8 THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, JUNE 17, 1010. The umaha' Daily Bee v i . , ' i lOfXDKU BY EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOn HOSE WATER, EDITOR. Entered at Omaha postofflce Second ers Blatter. TERMS OF SUBfKTRIPTlON. lally Kn (Including Sunday), pr week.lfic 1fclly tivm (Without punrtiiy), per week. .10c lnlly H (without Hunday). one year.f4.u0 Dally llee and Hunday. wis year 0V DEUIVEKJJD BY CARRIER. Evening l;e (without Hunday), per week. So Kvenlng Bee (with, Sunday), per week..lOr fciuuday Boa, on year 12.50 Saturday JUaa, ona year l.W Address all oomplalnta of Irregularities In 4alivry to City Circulation Department. OWICE3. Omaha The He Building. South Omaha Twenty-fourth and N. Council lllurfs la Scott Street. Lincoln 611 Little Building. Chicago 164K Marquette Building. New York-Hooma 1101-1102 No. 34 Weat Thirty-third Street. Washington J Fourteenth Street, N. W. COnUESI'ONt)ENCE5. Communications relating to news and editorial matter should be addressed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. 'Remit ly draft, express or postal order payable to The llee Publishing Company, only 2-cent stamps received in payment of mall accounts. I'eraonal checks, except on Dmaha or eastern exchange, not accepted. 8TATEMENT OS CIRCULATION. State of Nebraska! Douglas County, as: Oeone B. Tsschuck, treasurer of The Bee Publishing Company, being duly sworn, say that the actual number of full and complete copies of The Dally, Morning, Evening and Sunday Uee printed during the month of May, mo, M as follows; 1 .'..41,300 17 48,690 8 ,.42,450 18 43,030 1 42,880 19 43,680 4 48,110 20...., 43,000 6 42,680 21 43,000 4 42,640 22 41,400 1 42,680 21 43,740 1 41,370 24 43,230 9 43,150 25 43,090 fO 42,660 26 43,370 11 42,570 27 43,400 12 42,600 28 43,650 It 43,020 29 41,300 14 42,960 30 43,370 15 41,600 31 44,120 14 43,110 Total 1,326,210 Returned copies , t,85 Net Total 1,316,225 1 Dally Average 42,353 GEORGE B. TZSCHUCK. Treasurer. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me this 31st day of May, 1U10. . 11. P. WALKER, , Notary Public. Subscribers leaving the city tem porarily should have The Bee nailed to them. Addresses will be changed as often aa requested. -How many flies and rats have you killed? ' Miss Glaser is said to have a lulu of an offer for next season. ; Welcome, to the druggists. , May their pills be sugar-coated. , Is summer going to pass without . a single person going to the North Pole? In these days of aviation It is no re flection on a man to call him a "high flyer.V , ., - Texas claims to have made $2,000, 000 on its pnlon crop. That Is pretty strong talk. It's great advertising for the fight, Just the same.' Keep your eye on the gate receipts. The presence of those Abernatby boys la likely to start more talk about mollycoddles. "After all, the Jews who were barred from Russia ought to rejoice that it is not some other country. "VSlr William Jennings O'Bryan may put one over on the colonel by visiting the Auld Sod, which T. R. passed up. Some sinister people are saying that if the aeroplane succeeds the stork will lose his Job, which is needless pes simism. The Doormat club is successor to the Inbad club and Congressman Fran cis Burton Harrison Is the original member. The Connecticut man who stole $1,600 wort'i of watches should have no difficulty keeping time with the lock-step. Uncle Joe says he cannot see his finish. And he insists that, though he is 74, his eyesight is excellent. Um, huh. The suffragist leader in New York, who is to wed, probably thought that the surest way of getting the upper band over man. , Perhaps the Wright brothers are entitled to a monopoly on airship pat ents, but they will scarcely claim one on tho air, we trust " Mr. Bryan recently paid $600 for a saddle horse. Oh, the cross of gold and crown of thorns are not so bad after you get used to them. - The Chicago Judge who decided that rings were not necessary wearing ap parel will have a difficult time im pressing that on the stage. Would it not be awful if, after all It should transpire that it was simply an honest difference in methods over this matter of conservation? What ia Edgar Howard going to do about it If Governor Shallenberger persUU la remaining deaf to all en treaties to call that extra session? Several of those (Sugar trust fellows were weighed in the balance and found wanting because they did not have the ballaBt to hitch onto the sugar. The colonel tried to make a mere photographer of Kerralt, but he soon discovered in the boy a vigorous rival at killing bull elephants and boss lion American Diplomacy. American diplomacy from John Jay 'g treaty with Great Britain In 179 4 down to Philander C. Knox's Court of Abltral Justice In 1910 has been the science of the square deal between na tions and the g-ospel of international peace. Whether the issue was di rectly between the United States and another nation or not, American diplo macy has Btood for peace as against war and for commercial prosperity without political Intrigue and conniv ing. Secretay Knox was well within the facts as attested by history when he told the students of the University of Pennsylvania: If thla government can help to upbuild Its neighbors and promote the thought that the oapltal of the more advanced nations of the world would be better employed In assisting the peaceful development of those more backward, than in financing wars, It a such a deviation from traditions as the American people will approve. It is something every young man and woman, every boy and girl should know that aa this government has in creased in power and wealth and in- fluence, it has also increased its strength as a factor for world peace and righteousness and, while It btands today as the richest and strongest of nations, it likewise stands as the ex emplar of universal good will and square dealing. And this la the posi tion it, as the type of popular govern ment, should occupy. It Is Its own answer to the question of comparative triumph between this and any other form of national authority and should help men to a decision who are asking if this government, of, for and by the people will prove the ultimate test of endurance. Our diplomacy was written into the federal constitution and supplemented by the Monroe doctrine, and upon these solid rocks of peerless statecraft we have built and stand today, and the distinction we have achieved and are yet achieving but represents the logic of our constitutional development. We could have come to no other stage in the course of our national life by fol lowing the precepts laid down by the fathers and that we have not missed the mark is both tribute enough to their wisdom and our fidelity. No nation has ever had or ever will have cause to fear true American diplomacy, for it builds not with an eye single to self-aggrandizement, but with larger vision of mutual benefit. A Church Hat. A Brooklyn woman has taken the Initiative in attempting to secure a reform in hats that will create a spe cial design for church wear, and to that end has enlisted the services of sev eral Episcopal clergymen of her city. The church hat is to be smaller in dimensions than tho prevailing style, In fact, small enough to allow another person to sit within a reasonable range of the wearer and permit, worshipers in the rear to catch . an occasional glimpse of the pulpit and pastor. Every man should embrace this good woman's reform with the deepest cor diality, though she spurns the assist ance of men, saying that while men "will bluster and denounce the wo men's bata as an outrage," they are too completely under the petticoat domin ion to raise a hand in concerted action to reform the apparel, so that what ever progress is to be accomplished and whatever relief Is to be effected, must be brought about through the efforts of the women themselves. Per haps she is right, at least we have ob served that the men have stood and are still standing, meekly and blandly, for most anything In the shape of a hat the women choose to wear. While this woman Is engaged in a good cause, a righteous cause, we may even venture to suggest, yet though she may succeed in gaining the promise of co-operation from her friends of the cloth, we have no sort of faith in the success of her scheme. For after all it will pot depend on her efforts, nor the efforts of her colleagues in the pulpit, but on the wish and will of all the women who expect to wear the headgear, and they are not going to yield an inch so long as Dame Fashion tells them what is the style. That one word style is the inscrutable law to which femininity bows in humble, do cile, abject submission the one man date she will not violate, and this Brooklyn woman reformer knows that as well aa she knows that these hats are an abomination in the Bight of men, if not of the Lord, whether worn in church or elsewhere. Oillett Eight, McCarthy Wrong. If the traveling mayor of San Fran elsco is a wise man he will cool down ana say nothing more about ' my town" in connection with Governor Gillett'B order to prohibit the prize tight, for the governor's action Is "my town's" opportunity for redemption. It ia one thing for Mayor McCarthy to make loud declarations in a Chicago depot and quite another thing for him to intercept the authority of the state government, backed, as It undoubtedly is, by the popular sentiment of the peo ple, so the best he can hope to do Is to make a show of himself and reflect no credit upon San Francisco. Governor Gillett, manifestly, was Influenced by pressure from Washing ton, clearly indicating that if San Francisco expects aid from congress in securing the Panama-Pacific exposition it will have to turn its back on the prise fight That the governor's action will strike a popular chord in the state is, of course, a foregone con clusion. An exhibition of brute force, already Under the ban of law in most states, has no place in comparison with a legitimate institution of the world wide Importance such as this expos! tion will be. " It would have been most fatal error for the chief execu live to have chosen a prize fight in preference to this exposition. What criticism now comas of the governor's action can only be regarded as the howl of the mob. . Undoubtedly this marks the begin ning of th9 end of prize fighting In California. The next leKlslature will be almost obliged to enact a law against It, and that will constitute a tremendous example for Nevada, where sentiment Is already undergo ng a change toward such things. People everywhere are beginning to see that a prize fighter as such is a thoroughly useless member of society. He contributes nothing at all to the sum total of good, but adds much to the aggregate of evil. And this prize fight is the climax of disgraceful con tests. Everything connected with it smacks of the illegitimate and gives off the one Impression that it is a gigantic money-making scheme and little else. It may not be prevented, but it probably will not come off in California, and that will be all the vic tory that law and order need care to achieve at this time. The rest of the battle will be easy. Evil that must depend on public sufferance for Us ex istence can hope to exist but a little while at best. Lest We Forget. While that Judgment for $6,263.- 295.49 brought on by the foolhardy mismanagement of the Water board is hanging over Omaha and no one ven turing to say what the next step will be, let us recall a few points of recent history. , When the proposition of $6,500,000 of 4 per cent bonds was put up to us last year the Water board, over the signatures of all Its members, issued an appeal to the public explaining why the bonds should carry, In which, among other things, they said: Wo cannot and will not Use the $3,000,000 of bonds heretofore voted. V It la important that the bonds be voted now that the Water board may be In posi tion to. make Immediate compromise of the litigation, if this is possible. If Immediate compromise cannot be made It Is equally Important that the bonds be voted, that the Water board may be in position to pay the amount found due by the United States supreme court. If the bonds are voted, they will not be Issued, nor will they bear Interest, until the water works are acquired by the city. No more of said bonds will in any case be Jsaued than are actually necessary for the acquisition of the plant. Should the decision of the supreme court be against the city, a decree will be en tered which must be paid. The city can not avoid the payment of auch judgment by reruslng to vote bonds. The Judgment would be enforced by a levy of taxes on the property of the cltlsena. If the bonds are voted the Judgment can be paid by the proceeds of the bonds and the interest and expense of running the water works will be paid out of the revenues derived from the sale of water, without additional taies on the property of the olty. Of course, the Water board and its members have made a whole lot of statements .during the seven years of the proceedings for "immediate" pur chase of the water works that they have had to gig back on. To go back on these representations on which the people were induced to vote the $6,- 500,000 bonds would put them very much in the attitude of obtaining money under false pretenses. One of the candidates for the demo cratic nomination for United States senator suggests in self-consolation that if Mr. Bryan were back of those petitions asking himself to get into the running he would enclose return postage. We are not so sure about tha. Were It not for the bill raising the salary of the superintendent of Ar lington , cemetery people hereabouts would never have known that our old friend, Governor Magoon, while In the War department managed to plant a brother in a comfortable government Job. Charley Wooster thinks he is the only man in Nebraska who has ever publicly said a word against the Ore gon plan law, although everyone be has talked with on tho subject thinks as he does about it. No, there are still others who also think aloud. The democrats of Arkansas not only snubbed Senator Davis at a recent state convention, but have further diS' played their contempt for him by pub lishing the fact that his name ia not Jefferson, but Jeffries Davis. Congressman Hitchcock's newspa per concedes that the railroad bill is at least a step forward, but the chances are that again, as with the tariff bill, when the roll is called he will be necessarily absent There has never been a state like Okla homa, and there probably never will be again. World-Herald. We hope so, in spite of the fact that Mr. Bryan and his fellow demo crats are trying to make Nebraska a dead ringer for Oklahoma. A scientist figures out that the world has enough coal in its mines to keep miners busy for 7,000 years more, which ought to Justify the younger men, at least, in learning the business. As we read those reports of the colonel in London during the period of national mourning we could not help but ponder on the thought, sup pose the king had lived. Some democrats complain that pro hibition will destroy their party. It Is endangered, then, from both wind and water and both emanating from one source. If the namesake of Howell Water Bill No. 1 has not yet collected from the owners of the water company for making thn $6,203,295.49 sal;, he ought to put In his claim at once, and they ought to be glad to pay well fot the valuable services this expert bunco steerer has performed for them. Another democratic love feast Is scheduled to be pulled off at Colum bus. Will someone please have a waste basket handy to receive unread letters. , rteaplna; the Whirlwind. Wall Ptreet Journal. The officials of the sugar trust had a long, busy and profitable time sowing the wind. Now they are reaping the whirlwind. Aatl-Fat Treatment. , New York World. Three months In ' a federal jail took twenty-six pounds of surplus fat off a sugar trust culprit and improved his health. When does the rush of health seekers to jail begin? I'nfeellna? Comparison. Springfield Republican. When Bryan camo home In 1904 the "homefolka" who greeted him in New York all came from Nebraska. Roosevelt's "home folks" seem to come from all over the United States. Itadderleaa Phi pa of State. Minneapolis Journal. Colonel Bryan says that when lit for eign countries he never Instructs people as to what they should do. No wonder so many foreign countries are drifting aimlessly on the great ocean of events. Itesiionalbllltr Knili, Indianapolis News. Well, If the English will persist in going ahead with their Egyptian policy after the colonel has told them definitely and dis tinctly what they ought to do, they needn't expect him to hurry over there and get them out of trouble later on. Cruelties of Greed. New York Tribune. It will indeed be a grave reproach to America If the hideous evil of phosphorus necrosis Is longer tolerated in match fac tories Just for the sake of saving B per cent on the cost of one of the cheapest of all articles of merchandise. Well Worth Looking- Into. Baltimore American. If the strictures on the medical schools of the country In the reports to the Car negie foundation are Justified by facta, the states should be looking into the mat ter. Thla Is a matter of life and death to the public at large and If health and life are to be placed at the mercy of incompe tent and half-Instructed doctors, It is time for the law to be taking a hand in defense of both. ANOTHER PINCH IS PROSPECT. Something- Continue to Jor Riders on Swell Railroad Cars. Springfield Republican. Railroads east and west are considering the matter of Imposing an extra mileage charge on passengers taking sleeping or parlor car accommodations. Their position is that they must have more revenue, and that Increased charges should be placed where they are most easily borne. The passenger who can afford to buy sleeping and parlor car passage ia presumably bet ter able to pay an Increased rate for trav eling than one who puts up with, a day coach, A committee representing several of the principal 1 trunk lines la at work on the eubjwt. ' I'hls1 proposal will be- heard with more faVoV if ordinary passenger ratea are not raised 'than It will be if they are to ba 'raised also. If meantime Pull man rates should be reduced along the lines of the Interstate Commerce commis sion's order In relation to certain sections of that Service, parlor and sleeping car travel would remain probably no more ex pensive than before. But the Pullman com pany is fighting the commission's order and may succeed, even though It ia per fectly evident from the company's large dividends, stock and regular, that it can well afford to lower its ratea to some ex tent. CHAMPION FOR A DAY. Outburst of Enthusiasm for the Lat est Manblrd. Baltimore American. Without doubt the latest champion in tha aerial world, the man who has made aviation as easy and graceful aa the flight of birds, the inoomparablo Charles K, Ham ilton, is worthy to be rated as an epoch- maker. Ills flight from New York to Philadelphia, tha time from the metropolis to the Quaker City being ona hour and forty-seven minutes for the eighty-six mile flight, almost challenges belief. Incredulity as to the victories to be gained by tha air flyers, has the footing taken from under It when this man, a phenomenal goer, makes a marveloualy sustained long-distance flight, performing all the evolutions of a bird, in scarcely more space than Is required for the feathered flyers. Hamilton has made the feats of other flyera com monplace. The failure of a motor while It delayed his return trip did not prevent him from winning the prise of 110,000 offered by the New York Times. He is worthy of the name of Manblrd, aa he has prac tically paralleled the achievements of the birds of the air, even when a strong wind was blowing. What now remains? Swltness and duration have been made good. Air travel la assured. But to what extent the new mode of flight will enter into tranapor tatlon remains to be seen. As far aa its sport and recreative features are concerned It is almost as well established as automo- blllng. As to its military uses, aa to the results to be wrought out in traffic, these matters remain to be disclosed by further developments. The advent of Hamilton has removed tha objections raised as to the lack of mobility,, reliability and flexibility, as well as power of sustained flights that have been brought against aeroplanes. Our Birthday Book Jane 17, 1910. Charles Frohman, the theatrical manager, was bora June 17, I860, at Sandusky, O. He started out in business In 1877, and is one of the big guns ia the dramatic field. Robert J. Collier, proprietor of Collier's Weekly, la M. He was bora ia New York City, and waa associated with his father In the publishing business, taking It over on the latter's death a year or so ago. William W. Stetson, atate superintendent of public instruction of Minnesota, waa born June 17, IMS. He has been a high officer of the National Educational assocla tion and has lectured to teachers more than once here in Omaha. Fred P. Hamilton, cashier of the Mer chants National bank, la Just SI today. He is Omaha born, of a pioneer family, and was educated at Crelghton university. He has been In the bank in various capacities sine 1897. Franklin Shotwell of Shotwell & Shot well, attorneys at law, in the New York Life building, was born June 17, 1881, In Marengo, O. He graduated from the law department of tha Ohio (State university and started practicing his profession here la Omaha In IDOL He served aa deputy county attorney under Judge glabsugb. Washington Life Boms Interesting Phases act Conditions Oaeerrea at tha Station's OapltoL A few days Sao a cltlatn of Texas In closed a $1 bill to the rostoffice depart ment. No explanations accompanied the remittance. About a month before that a tl bill was received by the department, apparently from the same man. As In the latter Instance no explanation was forth coming. The two $1 bills were laid aside to await developments. Later on a letter came from a man In Pan Antonio which cleared up the mystery to sonic extent. Tho letter read: "By sending you this money I want to Introduce myself to the postmaster general and his secretary. 1 expect to do the same thing In every de partment Of the United States government at the capital. I hope this wtll be satis factory," That was all there was to it. A new and Important principle has Just been laid Oown by the court of clalma. It Is In effect that a federal employe dis missed without Justification may not sue the government for damages. The case came up in the claim of W. A. Miller, who achieved some fame during the Roosevelt administration by being dismissed from his position as foreman of bindery In the gov ernment printing office. Miller had been expelled from the book binders' union and because of this was dropped from the printing office by Public Printer Palmer. When Roosevelt heard of It he ordered the reinstatement of Miller and established the principle of the "open shop" in the govern ment. Miller brought suit to recover the salary during the period that he was out. The court of claims haa Just rejected his ap plication, taking the position that he ob tained his redress In the reinstatement. A contrary decision would have paved the way for wholesale suits to recover on the part of numberless employes who were dismissed and later obtained reinstatement. ' Ever Blnce his arrival in Washington, Representatives Eugene N. Foss of Massa chusetts, is being pointed out as a political wonder because having been a republican for so many years he Jumped over Into the democratic party and carried the strongest republican congressional district In Massachusetts. Aa a matter of fact, observes the Wash ington Times, there ia another member of the house who has a record which cannot be equaled by Mr. Foss or any other mem ber of congress. That member is Charles Henry Morgan of the Fifteenth Missouri district. Mr. Morgan, It may safely be said, carries the Fifteenth district around in his vest pocket. Just at present he Is a repub lican, but there la no telling when he will be nominated and elected as a democrat. He has been a member of both parties in the house. When the democratic leaders decided to send a man to the house to displace Mor gan he was not much concerned. The re publicans know that Morgan and not the leaders controlled the district and so they nominated and elected him. Having learned the error of their ways, the democrats took Morgan back into the told and sent him to congress as their representatives. Again factional strife broke out and Morgan was displaced by the democratic leaders. The republicans, ever on the alert for a man to carry the district, gave Morgan their nomination, and now he is their represen tative in the house. Mr, Morgan expects to come back to the house as a republican, but It ia regarded aa certain that If any ambitious member of that party deprives him of the nomination the democrats, anx ious to sweep the entire atate of Missouri, will ask Morgan to get bask into the fold. The demand for Senator Bourne's speech on popular government still continues, and with greater ' force. The edition has now reached 00,000, and a corps of clerks is working daily filling the orders. The re quests came from senators and members of the house for copies by hundreds and thousands. Tho fact that the people aa individuals are taking an interest in the speech is pleasing to Senator Bourne, and the many requests for one and two copies by citlaens from every section are attended to with as much care as those for a larger number. Not only have the politicians and Individuals asked for copies, but heads of large corporations are sending requests for the address. STRINGS ON PARTY FEALTY. How tho Interest Sidetracked "Stock Isaac" Regulation, Pittsburg Despatch. Tha excuse that la prevented by the leaders of the senate for refusing to teave In the railroad bill the provision with re gard to the regulation of stock and bond issues raises a unique question in political ethics. Aa given to the public this excuse is that the democratic senatora will not vote for the bill with such a section in It, as they believe It to be an Invasion of the domain of state legislation. But almost everyone who considers the question must have seen that the demo cratic senators are not in a majority, and to exclude a provision on account of the convictions of the opposition is a novel phaue of legislation by parties. If the organisation senators will vote wjth the progressives or Insurgents for this pur pose there will be no difficulty in passing the bill. The fact is stated by the New York Tribune that there la a bargain between the Aldrlch wing and certain so-called democrats to defeat what are termed radical enactmenta in the bill. The excuse then takes the phase that on account of a bargain with the minority the professed party leaders Intend to defeat a provision called for by the republican platform In order to gajn votes to defeat certain other provisions not excluded by the republican platform. There rarely Is a more salient example of the fact that party authority and party lines are binding on the men who make most of the professional party loyalty, only so long as it suits their personal In terests and prejudices. As a matter of fact the senators making this excuse are as much opposed to the provision against stock watering as tha democrats on whom they put the responsibility. They are op posed to It because the great Interest of emitting flat atocks ia the power that maintains them. "Give While Yoa tAvm." Chicago Record-Herald. Do It in your own lifetime. Such la the maxim followed by the St, Louis philan thropist who haa just given his entire for tune of t3.000.000 except for a small an nuity of $3,000 for the furtherance of good works. This action is, of course, a pointed lesson to auch wealthy wlllmakera as cling to the old familiar fashion of making their benefactions posthumous, with all ' the chances of family opposition and of faulty administration. David J. Rankin wisely chooses to see his money doing good in his own lifetime, under the direction of trustees of his own choosing. Detaching himself from his for tune, he modestly atanda to one aide and leta the fructifying work proceed. He "dies poor" to ona sense, yet rich, aa may be hoped, in satisfaction and content. 1 PERSONAL NOTES. A rock tunnel 700 feet under New York, built at a cost of I2t.0i0,0u0, beats any thing ever attempted by Captain Klild at burying treaaurc. Mrs. Alice Wells of Brooklyn will be come the first woman "patrolman" of Los Angrlrs. Her job will be to look after the morals of the young who appear In public plans. By the consolidation of the Continental and Commercial National banks Chicago will have the second largest Institution of this kind In the country. Only the Na tional City Hank of New York has a larger surplus and deposits. Mrs. Catherine Van Voorhla of Rochester Is said to have made the largest flag that ever floated over tha rapltol at Washing ton. She attended the suffrage convention recently held in Washington, and in spite of her 80 years, took part in all the pro ceedings. President Taft is reported to have received her with especial distinction, John Hill Bartlett of Brockton, Mass., who, several months ago, built a number of apartment houses which he advertised to let only to people with big families. Is going to try married life himself. The young woman of his choice la Florence M. Solmer, who cornea from Nova Scotia. They Intend to make their home In one of the apartments erected by Mr. Bart lett. The Wright brothers will become hon orary doctors of law Wilbur Wright, L.L. D and Orville Wright, LL. D., at the coming commencement of Oberlln college. Thla academic honor Is due to the Inven tion by the brothers "of a practical heav-ler-than-alr flying machine, and tho ad vancement given to the art of aviation by their expeditions and discoveries in the field of aero-dynamics." TRAIN CONTROL, 11 V WIRELESS. Revolution in Telegraphy oat the Vnlon Pacific. Philadelphia Record. Wireless telegraphy will soon be employed by the Union Pacific railway for train signaling and other official business. The advantages thereof In a country of mag nificent distances frequently visited by storms are obvious enough. It makes for greater safety In the terrific winds that blow on the plains. When wires go down before a gale it Is risky business to keep trains moving. The electric wave generated by the aerial transmitter are not affected by tho most tempestuous gust; hall and snow signify nothing for them. It will be possible at all times and under all weather conditions to transmit messages. It is clulmed that the new system will effect a considerable saving; and one can well be lieve that when the cost of wire and the wages of corps o( linemen, all of which will be eliminated, are taken into account, where there are many wireless stations and there la a possibility of much Interference, wireless telegraphy might not be as useful in railroad work as out on the windswept and sparsely populated plains. On the Union Pacific system, however, all trans mission difficulties are .said to have been solved, so that even the objections alluded to would no longer stand In the way of em ploying this method in congested regions. Talks for people "People will not read hardware ad vertisements, especially women, and they do the buying," said a hardware merchant to one of oijr representa-t tives. . Do you know of a woman who Isn't Interested in a cool summer kitchen T You sell gas and oil stoves, do you not? Do you know 6f a woman who doesn't want a stove with a good oven? You do sell stoves with good ovens, do you not? Do you know of a woman 'Who doesn't want good steel cutlery? The cutlery you carry Is good. Isn't it? Doesn't every family In Omaha need screens, hatchets, hammers, nails, tacks, screw drivers, can openers, pans, pots, kettles, irons, hinges, locks, bath room supplies? Aren't there a great many men and boys who fish, hunt and carry pocket knives? Isn't it reasonable to suppose that if you Interest the 42,000 families who read The Bee in your hardware that they will buy yours? The Salesman Who Wants More Salary Benham, advertising manager of E. C. Atkins' Saws, Indianapolis, finds It very profitable to send out short talks to clerks. Here's a sample: Nine out of every ten who read this ex pect to receive an advance in wages some day. Of the nine perhaps five are Just wait ing until they may be able to sayt "I think I ought to have more wages Tea wbbbA If made with Rumford Baking Powder will always be just right light, whole some and easily digested. It imparts to the biscuit the natural flavor of the grain Best of the High Crade Powder No Alum. A Mystifying Musical Treat 1IY ritOK. A. O. EDWAltDS, OK CHICAGO on the new Solo-Apollo Player Piano. MORNI-VQ AND AFTKJIXOON, FRIDAY, JUNE 17, 1010 People of refined musical taste will especially appreciate thla demonstration at The A. Hospe Go's Piano Parlor 1513-1518 Douglas Ktreet LINES TO A LAUGH. "Ooorge. Ooorgo. wake up! Von't yo rotlee that the tloor la quivering? 8me bodv Is walklna In the library!" "Uood heavens! Do you take ni for S seismograph! t leveianu nam i'taier , .. - tv.pbi... In. from ton rtf stalrV wiiy)-Jnhn. have you locked all tho rulthci shoes in the safo7 Mr. Dorklns Yes. Mrs. lh. i kins Well, tie the dog near tha rubber plant and turn out the lights. Chicago Tribune. Brown What have you got against that man Smith'.' He has Uoua some very Kood things. Junes Ye, hut I happened to bo ona of them. Ufe. A northerner slttlnK on the verandu of t southern hotel wat enraptured by tlis beauty of the niKlil. "How wonderfully beautiful Is the moon, llirlit falling on live w.iter," he exclaimed. "It Is, Indeed," replied his dignified but unreconstructed southern hostess; "but you should have seen It before the war." liv erybudy'a Magasine. "I wonder." ejaculated the provoked husband, Aaltlni; for nls. wife to put the last dab with the puff on her nose, "if Ihe world will ever se. faceless powder?" "Or," put In his spouse, "sniokleless hus bands." Baltimore American. "Snmatha, I can't see to Bhave by this light." "Horace, your fare la plain enough U be seen anywhere." Chicago Journal. "I tell you. my dear boy, I stand on my rights. I believe a man should be tua master in his own limine." "Of course; that's all rlRht. Rut whnt I want to know Is if you are allowed to vmoke lu tho parlor." Baltimore Ameri can. "Chicken croquettes." says a customer. "Fowl ball!" shouts the waiter. "Hash,'' says a customer. "Gentleman wants to take a chance!" sliou-ts the waiter. "I'll have hash, too," says the next cus tomer. "Another sport!" shouts the waiter. .New York Sun. . A ROSE, Alison Wlnslow in Book New A bud pink, graceful, aweet On bended stalk of dainty green, A bud that sunset glows might meet And find Its match In sweetest color seen. A bud 'tis in Its youth, and now It sents the air, o aweet though faint. And Its pure heart and. fineness would allow Its presence next the cheek of purest saint. A full-blown blossom 'tis a rose In lta great splendor rocks and sways On graceful atalk In graceful pose. And thus It lives through summor days, A rose, In Bummer-tlme of life A flower that knows no care or pain, Knows nothing of our mortal strife But knows the sun and cooling rain. A rose Its heart has had a tiny blight, The world l not so sweet as day of yoraw It seems aa If it's nearly nlwaya night, i It longs to bloom on tho celestial shore. A rose It weeps; its petals fall; ,, It wants to die and bloom In heavenly lands; It's glad, at last to hear the call, For earth, onco rich, seems now like wast ing sands. A rose? Ah, no; 'tis but a rod, And yet it 1b not wholly gone; 'TIs but a proof of the great love of Clod, Its duty In the world is not yet done. A rose? Ah, no; 'tis but a heart, The wind will blow It onward o'er th eflrth. Of all this life one rose is but a part. Yet who but God can estimate its worth! who sell things because I have been with you two yean next Monday." Or "I want more wagea because you pay Tom or Dick more than you do me and I , work Just as hard .as .they , do," . ., Two of the nine are making an honest effort to advance. They are on hand early In the morning and work diligently all day plodders putting their time conscien tiously, but with no fixed motive nor plan to work upon. The other two of the nine are different-, they have made a study of their employer. . They give thought to conditions and sup ply what la needed. They place themselves In their employers' shoes and do the things which common sense teaehes them that they would do, were positions reversed. Theae are the ones who advance quickly. Slie yourself tip you belong to one of these classes which one? If in the latter here's congratulations. It not, get In quick. And you can get in quicker by making a study of the goods you have to sell. Why Is It that Bill can sell more atoves or Tom heads the list on paint, or that you don't sell as many tools or saws a Charlie! You are perfectly at home, perhaps, when your customer asks for a refrigerator, bul you wish another salesman had him when he aska for builders' hardware. Your boss is in businuesa to sell, and tin more he sells the better he likes It; the mors sales you make, the more he likes you. And you can not make the most sulci unless you know your merchandise. It Is always safe to sell merchandise that Is advertised and this class Is the cos iest to learn about. . Show your customer your advertised ' goods. Hold him aa long as you can with out annoying him but show him or toll him about your advertised goods. Nine chances out of ten he Is ready to buy, but has not acknowledged the fact to himself. Take advantage of what Is being done to aid you and show him your lines that are advertised. RUMFORD The Wholesome Baking Powder