niK REE: OMAHA. FJilPAY. AfOUST 20. 100P. Tim Omaha Daily Del rOLNDED Br F.DWARl) ROSEWATKK. VICTOR RO.EWATRR EDITOR F.ntered at omTha poMfiu a second-J class matter. Daily Be iw.thout aimd.M onf ear. .M " f'ilT R and Sunday, on ye'' P...v KeiS riiy Bee (without Sunday), per week. .ic , Kvtnlng fce twithcut Sunda). per week So , , , , Kvtmlng Be cwtih ucda , per week. . Hs-j will extend to New England and to fMimtiy B' '' 'hoi the south. It may have the potency FSturday Roe. one var lr01"" Adrei all complaint of irregularities in j t0 really consolidate the intelligent 4.lvery 10 City rt-, ula'on Department. . ., th. ... knd OFFICES Omaha The Bt Bulling Woufh Omaha 1 w em v-rotn ih and N. ouncil Fluff,--1.. 8-ott street. coin MS Little Building V?R"T:m.Hsru. h.' This year .he only regular demo-Thirty-third Ktret cratic convention which possesses any Washington 72J Fourteenth street. N W , j coRRKSPONDEXCE significance Is that of Maryland. A Communications telatlng to news and edi torial matter should bo addressed: Omaha Be. Editorial r.'enartment. REMITTANCES Remit bv draft express or postal order. pvblo to The Beo Publishing; Company Only 2-ceiH stamps received In payment of mall aecoun:. Personal rherks. except nti Omaha or eastern echange, not aocpted TATKMLVT Or r'tRCULATION. Mat of Nebraska. Douglas County. s : 'ieorg B. TtKhuck, treaourer of Th Re Publlihlhf Company, being duly sworn ays that tho actual number of full and romptete, tuple of The Dally, Morning. K enlng snd flundar Beo printed during th month of July. IMS. was aa follows: 1 41,740 17 41.810 41.7BO II 40,300 41,00 40,330 ... 48.140 41,30 1( 4.1.840 20 41.T80 II 43,410 13 41,880 ?! 41.S10 14 41.800 ; 40,150 21 41,970 . . ' 41.080 X 41.870 41,810 1 a 41.748 11 40,880 12 43,880 1. . . 41.Y40 14. 41,710 I 41.870 1 41,740 To.ai P.tlurnSii rupits .. Not total Daily ftierag.... 7 41,880 . 1 asaoso ! , ... 8,ean i l.SBa.418 GEORGE B. TZSCHUCK. Treasurer. Subscribed in my presence and sworn to befnra me this 2d day of Anguet, 10. S1) M. P. WALKER, Notary Public sabsrrlkrra lewtlac the city tem porarily aid kave Th Bee me Ileal t tkeaa. AaMreaa will be Insurgent growth Is a trifle com pared with the pushing spread of the "th row -off-t he-shackles" democracy. Of course, Juage Dean dissents. He is running for re-election as a non partisan democrat on the populist ticket. A reunion in Illinois will entertain (iotcrnor beneen, Senator Lorimer and Speaker Cannon. Of course there is m politics In it. We are now tohl YhVT th ..., f 1 the ccruus will be below the estimates. Therc be some poor politicians In that department. ,.. Ahirolocer "rlkks" predicts a wntei Of toll anl bluster. A prophet who tiliks tloner to the summer rain topic wi!l hell more almanacs. - ! The first brick has been laid on Douglas county's new court houae. Tools on ihe date of the laying of the last brick are now open. Atlanta Is ennuied and has Intro-j duced watermelon rind fights as a so ! c.lery fad. The proper costume is cra vfnRiie cut a les firemen. Among i be chief causes ascribed for high prices is the overproduction of gold. Down around Lincoln they must get buoy with explanatory notes. .Senator Borah in seeking to provide liusbttcds In overalls for women wbo otk nliL. xiiong men is starting a trade which needs no advertising. A bogus collector has been exposed soliciting money In Omaha under daim of representing the Eagles. .Musi hnt gotten bis birds mixed. Who would think that Missouri would be the first state to give Ita mil itia a balloon corps. Since It became a republican stronghold Missouri has taken on a six-cylinder gait. American financiers have sent over Mr. straight to confer with the Chi nese railroad mandarins. The Chi nese ha little jokes of their own and wish to see the color of the money. lleney is now aupposod to have won, Vei thai need not necessarily call for full episodical reviews of San Fran cisco politics. The people of the na tion are willing to take it all for granted. Chicago s police chief looks enough like the late respected Hermann to cast a spell over the superstitious sil lies of the lower criminal class. Colonel Steward ts constructed on the lines of magical success. Mr. Harriman says he is coming home greatly Improved In health, but our junior yellow Journal knows bet ter and insists that Mr. Harrimaa's condition has been growing steadlVv worse. Mr. Harriman should correct himself. Nothing but another war will give us eommaad of Japanese and Chinese names. These narrow-guage railroads canaoi compete with the last days of a base ball aeason and we are not car- Ing mifch about Kalgun and Sul Yuan Ch eng trunk Does. There seems to be a renaissance of Hellealc culture. It Is Greeks who made ll tUe trouble at Fort William, pelopldas, Brasldas and Mlltiades will reappear when the moderns learn how to write as well as our old friends who Uited so long in the freshman classes A Party of Broken Pieces. I'ntW h name of regeneration ' the democrat of eastern states are laboring to find Issues which will ob iscure the. national tendencies of their party. The Saratoga assemblage In September li expected to be the t y pi- efforts. The momentum developed at New' York politics from the grasp j ft. , ba(1 i0. 0 democratic politicians,! i south and effect a regeneration of the party on understandable principles of government. legislature is to be elected which chooses a United States senator, but the place is conceded to Senator Ray ner. The overwhelming burden in the late democratic state convention was the task of inventing language which would attract votes to the disfran chisement amendment about to go be fore the people. In reality this amend ment is a dodge to hide the weakness of the democrats under recent national vagaries. A similar amendment was defeated when submitted under Sena tor Gorman's leadership. The large foreign mining and factory population took alarm at some of the restrictive provisions, fearing that'their sons and friends would be barred under the grandfather clause. Of course, Mr. Gorman's object was to escape the dan- ' l-M0ger of republican supremacy, which ao! !! 41880 ae unavoidable after the financial li .!!!!!!!. !4i',3so : policies of 1S96 became fastened on ,ne democratic party. The present amendment Is almost identical with (ne defeated one, but the democratic lota to be used In counties where the negro vote is large. Since 1895 Mary land, it is certain, has been a republi can state on a fair vote. To the demo cratic organization the disfranchise ment of the colored vote seems indis pensable. The struggle will be a com plicated and bitter one. Like the Saratoga conference, the Maryland convention has not in Itself a great deal of importance. It is part of a democratic movement In the east and south to ignore the national plat form and hold the party together on local questions or other "regenera tions." From Maine around the coaBt to Texas the white democracy is in a state of semi-decay. It has no cohe rent convictions on the state of gov ernment except those which are in nately in conflict with the platform To give a "clearer meaning to the party name" has an inspiring sound, but it 18 aU so"nd- The nrae h8 no !mpan,nK ln New York Tara I many- ,n Mar"and 11 h" none ' iPpt "franehlsement of negro voters. ;Tnc two states which are this year i quickened In political life are trying on the democratic side to "regener ate,", but the promise Is not backed by contagious moral enthusiasm. New York may search out the magic word for the national democracy, in Mary- land the democrats are politically and morally disgraced, whether they win or lose. It is an off year, following the enactment of a comprehensive tariff bill which has material for a hundred sharp disagreements. Yet re- publican confidence Is plain In every state. Allowing for the Saratoga con ference a regeneration sufficient to control the next national convention, there will be no nascent growth to af fect government. The present demo cratic supremacy would defeat a rival. A democratic victory in Maryland by unfair means would make the state republican at the polls as at heart. The luckiest thing for the democrats Is that there are so few elections any where for a test of public opinion. Soeed in Freights. Wben the men who had faith ln the development, of .water transportation on interior riversx began to look at the subject narrowly they came upon a few surprising facts which dissipated part of the Idea that transportation was synonymous with railroads. They found that, while a car and a locomo tive could be sent along fast, the prac tical movement of freight trains was slow, perhaps not beyond an average speed of twenty-five miles a day. On the Seine and Rhine the freight boats often exceed the railroads in regular freight schedules. The difficulties and obstacles to navigation on these rivers are familiar to travelers. The St. Louis Republic has obtained from a lead lug wholesale merchant an enlightenment on the Heedlessness of hurrying speed In many heavy lines of business. Numbers of the largest cot ton and woolen mills take their orders a year ahead and deliver at their leisure. In Europe, where they pur sue the same plan, they seek for such commodities the cheapest means of transportation, with little attention to speed. Good business men in America take that course systematically, always studying the question of transporta tion from the standpoint of economy. For example, freight Is often carried from New York by rail to Buffalo, then by lake to Chicago and rail to St. Louis; or by rail to Pittsburg and river to St. Louis; or by ocean route from Boston to New Orleans and river to St. lxiuia; or even by rail and water to Duluth, rail to St. Paul and river to bt. ixiuis To the novice it becomes remarkable when he learns what a volume ana va riety of freight suit everybody as veil If the goods iak a month to travel from factory to the retailer's ware house. The Republic says: "Water transportation need not detelop as much speed as transportation by rail and has developed It already." Students oi the subject quickly learned that railroad freight serTlce became faster when water relieved the railroad of low-vlass commodities. England demonstrated the fact on the Manchester canal and both Germany and France made It evident on all their Improved waterways. Not only Is the rail service faster, but It Is more profitable. Railroad dividends Increase titles is carried in barges. Rivers must have channels, the af- fair of the government, but they must also have warehouses, 'unloading ma chinery and other facilities, which are the affair of municipalities and local effort. B. F. Yoakum, another St. Louis man, who, being a great railroad man ager, makes light of water carriage, has just made an address before a convention ridiculing the wastefulness of the unintelligent efforts of the gov ernment in improving the interior rivers and pointing to the high perfec tion of railway service along the banks. The answer, obviously, Is that the peo ple should compel the government to proceed with system and economy to get the best results from the great rivers which penetrate the whole vast basin between the Alleghenles and the RockieB. In the new era of waterway improvement these old neglects and mistakes will not be repeated. The Two Opinions. Two opinions have just been handed down by the state supreme court in connection with the decision rendered nearly two months ago setting aside the so-called nonpartisan judiciary act because of its flagrant unconstitution ality. The majority opinion, in which all of the judges who heard the case but one concur, states in plain and convincing language the law Involved in the points presented along the lines indicated at the time the decision was rendered. It. holds that the so-called nonpartisan Judiciary act collides with the constitution in three places. First and foremost, it violates the right of free speech. Second, It violates the right of free assemblage "to consult for the com mon good and protection of govern ment." Third, it invades the guaranty of free elections. The attempt to prohibit political parties through their committees, pri maries or conventions from endorsing, criticising, or even referring to candi dates for office, is not upheld even in the dissenting opinion. The limita tion of signers to nominating petitions to not more than 500 ln any one county disfranchises all voters In ex cess of that number from participating in such nominations and discriminates between voters ln such a way as to amount to an impediment of free elec tions. The dissenting opinion, it should be noted, is filed by the one judge run ping for re-election on th4 democratic ticket. For the most part it reads like a stump speech rather than a legal argument or presentation of the law and is grounded on the assertion that the constitutional features of the law might be eliminated by judicial lofftalatlAn wtthftut pAmnltlv riaatrriT , " ' .. .. ing me otner pans, particularly me provision for a separate ballot without party designations for candidates for judicial and educational offices. The opinion of the court points out clearly that the moving clause of the whole enactment was the constitutional pro hibition of party nominations, as is ex pressly declared in the act itself, and that even without this the whole law would have to fall because so inex tricably Intertwined with the invalid features, and would furthermore be absolutely unworkable in the form for which the dissenting judge pleads. The fact is that the so-called non partisan judiciary act was from start to finish a piece of political buncombe designed, not to promote nonpartlsan- ,n,p' but t0 manufacture partisan po- ,,tical tpltl for democratic candl- dftte- w re convinced the dissent Ing opinion in this case would never have been written were the dissenting judge not seeking favor as a candidate on the democratic ticket which only goes to show the rank partisanship of the democratic pretense of nonpar tlsanship. When Mr. Taft traverses the Mis sissippi he will see the surging popu lation of a hundred historic towns which were supposed to have died be fore anybody now strong and hearty was born. It will be a pageant from the past. The president's attendants may reflect that these towns may be the live centers of another population when the inland empire applies new levers of power. There is romance in the old river towns and it Is not all in looking backward. Not only should the Real Estate ex change keep a watch on the construc tion of the court house to see that there are no lapses from the require ments of the contract, but every tax payer Is a part owner in this building and should exercise an owner's right of personal inspection at any time. The more Inspectors the less likelihood for anythins to go wrong. One of the board In Precinct Ttinleen U authority for the atatement that there was booze not far distant from the polling place, and that a worker for one candidate was putting In his time piloting the thirsty ones to the handy place where the bottlta were concealed Lincoln Journal. What, in Lincoln? ln L'ncoln, where the lid la supposed to be on tight and where the auti-saloonlsts go to tell how bad things are in Omaha? The state returns would indicate that the nonpartisan democrats had no compunctions about crossing over un- !der cever of the ide-open ballot to ! help make republican nominations. Still, when their tanUicUtes, pretend- , Ing to stand on a h tic h moral plane. , take oath that they are democrats and populists at one and the same time. to hmild..,. lhov wtmM ,ompi,n onie. the ordinary nonpartisan democrat I thin cannot be expected to shy at masquer-! providence police stopped some of the adlng temporarily as a republican for'rn,v automobile, ami mixed up ihr plan primsry election purposes. lof ""' ""' -e. :..s that in the mak- j ton of an nngentrnts ,,),, utile i-cins'dem- Congressman Tawney's consolation Is that much may happen In a year. Mr. Tawney has as yet no Inviutioo to the St. Paul reception to insurgent The Courier-Journal congressmen manes (ne long aisiant-p gut-so mm nc will not be around at the opening of the next congress. All this flurry will be over when the Twin City fair opens in a few days and discloses the radiant glory of the year's productions in the northwest. Comedians outlast all other stage artists. Dick Golden's departure evokes the news that Jaques Kruger is actively on the stage and W. H. Crane, who stopped twenty-five years ago telling what he did before the war, Is able to put on a new play every season. The country wishes a long j life to all of the Oldsters. . I A democratic prognostication Is that Senator Aldrlch will try next to push through a measure for a central bank or national clearing house. lie nearly did it once before, but Mr. Aldrlch does not tackle jobs of that kind when & presidential election is warming up. As for now well, nobody would be surprised. Congressman Hinshaw comes in for another excoriation from the demo cratic World-Herald. Voting against Cantaon brought brief democratic ap plause, but no republican can ever do anything to appease our amiable dem ocratic contemporary except to repu diate his party and (urn democrat. Secretary Wilson's essay on the progress of farm values is not a cam paign document. Still, it has more attraction for republican voters than for the other kind, and therefore will have a justly famous and fully paid circulation in the best circles of readers. A Doctor Getting; Wise. Pittsburg Despatch. Some members of the senate beat Mr. Taft'a doctor to the discovery that the president was a hard man to put to the mat. Sanitary Preventions. Brooklyn Kagle. Now for the Thaw divorce suit. Iet It be held in a dark sub-cellar, the papers burned and the ashes sealed. Profiting r Kiprrleare. Washington Herald. Life and accident Insurance companies have put the ban on aviators. It was not so long ago that a number of the big companies were up In the air them Helves, and they know It Is a dangerous situation. An Arasament for Waterways. 81. Louis Globe Democrat. Although we h'SVe had it often figured out to us w ItMn the last year of how many miles of empty freight cars were strung along sidetracks, we are now told, on the first general revival of Industry, that a car famine Is Imminent. Which Is an aigument for. deeper waterways and a less shallow faith in figures aald to be expert and official. How Great People Differ. Cleveland Plain Dealer. It la stated that Miss Jane Addams re ntal ked when told that her name had been auggested for the presidency, "It Is alto gether too absurd for me to dlscaas it." No doubt the lady was sincere when she aald this, but it isn't customary to push aside a presidential candidacy In such sum mery fashion. William J. Bryan, under similar circumstances, never permitted him self to use language like that. Playlna with Bl Figures. Harper's Weekly. The lateat "estimate" of the cost of the Panama canal la $o00.000.000. The first was $140,000,000. The Jest, In our judgment, will approach a billion. But that Is not why the government needs money. Eight years under Cleveland cost the country $2,519. 6Z4,M7, eight years under Roosevelt, M.SiT, 855.S83. a difference of more than two bil lion dollars. The army and navy, unuei Cleveland, cost Jibl.659.SM; under Roose velt, $1,781.42. 471, a difference of nearly billion and a Quarter. And fifteen years hence not a single battleship now afloat will be fit to go into action. FLOOD OF FIIHEKiN CAPITAL. Taxation at Home Sending; Large Vol. nine to I nlted States. New York Press. Among bankers and others who handle and pay close attention to Investment, both here and abroad, there la common agree ment that enormous sums of French and Kngltsh capital are being transferred to thia country for . permanent employment here. There are various re.-sons for this ahift of capital. The productive fields of the I'nlted Slates are so natutally rich with large returns easily and quickly earned, that capital discontented with ita proflta or security In other places seeks the better chance, for capital out of em ployment or engaged in unsatisfactory em ployment hunts for work Juai as the wage earner hunts for work. Again, the foreign manufacturer who can not get a share of our domestic market, the greatest and richest in t.'ie world, be cause our tariff astem preserves It for industries established here, mill often move all or part of hta plant to the I'nittd States so is to be able to upeiale within the linen of our customs duties. This, while permit ting the foreigner to share the beafW of our home market on even terms with American prulucers. Increases the produc tive forces of the country, swells the waste payments which are pent heie. stimulates the general pinchasing power and adds to th national wealth. A case in point Is the very recent one of a French automobile concern arranging to set up a plant and to opetata in it one o' our clues of the middle west. Thia capital culonUiiig. to to speak, has been going on for years l a mauer-of-ft et proceas In seeking beneflta rath?r than fl ing from injurlea. Recently, however, a hifchly significant Impetus has been given to this previously normal flow of foreign investment into th t nnei. Ktatta. Capital frcm abroad Is comir.g here In a volume that increases with astonishing force be cauea it is actually being drive out of England and Fra.iu by excessive taxation. FERSONAL NOTES. Pitu lint end Ph 1 1 it :is ( .if such good fiftMnra Ih.l If ih.v Rm t fiolit .hniiMn tlon Riven to the ways of Pi o idencv The I'nltrri State;. Mhv Fever association holds It annual me. tin hi lletlilehein. N. U. in a pollrn-tree land, where the re ports of the mrmheis need not he heard nd 1,,r 'losP"i" " to he sneezed at. championship of ihe lakes for vocal strength, t'hlcaso can he heard at St. Joseph, sixty mile? gay. mi a calm day. but the scream of s Cleveland woman ,.. . I Khin Manuel of Poitual Is said to he i solnn on a Journey In w hich he vi lli In- i dude the countries of Europe where ther ate olDtihle yotint ladles. He will visit England first, and It has been hinted upon more than one occasion that he wishes to wed n English princess. Chief Spencer, aped 110 yeats, a Klick itat, recently died on the reservation at Fort Simcoe. In IMS he saw whites come to the coast across country as settlers. In 1S56 lie was a guide and scout for Colonel Wrght nd Major Haines. Me had always been faithful to the whites, in spite of the fact that volunteers. In l"iO, killed every member of his family. Former Assistant Secretary of the Treas urer Taylor relates this Mississippi boat conversation of fifty years ago. when the Indians were much In evidence along its banks. Somebody remarking that St. Paul, to which they were going, was largely set tled by Maine-ites, a Boston school teacher asked: "Ate they friendly to the whites?" night In the thick of the dog days comes the Dog World and Anti-Cat Review, "written and Illustrated by dogs for dogs, assisted by Walter Emanuel." H hails from New York and claims to be the only dog magazine In the world. On a field of red on the title pe.ge Is a cropped eared and stumped-taited white dog of the Mc- I Cutchcon species In the act of chasing off the earth a black cat with a wealth of waving tail, proving plctnrially that some I fool dogs need literary assistance In ap- I proaching the scratch. ' POLITICS A IS D PKRJIRV. Hastr ('barges of Graft Rrlna Trouble to the Maker. St. Paul Dispatch. A Madison, Wis., Judge has sentenced a politician to spend three years In the penitentiary for the crime of perjury. It Is a pity that there are not mote such con victions. Perjury Is one of the most per nicious crimes on the calendar. It strikes at the very foundation of Justice. The per jurer Is the arch enemy of equity and fair ness and should be treated as such when ever he shows his head. The courts ai altogether ton lenient In the case of those who give false testimony. Frequently, of course, It is difficult to know Just which wilnessea are lying when their testimony conflicts. But If more effort were made to punish those who testify carelessly there would be fewer reckless statements made on the witness stand. The Wisconsin man who has been sen tenced to prison was one of those who at tempted to show that legislators had re ceived money In connection with the elec tion of Senator Stephenson. It is bad enougli for the friends of a prisoner to strain their memories and consciences in the effort to save him from the consequences of his crime. It Is possible to fee) a bit sorry for such witnesses. Hut no sensible person can have anything but contempt for a witness who will lie in order to aid In securing a conviction. Justice demands that nothing but the truth should be told by witnesses, and the courU' vtve It to themselves and to the public to put a stop to perjury. PASSING PLEASANTRIES. (Joodheart is having a serious time with his humanitarian tenements." How's that?" "He's giving the tenants bathtubs In tfl-a-month suites and now they want him 10 furnish the soap." Cleveland I'laln Uealer. "I understand that druggist Is such an j energetic parish worker that he has now the trade of the whole congregation." "He certainly has. In fact, he might ! literally be called a regular ptller of thu church. Baltimore American. Deemster Whenever 1 have to borrow money I try to get It from a pessimist. i Kieldman Why ? ' Deemster A pessimist never expects to get 11 back. Life. "No," said Hewllgus; "I never tip a waller, and yet l get the nest or service. "How do you manage It?" asked Grim ahaw. "1 never dine twice In succession at the same restaurant." "But that's so confoundedly like working up a free lunch route." Chicago Tribune. "Don't chide me for carrying a revolver. This little gun saved my life once." "How exciting! Tell me about It." "1 was starvlt.g and I panned It." Cleve land Leader. "Gayboy has gl' en up horses and drlnii and all his bad habits, and has settled d ma In a quiet little place ln the suburbs." "Where?" "The cemetery." Illusti'a ted Bits. "Sir, I want to marry your daughter." "Go slow, young man, go slow. When I waa your age I wanted just as badly to marry her mother." Baltimore American. Mu. X. My girl has left me. She said I had ao much company there waa too much work to do. Mis. Y. That's singular. Mine has gone, too. She said 1 had so little company It showed I had no social position. Boston Transcript. "My. but the lawyer In that will case waa awful rude to me when 1 was on the stand. He did ask the motu personal uue.i tlona." i "You don't expect a lawyer trying to gel information to be bowing and scraping, do vou?" j "But they told me tha case was golct to he tried in a civil court." Baltlmoi e American. j "Father. e hae come home, won't you i forgive us? "Never;" "Won't vou forgive us for getting mar- j rled?" "Oh. I'M forgive that, all right, tho'igni you were asking forgiveness for having j Him hom " Houstor Post. I THOSE WHO DO THEIR BEST. Roy Kauell Greene In Success. "Vou'll find In life, one thing, niv boy." said I'licle lllram. low. An' weiglnn' each word carefully, 'there haute In oing slow ; I iriint you'll never grow mo lug to rutnl- nate w Ith care On that old fable menlininn' lh to' tolse an' the hate. An recollect, my boy. that lam and for tune Isn't all Thai spells success it's Mlioulin'. Here'' when IHity deigns to can- i e. u ibm o' k ' ovow ina real. Tha fellow s doiir mighty wen who always does his best. "Perhaps hell never a'i. iealih roal. perhaps lie er Male fumes heights. Rit then he'll keep his conscience, an' llkelv rest well nights, For those who've fo.ial.l with main and might where 'hose leu strong hsd quv iled. Though fulsome glory be vol theirs. It can't be said they've failed Achievement isn't al.vay wni Idifce- lettered on o.ie's brow. While mpl- pac and aweet content oft low iy lives endow . An' so I'd say. though on his brow no !'l-el wreath's ' e n pressed 'Iti feller s dnin" mighty well who always doer his best.' Schools AN CollcsfOeO Pointers on Choosing a Business College Pointer No. I. on Shorthand, thorn la Inst one otiestton worthy of ur consideration when choosing a system of shorthand, and In use" or "How many thousand BK ACCOMPUSIIF.D WITH IT?" MOStlFR PIIOKTII NI ts the MNt.Y system tnught In Omaha which will produce' efficient Court Reporter- w rth lesi than a ear's study. Ask yourself w hv the so-called "lTA Nt A R O" systems st e unshle to do this. The best place to learn ti ls s stent Is under the author himself ln the MOSHK.R-I.AMPMAN BI SINKSS COM.KUK Our hook, "tit" A R A NTKKI STATKMK.NTP." explains the how'i. Why's of shorthand In a way you can understn nd. It will I nt e rest vm, This school also has utisut passed courses In HI SIM.f-H. Bt SIM.PP F.NOUSH and UPl'l'IAL PF.NMANSHIP. Fl I TKRM begins September 1st. Write for ( il A R . NTF.KP 8TATF.MKNTP tooay. It Is free. Addrcfs MOSHKK & LAMPMAX. 17th and Karnam Sts., Omaha, Nebraska. rownel 1 ForYounjf Women And Girls High at and a r 4, attraetlv. ColUa preparatory, academic andi collegia.! eouriaa. Certificate admits to Vassar, Wellesley. Smith. Mount Holyoke. tlniverslty of Chicago, Cnlrerslty of Nebraska, etc. Full equipment for instruction In Dm S. KAMBSBT, . A. The University School oi Music Z1IBCOZ.V, HIIglSKA Affiliated with University of Nebraska WILLARD KIMBALL, Director. V Offers complete course in all lirniiehes of Music. Posi tions for graduates. School year begins September 6th. Office open for registration Sept. 1st. Write for year book. A Place where manly boys are made With aeml-mllltary discipline. Prepares for sil rr.lleBes an " "J '"J Location healthful and building fire proof. All athletics, and all carefully supervised Writ for illustrated oatalog-we. HARRY N. RUSSELL, Head Master. : : Kearney, Nebraska. BELLEVUE . COLLEGE cith successful athletics;, offers at a low expense tne following courneo. OOX.I.ZIOII Degrees in (,'lssstcal, Scienttric ami i niiii"pmi.i uui... ACADEMIC Preapratlon for any College or University. MOKMAIa SCHOOLS Elementary and advanced courses. State certificates ""ooVrSEBTATOBT Theory of music, piano, voice, violin, elocution and art. Modern dormitories for both men and women. Address PKES. S. W. ITOOEBT, BILLITOE, WBB. MISSOURI MILITARY ACADEMY Educates the W'bolo Man! Select, limited, thorough! The ideal school for nice boys. No Failures! The crowded school cannot touch us Turns out finished scholars and polished gontlenion. Give your b6). the best chance, even if It does cost a little more. Do not eallruate their welfare In dollars and cents. That would be pitiful. Send them to the school that makes no failures! Address, Col. V. l. KONVII.LE. Mexico, .Mo. Box A-ai. Wentworth military Academy Oldest and Largest in Middle West. Government Supervision. Highest rating by War Department. Infantry, Artillery and Cavalry Drills. Courses of study prepare for liniverslties. Government Academies or for Business Life. Accredited by North Central Association of Schools and Colleges. Manual Training. Separate Department for Small Boys. For catalogue, address The Secretary. Bel A. t-estlnptea Mo. NEBRASKA WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY rnrriai nv T. Tm TUT. AKTS Graduates of accredited schools are admit ted to thla department without examination. Leads to A. H. degree, with high grade Instruction, reasonable expense, In a community and school whose nor inal, social and llterarv opportunities and surroundings are the best. Information regarding this department, or Tha Teachers' College, The AoademT, Tha School of Art, Tha School of Commaree, Tha Sohool of Bapraa alon and Oratory, Tha CnaarTatory of Music or any other department will r.e furnished upon application io tm negiairur, umV,. x . nn. . .- . - Western Militory Academy VvX?&$on Ideal location near 8t. Louis. 11 modern buildings. Fire proof Barracks. Kxoep. tlonally strong academic and military departments. Highest accredited eollSge rala tlona. Rated Ciaas "A" by War Department. Athletics eiv ouraged. Waiting list annu ally. Immediate application advlaable. COIi. AX.BBBT M. JACBSOM. A. Supt, yOU'LL find, when you j come to select a school j for your boy that Racine Col'ieg? I offers a number of advantage ; that are unusual. Our booklet "The right school for your boy," and our catalogue will give you interesting information. Ask for them. Racine College Racine. Wig. WHAT STCHCOL Information concerning th ad vantages, rates, extent of cur riculum and other data about th beat schools and college can b obtained from the School and College Inlormatioo Bureau of (be Omaha Bee All Information absolutely fr and imparl lal Catalosu of any particular school cheerfully fur Dished upon request. 1200 STUDENTS YEiRLY TBhat all i'ommHl B r n c b , Book 4-pinj it'mrihaDtf Tf pfwntlna Kngli'b. Gl rtrvir. 11 rrphr. Official I Tratnliiff t -ti'to.U .T K- H. TelB'P ItOJ HanMIVtT lPrtr.l. NiT work l VJ board Wrltt..dTf-rbi STOP STAMMERING : , (.ur rmp).ui inn p.rm.nenily " 1 jsi stubborn esses or iitntnanoi I CAN CURE YOU My spwislly It 01ts Slid spew W mrs tall to cuts Mr mihoa is m "c rss.tul in Iks woris No r.llure In IS )'" uit W'rltd s ow tor iisrtu-ulsis. i g Vsuftin. Irs . rnsiliuls tor jtuiMusrsri. 410 ill hsinss Bis . Omstis. Nsb. btBcela, Jr. A big i'tsd Srnol 64srl 0 a siruus ts U'lr ss! prsr'ng tor t&s tMl (.stolons letl Inrtllot Ks tiesns ln Lincoln. rtll ootnltt GOOD MSITI0NS A li. AIT Oil ' 1- wto. tor kttuiirui c.it- '"s ? w. M Boost int., GIAPliAlU 10-1 P Suoou Uncoia. ta. aTtfiiiTl-"-1 D L K that is NOT "Mow long has It been. 4 . people write it?" but "WHAT CAN 'I SaVaalsal 1 gsrm. itts Oms h. arroondinfls, happy horn III. domestic, aclenee and domestic art. Native French and German teachers. Exceptional advantages Is mnslc and art. r i The Dishoo of Nebraska. , rrlnolpal. Frealdent Baaid ef Trttrteag. rviilit n py Academy Into manly men. Home lire "rauinri Home life combined i.ountiful minnui and elevating aur roundinss. h large and able faculty, clean and Equal to a Course in a School of Agriculture . Read the Twentieth Cen tury Farmer from week io week an up-to-dat agricultural Journal that keeps In touoh with th moat scientific methods and latest experiments. Aadrs TWIHTIIH CEWTVBT rA-BMXB, Omaha. Only One Dollar a Year. FOREST PARK Xrogr. riaao. htockhoff Piano. f 9th Tear. CoUg aad Ooller Prepartory. Certificate admit to WelleSlay, Hmti I Vanaar and Mt Holyok. 24 Instructors" Gymnasium Bxpres UNIVERSITY slon. prompt applica tion necessary Board and tuition S26M3I6. kttl. ABBA IBBBD OAXBBra, Pr't T. I.OU1B. MO. COTNER UNIVERSITY. KpeeUI advantagea offeied to Oolleglat, Ministerial. Medical, Normal, Academy, Music, Kloeulion, Art and Buslnea stu dents, flood equipment. 8tat Teachers' fertlfh ates granted Normal graduate. William I'rlnc Aylaworlh, Chancellor Catalogue and Art Souvenir Free. Add rent lept. "J." Ootnsr Unlrsrslty, Batkaa (LUesta), MfTCir Domestic Science, Art, Expressioa. Special Course. Vonnal Course lur Tts ii.rs. Full Courses leading to Diplomas Tb Hest Instruction. Besonabl Rat Healtblul and Helpful College burroundluga. j Woman UHete, Bi 21 Jackil.. M. flNC0lv 'BUSINESS COLLZGE vsutsgei. N. soloont at Llsculn ' uO asotiu Isi'rssr. Holdcrtof sur il00Ut COSMMnS lS SM tttuSOoSS. tor srofportut sntl got full lalsnssooa. LIMOOLM BUINIa OOLLf CI N. IS IS tiroti, LM.lt, W ..Watts A COLLEGE m ITS F3m EDUCATION l'-!HJi!H roe PeSojIM OWOroos II I ,4 I , I li i " i: !i '! ill rwruT U: