xvT!Tr fi The Commoner. KOVBMBBR 25, 1910 11 arrive at the one true shrine of knowledge and rest. The announcement is also preg nant with the lesson that time flies. It is hard to realize that one who was a boy orator only yesterday should have arrived at the rank and condition of eldership today. There is always a strain to sad ness in the contemplation of the hoy orator. One knows that he must still learn that the cheering of a crowd is as dead sea fruit, which bears rosy aspects to the eye, but turns to ashes in the final test. Colonel Bryan is not the only indi vidual in contemparary history who has turned a blank face to the facts when the contrast between yelling and genuine support has had to be weighted. On the other hand, there is a pen' sive joy in harkening to an elder, who has shed his illusions, but who brings to his public a steadfast be lief in the abiding goodness of those who do not yell readily, but who have learned the lesson of listening with complacency and patience; St. Louis Times. , Nebraska convention, went down to defeat, then took his cause to the peoplo regardless of the effect upon his party and personal fortunes. Ho lost in personal prestige, but what of his cause? Was county option advanced or set back by his sacri fice? The election returns from Ne braska will answer tho question, but we do not havo tp wait for tho elec tion to estimate tho character of men. Measured in terms in politi cal morality, Nebraska is a long way from Saratoga. Oklahoma News. IX)ST AND WON William J. Bryan fought to the bitter, end for county option in tho OATAXIKH OF THE STOMACH A Pleasant, Simple, But Safe and Effectual Cure for It Catarrh of the stomach has long been considered the next thing to in curable. The usual symptoms are a full or bloating sensation after eat ing, accompanied sometimes with sour or watery risings, a formation of gases, causing pressure on tho heart and lungs and difficult breath ing, headaches, fickle appetite, ner vousness and a general played out, languid feeling. There is often a foul taste In the mouth,- coated tongue and if the In terior of the stomach could be seen it would show a'slimy, inflamed con dition. The cure for this common and ob stinate trouble is found in a treat ment which causes the food to be readily, thoroughly digested before it has time to ferment and irritate tho delicate mucous surfaces of the stomach. To secure a prompt and healthy digestion is the one neces sary thing to. do and when normal digestion is secured the catarrhal condition will have disappeared. According to Dr. Harlanson, the safest and best treatment is to use after each meal a tablet, composed of Diataso, Aseptic Pepsin, a little Nux, Golden Seal and fruit acids. These tablets can now be found at all drug stores under the name of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets and not being a patent medicine can be used with perfect safety and assurance that healthy appetite and thorough digestion will follow their regular use after meals. Mr. R. S. Workman, Chicago, 111., writes: "Catarrh is a local condition resulting from a neglected cold in the head, whereby the lining mem brane of the nose becomes inflamed and the poisonous discharge there from passing backward into the throat reaches the stomach, thus. pro ducing catarrh of the stomach. Medi cal authorities prescribed for me for three years for catarrh of stomach without cure, but today I am the happiest of men .after using only one box of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. I cannot find appropriate words to ex press -my good feeling. I have found flesh, appetite and sound rest from their use." Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets is the safest preparation as well as the simplest and most convenient remedy for any form of indigestion, catarrh of. stomach, biliousness, sour -stom-achheartburn and -bloating after meals. A TRUST MADE EDITORIAL In distributing thocredit for the great democratic victories achieved on Tuesday, it is hoped that duo ac knowledgement will bo mado to tho Hon. William Jennings Bryan for his splendid part in tho work of tho most glorious day that has dawned upon tho country since the election of Grover Cleveland as president of the United States In 1884 and his re-election in-1892. Mr. Bryan id especially deserving of thanks, not for his active participation in the campaign on tho stump, but for re serving a fairly discreet silence touching the issues of tho campaign that has just resulted in the resur rection of the party which ho had apparently ruined forever and made it once more the militant democracy. What ho could not accomplish by keeping his mouth open, he succeed ed in achieving by keeping his mouth shut. If this lesson shall bo ilnW impressed upon hira and regarded by mm m mo ruturo work of the party, it may be able, two years hence, to make "another winning fight for the salvation of the country. Richmond, Va Times-Dispatch. whllo conservative, are not reaction ary. By this time tho democrats ought to bo so thoroughly radical that they should bo able to swallow tho radical republicans, but by tradi tion tho democratic party is a con servative party, and although tho mass of democrats wero swept off their feet, and for a tlmo followol a radical leader, conservatism has once more reasserted itself, and It may bo that tho country will have to look to tho democrats to act ns the balanco wheel. America is large and in all things a law unto ItBclf, but even this country is not largo enough to support two radical parties; and tho republican Insur gents are so much more radical than over tho democrats dared to be that It Is hopeless for the democrats to try to compete with them. As tho party of consorvatlsm and construc tion rather than that of radicalism and destruction, tho democrats must raako their appeal. Tho radical republicans stole Mr. Bryan's policies and made them their own. Now, conservative democrats havo roblfCftMr. Bryan of tho party, of which ho was once chief. Mr. Bryan can follow his policies into tho insurgent ranks or can rejoin his party under conservative loader ship. A. Maurice Low, in tho Na tional Reviow, London. A IMJ8Y LA! Special dispatch to tho Denver News from Cambridge, Mass.: Itogei Sherman Hoar, aged 23, of Concord, grand nephew or tho lato Senator Hoar, scnialor-elect from tho Fifth Middlesex district, who Hays ho will bo tho youngest man who linn ever sat In tho Massachusetts upper liouao, 4 Is now n studont In tho Harvard law school and pursuing many different vocations. Hoar, while studying at Harvard, will sit In tho senate In addition ho Is now getting up a news agoncy. Ho Is furthermore writing a volume to provo tho valuo of tho BIblo as a text-hook for lawyers. Ho. In himself practicing law and also is putting on tho market a water-proof blanket. Ho Is secretary of tho free state committee, scout master of tho ' Boy league, treasurer of tlio Concord . Town scouts And is a professional cartoonist, besides being trumpeter of tho Harvard cavalry troop. Occa sionally ho takes tlmo to breathe. ASTHMA Cl'lUC ant by pipnwto yon on iTPoTrinl. If It cures wml l;lf not. ilon'l. Olvn hiiiiwi ol71e. National Clirnilcnl Co,. 710 Ohio Ave. Bldnoy. O. Christmas Post Cards Fret Band mt two So itatnpt and I'll aend you 16 beautiful ClirUtrnaa I'nrriiarul toll you about tny M nVHTHthV, C. T. MKREDITM. 2IS Buecaaa BMC.. DaCMelnaa, lawa NEBRASKA HAS A SHARK In this great democratic year does Colonel Bryan find great pleasure In tho reflection that bv his bolt of an old-timo friend on tho llquor-liconso issue he deprived Nebraska of a share in tho victory? Now York World. THE PASSING OF BRYAN Tho impressive fact about the nomination of a man like Mr. Wil son, and tho prominence of such men as Harmon and Gaynor, Is that it marks the passing of Bryan, on whom largely rests the responsibility for tho dishonesty and hysteria and humbug of politics for the last few years. Fate never played a mora ironic juggle than when it threw Mr. Bryan a cork on tho sea of politics. A man of high Ideals, of unflinching honesty, who has always sought after tho right and striven to lead men upward, it has been his fate unconsciously and unwillingly al most always to be wrong, and by being wrong to make it possible for dishonesty to flourish and incalcul able harm to bo done. Tho sham re forms and the self-advertising re formers of which the public is now so heartily sick, would have found no opportunity had not Mr. Bryan in his pursuit after the ideal, pre pared the ground. Hysteria could havo been checked, progress could have been made soberly, real reform could have been accomplished had it not been for Mr. Bryan. It is one of the most extraordinary cases on record of a good man doing evil be cause he Is an idealist living in a practical world. Mr. Bryan need no longer be con sidered as a determining factor In tho affairs of the democratic party, and his passing and the coming to tho front of Wilson, Harmon and Gaynor Is a movement as important among the democrats as Insurgency Is to the republicans. Insurgency is the republican drift toward radical ism: the retirement of Mr. Bryan marks the return of tho democratic party towards conservatism. It is in evitable that this should be so. At a time when there is more than an even chance of tho radicals control ling the republican, party, tho demo crats show a disposition to abandon the unscientific -radicalism, of -which they have 'been tho victims for some years, to .forsake the radical leader and to put their trust in men whOj SOMETHING BESIDES OFFICE It shows Mr?' Bryan to bo a short sighted man not to bo running for an office at tho only time when a democrat could scarcely help being elected. Omaha Bee. i rr T1 1T W U HKVmil'A OK VEK JL JMLA XU JX M. ri KKTUUNKD. Firo report n to Pnirntalilllty. lllmtrnUhl OuMl Hook, nnd 1 M of Invention Wanted, ncnt free. V1CTOK .1. KVANS & CO., Wellington. I). O ' t TWrntil 11AIBB THKM WITHOUT KKMMNMi Nebraska Socd Co., OmaM'Nftb nr Month pMuBiyca per mum ii afi,, Cmioroi $80 tcliedub. and Iniarnal Revenue I'.nirAirytt.'rboui fraalltn latlilal. Vtnt, DM, Kaattr, Jl. Y. sand u appointmeul oitnlnir, springr I nation everywhere. Ccachlnar tree. W V.iJttnU rkefor 'M'V'It 4WK jiJCJUffcmOHCEST IF" ML.MWMJrM MAUt. Hall . . I.,.,. vv ,w - -1 ' OUT AGAIN Then, again, Bryan is out of the game. Of course, he will not bo a candidate. Ho couldn't bo if ho would, and wouldn't bo if ho could that is, he has sense enough tq know that ho could by no possible means obtain tho nomination again, and he's not going to try, where cer tain ignominious failure must bo tho outcome. , But what is of greater importance, Mr. Bryan cannot raako himself an important factor in tho next national democratic convention. In 1904, though not a candidate, his earnest ness, his pugnacity, his rare oratori cal ability and the prestige of his former nominations gavo him influ ence enough in tho convention to practically frame tho platform, stud ding It with tho ghosts of free silver and other populistlc features. In 1912 he is liable to faro In the na tional convention as ho did In the Nebraska convention of this year lose all along the line; and if he per sists in attempting to thwart what may bo tho real determination of tho convention, leave it even more dis credited than ho did tho Nebraska convention. Nor will it be forgotten that his opposition to Dahlman lost to the democrats of tho nation a democratic governor which, in the matter of prestige, would add a great deal of strength to tho fight tho democrats will make to carry Nebraska, Kan sas, Colorado and Wyoming for the democratic presidential nominee. Washington Correspondence Denver News. ' HORSES TjATER "My lord, tho carriage waits with out." "Without what, -base varlet, with out what?" 2 "Without Jiorses,, my lord it Is the automobile." Brooklyn Life. attartftnu fttltl!. Hold to the user at n'hiwiU nn-tleht rrica. warajr rrtitau uataio true ire. COILKD SPRING PENCE CO.." Vox 334 Wlaehaater, Indiana.' ECZEMA DAN JIK Oritri. My mild, ixUilnr. auaranUad nr ioVs It .nd 1'KL AHPLlf vrovta It, BlOl Jilt 1TCUIN9 wd curoa U Uy. WUITK wow-today. DR CANHADAV, 174 PARK SQUARE. SEDALIA, MO. Hie line Must Be Tested In ulldfseaseflof the Kidney, Mad der, j.lvcr and Digestive organs, including Rheumatism, or the treatment will be sn experiment. I test urine Free. Mailing Case for urine srnt on request. Cos imitation nnd opinion free. DR. J. I'. 9HAPKR, Specialist. ?4 Peun Avenue, 1'ittnburg, Pa. CATAR H yoa bare Caurra la any fona yoa ibould try oar FREE SAMPLE TREATMENT which we will Kud to yoa in plain wrapper FREE of all cbarre by prepaid mail upon requttt. We prove we CURE CATARRH in any form who oar J-Fold Treatment consladnr of an Internal Remedy an External Remedy and an Inbalent, We ruarantce to care yoa or we will RETURN YOUR MONEY Oor complete treatment Las worked wonder In caaea aa tad or worac tiiaa youn Don't tend any money but write for tie FREE TRIAL TREATMENT today. We aeai oar booklet with tamplea THE STALEY CO. 427 Jasper St. Kalamaroo, Mich. Don't Wear a Truss STUARTS PUS TB PAIS adr.t Irura me pauimi iniiii enoc nuu Mir aaawi? torpoeir w uoia u ruptare In placa wilfcaut trsM, bsckie or tyinitna9t lip, to eaaaot etaa r eotapretf asolnit tbe ilTl4 bone. The tnfn etMiioaUeaaca rare la ttta prl iter otlht Ltitwe. IbbUJaoda lata (veaeufuDy trcatft ibrawlrra JUct blnAranea from rk. Soft a ?lrrt ry fa ICv ha! I aplf-laPtBf!fi. Vtpcnnoi cur it ciiurai, IPSPV I to no runner dm for tma-ra. Ke prara wbal wa I Rial of piAfMStiZi&'lWlX coupon and mail TODAY. Addr PLAPAO LABORATORIES, Block 54, St. LguIi, Jtft. '-: - - - -- - wB"r!Lr 'wfal Kassa , l&drtzt..,, Utters isail will biln j fr trial Plij.. :?l 'TI I .1 frl f i . 4 i HamfVaBawJ