THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16. lyi: n if, : OMi i a .' Daily Bel fuL"ND:i JiV. LDWAHD ROSEWATEK a , . 1 : VICTOR R09EWATF-K. EDITOR. Entered at Omaha toflce sa second class mstter. TERMS OF ;8SCitU-nON: Pally P (wlthcdt S.i-la. n year.. "0 Dally Boa and Sunday, on year 8.09 DEUyERCD ft CARRIER: Pally B-a (Including tunflsyl. rr week.. IS; Tially pee (without Sunday!, p?r weck...ljc Evening Be (without rundny), per week So Evening B! (with Bundsy), per week...! t: fliindHV R-. AHA VA.r...... taturriay Ben, one year...i. 1U A,i.ir.. ii nininii nf lrrctnitarlti-'S In delivery to Clly Circulation Pepmtroer.t. OtTIUE!: . Pmsha-The T5e Bal'dlng. ' fouth Omaha Twofity-foiirth and N. nuncll Bluff" IS Scott Mreet. " Chlraico 1W3 Marquette Building. New York-Rooms HQl-U'.'J. No- ' TMrty-thIrd Pirwt. ,,. . Vahlngtrn-rjf Fmirtsanth Street. N. CORBE8PONPENCE. Communications fisting to news and rrt'torial matter - ahow'.d be addressed. Omaha. Bee Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by.JIrsft. express or postal orde' ravable to The Bee Publishing Company. OnlT 2-cent stamps received in PTrne"t "J mall account. Personal check. cn Omaha or eastern exchange, not accsptea. Be uin. . .u. nllv full ana complete crit "i ' " .?A Morning, Evening and Bunday Bee Printed durlnn tha month of Auguat. 108. wu follows 36,130 38,930 86,860 3,M0 85,790 17 36,460 It 36,110 19 86,070 z0........: 85,990 1. 85,850 22 36,070 ........ 85,790 38,900 36,470 38,706 88,636 ........ 38,410 ...4.... 36,010 85,930 30,070 38,870 ........ 38,600 It,. 34.. 25.. Hi. 27,. 28.. 29.. 29.. II.. 35,400 36,850 35,940 .16.140 38,010 86,690 36,460 36,500 36,180 Totala .X.117,000 116 I-ess unsold and returned ooplaa, K.t total .1,105,464 Dully average 35,669 OEORGH B. TZSCHUCK, Treuunr. Eubacrlbed In my presence and sworn to before ma this 1st. day or September. 1J01. tSeal.) ROBERT HUNTER, ' Notary Public WHEN OVT Or TOWN. Subscribers leaving; th city tem porarily ahoald hT Tnn Ben mailed to them. Address will ! c-kaaged aa often aa requested. - President Roosevelt Is for Taft and doesn't care who knows It. First call for the straw hat, the ham mock and the peek-a-boo waist. At any rate, Chief of Police Dona hue had nothing to do with fixing the amount of the bail. Senator Ankeny of Washington will doubtless agree with Mr. Bryan that the people do no, ruU Why shouldn't Mark Twain leave New York? There's no fun for a. man of his years In that city. Mayor Jim could have told those base ball players to look out for trou ble when they went to Sioux City, The appointment of a receiver for a dermatologinal Institute Is going to cause an Inquiry Into one skin game. Just to show how far Mr. Bryan has retreated, his press agent no longer refers to him as a silver-tongued ora tor. 1 '' Candidate Chafln says that Washing ton is one of the worst cities in the world.- Well, he won't have to live there. Mr. Bryan. pt his dates mxed for some of hie eastern engagements. Is it poeslble that he Is still using an 1896 calendar? Magailne writers will create no spe cial Interest -b'y discussing the scarcity of skunks. The gasoline car is a very fair substitute. J A market report states that canned peaches will be higher this year. That may be, but canned speeches will be cheaper, than ever, , "What We Need" is the title of Ella Wheeler " Wilcox's latest poem. Well the list Includes almost everything ex cept canned speeches. Mr. Bryan says he IS the onljr candl date with a war record. True, but it Is a record of resigning his commission before smelling powder. "Wa3 a woman ever known to blow out the gas?", asks the ' kansas City Star. Perhaps not, but she has been known i,t blow him up. Dressmakers announce that the Ideal figure for. next season will be as slim as a beanpole. A delicate compliment to the Boston society leaders Russia is. determined to prevent the celebration of Tolstoi's birthday It ia a little surprising that Russia allows Tolstoi to have any more birthdays An Omaha pastor has been devoting a sermon to "Reasons for Nonattend ance at Church." Those who do not attend 'church will doubtless know th real reasons. . The Columbus Telegram asks "Wouldn't that power canal make nice Tuauk,iiug juooeut. for Culu Tu bus?" Of course, it' would. But we thought that power canal had already been built at least three times. Did ou notice that, notwithstand ing that -warning, "Beware of Smith." who wai running for presidential elec tor on the democratic, ticket. Smith got over 2,009 votes" right here' in Douglas county in spite of being ad- 'ImJ fta opposed to Bryan? STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION, tate ot Nebraska, Douglas. County, s.! George B. Tzechuck, treieuror of Trie Publishing company, wma; TFK COVS T R r tSCA PE.- ' . Tn his address opening; the national rampalgn In Ohio, Governor Hughes delivered 'mme (piling blows t the claims of Mr. Bryan and congratulated the country anew upon It a escape from Bryanism Jn 1896 and 1900. Gover nor Hughes said:" . If til that Mr. Pryan has favored during the Inst twelve years had "bpen enacted Into law. we should - have been over whelmed with disaster and would regard Is as our chief business In the future to find a wsy of escape from the mpshes nf ill-considered legislation In which we would have been entangled. While Mr. Bryan professes to be the only genuine disciple of Jefferson and his ' principles, Governor Hughes re minds the country that Jefferson's con tention that that country Is best gov erned which Is least goverend his been Lentlrely overlooked, by Mr. Bryan who as been persistently active In recom mending new legislative remedies for all existing and prospective ills. Governor Hughes' criticism concerns in particular two governmental policies which Mr. Bryan has a different times advocated. In 1896 and in 1900, Mr. Bryan contended In nearly every pub lic speech he made that the govern ment should coin all the silver bullion that might be sent to the mints by any person or from any source Into legal tender silver money at the ratio of 6 to 1. It requires no argument now to convince any person that the in- ustrlcs of the nation would have been paralyzed If Mr. Bryan's monetary scheme has adopted in either of Tils former campaigns for the presidency. Two years ago and again about a year ago Mr. Bryan declared his con- Ictlon that fallroad regulation could not succeed and that the only remedy for railroad abuses is to be found in government ownership of railroads. In face of almost universal protest from hlg own party, Mr. Bryan sidetracked that Issue for the time being, con vinced of the revolutionary and chaotic consequences of any attempt to put such a scheme to realization. He has been equally as far . from the ' true American policy in his advocacy of the disposition of the Philippines, his plan for the adoption of free trade and on practically every issue he has rged upon the attention of the Amer ican voters. THE LEAD 1T EDVCATlOy. The old Bay state has been estimated the most literate atate In the union.' How long it may retain distinction remains to be seen, but it has already lost its claim of being the firat collegiate in the union. Within Ita survey stand the proud and hon ored ivy-grown walla of Harvard, Williams. Amherst, Smith, Wellcaley, Tufts, Boston university and others. While Nebraska has no institution of higher learning of note. except Its State university at Lincoln, yet statistics of the United Statea bureau of education show that Nebraska has one reg ular collegian for each 409 ot Its population, while Massachusetts, with all its colleges, has but one in 600. Nor is Nebraska an ex ception. These same statistics show us that mora people are going to college in the west today than are attending In tha east. This comparison is made in a' care fully prepared article upon collegiate education east and west contributed to one of the current periodicals, em phasizing the tremendous growth of the state universities in the west. It is certainly gratifying that Nebraska should be taken as the highest type of state university development. - Of course,' we in Nebraska have long known that the assumption that "the old Bay state is the most literate state n the union" is without foundation and that Nebraska has fox years thown up with the smallest percentage of Illiteracy in its population of any of its sister states. That Nebraska outranks Massachusetts for "regular collegians" has not been previously established, so far as we know, but it has been plainly evident for some time that the people of the west have been more alive to the benefits of thorough - education, than those of the east.' The western states have not only continued to contribute their share of students to the eastern colleges and universities, ' but at the same time have been building, up largely attended universities of their own at home and in this llstxif western statea Nebraska occupies the forefront. It intellectual training is to be. the chief factor in our national progress, Nebraska and surrounding states will soon be recognized as heading the proposition. ' KANSAS ClTra JEAN VALJSAS. Students of prison reform will find an interesting subject for study in the case of Charles Anderson of Kansas City, who won an immense amount of sympathy when found about a year Ago under an assumed name,-, running Kansas City restaurant, after his es cape from the penitentiary. It appears that Anderson, when a youth, had be come implicated in a postoffice rob bery. He escaped from the penlten tlary later and began a new . life In Kansas City, having marred Q the interval. His Identity was discovered and the authorities had him returned to the penitentiary. Petitions were cir culated throughout the country and Anderson was paroled. Everybody felt pleased over the outcome and 'Ander son and his family were doing well operating a restaurant and caring for the increased patronage that came as a result of the publicity thus received Reports show now that-Anderson 1 in Jail again, charged with running a gambling house of the lowest type. His Glsplsy of feformstios, before and after his recent pardon, appears not to have been genuine. He was started in business and helped by friends and sympathizers, . but seems quickly to have drifted into the easier paths of crookedness. It may be difficult to de termine the cause of th man's latest lapse. The claim that an ex-convlct al ways finds difficulty in making an hon est living after bis release from prison tan not be urged in his case. He fur- nlnhes another Illustration of the ac cepted Ide that few men serve terms in prison without losing something es sential to proper conduct and right living after they have "done time." Ttir. AtnvsT riRK loss. August Is usually considered as a month of profit by the fire insurance companies, but an exception is shown this year, the losses for the month be ing $23,123,000, one of the heaviest on record, for' the midsummer months.. In the month there were 272 fires, which causod a loss of $10,000 or more In each instance, a total increase of more than $3,000,000 over August of last year. The fire loss of the present year to date Is in excess of $168,000,000, one of the largest on record, with the ex ception of 1906, when the San Fran cisco fire and earthquake added about $200,000,000 to the average loss. A re cent compilation shows that since 1835, counting only the fires in which a loss of $10,000,000 or more was en tailed the destruction of property in the United States has aggregated $697,000,000. or an amount almost equal to the national debt. The record In no other country approaches that total, the reports showing that France and Germany each has an annual fire loss leBs than that of the city of New York alone. The record is eloquent proof of the nation's failure to exercise proper precautions in building con struction -and enforcement of fire pre ventive regulations. THiC D1BT1 DOLLAR. The dirty dollar may hpld its head p again and demand restoration to Its standing in the community, as it as been granted a clean bill of health from an unquestioned authority. Only few years ago a veritable crusade was started against soiled paper money and enthusiastic sanitarians apparently vied with each other to see which could count the largest number of disease bearing germs on one of Uncle Sam's promises to pay. Timid people took the matter very seriously and even in some of the banking institutions the men who handled and counted large amounts of money ttok precautions against ty phoid, tuberculosis, diphtheria and smallpox, whose germs were supposed to have a special fondness for bills qf large Idenomlnatlon. Buf, now comes Warren W. Hildltch of the Sheffield laboratory of bacterl olo'gy and hygiene in the Yale uni versity, making public the results of most elaborate experiments with chem icals, inoculation and all other known methods, proving that the soiled bill is practically harmless. Taking twenty- four of the most disreputable bills he could find, Mr. Hildltch started out to find the deadly germs. He found bac teria in profusion, on the new bills as well as on the old ones, but could get no trace of disease-bearing germs by any of the tests known to science. In addition to the tests' in the lab oratory, Mr. Hildltch went to the Treasury "department at Washington, where bales of foul-appearing bills are handled dally. His investigations there showed that no employe of the . Treas ury department had ever contracted any infectious disease from the han-' dllng of paper money, thus supporting the contention that the dirty dollar should again command popular confi dence. It would be preferable, of course, to have clean, crisp, new bills, but it Is some relief to know that the unlaundered dollar need not be shunned as a disease-conveyor. It is really too bad that nothing the Omaha police may do tn any case at any time looks right to the fault finding newspapers persistently back capping Chief of Police Donahue for personal or political reasons. The po lice are expected to maintain order and detect criminals, but they are not ex pected to manufacture evidence to railroad anyone to the penitentiary They are supposed to get all .the facts connected with the commission of every crime and put them at the dis posal of the prosecuting officers, but the responsibility for conviction rests upon the county attorney and the courts. The police should not let any real criminal get away, but neither should they persecute anyone against whom the evidence of guilt is wanting. The prismatic political prophet of our democratic contemporary has again discovered that the editor of The Bee was running for every contested place on the ticket at the recent republican primary and having been jolted by the defeat of his political pets, the editor of The Bee is to be further castigated at the election by the defeat of those who defeated him at the primary. Is this the kind of stuff the Bryanites want to make themselves believ? Mr. Bryan publicly denounced Colonel Guffey of Pennsylvania as representative of predatory wealth and a man whose membership in the dem ocratic party was a reproach to the party. Now Mr. Bryan has ordered the fight on Colonel Guffey by Bryan ites in Pennsylvania to be stopped Who has changed, and why? Representatives ot city and county have about gotten together on the jail proposition. Inasmuch as a lot of val uable time has been needlessly lost by dilatory negotiations, the jsll builders ought to be made to get busy at once so' that the. plan finally adopted may be carried out without being stopped half way by cold weather. Kansas City's great Sunday closing crusader, Judge Wallace, has quit the fight and acknowledged the lmposslbll ity of making a Sunday schob out of city of several hundred thousand pop ulation. At last accounts Omaha's t puritanical Sunday promoters were still busily engaged at the hofioless task. ' Mr. Bryan declares that state rights must not be allowed to lapse. His government ownership plan, however, Is a long step In the other direction. Likewise his bank guaranty scheme. It Is proposed to prosecute the prin ter who took "Billy" Sunday's sermons and copyrighted them and then sold the copyright to Sunday for $3,600. That man' place is In Wall street. It is stated that Mr. Bryan takes no interest in aviation. That's little sur prising in view of the fact that he Is scheduled for his quadrlennlal balloon ascension on November 3. A Montana woman shot her husband because he refused to apologize for some of his remarks. These Montana folks are great sticklers for etiquette and the proprieties. 1 Note that the. independence party succeeded in electing six members of the legislature in Vermont, placing the democrats third In numerical position In that body. Why This Indignation Chicago Record-Herald. Mr. Bryan Indignantly denies that he la worth 11,000.000. There are people who can't understand why he ahould do It In dignantly. ,..' Shaky Millionaires Oatclasaed. Chicago News. - , Mr. Bryan Is worth but a beggarly. $150, 000, but aa it is in real money and other desirable possessions It Is more than some Now York mlllonalres can show. -Coolest of the Bunch. Chicago Record-Herald. It would be difficult. Indeed, to find any one who views the political situation with more calmness than Is exhibited by Charles Warren Fairbanks of Indiana. Political Gymnastics. . Chicago Tribune. Only one short year, ago Colonel Watter- aon was looking . despairingly around for some available candidate who , could free tha party from the blight of Bryanlsm! Lot it Go at That. Washington Post The Omaha Bee appears to be amazed at the discovery that there are 40,000 dis tinct species of files. Perhaps it now sees the folly of claiming that there are no flies oa Omaha. Not Thla Year. Washington Post. That .Nebraska democrat named Shallcn- berger should get all the satisfaction ho can out of his victory over Cowboy Mayor DaMman ' in the gubernatorial primaries, for It is doubtful if the republicans will ltt Mm have the office. Prosperity in Republican Times. Philadelphia Press. Colonef Bryan explains that he has only made $160,000 In the last twelve years, and s not the $1,000.00 plutocrat that Speaker Canncn declared. v Cclonel Bryan's wealth s not an Issue -1ft this campaign. How ever, In-view of the fact that the demo cratic candidate ;ls petistently trying to show that only , the rich have a chance under a republican administration, the ac cumulation pi, SliQOp h twelve, years,, be sides Jiving rather comfortably Jn the meantime, is aq argument, tnat knocks him out oft his o,wn '.position.', Colonel Bryan has done well updr tweive years of re publican administration. 1 THE PRESIDENT'S "BOYISHNESS." t ' .''. SBsManasans Baoyancy of Yoath, Manifested In All Hla Projects. Baltimore Sun. A dispatch from Oyster Bay states that tha tent which the president will take to Africa when he goes on his big game ex pedition was aet up on the lawn of Mr. Roosevelt's home. Sagamore Hill, last Monday. That day the preaident, accord ing to the dispatch, "played about It like boy, tightening ropes here and there and arranging the folds to the best advantage." This description gives a glimpse of Mr. Koosevelt in one of the most attractive phases of his personality. He is an enthu siast In all matters In which he is inter ested, and he has all the buoyancy of youth. The president is 60 years young. It is a great thing for a man who has rounded tlje half century mile post, to feel that he has not outlived the enthusiasm of his earlier years. The picture of the president "playing about the tent I'.ks a boy" is a thoroughly natural one. Some men were born old. They were never boys in spirit. Mr. Rdosevelt has never out grown , his boyishness. We can easily Im agine him at 70 'years of ae "playing about a tent" or engaging in recreations with an interest as esger and a spirit as youthful as he displays now In hla various diversions. Wc suspect the president will never get as old as his years. Fortunate is the man who never loses his interest In life, never feels that Ufa is not worth liv ing, who always keeps In touch with youth and Is neither ashamed nor disinclined to "play about his tent like a boy." FIRST I'MTED STATES CEX81 S. daalnt Features of tha First t'onat of Families. New York Times. The heads ot families whose nsmes adorn the pages of the first United Statea onsus of 1790. now for the firt time pub lished at Washington, were less than night limes as numerr us as the army of 70,000 census takers that will . be required to ccunt the population of 90,000,000 In JS10. There were six persons In the average family, ao that, exclusive of slaves, the total population In 1790 is set at 1.231.533. The schedules for ths states of Delaware, Oeorgla. Kentucky, New Jersey, TeDnos see and Virginia were destroyed when the British burned the capltol at Washington In tha war of 1812, but the records of the rest of the colonial states are complete. The cost of the first census was $44,377. For the census ot 1910 it will be approxi mately $14,000,000, and the country ti grow Ing so tremendously - that Director North predicts It may thereafter require a com plete enumeration every five years, instead of for each decennial period. The I'r.ited Sthles marshals and their assistants, C&1 in all, acting under orders from President George Washington, had greater dilficulty it seems, in obtaining answers to their simple questions about free persons and slaves than do the Ister enumerators alth their more complex requirements. Or see tlon of tha colonial population foui.d Bible wsrrant for opposing I he count, while other forefathers were somehow fearful that increased taxes would result from their disclosures. - Tlw heads nf families In this city and slat- did admit, however the possession (4 il.U s'avea. besides many persons bound in service, and '.hey frrely gave their names. It 1s of passing interest to those who are still Irv dcubt about th pronunciation nf the name' "Roosevelt' thjt it was apelled In the original census sheets with a single 'W IIOMK VIKtYS OF BRYAX. Sentiments of Lincoln People oted . tr at Correspondent. A eisff correspondent ' of ' ths Baltimore Sun, wh recently visited 4,lnroln to feci the public pulse on Bryanlsm, notes tht result as f,ilws: - Mr. Bryan la nndotibtrdly pfvpular In tMs, hts home town. Me Is probably Its most popular cltlien persons)-, but still the town may not cast a majority ot ita votes Tor him. H- Is regarded as a good fellow, always willing to oblige. He will come Into town at almost any time and make an address in one of the churches for a minister, but, after all Is said, he is not as popular as la generally believed In the east. Hla picture can be seen In windows all over town, but from a rathet casual observance, not an actual count, It seems that there are Just as many Taft pictures as those of him. The people of this town are not slow by any means. They ara Just as wide awake to the main chance as any Connectl- cut Yankee, and they realise that Mr. Bryan Is an asset to the town of considera ble commercial Importance. And they are playing this up for all it Is worth. As a result there have been several very amus ing occurrences, particularly Just after the Denver convention, when large delegations wera expected to come to Lincoln to con gratulate Mr. Bryan on his nomination. One of these grew out of the hanging of a Taft banner across one of the main streets leading from a railroad station. Protests were made by some of Mr. Bry an's followers. They said It was not seemly in a city like Lincoln to compel visitors to Mr. Bryan to march under the banner of their political enemies. A number of republicans agreed, and tha controversy really grew heated, until finally a leading republican paper came out in a hot edi torial giving the whole snap away. It frankly pointed out that these expected delegations would be large and would bring considerable money to , Lincoln and that It would mean much mora to Lincoln to get thla democratic money than to air any po litical sentiments that might he repre sented b;' a Taft banner. The banner stayed up, however, but another one went up with the words "Welcome to Bryan's Town," Thus do the thrifty Nebraskans make capital out of theft twice-defeated fellow citizen. SHU, the pilgrims have not been coming in aa expected. ' Mr. Bryan's front porch was strengthened, but up to this time there has been no repetition of the Canton pil grimages, when thousands and thousands of enthusiastic republicans went to' visit McKlnley In 1896. There have been some delegations, of course; but, really, this pilgrimage business lias been a frost. Ore can hear almost anything here for and against Mr. Bryan. There Is preju dice on both sides. One man will tell you Bryan la the finest fellow on God's green earth. He's an enthusiastic democrat. An other will say he's a mountebank and a faker. He's a rampant republican. A third will say, "Oh, yes; Mr. Bryon Is popular here.' He's a good cltlien and w all like him; but" And he may be either a demo crat or a republican. The truth 1 the people are doubting Mr. Brycn's sincerity. Hero's another singular thing: One of the arguments the democrats are using in advocacy cf the election cf Mr. Bryan Is tha same that the republicans are using for opposing him. And that Is that ne'e not the same Bryan he was In ISM and 1900. Tha democrats will tell you that Mr. Bryan Is a more coriervattve, a better balanced, a more thoughtful Bryan than tha Bryan who led the democrats to defest In those two memorable campaigns Since 1$9 they say ' he has studied and has traveled. He is not so swayed by his Im pulses, but acta with a cnlmer Judgment. He now realises what the people want and knows better bow to go after It. Yes, say tha republicans, Bryan is not the same Bryan h& was In 1896 and 1900. That is the trouble. Then he was a man of Ideals. He was mistaken, we believe. In the remedies he proposed, but he was honest In his belief In them. He was young and Impulsive, but he rang true. Now be has become commercialized. Ha knows better what he wants, and knows better how to go after It. He Is wil'lng to sacri fice principle for expediency, nnd he plays the game of poU'lcs as a politician. Not that we object to his playir.g the game that way, but we do object to his putting on a sanctimonious smirk while he Is doing it, pretending to be a follower after high Ideals, a Moses leading his party out of the wilderness by divine guidance. In other words, wa object to his building up n poli tical machine under the cover ot the teach ings of "The Prince of Peace." Another man In Lincoln, a former ad mirer of Mr. Bryan, a democrat who voted for him. twice and will vote for him again, expressed his opinion thus: "Mr. Bryan'a a good fellow and I like him. He haa always treated me all right. I am a democrat and am going to vote for him. But to tell you the honest truth Bryan'a got a yellow streak In him. Ha keeps It pretty well concealed -usually, but every now and then It shows. Bryan Isn't a thoroughbred." Now that's a pretty mean thing to say about a man. Another man, one who has known Mr. Bryan for yeans, a former supporter of his and once a warm friend, says this: - "Mr. Bryan haa gone backward tn every thing but finances. He Is now a rich man. When he was a young man, when he went to congress, he was poor. He had never had a thousand dollars all at one time In his life. He went to the republl can convention of 1894 to cover It for the paper he was employed by in Omaha, and went to the democratic convention to do tha aame thing. He could not make his living at his law practice, and he was getting $26 a week from the newspaper. That, of course, was nothing against him Then he was a fine fellow, a man of high, even if Impracticable, Ideals. When he went to that convention he had nd more Idea of being nominated than you or I have of buying the Union Pacific rail road. By the exercise of Ills silver tongue he stampeded the convention, and we all know what followed. For a long time, even after he was nominated a second time, we kert In touch with each other. After hla second defeat he deliberately aet hla ideals aside and has been out for th 'dough.' He coined the tinkling of bis silver tongue Into golden dollars, and he is as keen after them as any cf the plu toerat he so picturejquely denounced In other days. "I do not condemn him for making money', and I'm glxd to see hiin prosper. And his money, so far as I know, has been made honestly. But Bryan has be come sordid. He has lost his Ideals and the dollar look bigger to him than the principles he used tu cherish. Ha is now a political adventurer. Irs expediency now, and he'll do anything politically to make a point. He will advance a prop osition, feel the public pulse .and If It doesn't go he'll, drop It, Government ownership of railroads, for Instance. Now he's angling for the negro vote. "But the principal objection I have to Bryan Is hla persistent effort to arouse class against class, to stir up vtiifa and enmity between the poor and ths rich. All through history we can find examples of gllb-tongued demagogues who have aought tu rids Into power by audi methods, and The Necessity of Good Banking Facilities Is becoming more apparent each year. It" is the earnest desire and determination of the First National . rank of Omaha to supply the best possible facllitlee obtainable for safe and conservative banking. , Its officers and directors spsre no effort to make the service of this institution prompt, efficient and obliging and those who entrust them with their accounts will appreciate the results of careful and conservative methods. Th accounts of firms, corporations and individuals, subject to check, sre invited. ?''''" First National Bank ol Omaha " iSlh and Farnam Sis. With a capital of $500,000 and surplus and profits of $76,000, what could be mors secure than one of their interest bearing (3) Certificate of Deposits. Keep your surplus funds sttwork. sometimes they have aucceeded. But they have always brought sorrow and Buffer ing and misery In their train. Mr. Bryan knows this. He la not- a fool. And not being a fool, there Is the only alterna tive. He Is a demagogue, hungry for power and willing to get It at no matter what cost." i And this la also a hard thing to say against a man. PERSONAL NOTES. Naturally, any sea serpent who claimed to be on the coast of Ireland was at once set down as a liar. Judge Parker's enthusiasm for Bryan seems to be about a stand-off for the en thusiasm ot the Nebraskan four years ago. George Cooper, on English bookmaker. leaves an estate of $2,500,000 won from the fellows who think they know all about "playing the pontes." Pugilist Nelson, got only $7,568 for whip ping another man. However, there really are people who habitually do useful things and don't get so much In a year. Street car conductors who find plugged nickels In their money bags may soothe their feelings by remembering how Russell Sage, expert, - was plugged with gold brick securities and left $60,000,000 In real money. Mrs. Fanny Wells Embre, whose death occurred In New York City several .days ago, at the age of 81, was national represen tative of the state of New York on the ranltary commission tn the war for the union. Word has been received at Washington from Dr. Robert Koch, the German scien tist, now at Vancouver, B. C. that he Is on his way to Washington to attend as a delegate tha International Tuberculosis congress, which Is to ba held at Washing ton beginning September 21 and to continue for three weeks. James J. Hill returned to New York from 8. Paul, where he had been for several weeks. Asked about the remark made by E. H. Harriman In Portland, Ore., that complete harmony had been re-established between the Harriman and Hill Interests In the Pacific Northwestern territory, Mr. Hill replied: "That's nothing new, is it?" He said he knew nothing about Mr. Harrl man's reported prediction of extensive rail road building In that region. Foxy Bill's Forajotten Thnnder. .' 8t. Louis Globe-Democrat. Not so much as 'a whisper comes from Mr. Bryan charging that anybody has stolen the free silver thunder of his flrct campaign. And yet "the whole firmament rocked and reverberated with his racket about the necessity oi going into free sli ver to save the courtry from eyorlasting ruin. Foxy Mr. Bryan, to forget the big end ot his thunder. )AINTY pastries, pies and desserts delicifjus, attrac tive, out of the ordinary are the pride of the cook who uses ESBRKRSIFGDE&BB'S For filling for cream, pineapple, strawberry and nothing equals Kingsford's. delicate and delicious. Improve your cooking Original Recipes and Cooking Helps" by two cooks who know. Free on request. Insist upon the old reliable Kingsford's Oswego Corn Starch. Pound package, 10c. T. KIRCSFORD & SOW. OSWEGO, ATIOBU ITARCI CO., SdcosssU THE PKFB1 MIPT Well. Bummer Is pst. THE OPTIMIST :.o use looking backward Thera's plenty of Interest ahead. ' FALL WEAR Our new styles In suits and top coats sre the latest word In Men's Clotnes. We'd like jour Judgment of them and Invite your criticism. Suits 016 to S4C Overcoat to SSQ All the new shapes in hats are displayed here and the (all furnish ings are ready. 'BrQwn.ng.K.itg E. S. WILCOX, Manager. BREEZY TRIFLES. "Did that girl make' goodf In the candy factory?" . s "No;" she maae .goodies Baltimnie American. ' . - . ,' i ' ' . "I'm In a difficulty over1 my girl." "What's wrong?" "I've bi-en saying such nice things to her that she'a irettlng toriceltod. If I quit she'll think 1 don't eare for her any lonci-r. and if I go on she'lj think she's too gnmi for me." Puck. i, ' ' "I met Mrs. Chatterbuck a while fiRn Poor lady! she seemad, to , be going down hill rapidly." " ' "Has she aged ao TmichJ'V ' ', "I don't know about her aging, but her automobile spilled her out just as they got on ths grade." Philadelphia Tress. "Object to my language, do. you? Well, I believe in calling .things by their right names." it "Oh, that's all right. But couldn't vmi manage to call them in a whisper. Cleve land Leader, Grandmother Why Is the baby so happy? Nurse Oh, his mother --.and father are coming. . j v :, Grandmother I don't see them! Nurse Nor I ma'am. But the child's nose is very keen. He smells the automo bile, ma'am. Harper's Weekly. ONCE UPON A TIME. J. W. Foley tn Collier's Weekly. Once upon a time rare flowers grew On every shrub and bush we used to see, Tha skies abova. our heads were always blue, . 4 The woods held secrets deep or you and me; The hillsides had their caves where tales were told Of swart-cheeked "pirates from a far-off clime, When outtases were fle-rce and-rovers bVd Don't you remember? once upon a tlm. 4 " :, . , ' Once upon a time from- sua to Sun The hours were full of Joy there was no care. And webs of gaudy dream" In air wer spun ' Of deeds heroic and of fortunes fair; The Jangling school house bell was all th woa ' "' Our spirits knew,', and In "Its. tunlet chime Was all the sorrow of the long ago Don't you remember? once upon a time. Once upon a time the witches rode In sinister snd ominous parade -Upon their atlcks at Bight, and queer lights glowed With eery noises by the goblins made; And many things mysterious thero were For boyish. cliacHsufco Jal tStiUueugh the grime That held them brown; and shadows queer would stir ,- Don't you remember? once upon a tim. Once upon a time our faith was vsst To compass all tha things on sea and land That boys have trembled o'er for ages past. Nor ever could explain or understand. And in that faith found happiness too deep For all the gifted tongues ot prose or rime, And Joys Ineffeble we could not keep Don't you remember? once upon a lime. CORN STARCH i I i . lemon, rhubarb, other fruit pies, It makes them by following Sixty-six fears 0f Superiority K. T. 2 f nanasvnnusaMaannnnnnnnnnnaannnsnnnnaannnaaaiH nlVi5 V- 6 Company