Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 19, 1910, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1910.
9
The omaha Daily Bee.
FOUNDS D DT EDWARD ROSE WATER.
VICTOn ROSE WATER. EDITOR.
Entered at Omaltg postofflce as Second
rlasa matter.
TERMS OF Kt'BSCRIPTlON.
Imily Bee (Including -Sunday), per week 1M
I'.illy Be (without Hnnday), per week l"c
Ially Una (without Sunday), ona year U
Ially Bee and Sunday . one year w
DELIVERED,BY CARRIER.
Evening He (without Sunday). per tli c
Evening Bee (wtth unday. per week 10c
Sunday Beo, one year r
Baturdny Bee, one year -w
Addraaa alt complaints of Irregularities
delivery to City Circulation Department.
OFFICES.
Omaha, Tha Bee tlulldlnic.
South Omaha Twenty-fourth ana N. ,
Council Bluffs 13 Scott Street.
Lincoln 61 Little RulldlnB".
Chicago U, Marquette Building.
New Verk-Rooma U01-1102 No. 34 West
Thirty-third Street. ...
Washington 72G Fourteenth Rtreet. N W.
CORRESPONDENCE.
Communlcatlona relating to newa and ed
itorial matter should be addressed: Omaha
Bee, Editorial Iepartment.
RKM11TANCES.
Remit by draft, express or postal order
payable to The Bee Publishing Company.
Only !-eent atampa received In payment Of
mall accounts. Personal check, except on
Omaha or eaatern exchangee, not accepted.
STATEMENT Of CIRCULATION.
State of Nebraska, Douglas County, as.!
George B. . txschuck, treasurer of The
B-e Publishing Company, being duly
sworn" says that the actus.! number of full
and complete cobiee of The Dally, Morning-.
Evening -and hunday Bee printed dur
ing the' month ft December. 1908. wai as
IOII0WSI
X
a......
.'.....
' B...-n.
. . .,
t ..... .
8
t
i9.'.:.v.
lli.Vr.,
19
13
14......
IB ,
41,880
41,780
.41,680
41.7S0
40,344 .
4Jl,30
41,470
43,380 '
4330
' 43,660 "
V 4a4
41360
44,60
' ,48,470
.. 42,600
It... 49,630
1A 49,930
It....' 41.930
t0 . . . ' 49,770
tl . . . , 49,480
82......... 42,660
0,3 .'..'" 42,460
94 49,620
26 42,000
ag... 44,680
97......... 49,610
28 42,930
99 ........ . 49,370
30 49,410
81 42,490
It..
411430
Total .. 1,333,610
Returned copies.,,. 10,130
Net ToUl.;..' 1,3X3,380
Dally Average 42,334
atiORUhJ li. TiSSCHUCK. treasurer.
Subscribed la my presence and rworn to
before lue this lal uay of Deceiuber. 10.
W". P. WALKUK,
'" Notary public.
Subscribers leavlaa- the city tem
porarily should kit Tke Bet
mailed to them. Address will be
, chtagid as often as requested.
. As the London fog lifts th.e peers
may be seen still peering.
Where Is that goosebone prophet
who predicted an open winter?
, Sort of bloodless surgery . in the
maneuvers of our jack tars at Nicara
gua. "
With St. Louis society men taking
to wearing muffB, no wonder the gorge
of the plain bid liver rises.
'Perhaps' Cleveland's self-denial
meat strike ls he modern ivi'm of the
ancient mortification of the flesh.; ,
,-PtkfBgafcDmices that the bar are
down at Hun-Chun and Lun-Chin-Chun.
Presumably,, also, the ltd Is off
If Kansas City confirms Its poison
plot suspicions, our bid friend, Lucret'ia
Borgia, will have Buffered a partial
eclipse. .
After each-defeat Mr. Bryan has al
ways declared that he did not Want to
run again but that he would not prom
ise not to do so. '.-
Mayor "Jim" wants a transfer from
the executive office in the city hall to
that in the state house, and he is not
afraid. to aSK for it. (
Japan Is about to make Port Arthur
a commercial city. Instead of the
familiar .''Port Arthur falls" it is to be
'"Port Arthur rises." '
Announcement having been made by
science that the earth was never a mol
ten sphere, we may proceed with the
regular order of business.
Benjamin Franklin's birthday passed
without a whisper in hla memory. But
in this automobile-airship age the elec-
trio kite flyer is a dead one.
' Now that Mrs. Fish has joined the
votes-for-women movement, we may
expect the whole social aquarium to
get into the suffragette swim.
f v
Lincoln will vote again soon yto de
cide whether the town shall continue
dry or revert to the wet area. Have
lock will do well to look to its laurels
Organized effort against infant mor
tality gains steadily. Prevention of
' race' waste rather than race suicide is
another of the modern signs of conser-
1 va'lijn. : - '
Prof.,Bell say. that the proper word
for aviation Is dromlng. Will he claim
a patent, on it after everyone gets to
using' It, as in the case of the tele
phone? ' , '
If there were any question about his
Intention of trying the senatorial race
track', the recent performance of our
democratic congressman at Washington
'should dispel-alldoubt.
A' university professor has Invented
a machine to register the emotions.
.Still, it Is hardly likely to serve the
' came practical purpose as the machine
.to register polltfcal preferences.
The United States Fish commission
is planning to explore the Antarctic
waters for sea elephants reputed , to
fcWrt there. Good! That will divert
popular conversation to a fresh topic,
Speaker Cannon has engagements to
speak- la both New York and Pittsburg
on Lincoln's birthday. Fulfillment of
the dftar role -will prove . test of the
'masterfulness with which the insur
gents have credited him.
For Uniform Laws.
The variegated reception of the In
come tax amendment among the gov
ernors and legislatures is a fair indica
tion of the usual difficulty of getting
states to agree concerning any measure.
The president's suggestions to the con
ference of governors and also to the
Clvli! Federation can be regarded only
as a national crystallization of senti
ment that may aid In securing such
conformity of legislation among the
states as the people may deem desirable
on subjects which they are not ready
to yield up to congress. Some funda
mentals with which states seek, to deal
Individually have been topics of ar
gument for uniformity for a long time,
such as the divorce lawn, yet that one
subject alone finds the states so hope
lessly divided that it is doubtful if a
national law will soon If ever take the
place of state regulation. Similarly,
each state will cling to its own incor
poration methods, even should the na
tional Incorporation act become a law.
There are many matters In which
the independence of the state Is so
closely Involved that natural Jealousy
will not be ready to surrender separate
activity to uniform endeavor. - Occa
sionally neighboring states find it op
portune to act Jointly where both are
directly concerned, as witness the co
operation of New York and New Jersey
for the preservation of the Palisades.
And in such affairs as the reform of
Judicial procedure, it may well be that
many states might be persuadedlto pat
tern somewhat after the federal effort,
but even there differences -would arise
later, for the reform desire t or needed
In each state is not always the same.
Congress occasionally pAfscs a law that
proveB to' be beneficial! to all states
that originally held divergent views,
the present national bankruptcy act
being a case in point, but the right to
pass that particular law for uniformity
is distinctly granted by the constitu
tion, although the states may have
their own statutes In the absence of a
national law, yet so varying are local
conditions that national bankruptcy
acts have had a checkered career and
have at times suffered repeal for long
periods, while the states adjusted their
own conditions.
Uniform laws among the states are
desirable along many lines, but it will
take persistent effort to bring them
about and to preserve them when once
on the statute book.
1 Congressional Delaj.
The reluctance shown in the filing of
the administration bills for conserva
tion by the chairman or the house com
mittee on public lands, who has
measures of his own to foster, may not
be consequential, but it serves to re
mind the public,, that congressional de
lay is the factor that'must be reckoned
with for any failure to promote the
executive program. From the views of
the president thi, congressmen have the
unquestioned ight to differ, but with
one or two exceptions the policies pre
sented by; Mrf.Taft to the house have
been based on, the platform pledges on
which both he and the members of
congress were elected.
As the president, of, the whole coun
try, Mr, Taft has been alert to do ms
duty in putting such measures squarely
before the representatives. Any action
retarding the conservation -bills be
cause the chairman of the committee
in charge had an especial constituency
whose Interests he believes to be at
variance presents a peculiar situation.
It would seem as though the president
were entitled to have his bills pre
sented without undue,' and prejudicial
delay, when it is known that they con
form to the wishes of the people and;
the pledges of the party". The introT
ductlon of a bill is only the first step
and the halting of such measures on
the very threshold lsa congressional
move in. the policy of delay that too
conspicuously hampers that serious
work which the people, have a right to
expect from the present session.
The Kansas Tax Decision.
The judicial determination of a vexed
point of constitutional law is aptly
illustrated in the case involving the
Kansas corporation fe act, which has
Just been adjudged void by the' United
States supreme court. The fact that
three separate opinions were filed in
dlcates the divergent ; interpretations
that may obtain among the wisest and
best trained minds, yet out of the dlf
ferences is evolved the decree that sub
stantiates , the theory , of safety-ln
multitude of counselors.
That the controlling opinion is
against the Kansas act is 'not unex
pec ted, In view of the precedents estab
llshed in like cases. When the Western
Union appealed from the state's effort
to tax lt as a condition precedent to
doing business in Kansas, a similar at
tltude. toward commercial travelers and
Insurance companies had been deter
mined as unwarranted interference
with interstate commerce, and in the
case of a common carrier like the West
ern Union there was the possibility
that local exactions might drive the
corporation altogether from the field.
It may be that if a state required such
a tax of its native , corporations it
might maintain the' right to exact it
also from foreign corporations; but it
each state were to tax all foreign char
ters, where would, the burden end? If
a per cent tax. for Instance, were
legal, why not 20? Such a privilege
might be bul)t. up ,into a Chinese wall
about a coiutuouwealth and Interstate
commeroe completely shut out. ,
The suggestion of some kind of a
whistle to give public notice when the
schools lh be closed on account of bad
weather has a plausible sound, but the
trouble w 111 be to make it work in prac
tice. The number of pupils who would
hear imaginative whitstlos whenever
they happened to be absent from school I
would soon be appalling.
On the Forward March.
Successive announcements of big
real ptta doaia tnnktna! inward sub-
stantial building Improvements em
phasise the fact that Omaha is on the
forward march and making strides
such as never before made In the hls-
tnr nf thsi Htv.
To an observer who tries to get these
pending and Impending change, in the
city', configuration in their proper per-
soectlve it .eem. that the physical out-
lines of the city are becoming definitely
more fixed, that the business districts
are becoming permanently established
for retail and wholesale trade and that
the lines of future development are be
coming deeply drawn.
The Jobbing district of Omaha has
been determined by the location of rail
way trackage so essential to establish
ments that are constantly receiving and
dispatching large shipments of goods.
The retail district Is being centered at
the most Important central accessible of being bullies to the honor of being of
polnt and the permanent location ot (fleers and gentlemen; It Is the latter not
our financial institutions and large
office buildings is likewise being grad
ually settled.
There vwlll, of course, be continued
expansion and outspreading in various
directions, but the first movement
should be, and probably will be, the
filling in of these central areas with
solid and impressive buildings suitable
to the purposes of their most effective
use.
The Omaha property owner, and the
foreign capitalist, who fallB In with
this movement and helps push it along
Is bound to draw handsome returns in
the Inevitable future growth of Omaha.
Old-Age Pensions.
Because It is the first report of any
such official Investigation in this coun
try, the opinion filed in the state kmise
at Boston by the Massachusetts com
mission on old age pensions, annu
ities and insurance is sure to attract
general attention. The commission's
rejection of the British- scheme of non
contributory pensions is so emphatic
that the corollary comes as expected
In the -unanimous advisement against
the enactment of any general pension
legislation by the commonwealth. Bills
are submitted for the pensioning of
public employes in state, counties,
cities and towns, based on the con t rib u
tory system, with co-operative control,
and the legislature is urged to make
the old age commission permanent with
a view to fostering retirement systems
among the employers of labor. But for
the state to attempt old age pensions
is pronounced distinctly un-American
The sentiment in Massachusetts is
therefore found to' be largely that of
the people elsewhere. The country
already has many excellent methods of
proviaing aguinm iuiaiunuue, iu j,ne
nrovlsioni" for' savlnirs and Insurance
..J.i. j . ..t.V. ,.i,l'.i..
attached, ,to fraternal or labor organlxa-
tlons and tnrouga mamroiq associa-
tlons and corporations. It has - not
ceased to be a cardinal orinclnle of
. .
American laiuuy.,. to VreVn. 1Ur
the rainy day, and the voluntary effort
toward thrift still has its value In Char-
t,n,inr onH In QtLnnloHno- anri
, , , . . . '
sustaining perovuui auuiereuicuv. wu-
ernment support cannot take the place
of individual responsibility, ' and it is
.lo-n f In-tenndent anlrlt and
. i .
strengin oi luryuH iui. mo pcup.o ui
the old common weaun are aDie to
stand sturdily alone without any such
..i.ji... ..n
stipendiary prop.
Some of the democratic papers are
finding- fault because Secretary Royse
of the State Banking board is drawing
compensation at the increased rate
fixed by the late democratic legislature
notwithstanding the fact that the new
banking law embracing the deposit
guaranty feature, enacted by the same
legislature, has not become operative.
The real complaint of the democrats is
that Secretary Royse has managed to
hold on to the office as against the at-
temDt of Governor Shallenberger to
put a democrat in his place. If Gov
ernor Shallenberger a democratic ap
pointee were only drawing the salary
attached to the banking board's secre
taryship, not a democratio paper would
be peeping.
. It will be noticed that the man who
was the most punctual in the New York
railway service had thirty alarm clocks
. . . . .. ., vi
to rouse him; also that they gave, him
heart disease and killed him; which
leads to the conclusion that there' may
be too much time in the affairs of men.
Toledo as well as Indianapolis will
try for the Corn Show. Omahif has, at
least, demonstrated the value of this
exposition as an educational factor.
There was no such competition for it
before Omaha took it up and made It
what It is.
Baltimore and Massachusetts are at
...
it again.- the southern city negativing
the influence of modern New England
nrearhins:. The last news from the
seat of war depicts the Springfield Re
publican about to march upon the Bal
timore Sun.
Assurance is given that the pros
pective meeting of the so-called Insur
gents at Lincoln Is not to endorse any-
nn. fnr the United States senate. Its
mission must be then simply to con
demn someone and give a few patriots
a chance to let off surplus steam.
Now that the South African exploits
h.v. nnnnlarlied the word bongo, we
-
may look for some wonderful creatures
under that name at. the summer side
shows. "He eats them alive!'
The American nose society an
nounces two new blooms, the White
KUlarney and My Maryland. These
ought to catch the Irish and the south-
ern vote. But a rose by any other
name, etc.
Amid all this splutter by tne wsBn
ingtonlana who cannot always have
their own way,- let us not forget the
patient Dr. Wiley, who pursues his
troubled course with no loss of en
thusiasm. Th President of one of the biggest
"k Chicago I. serving as foreman
' the grand Jury In session there. Did
nron hT of an maha bBnk
President .ervlng on a JuryT
The Omaha school board spent only
a little over 800 for the school census
taken last year, and It is plain that
they did not get any more than they
paid for. ,
Pan tsh meat Flta the Crime.
Baltimore American.
Three cadets are to be dismissed from
West Point for hazing. The young men
guilty of this disgraceful practice can
wall be spared If they prefer the pleasure
tne rormer, kina or1 men wno are neeaea
to command In the United States army.
I ' ' ' ' i
Mechanics, .Not Sailors.
. Philadelphia Record.
One of the arguments for a subsidized
merchant marine Is that the navy needs
sailors. ; i But Secretary Meyer told the
house committee on naval affairs (that
while the old navy wanted sailor, "what
the na.vy, wants today Is not the class of
man who Is set . In hla Ideas. We want
young men who can be trained to manage
the mechanical features of a modern bat
tleship. An Inland man Is often better than
man from near the sea."
Sowar-Coated Innocence.
, rittsburg Dispatch.
The North American Sugar Refining com
pany explains Its status to the public in
a way to create the Impression that It is
an entirely separate corporate entity from
the much-offending sugar trust. Courts
and government officers are strongly of
he opinion that this Is not quite accurate.
But it is a proof that the (Vurld move
forward when, after' over twenty years'
operation's, this corporation takes so much
pains to convey to the public Its Impres
sion of its unsoiled purity.
Footwear Looking; l"p.
New York World.
The 10 per cent Iticroase In the cost of
shoe materials foreshadows a further In
crease In the general cost ot living. If, as
stated, shoe leather la dearer partly be
cause of a scarcity of hides due to de
creased meat consumption, It would appear
that the consumer must pay a new pen
alty for his attempted economies In sub
stituting cereals and vegetables for meat.
Is there no escape for him? It he evades
higher prices on . one aide 't Is only with
the almost certain result of encountering
them In some, other necessity of Ufa,
LEANING OS A HEED.
Foolishness . of Democratic Depend
enee on . Republican Faction.
Washington Post.
Our friends, the democrats, should not
depend too much on .the quarrel of the
regulars, and the Insurgents in the re-
publican camo.' Colonel Roosevelt was
iarm reiormpr,h dui ne declared that ne
wa8 a republican before, he was a tariff
reformer. Victor Murdock Is an Insurgent
DUt Be B rUDftcan before ne l8 an ,
surgent. Albert B. Cummins Is a pro
wresslve, but lie is a republican before he
a Progressive.
I' - Mr. Murdock 'will follow the lead of
Speak. Cannen before he will enlist under
the banner ofChamp Clark, and Mr. Cum
mlns will follow the lead of Senator Al
ancn oeiore ne win ran into tne ranKS or
any squad led by Senator Money.
No two publld men ever hated each other
with more bitter intensity than Roscoe
Conkllng and James O. Blaine. It all grew
out or Co-naMlng practically calling Blaine
unci, ana ximue rciumiiK mat (JonK1
ilng wa8 a turkey cock. Their followers
shared the quarrel and were full of the
mo virulent animosity toward one M
other and the, breach was greatly widened
,fP , f.4h
Ination of Grant in 1880 and gave the place
to Garfield.
Conkllng might have folded his hands,
as thousands expected him to do,
In Sop.
tcmber Maine went democratic, and then
It' was that Conkllng took' command and
restored the - battle. Never was there so
brilliant a campaign In our history, and
when the returns came In it was found
that Conkllng had elected to the presi
dency a man who was completely under
the dominion of his bitterest enemy, whom
he hated with the cordiality of the very
old homed devil himself.
If the democrats are depending on the
Insurgents to elect the Sixty-second con
gress they ' would as well throw up the
sponge right now.
t -n . ,
Our Birthday Book
January 19, 1910. '
Bishop John-L. Nuelsen of the Methodist
church, with
his episcopal residence In
Omaha,, was born at Zurich, Swltserland.
January 19, Ui7 coming to this country
whm a om BlBhop NueUen
Waa-eduoated In both German and Amerl-
can uatversittc-H: His first pastorate In
the Methodist cburch was In Bedalia, Mu.
tie was eievaico. iu ue uisnuy in ijua.
mocrfttl0 BlltU)nal Commltteenlan from
Pennsylvania, who had a little fracas with
Mr. Bryan In the Denver convention Is
71 ;",ay- . ....... ,
, , Mi,wauk(,e J st . jiau, T:,lro&a iu ,
yeara 0id today.- Richfield, Mo., has the
I distinction Of being his birth place.
Kollo Ugden, editor of tne new Yoik
rcvenm post, was corn at saim Lae,
N. Y.. January 19. 1866.
,)av(1 8ta.r Jordan prMldent of th). u
iKnd Stanford university, completes today
his fifty-ninth year. Doctor Jordan Is a
man of science and an authority on biology
and xoology.
Pr. William W. Keen, the famous Phila
delphia surgeon, who delivered the addre
to the graduating clas of the medical de
partment of the University of Nebraska
here last year, was born January ltf, 1X(7.
Dr. 'Keen Is profesaor of surgery In Jefftr-
,on Medlcal coiiese. and hs written
than a five-foot shelf of books on surgery.
Joseph M. Carey, the big stockman
lawyer and author of the Carey act, which
started the Irrigation movement, Is 6t It
used to be Senator Carey of Wyoming.
George T, Ladd, the great physcologlvt
and professor at Yale, Is 68. He was burn
t Palnesvllle, o.
I tr lfntf Mirll mrtA r,.n t rs.'l l0 n
glnoer, la iS years eld today. Scott King
was county surveyor of Douglas county In
18U6-US7, and was chidf engineer for the
South Omaha stockyards until two years
ago, when he went Into business for him
self. He was born on a farm In Colfax
county, and his father, Jacob King, was
one ot the pioneers of Nebraska.
Nebraska Voices
west ginger of Beatrice, "Where
the Wind Blows All the Time,"
Xnde Harmony to the Tolume.
St. Louis Ulobe-tomocrat.
I Voices have ere now cume out of N
braska for the charming ot multitudes.
The winds of Nebraska breathe upon the
vocal chorda and make them concordant
of sweet sounds. Hough and rasping as the
Nebraska wind Is to one who takes its bite.
It carries musio on its loud-flapping wings
to such as suck It In with an open mouth
and an understanding heart. The winds ot
Nebraska are a standing refutation of the
old theory that the human voice can only
be fanned Into sweetest expression of feel
ing by the gentle sephyrs of Mediterranean
or Adriatic shores, where the soft Insou
ciance of wind and wave blend Into har
monies of which the singing voice Is but
a natural part. The Nebraska wind blows
not off spiced Islands or scented orange
groves. It howls down Wind river valley
and the only wave It dallies with on Its
way Is that of the Platte, In which there
Is always more' of quicksand than of
Insouciance. But, handicapped as It Is, it
has made voices to rival those of Mia
Riviera Itself.
Across the divide between the Missouri
river and the great bend of the Platte,
this phenomena of nature is most manifest.
There the Nebraska wind leaps to an an
nihilation of distance1 In Its"" ciiuerness to
find that south where Insouciance will be
possible for It. It rages over Lincoln and
storms above Beatrice, lying close together
In Its path. But out of Lincoln has come
a' voice musical enough to charm even a
donkey and hold it charmed for lo. these
many years. And now Beatrice has given
to the world of song a Miss Mary Lasalle,
jum uiscoverea in iew xork, to nave a
voice of that sweetness and power which
warrant great Impresarios In saying that
she Is destined to shine, a star In the
operatic world. "We lived In Beatrice,"
says Miss Lasalle simply, "and we think
sweetly, where the wind blows all the time,
nd where the Jackrabblt, the coyote and
the wheat fields thrive."
It Is not always In sweet waves of sound,
made by soft airs from tropic seas, steeped
in the perfume of orange grovea. that sweet
voices are attuned. The howl of the covote.
borne upon a wind which- never whispers
and often roars, In a land In which nothing
but the hardier grains can grow, can also
nurture throats strung to perfect melody.
Lincoln has proved It once. Beatrice, an
hour's ride from Lincoln, and as much Inl
the path of the Wind river wind, proves It
now again. And history has repeated Itself
In more ways than one. It was In Chicago
that the voice of Bryan of Lincoln first
charmed the donkey. It was In Chicago,
too, that Miss Lasalle first found a ca
pacious ear to hearken to her. Iter musical
success since then has been as great as has
that of Mr. Bryan. Nobody now denies the
fine quality of her voice, as nobody has
ever denied the fine quality of his. She,
like Mr. Bryan, can never be president, but
she will, like htm, charm multitudes with
the muBlo of her tones, and, Ifke him, she
will make somebody, pay for the music.
She, like Bryan, can console herself for
the "loss of an empty bauble of a presi
dency, with guarantees, regardless of the
ftgate reoetpits. Each of them commands our
admiration. But together they command
our pride -and love as hurling back wtth
scorn, and burying under an avalanche of
proof, the old slander that effete foreign
lands can make a better noise than we can
make here.- Long live the Platte! Long live
the Wind rlver valley! t
CA ti OF THB FAItm.
Land Cultivation More Profitable
Than City Jobs.
Cleveland Leader.
One great truth which Btands out from
all the tangle of fact and error and guess
ing and theorizing on the " Increased cost
of living Is the comparative Immunity of
those who live on farms from the worst
effects of the rise In market values. Most
of the food they eat Is produced', or can
easily be produced, on their own land.
They get It, or can get It, at cost price to
the producer. Their shelter is found under
roofs which are tholrs. If they own their
farms. If not, the rent Is very low, com
pared with the scale of living In cities and
towns. The need of clothing Is less, other
things being equal. In the country than it Is
In the cities. The temptations to spend
money lor many tnings are much nar
rowed.
On the other hand, 'the rise In food
staples, the burden of which there ls.mos
bitter complaint in cities and towns, In
creases the farmer's chances of profits
from his land and his labor. He makes
money by the changes In values which
cause the loudest grumbling In urban com
munitles, great and , small. The food he
consumes is only a very Bmall fraction of
the quantity which he sells. The higher
gialn and meats, eggs and poultry, milk
ana cutter, rruit and vegetables, rise the
greater his harvests are in their market
value.
It Is perfectly clear that however prone
the cities are to exagerate the rewards of
agriculture the lot of the farmer, espe
cially the farmer who tills his own land
ana worxs nis rarm. In large part, with
his own hands, is changing for the better.
If he can make nothing more than
modest living now, he was certainly worse
off a few years ago. If he was able
clear a rair profit then he can do batter
under existing conditions. The economic
changes are much. In favor of the land
owner who manages his own farm.
Meanwhile,, country life Is gaining
in
other ways. It Is not so lonely as It used
to be. The trolley cars have dono much
to Incraare Its sociability and widen It
opportunities for , enjoyment. The. rural
free delivery system has helped greatly 1
the same direction. The telephone ha
probably been tho most Important of the
agencies which have made the farm home
of America less Isolated and -broadene,
their contact with the outside world. The
gradual improvement In country highway
is also a powerful aid to happier and fre
uvinjir " me lui'ma. ana where an uuto
moblla can te kept it add to the farmer'
freedom of movement and diversity of en
joynient.
In the light of there facts, al! of mhlc
are beyond dispute, is not the call of the
country strong enough to lead many strong
and capable men out cf the struggles and
uncertainties and strain of the rltles to
the comparative security of livelihood and
relative peace and calm of the farms?
W ill ouBTreut ut Una? f
lnd anapolia News.
Mr. Taft has told congress now what ho
thinks ought to be dure on several great
questions and he has sold his say with
clearness, force and vigor. Several of his
suggestions doubtless have the approval
and support pi IntelllKent publlo opinion.
But will congress heed the president's ad
vice. One man can take a horse to the
stream, but seven cannot make him drini
Wkrrt Korlaae Waits.
Washington Post.
The warden of Atlanta prison finds that
It costs but lOty cents a day for Banker
Morse's maintenance. The warden could
make a fortune going on tour with a
monologue on the low oost of living.
Miss
Remington
Says
that she his
used the
Remington
Typewriter
for years and
always pre
ferred, it, but
that the new
model i o is a
revelation to
her in new
dp;
time and labor saving features.
It has always been so with every, new Reming
ton model. The new model io, like all its
predecessors, offers a brand new proposition to the
buyer, something more and better for his money than
he has ever before obtained in a writing machine.
Remington Typewriter Company (incorporated)
1619 Farnam Street, Omaha .
PERSONAL NOTES.
So many wealthy Pittsburgers are under
arrest for graft, or threatened with arreHt,
that fears arise of a shortage In the mascu
line element at social functions. '
Two Oleomargarine dealers have been
fined $2,S00 apiece and sent to prison for
two and a half years. Counterfeiting but
ter seems to be a trifle more deeply crim
inal than counterfeiting coin.
Louise, daughter of the late Leopold, re
ceived a fortune from ber father, but beat
the best ' Broadway record In getting rid
of It. She is broke so completely this time
that she can't raise even sympathy.
Jamoe Sargent, Inventor of the time lock
to prevent safe burglaries, has Just died
at the age of 86 years. Many a rogue who
Is doing time in the lock-step can thank
Sargent for failure when he knocked on the
door of opportunity and found the com
bination too much for him.
Mrs. Winston Churchill, wife ot tho
American novelist, who was a St. Louis
girl, he been in London with her husband
this month, and last week entertained with
him the English Winston Churchill. The
American Churchllls are on their way to
KsrypW .where they will spent the winter.,
Sven Hedln, the explorer and author, Is a
Swede,' 44 years old and unmarried. His
horns Is In Stockholm, but clnce 1885 his
time has been spent largely in the wildest
regions of Asia. He Is a good linguist and
lira received titles and medals from various
governments. His book "Through Asia"
was published in nine languages, and hla
'Central Afcla and Tibot" In twelve.
SMILING LINES.
'The man who lent his dog to the pur
suit of that fugitive frym Justice gave
both more and less than those who con
tributed their money."
"How was that?"
"Because, though, his dog did more than
anything else, he contributed only a
scent." Baltimore American.
'Sir. could you give a starving man
work V
Sure. Pitch right in."
Thanks, but the fact Is I couldn't stirt
before next week." Louisville Courier
Journal. An English clergyman, talking one day
with a Scottish brother of the cloth, re-
'll'r1 tt"
a.iJifflfft
VI f aJUPVST iHasIslsBttRHl 8 31 l tBH
tTT" - - -JJMM'-.--.-?gC S'mHf Iff"1-WM'iaSr hi isnrV'Hitril
You Don't Buy "Futures"
When You Buy "Sectipnets"
N the past every filing device every
section has been made with much
more capacity than you would prob
ably use when you bought it. it
meant sood money lnvetted In a
piece of furniture non-productive of
results. Whether you buy a $5,000.00 ma
chine or Just a simple filing cabinet,
which doesn't begin to work all over from
the day you buy. It. It Isn't true eoonuny.
In 'eetlonets," however, there is o
tlad up capital not a penny that Isn t
doing Its full share from the start to
operate your buhlno-M at lowar eort and
with greater convenience.
Seetlonets" at lat make modern fil
ing systems possible to even the sinallent
business, or the one with the lean ro-
.rr'K. alonal man or woman
without uuying lutures
without estraragaaoi.
''Ssctionets" make It l04
Mi'ls . for the smallest
bunlri', the business of
growing needs snd per
haps 'lmlted capital,
where every cent, counts.
A ll lil i. v
In addition to the above lines we carry the largest stock of
high grade office DESE8, CHAIRS and TABLES in the West.
Vie are making an unusual REDUCTION FROM REGULAR
PRICES this month on all DESKS, CHAHtS and TABLES.
0
SBBJ LI i J
Hi!
Phone Doug. 348; lnd. A-3451.
Wsl sss i in nil i ' ar--stfcAja1 fcj fij
marked facetiously: "Well, Pavld, I be
lieve after all has been said, that my head
could hold two of yours."
"Mon," returned the other' with ready
wit, "I never tocht before that your held
wos sae eempty." Boston Transcript.
"There's one thing we will have to chango
If these ladles who wish to vote have their
way," said Senutor Horghum.
"What is that?", .
"We'll have to quit talking about the
wlmlom of the plain people." Washington
Stur.
Butler I-ady Gray and the new
cook
are waiting below stairs, madam.
Mrs. Frodt Show the ouok up first, Jork
kins. Lady Uray can wait, but the cook
won't. Life. 1
"One thing always puszled me about a
parliamentary proceeding."
"What Is Unit?"
"How a man can be so acrobatlo as to
be the chairman of a standing commit-
tee. Baltimore American.
I
EUMBLE SEAT ROMANCE.
Minna Irving In Leslie's.
A pretty, maiden tired of golf, .
And bridge, and tennis, too,
Went out and bought a motor-coat
And filmy veil of blue.
And then she got an auto-car,
A model new and neat, .
It was a sporty runabout
And had a rumble seat.
'sho'tled'the veil conuettishly'r ' ;,n
Beneath her dimpled chin, 1
And with her sister at her side .
Went out to take a spin. .
And as they sat In front she cried,
In accents silver sweet,
"I wish a young and, handsome, man
Was In the rumble seat."
She looked so fair behind the wheel.
So graceful and so gay,
She captivated old and young
And stole their hearts away.
And when a dashing college youth
One day she chanced to meet,
He yielded to her girlish charms
And took the rumble seat. '
Along the winding country roads
They motored far and wide,
And soon the ardent lovor changed
His place unto her side.
Love's old sweet story as they sped
He managed to. repeat;
Her sister always after that ,
Rode In the rumble seat. V.
Three times since then the golden-rod
Has gilded vale and hill;
The drives tho racy runabout
With him beside her still.
And now to makn their rosy dream
Of hnpplness complete
A chubby younster and his nurse
Are In the rumble seat.
"il'i" fjr:
to be up to the minute to lake advantage
of time and money saved by modern
methods, without putting needed capital
into unearnlng furniture. "Seetlonets"
may be expanded from the requirements
of a doctor with one patient to a trans
continental railroad and every cent of
their cost will be eu earning cent all the
time. : : . :
Beotlonets" ar'e' the first big Improve-
rnent In tiling device since the Invention
of modern business Kysteme. We want to
needs, why you can no longer forego the
Installation of tho ijiodern office system
you know you need.
We have something of Interest ti say
olso to the biggest busln'SS man the
man who thinks his preent -system fills
ail requirement. We can show you pos
itively how you can save money. Won't
you come In and give us the opportunl,
or 'phone and we will do the comlngT
tell you more about these "little Droinera r
to Whil W.Wallf A. SSvutAmB" .w Want to
tell vou why our whole reputation and fv
IUI1UII1I III HUB CUIIltllUllliy . mw u . I
tlitm. wliv we know they are fitted to your
Pmting-.'.Co
918 924 Farnam Street
r
') 1 '
Y.
J