THE BEE: OMAHA, FK1DAY, OCTOBER 15, 1909. The Omaha " Daily Bee. FOUNDED BY EDWARD ROSE WATER. VICTOR ROPEWATKR. EDITOR. Kntered at Omaha posiofflc a eoond clsss matter. . TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. rlly He (without Sunday), on yar..$400 Dally Ilea and Sunday, on year 100 DELIVERED BT CARRIER. Pally Re (Including Sunday), per week..Mc I 'ally Bee (without Sundty), per wek...l0o Kvenlng Baa (without Sunday), per week tc Kvenlng ree (with Sunday), per week.. 10c Sunday Cm, one year $2 &0 Saturday Bee, one year 1 w Addreea all complaints of IrregularUtee In delivery to City Circulation Department OFFICE Omaha The Bee Building. South Omaha Twenty-fourth and N. Council Bluffa 15 Scott Street. Llnroln-tfl Lttle Building.' Chlcago-lMS' Marquette Building. New York-Rooma 1101-1101 No. M Waat Thirtv-third Street. Washington Fourteenth Street, ft. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Communication relating to newa and edi torial matter should ba addreased: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit bylrft, exphfi or poatal order payable to The Bea Publishing Company. Only i-cnt U.jnn received In payment of mall aecmrits. Perwnnal check, except on Omaha or eastern exchangee, not accepted. STATEMENT Of CIRCULATION. Slate of N-brsnka Dougia County, as.: Qeoige B. Tsschuck, treasurer of Tha Bea Publishing Company, being duly aworn, aays that tha actual number of iull and complete eoplee of Tha Dally, (ornlng Evening and Sunday Ba printed during the month of September, 1)0. was aa follow; . i i,tro i..... 49,aoo t 4i,no 4.... ...... 4L0. t. . 44 . .3,00 ' ...;, a,io 7 ...,.4iao - awo M-to 10 49400 ll....,..,..41,70 It.. ...40.000 II..... 43440 , .40,000 , .43,700 , .40460 .40,400 .43,40 49,460 44M ........44,040 48,030 4S410 4 Zl . , 21 40,300 17 ;43480 IS 40,070 It 43400 10 41,340 14.... II.... . .43,070 , .. 43.100 Total Returned coplea .1460400 04U Nat total .1466,088 bally average 41,070 OEORQE B. TZSCHUCK. Treaaurar. Subscribed In my presence and aworn to before ma this 10th day of Septem ber lo. M. r. WALKER, (Beal.) . , Notary public - 1 ntaer1b-ra tearlaar (fee eltr tem porarily akoald nave Tata Bea mailed to then. . Andreas will be Will Ig Dunn take it back anl apol oglxe? Will a duck owim? I Minister Wu la finding those Wash nlgton spirit a linguistic Int. The polite, but firm, hand of Knox still holds that door ajar. Mr. "There'll be' a frying of fat if those Cook Esquimaux reach Now York in the summer. The florist who named hla new rose Peary has rachrlatened it Cook. '.'By any other name." Why should It embarrass those opera stars that they landed in New York short oh costumes? , ' ' When Mrs. Mackay argues about a community of interest between the sexes she talks like a trust. ' News that the nation's steel works re tramped with orders .will help swell the -wave) prosperity, . In devising $400,000 to public char- itres. the 'widbw' of Nelson Morris nas .left a praiseworthy memorial. Mr. Taft preserved his "solidarity" with Mr. Knox by-losing ho time In ac cepting the Crane resignation. Nobody has ever questioned the loyalty of V.'J Thompson to the republican party, -WotlWira4: ' f ;- ' Oh, Jwo 'don't know about that. , A member of the Jesse James band has married an actress. He could not stand his retirement from the melo drama. ; Croakers view with fresh dismay the official reports showing the dirt flying fi.itor each month at the Pan am a canal. i , . i If Kansas does not soon settle it prolonged, litigation over the cream Tate case, it will have been churned Into butter. Too bad, Mrs. Caudle isn't alive to enjoy the new that curtains will be cheapen Vhn the new tariff gets down to busings. 4 : ' Texan; rnnthers will try to Introduce their famous Angora goat to the pres Ident. There always has to be "butt-in" around. Mark Twain cannot truBt himself to speak further his opinions of Leopold and the Gefffco. Ho might -trespass on Cannon's vocabulary. Mr. Tatt refers to the Oklahoma constitution, as a "zoological garden of cranks. 'sj Now there'll be growls from Guthrie and way stations. The English authoress who rails be cause in her opinion "marriage is only a trade" leaves her readers, to guess who gets the better of the bargain. The .'possum was bound to come iuio uif .un axter uej ooom me presi dential entertainers gave htm, and bow his' fur is'the feminine fad of the day. It was not very nice of the Barrie corespondent to make a book out the affair. It was bad enough to of be a household rival without becomln as literary one as well. , Is this Ig Duno now cltej for con tempt of the supreme court the lira Jg Dunn - who ' refused to testify In gamblluc ease on the ground that he nightJnocUlnau-r $.". ... .- The Execution of Term. Alfonso' J summary execution of Prof. Ferrer in the face of protests from various European centers, which Included warnings of his own personal doom, shows again the ready fearless ness of the Spanish monarch In handling a desperate situation. His display of courage In pursuing bis pol icy, no matter how determined and dangerous the opposition, was prob ably intended to avert the threatened crisis, though late reports Indicate that the furore is spreading. The ef fort of Franco to make of the affair not her Dreyfus case, the rlotois ap peals from the masses in Rome, the heartrending loyalty of the con demned man's daughter, alike found the king unflinching In offering up the liberal schoolmaster as an example to the Harcelona rioters. Inabtuuch as the sentiment aroused abroad was that of the liberal element, the first uvtural conclusion wodld be that America would share In tho hos tility to the Idea of executing Ferrer, for he was first of all the progressive schoolmaster, and It was Emerson who proclaimed that "every child shall have Its school." But Ferrer was not content to raise the schools of Bpatn to a modern standard. Had he been convicted simply of liberal education for the youth of the land, it Is unlikely that his life would have been for feited; with all his -fearlessness, Al fonso would hardly have dared do that InjnMlce. But Ferrer went further. The opposition which his schooia en countered from church and state cult!-. vated all the inherent revolutionary depths of his nature, and the man who ad begun public life as the private secretary, of. Zorllla, the Spanish re publican leader, developed Into an opt'ii and violent agitator for -oforms which struck at the throne. It was because of this antagonism that he was tried for complicity in the at tempted assassination of the? king.' On that occasion the intervention of the enlightened sentiment of Europe pre vented his summary imprisonment nd his acquittal followed. The trial that led to his execution for his share n inspiring the Barcelona riots was an open courtmartlal, and In the face of the evidence adduced there was no escaping the sentence. He fell a mar tyr to mixed free thought Ideas of lib erty such aa were not entirely con tlstent with American, ideas of Inde pendence, yet liberal Americana will consider him a martyr for all i.hat, as do the free thinkers of .Europe. Now every center of old world un rest Is predicting dire things for the SpanlBh dynasty. The name of the ex ecuted fighting schoolmaster of Spain Is being used as a rallying cry for all the resources of socialism and an archy. Loyal Spain is apprehensive for the monarchy, aware of tho crip pled condition of tho king's forces, already weakened by the drafts of the unpopular Moorish warfare. Alfonso Is in personal peril and his throne faces crisis. However else Ameri cans may bestow their sympathies In tho situation, they cannpt but feel for the English girl -who is his consort, and who, under like conditions, when assassins made her nuptial processloD grim with blood, showed , the world how true a woman sh3;was anl how real a queen. -iv' Japan and the Pacific While the visit of the Japanese financiers, headed by Baron Shlbu sawa, is ostensibly to cultivate com merce between Japan and the United States, that Is an open warning which the baron is reported to have uttered in New York, that . with the develop ment of Manchuria the United States could look for lively .competition with Japan In the wheat and flour trade. Mant-huria is unquestionably one of the most promising granaries in the world, and It Is evident from the baron's admissions that Japan had this in mind when securing such a foothold In that country. Undoubtedly.- too, the -State department has It also In mind In reserving the right to insist that the equal privileges of uatlona be maintained In all China under the open door principle. Shibusawa's oriental remark that his country ac cepts the open door policy, but must Insist on its special rights and prlvl leges as a legacy from the Russian war. is. an Indication of the sort of diplomacy with which Mr. Knox will have to deal when disposing of the treaties now under consideration. The haron Is almost as outspoken as was Mr. Crane, -but not being an official representative of his country he is not trammeled by considerations of diplomacy when he discusses the possibilities of trade rivalry on the Pacific. "As keen commercial nations we may expect such competition," he says, "but in the end It will strengthen the mutuality of interests." From one of Japan's experiences he thinks the United States may learn a lesson, and that is In the matter . of ship subsidies. His comment that while there is criticism among bis peo ple because of the detail of the sub sidy system there Is none against It results Is supplemented by his own opinion that ship subsidies are the one factor in the commercial development IV Damla Inl.rnl In tha T'nltur! P.tatea however, will not accept the baron's philosophy without a question. Ocean commerce was vital to Japan; her limited area and her Isolation aa an Island empire compelled her to go to vxtreme measures to strengthen her position In tho world's affairs and to establish close and direct chan nels of trade. Japan had to get out to the world, whereas the world had to come to America, and still fcs to come here for tho necesal ties of life. When Japan realized her neeos she did not hesitate on either subsidy or war; she had everything to gain, aid If she lost was little the worse for her enterprise. But while the United States may take pleasure In watching Japan's future endeavors, it does not necessarily follow that she needs to copy any of her perform ances, past or prospective. Infantile Paralysis. In many of the states a definite in vestigation of that new terror of the household, Infantile paralysis, is In progress, and the medical profession hopes soon to bo able to combat a dis ease which, though not a new disor der, has only within the last two years become a general menace to tho babies of tho land. As far east as Massachu setts tho State Board of Health Is making a special study of the matter, prompted thereto by the reports of cases In eighty towns of tho common wealth. The Kansas board will use all of its emergency fund If necessary and the governor has offered also one half of his contingent fund to discover effective treatment for the visitation. Similar determination to rout this In sidious foe Is everywhere apparent, and out of the concerted action the profession confidently expects to evolve solution. One of the most promlslngv reports comes from Minnesota, where the state convention of physicians, has received word that a Norwegian Investigator had discovered the poliomyelitis germ. Location of the cause of the disease is the first step toward evolving a cure, and If the report from Norway proves correct It will be one of the best things that every camo out of the north. When facing a situation blindly, household and practitioners alike can not but feel the hopelessness of it. Having a basis for action, however, man's ingenuity Is bound to win. The devotion of the world of medicine to the fight against this enemy of the babies is- of a part with all the history cf this branch of science, and the pub lic In rejoicing over the expected vic tory will not omit honors to the dis coverers of cause and cure. Quick DeliTery. . The very same issue of the Lincoln Star which contains the five-page ad vertisement of the corporation tax de linquents, which tho democratic gov ernor assigned to it as Its share of the publication pie, comes out for all three of the democratic nominees for su preme judge. This Is mighty quick delivery. In deed, if circumstantial evidence were conclusive the natural inference would be that the two were cause and effect, although it might be difficult to say which were cause and which effect. . It follows, of course, that the decla ration of the Lincoln Star, pretended republican and recipient of democratic favor, should be immediately acclaimed by tho democratic dally that absorbed the other half of the pie as a great Daniel come to judgment. Whereas only a short time ago it could not find adjectives strong enough to revile the corporation-ridden Star, the World-Herald now suddenly dis covers that the Star's high-minded patriotism transcends its party loyalty, and that this formerly discredited source pf advice and inspiration has become an oracle entitled to the im plicit obedience of all "progressive republicans. This same democratic World-Herald some years ago made a deal with the republican state committee for the sale of two columns of space on its edi torial page dally for ten days to op pose the candidates of Its own party, and it lived up to the agreement, al though it took a court order to secure specific performance of the written contract. No wonder the World- Herald admires and praises- the Lin coin Star for promptly delivering the goods without litigation. The report of the receiver under takes to make out that the bankrupt Hanson cafe and restaurant could never have been operated at a profit, even If the plice and Its fixtures aud equipment were obtained for nothing and rent free. - That, however, does not follow at all. Many a successful business has been built up that lost money steadily at the start and until It had become firmly established. Bus iness failure results as often from lack of sufficient capital to survive the Ini tlal period as it does from mistakes of niriiageinent. The World-Herald admits that Mr Bryan in advocating the federal licens ing of corporations doing business out side of the state in which they are in corporated uses the same arguments which It denounces when urged In sup nort of federal incorporation. The as sumption that federal incorporation would nullify state laws regulating the transaction of business within the state any more than would federal 11 cense Is entirely unwarranted, al though It may be moot question. Proud women of Chicago are pa radlng their husbands on show In i prize contest, but among tho points on which the awards 4 re baod we fall to find mention of ability to bring home Ma pay envelope untouched or willingness to tend the babies on sum mer nights or the furnace on winter mornings. Evidently tho managers of the prize husband show are in the newly-wed clash. If the antl-salooq sleuths have the evidence as they say they have to put a lot of liquor dealers out of business, what are they ' waiting for? Why don't they file their complaints, secure convictions and call on the police board to revoke the license? One poor devil had his license revoked early in .the game, and evidence enough to convict will send after him any others caught violating tho t o'clock closing law. It goes without raying that tho cam paign to land three nonpartisan demo cratic judges on the supreme bench this year will be followed up by an other similar campaign to land three more nonpartisan democratic judges next time. It Is a trifle early to discuss the question of charter versus license for the regulation of Interstate commerce corporations. That will como later, and will disclose the fact that the "abyssmal ignorance" It not all on one side. The Omaha Real Estate exchange is to visit Kansas City on invitation from the Kansas City real estate men. Omaha can learn something from Kan sas City, and so can Kansas City learn something from Omaha. Orover Cleveland's children are to bo placed at school In Switzerland, and Mr. Bryan's grandchildren are to be placed, at school in Germany. That ought to even up between thjse two great democrats. Official report that tho .troops In Alaska have the best -health in the United States army will Inspire ex cuse for another voyage for tho hypochondriacs, who have tried all otiier resorts. Neither firewater nor fireworks will be permitted while the two presidents are at Ciudad Juarez. This, however, will not Interfere with the flow of dry wit nor the display of oratorical pyro technics. Hungarian aristocracy Is shocked because Gladys Vanderbllt, Countess Szechenyi, has bought a sawmill. The countess may have found that even palace dolls are stuffed with sawdust. And now they say that Gaynor not only favored race track gambling, but actually encouraged betting on golf. How the bogey of a man's past will rise when he runs for office. Maine's census, showing an Invest ment of $40,000,000 in tho summer resort business, proves that one state has cultivated a natural resource thor oughly. It will be noticed that It was not un til after he had seen J. P. Morgan that Mr. Hill announced ho would not ex tend his Oregon lines into California. Same" Old .Starr. New 'York Herald. Extract from, the log of the Halt Moon recording the arrival from shore of an ex ploring party bringing "two dozen of fowls and somcitggs, whereof a few were good," . auggeas .ithat thluga- haven't changed In 80S years. Whither t Sooth la Drifting-. , Washington -Herald. Possession of a corkscrew has not yet been made presumptive evidence of Intent to commit a felony in Alabama, but if you think. It nonsense to suspect that it may be, you have not been reading the late news from down south that's all. Consumer Gete Hla. New . York World. Congress raised the duty on lemons to 'heln tha California ffrnwr ' xrA u - railroads have raised th' freight rate on lemons from sea to sea. That Is the way It works. The railroads sret the tnnn the produoer gets, healthful, open-air labor, the consumer gets the lemon. Where the Jeer Originated. New York Tribune. In Impeaching ' the IntelliKence and nm. pactty of democratic national convention Senator Bailey may have had in mind th awe-stricken members of the committee on resolution at Denver whlcji listened to Mr. Hobson's prediction of an immediate Jap anese Invasion with open-mouthed credul ity. TAFT DRAWS A DISTINCTION. The Line Between the Carrier and the Goods Carried. Minneapolis Journal. President Taft draws a distinction which never occurred to hi predecessor, and which may prove the Bearchllnht to rive the obscurity that Invests the lntsrlr.wi questions of railways and interstate com merce. The Sherman anti-trust law. which ! agree needs amendment, extends its pro motion over railways and industries alike. President Taft wquld exempt not only labor unions, but also railwaya from the applica tion of the Sherman act. He would con fide the regulation of railwaya to an ad ministrative and a judiciary body, while the regulation of Interstate Industries would be confided to a different body. A common carrier Is one thing. An In dustry that ship over, the common carrtei la another. Deoauxe an Industry that is a monopoly or that exhibits a tendency to become a monopoly, requires to be re strained, supplies no reason for prohibiting combination among" railwaya. In other words that which invites restraint or regu lation In railways is not the same as that which invites restraint or regulation In In dustrial corporations. When the distinction Is stated, It seems simple. ' Why should .common carriers not con solidate? Tho evils we suffer from rail waya do not proceed from their consolida tions. Indeed, such evils can be more easily remedied by government when com mitted by the simplified consolidation, than when dispersed among tht multipli city of ownerships and managerships. Peculiar railway evils, such as rebates, have flourished because of competition, not because of consolidation. The complex problem of rates, which the Interstate Commerce Commission endeavors to solve, is still more complicated by multiform ownerships and corporate managerships. Mr. Roosevelt went as far as urging the repeal of tha prohibition against railway pooling, or at least, the devising of a sub stitute for pooling. The problem of the railways Is not the problem of the Industries. Beoauae com petition should be upheld aa regards In dustries la no argument agalnat consolida tion among common carriers Railwaya' rate can be the.tnore easily regulated and supervision over railways tha more easily established, aa railway ownership and man ageshlp approach unification. Tha separation of the railway question from the industrial question Is a long step toward right eel ut Ion a of them both. Around New York mipples ea the Carres ef Ilf aa Sea la tha (treat Ajnarloam Metropolis from Bay to Pay. With the tumult and the shouting gone, float shifted Into the country, decora tions down, and lllumlr.atlone reduced to tha regular limit. New Torkers and visiting spectator are pointing out some of the glaring defect of the Hudson-Fulton cele bration. The historic parade has been torn to shreda by critic. Equally severe are the reflect lona on the musical deficiencies of the score oAmore banda In the parade. Foreign visitors expressed astonishment at the quality and quantity of the muelo and the absurdities of the rag-time productions played on an occasion requiring the best of marching musio. The musical absurdi ties which attracted attention are thus set forth by a correspondent of the Philadel phia Bulletin: "Die Wacht Am Rhine," played by a dis cordant chime of bells near the reviewing stand before the procession approached, was like a prophetic note of warning aa to the Inapproprlateness of the things to fol low. Mayor McClellan, looking sprece In a frock coat and silk hat. walked at the head of the strange procession, In which bands of muelo were so numerous and near to on another than one marching tune melted Into another. An Italian band played "I'm Going to Do What I Like," and when the crowd jeered this It changed to the claaalo trains of "My Wife's Gone to the Coun try." Even the Englishmen on the reviewing stand and the English are not generally credited with much aense of humor laughed at this. Equally Inappropriate was the appearance of the float of "Bowling on the Green." sandwiched between the Syr ian-American cavalry and a French band playing tha "Marseillaise." Another float, aymbotlilng the "Introduc tion of Croton Water," on which were a half doaen pretty girls In white and wear ing gold crown, was heralded by a bras band playing "I Love My Wife, but Oh, Tou Kid!" Six of the great foreign men of war three British armored crttlsere and -three French battleahlp crept out to sea through the narrows Jut at dark Saturday night, leaving behind a substantial number of their men. Just how many of the blue jacket remained In the city for one reason or another Is a matter of official knowledge only, but It was reported that 200 men from the British ships had failed to turn up for duty. Of tha French men, It waa said that only three out of the 1,500 Bailors had stayed behind. Fleet officers remained to search -for the men of both squadron. When the British quadron visited New York several year ago It lost SOD men. In many cases the English sailors have friends here, and, in addition, the lure ef American wages some time prove irresistible. The great blue gray Inflexible, confident of Its speed, remained at its anchorage Saturday night, giving the other three vessels of the British squadron the A r gyle, Drake and Duke ' of Edlnbrugh nearly twenty-four hours' start. As he ran to meet his father, 4-year-old Jlmmie Clowes was killed before his mother's eye by a Long Island express train at the Norwood avenue crossing, In East New Tork. Only a moment before he had left his home with his mother and his brother, Fred, S year old. They reached the crossing just as an electric train approached. Jlmmie saw his father coming from the elevated station, two blocks away, at the same time. "There's daddy now!" he exclaimed, slipping from hi mother's hand. He ran joyfully forward in front of the train. With a shook that hurled the passengers to the floor, the motorman, Arthur Ark ley, stopped hi train. He ran back to pick up the child, but 'the mother already had It In her arms. She was erased for tha moment by shock and grief. "Oh, look at my little Jlmmie asleep!" she cried to the crowd about her. "Isn't he a beautiful child? Please don't wake him up." The father, half crated with grief him self, made his way through the crowd. With difficulty he made her relinquish the little body to the police. It waa not until later, in her home, that she realised the baby had been killed. ' Many a man has talked hla way Into matrimony or publlo office, but seldom does one talk himself Into jail. Such was the fate of Charlea . Sternberg, a merchant of Queensborough, who would not abate his conversational powers when the police magistrate ordered him to desist. Mr. Sternberg waa arrested for letting water run Into the stret. No sooner was he. before the judge than he opened the floodgates of speech, and in shrill denunci ation compared America with Russia In Its worst days. The policeman tried to stop him; the magistrate pounded with hla gavel and ordered him to turn off the faucet But the prisoner, like a motor cycle, exploded more and more vehemently aa he gained headway. "Stop talking thla moment, or I'll send you to Jail!" said Judge Connolly. "Go on! Send me if you dare I thla a free country, I would like to know" "Commlted to Jail for five days." said the judge. "Give me six months If you want to, I don't care!" yelled the prisoner. "All right." said the court. "I will send you for fifteen days, and no chance for a fine. Take him away." Mr. Sternberger was token to a cell, talk ing all the way. "It took a railroad to bring the great sea captain finally to hla own." said Charles H. Hull, professor of American history at Cornsll university, discussing the Hudson Fulton celebration. He referred to the naming of the Hudson river, and aserted that the Dutch had not named it thus. It was known as the Man hattes, the Great river, and also the North river. The English called It the Hudson, but the name of North river clung to It, especially among tha people of Dutch deaoent, until well toward the middle of the nineteenth century, and seems not to have vanished, he said, "until the Interpre tation of the cabalistic Initials 11. H. R. K. forced them to mend their waya. No other Dutchman contrived ao much to make the North river Hudson' river a did Commo dore Vanderbllt." Cotton Goods Combine. Bosion Herald. The man on the street, Including the man who pays for cotton cloth for his fam ily a use and the man who la dependent for his living on the cotton Industry, will have hard work paralleling the recently pub lished evidence of prosperity In the textile world with the tentative agreement to cur tall production to the extent of thirty days' time during the next six months, whether Its avowed purpose be to force up the price of manufactured foods or to inset a de mand for higher wages. For an Infant In dustry recently pleading plteously for the protection of higher tariff duties the ap parent world agreement concerning produc tion Is an Inconsistency that will occasion much thinking and many doubt How io buy Thonogra ' PERSONAL NOTES. So there are 40,000 more Indians than twenty years ago. Government rations are a great attraction. Dr. Cook aays he acquired the "boreal quint" in the arctic region. Mr. Peary teems merely to have acquired the bore some grouch. '. A Philadelphia maid was so shocked by receiving the mitten over the 'phone that the lost twenty-five pound of precious weight, and wants damages at the rate of 11.000 a pound. She ought to get enough for a dreas to fit the downward revision. Ten thouaand dollars Is the price de manded from his wife by William J. Decato of Bristol, N. H., a base ball p;toher, In payment for his playing the part of a faithful husband for seven year. Mr. Decato wants' divorce and she haa the money. Captain Roald Amundsen, the Danish ex plorer. Will Start for the North pole with hi sledgee drawn by polar bears, draught animal that can be quickly converted Into Juicy stakes. Should the bears all hear vh call of the wild at .' once, Amundsen eight be discovered by them to be good eating, and the effect of this novel adver tising lost on the polar air. , Forty miles a day I only a jaunt for F. Forrest Crooks of Masslllon, O., and Samuel R. Mansfield ' of Steubenvllle, O., two husky young athletes, who have ar rived In Bt Loula on their way from Ak ron, O., to Seattle, Wash. They have averaged forty miles a day since leaving Akron, on September 18, and expect to ar rive In Seattle In about five months. . , If an autolat can drive a car a mile a minute; and If the general aspect of the landscape and of social conditions Is about the same at both end of the mile; and if the time of the autolat I not especially valuable, and no great demand exists for his presence at the hither end of the mile In question, Is there adequate reason for him to risk hla own neck and a lot of rubber-necks. In getting there? NOT A VANISHING RACES. Marked laereaae la Indian Population In Last Decade. Denver Republican. The publication of official .figures show ing that there are now over 800,000 Indians In the United States an Increase of 40,000 In the last decade, Indicates that there is no truth In the generally aocepted theory that the redskin are a "vanishing race." In the history of civilisation there la no oaae to parallel that of the Indian. No where la there any record of a savage race being conquered by a civilised race and then lifted from tho plane of savagery to the plane of civilisation. Always, be fore this, the result has been oblivion for the conquered race. For a time It looked as If oblivion would be the lot of the In dian. But the general idea of the Ameri can people haa been to uplift Jhe savage. There have been abuse in tha Indian serv ice, without doubt. Some official have been Incompetent, and others have been dishonest.. But these have proved mere Incident. Tht general result has been all that could be hoped for under the circum stances, and now the Indian haa begun to show the effect of Uncle Sam's care. What the future of the Indian will be, no man can tell. There will be a break ing up of tribal relation everywhere. The reservations themselves will disappear, and each Indian' must settle on his own allot ment to "sink or swim." No person can tell if the Indian will prove equal to the teat, but the Indication seem to be that he will survive. At any rate he has thrived In hi position of wardship, until today he fax arrived at tha parting of the waya and must strike out for hlmsalf. The next two generations are going to tell the real story of the Indian. They will demon strate If the red men are to bcome a atrong, helpful part of the nation, or are to be In fact a "vanishing race." THE CHRISTENING. Chicago New. It happened at the christening. My dear- tst wife Sophia Had bioueht our baby to the font. We called him Obadlah. I was not partial to the name In fact, I did not ohoose III Since 'twas a wealthy uncle's choice we could not well refuse it. A soon a we had breathed the name the infant'a eye flashed fire; He gave a sudden yell and cried, "I'li nc be Obadlah! Just think of going through the world with such a hideous label! Why don't you call me Khera at once or Zebedee or Abel? "It la a cruel thing to do, to blight my whole existence. To doom me when I am too small to of fer much resistance. How can you do such wickedness with out least oompunctlon? I'll go to court without delay and plead for an Injunction." The clergyman looked quite abashed I'm sure my wife and I did; The christening could not proced until the babe aubalded; We whispered In his ear: "That name your uncle, dear, proposes." "And so," the babe replied, "might be Methuselah or Moses. "Still. If he put ma in hi will for some thing really handsome, I'll 1st him call me w:iai he likes, Zer r i) babel or Bamson. And now," tha baby murmured sweet, "just wrua nun ana inquire Ho mu h It will be worth to him to call ma Cbadiah." an CM Li Do not buy an Edison Phonograph until you are convinced that you want one. Hear it at tho dealer'a first. Hear it play ft number of pieces. HocV play tha kind of music that you like musio that you have heard people aing and play so that you can know how well it does it. Hear it play Amberol as well as Standard Records. You will decide that the Edison Phonograph is the best. Then remember that it takes only a small amount of money to buy it. You can get a perfect Edison Phonograph at your own price, whether it Is $12.20 or any price op to $15.00 one that will hut a life-time, that will give pleasure every day, that will help you to educate your family, that will entertain your friends, and that will while away many hours that might otherwise be misspent. . i Staadsrd Records . . . . . si Amberol Records (twice as long) oc Grand Opera Keerds . . . . c There are Edison dealers everywhere. Go te the nearest saJ kesr the Kdiion Pbonotraph play both Edison Standard n4 Amberol Records. Get complete catslog troaa your dealer at NATIONAL PHONOGRAPH COMPANY , I tahsaide Ave. Orange. N. J. 4 I Represent the 7n EDISON Phonograph Company in Nebraska, and carry huge stocks of the models mentioned in the Edison Phonograph C03 announcement on this page today Jeo. B. allokel, Mgv 16th and Harney St.. Omaha. Neb. m Broadway, Council Bluff, lowa. SMILING REMARKS, "So Jagsby said he quit courting Miss Flip because she gave him a delicate hint that hla attention were unwelcome." "Delicate hlntj It was a very strong one." "What was It?" "She married the other fellow." Balti more American. "My dear." "What is it hubby?" .v -.n.. .ahT.I A ftt .rniltt At fnA A .mil U TT H 1. 1 . . - market today and Inspect a steak that I hold an option on. Then. If you like It, call at my office and we'll sign the transfer papers." Pittsburg American. Myer I wonder why Browne added the "o" to his name after inheriting a fortune? Oyer He probably figures out to his own satisfaction that rich people are entitled to more ease than poor people. London Tlt- Rits. Rivers Let's see what Is that i what Is that "mSrt tery of INN?" . Brooks There are two: Bryan Is pusxllng over one of them, and Pearv Is trying to unravel the other. Chicago Tribune. "I guess Miss psnilth doesn't like the way you drefs your hair." "What did he say?' "She sav she despises rats. "The cat!" Cleaveland Leader. CAREHCE CRAFTWORK JEWELRY RAGE HOW i A A. Ho8!e Co. Has Only Omaha Bhow ing of Those Curious Patterned Hand Wrought Jewel. ( "This piece was wrought by hand at the ahop of the CARKNCB CRAFTERS, from an exclusive design, executed by the. art ist whose algiiature appears below." 1 Signed (Artists' Nam) A little label, worded In the above fashion Insures "exeluslveness" In every piece of "CARKNCE CRAFTER" jewelry now on exhibit and sale at The A. Hospe Co., 1613 Douglas steet. " . J And the "CAR ENOE". piece are beauti ful Indeed odd rare different from anything yet aiiown. '- The various articles such a fobl, links, bracelets, rings, brooches, belt buckles, hat pins and the like may be had In ater llng sliver or In the baser metals such as copper, German llver, etc. Then too, hand beaten brass 'crumb trays, pin traya, match safes and oandle sticks are In evidence -each Individually tooled In a deft manner by the clever "craftera" In the Carenoe ahops at Chi cago. The A. Hospe Co. has had made up es pecially for Omaha High School student, a line of "CARENCE CRAFTMADE" hat plna, fobs, link, stick pin, etc., tanh lettered with the high school Initials and quite modestly priced, at, from 78c to $2 each. Many of the pieces of Jewelry enum erated above are studded, with such un common stones as jaspor. Jade, matrix turquolHe and the like. and. the line right through is on that 4a bound to become favored by the knowing on of the city. It wouldn't be a bit too early to look Into these cleverly made, hand wrougHj piece now. Chrlatma thoughts are v ready engaging ones' mind. "CARENCE CRArjflHOI" piece are sold only at the f Oeo. E. allokel. HjiV 1 If 16th and Harney J x Jn Ht., Omaha, Neb. j- A. HOSPE CO. IMS DougUa Bt.'