14 THE HEE: OMAHA. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1909. THepmama Daily Dee: KOVNDED BT EDWARD rtOSBWATER. VICTOR ROSEWATER. EDITOR. F.nlered at Omaha postofflte aa eecond :' matter. TKRM3 OF SUBSCRIPTION. Iaily pea (without Burnley), one year. MOO I 'ally Ree and Sunday, ona year 00 DELIVERED BT CARRIER I'ally B (Including Sunday), rr wekk.We Dally Bee (without Sunday), per week. .10c Kvenlng Be (mlthout Sunday), per wee o Kveftlng Hea (rnlth Sunday). per week. Wo undav Boa. nna yaar "52 tilrlay Be, ona year tndr all complaint! of lrreulsrltles In lellvery to City Circulation Department. orrtCEs. "nulla-Tha Bee Building. -'outh Omaha Twenty-fourth and N. ' 'unrli ninf r IB S-otf Street. f.inein-n1 Lime Building. '"hirago 1S Marquetta Building Viw York-Rooms 1101-1101 No. 3! West i 'ilrtv-thlid Rtreet Washington 725 Fourteenth Street. N. W. rORKPON-r)RNCE. Oommiinlratlnne relating to new and edl ''rlal matter ahould ba addressed: Omaha Hee, Editorial Depsrtment REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order payable to Tha Ree Publishing Company. Only t-rent stamps received In payment of rail account Personal rbecka. except on lmhi or eastern exchanges, not accepted. ffTATFAfENT Or CTnrin.AT10N. Rate of Nebraska. Douglas County, as.: George R. Tiehuck. treasurer of The Pea Publishing Cempany, being duly sworn, says that tha actual number of full and complete enples of The Dally. Morning. Kvenlng and Pumlny Hee printed durlnif tha month of October. 1V was na foilc-v- 1 40,360 It... .43.940 tj.... 41,790 ..'. .4a.0B0 13 43,160 2S . . .43.490 I.... 40,400 14... .42.840 1 4 40,330 4....43,S40 13. ...43,990 IS... .41,190 S.... 49,810 IS... 43,560 !.... 41,0 .. '..43,400 IT. . . .40,800 27. ...43,890 7... . 43,470 II.. ..43,450 Jl... .43,810 I. ... .4810 II.... 43,050 19. .. .43,000 l....4a,t0 30...43.8SO 10.... 43,070 0 0... .40,300 21.... 48,060 II.... 40.600 11 48.T10 Total 1. 1,303,040 Returned copies 8,870 Nat. total 1,393,370 Dally avaraga 41,781 QEOROB B. TZSCHUCK. Treasurer. Subscribed in my presence and sworn to before ma this 1st day ef Novambar, 1949. (Seal.) M. r. WALKER. Notary FubUe. Sabscrlbers leaTtaat tha city tem porarily sbanld kara Tha Bee mailed to tharn. Adareae will ba cfcaaa-e me often aa reqaeste. What a swarm of lies In the sugar bowl. If Is; Dunn la ready to take it back and apologize, why doesn't he? 1 The next question is, Will Uncle Sam ring off that telephone deal?. . The more Uncle Sam considers the told deal Chile gave him, the hotter he gets. While the sugar ring refrained from being good, it wag for a long time careful. Those Canary Island tremblings must have been the tremolo of the canaries. No one need think that the French children mind the burning of those school books. If Mrs. Stetson were an actress she would be expected to announce In the pupers "At liberty." Ambassador Thompson is now pres ident of the Tan-American railroad and the Lincoln Star. ' Scouring the seas for Colonel Astor's yacht will not cleanse the records of the divorce court. The promised .opening of more land In the Rosebud reservation wllf find plenty of people ready to dash for the Pine Ridge pole. One brave girl has demonstrated on the Chicago elevated that a well-directed punch will rout a robber, even If It's only a ticket punch. Those life sentences for train rob bers will have a tendency to make fu ture bandits study their geography to make sure of keeping out of Nebraska. A female doctor has arisen to an nounce that the electric chair Is not fatal. And this after they have burled so many ef Its victims under" the de lusion that it was. Our amiable democratic contem porary has a rail-down for Ross Ham mond for "rounding a Corpse." It evidently wants that privilege reserved exclusively for Itself. That Muskegon democrat who for seventeen years has been under a hypnotic spell to vote for Grover Cleveland Is In a bad way. Where are the other spellbinders? Although Mrs. Longworth did not take that horseback ride as described in Frauleln Krobel's book, we venture to believe that when the emperor of Korea reads about It he will wish she had. 14 r. Qompers may think that he Is abused la the matter of free speech, but just let him consider the awful case ef those Knox college girls who are forbidden te yell for their favor ites on the foot ball field. The man who has writteu a book to demonstrate that the cigarette is a "Tyrant In White" has overlooked the rial claimant for that title who makes tie fathers of the land walk the floor when they Bhould be slumbering. 'hi!t tCusapla Paladlno is having I roubles convincing skeptical New . rkers t her ability to raise the 'iests ef the departed, an Inucxant - rastula has instantaneously resur rted the spirits of the dead letter rfllre. The tarantella danrej by the lorke shows that to be a good judge of moribund mall one dors not have u. t necessarily a f!ead una Out Neighboring' Kevolutioniiti. The significance of the decision of our government aa voiced in the mes esge signed by Secretary Knox after consultation with the president con cerning the Nlcaraguan affair Is not In the-language of the dispatch, which la that usual In such cases, in con formity with the established interna tional blockade code, but Instead lies In the fact that by recognizing the blockade, "If effective," we virtually commit ourselves to recognition of the rebels operating against Zelaya as revolutionists. Recognition of such belligerents has uniformly been withheld in the practice of the State department, but the knowledge that Zelaya's long- established hostility to Americans had actually taken the form of operations against American Interests in Nica ragua and also execution of Ameri cans without trial, was bound to pre cipitate action. The United States manifests no desire or intention to take any active part In the conflict of the two forces, and Its vigilance thus far Is confined to protection of its own Interests, but the fact that circum stances required us to acknowledge the belligerency of the insurgents may l6ad to attempted reprisals which will still further Involve us in the future of that republic. ' The natural disposition for us Is to keep hands oft of these troubled Cen tral American republics, but when driven to take a hand events maroh fast. Since we have committed our selves thus far, it might be worth while to consider seriously the subject of a convention that should put an end to these constantly recurring ebullitions go destructive of trade re latione and subversive of prosperity among our i leaser neighbors. While they take advantage of our protection through assertion of the Monroe doc trine, they should give us some sort of assurance of good behavior. The Burden of Armament. Nations of Europe are beginning to look askance at the naval programs, and there are indications that a halt eventually will be called upon the na val rivalry of the world. Great Britain Is already beginning to stagger under the gigantic burden of its peace arma ment and has not succeeded in straightening out its budget crisis when France also awakes to the fact that naval and army expenses have brought it face to face with a budget whose increase is more than forty mil Ifons. The suggestion broached In Paris that France, Britain and Germany form a tripartite treaty for the limita tion ef the poace armament is likely to be viewed favorably by the taxpay ers of the three countries, yet with re luctance, if not suspicion, by the am bitious and jealous powers. But the prodigious bounds made in the cost of naval construction must soon bring not only European nations, but also the United States, to realise that ere long the limit of endurance shall have been reached by the public purse. ' One hopeful sign in our own coun try is that the future evolution of the navy promises to be along lines that may make for economy. The strat egists having doomed the light cruis ers and Other auxiliary vessels, the navy promises to be confined to two classes, the battleships and the de stroyers. ' Simplified batteries are promised for the dreadnaughts, and Inasmuch as the naval battles of the future are likely to be confined largely to long range fighting, it is probable that fewer warships will be needed and that no exhaustive addition to our present program need be made. As far as our country is concerned, it must maintain a navy sufficient to operate If need be against any hostile power in either ocean, so that we have a direct interest in every proposal to fix a limit for European fleets. ' Another Banco Game Exposed. The opinion recently given by the city attorney advising the city council that the initiative and referendum law Is not In force in Omaha is entitled to some attention in passing because it exposes another bunco game which our friends, the democrats, tried to work with more or less success on victims who ought to have known better. It should be remembered that three years ago the democratic mayor and council submitted to the voters a prop osition for popular ratification which was supposed to put into effect the in itiative and referendum law, which by Its terms waited for such acceptance. The democratic World-Herald pounded the tom-tom for the initiative and referendum to enlist votes for its edi tor, who was then running for con gress, knowing full well that the proposition was not in legal form and was vitally defective because of failure to comply with jurisdictional require ments. In other words, the referendum was simply a bunco game set up by the democrats la control of the city hall with full knowledge of Its fraudulent character and designed to catch a few suckers who might not see through the sham. And now comes the same democratic city attorney, who was officially charged with passing on the original ordinance, and la a written opinion de clares that the action of the former democratic mayor and council is void and ef no effect and the vote taken purporting to endorse it was merely a straw ballot. If the city attorney had given this opinion at the time the fake ordinance was up the bunco game would have been balked, but holding his office as a democrat, be must have thought Jerty loyalty called on him to keep still. The mly question Is, bow many 'times the people will permit t themselves to be fooled by the same bunch, of democratic bunco steerers? Oilder and Laffan. In leveling Its shafts, death has in one day singled out two shining marks, men 'of similar walks of life, In Rich ard Watson Glider and William M. Laffan. Mr. Gilder was the chief genius of a family of geniuses, and came to be universally known as an editor and as a poet. His life and his letters dealt with great thoughts and lofty alms, and although he could in no sense be considered a popular poet, writing for the masses as did Longfellow, never theless his name will live in song, sounding the clear, high notes. Not only was he a good editor and good poet; he was also a good citizen, and his works In the causes of benefaction and good government will live after him. Mr. Laffan was best known as pub lisher of the New York Sun, which he had for many years conducted as' a fearless free lance in the cause of civ ilization. In addition he took impor tant part in the directorate of Harper & Brothers, and be was an authority on fine arts, architecture and ceramics. Both Mr. Glider and Mr. Laffan gave to literature lasting products from their pens, and neither was too busy enacting the part of the scholar to take a large personal share in the practical duties of citizenship making for a greater and a nobler country. Theirs It was to demonstrate that One schol arship did not need to stoop to con quer In sharing with humbler human ity the grind of the mills toward the general uplift. Railroad Supervision. The spirit of hostility manifested be tween state and Interstate commis sions gives proof to the public, if any proof were needed, of the justice of the president's assertion that further railway regulating legislation Is .called for. With legitimate state rights of any sort there should, of course, be no fed eral interference, nor is there evident any Intention on the part of Interstate commission or the president to ask for congressional action that shall restrict the powers of the state commissioners. It Is manifestly unfair, however, for federal Inspectors to be hampered in their work by the exercise of the pre rogatives of state officials, and con gress will be expected to enact such legislation as shall free the interstate commission from such strife. It should always be remembered that state and nation are working to the same end, and they should un doubtedly work iu the utmost har mony. State authority may be main tained without interfering with the op eration of the interstate board in any state for the good of the country at large, and the national board should be able so to adjust itself that it may ac complish its purposes without denial of any local privileges. 'It is a delicate problem, but it devolves upon congress to make an early attempt to remove existing restrictions which are at the root of the present clash 'of state and Interstate nuthnritv. What the ah-wlae book suys about returning good for evil Is strikingly exemplified In the contempt case of Ig Dunn, in which William J. Connell has gone to the front to rescue the dis barred attorney from his plight. For years Mr. Dunn has been most virulent and vicious in his fulminatlon against Mr. Connell, presumably because he was once city attorney during the may oralty, of Frank E. Moores, and since then has been the regularly retained attorney for The Bee. The personal affronts by Mr. Dunn, however, did not prevent him from seeking Mr. Con nell's assistance nor prevent Mr. Con nell from responding to the appeal. It remains to be seen whether this gen erosity will soften Ig's asperity and prevent him in the future from de nouncing as a liar and a rogue every one who happens to disagree with him. The observing layman may wonder if there Is not some truth in the Bos ton physician's claim that the matter of operating for appendicitis Is over done. Since the memorable case of Elliott F. Shepard, whose death first called public attention to this malady, there have been enough other distin guished victims to make it a cause of remark. Recent in the list is Clyde Fitch, and now another ' Important New York publisher, William M. Laf fan, has succumbed. The wonderful progress of surgery has not yet out grown the stage of an occasional re port, "Operation successful, but pa tient dead." The sale of the Gould Interests in the Western Union are taken in some quarters to mean that the Goulds will devote all their attention to the devel opment of the Gould railroads iu the middle west. Omaha Is on both the Wabash and Missouri Pacific and therefore should share In the upbuild ing of these lines, which are conceded to offer much room for improvement. A vear ago Comruls&loner Brunlng gave as his excuse for tying up with the democrats his persouai differences with late County Commissioner M. J. Kennard. If Mr. Bruning ties up with the democrats again this year It will be because he prefers to work In with democrats who did their best to defeat him rather than with repub llcana who elected him. Omaha banks show substantial gains in the reports made in answer to the comptroller's call. If the banks are in stronger condition, so must also be the business Institutions who transaction they reflect In Other Lands The Impending- Folltloal Crisis la (treat Britain, tha Antagonised Bud get Taxation ana Alternative Polloy. A political crisis of International Internet la approaching In Qrrat Britain. The de termination of the House ef Lords to re ject the budget aa aoon aa the formalities of debate are gone through with Is Indi cated by the motion of Lord Landsdowne, on which discussion begins next Monday. Lord Landsdowne is the recognised leader of the forcea opposed to the program of the liberal ministry, not only the present revenue measuio, but every distinctive party measure passed by the Huse of Commons since tlte liberals came Into power. Hla motion for rejection is pressed to a vote, will bring to Its support an overwhelming majority of the peers and force an appeal to tha country for which the Tories have been striving for two years. There are 620 members In the House of Lords. Four-fifths of them are Tories by Inheritance. The Lloyd-George budget drove into the ranks of the opposition sev eral liberal peers, among them Lord Rose bcry and Lord Iveagh, the former an ex tensive land owner and tho latter a titled brewer, representing the two Interesta most serlausly affected by the taxing features of the bill. There Is left but a handful of liberal peers, estimated at forty, to battle for tha bill. Scarcely fifty of the entire membership participate regularly In legislation, and only on occasions such aa the present when their income and their privileges are menaced do they concern themselves with legislative affairs. Under the leadership of Lord Landndowne no dif ficulty will be experienced in rallying the idla peera and overwhelming the feeble liberal minority. The anticipated action of the lords in rejecting tha budget overthrows a custom sanctioned by the usage of almost fifty years. Not since 1800 has the lords antagonized a finance bill sent up from the House of Commons. In that year, in order to Snake good the loss of revenue due te tha repeal of the paper duty, the com mons sent to the lords two bills, one in creasing the property tax and another stamp duties. These were preliminary to tha abolition of the paper duty, and the whole scheme waa expressed In three separata bills. The lords concurred In both Increases, and then rejected tha bill abolishing tha papsr duty. Immediately there was a constitutional crisis. The commons contended that the lords had by violating the "constitutional usag" of more than two centuries,, encroached upon tha commons' prerogative. The lords retorted that so far from killing a supply bill, they had rejected ona which diminished tho revenue of tho crown and pointed to two unchallenged instances of vetoing ad ministrative measures In which revenue raising waa an Incident, as their Justifica tion. Thay denied emphatically that they had Interfered with the budget. The com mons, however, remained obdurate, and finally adopted, at the suggestion ef Lord Palmerston, a series of resolutions tha gist of which Is that the peers are not te sit In revision of the financial calculations ef tho lower house made In carrying out Its con stitutional power of providing for tho sup port ef the government. For forty-nlna years tha "platform" of the commons adopted In 1860 has been tha unquestlaned "last word" on tho subject. m The increased taxes provided for In the budget are designed to meet an anticipated deficit roughly estimated at JS0.tVi0.00n. Tha estimated expenditures of the government for 1909-10 are placed at $2O.75O.0OO. The revenue en last year's basis of taxation was calculated to reach only $741.?Wi,000. A portion of tho deficit Is to be met by re ducing tha sums appropriated to tho sink ing fund by tl,OOO,O0O. leaving only about 166.000.000 to bo raised by taxation. The additional revenue Is required for the old age pensions, $46,000,000. and for Increased raval outlay of from $15,000,000 to $20,000,000. Various increases' In existing taxes and duties are mnde, chiefly on liquor and liquor licenses, tobacco and inheritances. Income taxes are Increased from 28 to IS cents on each $5 and a super tax of 12 cents on each $5 on Incomes over $.000 a year. These increases strike the well-to-do In a tender spot, as the chancellor of the exchequer planned that wealth should contribute the bulk of the deficit. The greatest source of Irritation to the lords and landlords, however. Is tho tax en un earned Increment, amounting to 20 per cent of thf Increase In tho value of land. To tho land owners this taxing innovation is denounced as "socialistic" and "revolu tionary." "You will understand," said George I'alsh of the London Statist, In recent lecture at Columbia university, "that tha Incre ment duty of 20 per cent la a matter of the future only. Land la to be valued at tht. present time and the tax Is to be placed upon tho future Increment In tha vulue, dating from tho time at which tho valua tion Is made. How much this tax will yield in the future it Is difficult to estimate Rut bavin regard to the enormous ad vance In the value of urban land In the past and the probable further great In crease In tho future, the tax should ulti mately be a productive one. We have In our country a population of only 45,000.000. which is growing at the rate of about 1 per cent per annum, or 450.000 a year. Our wealth Is doubling about every thirty-three years and the value of land seems to rise Just about In proportion to the growth of wealth, 'that Is to say, as we grow richer wo can afford to pay a higher price for the land. Hitherto the unearned Increment from land has entirely esenped taxation. Not infrequently It happens that the land Is left at very low rentals for a period of years in expectation of a great Increase in rental at a subsequent date and the In come thus derivad by its possessor conse quently escapes the Income tax, which la imposed only upon the Incomes actually received from year to year regardless of the Increment in tho capital value." All parties concede the necessity of dio- vlillng more revenue. Old age pensions have come to Ftay. The naval program of four dreadnoughts a year has been increased to eight under the spur of Ger man activity. Both policies call for money and lots of it. How is It to be raised? The liberal party policy as embodied In tue budget is direct taxation of wealth. The Tory alternative la indirect taxation embodied In the Chamberlain plan of "tai If refi.rm." Tariff reform in Kngland differs radically from the common understand ing of the term in the United States. Here it implies reduction of duties on im port. In ICngland It means a tax on Im ports now duty free. None of the leaders of the Tory pulley has yet detailed v. hat Imports are to be taxed. Former Premier Balfour Insiste that tariff reform doea not mean an Increase In tha cost of the neces carles. Lord Miluer. champions It on pro tective ground, asertlng that "tha for eigner will pay the tax." In a vague way the TorUa plan to devise customs duties huh will protect tha homsnvaiket and not raits tha price of Imports should they coirje In. Carolyn Bellalr. a aeced itig liberal and advocate of tariff reform, defines 1 as "a low tariff on foreign goods, framed to the best of tho govern in nt's afcrity to secure reduclitna In I he tun."f i'f other cnuntrles h hlch press T.;V. so heavily on British commerce." It is too early yet for clearness of statement re garding the new policy. An authoritative definition must wait on this party mani festo te tha electors, should the Issues now joined be submitted to a vote of tho people. The fierceness of the coming struggle between entrenched power and privilege and the masses may be Inferred from Premier Asquith reply to Lord Roseberry, delivered In Birmingham several weeks ago. "Is this issue going to be raised?" referring to the threat of vetoing the budget "If It Is. It will carry with It consequences which he would be a bold man to forecast That way revolution ties, and If It Is going to bo seriously threatened, Involving, as I venture to predict It will, issues far wider and far deeper than the mora right ef tho House ef Lords to meddle with finance, I say that the liberal party Is not only ready but anxious te take up tho challenge." THEIR WAYS AND Ol'RS. Jadlelal Practices Abroad and Their Like at Home. New York Sun. The disinterested condemnation directed from America against the processes and practlsea of the French courts must bring tho flush ef pride to every patriot cheek. The examination of tho prisoner provided for In tho Code Napoleon la properly de nounced. The wrongs done to the ac cused are fittingly celebrated. The hideous possibilities concealed In these legal pro visions for compelling confession are ap propriately set forth. There is no doubt that Judge Valles would mend his ways were It necessary for him to appeal to the electors ef Now York for retention in office. So from the contemplation of this abom inable spectacle of public Inquisition and tha admirable anger It has produced among the foremost protectors of human rights we turn In relief to the study ef our own gentle and wholly praiseworthy Institutions. The highly Ingenious misuse of the grand jury's summons, which calls a suspect be fore an assistant district attorney, pro claims our superiority to the despised French. The magnificent "third degree" of eur police masters with Its edifying trick of keeping prisoners without sleep for hours on end, its reBort to mental if not physi cal torture, Its bland acceptance of "volun tary" confession, all appeal Irresistibly to us. We know that they must be the finest flower of human civilization, else their existence would not bo tolerated for a moment In th's country. Were they even In the slightest degree questionable they could not survive for an Instant In a com munity in which the Bufferings of a pris oner In a foreign land can stir to Indignant expression so generous a sentiment of hor ror and disgust Words Pointing; One Way. Kan Francisco Chronicle. There are many way a of getting around the shorter and uglier word In Parlia ment but Mr. Balfour made a short cut the other day when he described the statement of a Scotch member as "a frigid, calculated lie." Disraeli waa more cautious and never went further than to describe a man of questionable verity aa "con spicuously Inexact" The Balfour method came rather perllouxly near the edge and was a reminder of Horace Greeley's fa mous remark that his opponent In debate "lied openly, knowingly and with naked intent to deceive" a grouping of words which did not leave much to the Imagina tion. Warning; to Officials. Philadelphia Record. Sentences of sixty and ninety days on Sheriff Shipp and his associates for par ticipation in the lynching of a negro to whom the supreme court had granted a supersedeas will not stop lynching, but will make an Impression upon the mln-'s of sheriffs and other persons In authority. When the supreme court decides te review the trial ef a man It Is a dangerous busi ness for a mob, official or unofficial, to break into a Jail and assassinate him. Backing; the Klark Clear. ' New York Tribune. Some American cigar dealers object to the government stamp on Philippine cigars certifying that they actually came from tha Philippines and were manufactured of tobacco of the grade standard for the brand and under sanitary conditions as an undue discrimination against tha Cuban, Porto Rlcan and domestic product la that a confession that other cigars are not up to the same' standard In quality and conditions of manufacture? Oar I'rmluctl vr I'oau bil: t lr. Wall Street Journal. rea rt and swamp lands to be reclaimed by the government's project of Irrigation, according to President Taft, will ult mately yitld riir.re than the lands now under tillage, while President Brown of the New York dntral clalma tha average product per acre of the nation's farma can ba doubled. Evidently the (Initiations of our produc tive possibilities can only be measured hy our supply of agricultural labor, ambition and Intelligence. "Got There Jua the Same." New York World. Mherirf Hhlpp of Memphis sympathized with the mob that hanged his prisoner be cause he didn't want to see the negro'a case delayed "four or five years'' in fed eral courts. Those courts are not so slow after all. He got Into Jail for contempt in less time. The Test of Greatness. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Mr. Tsfl will prove himself a man ut wonderful resource fulnets and Versatility If, after all he has said in tha last fow weeks, he can find anything nw to Insert In his massage to congress vvV i 'V sr V'.- 1 '.-' ft ,. . r. -r . . 1 ' U are Absolutely Pare The only Baking Powder Made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar Hence Finer, More Wholesome Food POLITICAL DRIFT. Only sixteen days to congress. Cleveland paid Tom Johnson $.0o0 a year for his troubles. Mayor Baehr will get $10,000 and no trouble at all. A prohibition candidate for the legisla ture In Maryland swears he spent 4 cents for campaign necessaries. The boodle equaled his run. Fountain L. Thompson, the newly ap pointed United States senator for North Dakota, will hold office until the legisla ture assembles In 1911. He Is rated as a "progressive democrat." One of the rural candidates for the as sembly in New York reports his campaign expenses at $6.80, and Justifies the extrava gance by saying, "I don't see how I could have been beaten for less." The experience of being beaten In the race for the Massachusetts lieutenant gov ernorship this year Cost Eugme N. Fos, $11,767; the democratic stale committee got $21,00$ of it, and about $15,000 went for po litical advertising in the newspapers. Gov ernor Draper's re-election cost him $3 3C0. Democratic sentiment now veering to ward Governor Harmon of Ohio as an avail able man to head the presidential ticket in 1912, would, If It becomes a reality, make a unique contest. Two candidatea from Ohio would make the Buckeye state a lively battlefield and incidentally prove the un surpassed reach of the Buckeyes for the pie and the counter. Fer the second time In Its history San Francisco has a mayor elected on the union labor ticket, but for the first time the chief executive of the city Is a genuine leader of labor, a worklngman who has risen by the force of his own ability from the ranks of the tollers. P. H. McCarthy, mayor elect, la a carpenter, and for nearly thirty years he has been an active and aggressive leader of labor. INAPPROPRIATE SIMILES. Far-Fetched Political Spook Ma terialised. Boston Olobe. Napoleon and Roosevelt, as subjects from which to point a moral or adorn a tale, are sadly over-worked. Especially Is this true when brilliant pens write of Roose velt's' possible return from Elba a political spook materialized for the purpose of frightening Mr. Taft. 1 Mr. Roosevelt's retirement from the pres idency Is so recent that It seems a pity some persons must be reminded that In tha biography of that distinguished hunter of predatory thlnHS, both tame and wild, there is no auch word aa "Elba." In the career of the great Corslcan. Elba followed a disastrous defeat The restless spirit, which Europe was hardly big enoug.i te contain, was cabined by his vanquishers on a small Island In thn Mediterranean. Although surrounded by some of the In signia of state and permitted to have a little army. Napoleon's Elba kingdom was la fact a prison cell. And as the oat came back so did he to Franco, for a hundred daya. Then another Island Jail for him; this time St. Helena, which became at last his tomb. As for Theodore Roosevelt, he was not defeated. When he left the White House he left It freely. Had ho desired to atay another four years the people would have assented. And, furthermore, they took as his sucoessor the very man he asked them to take. Nor la he In exile. Though his present address Is somewhere In the tropics and In the same latitude as ft. Helena, he has not yet been banished from the affections of his countrymen. And when he returns to his native land It will not be for a hundred daya, we trust, but for manj years. t'oatlnsoai House Warmlna. St Louis Olobe-Democrat. On his trip through the west and south President Taft Invited the people to pay him a reciprocal visit to Washington. The new addition tothe White House will come in handy this winter. Boys sumdl Sinnisilia IVIsim We have fifty Bints, in sizos .'52 to 35 chest, that wc have left from last season, that we must sell. Those suits come in plain blacks and blues and in fancy mixtures, both single and double breasted styles. They sold for $15.00 and $18.00, and for Saturday you can take your choice for $8o50 These suits are on sale in our Young Men's lU-partment, on 2d floor. See Douglas street case for display. BrowninalCing & Cq bTk7 CLOTHINQ, ff FIFTEENTH R. S. WILCOa, Manager. - The healthful properties of Grapes conveyed to food by SMILING REMARKS. Friend So your detective force Is a fail ure? Chief Emma-"-Yea; we can't find any en who Is willing to be a plain clothea woman. Puck. Tha prisoner had no friends. Ills attorney, appointed by the oourt to defend him, advised him to plead guilty. The Judge yawned and looked at hla watch. "They're tryln to avltate me to the pen itentiary!" groaned the wretched victim Chicago Tribune. "The foreigner we are entertaining thinks we have queer ways of expressing our selves." "How is that?" "lie heard several men discussing the transportation question the other day and he asked me how they could ever land Improved waterways." Baltimore Amer ican. "So you went into the country te get 'atmosphere?' How did you like It T" "Disappointed. Couldn't find a farmer who had a horse named Dobbin, and never heard one ef them say 'by hook!" "Phila delphia Record. "Senator." said the Interviewer, "It is rumored that you Intend to retire from politics." "Well, well," replied the senator, "It's queer how rumors ..art. I suppose this one grew out of the fact that I attended church with my wife last Sunday Cath olio Standard and Times. 'You needn't think you can deceive me, young man," said the financial and social magnate. "I have an especial aptitude for taking people's measure." "I suppose," answered the young man he sought to snub, "that Is because your grandfather bean life aa an Itinerant taller." Baltimore American. The Pesslmlst-We'il pay for all this fine weather later on. The Optimist Well, cheer up! That's the regular time for paying for things. Isn't It? Puck. "When I got home yesterday I found that my wife had gone home to her mother." "You did, What did you dor' "Oh. I Just hurried over there and had a good meal, too." Cleveland Leader. "You can't iret something for nothing "Oh, I don't know," replied the boy "How about the toothache?" Detroit Free Press. Her Do you believe that a word tn the wise Is sufficient? Him Well. It denenda on the word Chi cago News. The saccharine mairnate smiled & Ana In high good humor. Just heard a funny thing." he ramarkcwl to a visitor. "The government threatens to demand back the money we stole." "That looka serious to ma." "Haw, haw. Can't you see a Joke? Why. we've spent the money." Philadelphia Ledger. "IT IS DONE, MR. DUNN. . A. L. Bixby in Lincoln Journal. It Is done, Mr. Dunn, and I speak net in fun. When I say that It fits like a garment: The decree of the court for a crime of thai sort. Could be hardly lees fierce than disbar ment. 'Twill be tough, sure enough, If the winter la rough, And the poor will find little enjoyment. But I know if you go lii to win you can show Yourself strong In some other employ ment. My belief is your grief came from writing a brief. Which fur you was exceedingly easy; Not the same as its name might Imply. for the shams Was In making the darathlrur too "breesy." If some day you shall say. In no half hearted way, That you never will do It again, air. Ah, mv aon, I for one, will regret. Mr. Dunn, This too hasty rebuke from my pen, sir. On my word I have heard, though It may be absurd, ' That, among alt the wise and tha witty, Greater he. on the whole, with himself In control Than the one who subduea a great city. Then, old man. If you can, here's the hint of a plan , That will make all your enemlea dlzsy: If you master yourself that la better than pelf- And light now Is the time to get busy. FURNI3HINQ9 AND HATS, aho DOUGLAS STREETS,