6 t iJL1 T1IK HKK: OMAHA. "WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1V 1910. 'j r Tinv Omaha t Daily Bee, FOUNDED HT EDWARD ROSE WATER. VICTOR ROSE WATER, EDITOR. Entered at Omaha pustofflce a second elae matter. TERMS OF KURffRIPTION. Daily He, (Including- Sunday), fwr wk 15e I'ally Hee (without Knmtav) ner W l"o Dully (wlilmul Sunday), one ),r..WM Ially Bee and Sunday, on year 600 DELIVERED BY CARRIER. Evening- Roe (without 8nnday), per week e ' Evenlna Mee (with Hundav). Dcr week... 10c Hnnday H, otin year $! SO riattirday Hne, one year IK Afldress ail complaint of Irregularities la delivery to City Circulation Department. OFFICES. Omaha The Pe Building South Omaha Twent v-fourth and N. Coiinrll Rluffs-lS Kcrrll Ptrect. Lincoln Mt Little. BulMlng. Chlrart j4fl Marquette Rulldln. New York-Rooms 1101-1103 No. U West Thirty-third Htreet Washington 723 Fourteenth street N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to news and editorial matter should be addressed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Iepartmeut. REMITTANCES. Remit by'flraft. express or postal order payable to The Bee Publishing- Company. Only J-oent stamps -received In payment of mall aoemint. Personal rhecVs, except on Omaha or eastern exchange, not accepted. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION. Btate of Nebraska, Douft-la Count, ss.: Georxe B. Tehuck, treasurer of The Bee Publishing Company, being duly sworn. says thAt the actual number of full and complete copies of The Dally, Morning. Evening and Hnnday Bee printed durlnr the month of February, 1910. wu as follows: 1.. ....... 43,140 ....... 43.800 . r 43.E70 ....... 4a,7a- 43,030 ....... 41,740 ....... 43,810 ....... 43,080 43,910 43,980 1 ....... 43,700 IS... 1C... IT... 1... It... to... II... ... 21... 34... ... 43.070 40.880 43,880 43,890 43,770 41,980 43,930 43,870 43,840 43,810 43,930 43,100 42,100 ' 444(80 21. 43,440 T 41,700 IS.......... 43,870 Total Returned " coplss. ,.','.., -, , Not total ..1,199,860 9.990 .1,189,970 iany average. .... ; J. 43,498 UE0RGB B. TZSCHUCK, ' ' Treasurer, Subscribed In ray presence and sworn to before ma tiila JStu day of February, ma. ftOiifcJKT HUNTKR, fiotary Public. Subscribers leavta- the city tem porarily should have The Bee mailed to I hern. Address will be chanced as of tea as reqaeetrd. . At last accounts' the rating "of In gratitude" was still In cold storage. Omaha's present' Are limits date from 1894. ; Omaha has been growing some since then. It must be an awful feeling to win $60,000 on a lottery ticket and then to lose the ticket. , ' ; ' The . Spanish premier has appealed to his country to "Europeanlze" It self. Why not tell It Just to "Brace up?" There Is considerable speculation in Ohio about the floating vote along the-Ohio river front. .Whither 1 it drifting?' - " ."' 'J ' ', 'The' most apt comment to be made on the Patten incident in Manchester is that the exchange thought it would do it first. j L'Now the flow of the campaign fund will disclose whether that $50,000 sale of r World-Herald . reaL estate was for real money.' Clean up the city is to be Mayor "Jim's" "next slogan. Never mind the slogan. Just clean -up beginning with the streets. It Is evident that young Mr. Knox is a "chip t)ff the old block" diplo matic, as an ambassador he will not admit that he is scared. It la, evident that the men in the box in Philadelphia have been "bunch ing the strikes,; , even though they may not have made a safe hit. v Has any scientific society made ar rangements to inspect Theodore Roosevelt's records? A little matter like that should not be overlooked. Filings under the Nebraska primary law do not close for more than three months yet. The Anal entry list may look very different from the present ippearance. . " Another expert is coming to Omaha to throw light on the cause of the prevailing typhoid. If we can only get two experts to agree, it will be smoother sailing. The supreme court of Georgia holds that a woman may change her mind, but then It was not really necessary Tor any court to take the trouble to make such a decision. it is to be distinctly understood that Mr. Bryan reserves the right to de cide for himself not only as between loyalty and disloyalty, but also as to the degrees of loyalty. When the Navy department made the exhibit that food is aa cheap as dirt In China, the Cleveland Leader Immediately inquires, ."What is the tariff oa Chinese dirt?" In Italy an official can fight five duals and come off with a scratch and yet have the honor of all concerned perfectly satisfied. Why cannot the Italian duels be made more exciting? we are to have a cbange in the management of the county hospital let us have a change for the better, and not for the worse. Still, almost any change would be for the better. What hold has the bill board bunch on our city council? What is the use of talking about a city beautiful so long as the council is a willing party to the. disfigurement of the city fcy the uoisome bill boards? Purpose of the Census. In explanation of the purpose of the census to be taken this spring PrtH,! dent Taft has Issued a proclamation, asking all the citizens of the United States to answer questions frankly and without hesitancy, assuring them that nothing told the enumerator will be disclosed under penalty of law. The purpose of the census Is not to invest! gate incomes or property-, values for taxation or to pry into business or prl vate affairs. It Is Mo compile a vol ume of reliable statistical Information as a sort of decennial stock taking for comparison with previous complla tlons and for government reference during succeeding years. A source of wonderment to. all Is the amount of information gleaned during the taking ot a census. The data thus gathered at this time, especially will be of untold value, covering as It will race, occupations and professions, in comes, property, agricultural and com mercial conditions and everything, in fact, necessary to complete under standing ofwhat America is and owns. Much depends on the results also as the basis for future congressional and state affairs. The enumeration will be the guide to the formation of new con gressional and representative dis tricts in many states of the union. It will also determine the rearrangement of all sorts of governmental districts for the facilitation of public business. Many people do not like to tell about their business or private affairs, regardless who, the questioner may be, and especially if he is an official of the law." The average person is tempted to twist things for the sake of appear ances, to give one sort of a twist to the assessor, another to the Census-taker and several original varieties of twists to' the newspaper reporter. The pur pose for which the Information is to be used governs very largely the amount and accuracy of what is given. But for the coming census it is hoped full compliance will be made' to re quests of the enumerators, not be cause of the penalty of a fine for re fusal, but because we all want full and reliable returns. Meat Prices in England. While American consumers are find ing fault with the price of meat lu the United States, It Is little consolation, although no relief,- to know that the Englishman is from 4 to 6 cents a pound worse off. It matters little whether the meat is American refrig erated. South American frozen or Brit-, lsh .slaughtered, the general prices of any and all kinds are higher la England to the extent mentioned. This condition prevailthroughout the 'British isles, varying unappreciably even where lo cal competition Is keenest. Compari son of prices there with the corre sponding prices here has recently been made by the consular-service, and has been of no small Interest 'among all English-speaking peoples. ;,i - In America the brisket sells for 5 cents. a pound, while in England the same piece sells' for. 10. Stewing beef sells for 11 cents here,' as against 14 there; round, 14 here, as against 18 and 20 cents; rib roast, 14, as against 20; sirloin, '16, as against 20; "rump steak." (our porterhouse) sells for 20 cents here and 26 there. " This same ratio is disclosed also in prices of other meats. . . ... A general sentiment prevails In Eng land favoring domestic products of all kinds, and this is so noticeable In the meat markets that some shops make it a point to advertise "British beef only is sold here,", and these shops get the major portion of the trade, even though imported beef is slightly cheaper and often' better. It is charged that, like their .American cousins", English butchers frequently "fudge" on the public so that "British beef" is any beef slaughtered on Eng lish soil, no matter where it is raised or rattened. Consequently i several hundred thousand head of cattle are shipped to Englalnd annually to be sold aa native beef. The cause for high prices in Eng land is tho same as that given here the high cost of beef on the foot and of the. feed necessary for fattening. The English people complain and have started investigations' just as we have, which, very like those in America, Have so far resulted chiefly In enlight enment, but not in lightening the load. Western Ideas on Eastern Farms. With the establishment of an agri cultural department as an adjunct to the New York Central railroad a new Idea is being Introduced in the rural districts of the east. It is the applica tion of western metnoda to eastern farms and to eastern conditions. The railroad expects to make it a success ful experiment, not only from the farms to be cultivated, but also be cause of the traffic resulting from put ting new life, new energy and new ideas into the farming constituency of Its territory. The idea obtains quite generally, al though erroneously, throughout the east, that the soil there fa run out and worthless and that the farmers of that section cannot compete with, the more vigorous soil of the middle west. But the fact that the westerner is learning to, renewthe soil by scientific pro cesses and make it capable of cultiva tion for an indefinite length of time has never occurred to them. It has also been forgotten in the east that continental Europe, which has been cultivated for centuries, is still a very profitable farming district. The west is learning and the east must learn the principles of soil restoration and con servation by both precept and example. It is pathetic to look over the aban doned farms In some sections of the east The weeds and underbrush have - .)- grown rank and tall and the buildings are In tumble-down condition. No one seems to care what happens to that magnificent country, fend yet agricul tural scientist say that with proprr treatment and care those farms can be made to produce as much as they ever did. The present condition Is attri buted to the lack of proper methods and the trend of national immigration from the east to the west and to the cities. But lhat there is now to be an ftTort to change this U a matter of no small importance. The rejuvenation of agriculture In the east should give back to the states along- tho North At lantic seaboard "fence more a good, healthy, vigorous farming constit uency. Ease Ball Season Opening'. With the coming of the warm days the base ball germ has taken on life and Is at present stretching itself for a season of great activity. On the va cant lots and In the streets of the city the game has already begun and the "kids" have started the fight on the umpire. Away off in California, down in southern Texas and along the gulf states the big league teams are prac ticing steadily and the sporting col umns bulge with the dope on the com ing season. While every season of the year baa its sport, no season is quite like the summer eeason and no sport is like base ball. The American peo ple can go crazy over base ball with remarkably little effort. When once they are started they do not stop and nobody cares. The boys catch the spirit first and as- soon as vthe proverbial spring game of marbles is possible the base ball game is in full swing. It has been well said that the most popular poem In America is nothing of Browning or Kipling, Inlnd you no other than "Casey at the Bat." It surely is typical of the Amer ican game, although it gives but a rijnall idea of the extremes of lunacy possible on the "bleachers." Is This Another Foreery t Among the collection of self- solicited testimonials which the latest democratic candidate for United States senator from Nebraska modestly prints in bis own paper is the follow ing, which raises suspicion of the same kind of -forgery which the same paper tried recently to .perpetrate on an other distinguished Nebraskan: T.' W. Blackburn, active among local democrats, said: "I believe that the can didacy of Mr. Hitchcock will meet with the approval of tho majority ot Lancaster democrats. ' With his entrance- Into the race fresh blood has been Injected Into the com ing fight. He will be an able representative of the state, and would not, even If 1,500 miles away,- forget that Nebraska was his home and that ha was primarily represent ing this state." While this Is printed under the head of Lincoln, everybody knows there is only one T. ,W. Blackburn In Ne braska and that be lives in Omaha and not in Lincoln, and that . he." registers as a republican and not as a democrat and that he .said nothing of the kind. If our T. W. Blackburn, has a double in Lancaster county, the sooner we know it the better, so that we can keep the republican and democratic twins separate and distinct. The real T; W. Blackburn would never have made the mistake of putting the hiding place in Europe, to which Mr. Hitch cock decamped when the vote on the tariff was impending, only 1,500 miles away. If this is not another rank forgery, what is it? ; Changing Preachers. The changes in the personnel of the preachers occupying pulpits in Omaha churches seem this year to be more numerous than ever, and the move ment,, in response to calls to larger fields or bigger salaries seems more active than usual. As a rule we regret the loss of these departing preachers who stay with ' us an all too short time, and almost be fore they have become thoroughly Identified with the community and get really in touch with our Interests fly away like birds of passage to other climes. The preachers who are more permanently attached to" their churches and who are with us and of us year after year, are generally steady-going, industrious and progressive workers for the upbuilding of Omaha along practical lines, while the new crop, even before they get rooted in" the ground, want to turn things upside down, experiment with impractical the ories, and accomplish in a day reforms that require years. It is always the latest-come preacher who thinks his new home Is the worst vice-infested place be ever saw, and conceives it to be his mission to tell how bad we are In order to make his work of redemp tion shine brighter. Every community ought to change some of its preachers once in a while in order to appreciate better those we have kept and those we have lost. If the perusal of Commander Peary's proof were to be only a fore runner of a trip over the country on the Chautauqua platform the people of Kansas City, St. Louis and a few other Cooked towns would raise a roar to have the congressional committee sup press them. Occasionally one hears a sound from the gables in the attic of the past. The carriages belonging to J. Edward Addlcka are being sold In Newport for storage debts. Will you have to search the pages of ancient history to find out who Addlcka is? The Omaha Ad club is figuring on entertaining its guests, during the meeting ot the National Association of Ad clubs, with a home product dinner. We used to have dinners of this kind when the patronize home-Industry movement wae first started, and those who participated still have a fond re membrance. 1 Will Edgar Howard produce the names of the "prominent democratic lawyer in Omaha" and the "well known republican office holder in Lin coin" who have hired out to the cor poratlons as "fixers' for the coming campaign? Will Edgar flunk? Will a duck swim? ' It is authentically reported that Mme. Tatrastlni fainted at the end of the "mad scene" in "Lucia." Having seen Mme. Tatrazzlni, the question naturally propounds itself, who or how many carried her off the stage? A Pittsburg . editor is asking his readers to tell him what he can do with $100. '-- It is not surprising that an editor should be bewildered at the thought of spending so much money all at once. John L. Sullivan maintains that the romance has gone from prize fighting What else could anyone expect a man to say when he has been licked as hard as Sullivan was the last time he fought? Poar to One. Chicago Trlgune. As the pool now stands, four states have ratified the Income tax amendment and one n an reiusea to ao bo, in rial defiance of a platform Its legislators should have re peeled. Even Rut Stores. Brooklyn Eagle. Rome has Improved since the late Julius Ceaser was stabbed In the back. Now her statesmen fight duels and wear court plaster on their faces for a week or so In consequence. Knock for Iowa Conscience. Charleston News and Courier. It is now claimed that the Iowa con science la keenest, because a man from that state has made restitution to the government for having bored a hole in Lincoln penny, but the chances are that his repentance was due to the fact that he found that he could no longer pass the coin which he had mutilated. Pashlaa? a Good Thin a: A Ion a. Sioux City Journal. . The retail meat, dealers blame It on the , farmers, .. the wholesalers and the packers. The wholesalers will blame it on the farmers,, the retailers and the packers. The packers will blame it on the farm ers, the wholesalers and the retailers. The farmers will blame It on the retail ers, the wholesalers and the packers. And there you are. Appreciation of Hand-Made Art. San Francisco Chronicle. The fact that Mr. Wolgast, the new light weight champion In pugilism, is being flooded with proposals from theatrical managers, some offering him so much as 12,000 a week, ought effectively to silence those cavillers, who assert that in this country there is no real appreciation of home talent in art. ' Worklaa- Off the Deficit. " Philadelphia Press. The tariff and; 'the revenue provided by the present congress last August -Is doing Its work. Today; last fiscal year, the reflctt was1 $81,628,000. To date, the fiscal year, the deficit Iv $23,660,000. By the end of the fiscat year 'this will be almost gone. Were the revenue for the current fiscal year from the -Income tax on oorporoutions already in there. would be no deficit. PENSIONS FOR MERRY WIDOWS. Novel lea. for that Saajared Palm of facie -Sana. New'York Sun. Senator Root has announced his Inten tion to oppose 'a pension measure now on its way through congress. An act of June 27, 1890, granted pensions of $8 a month to widows of deceased soldiers and sailors whose marriage occured prior to the pas sage of the bill. The benefit was limited to those without income or means of sup port other than their own' dally labor and to those whose 'actual net Income did not exceed 1200 a year. The law of April, 1908, removed the income restriction and in creased the rate to $12 a month, thus pro viding for the payment of that sum to all widows of soldiers and sailors subject only to the condition- of marriage prior to June 27, 1890. The measure now before the sen ate proposes the removal of the time limit and the payment of a $12 pension to wid ows of soldiers and sailors irrespective of the date of marriage. Opposition to an extension of tho pension system calls for independence and courage. The argument of earlier years was the ob ligation of the- nation to devoted women who cared for the home- and the family while the soldier-husband was In the field fighting for his country. The argument of today is the obligation to the ' devoted women who marry veterans and care for them and nurse, them in their decllqlng years. It is estimated mat some or zv.uuv have been engaged in that laudable enter prise since June 27, 1890. and the country Is asked to recognize their devotion to the extent of $12 a month, presumably retro active and cumulative. ', The United States has paid military pen sions amounting, In their aggregate, to $4, 000,000,000. Sentiment, and not legal or fi nancial obligation, has toeeti the controlling influence.' "Without sentiment the world would be a hard and cheerless place of residence, but there is a point at which sentiment goes to seed. It is a fair Infer ence that Senator Root believes that senti ment in the matter of pensions to soldier's widows has reached Its proper limit, and there are a great many people who will agree with him. 1 . I Our Birthday Book March 18, 1810, WUtls J. Abbott, the well known news paper man and political writer, was born March 16, 1863, at New Haven. He ran the publicity department for Mr. Bryan's last campaign. Pr. Robert S. Anglln, the oculist and aurlst in the Karbach block, is 63 today. He Is a Canadian by birth, and graduated in medicine at Queen's university at Kings ton. . J Louis V. Carrier, chief clerk of the gen eral baggage office of the Union Pacific railway at Council Bluffs, was born March 16, lttS.t at Geneseo, III. He has been con tinuously In railroad work since 1875. John N. Rem me!, chief clerk of the local freight' office of the Chicago North atstorn railway, was born March 18, 1872. He is a native of Wisconsin, where he started out as a telegraph operator for. the Northwestern. Mr. Rem me I has been In Omaha for five year v- Around New York SUvplee m the Oarreal at Ufa aa aura to the 0rt Asaerleaa Metrepella freaa Bay to Pay. While sentimental New Torkers were shedding gobs of tears over the banish ment of picturesque horse cars from local oenery, the callous-hearted push to tne op poslte extreme by Introducing high poire automobile hearses. They reason that dead New Yorker ought to be put out sight as quickly as social regulations per mlt. They consider encumbering the streets with slowly moving funerals a serious dls (urbane to business and a needless tax on the nerves of spectators The automobile hearse will obviate these discomforts and give the deceased as well aa the mourners a Joy ride that Is worth the price. The machine combines space tfr the casket and seats for eight persons, and, catyspeed up i rum iiva to twenty miles an nour. The rush to the cities does not find its sole explanation In a general longing for the glitter and excitement of urban life. The city as a labor market draws Its crowds. One charitable organisation livNew Tork reports that while the supply of man ual labor for spring will scarcely be up to the demand. New York Is flooded with peo ple In search of clerical work, and search ing In vain. "The class to worry about Is that which Includes the clerk, the sales man. and the man who thinks that by not learning a trade he has a chance to be come a bank clerk, and then a bank presl dent. 'Anything to be In New York' Is the outsider s slogan. As long aa that continues, there will be more men than Jobs." ( "That's an easy lot whicb hangs about the broker's office here," said the cashier of a fashionable uptown hotel, quoted by the Sun. "They'll bite onalmost anything; even the brokers themselves will. "The morning that the sentence of Lupo's gang of counterfeiters was announced, as one of the brokers passed my desk I asked him If he had ever seen one of the phony dollar bills that had been passed. He had not, so I took one of a lot of brand new dollar bills that I had Just got from the bank and passed It through the grating. He looked It over. Then he took It into his office, where everybody took look at it. Well, they got a big magnifying glass and scrutinized the bill and I'll be banged If they didn't take a whole hour off Just looking at It. Then one of them came out here and offered to give me $5 for It. Of course, I then had to show hlra the tlllful of such bills." Some Brooklyn housekeepers are availing themselves of a plan by which they make two pounds of butter out of one pound and a pint of milk. The pound of regular store butter Is put with a pint of milk into a sort of double boiler affair, in Which the butter Is mixed with the milk by means of a paddle not unlike thai of an Ice cream freexer. From this a rather soft substance emerges, to which some of the less con sclentlous housewives add a bit of coloring matter, for the mixture Is a bit paler than the original pound of butter which went in. When the composition has cooled It becomes hard and to all Intents and pur poses butter. It certainly weights two pounds where there was only one before, and, Is so like the genuine that most fam ilies do not know the difference. As but ter is now selling in Brooklyn for about $8 cents a pound, the thrifty souls are get ting two pounds of this "Just aa good" for 42 cents, and in this way reducing their creamery bills. ' A portly man. who looked like "aW Ar menian,' boarded a Broadway car at Bowling Green and sat next to a placid, spectacled old fellow, who was reading a little blue volume bearing the title "Mar cus Aural bid. ". The. portly man handed cthe conductor - a dollar bill, fiattlns. 95 cents, chiefly In dimes and nickels. He lipped the change in what he supposed was his overcoat pocket. At Park place the foreigner got up. Before doing so he felt-In the pocket In which he be lieved he had put the coin. He did not find It. His face lit up, and he turned to his quiet neighbor, and remarked. "You have, niy money in your overcoat pocket.", The placid man stared at the foreigner. who took off his hat, and bowing to the Imperturbable one said, with emphasis, 'I say you have my money, 95 cents, the change of a dollar, in that pocket," and the foreigner pointed to the other man's pocket. ' Again the self-possessed old party stared and went on reading. The foreigner leaned over and putting his right hand in the overcoat pocket of the disciple of Marcus Aurellus extracted 95 cents. - Spreading the money out In his palm the foreigner shook his other- hand at Mr. Aurellus, and sald "You see, It was as 1 said. We were sit ting so close that I thought your overcoat pocket waa mine," Mr. Aurellus' calmness was more notice able than when he first lifted !) ' from his book. A little Greek restaurant in New York has neted its owners a fortune. One of them cooked and the other waited on the few tables when they began business, twenty-five or more years ago. Today one of the men they used to serve with the pies of Pericles and the thumb-bits ot Themlstocles, Is putting up a new building for them. They paid $54,000 for the land, and they are spending $57,000 on the build ing, exclusive of the cold storage plant, which la to cost $16,000. A cellar and two sub-cellars are hewn out of tthe solid rock Above ground there will not be many floors. The speciality of these thrifty Oreeks is the serving of food, so they Insist upon ample restaurant space. They have a theory that a table should pay 100 per cent a day. In this country Greek sculp tors turn easily to carving out fortunes. "The announcement that there are more than 1,600 cases of divorce, separation, and annulment of marriage on the calendar of the supreme court at present, to be dis posed of before June 1," says the New York Times, "Is somewhat disquieting. But that court administers the law for a very large and thickly populated district. In a population of 4,000,000 the appeal of 1,600 discontented married couples for re lease from their marriage ties need not be taken aa an Indication that the com munity is already In a state ot moral de gradation. Doubtless, the complaint In many cases Is Justifiable. Until lately marriages have been too easily contracted In New Yorlu- We may hope that one of the effects of the new marriage laws will be a decrease in the number of divorces." 4 Toe Msieh Uniting- In. Philadelphia Press. Amateur wireless operators who flash out Idle messages, which confuse and mislead the operators of wireless stations are clearly a nuisance. When the steamer Tagus was in distress recently her signals for help were interfered with by an amataur wlreleas operator on the top of a New York sky scraper. There Is a growing demand for a law ot the air which will suppress ware leas trilling and Jocosltes snd have the air -'-ir for bona side messages. ' v vTTie only Dakln g PowJ y ' made from Hoyal Grapo . ' Cream of Tartar PERSONAL NOTES. If Messrs. Shaw and Hobson insist upon having war with Japan, there Is no reason why they should draw tho country into their private concerns. For sending a fake telegram as news to London paper a man nanKjd Horner has Been sent to Jail for six weeks. Similar tactics would' not be practicable 'In this country yet, owing to lack of Jail space. "Killed by Joy," was the coroner's ver dict In the case of Mrs. Mury K. llen drick, who dropped dead at South Nor- walk, Just after she had been paid $5,000 in cash for some property by Zenus C. Buha. Prof. Thomas Nixon Carver of Harvard university denies that the trusts have been more efficient than Individual con cerns In lowering the cost of production, but says that they have been abf& to lower the cost of distribution. . Hannah, the Missouri mule laid out by a Brooklyn car. managed to land a "good lurk" souvenir on the shoulder of the motormaa a moment before the crash came. It Is characteristic of the Missouri mule to make an Impression at home or abroad. Whon Bryan MullanDhv of JodIIii. m. died In 1861 be left one-third of his large fortune to be devoted to help immigrants passing through St. Louis "on their way to tha west." . The fund has grown to about $1,000,000 and the trustees have noth ing to do but draw their salaries. The Supreme court has denied the right tc divert the fund to other ftubllc purposes. Oliver Harrlman, millionaire banker. president of the Westchester Horse Show association, has filed at Mount Vernon N. Y., his oath of office and appointment as deputy sheriff of Westchester county, by onerirr Bcherp. Mr. Harrlmai has a man sion at Purchase, on the outskirts of White Plains. He is one of the staff of rich deputies Sheriff Scberp has appointed. DEMOCRATIC FOLLY. ' Policy of Negation ProTea Parlv Undeserving; ' of Power. Minneapolis Journal. Some of the democrats think the demo cratlo senators were under no obligation to m poHiai sayings uank bill, which was a repuDiican program measure. Tha platform had demanded It and the president had adopted it as part of his irreduetble minimum of performance by his party at this session. This, It Is claimed, made the bill a political Issue and absolved the dem ocrats from voting for It. Of course, If the democratic senators can reason that way .and make their constitu ents feel that It Is all right, they may have saved their own seats. But where' have they landed the party with the large Inde pendent vote, which, it Is acknowledged, sways the country, and which flits from one party to another, largely on the merits pr demands of their records? Can the dem ocrats satisfy this element by mere nega tion? The attitude of the democrats In congress ever since the Taft administration came In as been weak. It proposed nothing as an alternative for the Payne tariff bill. It did not even make a virile protest against its adoption In the house, while In the senate the democrats divided and floundered, part of them supporting and part repudiating their own platform, which specifically de manded fVee lumber, free ipulp wood and free Iron ore. The republicans have committed enough e i one kind of sex. There that teaches a paper covered copy send 21 one-cent stamps, f rt'r mailing tnly, to the World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.; French cloth binding; 31 stamps. A new, revised .tip-to-date Edition, now ready. . ' This great book tells all about medicine that if our for .' all weakness and disease) of tho delicate organs distinctly . ' feminine. Tha medicine is Dr. Pierce's Favorito Prescrip tion. During tho past 40 years many thousands ot women - have used it with marvelous results. It imparts health, vigor,. virility, strength and elasticity to the or-: gans that bear the burdens of maternity. It fits fot wrfehopd and motherhood. Taken during the period of gestation, it makes the coming of baby easy and almost painless. It completely banishes the pain and misery that are the result of a woman's .neglecting her womanly health. - . . , - ' . V ' , ' An honest medicine dealer will give you wliat ypu ask for and nat try to persuade you to take some inferior-secrer-nostrum -substitute for the little added profit he may make thereon. "Favorite Prescription" is so perfect and so good Ire its make-up that its makers feel warranted to print its every ingredient on its bottle-wrappers. Is that not a significant fact ? As will be seen from its list of ingredients, it contains neither alcohol nor habit forming drugs. ? GUCKERT & HcDONALDr .;Tailors We are now displaying a most complete line 'pi. foreign novel ties for spring and summer wear. ,'v-.-.-" Your early inspection is invited, as it will afford an opporluuity of choosing from a larae number of exclusive styles. ' - 1 ' ' We Import in "single suit lengths," and a suit cannot be dupft-W - An order placed now may be "317 South Fifteenth Street blunders to lose them the house In the com ing elections, but' their opponents have made enough mistakes to counterbalance them, and leave the parties about where they stood at the beginning of the admlnln t ration. , ,. . It la often said that the people hold the party in power responsible, and that they vote to rebuke it If it forgets its. pledges. This K to a great, extent,, true, but It Is also truo that the discriminating Independ ent voter of today asks himself what he Is going to put In the place of the party he relieves. When he look" aC the record of the democrats lately, he Is almost com pelled to say that whatever the shortcom-j Ings of the republicans, the democrats hn' A not deserved power. CHEERY CHAFF. Inebriated One Sliay, " mlshter did you alio me beat out that friend of mine? Stranger I saw you 'running down the street, but I didn't observe any competi tor. Inebriated One You didn't? Why, I went by that lamp post back there's if It waa standing still! Puck.' . First Physician So you lost Ro-i-. as a patient? Didn't he .respond to your treat ment? Mecond Physician Yes, but not to my dunning letters. -rLlpp(ncott's, Magazine. "John," queried hep husband's wife, "If some bold man were, to kidnap me would you offer n reward?" '. "Sure thing," replied the wife's husband. "1 always reward those who favor me." -Boston Courier.. "What do you "think of this theory that the comet will sweep the earth with Its tall 7" . . . "Oood Idea," . replied the public-spirited man, "If the comet can be persuaded to give some of our street -espcalal attention.'' Washington Star. . ... Reoprter How was the opeatlon,' doctor? A success? . . ' .. Doctor Perfect. We found things not before known to science. Reporter Hut, 'doctor- they -tell me that the patient -died. . Doctor (impatiently) That's Just lik you laymen. Let's bury the subject. Hal tlmore American, Friend Wfiat? You don't m,ean to say you saved the lives of those freezing men by mental treatment? Kxplorer Yes. indeed. We persuaded them that they were watching one of the early season's ball gam. Puck. ."Hold, man! What would you do?" "I would die! From this brldsre I will leap Hio-yon: .mighty rtoirviu.! axl ,nd It all-all.," "Heavens! But if you must,' Walt twenty minutes until I can send fr my moving picture machine; this will make a corking film." St. Paul Dispatch. - TELL" ME NOT. Teil me not In box-car numbtrs' ' Life Is but an empty dream. If you're working for. a railroad.. Oh, how happy life must seem! Life Is business on a railroad. Where you have to do thins right, uo just what the yardmaster tells Labor hard from morn till night. you. Lives of railroad men . remind us We must never be sublime. But when going leave behind us uarnlshes upon our time. Garnishes which perhaps some other Wandering on this stormy main- Some forlorn and wayward brother- Seeing shall pass on again. When our working days are over, And our harvest davs are spent. With our shoes all worn and dusty, With our backs all tired and bent. We shall near the gates of heaven, But InHlde we'll never get, For St. Peter there will tell us. We've no railroad men here yet Knowledge is Vower knowledge that is power and ge in the hands of a woman. It is the knowledge :ier own nature, her own physical make-up and the home-treatment of diseases peculiar to her is a great home medical book all this. It is Dr. Pierce's Com-; mon Sense Medical Adviser, a book of 1008 pages v and over 700 wood-cuts and colored plates. Oyer 2,300,000 American homes contain copies of this work. If used to cost $1.50: now it is free. For delivered at your convenience. -ESTABLISHED 1887. I