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CONGRESS HEARS SECOND MESSAGE President Tells of Treasury and Army Affairs. PHILIPPINES ARE INCLUDED Bill for Natives’ Independennce De nounced as Premature—Progress of Panama Canal. Washington. Pee 6.—Congress today re reived from President Taft the second of his messages to the short session. It deals with fiscal, military, insular and judicial affairs and in part is as follows: The condition of the country with ref erence to business could hardly be better. While the four years of the administra tion now drawing to a close have not de veloped great speculative expansion or a wide field of new investment, the recov ery and progress made from the depress ing conditions following the panic of 1907 have been steady and the improvement has been clear and easily traced in the statistics. The business of the country is now on a solid basis. Credits are not unduly extended and every phase of the situation seems in a state of prepared ness for a period of unexampled prosper ity. Manufacturing concerns are running at their full capacity and the demand for labor was never so constant and growing. The foreign trade of the country for this year will exceed $4,000,000,000. while tin* balance in our favor—that of the excess of exports over imports—will exceed $500, 000,000. More than half our exports are manufactures or partly manufactured material, while our exports of farm pro ducts do not show the same lncrea.se of domestic consumption. It is a year of bumper crops: the total money value of farm products will exceed $9,500,000,000. It is a year when the bushel or unit price of agricultural products has gradually fallen, and yet the total value of the en tire crop is greater by over $1,000,000,000 than we have known in our history. Condition of the Treasury. Th? condition of the treasury is very satisfactory. The total interest-bearing debt is $963,777,770. of which $134,631,980 con stiute the Panama canal loan. The non interest-bearing debt is $378,301,284.90. in cluding $346,671,016 of greenbacks. We have in the treasury $150,000,000 in gold coin as a reserve against the outstanding green backs; and in addition we have a cash balance in the treasury as a general fund of $167,152,478.99. or an increase of $26,975, W2 over the general fund last year. Receipts and Expenditures. Kor three years the expenditures or tne i government have decreased under the in fluence of an effort to economize. This year presents an apparent exception. The estimate by the secretary of tlie treasury of the ordinary receipts, exclusive of pos tal revenues, for the year ending June 30, 1914. indicates that they will amount to $170,000,000. The sum of the estimates j of the expenditures for that same year, exclusive of Panama canal disbursements i and postal disbursements payable from postal revenues is $732,000,000, indicating a deficit of $22,000,000. For the year ending June 30. 1913, similarly estimated receipts were $667,000,000. while the total corre sponding estimate of expenditures for that year, submitted through the secretary of the treasury to congress, amounted to $656,000,000. This shows an increase of $76,000,000 in the estimates for 1914 over the total estimates of 1913. This is due to an Increase of $25,000,000 in the estimate far rivers and harbors for the next year on projects and surveys authorized by congress; to an increase under the new pension bill of $32,500,000; and to an in- j crease In the estimates for expenses of the navy department of $24,000,000. The estimate for the navy department for the year 1913 included two battleship*5- Con gress made provision for only one battle ship, and therefore the navy department has deemed it necessary and proper to make an estimate which includes the first year’s expenditure for three battleships In addition to the amount required for work on the uncompleted ships now under construction. In add?’’ n to the natural increase In the expenditures for the un completed ships, and the additional hat i tleshtp estimated for, the other increases i are due to the pay required for 4,000 or more additional enlisted men in the navy, and to this must he added the additional cost of construction imposed by the change In the eight-hour law which makes it applicable to ships built In pri vate shipyards. With the exceptions of these three i Items, the estimates show a reduction this year below the total estimates for 1913 of more than $5,000,000, The estimates for Panama canal con struction for 1914 are $17,000,000 less than for 1913. The president then explained at some length the national reserve association system recommended by the monetary commission and urged congress to ex amine the plan impartially from all standpoints and then to adopt some plan which will secure the benefits de sired. Concerning the tariff he had little to say in view of the fact that a new con gress has been elected on a platform of tariff for revenue only. Army Reorganization. Our small army now consists of 83,809 men. excluding the 5.000 Philippine scouts. 1.saving out of consideration the coast artillery force, whose position is fixed in our various seacoast defenses, and the present garrisons of our various insular possessions, we have today within the continental United States a mobile army of only about 35,000 men. This little force must be still further drawn upon to sup ply the new garrisons for the great naval base which is being established at Pearl Harbor, in the Hawaiian islands, and to protect the locks now rapidly approaching completion at Panama. The forces re maining in the United States are now scattered In nearly fifty posts, situated for a variety of historical reasons in twenty-four states. These posts contain only fractions of regiments, averaging less than 700 men each. Ih time of peace it lias l>een our historical policy to ad minister these units separately by a geo graphical organization. In other words, our army in time of pe ace has never been a united organization but merely scat tered groups of companies, battalions and regiments, and the first task in time of war has been to create out of these scat tered units an army fit for effective team work and co-operation. To the task of meeting these patent defects, the war department has been ad dressing itself during the past year. A comprehensive plan of reorganization was prepared by the war college division of the general staff. This plan was thor oughly discussed last summer at a series of open conferences held by the secretary of war and attended by representatives from all branches of the army and from congress. In printed form it has been distributed to members of congress and throughout the army and the national guard, and widely through institutions of learning and elsewhere in the United States. In it, for the first time, we have a tentative chart for future progress. The National Guard. Under existing law the national guard constitutes, after the regular army, the first line of national defense. Its or ganization, discipline, training, and equip ment. under recent legislation, have been assimilated, as far as possible, to those of the regular army, and its practical efficiency, under the effect of this train ing, has very greatly increased. Our citi zen soldiers under present conditions have reached a stage of development be yond which they cannot reasonably be asked to go without further direct as sistance in the form of pay from the fed eral government. On the other hand, such pay from the* national treasury would not be justified unless it produced a proper equivalent in additional efficiency on the part of the national guard. The organized militia today cannot be ordered outside of the limits of the United States, and thus cannot lawfully he used for general mili tary purposes. The officers and men are ambitious and eager to make themselves thus available and to become an efficient national reserve of citizen soldiery. They are the only force of trained men. other than the regular army, upon which we can rely. The so-called military pay bill, in the form agreed on between the au thorities of the war department and the representatives of the national guard, in my opinion adequately meets these con ditions and offers a proper return for the pay which it is proposed to give to the national guard. I believe that its enact ment into law would he a very long step toward providing this nation with a first line of citizen soldiery, upon which its main reliance must depend in ease of any national emergency. Plans for the or ganization of the national guard into tac tical divisions, on the same lines as those adopted for the regular army, are being formulated by the war college division of the general staff. Porto Rico, \lr. Taft says, continues to show notable progress and he urges the senate to pass the bill granting the Porto Ricans American citizenship. Philippines. A bill is pending in congress, con tinues the message, which revolution izes the carefully worked out scheme of government under which the Philip pine islands are now' governed and which proposes to render them virtu ally autonomous at once and absolutely independent in eight years. Such a proposal can only be founded on the assumption that we have now dis charged our trusteeship to the Filipino people and our responsibility for them to the world, and that they are now prepared for self-government as well as national sovereignty. A thorough and unbiased knowledge of the facts clearly shows that these assumptions are absolutely with justification. As to this, I believe that there is no sub stantial difference of opinion among any of those who have had the respon sibility of facing Philippine problems in the administration of the islands, and T believe that no one to whom the future of this people is a responsible concern can countenance a policy fraught with the direst consequences to those on whose behalf it is osten sibly urged. In the Philippine islands we have embarked upon an experiment unprece dented in dealing with dependent peoples. We are developing there conditions exclusively for their own welfare. We found an archipelago containing 24 tribes and races, speak ing a great variety of languages, and w'ith a population over 80 per cent, of which could neither read nor write. Through the unifying forces of a common education. of commercial and economic development, and of gradual participation in local self-govern ment we are endeavoring to evolve a homogeneous people fit to determine, when the time arrives, their own destiny. We are seeking to arouse a national spir it and not, as under the older colonial theory, to suppress such a spirit. The character of the work we have been do ing is keenly recognized in the Orient, and our success thus far followed with not a little envy by those who, initiating the same policy, find themselves hamp ered by conditions grown up in earlier days and under different theories of ad ministration. But our work is far from done. Our duty to the Filipinos is far from discharged. Over half a million Fili pino students are now' in the Philippine schools helping to mold the men of the future Into a homogeneous people, but there still remain more than a million Filipino children of school age yet to he reached. Freed from American control the integrating forces of a common edu cation and a common language will cease a/id the eucational system now well start ed will slip back into Inefficiency and dis order. An enormous increase in the commer cial development of the islands has been made sinec they were virtually granted full access to our markets three years ago. with every prospect of Increasing development and diversified industries. Freed from American control such devel opment is bound to decline. Every ob server speaks of the great progress in public works for the benefit of the Fili pinos. of hart or improvements, of road and railways, of irrigation and artesian wells, public buildings, and better means of communication. But large parts of the islands are still unreached, still even unexplored, roads and railways are need ed in many parts, irrigation systems are | still to be installed and wells to be driven. Whole villages and towns are still with out means of communication other than almost impassible roads and trails. Even the great progress in sanitation, which has successfully suppressed smallpox, the bubonic plague, and Asiatic cholera, has found the cause of and a cure for beri beri. has segregated the lepers, has help ed to make Manila the most healthful city in the Orient, and to free life throughout the whole archipelago from Its former dread diseases, is nevertheless incom plete in many essentials of permanence In sanitary policy. Even more remains to be accomplished. If freed from Ameri can control sanitary progress is bound to be arrested and all that has been achiev ed likely to he lost. If the task we have undertaken is high er than that assumed by other nations its accomplishment must demand even more patience. We must not forget that we found the Filipinos wholly untrained tn government. Up to our advent all other experience sought to repress rather than encourage political power. It takes long time and much experience to Ingrain po litical habits of steadiness and efficiency. Popular self-government ultimately must rest upon common habits of thought and upon a reasonably developed public opin ion. No such foundations for self-gov ernment, let alone independence, are now present in the Philippine Islands. Disre garding even their racial heterogeneity and the lack of ability to think as a na tion, it is sufficient to point out that un der liberal franchise privileges only about 3 per cent, of the Filipinos vote and only ft per cent, of the people are said to read the public press. To confer independence upon the Filipinos now is. therefore, to subject the great mass of their people to the dominance of an oligarchical and. probably, exploiting minority. Such a course will be as cruel to those people as It would he shameful‘to us. Our true course is to pursue steadily and courageously the path we have thus far followed: to guide the Filipinos into self-sustaining pursuits; to continue the I cultivation of sound political habits through education and political practice: to encourage the diversification of indus tries, and to realize the advantages of their Industrial education by conserva tively approved co-operative methods, at once checking the dangers of concentrat ed wealth and building lip a sturdy, inde pendent citizenship. Regulation of Water Power. There are pending before congress a | large number of bills proposing to grant | privileges of erecting dams for tbe pur pose of creating water power in our navi gable rivers. The pendency of these bills has brought out an important defect in the existing general dam act. That act does not. in my opinion, grant sufficient j power to the federal government in dcal I ing with the construction of such dams to exact protective conditions in the interest of navigation. It does not permit the federal government, as a condition of its permit, to require that a part of the value thus created shall be applied to the further general improvement and protec tion of the stream. I believe this to be one of the most important matters of I Internal improvement now confronting the government. Most of the navigable rivers of ibis country are comparatively long and shallow. In order that they I may be made fully useful for navigation J there has come into vogue a method of improvement known as canalization, or the slack-water method, which consists in building a series of dams and locks, each of which will create a long pool of I deep navigable water. At each of these dams there is usually created a long pool of deep navigable water. At each of these dams there is usually created also water power of commercial value. If the water power thus created can be made available for tbe further improvement of naviga tion in the stream, it is manifest that the improvement w’ill be much more quickly effected on the one hand, and on the other, that the burden on the general tax payers of the country will be very much reduced. Private interests seeking per j mits to building waterpower dams in navigable streams usually urge that they • j thus improve navigation, and that If they i do not impair navigation they should be I allowed to take for themselves the en tire profits of the water-power develop j mont. Whatever they may do by way of relieving the government of the expense of improving navigation should be given due consideration, but it must be apparent that there may be a profit beyond a rea sonably liberal return upon the private investment which is a potential asset of | the government in carrying out a com prehensive policy of waterway develop ment. It is no objection to the retention and use of such an asset by the govern ment that a comprehensive waterway policy will include tbe protection and de j velopment of tbe other public uses of water, which cannot and should not be ignored in making and executing plans for tbe .protection and development of navigation. It is also equally clear that inasmuch as the water power tb”i cre ated Is or may be an incident of a gen eral scheme of waterway Improvement within the constitutional jurisdiction of the federal government, the regulation of such water power lies also within that jurisdiction. In my opinion constructive statesmanship requires that legislation should be enacted which will permit the development of navigation in these great i rivers to go hand in hand with the util ization of this by-product of water pow er. created In the course of the same Im provement. and that the general dam act should be so amended as to make this pos sible. I deem it highly important that the nation should adopt a consistent and harmonious treatment of these water power projects, which will preserve for this purpose their value to the govern ment, whose right it is to gTant the per mit. Any other policy is equivalent to throwing away a most valuable national asset. The Panama Canal. During the past year the work of con struction upon the canal has progressed most satisfactorily. About 87 per cent, of the execavatlon work has been completed, and more than 93 per cent, of the con crete for all the locks ts In place. In view of the great interest which has been manifested as to some slides in the Cule bra Cut, T am glad to say that the report of Col. Goethals should allay any ap prehension on this point. It Is gratifying to note that none of the slides which oc curred during this year would have in terfered with the passage of the ships had the canal, in fact, been in operation, ar.d when the slope pressures will have been finally adjusted and the growth of vegetation will minimize erosion in the hanks of the cut. the slide problem will be practically solved and an ample sta bility assured for the Culebra Cut. Although the official date of the open ing has been set for January 1. 1915. the canal will. In fact, from present indica tions. he opened for shipping during the latter half of 1913. No fixed date can as yet be set. hut shipping interests will be advised as soon as assurances can he given that vessels can pass through with out unnecessary delay. Recognizing the administrative problem in the management of the canal, con gress In the act of August 24. 1912, has made admirable provision for executive responsibility in the control of the canal and the government of the Canal Zone. The problem of most efficient organiza tion is receiving careful consideration, so that a scheme of organization and con trol best adapted to the conditions of the canal may be formulated and put In op eration as expeditiously as possible. Act ing under the authority conferred on me by congress. I have, by executive procla mation. promulgated the following sehed uel of tolls for ships passing through the canal, based upon the thorough report of Emory R. Johnson, special commis sioner on traffic and tolls: 1. On merchant vessels carrying pas sengers or cargo. $1.20 per net *+•*<*( ton—each 100 cubic feet—of actual capac ity. 2. On vessels in ballast without pas sengers or cargo, 40 per cent, less than the rate of tolls for vessels with passen gers or cargo. 3. Upon naval vessels, other than trans ports, colliers, hospital ships, and supply ships. 50 cents per displacement ton. 4. Upon army and navy transports, col liers. hospital ships, and supply’ ships, $1.20 per net ton. the vessels to be meafl used by the same rules as are employed in determining the net tonnage of mer chant vessels. Rules for the determination of the ton nage upon which toll charges are based are now in course of preparation and will be promulgated in due season. Panama Canal Treaty. The proclamation which 1 have Issued In respect to the Panama Canal tolls Is In accord with the Panama Canal act passed by’ this congress August 24. 1912. We have been advised that the British government has prepared a protest against the act and its enforcement in so far as it relieves from the payment of tolls American ships engaged in the Amer ; ican coastwise trade on the ground that ! it violates British rights under the Hay Pauncefote treaty concerning the Panama ! Canal. When the protest is presented, it will be promptly considered and an ef fort made to reach a satisfactory adjust ment of any differences there may’ be be I tween the two governments. Workmen’s Compensation Act. The promulgation of an efficient work men’s compensation act. adapted to the particular conditions of the zone, Is awaiting adequate appropriation by con gress for the payment of claims arising thereunder. I urge that speedy’ provision be made in order that we may install up on the zone a system of settling claims for injuries in best. accord with modern humane, social, and industrial theories. Promotion for Col. Goethals. As the completion of the canal grows nearer, and as the wonderful executive work of Col. Goethals become? more con spicuous in the eyes of the country and of the world, it seems to me wise and proper to make provision by law for such reward to him as may be commensurate with the service that he has rendered to his country. 1 suggest that this reward take the form of an appointment of Col. Goethals as a major general in the army of the United States, and that the law authorizing such appointment bo accom panied with a provision permitting his designation ::s chief of engineers upon the retirement of the present incumbent of that office. Navy Department. The navy of the United States Is In a greater state of efficiency and is more powerful than it lias been be fore. but in the emulation which ex ists between different countries in re spect to the increase of naval and military armaments this condition is not a permanent one. In view of the many improvements and increases by foreign governments the slightest halt on our part in respect to new construc tion throws us hack and reduces us from a naval power of the first rank and places us among the nations of the second rank. A year ago congress refused to ap propriate for more than one battleship. In this I think u great mistake of policy was made, and I urgently rec ommend that this congress make up for the mistake of the last session by appropriations authorizing the con struction of three battleships, in ad dition to destroyers, fuel ships, and the other auxiliary vessels as shown in the building program of the general hoard. We are confronted by a condi tion in respect to the navies of the world w’hich requires us. if we would maintain our navy as an insurance of peace, to augment our naval force by at least two battleships a year and by battle cruisers, gunboats, torpedo de stroyers. and submarine boats in a proper prorotion. We have no desire for war. We go as far as any nation in the world to avoid war. hut we are a world power. Our population, our wealth, our definite policies, our re sponsibilities in the Pacific and the At lantic. our defense of the Panama ca nal. together with our enormous world trade and our missionary outposts on the frontiers of civilization, require us to recognize our position as one of the foremost in the family of nations, and to clothe ourselves with sufficient naval power to give force to our rea sonable demands, and to give weight to our influence in those directions of progress that a powerful Christian na tion should advocate. Department of Justice. This department has been very active in the enforcement of the law. It has been better organized and with a larger force than ever before in the history of the government. The prose cutions which have been successfullv concluded and which are now pending testify to the effectiveness of the de partment work. The prosecution of trusts under the Sherman anti-trust law has gone on without restraint or diminution, and decrees similar to those entered in the Standard Oil and Tobacco cases have been entered in other suits, like the suits against the powder trust and the bath tub trust. I am very strongly con vinced that a steady, consistent course in this regard, with a continuing of Supreme court decisions upon the new phases of the trust question not already finally decided, is going to offer a solution of this much-discussed and troublesome issue in a quiet, calm and judicial way. without any radical leg islation changing the governmental policy in regard to combinations now denounced by the Sherman anti-trust law. I have already recommended as an aid in this matter legislation which would declare unlawful certain w’ell known phases of unfair competition in interstate trade, and I have also advo cated voluntary national incorporation for the larger industrial enterprises, with provision for a closer supervision by the bureau of corporations, or a board appointed for the purpose, so as to make certain compliance with the anti-trust lawT on the one hand and to give greater security to the stock holders against possible prosecutions on the other. I believe, however, that the orderly course of litigation In the courts and the regular prosecution of trusts charged with the violation of the anti-trust law is producing among business men a clearer and clearer perception of the line of distinction be tween business that is to be encour aged and business that is to be con demned. and that in this quiet way the question of trusts can be settled and competition retained as an economic force to secure reasonableness in prices and freedom and independence in trade. WILLIAM H. TAFT. Thne He Went. "Ah.” remarked Miss Weary, whom Mr. Staylate had been boring with old conundrums, “that last one re minds me of the best thing going-” "What's that?” he asked, eagerly. “A man who has stayed too long."— Catholic Standard and Times. I Ambiguous. Mp.ud—What kind of a man did Car oline marry? Beatrix—The kind who can come home from Europe with money in his pocket. O Before Houses Were Numbered. Four hundred years ago the idea of numbering houses originated in Paris, though it was not until 1789 that the system became general. The first known instance of a London street in which houses were numbered is Pres cott street, but the practice did not spread far until 1764. Worth Knowing. When running curtain rods through thin curtails place a thimble on the end of the rod to prevent it from catching in the material. 4 The Real Boss. “Well, which one of the newly mar ried pair is boss?” "No one can tell." “Why not?” “Her mother is visiting them at | present." The Topic “What is being most discussed in the homes of the nations just now? The tariff?” 'No; 1 think fall housecleaning is just now on the carpet.” Finance. Marks—"I have Borne money, but 1 l don’t know whether to buy a home or an automobile.” Parks—“Take my advice; buy a home and mortgage it to get the machine. Then you’ll have both.”—Boston Transcript. Suitable Play. “I am going to make my farewell tour in Shakespeare. What shall be the play? ’Hamlet?’ ‘Macbeth?’” “This is your sixth farewell tour, I believe.” “Well, yes.” “I would suggest ‘Much Adieu About Nothing.' ” Both Alike. “A dentist who wishes to change his business ought to be a good real estate agent.” “Why so?” “Because he haB had experience in making money out of ache-rs.” Tact. She (sternly)—I have a rod in pic We for you. He (genially)—If the pickle is one of those jars you fill so appetizingly, I shall welcome it, my dear. Argumentum ad— “John, why don’t women have the right to vote, anyhow?” "Maria, do you really want women to have the right to vote?” “Not on my own account, of course, but—” “Wrell, that’s the reason, Maria.” No Danger. “I am afraid that young writer will skim over the surface of his subject and never go deeply into it.” “He can’t. The subject la the bor ing of wells.” Two of ’Em. "Yes. I was a great player in my day," said Jones. "Made a goal Trent the kickoff. Can any of you beat that?” “I'ye done the same, you bloomin’ liar!” replied Brown.—Judge. Its Class. "Unhorsing a rival in the old days of chivalry was very much like a modern holiday in a busy life.” "How so?” "It was taking a knight off.” Precautions. George—She sings nicely, doesn’t she? Tom—Oh, yes. When she sings they have to close the windows. George—My goodness! What for? Tom—Her voice is so sweet that it draws the flies.—Pathfinder. Rough on Dad. "Dp you believe in love at first sight, mother?” “Of course, I do, my dear. Do you suppose I’d have mar ried your father if I’d taken a sfecond look.”—Detroit Free Presa. This is a Duke’s Mixture Umbrella j Whatever way you smoke Duke's Mixture it is de- ? lightfully satisfying. Everywhere it is the choice of men I who svant real, natural tobacco. J i I l 4 I In each 5c sack there are one and a half ounces of jjj choice Virginia and North Carolina tobacco—pure, mild, ” rich—best sort of granulated'tobaceo. Enough to make % many good, satisfying smokes—anyway you want to | use itf And with each sack you get a present coupon | free. ? Get an Umbrella Free I The coupons can be exchanged for all sorts of valu- jj able presents. The list includes not only smokers’ articles I —but many desirable presents for women and children— | umbrellas, cameras, 4 toilet articles, tennis I rackets, catcher’* | gloves and masks, etc. During December and January only we will send our illustrated catalogue of presents FREE to any address. Ask for it on a postal, today. Coupons from Duke'^Mixture mar be assorted with tags from HORSE \ SHOE. J. T.,TINSLEY’S NATU RAL LEAF. GRANGER TWIST. coupons from FOUR ROSES (10c tin double coupon), PICK PLUG CUT. PIEDMONT CIGARETTES. CLiX CIGARETTES, and other tags or coupons tssued by us. Address—Premium1 Dept. ^ofaaoo Cot St. Louis, Mo. For Best Results Ship to Omaha Live Stock Commission Go. THEY “FILL’EM AND SELL’EM” RIGHT. SOUTH OMAHA. NEBRASKA T°r nilUlf FYF FEVER FlnR ELIL andthUT/disexsis Cures the sick and acts as a preventive for others. Liquid given on the tongue. Safe for brood mares and all others. Best kidney remedy; 50c and $1 a bottle; $5 and $10 a dozen. Sold by all druggists and horse good* houses, or sent, express paid, by the manufacturers. SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. Chemists. GOSHEN, INDIANA HUBBY GOT IT. Wiley—I want tc get a big effect with my new spring gown, dear. Hubby—Don't worry, darling; you'll get it all right in the bill. No Cali for Anxiety. The citizen put the solicited coin in the hand of the tramp. "And now I want your assurance,” he said, “that this money will not be used for any unworthy or unnecessary purpose." The tramp drew back. “You don’t think f'r a minute that i I’d waste it on food an’ clothes, do you,” he indignantly demanded. Father’s Admiration. Mrs. Shortley was discussing the i latest; fashions with a young lady ! caller. “Did you say your husband was fond i of those clinging gowns. Mae?” “Yes, he likes one to cling to me for j about three years.”—Lippincott's Mag azine. „ Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Stature o6f In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria A small boy doesn’t find it very amusing to do the things his parents are willing to let him do. Hope is a pneumatic tire that is fre quentiy punctured. FOLEY KIDNEY PIUS Are Richest in Curative Qualities FOR BACKACHE. RHEUMATISM. KIDHEYR Anp BLADDER Quickly relieves <®EYfWATERSr&w JOHN L. THOMPSON SONS* CO.,Troy,N.Y. |Sl B«» Cooth 0jTT,i7ri!«TciT^^!^ r gjf is Urns. Sold by OroniMi. | t Countryman's Notion. Farmer (seeing a water cart for the first time)—Dang me, Halbert, if these Lunnon chaps ain’t smart! Just look what that feller’s fixed up at tbe back of ’is wagon to keep boyB from hangin' on be’ind!”—London Sketch. The honeymoon is on the wane when hubby quits taking wifey every where he goes. Nearly every shiftless man has a horseshoe nailed over his door—that is, if he has a door. t _ f It Wins its ttiay bp service L.C. Smith & Bros. Typewriter (Ball Bearing—Long Wearing) In buying a typewriter you want a satisfactory answer to three questions: What Wilt it do for me? HoW Well Will it do it? HoW long WiU it do it? By answering these queries with the needs of the typewriter owner and user in mind, the L. C. Smith fit Bros. Type writer Company has attained the frottf rank in the typewriter held. Some people think that. typewriter ii a tyi< wnttr and that » all these is to it. Machine, may look alike but there is a lot of dderenta ■Deficiency. The new Model Fire is hush not only foe straight correspondence but for tabulating, bill ing and in fad for every aanrice needed in the average business. Its bal bearings at all points when friction de veloped through action, permit close adjustment and insure coned and accurate typewriting. Wi would Jilt tit ottartanity to ttB yarn mort about it. Writtforfrtt loti of on r now Maid Fit*. L. C. SMITH & BROS. TYPEWRITER CO. Head OCcefa Domaric and Feragn W— SYRACUSE. N. Y.. U.S. A. Brandta i. aB Principal Citita Omaha Branch, 1316 Far nam Street, Omaha, Neb. HHHmnHHI I