need of a great satirical novelist. That is a golden gift to any age or any nation, bat never, it mast seem to us,, would such a gift be more timely than at this stag? of the democratic experiment in Ami. Its special value to as would lie in its access to our national sense of Lumor. That sense is now chie3y mere joke, irresponsible, nnpropor tiomate, inconclusive and soperSeiaL Bat to a great satirical humorist it would open wide to the light. The trouble with much of our self-flaget-lation is that it lacks true propor tion, which is the strong merit of satire. It is not merely serioas. It is a glum. has not the tonic sf icg of high comedy. Against it no only our sensual complacency rw. but also oar common sense. FOLLOWING INSTRUCT 3 -CL ''Good heavecs, J of-:?. Kiwr jms come to send 3r-h as !?y wo an from the intelligence r.-e. Si.e scared the baby into :." My dear. I did ewtlj a yoa told me, and informed the See we wanted a plain rook." iteivrsoc. WMfcsz.sxsa.saa igfcr i i is GLOBE HOTEL 1329 P ; Wageworkers We AUenUOn m chattels. Plenty of it. Utmost Secrecy. i29So. lid. St. Kelly &Norris MONEY LOANED abort time. Ko charn Car pspara. Ho imleras laatfvmaea. Mo vobbcity or fii- tac Money XTUBIA COL! tAHCxx va Dr. Chas. Yungblut ROOM BURR No. 202 Lyermst block AUTO.. PHONE 3416. RF11 636 LINCOLN, - NEBR.