THE OMAIIA DAILY BEE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1908. .k. The Omaiia Daily. Bee FOUNDED BT EDWARD ROSEWATEH VICTOR ROBBWATER, EDITOR. Entered at Omaha postoftlc second class matter. TERMS OF 8CB8CRIFTION: Pally Pee (without Sunday), on year. .$.'X Dally Dm and Sunday, on year 00 DEIJVERKD BT CARRIER: Dally Be (Including Bunflar). rr week..lSe Dally n (without Sunday). per week. ..l'c Evening Bo (without Sunday), por week c Evening 8w iwlth Sunday), pr wek...l'o Nunday Bee, on yaar W balurday Be, on year " Add reus ail complaint of Irregularltl la delivery to City Circulation Deptmant. OFFICES! , Omaha Th Be Building. South Omh a Twenty-fourth and N. Council Bluffs IS Soott Street. Chicago 1M Mariuett Building. Nw York-Rooms 1101-U0J. No. 81 Wet Thirty-third BtrM Wahington-726 Fourteenth Btreet, N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Communication relating t new and fdltnrlal matter should b addressed: Omaha Be. Edttorlat Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, upwi or poatal order payable to Th Be Publishing Company. Onlv 2-cent stamp received In payment of mall account personal checks, except en Omaha or aatern exchange, not accepted. STATEMENT OF CTRCTttATION. Stat of Nebraska, Douglas County, aw.; George. B. Tischuck. treaauror of TM Be Publishing company, being duly worn, -ay that the actual number or full and complete copies of Tha Daily. Morning, Evening and Sunday Bee printed during tb month of Auguat. l08. wu a follows: 1 86,130 17 ,460 t U.S30 18 38,110 I 6.8W 19 S,070 4 354(40 20 35,990 1 33,790 21 36,860 35,790 22 38,070 T 86,900 21 86,400 1 36,470 24 38,160 1 88,706 28 30,940 10 36,636 28 M,l0 11 36,410 27 38,010 It 80,010 28 36,830 II 36,930 2 38,460 14 36.070 80 36,600 It 86,870 II 36,180 II 30,600 Totals 1,117,000 Less unsold and returned copies. . 11,648 Net total 1,106,44 Dally average ..-,,..,...., 80,669 GEORGE a TZSCHUCK, Treasurer. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before m tbla lit day of September, 1J0I. (Seal.) ROBERT HUNTEK, Notary Public. ' WHEN OCT OF TOWN. Babserlbsra leavlaa; tfc city tern porarlly ataowld have Tha Bee tailed . t tkent. , Addreaa will be changed at often mm rqot4. Judge Parker continues to make a noise like a 1912 possibility. Anyway, William Randolph Hearst Is a cure for political apathy. Evidently the weather man is no friend of the umbrella makers. Chicago proposes to make war on smells. Society had better reform. Chicago financiers are all in a stew over the failure of the Oyster trust. "Auto-suggestion" is the latest fad. It is probably an Invention of the go devil. Creditors are' causing trouble by in sisting -that the) Oyster trust should shell out. i ' . Mr. Bryan is spending more time on the rear platform than on the Denver platform. Philadelphia demands faster street cars. For the accommodation of transients? Democrats might forgive Mr. Hearst tf he hadn't caught so many of them With the goods. Ak-Sar-Deu starts off with splendid promise and even the weather man agrees to help out. "Umbrellas were introduced In 1772," says an exchange. Yes, and disappeared in the fall of 1908. I Emma Goldman is going on a six months' lecture tour of Australia and we haven't a thing against Australia, at that. "Good bye. Bill, take keer o' yer Belf," win go on the morning of No vember 4, regardless of the results at the polls. According to Mr. Hearst and s'ome turt records. Governor Haskell, treas urer of the democratic national com mittee, is oil rlfiht. The government might save a little money by buying round-trip tickets for the American soldiers who are to come home from Cuba In January. The Standard OH company Insists that it is nonpartisan. Looks like It was trying to be bi-partisan, with prej udlce In favor of the democrats. The national debt of Japan is $200, 000,000 larger than that of the United States, and that's another reason for postponing the war between the two nations. A caller at Oyster Bay tooy away Mr. President Roosevelt's hat by mis take. Mr. Bryan might drop in at Oyster Bay In his effort to get into Mr Roosevelt's shoes. On account of the advance In price this year's corn crop will be worth about $676,000,000 more than the crop of 1907. The cornfields refuse to go democratic. Mr. Bryan was too tired to reply to President Roosevelt's letter on Has kell. The Peerless Leader will prob ably be even more fatigued before the Incident Is closed. "Anybody else to notify?" asks the Richmond Tlnies-Dlspatch. Sure! Mr Bryan Is to receive the notification that usually comes to Mm n the tuernlug after election. the rRrswr.yr rn b. rryas. Mr. Bryan's demand upon President Roosevelt for information connecting Governor Haskell of Oklahoma, chair man of Mr. Bryan's resolutions com mittee at Denver and Mr. Bryan's per sonal selecflon as treasurer of the dem ocratic national committee, has been compiled with. Mr. Bryan wanted cer tain Information. He has received it, long with a lot of vastly interesting Information whirh he did not want. In the course of his letter to the presi dent, Mr. Bryan said: I agree with you that If Oovernor Has kell la guilty as charged he Is unfit to be connected with the democratic national committee, and I am sure you will agree with me that If he Is Innocent he deserves to be exonerated from so damning an ac cusation: In the light of the record cited by President Roosevelt, it will be difficult for Mr. Bryan to convince himself that Governor Haskell is fit to remain Ju his high official poRltion in the demo cratic councils. The original charges implicating Governor Haskell with an attempt to bribe the then attorney general of Ohio, F. 8. Monnett, In the Interests of the Standard Oil trust were made by W. R. Hearst. The charges were somewhat indefinite, but Governor Haskell denied them simply by plead ing a case of mistaken ldenlty. On the basis of this denial, Mr.' Bryan be came highly indignant and demanded proofs. The president's reply is over whelmingly convincing. He quotes records instead of rumors, and he passes up the Ohio case to cite one in Oklahoma, a case that came into the courts no later than July of this year, at the very hour when Governor Has kell was in Denver framing Mr. Bryan's antl-corporatlon platform. . . Briefly summarized, the Oklahoma case is as follows: The Oklahoma constitution, alleged to have been framed largely by Mr. Bryan, ' con tained a clause prohibiting foreign cor porations from doing business in the new state except on compliance with certain anti-trust provisions of the constitution. While Mr. Haskell was in Denver the Prairie Oil and Gas com pany sought a permit to do business In the new state. This was refused and the attorney general of the state, with the counsel and consent of thp acting governor, obtained an injunction in the courts restraining the foreign gas and oil company from operating in Oklahoma until it complied with the provisions of the 'constitution ap plicable to such corporations. Gov ernor Haskell, hurrying home from Denver, appealed to a higher court for a dissolution of the injunction, alleging In his petition that he was the sole authority to determine such matters and that the action of the attorney general was "an encroachment by the Judiciary" upon the prerogatives of the executive. The governor carried his point and the Prairie Oil and Gas company is doing business in Okla homa, as the nttorney general of the state puts it, "without the color of law." , Governor Haskell. and his friends have offered neither defense nor ex planation of his conduct in that case, except to assert that the permit was given to the Prairie Oil and Gas com pany and not the Standard Oil com pany. The testimony offered in a case against the Oil trust In St. Louis less than a year ago bUowh that the Stand ard owns all but $500 of the $10,000,- 000 stock of the Prairie Oil and Gas company. Whether Governor Haskell had any connection with the attempt of the Standard Oil company to bribe the at torney general of Ohio has nothing to do with the present case. That ho acted in the interests of the Standard Oil company in the Oklahoma case in July, 1908, using his power as gov ernor of the state to prevent the at torney general from doing what he thought was his sworn duty to do, sup porting the laws and the constitution of the state, is proven beyond quibble or question. It Is a matter of official record, supplied by the courts and competent officials, that Governor Has kell, whatever he may or may not have done in his checkered career in Ohio, has been openly seeking to fasten the fangs of the Standard upon Oklahoma, going so far as to oppose his attorney general, who was making an effort to enforce the state law against the Oil trust. President Roosevelt has made it impossible for Mr. Bryan to appeal to the American people on a moral issue when his chosen political asso ciates and advisers are of the Haskell stripe. SKUATOR "FiyOY" COKKfBS. W. J. Conners of Buffalo, who by one of those strange mutations of poli tics, all too common in the United States, has obtained the leadership of the up-state fortes of New York democracy, has announced, or rather served notice, that In the event of a victory for the democrats in New York, giving them control of the legislature on Joint ballot, he will demand as his measure of reward that he be sent as successor to Thomas Collier Piatt in the United States senate. There is refreshing directness about "Flngy's" methods. The desires of the sovereign people cut as little figure In the consideration as his own qualifica tions, and on the latter score ho has no worry. He admits that he may be a little short on visible biain supply but he declares that ho does not need anything in that line, as, using hi words. "I'm not bothered about brains. I can buy all I want of 'em for $2 5 -a week." Neither is "Flngy' bothered about reasons for his new aspiration It is Just a whimsical notion that has popped into his head and he has never considered the duties and responsibili ties of the position, nor does he care about them. Still, the ambl'lon of ' Fiugj" is BVi unreasonable, in view of the demo cratic situation In New York. David B. Hill has declined endorsement for the senatorshlp. Judge Parker Is not available. Bourke Cockran Is out of the question, owing to factional fights, and Nornan E. Mack Is neither of proper ctfllber nor able to secure an endorsement, while "Flngy" keeps his grip on the state organization. "Flngy" would fit Into the situation nicely. He knows nothing of tariff, finance, railroad regulation or any of the Issues before the people. Once in the senate he would send a page out and buy him brains on such subjects. The triumphs of corruption and politi cal indecency have been so frequent in New York that the elevation of "Flngy" Conners to the United States senate, in ca6e of democratic victory in November, seems not only logical but fitting. NEBRASKA A SD THE RATION'. For at least twelve years Nebraska has had a prominent place in national politics, and the attitude of the par ties In this state has been of real im portance in the affairs of the nation. For this reason the course of the re publican convention at Lincoln on Tuesday was watched with much in terest outside of Nebraska. That it adopted a platform which Is squarely in line with the principles enunciated at Chicago, and which pledges the party to a continuation of the forward work that has marked it always is a source of continued gratification. It would have been a mistake beyond measurement for. the republicans of Nebraska1 to have undertaken to go beyond the national platform, or the issues as outlined by the Roosevelt policies. At present, no crying evil exists within Nebraska and no wrong of se rious importance demands rectifying. The party is pledged to such cor rective or remedial legislation as ex perience shows Is necessary to make the reform laws passed by the last legislature more effective and satis factory in operation. The general proposition that Nebraska republicans will, always support the general cause of social and business advancement is sufficient for the present needs. This will include, naturally, close scrutiny of the banking laws of the state, and If a measure 1b brought forward that will secure a better administration of the fiduciary institutions under state control, it will be enacted into law. But what Is true of this la true in all other records, but the repub licans of Nebraska do not propose to allow the democrats of the state to write their platform nor to dlctato their policies. Nebraska is following Roosevelt and Taft and not Bryan. DR. BRYAN'S LA TEST NOSTRUM. Far from being discouraged by the argument of Governor Hughes, show ing that the Bryan plan for regulating the trusts would not hold water in any court in the land, Mr. Bryan has turned prpmptly from that proposition and has offered another prescription. He has a repertory of cures, and If one does not work he Is ever ready to give another. In one of his recent ad dresses, ho proposed an absolutely new and novel remedy for tho cure of the trust evil. He said: No party can consistently claim to be op posed to the trusts which will allow the malls of the United States to he used by the trusts as an agency for the extermina tion of competition. Congress lias already exercised this power to exterminate lot teries. Why not exercise It to make pri vate monopolies Impossible? Mr. Bryan does not explain where he found that prescription, but he must have gotten It in the course of his travels abroad, as it sounds sus piciously like remedies used in Russia, where' the sanctity of the mails is un known and private and personal rights arc ignored by the authorities. The suggestion is too serious to be dis missed with a laugh, particularly when it comes from a man who hopes to be president of the United States and whose heart bleeds for the rights of the people. There can be no parallel with the lottery law, cited by Mr. Bryan, be cause all lotteries were outlawed, as to the mails, and excluded from the post- offices, while no such position can be taken by the government with reference to the manufacture of iron, matches, tobacco, oil or any other product. It is not within the province of. the Post office department to decide whether a business concern is too large, or Just large enough, or whether a corpora tion is exercising Its legitimate and natural rights. The federal law pro hibits the use of the malls for fraudu lent purposes, but the question of fraud must be shown and proved and cannot be left to the discretion of postal officials. The American people are not yet ready for the establish ment of a press censorship or a censor ship of the mails. The whole sugges tion is as hopeless as the other Bryan dreams and fancies which have drifted off into the mists of the past. Notice Is hereby served on the peo pie of Nebraska that the demand of the democratic platform that Omah and South Omaha be segregated from the state does not represent the sentl nient of these communities. The peo pie of the metropolitan district of Ne braska are law-abiding and decline t be misrepresented by a lot of political malcontents who are merely throwln out bait to catch tho thoughtles voter. The Omaha double-ender la shout ing itself hoarse in an effort to de ceive the people aa to the real issues of the present campaign. Nebraskans are not nearly so much interested in .Mr. Bryan this year as they are i securing a continuation of a state ad- I .iiiuistrbtion tliat hue uroved wise, ef flclent and economical. Governor Sheldon and his associates at the state house have handled, the affairs of the state so ably that they are easily en titled to the endorsement they are certain to receive from the voters. The New York Press declares that "Mr. Taft was nursed by an old negro 'mammy,' who Is very fond of ash cake, ham gravy, lye hominy and corn pone." That's pretty tough on Mr. Bryan, but he is tongue-tied on the subject, as the Denver platform falls to say anything about negro "mam mies." ash cake, ham gravy or corn pone. Henry Gassaway Davis declares that the democrats cannot carry West Vir ginia this year. Mr. Davis will be re membered as the wealthy West Vir ginian who failed to help Judge Parker carry that state in 1904, and Parker Is stronger than Bryan in that section of the country. President Roosevelt has lost none of his ability as a letter writer. It may be that even the Peerless dodger will admit this. It seems hardly pos sible that even one so elusive as the Peerless could escape all the points made by the president. The increase of deposits In state banks in Nebraska is not an Indica tion that the prosperous people of the state are worried excessively over the safety oftheir funds. The demand for a state guaranty law Is much more apparent than real. "Flngy" Conners wants to succeed Mr. T. C. Piatt as United States sena tor from New York. This spoils the Impression that once prevailed that any change in senators from New York would be for the better. Senator Foraker says that part of that Standard Oil money was sent to him for legal services. This may sug gest to Mr. Bryan an explanation of that $20,000 sent to Nebraska In 1904 by T. Fortune Ryan. Mr. Bryan slept peacefully In hla berth when his special train went through Washington the other night. Mr. Bryan's ticket in presidential years Is always punched for some station near Washington. . Not In a great many years has a democrat been elected to office in Omaha or Douglas county without re publican votes. No reason can be given this year for republicans voting for a democrat. A New Jersey policeman who found a package containing $2,000,000 worth of Wall street securities returned it to its owner and, got $1 in real money. Wall street securities must be increas ing In value. In the meantime, Mayor "Jim" is jumping from fttump to stump through Illinois, while his faithful followers at home are secretly sharpening knives for his good friend Shallenber ger. Mr. Harrlman says he does not care who is elected president. In other words, he is willing to have the cam paign committees of both parties look upon him as an undesirable citizen. Hint ta the Smirched. St. Louis Times. Foraker and Haskell will waste time if (hey attempt to explain. All the people want from them Is alienee or absolute proof of Innocence. A Mission that Failed. Kansas City Star. Aa for the Hon. Joe Sibley of Pennsyl vania he Is able to prove that even If he did Intercede ta urge the president to stop the Standard Oil prosecutions, his Inter cession waa absolutely barren of result. Overworking- the t hief Recorder. Washington Post. If it ever becomes necessary for every would-be candidate to state how much ho Is worth and how he got It, the recording angel will find It n&ccaaury to Increase hla staff of perjury experts in the shorthand division. Idle Money In roMofllees. Kansas City Star. Lying In the postofflco In Kansas City Is the sum of 130O.OM paid In by purchasers of money orders made payable to the pur chasers, the payment accompanied by the customary fees. If there was a postal savings bank, such as Is advocated by the republican national platform and by Mr. Taft, this money, and doubtless a great deal more, would toe safely deposited more safely than under any bank guarantee system and the de positors would not only be getting a rate of Interest on their money, but the money would be kept In circulation. PERSONAL NOTES. Partisans President Castro have In re cent speeches initiated a movement to pro claim C'aMro president of Venezuela for life. The largest onion fry on record was the burning of that ToO-aore crop at Warsaw, Ind.. Saturday night. A sight to make one weep! Mike Donovan, physical trainer, gives out the reassuring statement that President Roosevelt was never In better physical con dition and weighs only 20 pound stripped. An Arkansas woman somewhat actively engaged In a feud was wounded fourteen times before she would quit killing people, and even then relinquished the task with regret. GergB Palmer and wife walked from Ashcroft, British Columbia, north 350 mile In a wild country to take up land for farming purposes, wheeling all the way In a go-cart their 1-year-old eon. Mile. Blanche Aroulay, who Is the first woman to be admitted to practice law In Algiers, ha Just taken the oath in the court of appeala. To commemorate the occasion, the counsel of the bar of Algiers organised an elaborate ceremony. The barristers were all present, and tha leader of the bar made a speech welcoming Mile. Asoulay to their ranks. Th president. of the court alao made a apeech of welcome. Mile. Relder. a prosecuting barrister, was present by invitation from th bar. She had just carried off th first prlz at the general examination of the atudeut In the low M-lmol of Algieis. ROIXD A BOl'T SEW TOR K. Rlpplea on the Current of Lit In h Metro poll. Clergymen of Manhattan and surround ing suburbs have received circulars from a syndicate of sermon mnkers offering to supply them with up-to-date sermons for X cents a week, or $10 a year. The offer came from the "homlletlc department" of a New York publishing house, which gives assurances that tta mechanical equipment Is equal to any demand for variety, versa tility, dialect or straight goods. "No patron," sas the circular, "need fear an accusation of plagiarism. We sell the clergyman our work, and he ha a right to use what he purchased as seems best to him. The sermons are mailed in New York every Friday morning In plain sealed envelopes. They are evange-tcal in tone. They enable the clergyman to get alung with fewer homlletlc books and magaa'nos, and the terms put this unique service within the reach of the poorest ministers. We shall not furnish our service to more than one minister In any given city or town." The circular states that the sermons are prepared by a pastor In active service, "who understands the grind of the averaKe pastorate In the direction of sermon mak ing and who has special ability as a writer of good sermon material." Foreclosure sale of the Hotel Gotham on a third mortgage Judgment for $465,0no se cured by the Knickerbocker Trust com pany haa been set for October 13, by or der of the supreme court. The new man agement, which took hold of the twenty-one-story hotel on August 7, will not bj disturbed by the foreclosure, as the per manency of Its tenure waa provided for. The foreclosure Is subject to two prior liens aggregating $1,950,000, held by the Met ropolitan LJfe Insurance company. The fifty-first street company Is the owner of the property. The Ootham never has been a auccess in the three years of Its existence. It was built by Thomas F. Ryan. James J. Hill, Thomas C. Platt, Henry I. Goodwin and the estate of Mark Hanna at the sugges tion Of the late Frank V. Bennett, Its first manager. As the Fifth Avenue Presby terian church was on the northwest corner of Fifth avenue and Fifty-fifth Btreet, within the statutory limitation of 300 feet, no liquor license for the hotel could bo procured and it lost money. The happiest man In New York Is Adam Brede, chef in a lunch room. Over twenty years ago Brede deposited $T0 In the 8 a mans Bnk for Savings. With a friend he attended a festival that night, and when he left the hall he found that both his friend and his bank book had disap peared. Last Friday night he encountered Ms friend, who greeted him effusively and said: "Here Is that bank book, Adam. It has hurt my conscience for twenty years, but It waa the means of saving my life. After leaving New York I went to Albany. From (there I drifted out to San Francisco, where I started a fruit business. I pros pered and at the end of eighteen year was worth about $60,000. I arrived here last Sunday and have been looking for you ever since. He then- handed over the bank book and $1,000 for Interest. Gossip by well meaning, but thoughtless, neighbors and friends is said to have hastened the death of Mrs. May Rose Howe and her husband, James Howe, who died within four day of each other from heart disease at Corona, Long Island. For some lime Mr. Howe had been troubled with heart disease and well tn tentioned neighbors called on Mrs. Howe and caused her anxiety by dwelling on her husband'a malady, notwithstanding! the physician reported that Mr. f Howe, who wa 68 years old, waa on the road to recovery. Mrs. Howe was In excellent health, but the gossip of the neighbors wore upon her to auch an extent that she waa suddenly stricken with heart disease and died. The news of his wife's death was kept from Mr. Howe for several days, when it was believed he was strong enough ta stand the ahock. But within a fw min utes after hearing the news he expired. On a Broadway car, the other afternoon, a mite of a gamin struggled aboard the rear platform with a heavy suitcase. Be hind him, all smiles, was a Btout woman, whose atature and rugged build auggeated her ability to lift a trunk, had ahe been so minded. As the boy deposited his bur den on the platform, the woman opened her purse and took thurefrom not the 5-cent piece which might have been expected, but a penny paper of chewing gum, which she handed to the urchin with much unction. The boy alighted from the car so dazed that he could hardly speak, and as the car rolled away he still stood by the track gating at it. "Well, what do you think of that?" said a male paasenger audibly. And the woman beamed on hiin with great complacence. One of the oueer businesses that Interest visitors to Manhattan Is the "Worm trust" in West street. You can alway find a crowd around the little old man who has been selling fishing worms for 1V4 cents apiece at the same stand for niteen years at least. White worms and sandworms, caught over In Jersey or up In Westchester maybe, are shipped to him as careiuuy as if they were the most fragile of Jeweler's trinket. They are kept in big platters of wet grasses and taken out to be put In small pasteboard boxes for customers. Sat urday afternoon provides a crush at tho old man'a stand Invariably, the fishermen being anxious to get bait for their Sunday fun. Sleeping quarters entirely out of doors are not confined to invalids, mcuntain camps, or hospitals. There are many of them on top of private houses In New York City. One such may be seen from Riverside drive, not far north of One Hundredth street. It looks like a shed built on the roof, with side walls only about four feet high. That Is quite enough to shut off the view of passersby, but If one should take a balloon ride over the house he would see. Inside the breexe-swept enclosure, a comfortable bed, close to which is a door leading Into a warmed and thoroughly en closed dressing room. The eye of thousands turn daily to look for the time where they used to get It from the Fifth Avenue hotel clock In Madi son Square, and many are the specula tions as to whether, when the new build ing Is finished on the old hotel site, the clock will be replaced. After Tiffany moved up town from Union aquare the business firm that moved into the building found It advantageous to put out a clock with the firm's own sign on It to replace the one so long familiar to travelers when the Jewelers occupied the building. Many hundreds, if not thousands, of persons thus were practically fuiced to read the name of the newer occupant of the building. t oarage that Pay. Kansas City Times. Judge Taft had no way of knowing what developments were coming when h re fused to make any kind of terma with Senator Foraker. but the result show that it paya a candidate to have the courage of hla convictions, even at a seeming sacrifice of what th -uollticlans tall "hurmnnv." GOLD DUST will sterilize your kitchen things and make them wholesome and sanitary GOLD DUST docs more than clean it steril izes and leaves your kitchen things sanitarily safe. The ordinary soap-washed utensil is not fit to eat from, because soap does not cleanse as thoroughly as it should does not kill germs of decay which are bound to lurk in oft-used utensils. Besides its cleansing" virtues, GOLD DUST has the merit of doing" work quickly, and saving your strengtn. it will do most of the cleaning without your assistance, and do it too, in a quicker and more thorough man ner than will soap, or any other cleanser. GOLD DUST malros zpot and pan spick and span. Made by THE N. K. Makers of FAIRY IN NKBHASKA. Columbus Tribune: Sheldon for Governor, sounds pretty good. Btanton Picket: When Mr. Hitchcock, democratlo candidate for congress in the second district, gets the returns next No vember he will probably find himself a good many votes shy. It doesn't ulways pay to knife a home candidate, as some other people may yet find out. Hlldreth Telescope: Our democratic and populist friends will find but little encour agement In returns of the recent primary elertloq so far as Interest In the campaign Is shown. With three candidates for gover nor they polled a much smaller percentage of their vote than did the republicans with no contest for governor and a majority of the other offices on the state ticket. McCook Tribune: The progressive legisla tion of recent republican legislatures in Nebraska should at all hazards be pro tected and preserved. No backward move ment should be allowed In the face of the opposition's ftr. It will be well In thl con nection for the friends and advocates of the primary election system to be fore armed as they have been forewarned. Beaver City Times Tribune: The reduction of the Nebraska state dpbt from over $2,C0O,OOO In 10o5 to less than $50,0flO on July SI, 1908. Is Indeed "going some" and the voters will not forget that good manage ment, economy and business ability of re publican state officers made this flattering result possible without making the liquida tion of tho debt 3 heavy burden to the taxpayer. Ord Journal: The Omaha Bee calls. at. tentlon to the fact that Valley county democrats have the distinction of being alone in their opposition to the amend ment providing for raising the salaries of the supreme and district court Judges. Not another county in the state returned a majority against the Increased cost of the courts It Is a distinction of which the Journal Is quite proud. Do other demo cratic papers approve the amendment or have they not given the mutter their atten tion? Alma Record: The democrat editors of this congressional district have all received nicely printed Invitations asking them to attend a political meeting and banquet at the Hampton hotel In Holdrege, railroad fare and all expenses paid. The big love feaat will bo pulled off Saturday and Candidates Ashton, Roth and several wire manipulators will be present. This spread will cost lots of money, however, It Is In timated by thoso high in authority that the ensh, supply Is unlimited. Perhaps some concern has guaranteed a deponit of cam paign funds, but will the voters be Informed as to who Is putting up the money? They should be, as there is a publicity plank In the platform. Burt County Herald: We feel like re joicing over tlie support that we gave the terminal tax law. The Herald was the only paper An Burt county that gave the measure cordial support and we are pleased with the result of the new law, which Increased the railroad valuation in the four towns In ttie county $119.1(10, divide that amount by five for assessment pur poses, makes $23,820 more property for town taxes to be levied on. It Is appor tioned as follows: Tekamah. $1,671: Crulg, $3.2S7: Oakland, lit.SOU; Lyons, $6,156. The two latter were Increased by the new rail road. Blair has an Increase from $&.T16 to $16,1S, nearly double, for municipal taxation. Omaha had an increase from $34,610 to $1S6,"35. a net gain in Omaha of $1,225. The contention was that the Increased tax in towns would1 diminish the railroad tax In the rural school districts, but this Is not true. The country road and school Commendation or condemnation of your goods may depend upon the character of your printed matter A. 1. Root, Incorporated, 1210.1212 Howard Street, Omaha iMaaBMarwTTiTmrTir i i i : n-n- mvibih in ai"fiinrtwirrrmiwiiiaiigiarat .UlC-SM-lM PIANO .-. SALE A. HOSPE CO., Omaha -IM Ca GOLD DUST IWm do soar wer- FAIRBANK COMPANY SOAP, the oval cake. districts have Just the same railroad tax that they had before on the mileage basis, but the towns levy municipal , tax on all railroad property within the cor porate limits. Elgin Review: Tha republican party has named Its candidate fur the. legislature In every district of the state. A republican legislature means a great deal more to Nebraska than a great party victory. It means progressive .legislation In the Inter est of the whole people. It mean the per manent clinching of all the reform meas ures and the permanent establishment of all the square deal policies enacted into law by the last republican body. It means that progress shall go on In Nebraska and not be halted by incompetent and reac tionary democratic control. If means the people shall rule as the people did rule in the last session, when every republican platform promise was redeemed by being enacted into law. I. A I GHI.N'GI LINES. "There's nothing which attract lead llk a magnet does Iron, Is there, papa?" "Nothing but an innocent bystander." Houston Post. " Rumor came from abroad that an Ameri can woman had been secretly married to a printTe. "Catch a woman keeping such a secret aa that!" sneered society, rejecting the rumcr as a canard. -Philadelphia Ledger. "How's de game, Chlmmle?" "lie home team's got two men down." "Say. dat's tough." "O'wan. One of m is de guy dat made de home run off us, and de udder one is de umpire." Puck. "Colonel," asked tb campaign manager, "what are the proapects down In your county?" "Gosh!" answered the prominent citizen, "If we don't have ruin pretty aoon ther" won't be corn enough to keep the blamed crows from starvln'." Chicago Tribune. "I always hate to see the ataff poet g. off on a vacation," said the managing editor. "You consider his work valuable to tho paper?" "Not at all. But his absence usually fires all the other near-poets In town with tho Idea that wo need assistance." Bir mingham Age-Herald. "I don't believe In kicking a man when he is down." "Of course you don't. It might stimu late him to get up again." Philadelphia Ledger. Angry Customer These shirt aren't mine. You've brought me some other man's bundle, and I reckon he's got mine. Laundryinan It's mighty lucky for ine you've told me about It. The other man is tlw one that would do the real klckln' about It, you know. Chicago Tribune. l'OOIl WOMAN. Chicago Record-Herald. Her husband still Is true to her, and bravely kind; A better man than he It would be hard to find; Ills reputation is unsmlrched; his neigh, burs deem Him worthy of their fullest trust and their esteem. Hr children shout with healthy glee, un blemished, glad; They play upon the wide, green lawn, but she Is sad; An ache Is deep within her heart; with tear-dimmed eyes She sits within her rich boudoir alone and sighs. Her parents live; her sisters and her broth ers, too. Retain their honor, while their cares ar small and few; Youth mil! Is hers, and she is possessed of princely weulth. . ( Yet saddened and alone she fcitrf a bitter tear Hangs on her lashes; all her world Is dark and drear; A thousand ugly fancies come to fill her mind Her newest gown refuses to. hang right behind. ' - 1 1513 Douglas Street I