Mayor Moores' Campaign Methods Pictures from Photos by The Bee Staff Artist n hi: r 1 i Kit -2 v. f :;.. - v 111 (s 111 r ?? lilt I : - '.. OFFICIAL BUSINESS GETS PROPER AT TENTION. if I . . J i H ;IUUW 1 1. ? T i a.V v - Up. . J5jt"W .. .-.a-Jar f fc a 4- 1 CONSULTATION BETWEEN THE MATOR, AND CHAIRMAN COWELL OF THH CENTRAL COMMITTEE. HAT mao who undertakes to tell how Frank E. Mcoree conrtucti "one of his campaign" tr.cklea a very difficult task. To begin with. Moores recognizes no chronological boundaries In campaigning. He is at It all the time as much the month after an election as the month before It, except In the respect that when a battle f ballots Is approaching, he organizes the forces that previously have been scattered and without discipline. Campaigning has come to be accepted aa a term meaning "making friends," and Mayor Moores, acquiescing in this, doesn't ace why there should be any attempt to crowd all the work Into one particular period. For a man of his temperament and disposition, it Is something which may as well be made part of the daily routine of both official and private life, year in an I yrar out. Moores likes to do it. He did it before he ever entered puliticea arid ha did it after his election. He could not quit if he tried. No man who Is naturally genial and sympathetic ever becomes otherwise so long as he keeps healtby and Moores' health is distinctly a preferred risk. Once upon a time the present mayor of Omaha was a cabin boy on an Ohio river steamboat. The captain was an austere man who believed In doing as much as possible to make subordinates uncomfortable. Ha worked Moores an average of nineteen hours per day and he swore at him the Other five. The lad learned then the differ ence between a klud word and one with knots on it- He swore a mighty oath it ever permitted to become a full grown Bian he would first bruise the person of r I - - - -:.. i :. -j .'...:, - , i tJf - few. I --::,- ' 'Sm V ' yTr.rv ' : -;' -- - -, , . - i - ,. !""; : -h'vv v.-v . , . - :i . ' - .' " - - --'.!;:.:-- " ' - :---..".v-. - INTERVIEWERS GREET HIM ON TTfE CITY HALL STEPS. r: oo 0 4 5 Ai. w .. ...... .ii.irf- jr-jTijaw ANTE-ROOM OF THE MAYOR'S OFFICE, WHERE A THRONG IS ALWAYS WAITING. V a. . V At V'. t 4 I i UAtOR MOORES' UUwa.tb FACB. that particular captain and then devote all the rest of his days to doing kindness for other people. The first part of the pledge never was carried out because the navigator died while still too strong to be licked, but the other part of .the obliga tion has been pretty cons'antly observed. And that is precisely why it is hard to talk of "a" campaign with Moores in mind. Having had no specific beginning and being still without ending, adjectives Implying distinction among sevetal of a kind won't apply to Moons' campaigning If the word be accepted In the broader sense. His is not a one-night-stand show but a continuous performance. "Hut," some one may suscst, "admitting that whatever he does he does the whole year through leaves still unanswered the main quetstion. What is It that he does?" And this Isn't much easier answered than the first query because it la so limitlessly comprehensive and involves such a multi tude of little things. Moores never has been an agitator. Except In movements for tho relief of victims of a great and sudden calamity such as the St. Louis cyclone or tho Galveston flood he never has been a "leader." No great new theories of gov ernment have originated with him and he never has required that his party adopt a platform btiBed upon some hobby of his own. What he has done, then, is to prove a real friend to any man who chose to have him as such. Content to let other men champion each great "cause," he has sim ply championed the people. Where other men have preached charity, Moores baa practiced it. Where other men have prayed (Continued on Fifth Page.)