TIIK REE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, XOVEMREIt 2;, IMP. The Omaha Daily Beej lUlMir-.I) HT EI'WARP ROSE WATER. VICTOIl ROPE WATER. F.P1TC.R. Kntered at Omaha postofflee as second class matter. TERMS OF SUH.TRIPTION. Pally ttee (without Runrtay), one year. 14 00 l'ally Itee and fcunday. one year 00 DELIVERED BT CARRIER. Pally Fee (Including Sunday), per wekk 1Sc I'allv Hew mlthnut Runday), per week. 10c Kvenlng ! (without 8unday). per week c Kvenlng Hee (with Sunday), per wee i"c Fundav I!ee, one yea? BM Batuiday Hee. one year IS Andres all complaints of Irregularities In delivery to City Clrrulaflon Department. OFriCE. Omntin-The Pee Bullfltng. Koufh O-naha Twenty-fourth and N. Council Pcott Street Lincoln CM Little Pulldlnc. Chicago Marquette Pulldlng. New York-Rooms UOt-UOI No. St West Thirty-third Street Washington Fourteenth Street. S. W. J . CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to news and edi torial matter should be addressed: Omaha Hee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit hy draft, express or poatal order pavahle to The Pee Publishing Company. Only 2-cent stamps received In payment of mail accounts. Ptrsonal checka. except on Omaha or eastern exchanges, not accepted. STATEMENT OF ClRCl'LATI ON. State of Nebrssfca, Douglas County, aa.: fieorite R. Tzschuek. treasurer of Tha Bea Publishing Company.. being duly aworn. aa that the actual number of full and complete copies of Tha Pallv. Morning. Kvenln and Pundav Me printed during tha month of October. v ai foilcva: 1 42,330 It.... 43 340 22.... 41,790 2 43,080 IS. .. .42,160 2S ...41.490 I 40,000 14 42.240 24 40,330 4.... 43,640 IS 42.230 rS 41,990 8 43,510 ).... 43,500 20 41,930 42,450 IT 40.200 27 43,250 7 42,670 IS 42,40 IS 42,210 8 42.810 1J.... 42,050 29 42,000 ... 42.880 . 20.... 43.350 30 42,070 10... 10.300 21.... 43,050 81 40.S00 11... 42,710 - Total 1,303,040 Returned oupien 8,670 Net total 1,293,370 Dally average 41,721 OEORUK B. TZSCHUCK, Treasurer. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before ma thla 1st day of November, 190i. (Seal.) M. P. WALKER, Notary Public nbarrlbers leaving the city tem porarily aboald bar The V-1 mailed to them. Addreaa will be changed aa often aa reqaeate. No one but has something to be thankful for. Since the N'ourmahal floats It may be considered 99 per cent pure. Now It is ihe thread combine that manifests some Inclination of unwind ing. Still, that peachlees peach brandy may have been bo named because of Its after-fruits. Zelaya's policy toward Americans In Nicaragua must have been that of put up or be shut up. Let us today at least be thankful that' things are not yet as hopeless as Jim Will paints them. Postponement ,oC Mm Mabray trial means that the fascinating story of tha "Mikes" will be a serial production. With disbarment continuing effec tive over Is. the other members of the city law department will soon be com plaining of overwork. The special rate put in by the rail roads for the Corn show at Omaha presages an attendance "bigger, better and grander than ever." Now that Mr. Wellman has endorsed Mr. Peary as the only man who reached the pole, Dr. Cook may con sider himself ruled out of the Arctic sourt. ( : The policeman who rushed into a '.heater crying "fire," doubtless had tils eye fixed on a Carnegie medal. He might be permitted to squint at one of '.eather. Mr. Latham may be skillful enough to go hunting In his aeroplane, but the amateur .aviator who tries it will be more apt-to find the wild steers mak n game of him. Tn the meantime the unanimity with which consummation of prospective mergers in deferred indicates that the promoters reellze that I'ncle Sam has ".he drop on them. The State anti-Saloon league reso tutcs approval of the Douglas county anti-Saloon league. Seeing that they are one and the same, they certainly ought to approve one another. Health Commissioner Connell has a new plan for solving the garbage prob lem. The good doctor solves the gar bage problem every year, and each solution different from the last one. Tho council resolution for an in quiry Into the question whether the city should carry Insurance on Its pub lic buildings will be all the hint to get busy that the Are underwriters need. Members of the Omaha Real Estate exrhanse are being Instructed how to draw wills. There was a time when It made no difference to an Omaha real estate man whether he knew how to draw a will or not, but happily that time Is past. A man has just died who was office boy for Daniel Webster, worked for Presidents Lincoln and Johnson and was a neighbor of Mark Twain. . Had not his personality been so constantly obscured by great lights be might have become famous himself. Abdul Hainld thought he had three millions In the German bank, but the fact that the cashier declines to recog nize him without hi regal helmet trachea us that when we have a Job as king we ought to stick to It. For Abdul's case. It looks like a case of no viowa the double cross. Scholar and Athlete. Whether he be considered as the scholarly athlete or tho athletic scholar, that Individual Is getting due recognition from the practical world. Physical prowess enlists admiration at large, as Is attested by the acclaim be stowed upon the champion of every contest, whether hearty-brute or agile gentleman. But ho one ever expects to see the strictly physical hero occu pying high place In affairs. Sim ilarly, the devotee of manly sports has not always been regarded seriously, and the question has even been raised whether the colleges wer not devoting too much attention to athletics, thereby possibly diverting students from development along useful lines. The answer to such criticism is met by the recent appointment of a fa mous halfback and an Intercollegiate golf champion to Important posts In the government service, where keen mentality Is necessary to administer nice points of law, finance and diplo macy. Mr. Taft Is a shrewd Judge of human values, and he recognizes the worth of a robust brain In a robust body, when both have undergone sys tematic co-operative training.' Hith erto the athletic man of affairs has found his chief field of public recog nition In the pages of fiction, where the clergyman with varsity muscles suddenly evolves heroism, but of late even those leaders among men who had no athletic ywrth are coming to understand the merits of physical ex ercise. It Is this reawakened general Inter est In athletics that has led to the placing of emphasis on the usefulness of the athletic scholar. He Is hardly a new discovery, for he has had his place, and that a high one, constantly In the work of life. But your true ath lete is a modest fellow, and when he finds his field of endeavor he seldom seeks self-exploitation, but carves out his career by the same earnest effort that marked his days with books and apparatus while at school. An Election Straw. The congressional by-election In the Sixth Illinois district has been ex pected at the outset to be a test of the voters' attitude concerning the recent tariff legislation, but such a ppriiitnr campaign developed that It la not easy to read any particular lesson In the returns. Certainly the result cannot be accepted as an exhibit against the new tariff law, for while only half the vote was brought out, the relative nor mal republican majority was main tained. Mr. Moxley, the successful republican candidate, was Senator Lor lmer's personal choice for succession to his seat In the house, and In the face of the bitter hostility of the Chicago republican newspapers because of his deal with the democrats at Springfield, Mr. Lorlmer may claim a victory which Is- largely a personal one. So many conflicting Interests were brought Into the canvass that It is not safe to draw conclusions, although the" fact that speaker Cannon took the stump for Mr. Moxley, and Invited any rebuke the voters desired to register against Cannonlsra, gives some significance to the republican majority maintained against both democratic and Independ ent nominations of considerable strength. Triumph of the Mind Wave. When Young America comes to the rescue, we may be sure that It will be by the most approved and up-to-date method, as witness the experience of Father Knickerbocker at the behest of his hopefuls furnishing a startling example of the progress of the rising generation. While the parents of the metropolis had been in wonderment over the spirit rapping of the visiting Italian medium, and had been puzzling their heads over other occult problems of the day, the children, In their straightforward, practical way, have scored a real victory along telepathic lines. It seems that the adults bad been unable to convince the Board of Educa tion of the needs of a new high school. Earthly methods falling, jlie children took up the crusade, and appealed to the higher realms of thought. At a fixed moment, three thousand of them stopped dead In their tracks, with face turned In the direction where the Board of Education was assembled, pointed their forefingers Bt the recal citrant budget-spenders, and concen trated their thought on a preconceived prayer designed to compel the erec tion of the new school. The result was Instantaneous, In the adoption of a resolution authorizing construction, and Is bound to be heraldfcd as a tri umph of the mind sweeping a may ob stacles. Yet the uninitiated may be pardoned the lingering suspicion, that It may have been only a case where the School board had hadfall the bom bardment it could withstand and took the easiest way out of a bad dilemma. An Echo from the Fast. The death of Solon Chase, farmer orator of Chase's Mills, removes not only a familiar figure from the local life of Maine, but also a landmark of devotion to a lost cause. For years he had been forgotten by the public, yet thirty years ago he was a national figure, and his passing serves to re awaken some of the echoes of the strife of American politics. Solon Chase was a greenbacker of the greenbackers. The west will re member him as the man who drove a yoke of oxen from New England nearly half way across the continent, and stumped the country for the greenback, utilizing his haywagon as a rostrum. At that time he was near lng 60 years, and the homely earnest ness of the graybeard had much, to do with the gains made by the doctrine that he preached. Few of the younger voters of today could give more than a hasy suggestion of what the greenback creed was de signed to accomplish, so completely has the party been burled under the successive campaign waves, but to the elders there will come recollections of the zealous attempt to prohibit bank note circulation, the relegation of coin, and the establishment of the green back aa the only currency exchang- able on demand for Interest-paying bonds. At the height of their career, the greenbackers controlled a popular vote of more than a million, and had fourteen representatives In congress. But the party went the way of many of Its predecessors. Even the names of Its leaders have been forgotten, aside from such presidential nominees as Peter Cooper, James B. Weaver and Benjamin F. Butler; and Solon Chase was one of the few backwoodsmen who clung to the spirit of the party until bis death. Billboard Reform. It Is a self-evident fact that the bill board nuisance in Omaha has not only attained gross proportions, but Is steadily spreading and becoming more offensive. The so-called regulation of billboards in Omaha Is no regulation at all, because it Imposes no restric tions that tend seriously to obstruct or prevent the maintenance of this nuisance. Over In Chicago the Municipal Art league has proclaimed a program for billboard reform of which It will be well for other cities to take notice. The Chicago council Is asked to take measures covering the following points: 1. To require billboard companies to ob tain frontage conaents as follows: Pro hibiting the location of any billboard on property froutlng on any boulevard or public park, or In any block of any atreat, In which two-thirds of the buildings on both sides of the street In the block are devoted to exclusive residence purposes, unless tha consent in writing la obtained from the owners or their agents of a ma jority of tha frontaca fronting or abut ting on both sldea of the street of any block In which such billboard or atgn board Is proposed to be erected, and to file such written consent with the com missioner of bull. lings before a permit is granted for such erectloi. 2. To prohibit the erection of billboard on the roofs of buildings. 8. To allow the billboard companies to construct billboards sevznteen feet high, as they are now being constructed. This Is a very moderate program. The requirement of the consent of ad jacent property owners liable to be af fected by the billboard nuisance Is a reasonable condition which should ap ply to billboards wherever they are put, whether In residence or business districts. The roof billboards are like wise more menacing to safety and more conducive to spread of fire even than the street billboard, and should not be tolerated under any terms. The two-story billboard, furthermore, should be high enough without going Into the sky-scraper class, and the pro priety of limiting the height and dis tance from the sidewalk Is plain. Just because the owners of vacant lots are too devoid of enterprise to Improve them with buildings and can get a few dollars rental from the billboard men is no reason why they should be per mitted freely to disfigure the whole city, and to the detriment of all the neighbors and public generally. Our amiable democratic contem porary, the World-Herald, is living on the hope that Nebraska republicans may have a factional cat and dog fight over next year's election, under cover of which the democrats may sneak Into office. The World-Herald practically admits that the only chance for the democrats to win In Nebraska lies in republican dissension. But our dem ocratic friends may be disappointed. The mayor-elect of Indianapolis is facing a complaint before the grand Jury charging him with violating the corrupt practices act by promising ap pointive offices in return for political support. Nebraska has had a corrupt practices law for ten years, yet no one has ever been called to answer under it. The elective officers In Nebraska have been lucky that's all. Applications are said to be pouring in from would-be census enumerators who would like to help count the pop ulation of Omaha and of this congres sional district. The first requisite should be assurance of ability to do a better Job than the school census enu merators. The defeat of tho measure before the Chicago Board of Trade Intended to prevent corners in foodstuffs shows where that body'stands. The profes sional speculator always has a corner in his heart for a squeeze, provided Its yield is headed toward his own purse. When the national park promoters placard the historic ground at the scene of Washington's crossing of the Delaware will they please erect a tab let setting at rest the popular delusion that the Illustrious ferryman stood up in the rowboat all the way? The present plea of certain railroads that they are carrying the malls at a loss is hardly sustained by the spirit , of competition they occasionally dis play to get the big end of the contracts. eck and Keek. Washington Star. The Standard Oil gets a chunk of un pleasant legal lore Just in time to save It from being distanced by the Sugar trust In the great unpopularity contest. t atting; Oat "Other Matter." Chicago Record-Herald. Collector Loeb of New Tork la giving a lot of gentlemen an opportunity to devote their whule Ume M the interest of the A Proclamation By George Washington, President of the United States. When we review the ralamltes which af flict so many other nations, the present condition of the t'nlted States affords much matter of consolation and satisfaction. Our exemption hitherto from foreign war, an Increasing prospect of the continuance of that exemption, the great degree of Inter national trnnquallty wr have enjoyed, the recent confirmation of that tranquility by the suppression of an Insurrection which so wantonly threatened It, the happy course of our public affairs. In general, the unex ampled prosperity of all classes of our citizens ate clrmuetsncea which peculiarly mark our situation with Indications of the divine beneficence toward us. In such a state of things It Is In an especial manner our duty as a people, with devout rev erence and affectionate gratitude, to ack nowledge our many and great obligations to Almighty God and to Implore Him to continue and confirm the blessing we ex perience. Deeply penetrated with thla sentiment. I, George Washington, President of the United States, do recommend to all re ligious societies and denominations, and to all persons whomsoever within the United States, to set apart and observe Thurs day, the nineteenth day of February' next, as a day of publlo thanksgiving and prayer; and on that day to meet together and render their sincere and hearty thanks to the Great Ruler of Nations for the manifold and signal mercies which dis tinguished our lot aa a nation; particularly for the possession of constitutions of gov ernment which unite and by their union Sugar trust. Heretofore it haa been neces- sary for them to occasionally give their j attention to other matters, which must j have been exceedingly annoying to them. Dime Novel Gone Wrong;. Philadelphia Ledger. Five train robbers have Just been sen tenced to life Imprisonment In Nebraska. Another dime novel gone wrong. That was not the proper climax at all. Decidedly Unprofitable. Baltimore American. Life Imprisonment for five men who held up a railroad train In Nebraska may con vince this class of thugs that a less stren uous occupation would prove more profit able. One Undoubted Fact. Washington Herald. Another foot ball player had his back brokon Friday. Of course. It may be argued that "he was not properly trained," was "the victim of brutal playing," and so on. It is not disputed that he is dead, how ever. Melons Eapreasly Made. Plttsburfj Dispatch. The $24,000,000 watermelon divided by an 8,000,000 express company Is likely to R-en- eiate a boom for the parcels post measure If the latter is not forestalled bv an ef fective regulative reform of the express business. Appltcanta at the Door. Philadelphia Press. Ex-President Roosevelt will be a busy man when he returns to the UnUed States next year. The waiting list for admission to the Ananias club Is long enough to en gage much of his time. Cook and Peary, Balllnger and Pinchot, Parr and Reynolds, Cannon and Rldder 'have proposed each other for membership'; A Chance lat Form Only. Philadelphia Record. The dlssplutlon of ,the Oil Trust will not necessarily Impair . the ability of John D. Rockefeller to bestow money on edu cation, and eradication of hookworms and other matters of public beneficence. The corporate ownership remains unchanged. and so long as a half dozen or a dozen Individuals remain harmonious the various refineries, whicn they Jointly own, will not compete with each other seriously. Walt and Saw Wood. San Francisco Chronicle. It la well enough not to get excited over the case of the two Americans who were exeouted in Nicaragua until the facts about them are fully developed. Slnoe Filibuster Walker's time Nlcaraguuii governments have been auspicious of Yankee adventur ers; and when two of these gentry were caught making war with dynamite, one of whom had been In revolutionary move ments before, both were given a short shrift. At least such Is Nicaragua's ex planation, and the fact that the Americans were where they had no business to be Justifies a suspension of Judgment until the whole story Is known. PHEDATOH V LAWYERS. Some Remark on Those Who Prey on the Unfortunate. Chicago Hecord-Horaid. Every now and then a lawyer is dis barred for some serious offense. Some times his offense is a crime which can be punished by the courts. At other times It Is near to a crime, but unpunishable fur technical reasons. Occasionally serious abuse of patrons within the letter of the law also liads to disbarment. There exists, nevertheless, a large clas of predatory lawyers whom disbarment proceedings never reach, but who go forth to prey upon the weak and unprotected aa unquestionably as if they operated wl.h a Jimmy and a kit of burglar tools In the middle of the night. The fact that they are tolerated to exist In such large numbers Is among the worst of the abuses that are to be charged against the leal fraternity at the present time. These men are the ones who go forth hunting business In the form of damage suits, ard who do not hesltute to stimulate suits of this kind where 110 good ground fir them exist. They cause continual heavy luxses both to the defendants In thtse casaa who are mulcted and (o th prosecutor who most u-sually pay their lawyers exorbiturtlly heavy f, e . The merj items cf court cot! alone Is a se.-lou waste of Individual resources, whll the accompanying burden upon the courts 1 themselves by tliev unnecessary buslnes 1 hey must handle Is an udil.d evil. Such lawyer have been ten fl.;ckn.' to Cherry to secure damage suits asainn the mleing company. They are the emniies of the company, of the lgnor.:nt and d I ludel people who trust their ctces t' them and of Justice Itaeir. Every rallroid company has continually to fight fra-Jdu-Kl.t d:ii:iuto suits, the Inception 0f uhl?h la chargeable to predatory lawyers. Must large factories have a similar burden. Our cities are notorious sufferers. In tl.e ca e of the Chicago sanitary district t' e Uw as it exists actually put a premium on such suits. It Is most difficult to phrase any rule or regulation for the bar which will leave lawyers free to do legitimate work and which yet will suppress this evil. To f.nd the proper teat by which the offender can be disbarred Is the task of the bar Itself. The public feels the need, but can do no inure than call attention to it. establish liberty with order; for the pre servation of our peace, foreign and do- tnratlc; for the seasonable control which has been given to a spirit of disorder In the suppression of the late Insurrection ; and generally for the proaperous course of our affairs, public and private, and. at the same time humbly and fervently to be seech the kind author of these blessings to prolong them to us to imprint In our hearts a doep and solemn sense of our obligations to him for them to teach us rightly to estfWte their Immense value to preserve us from the arrogance of pros perity and. from hazarding the advantages we enjoy by delusive pursuits to dispose Us to merit the continuance of his favors by not abusing them, but our gratitude for them and by a correspondent conduct aa cttlxens and aa men to render this country more and more a safe and pros perous asylum for the unfortunate of other countries to extend among us true and useful knowledge to diffuse and estabMsh habits of sobriety, order, morality and piety, and finally to Impart all the bless ings we possess or ask for ourselves to the whole family of mankind. In testimony whereof I have caused the Seal of the T'nlted States of America to b affixed to these presents and signed the same with my hand. Pone at the city of Philadelphia, the first day of January, ons thousand seven hundred and ninety-five, and of the Independence of the United States of America, the nineteenth. By the President, O. WASHINGTON. EDM. RANDOLPH, (Secretary of State.) Thankful Muses Elevating Sentiments Baited td the say, Bplood with Tew Frivolous Expressions. A Thankful l.nnd. Look to the North, set like a gem Uron the bosom of her hills: Look to the South, whose blood-stained soli Ihe patriots soul with fervor thrills. Lofk to the East, where pilgrim bands Found refuge from the oppressor's hate; Look to the West, whose treasures stores Stand guarded by her "Golden Gate." Aye, look again beyond the 'seas. And catch the gleam In Islea afar Of Stars and Stripes In fluttering folds, Afloat where our poHsesslons are. Where'er that sacred emblem flies. Or North or South, or Eaat or West, Behold the free man's ratal land! Behold America, the blest! Then at this glad Thanksgiving titjs Rejoice! and once agnln rejoice! And for this goodly heritage Praise ye the Lord with heart and voles. EDITH VIRGINIA BRADT. Thoughts of ThanksgrlTlna; Day. Let this be the day that crowns the year Vi Ith symbols of frultfulness and cheer. Though winds blow cold and white anow drirta. Yet memory warm shall bring her gifts. From many a scene of months gone by. 10 wnicn our iignt-wingea thought may ny. Yes, while we sit by the fire here. In thoughts we may walk through the circling year. Out where the springtime furrows rolled. As the shining plowshare turned the mold; Out where the sod In vernal heat Grew soft to the tender lambkin's feet; Out where the cultured, mellow land Received the seed from the farmer's hand; Out where the orchard's fragrant flowers Bedecked the ground with their petal showers; j Out where the breathing fields lay green, With the lines of fence and roads be tween; Out where the pastured cattle fed, And mothering ones their younglings led; Where the rippling wheat and rustling corn Quivered and laughed In the sunny morn, M Whllo the wild birds flung o'er field and lea Their joyous notes from the new-leafed tree; Where over the feast of grain field ripe The fat quail sounded hi whistling pipe, v bile harvesters bore the noonday heat. To gather and store the precious wheat; Where early autumn, with milder air, Gave vine ana tree the color most fair, And, touched with her soft and artful brush, Their fruits hung low with a winning blush. From all these sources of life and wealth Of comfort, content and bodily health, We well may draw and freely confess A feeling of truest thankfulness. Omaha BHKIAH K. COCHRAN. The Turkey' Lament. "Farewell, oh, farewell to thee, joy of the barnyard:" Thu gobbled a turkey within his last coop: "Ah, ne'er did the beauties so charming seem to me, Now that my fair future Is all in the foup. No r.ioie shall I scratch with eager devotion Thy soil to turn up grains of corn for my (lear; No more shall I roost on tho perch in thy limits. 1 The fatal day men call Thanksgiving is here ! 1 "Ah, fair la that season to hearts of the humans. But to us poor turkeys 'tis laden with dread; We trail 'round dejected, we know not which dear one Will go to the bock as they ax off his head. What care we that splendid and fat thev will en'l us, And iituff us with things that are flavored and sweet? They (jo us no good, these dear post, humous honor, Since the stuffing so fine we are not thtre to eat. "And thne who escape this feust canni balistic Tis hut to prolong their sad time of suspense. For Thttiikaalvlng gone. Here la yet ChrlstnwiH oinliig. And that Is, alas, but a few short weeks hence. All. vud and past hope Is the fate of a tnrkev! The humans will fill us with hate and ulth (1 rt ai The fate they inflict, they themselves can en'l ore. But the tui-l-ey is done for who loses j his head!" -S. W. OILLII.AN. Anticipations. Of coiiih ue'l! have a turkey A great big husky felier. "N" vrretahuls of ,'very kind I'n'akers, white and yeller; Turnips, n' .uh. -ir onions, too - I'm! I'm! N' celery, '.V stuff n . that's thu best of all, Fixed up with savery. 'N' piefc! Well. I m prepared to ty All other kinds Is fske Alongside o' the punkln one An' mlncn my mother mke. Ill side there's apple turnovers To cap the hull array. An' I can have two slabs of each, 'Causo It's Thanksgiving duy! But after eatln' fruit an' nuts 'N' candy with the rest, I let I'll feel like letting out The buttons on my vest. 'N' walkln' 'round the Mock Is good For appetites like mine; Then afterwards I'll feel like "more" tie-! ain't Thanksgiving fine! Llppincott's Magazine. r"N f) I r?l Stody the label and buy only baking powder made Iron cream ol tartar THANKSGIVHTG CHAFF. The heart worth while expands befor? the waist line. Vocal chestnuts are permissible between helpings If the real goods are absent from the dressing. An extra "helping" of chestiness Is the rightful due of grandpas and grandmas in Ihe midst of their flocks. Should the turkey roost beyond reach, remember, Just as much Juice may be ex tracted from less noble meats. Should the day close with a spotless mortuary and hospital record, a second session for thanks will be In order. It Is wholly pardonable In the elders to live over the Thanksgiving of yesterday, but the wise elder, even if bald-headed, will Increase his scant stock of years by Joining heartily In the wholesome cheer of the youths of today. If you have not noticed It before, observe today the Imposing solemnity of the grand pa as they approach the respon.-lble task of dismembering the bird. It is a specta cle worth while when framed with the eager, wondering eyes of children and grandchildren. 'We know that fortune breaks some times and we cannot repair It," observe a shorthorn poet," but, nay, occasionally good things come our way, don't they? sure they do, and bully ones, too, so let us growl and klok on every day save one; on that one let us pause and thank the Lord for what He' done." THAKKGIVI.G OP TUB WOKLU. A I'nlon of All Men for the Better. inent of All. Dr. Hale In Woman's Home Companion. Sixty year ago there was Bomeihing called a world. In which some of us were alive. It wa a world of four or five con tinents of jarring Interests; a world parted by three or four oceans. If I wrote 'to my brother on the other sldo of the world I might expect an answer In ajx months. Jt in the region where he lived the water failed, or the winds did not blow, the poor people there lay down and died of famine. The barns of Ohio might be bursting, but the starving people had to die. But sixty years have changed all that. All that has been changed because God baa worked with His children, and Ills children have worked with htm. Men have been working each for all, and all for each. When a botanist In Java made gutta percha flow from a tree, and, when Alexander Agasslt and the rest compelled the Lake Superior mines to deliver their copper, some hundreds of thousands of If ill A Health' Guarantee to be Found in No Other Water, Because: 1 The ONLY Water put up in STERILIZED bottles; 2 The ONLY Water Domestic or Foreign which is NEVER put in a bottle that has been used before. The World's Best Table Water" For Young Men There is individuality in our Suits mid Over coats for Young Men. The iattonis ure youthful, if you please, and snappy, hut not freakish. There is variety enough to give everyone a sat-" factory choice. ' We have recently added some very attractive new lines for young men from 17 to 21 years. Shirts and Neckwear for Vouug Men, too. i'Iuko Thursday, TliuiiksgivinK Day, at 12.30. Tirowninaldno & Cq Bo K clothing, furnishings and hats, 1 ClV FIFTEENTH awo DOUGLAS STREETS, y OMAHA. E. S. WILCOX, Manager, t)) Vr dK( i m Pirn' iiiittii mmm God's children between thenl drew th copper Into wire and sheathed it with gutta pcrcha and laid their cable beneath the oceans. The children worked with their Father, and the Father worked with KIs children. It la not one man who ha done this. It Is not a hundred men. It is the union of the world. It Is this union of the children with the Father, and ol the Father with the children. The great victories have been the victories which you and I have prayed for every morning when we have wished that the Father's will may be done on earth just aa It is done in Heaven. All for each, and each for alll SPICED CHEEK. "There Is one thing whloh woman could understand In political matters if ah had the franchise." "What's that?" "When sweeping reforms are on the carpet." Baltimore American. I tasking -I suppose you have put your summer duds up with camphor balls to keep the motliB out. lie Broke No; I huve put them up with glided hulls to keep" the wolf away. Boston Transcript. Professor (of English literature At times you find It difficult, I dare say, to com prehend the Involved style of Mr. James. Miss do Mulr Oh, no, professor; I never have any difficulty In understanding him. Tho only trouble I have is to find out what he Is driving at. Chicago Tribune. "Say," Inquired the boy next door, of the little girl whose father suffered from asthma, "what make your father wheex o?" "I guess It's one of hi inside organs playing." -Puck. . .... ,,; (l. "So you like classical muslcf -"Well," answered Mr. Cumrox. "I'm beginning to be won over. When some one goes to the piano It's a satisfaction to know that you're not going to hear the kind of word they put to the average popular song." Washington Star. "Maria, whut's this salad made of?" "Chopped celery, onions, vinegar, salt, and pepiR-r." "Yes, I can taste those, but what are the other Ingredients?" "The scraps of everything we had left j from dinner yesterday, If you must know." I Chicago Tribune. "You and that playwright are fast friends since you fought a duel." "Certainly," answered the French play wrlght. "Have we not. risked our lives to advertise each other?" Indianapolis New. "I'd like to have you meet Mr. Lohscome. He's tho vice president of our literary so ciety." "Why. Ir it any particular honor to be a vice president? I thought " "Not of the kind you ure thinking about, " perhaps, but It's some distinction to be 3 vire president of our literary society, let me tell you." Chicago Tribune. ;