Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 22, 1908, Page 4, Image 4

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    TIIE OMAHA
DAILY BEE: FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1908.
for now Tisw or TAFT. I wnaimmmmmmmmmmMmmmmmmmtmmmfmm
TUT, OMAHA DAILY PER Go ""nr
FOUNDED BT EDWARD R08EWATER the decision and announcement of the
Attorney general at waanington mat
VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR.
Entered at Omaha Poatofflo as soond
class matter.
est mnn of letter that Missouri had ever tltlon than In anything lately brought
produced. forward In the council. ' The condition
Accepting Mr. Walker's explanation, of pmrement ,n Omaha la largely
the action of the Springfield conven- . . nt orftn.rtT owner
I a l l .nil .,V...1.H a tf tl otn m n4 I
the new natnralUatlon laws paesed by l" -" "'- """ In thla respect and any law that will
the laat congreaa are to be most rigidly th08 e"tern democrat, who labored a,d n remodj.,ng lhe matter win be of
under the delusion that Mlssourlana 8ervIce
It
TERUg OF BUBBCRIPTIOK:
Pally Be fwltt-out Sunday). Tr", 2
uaiiy Hw and Sunday, on year.
mmday Bra, on rear..
00
1
Saturday lie, on year.
rktr.rA That attorney reneral has
k-m - mnrMnM .ith fh snerial at- re nt "P to snuff on literature
. . , .,. n.n.r.ment f Justice tal mistake for the Bryan man
" . ... . . - 1.1.,.. I - .. . . . ... .
charged with the enforcement of the "emp. to uurr v.uin.uv. 0y mo speaker a gavei ana tu comu..i-,
i new law and plana and provisions for h the Mlesourlana that they would not tee on rules." aaya the Et.
delivered bt CARRIER: L.n. n .v- ,.. hn decided think of making to an Indiana con- public. Mr. Llttlefleld la a fighter ana
ba ntu uy uw rvi . . I . . . - a
Traflv T)m flnliirilnsr fltinAavi. Mr W.lfcl
Evening (without Sunday). pr week o i .nnnort
Meaaare f tk War Secretary Take
by a British Writer.
Sydney Brook i In Fortnightly Review.
H la In every ens a Mir mn. Whtn-
ever aom peculiarly difficult or complex
problem arise h I at one deputed to
olv It. Work on th Panama canal, tor
Instance, 1 disorganised and threaten to
"Llttlefleld Is driven out of congress atop through the friction tf a multiplicity
of board and th resignation of one engl-neer-ln-chlef
after another. Mr. Tft visit
the Isthmus, look Into things, derides that
the army engineer are the men to "dig
th dltoh" and all I peace and progress.
Cuba, again, conduct Itself by th usual
Spanish-American route to th very brink
of revolution. Mr. Tart step In, examines.
humor, conciliate, take over the whole
ventlon where the reverence for letters not In the least afraid of the speaker
fa an wall known. The Mlssourlana I Ha hum not heen driven otlt of Con-
'' ' l. 1.1 I TVJr, arrnrranr la nneoen in SUDDOri 1 I
I iwun Hunotri, per wnn. i - i . .v. v n ... I , . , . . .
Addre. all rompl.lnt. of Irreirulantie th m.p!u of the r.ther Btrtn rent pro- """- K-. ui du oeeu ui u7 -
o city ovulation iprunnu nation Bome of the political questions of the fancy salary offer from a big corpora-
ur rn f.o; i " - i a . ai . . i . . .........
Omsha The Bee Building-. Ii . .v- ..i-noiro nf aa-7, oui iney Know wnere luej biauu uon mai manuiaciurea ureaaiaBi r ooa i nusinesa or government ana aimosi msxes
r-nV'-iPr ,aHMlB,lJl,nB' i !h nrn(0,Hnn to nllena n the question whether Qua Thomas and hatea Samuel Compere. the outside world question the gr.vlty of
Counni Bluffs u Scott fttreet. cltlzenshlD and protection to aliens V ... . .. . . Ith. .it,..nr.n h .... nh whih b.
greyer .iwiarjr e"'u. tiiiA . i ,..
Gene Field. On that rock of opinion Claude Monet, the Trench artist, la thtmeo
outelde sentiment may split to frota w aes.royim v'uus ,t one another over the Immigration dlffl
and foam without disturbance the vaiuea at iiuu.ooo Decause tney aia culty. Mr. Taft, en route for the rhiiip
serenity of the MlBsouriana In the not come up to hit artistic Ideals. He pines, call, in at Tokio. h.s an audience
r-1 i it v i i . r..ii4ii
VA-"VrwT"'Vnf.rrn asking anything in return
Washington 728 Fourteenth Street N. W.
CORRESPONDENCE.
Communication relating to new and edi
torial matter should b addressed: Omaha
lie. Editorial Dt-partment.
i REMITTANCES.
Remit by draft, ex-press or postal order
psyabl to The Be Publishing company.
Only 1-cent stamp received In payment or
mall accounts. Personal checks, except on
Omaha or eastern exchange, not accepted.
STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION.
Foreigners coming to thlB country
have been rushed through the natu
ralisation mill by the agents of all
political parties and allowed to exer
cise the right of franchise when they
kut hut th vAPiipst Meaa whether the
country was a monarchy or a republic wh,ch they refuse to be shown
and no lntelllscent conception of the
genius of American Institutions.
Happily, all this la to be stopped and
REPCDLICAIf KKFKOTB AT OHICAOO.
Republican reactionaries and their
hereafter the foreigner seeking to enthusiastic democratic allies who are
make his home In this country will trying to conjure an antl-Taft move
ment out of the selection or unuea
least They know literature when they might hare done better by adopting
meet It and' It la the ono subject on the popoular custom of Parisian ar
tist by discovering that they were
genuine Van Dykes and unloading
them on American connoisseurs.
Stat of Nebraska, Pougla County, ea.1
Oeorire H. Tsachuck, treasurer of Th Be
Publishing company, being duly swom. ay
that the actual number of full and completj
s.,n c A..wtr,m the month of havA tha hrtnn nf fit ll-flpd trod citizen
April. i08. wa a 'allow: ohln w,rf unnn Mm onlv whpn he States Senator Julius C. Burrows of
p . . oa.sov i f -- i .. . i-. ..
1 SS,4d
I sa.aoo
S 36,750
4 17,010
MOO
4 artso
t 8740
I. S7.O40
ST.140
It . 87,090
II 7B0
II 87,060
II I7,B40
14 87,30
II 37,10
selaoo baa demonstrated hla worthiness. Michigan to ' be the temporary chair-
f!-i" Under the new law an alien must man of the r,Publ,can national conven-
11 W0 I
aa aao makn annllcatlon for cltlzenshlD. send-
llllXH'.'.il M. line in dunllcate netltlons In his own dutr of delivering the keynote address.
8,-480knnHfino. rn ptitinn a iih are simply sowing for another harvest
"::::::.::: aaiaeo with the clerk of the court and the dlBappointment. While, at first
niign, some 01 mo eninuBiaBiic bujjpui v
Two thousand Nebraska farmers
are raising corn for the Omaha Corn
show. All of which means that the
plana drawn for the exhibition space
do not contemplate any too much
room. The Corn show Is following In
the wake of the Omaha exposition and
getting bigger every day.
'Mr. Bryan Is better known and
better understood than ha ever was
before," says Governor Folk of Mls-
mors of trouble are dissolved In a douche
of sanity. An ugly controversy of personal
charge and recrimination breaks out be
tween two American diplomats. It Is a
matter altogether outalde Mr. Taft's de
partment, yet It roes to him for settle
ment, and he settles It. "Oo over and see
Taft about If I a formula so often on the
president' Hp that It ha passed Into the
slang of the day, and the, war secretary'
nickname, "General Utility BUI," give
both the popular and the official measure
of his capacities.
He has a peculiar gift of lubricating sa
gacity. He radiate Jollity and conciliation.
Alt men Instinctively like and trust this
huge, good-humored giant, whose mere
physical Immensity Impresses one with a
sort of guaranty of Invincibility. He
crashes through problem and tangle with
th all-conquering certainty of a smiling.
patient, supremely human team roller
no one, even In America, more
21 86,580 nhAr la aont in Washington. The netl
?! .rrrililnna ran not h heard before ninety ers of Mr. Tart ana tne aaminisuauon eouri perhaDa that explains why
ii''"'''''' ae.ao dav. and then are considered on ano- mar be disappointed at the selection of Uj.fQ 80 much orJDo8lUon to Bryan L.v t
clal days fixed by the court. The gov- Senator Burrows, results promise to ,a tate8 that uaed to bo m n. whoiry destltut of fuasines and affecta
10 1' ' ernment mav be reoresented at the f"y lUBtlfv tne luom of Chairman thuslastlcally for him. "on- Nothing seems to flurry him or to
Total. 1.10,B9O ' New'a choice. break through his reserve of genial pla-
- ... nMnnnir r fa ri 11 phi liirt im n 1 1 1 1 1 1 r'ti ri r nr i" -
The AH-American
Food'
VOU like toasted corn flakes,
A do you? Well, you don't
know how good toasted corn
flakes can be until you eat
""1 M
Mm;
74
The E-C process of steam-cooking
retains and emphnsir.es in E-C
Corn Flakes all the natural flavor
of the corn, and the E C toestinff
process makes every flake dainty
and crisp, ' the most delicious
morsel of corn food anyon ever
tasted. You'll say so, too. No arti
ficial flavoring is used in E-C.
At Tour Crocrii 10 Caoto
Egg-O-See Cereal
Company Chicarfo
Xju-gest
Vei
Mannfarturers of Fliktd
real ouU In the World.
Less unsold and returned copt.
Net total X,097,17t
Dally averag Wfil
QEORQB B. TZ8CHUCK. .
-Trsaaurar.
Subscribed In my presence andjworn
to befor m this 1st day of May. 1008.
(BU ROBERT HUNTER.
Notary Futile.
WHEPt OJJT OS TOWW. v -Sabeorlbera
leavlnc tk city tem
porarily shODld hav Tk Be
nailed t tkeaa. AtsrtM' wUI b
ckaased mm of tarn aa reaeste.
Though scarcely less badgered than
his witnesses and a force of examiners ,l 18 lne ProvincB BUU tUBlu' Ul maiana woman wno snoi auu Mf Rooflevelt hlm9olf( he nevcr eipIode8.
Is provided to Investigate the petitions temporary chairman of a national con- killed a man was acquitted cn the h ha th evennes. of temper, the cheery
onA n tub .ton. fr,r th nrn.o,nnn ventlon to make the keynote speech of ground that she mistook him for her eif-continence. which it would be posi-
. ' ...v. ..... the camDalen. For that reason he is husband. After an exoerlence of that "vely dangerou for a man of hi colossal
.u, usuu. auuBu. vo pravu - , . . th H fcl . , v .. b" to have. There 1. a hearty and
In securing citizenship papers. USUI"" "DC" V1 wu 1 m0gt winning naturalness In his Inter-
The law nlacea the eovernment In aympatny wun me preaominani reuu- mi me nexi lime sue wants 10 snooi course with people. He has all of the aver
position to withhold its protection and ment 01 V"1 Bna eaBer lo pr- ner "UBoana
immnniiT from fhn.n ..nwnrthv tn ro. claim the policies wnicn are expectea
celve them and la designed to shut out to be the rall'In8 P,nta of the cam
undesirable aliens. The new laws do Pa'n
age American s Indifference to externals
and appearance a anapehot of Mr. Taft,
seated at his official desk, would make an
admirable study of democracy in undress.
His mind, I should Judge, Is a healthy and
vigorous rather than a pliable instrument.
It works with a ponderous, probing thor-
I . -, i . , I nnrhnaa. On. wnnlj. nnt 1inlr In Huf w Tn ft
that he has not been an ardent Roose- wnaiever action me commission may " -
Railroad men are offering many
Those who are trying to dls- reasons to the state commission why
not restrict the right of suffrage JfT ,,,!e., 1.1 tJSin
those states where full citizenship Is
nnt a faniitoHA' .ii V. Ik 1 A a ..11 .U I
veit supporter, ana iear mat, ne - " " "",vu " osophy of politics any more than one would
Mr. Fuller Wind Is a candidate for zenshlp from those incapable of appre-
polltlcal honors In Florida.
elating the value of the nation's pro
tection and guardianship.
A Cincinnati doctor claims he has
discovered the germ of paresis. Let
him keep it. .
The 3 -cent Btreet caf fares are very
popular with Cleveland folks, when the
cars are running.
TUK NAT10HAL ASBBXAF,
While the governors of the differ
ent states were In session at the White
House Quoting figures to show how
the natural resources of the nation are
being wasted each year, the National
i" a m mi t m i a. .
r.iai t.n tnrf (hot ho I oJru jl r ire uuuerwriuera -was in
does not expect the electoral vote of lon in New York, calling attention
Pennsylvania, anyway. lu uu.w
i causes an annual drain that would
The pushcart merchants have lost bankrupt any other nation In the
another round, but this is not taken to world. Statistics were presented show-
Indicate that the fight Is oft. lng that the loss by fire In the United
States amounts to about $600,000
Iceland Is. preparing to break away daily, a total of. more than S2 00,000,
from Denmark and become an Inde- 000 annually. This amount of prop
pendent nation. Iceland Is getting to erty Is wiped out of existence every
be a warm number. year. It means a complete waste, for
which there Is no compensation. Pres-
Iceland Is going to make a fight for ,dent Burcheu of th9 underwriters
home rule, convinced that it has been gUted that the flre ,oe(J ,n CQun.
.getting a cow neai. instead oi a square try for the iast flve year, aggregated
will not be properly enthusias
tic in proclaiming the Taft policies.
Senator Burrows, when asked if his
speech would be a Roosevelt or an
anti-Roosevelt speech, promptly re
plied: "Neither. It will be a repub
lican address." The answer contains
satisfying assurance that Senator Bur
rows understands the duties of the oc
casion and will perform them credita
bly.
information.
expect him to bubble forth In epigrams,
He Is not a man of wide reading or of
A democratic congressman wants to diversified Intellectual interest and has a
know what It Will cost to repair the mt,e of Mr. Rooevelf manysldedness as
battleships after their trip around the 0!;,h.1fl"hln,I '"tnMTi ' on,!1wht
volcanic temperament. But his qualities,
world. Practically nothing. The if of ,he minor order of merit, are trong,
Bhlpa are kept In almost perfect condl- genuine and serviceable. He ha had far
tlon and their service does not injure mor tnan tn" ordinary candidate's experl-
them.
ene of men and affairs and high responsl
bllltle. and Mr. Taft, Ilk Cobden, Is on
of thos men nn whom no exnerlene. Is
David Bennett Hill la going abroad wasted. Hi administrate aptitudes are
for the first 'time, although he has I unquestionable. He has that kind of Im-
The convention will be a republican nracticaliv been out of the countrv personal disentangling mind, of perspective
convention. Mr. Roosevelt's personal- ence that warm d ,n Chfcftg0i twclve Judicial bal.nce which when united
nrin nnt k. on icoua nofnm t .1. " . with an engaging personality and a de-
J J ... .. . ' . yar a8i When the democratic party pendabl character make its possessor a
though his policies and the party s fell undef tne Bryan Bpell court of fna, appea, for prvate frlen(li
policies wm oe tne suDjects oi most . - i. . i i end public colleagues.
attention and concern. Senator Bev I fiaMorv Metrolf itulru th.t v. I
h. ' .k::.: : " Mr. t. i. on -of th mMt paipawy
r"u lu 4imiui naiueimps are iu oeiver conamon honest mem I have ever encountered. He
Roosevelt s choice for temporary chair- than when they started on their long is honest even in his politic, indeed, it I
man of the convention, while Senator cruise. The trip appears to have im- hardly too much to ay that his politic
Dolliver la said to have been Mr. Taffs nrnvori ovrvrhln evmnt th it-. comprised in saying tralght out pre-
vuuh-d. t. nig ,avi(tai tcoouuo 1 imh Davy CrlLlCo.
against the selection of either. Sena
tor Beverldge comes from a state which
DEFYING H AtlD TIMES.
Paclflc Rallroada Stick to Eatabllaked
Dividend Rate.
Springfield Republican.
Mr. Harrlman Is the most audacious of
all our great railroad managers, and to
find the Harrlman Pacific roads defying
the effect of hard times in maintaining
the, former dividend rate clear Into the
thick of the business depression Is among
th things which had been expected. The
10 per cent rate paid by the Union Pa
clflo is uniquely high among the larger
railroad system of the country, even in
good times, and the present continuance
of th rat under such adverse conditions
a have swept like a tornado through the
traffic earning of American railroads Is
something to arrest attention. Yet this
rate aeetna to have been amply earned, as
well a th ( per cent on Southern Pacific.
These road have not suffered so severely
from the panic and It aftermath as most
of the eastern roads have. Indeed, the
Southern Pacific, after several months' de
clining net earnings, was able to report
an Increase for March, while the Union
Pacific's losses in net were not large. As
for the Union Pacific' new bond Issue,
nothing Is said beyond the fact that flota
tion arrangement have not been com
pleted. There ia a hitch somewhere, but it
1 reported to be over the price and not
over any fundamental difficulty In dis
posing of the securities. Mr. Harrlman Is
aid to stick for 9fl from the bankers, who
gave only about 93 for th recent Pennsyl
vania bond Issue.
deal, from Denmark.
The coroner's Jury has decided that
Mrs. Gunneas was killed and then cre
mated. It was a case In which It was
not safe to take chances.
11,257,955,000, or more than enough
to pay off the national debt
Great as the average from flre
losses has been for the last flve years,
this year promises to break the
Pennsylvania democrats
haa a favorite son candidate in the "till retain the faith of their fathers.
field for the presidential nomination. The loyal- follower of Samuel J. Ran
Senator Dolliver Is Involved in the fac- dall can hardly enroll himself under
tlonal fight In his party In Iowa and the banner of William J. Bryan
the national' chairman wisely decided
to take no sides In that enntrovrav. lne government is going to huy an
capable a Lord Rosebery himself, though
from widely different causes, of the dls
evidently tortlon of partisanship. That perhaps Is
on of the reasons why th professional
politicians do not relish him. He 1 wholly
scornful of the time serving maneuvers.
th intimate deals and propitiation they
expect a pusldentlnl candidate to practice.
record. The New York Journal of
Denver boasts of the purest drinking Commerce has prepared the following
water in the world, but it did not use table showing the loss for the first
that argument in securing the demo- fr months of the year, as compared anjr candldate who8e name will be con
oi-aHn natlnnsl rnnvnnllnn With the Same Derlod In IflOfi nnri I . . . . ...
- v ... - - siaerea dv tne convention -mo .ana
. . -
I tni- I. an Ai-.tnt nf ta ia n Ti 1 1 1 1 Vn
WW .J A.m .... X . . rv-.t . I " wulJilJ I 4iaO
u v. . . ... January I I7.72s.8fl0 i24.i4.flno iM.tK2.iioo been Intimately associated with the
nasiing uuw mm mo interest oi me i jbrury 18.29,360 is.gr..iut is 4 700 management of the republican nartv "let-ua-aione" policy
old soldlera in their organization does Mi:h 18.727.750 20.56i1.700 n.m.s.n 01 ine repuoncan party
tk. i. wt April z2,6oi.iw 2i,iu6,8uo ai.ti(i,ouu ior over iony years ana may De relied
nni w ana .. thAir rank! rw thlnna, I 1
' ' W.Uuo. 1 - r , 1, it.
Total $347,203,050 1K6.427.100 $31,464,600 " u uuw spwtu iuui
There Is no quibbling about Mr. Taft. Like
Senator Burrows on the other hanrl otner 100,000 pounds of smok ng to- Mr- Roosevelt, he la the best of politicians,
benator uurrowa. on tne other hand, ' because he never '"play politic." Like
comes from a "house In order" state. bacco 'or the men of tn navv- The M 9nnmM hA ml, nrnva . Mnn,rt)lta .n
and comes as a republican without navJr en0V8 amoke of battle and the more formidable because ha never
nronouneerl nreiurllcea for nr also tne smoke Of peace
Aa Expandln; Policy.
Chicago Record-Herald.
We have no doubt that Thomas Collier
Piatt Is an enthuslastlo believer tn th
trouble about th vote. He suffers, how
ever, from certain disadvantages. With
practically the whole of his active life
divided between the court house In Cin
cinnati, the Philippine and Washington,
he has had little chance of becoming
personally known to th bulk of bis coun
trymen. Hitherto they have had to Judge
him at a distance. But with every week
that passe he 1 becoming better known
The Omaha wool market is rettlna The heavy loss In 1806 was due to wm nave tne irue repumican ring,
much' promise of support from the the disaster at San Francisco and is without reference to the individual
wool growers of the west and its sue- exceptional, but at the present rate wfl0 m&y be cnosen by the convention
cess is now assured beyond any doubt tne l0B 'or 108 Prml8e to reach He na8 a 'u11 appreciation of the pre- for th score,
J270.000.000. In view of theso vailing sentiment of his party toward
Progress of the times Is shown in enormous losses, the appeal of the flre Public questions and the ability to
the fact that when the governor of underwriters for the adoption and vlg- Btate tnls attitude, in his keynote
North Carolina meets the governor of oroua enforcement of more strlngeut sPeech. In a way to attract the atten
South Carolina the conversation Is on tuildlng laws should meet responsive tlon r t"e country,
kow to save water. action by municipal authorities everv-
i - - -
where.
Enoiak Said.
St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Admiral Evans says th n-arksmanshlp and, though little of an orator, better liked
at Magdalena bay wa never equaled Th labor men cherish an old grudge
by any navy In the -world. This tat- against him because as a Judge In Ohio
ment answer th purpose while waiting I certain of his decisions helped to perpetuate
the abuse of "government by Injunction.
The nearroea. who hold th balance of cower
Nerve Reduced. I l mnr. thsn one utat. ara InuniMl
against him because a secretary of wa
Celoaaal
Pittsburg Dtapetch.
Th recently proposed, but now alleged ne ..reed to. thouah he did not himself
to ba postponed, advance In freight rate ppo,,, tno dlabandment of an entire negro
regiment, some of whose members were
Benator Jeff Davis of Arkansas is
planning for a busy summer on the
Chautauqua circuit. That sounds like
open defiance of the "Society for the
Suppression of Unnecessary Noises,"
The vice president of the Chicago &
Alton, In an interview in the Wall
Street Journal, says:
The railroads have pent lot of money
getting evidence that the 8-cent fare ia
confiscatory, but they cannot prove it.
lliey may prove that It is unfair, but I
A VOTTLKD SPEECH.
Missouri democrats are for Bryan,
all right, but they have made it plain
that even Colonel Bryan cannot show
them anything new In the culture line
or teach them much about the merits of
poets and authors. The Mlssourlana
thought to this before he committed hBTe bottled- "Peech which Augustus find railroad managers looking for a
the murder for which he is to be tried. Tnomae' the playwright, had prepared legitimate excuse for opposing railway
for delivery at the democratic conven- rate regulation Instead of following
might In one . sense be evidence of the
return of confidence. Indeed, aom of
th shipper say It would tcatlfy to th
return of colossal nerve on th part of th
railroad.
f
"He Art lb People."
v Brooklyn Eagle.
Bryan want delegate to Denver In.
tructed. That la, he want them In
structed for himself. When they ara in-
PERSONAL, NOTES.
Wyoming grant to women every privi
lege that men have. Hence the fact that
one woman haa fenced In 2,000 acres of
publlo land is not surprising.
A Pennsylvania court recently decided
that a woman who keeps the ashes of her
second husband in the same room occupied
by her third husband la not necessarily in-
an.
Senator Simon Guggenheim of Colorado,
41 year of age, is said to be the only
United State senator whose feet do not
touch the floor when seated In his chair.
The announcement that Benor Pedro
Alvarado, the Mexican millionaire land
owner, has given $2,000,000 for tho purpose
of aiding poor Mexican recalls the fact
that ha started life as a day laborer on a
ranch.
Mis Delia Colvin of Pontlac, Mich., a
senior in the Stat Normal college, estab
lished a world's record of 4 feet fH Inches
for the running high Jump for girls in a
contest with Miss Emily Stark, a medical
student in the University of Michigan,
A tablet commemorating 'the life and pub
llo service of the late Oeorge S. Boutwell,
former governor of Massachusetts, con
gressman, senator and secretary of the
treasury, wa dedicated at the Groton
cemetery with simple exercises. The me
morial is the gift of Andrew Carnegir,
General W. A. Bancroft, Moorefleld Storey,
Albert 8. Parsons and John Ritchie.
A SMII.B OK TWO.
"Well." finally remarked Mr. Staylat. "I
must be thinking of going. What tlm I
It?"
"Oh," replied Miss Patience Gonna, "I m
sure It's later than that." Philadelphia
Press.
Mrs. Chilllcon-Kearney-Tour .husband. It
seems Is quite a rounder.
Mrs. Goodsole A rounder? Oh, you mean
his shoulders. Yes, poor, dear Gregory
Just can't straighten up. Ho was always
that way. Chicago Tribune.
"Who are you, madam? What do you
wish? Why have you entered my hous
uninvited and uSnnnounced?"
"Oh, don't mind me, ma'am. I m Juat
doing a little slumming In the home of
the rich." Chicago Trlbuna
"Why don't you get up a dollar dinner
for your candidate?
"I don't think It advisable," answered
the campaign manager. "After a man ha
been at a dollar dinner for a half hour or
so he grows Impatient to go home and get
something to eat." Washington Star.
"I understand he claims to ba descended
from somebody high up."
"Yes, he fell out of his father' balloon
and waa miraculously saved." Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
"Hamm, tho great Shakespearean actot.
haa named all the people and creature
on his farm after characters in his plays,
and appropriately, too."
"I know, but why does he call hi servant
boy Romeo?" ,
"Because he attenda to the boating.
"And what Is the reason he named his
prise hen Macduff?"
"Because he wanted her to lay on.
Baltimore American.
OILD BARNEY TO THB' V.
Standard and
A. Daly in
Catholic
Times.
ma bouchal, 'tis courtin"
Arraht Barney
ye are.
An' you but out of your dresses!
TIs the light In your eye, like a new
risen star.
That this news to your father confesses.
Now you're off to the town.
For the sun has gone down.
An the spell o' the gloamln' I o'er y.
Faith ye're started like me,
But it's lucky ye'U be
If ye end like yer father before ye.
Oh. the glamour o' night
Breeds a passion too light
For a daclnt long life-time's adornln'.
But the blessing that cheer
All the slow-wlieelin' year
Is the love that blooms warm In tlti
mornlu'.
Arrah! Barney ma bouchal, when I waa
a lad
I courted one lass an' another.
But the sorra bit comfort from anny I
had
Till I came on the heart o' your
mother.
Oil, her charms they were rare
In the dusk, at the fair
At the dance,' lit the house she wa
born In.
But her heart. It was found
When I happened around
Where she sang at her work In th
mornln .
Oh, the glamour o' night
Breeds a uasslon too light
For a daclnt long life-time adornln'
Bui the blessln' that cheers
All the alow-wheelln' years
Is the love that brooms warm In
mornln'.
rri r flint rrn imp nnifiMn
rtLLUuv rttiiMu h.i.uhu v
OMAHA TOBACCONISTS
. A prisoner in a Nebraska Jail com
plains of the sanitary condition of his
quarters. He should have given some
, vi ...tii.111, auvers puD- .tructed for another man. In Minnesota,
lo entiment by making any big fuss about Mr. Bryan lift no restraining finger to
I prevent hi friends fighting th Instruc
tions tooth and nail.
it-
Mr. Cleveland' Htenverr
Philadelphia Record.
There will be universal satisfaction over
The railroads Insist that they mus tlon in Denver. This action was taken the old plan of opposing It on general the announcement that Mr. Cleveland ha
raise rates or reduce wages and are by the Mlssourlana in the face of a per- principles. ,0 rr recovered that the doctors do not
afraid If they reduce wages the em- aonal request that Mr. Thomas be ' . h,m,n fBr and will cease their
1. ... . . , , w A n , 7 j " . regular vialt to Lake wood, leaving him
pioyes wm striae, ah oi wnicn goes jeieciea as an alternate 10 tne Denver I ruuijnui uewocraia rerusea to t tu car of Mrs. Cleveland and only oc
to show that the consumer has no convention from Missouri. insvuci ror uoionet Bryan, but the tasionaiiy running down from New York
friends. I Mr. Thomas 1b one of the original fact ia not algniflcant from a political t0 assure themselves that his improve
admirers of Colonel Bryan. It is gen- standpoint. Pennsylvania democrats
ment continue. Mr. Cleveland I getting
Into year now. but tho country cannot
apsr him for a long time yet.
Congressman John Wesley Gaines I rally underatood that Mr, Bryan nave ,on' taken their orders from a
of Tennessee has -offered a bill to re- wanted to be placed in nomination by bofB who carries the organization In
duce the congressional mileage fee Mr. Thomas at Denver, but there were bla vest pocket It is bis by rlicht of
from 10 cents a mile to 7 cents a mile, obstacles in the way. Mr. Thomas Purchase and he uses it aa he pleasea.
The bill will have the enthusiastic sup- lives in New Rochelle, N. Y where the Ho 18 a Bryan democrat, except that
port of Congressman Gaines.
I . ' 1 I y, -,.- ki , . . tncHvn arlir anri lu .trnn.i. . . smart snd catchy ring to It, but is It right?
If let alone meana in aDaenca or need
less ajltatlcn cf whatever description it If
well enough. But If It meana th condone-
Tbe Pittsburg & Lake Erie road, ment of offenses of any character whatso
one of the big coal-carrylnsr lines, hna ever It la all wrong. The people don't
'Let l Alone" Wva'l Do. ,
Philadelphia Preaa.
Th antl- Roosevelt newspaper are mak
ing a great ado over th little platform
anti-Bryan forces are In control mH he believes in sound money, hlah nrn. plnk, "Let us alone. Thl ha a rather
ha had no chance of he I no- aWtd .. . I tectlve tariff and In strons-lv nnnncuH t
W.L - . . . . . . . I - " I - I- r .V
mo wmw umm pe a diu appro- delegate thw, to. It 1b alleged. Mr. the Initiative and referendum.
priauug vo.vvu.vuv iur a xoreiu re-
- w T r - - vbjhbv aunriiat I-l F FA SJ A nk rt a.n I a .. a
Bryan requested that be be sent as an
ervo in mu Appaiacmau range.
Speaker Cannon will defeat the meas. conventlon at SDrlnKf,el(, Mo ..J
ure in the house, but it is a hint of the Thom(U. p,rthplacei The dernocraU
Springfield turned the request down.
condition
growing sentiment for forest preserva
tlon
Adjutant General SchwarU ia en
deavoring to stimulate interest in the
drill of the National Guard. On ex
cellent plan for this would be to have
the state provide suitable armories and
relieve the guardsmen of the present
eipense of maintaining quarters tot
Ukunslvev
the rails. The panto is becoming a
reminiscence.
Harry W. Walker, Mr. Bryan's un
official spokesman in New York, ex
plains the situation this way:
Mr. Bryan's request shout Auguatua
Thomas waa not turned down. Th. r.rw
lutlon to send Thoma to Iknver waa Tne city council proposes that
worded In such a way that th ilhseouri I Omaha shall return to the original
plan of having service pipes of all sorts
nlaeed a rush ordr fnr S ftrtft want imnge lei aiune. unieaa
, , . , , " ' v' are atralght and honeat.
rnal pflra and nnrlarM tha th. 0iAtAn. .....
. n Buri-ectic-n of 1'IS W not a pleasant
rush known to business in years will taak, but it la coward work to avoid It
be on before the cars can be placed on Ju8t tor thHt reaon- Th thinge the light
dear.ocrat regarded It a a reflection upon
th lata Kuen Field, the poet. The ri-ao.
lutloa stated that, aald from Samuel L
uemeni, Auguctus Tnonia was the gTta
laid before pavement ia put down.
There is more reason in this propo-
reveal when turned en may not be beau--
tlful to behold, but that Is no reason for
continuing In darkness.
Th let us alone platform won't do. It
won I oo a applied to our currency, our
tariff and our corporation lawa, all of
which are great laauea and cannot b let
alone.
Th party that simply let thing alone
wfll go out of bu;nta
suspected of having "shot up" a southern
townlet. The high protectionists do not
like him becuuse he has come out squarely
for tariff revision and Incessantly advocates
a reduction of duties on Philippine Im
ports into the United States. Th conserv
atives suspect him because he subacrlbea
unreservedly to the Rooaevelt pollciea and
becauaa any administration over which ha
presided would ba distinguishable In its
general aims, however much it might differ
in temper and methods, from the present
regime. And "th politicians," I need
scarcely sdd, inatlrjctlvely distrust a man
of Mr. Taft's independence and will only
accept and support him sa a presidential
candidate to avoid the yet greater catas
trophe of a party defeat.
EARLY SIGNS OF GREATNESS.
A Leaf from Taft' Carer Neglected
br Biographers.
Washington Herald.
tow -that the William Howard Taft boom
appears almost, If not quite, to hav
squelched all other republican boom into
sero-llke proportion, it Is interesting to
study this genial gentleman perhapa Our
next praaldent from an entirely human
point, of view, and aubject to our mlul'
solemn contemplation such Incident and
matters along his former life's pathway ai
may Qav bearing on th auprem futur
graatneaa mayhap In ator for th Ohloan.
It la pleasant to learn, for ins'anc. that
the big aecretary waa a promising person,
ality from th very etart; and to thl th
Ladle' Monitor bear abundant wltneas In
the following worda:
A sweeter baby never lived than Secretary
Taft whan lie waa little, and every woman
who rainembera )us early year watches hi
rac for tne presidency wun admiring lr-
tereat. Although not a pretty baby, Willi
waa exceedingly bright. At t months ha
could call Ills nunu, at he played with a
box of tin soldiers, at T he addressed hi
father a "dada. and at I h poaed for
hi photograph without moving a muscle.
Being a vrry large child, ha did not walk
until 14 montha old, and hla family suf
fered great anxlaly aa lo his perfRctneea.
but avhen, at th of 1 year and I
montha Ii deliberately weaned himself
from hi bottle, hla ldera fk mor than
reassured that Ir. W lllio they pusaensetl
baby with a futur ,
Ma Monnia uemoiiatsky.
"Bom time ago," ay Morrla Denior
ataky, th well-known and popular salts
man at th McVlttie Cigar Store, 4 Bouth
Fifteenth Btreet, "I noticed In the papers
n endorsement of Cooper's New l)ls
covwy medlelne for atomach trouble by
Mr. W. J. Grant, who i engaged in the
same business a myself at t South Six
teenth Street. I asked Mr. Grant If what
th paper aald wa true, and ba asaured
m that it waa
"A l was suffering in th sam way.
I went to the It. aton Prug t Stor and
bought three bottle of the Cooper Madir
tlne. I found It possessed all the virtus
claimed for It, and well merited th in
dorsement it haa received from o msny
representative people of Omaha. It ha
restored me to excellent health-ln fact,
I fed better than ever. ' I cnalder It a
uousenu w SUlIems trOM
trouble.
stomach
V
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A1
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