J Hie ctma i i a Daily Her FOI.Nr'KD Br KDWAHD ROSEWATER VICTOIl ItOShW'AThK. KDITOR. r.ntered at On.alu class matter. postoffice aa second- tkhm.s or st. nscnirTioN. iv,v w (wiiiioui sundew on year, ti o oj nee ami muidav. on ear .) l KLIVKfU.lt BT CARRIER I'ally He tin. ludlng Sunday), per f''k..li I'ally He tKiiiiont Sliimls' t. per ek..li)o Kienlng Bee (without flu. day), per ett 'k :venln Hee. (wuh Sunday), per week.. 10c r-iindav H. one yean r-aturday Hee, on year 14 Address all complaint of Irregularltlei l.l ellv cry to City Circulation UepartmanU OFFICES) Omaha -The He Hulldlrig. South Omaha Twenty-fourth and N. Council Bluffs-1 K.ott street. Lincoln --Ms Little Hulldlr-. Chicago- Marquette Building. New Vnrk- ti.w.ma iini.iurs N.n 11 tv.i iiijiiy-uiia rMreer. Washington-;l'S Fourteenth Rtreel, N. W. CORK KSPONDENCE Communication relating io news and edi torial matter should be addressed: Omaha Hee, Editorial I epartnien. Remit by draft exnrc., or no.tat order rabie to The Fe Publishing Company, (inly 2-cent stamps received In payment of ruall accounts. Personal checks, execot on Omaha or raetern exchangee, not accepted. STATEMENT- OF CIRCULATION. Plate of Nebraska, IKtugta County, as : 'ieorge B Tsscliuck. treaaurer of The, H"e Publishing Companr. being duly 'rn, says that the actual number of full and roniDX conlea of The Dally. Jwornlng. Kvenuia and Sunday Bee printed .iiK ins mr mi n or a iiviiui iia. w . n follows 3,C0 t 41,O0 41,470 41330 t 41,770 41,640 7 41.70 t 30,900 41.S30 10 41,990 11 41.MO 12 41,870 11 49,080 14 41,430 IS 40,000 1( 41,(50 Total Returned copies.. 17. , It. , It. . 10.. 11. . 22.. :s. . 24.. 41.770 , .43,630 : it'0" 43170 Zi 40,ooo $0 41,910 $1. 43.190 .1,389,410 10,381 Net total 1,27,03 I'ally average 41,399 GEO. E TZSCHLTK. Treasurer. Subscribed In my preesme and sworn to before ma tnla 1st day of September, 190K. M. P WALKER, Notary Public porarllr should hay Th Be mailed to them. Address will ! rka.cd aa .ft. .. req.es.ed. Anyhow, It's good for the shoe maker. The weather man knows bis busi ness, too. New plays of the year are not all fit to be seen. Naturally the audiences are buying tickets for the "are nota." Mr. Taft talks about the tariff as If he never heard of nervousness. That's a man of the kind the people like. While Mars and the comet are trav eling In our neighborhood nothing short of a savant should talk at length. Fa Rourke's boys may not be able to win the jiennank, but they certainly know how to handle the Lincoln team. Minister i.tVu again predicts that war will be abolished. Back talk to Japan is a privilege China yearns to try. President Taft will And the Omaha people good-natured even if they have been put to some little Inconvenience of late. In rejuvenating the democratic party the Cleveland and Tllden men evidently Inoculated it with Infantile paralysis. Feople are worried over the bank reserve as they were worried over the gold reserve In the late G. Cleveland's Incumbency. Chicago bids defiance to Paris and proposes to set the styles. Will the models be selected on Ashland avenue or the boulevard? A patent flax-puller Is doing the work In Ontario. What a pity the old Scotch-Irish near Belfast did not have it a hundred years ago. At the North Pole It is always 12 o'clock and nobody Is late for school or church. It was located just In time for the new school year. The Balllnger-Uiavls exchange of views lasted such a short time that It Is hardly rememberd as an incident. It was a spark or a flash and, at lest, It Is gone. Los Angeles wishes another state which will separate it from San Fran cisco, but there Is no population which Ma run state on climate and trading real estate. Julia Marlowe is working on a new version of Cleopatra's character. The old one was strong enough, though some say that she bad not enough lo be seen. Omaha owes another debt of grati tude to President Taft. "Hoss Tom" has had the streets cleaned, which otherwise might not have happened until election time. HrysB ran up against free raw ma terials too hard aud unhinged his con science. A revised edition of the new model plank may be issued after a talk with Senator Ballev. After long reflection one man says that Cook had no iik to lie about reaching the pole, while Peary did. It proves nothing, but will do for talk at the breakfast table. The Atlanta Constitution and other southern papers are debating with J. J. Hill. Hut was not Mr. Mill talking bout wheat? He aldiioiuiiig about tried hatu and corn brewj High Cost of Meat. In Omaha and the other packing renters the ranges of high live stork prices are fairly well understood, but it la a bin subject and all explanation berome Interesting. A Texaa ranchman vlnltlnn In New England baa given out I Intervlewa w hich have, set the writers at work. His view la that the under production ofh eef cattle, caused by cutting tip the ranches Into farms, la one main cause, and that the other Is the abnormal consumption of meat due to the country's prosperity. These are not bad guesses, but are not the whole of the aubject. They do not explain the high prices of hogs and pork, which are In part produced ! bv the difficult? of ralnlnz hnpa when diseases ravage the herds so often. After all, however, the dominating cause Is the unceasing increase of mouths to he fed. The west needs beef . nJ P'" 88 much S the east. The south Is buying more every rear. The , , . . . . . . " pacKing industry wnne it has utilized meat products beyond the Imagination of fifty years ago has taught not only this country but the world to pro vision itself liberally with meat. Fresh meat Is a small part of the total. Oan- , rjP( and prepared meat Is used : ii y i in- ion in tne armies or Europe, '"'35?Q blch once were glad to feed on vege 4l!80 I tBR,p articles. Even Japanese coimnla- l,8io I sarlats are using meat rations. The 4i,g30jncw navies and heavily manned ships a'aiio'are liasR'nft ov navy beuns and enlaig- ing the meat allowance. In our country more population ! stands fur more meat. Aliens who ' rareIy tasted meat in Europe eat it freely here. Natives, who relied on ham and bacon have turned to high priced cuts of beef and to fresh pork. The changes of the last twenty-five years have all been toward meat con sumption. The prosperity of the McKlnley period taught habits of liv ing hard to give up and the present active era. following a vast increase of population, presses heavily on the meat supply. What will be the end cannot be foreseen, but, as far as any Investigator can calculate, the prices of beef and pork will be high for a long period. Money Rates. Money prices are to those who pro fessionally deal In that apparently mysterious commodity as simple as the price of corn and cotton. A Wall street paper says that money looks easy now, but we are two years from the panic of 1907, and, unless all re corded history counts for nothing, we are near the end of the cheap money period. This opinion is predicted on the stated rule that after great panics, es pecially those which are felt with more or less effect in all the world's markets, money becomes very easy and remains so for a long time. In the panic of 1873, after the rate had touched 9 per cent in November, it bad fallen to 2 4 by June. In the late panic money could not be obtained at any price for a time, but it has been steady lately at 2 4 per cent. People quickly forget and they now talk as If the price could never change. The Wall street paper utters the caution that conditions after these periods of easy money change with surprising rapidity. It ts generally in the late autumn the unlendable surplus seems suddenly to have disappeared. The market realizes that its calculations must be based on an entirely new set of figures. One authority does not know more than another or see much further, but It is not unprofitable to note the dicta of these organs of the stock market. If money is on the verge of tightness the people, even those who have not much cash, ought to know the signs and gov ern themselves with prudence. Toward a Central Bank. Officials of the treasury are con vinced that both the public and the country banks have laid aside most of their prejudice against the central bank Idea. These officials, looking at the movements of opinion merely aa information in the line of their duty, think that the long-sustained political hostility to a central bank, dating from Jackson's battle with Middle and' his bank has nearly passed away. The position of the president, which Is not a demand, but a thoughtful . willing ness to consider the recommendation If presented by the monetary commis sion, has had a profound effect on general opinion. As the old democrats learn that the central bank lda of today has little resemblance to the Blddle bank that Jackson destroyed, they forget any prejudice resting on the ground of political consistency. The Aldrlch plan contemplates only a bank of Issue which will be free of Wall street Influence and separated from the politics of political machines. If this separation fron: Wall street tnd the machines seems difficult, the country feels that for the present It tan trust President Taft and can await the full development of the com mission's plan. If the national bank ers, somewhat reluctant and highly critical, could project at their conven tion no serious reason for hostility, the people feel that they are not called upon to sound a call to battle. Speaker Cannon's refusal to indorse the idea is ascribed rather to his iettled objection to violent changes in the money system than to a positive intention of opposit'dn. His appoint ment of Vreelaud is not consistent with a bitter personal opposition. In a parliamentary sense, Vreeland Is as powerful as Aldrlch. While Cannon is not willing to be considered a pre- ponent of a right-angled, abrupt monetary change, he Is willing he Is willing that I the maiorlty shall take that, course. If the president and tha other leaders base decided on the pollcj and the TI1K liKK: OMAHA. TIKSDAV. NKPTK.MHKI 21, IIHIO. opinion of the voters does not encour age hostility. There Is evidently at this moment a definite, if not Irrevocable movement toward a central bank, to escape the dangers of an Inelastic currency and the costliness of uncertainty In the price of money. "Embetzlement of Power." In some of his recent speeches Mr. Bryan has again bee a using a favorite expression, "Embezzlement of Power," with which he characterizes the repu diation by any public officer of the pledges made In order to secure the votes necessary to elect him. Nobody should defend deceit and double deal ing, and the acquisition of official power by fraud may properly be likened to embezzlement. But is this ranch different from the attempt to secure official power by masquerading In a party livery that belongs to someone else. How about the theft of a party name and the mis branding of candidates for office in or der to fool people Into giving votes, which could never be gotten traveling under their own cognomen? To go back only one year, what about the embezzlement by Mr. Bryan's democratic presidential elec tors In Nebraska in 1908 of the popu list name, and their Invasion of the official ballot under the populist label, .un.. i c.ni or their gross earnings, as compared Everyone knows that except for lliis,v,itli only a quartet of that percentage flagrant fraud the Pryanlte preslden-1 1"""1 b.v British railways. tial electors In Nebraska would have lost 15,000 to 20,000 votes that would i have gone to Tom Watson had lie not been thus frozen out, and that In the ! ,hH "'' ",le tok have the keenest in electoral college Nebraska would have i ,P""', '" ','s',oveiy of the pole, of stnvod to iho r.n..kit...n i i. . '"" ",e iHirsei'.v lots have always a sa mm. 1 X. I'UUIil Oil UIUI11U, 11 II Is an "embezzlement of power" to climb into office on false representa tion, what should we call the capture of the votes of eight presidential elec tors by the theft of the populist name? It might be fruitless to go again Into this dead history were the democrats In Nebraska not nt this very moment trying to repeat the Biyanlto perfor- i mance of 190N just recalled. In order to secure populist votea by fraud and deception the nominees on the demo cratic state ticket asking for election this fall have, each and every one of them (l..l ... .1 n, . i.... ..or,. ul,oi wiry uuniaie with the populist party. Their names ! are to go on the official ballot, not only as democrats, but also as DoDulists. al- though they have never been enlisted In the populist party, and last fall openly opposed the populist presiden tial nominee. If to make a pledge never lnteuded to be carried out, and to repudiate it at the first opportunity, j contains the mora,. Ingredient of em- bezzlement of power, for a notorious j democrat to feign being a populist in j Order to Steal populist votes presents I the same moral element of embezzle- ment. The expert statisticians of the ten 8U8 office profess to be seriously con cerned as to what became of the de- i scendants of these worthy inhabitants of colonial days. If we were to make a rash guess we would say that the census of 1790 was grossly padded and that the census enumerators em ployed their wits to concoct plausible names with which to fill In the sched- j ules and collect their per capita. j .. I The Custer county rival of the Wright brothers, Curt ins and other record-rtakers is having tough luck with his flying machine, but the best of good fortune in bis lighting ap paratus. So far he holds the record for long distance drops, and it may be in time he will learn to go up as grace fully as he can come down. Omaha is no place for mob violence, and this must be generally understood. The fact that no union men were en gaged in the unseemly demonstrations of Sunday is to their credit, and it will be still more to their credit If they manage so as to prevept any further outbreaks. Bailey breaks clear through the "Tariff Battle-Line" when he says that free raw material and a tariff for rev enue only are not consistent. With out admitting the protection principle, raw material must pay its share of taxes. A man is not ranked as a really great financier unless, like Russell Sage and E. H. Harriman, his will holds the bulk of his property together for his wife. How could a superior mind ever have thought of anything else? The Omaha double-ender is printing labored editorials discussing the Bal linger case, but has not as yet given its readers the text of the president's letter In regard to the controversy. Why this discrimination? i - Local Christianity seems to be the sort, that overcomes small difficulties easily. The churches Sunday were filled with worshipers, who felt suffi cient interest In the future to overlook the present. Peary and Cook are only precur sors of Hudson and Yen azzano. New York has left the polar fellows in the "lout" department, and gone to war over the first man to sail the Hudson i river. " "t-I Judge (iaynor is the Ta mmanv 1 i c.noice tor mayor, w nat a Mmple prob lem U presented by our western way of nominating somebody and sticking ' to mm until time to vine. " When a friend of a principal t hese i days enters a dispute lie always begins i bv savlne that the other fellou. ciod 1 the main issue j havitlP U HlEfraii,.liiina Maryland v. ,n i amendment as Its foremost issue this year, President Taft steps In with the opinion thst the effort Is vicious. Tht scolding will not break off the pleasant relations between the president and his democratic census supervisors In the soutL:. t.reat Expectations pollen'. Washington Post. The howls of foreign countries over the new tariff law make It look as If they had expected an enactment for the gayety of nations. Hitch In the Hope. Washington fleiald. After all. It is not so much a question of whether there Is glory enough for two. apparently, as It Is whether there Is story enough for two. i ealeced M raters. Chicago News. Mr. Bryan seldom speaks now of the ' mystery of 1!." Rrlng able to see It in perspective, he probably discovers that there la nothing mysterious about it. Road to the Ton of the Mill. Chicago Itrcortl-Heiald. Judge Lovett Is another of the many Aim iito . .!. A . .. start In Vi e r-nen i i I . V ,hr orM- Mr- H't,v rM,n' holdings ' "J T 1b,",ln"!' b' P""hl"h.ve been estimated at $40,000,000. those of thejlt,,,dlrs of the doors in lawyers' f-Ml. Prrlck Courtland PenflHd, wll0 l"' - a Anne Welghtman of Philadelphia, at ItiMim fr mprnvenient. New York Tiibune American railways can boast that the! fastest ,og dtstance tta.n In the wr,d j I ' C"ntry but there Is still room i . ' """" . nl; . "m'fM aml ",U" ,es ' !".! men jri .'a per:in.leert it l n..lt A.iki. ..... ,u. t.- Klndlnar of Santa Claos Land. Haltlniure Anieilcan. It Mfi.mu In l-itti-a t a ....It.- .!.. i - ' ..m.c t.-.-i, muii,- utrimuhra known that Santa Clans lives in tin; Uieen luml t.r I.apland or some of those fat-off places. The Utile geographers have had the profounrlrat faith in the nmbltubillty of the farthest polar regions. They have so frequently pictured the snow farles, the asslstnnis of Santa Clans, at work with this indefatigable toiler in hi' snow shops that they arc quite prparrd not only to believe that he lives at the pole, hut that he has all along lived there under the American flag. Concerning: the Eskimo. SI. l.ouis Republic. The Eskimo is affable, brave and loval. V" "T"" " lan,UB'rr ,, n,"n 18 hi' .... .. on.. I'iiiiiimi- people OU ano nBS , certain rudimentary ideas of a warm and babitahle heaven and a cold and cheerless bell. And in knowledge of ways and means to right cold. Ice and darkness and wrest sursiBtcncc from a frozen desert he k-sds all other children of th North and South.' Rti he lixes his life in a realm of Ideas Incalculably remote from civilisation. I Peary tells us of a tr ibe of loss than loo ne"np wno- cllt tt from their fellows for "veral Kerations and out of the track TlXlr worid-a world of bi-rg snd floe, of naked rock and mighty glacier, of wheeling stars arK' 'livering aurora, of immeasurable. "ac,IPS of lc "ow. all existing for I mr i inpri.N oi a race or a retv score ) human beings in a few oglooa of utoncs ! nd ice. NARROW VIEW OF BtNNKK. Opposition to Postal' Savings Ranks Distinctly ietflsh. Chicago News. The time to enact portal savings bank legislation is at the coming session of con gress. The agitation against the postal sav ings system, which the banker in their convention v- iI.ai- I. a... I a slstently, has little enough In the way "t sound argument to give It effectiveness. It i8 "lost absurd, as the president points out. to represent that evils to the people would result from this system when over the Canadian border it has been In operation for years and the results have been uni formly good. Surely the people ought to Bupport the president heartily In hla ef forts to secure for them the privilege of depositing conveniently and with abso lute safety small sums at any postoffice in the United States. While condemning postal savings banks and declaring unsafe and unwise President Taft's views with respect to the use of deposits in them, the bankers' convention got into a row over its legislative commit tee's tecoinnietidatioit of savings depart ments in national banks, with special se curity for their deposits. So it recom mended no legislation to improve existing cjnditlons with respect to the receiving and safeguarding of small deposits. Its at titude on this subject Is distinctly unen lightened and narrow. Congress should look to the facts, and not to the vocalized prejudices of men who insist that the people of the nation shall deposit their money in existing banking institutions or nowhere. A UAMiEKOl It BOOSTKH. Suppose the Hush to the Farm De populated the t itle. What Then f Pittsburg Dispatch. If Secretary Wilson Is allowed to stay In the Department of Agriculture much longer grass will be growing on the main streets of the big cities and the small ones. too. The exodus from th cities and the rush to the farm is Inevitable unless something Is done to stop the press agent of prosperity in the Department of Agri culture. W have all read about the farmers in the west and their automobiles and grand pianos, and most of us have dismissed the tale as bucolic humor. But whn Secre tary Wilson Is asked on his return from the woat If the farmers are really invest ing such large sums .in automobiles he rises with uplifted hand and sweara "there Is too much truth in it. The farmers are out of debt, have money in their pockets and big crops continue to com on. Why, folks in the east do not know nhat luxuries are, ihey must go west lo find out." In time this official assertion of bulging ptospeilty and lalh luxury on the farm Is bound to get on the nerves of the urban population. Some city Cook or Peary will ! go west to discover If these things ar so. and if they are look out for the back-to- the-fartn movement becoming nrally. Secretary Wilson tanipede. ought to moderate his xeal. If he succeeds In drain ing the cities to furnish labor for th farmers how are the farmra . m.. luxuries now m.d. i-..? la aie no big city populations to pay high prices for food ho long Is the farmers' prosperity going to last? I.et him. instead us l'"'i,"'"' v.iih h'8 rural friends to keeP ,ne ' ost l,f livin here farmer and city resident can both get a shaie of the luxuries The prospeitly of , one la the prosperity of both, and any such !..... ino-sided di-strittution as Ire leix'lis IS bound lo rean one ot the o;hrr. Around New York lppla ea th ourraai f 1.1 f aa aja la th Orat Amartoaa Metropolis from Day to Say. The fortune of Edward II Harrlman. be queathed without restriction to his wife. Maty V. Harrlman. Is variously estimated at from Kd.OOQ.MO to HOO.OU) 000. One of the Wall street buletin services announced that It had authority for saying that the estate came within these figures. Others point to the report which Mr. Harrlman sub mitted on June SO. 1KB, to the Interstate Commerce commission in which he said he owned outright or held as trustee rail toad securities approximately in their present market value ,192.000.000. and de duced from thst that his personal hold ings. Including his residence In New Tork City and Atden, his bank stocks and his Industrial securities, would teach the value of ab nit I5i.ono.ono. Another statement, said to be authorltlve. put the value of the esinte between rJO.000.Ono to $26,000,000. On the latter figures the Inheritance tax will be between $300,000 and $250,080. If the estate measures up to the first stimate, Mrs. Harrlman Is one of the wealthiest women , ise wO.OOO and those of Mr, .i.il Russell Page ,,, . . . . , , . th?Z T. """V" V!T .A ' f " .of ' lldson.Kulton celebration, annear. i ,0 a new record In such matters. t ' ' 1 ' ' ...... iii.-. f-ajn 1 1 1 n I . v 1 - Ing Post, that late purchasers will be compelled to expend ns much for a scat in the best location as for a subscription to grand opera. It is Impossible to esti mate fully at this time the cost of provld i ing accommodations to view the parade, oui. up to date, conservative calculations place the expenditure at $,i00.000. This esti mate Is exclusive of the arrangements which are being made by the managers of the celebration, the Hudson-Fulton cele bration committee, andS the municipal authorities. Owners of private residences and business property are being besieged by professional ticket speculators, adver tising concerns, and others with an eye to reaping a harvest from the multitudes expected to flock into the city. In some instances txttemely high prices have been paid for the privilege of erecting stands in ironi or dwellings on Fifth avenue and oincr lavored streets, although in other cases similar propositions were refused. Apartments at $-.000 ,,. arf an. nounced In one of New York's latest houa.s of multiple dwellings. Mote significant than the rental inrm.seives. says ..u.iu. rs tne raet that they are set forth quite casually. The man may happen in tomorrow who find the $22,000 suite exactly what he wants. He . a man one may meet anywhere on the street today. The yesterday Is not many years past when .f," a" exc'Ptlo"-' being and when a 1.000 apartment would have bcn built only of his special order-not on the land lord's chance of his appearance. There are twenty-four rooms in this $J2.000 -uite-a different one, if the tenant choose for each hours meditations In a long day. There ate nine bathrooms, as though it were as sumed that cleanliness is inevitably next to money-godllness. For an ultra-costlv hired dwelling ultra-modern luxuries must be provided above modern conveniences Says a student of home conditions in this city: "Family desertion is decidedly on the increase in Urcater New York. "This is the testimony given by the char Hies department both -In Manhattan and Brooklyn, and is borne out by the exper ience of district visitors of the organized private charities. "While conceited and effective efforts have been made to reduce infant mortality to combat the ravages of tuberculosis, and to extend means of mote comfort in the homes of the poor, no steps have been taken to rout out the growing evil of wife abandonment." These allegations were borne out by one days recent record. Flfty-five appllca tlons were made In eight homes In Man hattan alone, for arrests of husbands who have run away or in other ways refused to contribute to the support of their fam ilies. It is estimated that where one wife makes a complaint, there ate ten who make no move except to bravely bu. kle down for the support of themselves and their chil dren. New York Is to have a new municipal building which is to be a departure from the usual style of such buildings. The new structure Is to be of the skyscraper class, the height being feet, which is suf ficient for forty stories. Ther will bd only twenty-five stories in the main build ing, however, and ten In the tower. The foundation will gu down 128 feet below Park Row, which is enough lo provide for a pretty good sized building Itself. The building Is to be erected on a lot having an area of 44.O0O square feet. HAS NO DKMMIONN. Democratic Tariff Heformer Stamped hj a Record. Pittsburg Dispatch. Judging from Mr. Bryan's speech in Texaa. that gentleman has no delusions about the democrats carrying ihe next house. Both the Nebraskan and the New York organisers ar agreed that the tariff la their next issue, but Mr. Bryan sees that whatever chance his party might have had for victory on that plank has been sacrificed by the action of the parly's rep resentatives In congress when the tariff legislation was before them. If all the democrat in the house and senate, Mr. Bryan plaintively observes, had voted against every Increase and for every proposed decrease "we might have mad our fight next year upon the party's rec ord." But whatever fight they make will, on the contrary, have to b made against that record. His proposal that th party declare for a material reduction la imprac ticable In view of what the party's repre sentatives actually did. Nor can It be ex pected that th tariff democrats In the constituencies represented by the tariff voting representatives will go along on such a platform. It may be adopted as a gehral statement of party policy, but It will be impotent and valueless then put to the test of votes. And the voter will not easily forget the party's tecoid no matter what the parly's platfotm say." may Brevity of Harrlman' Hill. St. l.ouis tilobe-nemocrai. Mr. Harrlman s will Has brief, as well became the wisdom of a man with a good wife who left his entire estare In her hands. The absence of th good wives may account for the verbosity and complexity of many millionaires wills. YourNerves Atk your doctor if alcoholic tiimulontt ar not often very duastrout when given lo ntrvout people, lie will tell you why. f r"iV.V FT? M Tr Ti fcMfft 'Mill llfi J- Tber are two n fei good lessons why yon should trad at th grocery stores nersonstlr brand. He guarantees Its superior HQ CO and c r. where the Taltr-Ho Biga haag. 1st. Becaus that la where TallfH CfY is sold. 2d. Becaus that Is wher the best of all g rue riles ar sold, at reaaoa able price. Tmlh'ff Cff makes th tnoet delicious tirp of coffee yoa erer draak. Mr. C. F. Blaake, President of th C. F. Blsnke Tea snd Coflee Co. ' of M. Louis, who chief aim In life la the attainment of coffee perlec tloa, personstlr snperlsea the selection, testlof and blending of this WW ' wmm Here's a good nourishing meal for 5 cents. EMM Biscuit with half pint of milk, a little fruit and a cup of coffee. Delicious and strengthening. Try it. PERSONAL NOTES. Halleys comet is said to be scooting along at the rate of 4.000.000 miles a day. This gait should keep out of reach of Joy riders and aviators. The great-granddaughter of Itobert Ful ton. Mrs. Alice Crary Sutcllffe, has writ ten the story of "Robert Fulton and the Clermont. " and the Century company will publish the volume. St. Paul's eplsile to local bakers com mands thai each loaf of bread he covered with oil paper. Arc and piety Induces great care in selecting material for the Interior department. Callfornlans complain that after the tar iff placed a heaping spoonful of sugar on their lemons, railroad freight ssenls got together and swiped one-third of the Juice. Both producera and railroaders agree that the consumer wilt get the lemon event ually. A cable message has been received In New York announcing the death In Jeru salem of Mrs. Angelina Ensign Newman, widow of Bishop John P. Newman of the Methodist church, who was widely known as General Oram's pastor and formerly a resident of Omaha. "Marse Henry" Watterson Is to write some letters from Paris to the Louisville Courier-Journal soon. William Allen White has Just concluded a splendid series of Parisian epistles, but as he declared that he Invariably retired at S:S0 in the evening while over there, there are still a lot of things left for "Marse Henry" to tell, of course. TEW (KNTS FOR RKGISTRY. created Charge Contrary to I'abllc Policy. Brooklyn Eagle. An order has been signed by Postmaster General Hitchcock raising the ;fee for registering a letter or a parkage from 8 to 10 cents. It la proposed at the .same time to Increase the liability of the government from $U5 to $i0. The excuse for the In crease Is that the reglatrv department has been run at a lost. We do not tthink that the Increase of liability will be regu.ded by the general public as much of a boon. We do think that the utility of the postoffice as a safe transmitter of valuables will be vastly lessened by the increase In charge. For $0 cents a man can send $100 by express money order. Kight tents is enough for ihe secure transmission of a U bill by registered letter. KxperlmentB In ihe line of increased charges for postal service aie obsolete in neatly every country but our own. The trend is altogether In the opposite direc tion. This trend springs from a whole some appreciation of the fact that, profit able or not. the postoffice is a valuable I servant to the people, who pay deficits as well as regular charges, in the lust analysis. BRIGHT AND BREEZY. The Briton As the old proverb savs. v' know. He lawfs best who lawfs lahst " Th Yankee If that's so, what Rood lauKhers you English must be' Cleveland Leader. "I don't see why moralists call th lime a girl spends at her mirror, lime wasted by vanity." "Isn't it?" "Of course not. Its time of real re flection." Baltimore American She That's Mr. Osborn over there. He married a million. He You don't say. Well, that bests Solomon to a fraizle. Boston Tiauscnpt "Billinger ha some very ancient airs in his new comic opera." "Ancient! Kay. I ll het lie hss gone hack for some of 'em to the time when the morn loir stars sang together." Cleveland Plain liealer. "Yes. I m working on a scheme to remove weeds " "Aha! Hardening?" "No. I'm hoping to many New York Telegram. money-ma king rich idn "Colonel, what would on lo if von hdd i your life to live over again?" "Well, my bo , I'm proud of inv arl record, of course, but sometimes, when I 1 Your nerves must be fed with pure, rich blood, or there w ll be trouble. Poorly fed nerves are weak nerves ; and weak nerves mesn nervousness, neuralgia, besdsches, debility. Weak nerves need good food, fresh sir, and Aver's non-alcoholic Sarsspsrilla. m cu m xmzm drinking qnsllties Lb. Package 1P Net Weight UOC j aX 1 Makes mote cap per pound tbsn sny other 2V coflee because of it uniform strength rich flavor. Less Than One Half Cent A Cup soin oniy st grocery stores ot tne v7o:y:."'' J better class stores where the best A.'f'&Vi-l .v .- I I tory stores which you should patronize regardless of their selling TmllyHm C off 00. west BLiTtE m ami corrn cn. St. Uats, II. S. 1 r t get a twinge In that missing foot of mln. 1 feel that If I had it all to do over niraln. I'd serve my country bv getting an army contract." Houston Post. PLEA OF THE JESTER. T. A. Daly In Catholic Standard. O ye wealthy folk, blessed with a heaped over measure Of bodily comforts, of treasure and gold. If your soula have been stirred for one moment with pleasure By the CHtchea I've sung or" the Jests I have told, Oh, I pray ye, take heed of , What most I'm In need of And loosen the strings of the purses e hold. Olve the best that ye have For the best that I gave. For the gay Merry Andrew you've seen me today Or, remember me. pray. With your gold. O .ye poor ef Ood. hlemed with warm hearts ever throbbloti.. . . With love for a fellow man burdened with cares, If ye sense the soul hunger, the sorrowful sobbing In his merriest Jests, in his liveliest airs, Ye will know i nd take heed of What most lies In need of. Both here and hereafter, wherever h fares. For the sorrow he's known That Is like to your own. When with tears of sweet pity your lashes are dim. lisve remembrance of him In your prn er s. Satisfactory Tailoring Nicoll's Isn't the ordinary sort of tailor ing nor conducted under otdlnaty Ideas of making to measure. We're large buyer of oolens - iskln.t cases often where others buy yards. That's a saving in first cost. A well drilled orgsniratlon of competent cutters and skilled tailors lo look after the details of your orders. That asiua tailoring satisfaction. ro users SB to $12 Suits S25 to S50 7 TAIL WILLIAM JEKHKMH M).tJ. Soo-ll ho. Ifitli St. I FALL HATS Our new shapes in Fall Hats are ready lierc in a wider range of styles than any one Hatter carries. Soft Hats Derby I lats . Silk Hats Opera Hats Hats and Caps, too, for Hoys and Children. BrQwningfting WW& Company Fifteenth and Douglu Stm. OMAHA JT W gf MWfmM-B OR t 01 Pa V J Cot teS M In ! t IB X for I. CIS Jtrt Mo 'n: v$ gr! Hn c nt ret ete off off for bet? A sul cut nut Jit cotf wl (" jee tin n a4 joti n.-: folf M KHii t mi era rod "I wo; vie It lnot t. rt TE J Tt Isf SOU asm paf "Jr If", w hi Fr T' the tho Hi et ll-eo i )roo i ; its) nut rf ? lout the be t tin": SMtf fru! " A ) ti :r, '! it I'If l.it t.'V ; a ! ;'4 i : J s id Pi mi Cot bid! ' Mat Ji thltj Hit A J ;4