ERNEST F. MONROE For State Superintendent of Public Instruction In the Democratic and People's Independent Primaries, April 19. or Residence: Born in Arlington, Ben nington County, Vermont Came to Ne braska in 1898. Is at present Superin tendent of the Shelton Schools, elected for the fourth year. General Education: Graduate of the College of Arts and Sciences, University of Nebraska. A. B. degree. Legal Education: Graduate of the College of Law, University of Nebraska. LU B. degree. Admitted to the bar by the Nebraska Supreme Court. Pedagogical Education: Graduate of the Educational Department (Teachers' College), University of Nebraska. Pro fessional State General Life Certificate. Professional State City ure certincate. A. M. degree's work nearly completed in Education and Philosophy, University of Nebraska. Pedagogical Experience: Fourteen years experience In teaching, in all kinds of public schools, in rural schools, in cityhigh schools, and In city superlntendencles of schools. Has taught in the northern eastern, southern and west-central portions of Nebraska; and is there fore familiar with school conditions in all portions of the state. Your vote is solictod for ERNEST F. MONROE for Stat Superintendent Walter A. Goorgo STATE TREASURER Republican Candidate for Renomination Primaries April 19, 1912 BROKEN BOW, NEBR. WHAT IT COSTS TO RUN THE STATE ONE YEAR. General Fund 23,371 $2,329,396.03 University and Normal Interest Funds 6,985 643,236.33 Temporary School Fund 277 889,446.85 State and National Libraries Funds 311 10,187.61 Institution Cash Fund 1,113 73,757.80 Forest Reserve Fund 4 2,451.45 Fire Commission Fund .', 190 11,373.23 32,251 $3,959,849.32 Average number of warrants per month 2,688 Average expenditure per month $329,987.44 Average number warrants issued per day, 313 work ing days 103 Average expenditure per day $12,651.27 ARTHUR W. RICHARDSON Grant Precinct, R. F. D. 3, Lincoln. Candidate for Republican Nomination for Legislature April 19th, 1912. Lancaster county will have six mem bers in the House of Representatives. As one of the Republican candidates, I ask your support of my candidacy. I live in Grant precinct, near Lin coln. Was born and raised in Nebraska; admitted to the law practice in 1894; practiced law, and have also acted as court reporter in Lancaster county. I am for the initiative and referen dum and for the election of senators by direct vote. I signed Statement No. 1 as a candidate, and if elected will vote for the people's choice for senator. While not a resident of Lincoln, I am in favor of such amendment to its charter by the legislature as will enable its citizens to decide for themselves the question of acquiring public utilities. I am greatly Interested in better roads for Nebraska, and if elected will work for a sensible and practical good roads law. I am for reasonable and just appropriations for the university and. other state institutions. I represent no special interest or faction in politics or business, and if elected I will impartially and fairly represent the people of. Lancaster county to the best of my ability. If we are not already acquainted, I hope you will carefully inquire about me before voting at the primaries April 19th. EDWIN JEARY LINCOLN, NEBR. Candidate for Republican Nomination for Legislature April 19th, 1912. I am a candidate for the Republican nomination as one of the six members of the House of Representatives, and re spectfully solicit the support of yourself and friends at the primaries April 19th, 1912. I served as a member of that body from Cass county, term of 1887, and I in vite an inspection of my record at that time. I have been a resident of Nebraska forty years and of Lancaster county twenty-four years. If nominated and elected I will sup port the people's choice for U. S. Sena . tor, and work and vote to so amend the charter of the city of Lincoln, that her citizens can vote to acquire public utilities. In the matter of our State University and other public institutions of the state of Nebraska, my motto shall be: Liberality without ex travagance. I will support any fair and equitable employers' liability law; in short, will do my best to serve the people faithfully and impartially. SEEMED SPEED MARVEL San Diego, Cal. That nearly fifty of the industrial workers of the world arrested here have admitted they were trying to overthrow the United States government Is a statement contained In a report which the California au thorities will send to the immigration bureau at Washington. Lowell, Mass. More than 1.000 tex tile operatives in this citv have lolned the ranks of the 2,000 strikers who are demanding a greater wage in crease than that granted by the manu facturers. An early moraine: narade was held by the strikers in the busi ness and mill districts. OLD-TIMERS STOOD AGHAST AT THIRTY MILES AN HOUR. ML To Them Such Rapid Traveling Seem ed Almost Beyond Possibility, Much as Traffic of the Air Appears Today. If the ghost of Horace Greeley were to come wandering back across the old Cattaraugus hills to this town, where he once worked as a Jour neyman printer, it would not only witness changes in conditions, but would marvel, in the face of those conditions, at some of the things his nimble fingers set in the office of the old time Cattaraugus Freeman and Lodl Messenger, says a Gowanda (N. Y.) correspondent In giving a brief resume of rail road progress, a report tells of the advancement in carrying mails from a speed of seven miles per day, twenty years before that date, up to nine miles per hour at the date of the re port. Then comes this naive state ment: "Attempts are making to force it up to ten miles an hour, but at anything beyond this, to a cer tainty, horsepower falls us. How, then, shall we find terms adequate to express the value of a discovery which carries us from ten to twenty or thirty miles an hour?" Speaking of the expenses of rail road maintenance, the report men tions a day's cost of a train upon the Manchester railroad. This was in England, and, of course, English money. "The hire of the engine man, four shillings; fireman, two shillings and six pence; coal, three shillings and four pence; oil, one shilling. To tal, ten shillings and ten pence sterling." At every point in this old report one finds facts of great interest to one liv ing in the present day. when air traffic brings up similar comments. At that time the Freeman and Mes senger was published by G. N. Starr, with weekly issue and subscription price of $2.50 a year. In clubs of twelve, the cost was brought down to $1.25. Advertising went by the square inch. Instead of by column- inch as now, and the rate was "$1 per square, with liberal discount to those who advertise-by the year." Even so far along as 1851, when the New York & Erie railroad went through Dayton, four miles away, newspaper methods were somewhat different from now. In an obscure place on the inside pages of a Go wanda paper was a short notice of the passing through of President Millard Fillmore, with Daniel Web ster, secretary of state, the remainder of the cabinet, Governor Washington Hunt of New York and railroad offi cials. Over this was the head: "Hor rible Casualty." At the bottom of the article it said that two young men. Franklin Peacock and Ebenezer Hen ry, were badly and perhaps fatally in jured by the premature explosion or bursting of a cannon fired in salute to the party. The following week, in the editorial notices, the death of young Peacock was mentioned. So do times and newspapers change. Buffalo Express. Plan Monster Terminal. The Canadian Pacific Railway is planning a new terminal for through freight which will cost about $7,000, 000. This line is said to have at Win nipeg the largest car yard in the world. There are 132 miles of track, with accommodations for upward of 3,000 cars. Engineers are 'making plans for a clearing yard with accom modations for 5,000 cars. COLD WEATHER AND METALS Scientists Assert Temperature Makes 'No Difference, but Railroad Men Disagree. Broken rails and broken axles hare caused many accidents this winter, with its unusually low temperature, yet certain scientists who are report ed to be high authorities concerning strength of material insist that cold does not cause metal to become brit tle, and that the idea that such is the case is a popular fallacy. Among the scientists holding these views are Styffe, Fairbain, Klrkaldy. Webster, the United States government com mission, and others: but they have against them all the practical men who have to handle tools or material in zero weather. It is no superstition that induced a wood chopper to warm his ax before beginning work on a frosty morning; and it is the teachings of experience that induces the trackman to lighten his blows on his cflld chisel when the temperature is low, and be knows it is not necessary to cut so deeply into the rail to be broken as it would be if the day were warm. Civil engineers, as a rule, have insisted that temperature makes no difference to the resisting power of metals, not withstanding that the popular voice has always maintained that metals break more readily in cold than in warm weather. The correctness of the popular belief concerning metal getting brittle when cold- was vindi cated by tests made by a member of the British Institution of Civil En gineers some years ago. A series of drop tests were made on axles kept artificially in a temperature of zero and on other axles of the same kind kept at 100 Fahrenheit. The results were that the axles tested warm ex hibited an average of 58 per cent, more resisting power than those tested at the lower temperature. Chicago Tribune. WILL REPLACE WOODEN TIE Railroads Quick to See Possibilities of New Concrete "Sleeper," Re cently Devised. A struggling Californian named George Gates, who is 70 years of age, has sold to a syndicate of eleven of the greatest railway systems of the United States, for three and a half millions sterling, the patent rights to a concrete railway tie or sleeper, in vented by him. The new concrete sleeper is considered the greatest rail way invention since the airbrake. It is a composition of substances which afford extraordinary resilience and durability. A single machine can turn them out at the rate of 3,500 a day. Gates is a veteran of the Civil war and has had a hard fight with poverty during his career as an inventor. He proposed to spend a portion of the money now received in perfecting and Introducing another invention styled by him a "continuous rail." Of the remainder the bulk will be placed in trust for the benefit of his wife and relatives generally. For the present Gates lives in a modest cottage in San Jose, Cal. Sunday Magazine. Grade of Railroad Wages. " The railroad world offers a greater variety of employment than any other The following table shows tbe average daily remuneration in the year 1909 of the various grades of railroad man: Averagre dallv Occupation. . wage scale. General officers $12.07 Other officers 6.40 Englnemen 4.44 Conductors 3.81 Machinists . 2.98 Firemen 2.69 Trainmen, other than conductors .53 Carpenters 2.43 General office clerks 2.31 Telegraph operators and dispatchers 2.30 Shopmen, other than carpenters 2.13 Station agents 2.0S Section foremen 1.96 Switch tenders, watchmen, etc 1.73 Station employes 1.82 Track workers, not foremen 1.3S To Teach Art of Cooking. A cooking school for cooks has been established in the dining car depart ment of the Southern Pacific Railroad company. PERFECTED BLOCK SIGNALS WHAT is called the block signal shows tbe railroad engineer whether tbe way ahead is clear or blocked. In tbe modern block system of signals used on so many of the railroads the movements of a train are actually controlled by the movement of another through the operation of these sig nals. Here again electricity plays a wonderful part. How the Dimes Grow Wonderful how easy it is to break a dollar and spend it a dime at a time. But it is just as easy to save a dollar a dime at a time if you, cultivate the habit. Dimes grow into dollars rapidly and a dollar working for you helps you in getting the dollars you are working for. "We help you culti vate the saving habit, and the dollars you save we will put to work for you. Make your dollars work for you and in time you'll not 'need to work so hard for them. v Come in and let us explain our methods. More than a decade of successful business is the record we offer for your consideration.' American Savings Bank 110 SOUTH ELEVENTH ST. Now located in its splendid new home in the . , Chapin Block, corner 14th and O Streets, Lincoln The Finest Business College Home in the West . Every provision has been made for the comfort, and convenience of our students. All modern equipment A live progressive school, using the very latest methods. Every teacher a trained specialist. You should call and inspect this school. We have ad vantages you cannot find elsewhere. Auto B4387 W. M. BRYANT, President Ball F3566 ONCE TRIED ALWAYS USED Little Hatchet Flour Made from Select Nebraska Hard Wheat WILBER & De WITT MILLS RYE FLOUR A SPECIALTY , 145 S. 9th St., LINCOLN, NEB. TELEPHONE US Bell Phone 200: Auto. 1459 FIRS T SA VINGS BANK OF LINCOLN DEPOSITS $742,000.00 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 low as $1 HOOSS & FRAAS Wholesale Liquor Dealers Distributors of the famous Storz and Saxon Brew Beers Family Trade a Specialty 201 N. 9th St. Auto lead Bell 3187 en Gables The Zr. BenJ. F. Baily Sanatorium, Lincoln, Neb. FOR NON-CONTAGIOUS CHRONIC DISEASES. LARGEST BEST EQUIPPED, MOST BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED Dedicate New Bell. Fremont At St. Patrick's church Saturday morning services delicating a new $600 bell, presented by Mrs. Julia Archer In memory of her late husband, were held. The services were led by Rev. Father J. J. O'SullI van. The bell will be rung lor the first time on Easter Sunday morning. Long List of Candidates. The certificates which Secretary of State Wait will mail to county clerks contains all of the candidates of all of the parties. The list was so long that the printer had to print it in two sheets and paste them together, mak ing a total length of ninety-four inches.