THE HEK! OMAHA, MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1910. 'Hie umaiia Daily Bee. rOfXIjKD BY EDWARD KOSEWATER VICTOR ROSE WATER, EDITOR. Entered at Omaha pmtuff ce as second clas matter. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. Dally Bee (including Kunday, per week. 15c Dally Bee (without Sunday;, per week. .100 Dally lie (without nunoavl. una year.$400 Dally Dm and Humlay. one year 6.W DEL.1VKHK1) HV CAKKlKlt Evening 11. e (without Nunilay;, per week. 6a Juvenlii He (with Hunday;, per week.. 10c Sunday Bee, unit year tiW Saturday Bee. on year 1.60 Address all complaints of Irregularities In delivery to City Circulation ytriiueuu OFFICES. Omaha The lira Building. South Omaha Twenty-fourth and N. Council Bluffs 14 Scott Street Lincoln bis Little Building. Chlrarn 1648 ilarauetta liulldlng. New York-Rooms 1101-1102 No. 44 West Ttalrt v-thirrt Hrrt Washington lia Fourteenth Street, N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating: to news and editorial matter thuuld be addressed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order payable to The Bee Publishing Company. Only t-cent stamps received in payment of mall accounts. Personal check except on Omaha or eastern exchange, nut aecepiea, STATEMENT Of CJKCTXATION. t,l nt Vahrnvlia nnililaS COUhty. S9. iiMirm B. 'Ixschuck. treasurer of The Bee Publishing Company, being duly sworn, ays that the actual number of full anu complete copies of The Dally, Morning, fcvenlng and Sunday Bee printed during tue month of May, iw, was as iu.. 1 41,300 1 43,450 43,880 4 ....43,810 i ...43,080 43,840 1 43,890 1 41,370 v 17 43,830 H 43,030 11 48,880 ,g 43,000 XI.... 43,000 H 41,480 aa 43,740 t 43,830 2 J 43,080 2t 43,370 17... 43,400 21 43,660 2 .41,3(10 10 43,370 II 44,130 I W!ini X::::::::: .43,800 .43,070 1..V 43,600 II 43,030 14 43,960 II 41,600 . II 43,110 Total Returned copies 1-.B10 8,888 Net Total 1,3 6,381 Dally Average .36a GEOUUE B. TZSCHUCK. Treasurer. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to lefore mo tbu Suit day of May, MO. M. Pi WALKER, Notary Pubno. Subscribers leaTln the city tem porarily staonld bar The Bee mailed to them. Addressee will be changed as oftea aa ree, tested. The joyful, murderous Fourth la drawing1 near. It Is never too hot to boost for Omaha and Nebraska. . Strange that It occurred to the long est day to also be the hottest. Folks continue to give advice to the colonel and yet he has not asked for a word. How much more In bonds will the Water board ask the people to vote at the next election? ' France thinks the old stork has loafed on the job long enough and has decided to put him to work. With one stroke of his pen Mr. Taft made It possible for Uncle Sam to see two new stars In the year of the comet. A party of British university stu dents is to visit Pittsburg. Probably to study the gentle art of civic virtue. A nolselcsB firecracker has been talked about for a long time, but we expect invisible a'lrshlps to beat It to us. Not only Is Lillian Russell airy and fairy, but fluffy and fifty. She admits it herself, and sho Is getting off easy at that. Now it Texas will submit to a little carving, we may manage to bring the total up to an even fifty states before we quit. Colonel Roosevelt has finally de cided to slow down and ride in an au tomobile, against which he has had an abiding prejudice. Members of the democratic minority are now in a position to give expert opinion on the relative merits of the big stick and steam roller. The Omaha Commercial club Is to try for 1,500 members. The 1,500 eliglbleB are here without a doubt. The only thing la to get them enrolled. An Increase In Omaha's weekly bank clearings of 1 1.6 per cent over the corresponding week of last year is a pretty good sign for hot weather busi ness. Why call it "A Third Party T" What has gone with the Silver Republicans, the Qreenbackers, the Populists, the Mug-wumps and a few other "Third parties!" Of course, it the revenue of the school board this year is $50,000 more than it was figured in its budget, it will ask tor $50,000 less next year. Watch and see. Th invitation of Archbishop Spald lng of Peoria to Colonel Roosevelt to address the Knights of Columbus in dicates that American Catholics have not foolishly capitalized that Vatican episode against the former president. Talk about your democracy of pleas ure and Borrow! Here Is a set of St. Louts policemen gathering up a wagon t oaa oi men tur simwug uu tue siue valk and when they line them up at the Ration they find an actor, a railroad .(ashler, a physician, a reformed news paper reporter aud a preacher. And hey were all standing gating at a base all aenra board. The Preiident'i Waterway Policy. The president hits the nail squarely on the head in his suggestions to con grees as to future rivers and harbors appropriation. He has affixed his Big nature to the bill setting aside $52, 000,000 for a miscellaneous lot of waterway improvements, which has been characterized "piecemeal" legis lation, but he accompanied his ap proval with a statement expressing disfavor with this method of legisla tton which combines such a variety of enterprises over such a wide section of country. He does not believe the appropriation is exorbitant for the work to be done, but rather that too much has been undertaken to bring any of it to the successful completion It should reach. He suggests, there fore, that in the future congress should submit to a commission of experts the matter of determining what projects should be prosecuted and appropriate the mortey necessary to finish them In the proper manner The president is undoubtedly cor rect In assuming that this piecemeal system will lead to a continuation of demands for money to finish these va rloua projects, which are to run along for ten to twenty years before com pleted. They are very likely to In volve waste and unnecessarily heavier expenditures of money than If the more comprehensive system which he has all along favored and which he now proposes were followed. To de termine definitely Just what Is to be done and to set about doing that and persist in the work until it is speedily concluded would mean much more for waterway improvement than thlB sys tem of a little here and a little there can possibly mean A Law that Makei Hew Homes. A law enacted by the Sixty-first con gress which is of the utmost Import ance to the people of this entire coun try 1b that providing for the agricul tural entry of the surface of coal land, while reserving all mineral rights to the government. Under Its provisions 60.000.000 acres of land will be thrown open to settlement, which means thousands of new homes In the great west and a tremendous lifting of pressure from certain congested areas of population. This land is chiefly in Montana and the far north west, where the climate and soil are adapted to robust life and good crops of grain and fruit, conditions that In vite most appeallngly the man with energy and small means who Is look ing for a chance to establish a home and acquire a competency. This is one of the conservation laws which the president urged upon con gress and one whose benefits it is im possible to measure or estimate. Ap parent upon its face, however, is that fact of Its far-reaching advantages which will be available . very . soon. This land is not only fertile for agri cultural purposes, but is believed to be prolific of mineral wealth, chiefly coal, and it is much more desirable for coal production than the coal land of Alaska because of its proximity to the market and the comparative cost of production. Nor will the present set tlement and farming of the land in any way hinder its exploitation when the time comes for coal; rather it will facilitate it, for it will tend toward a general settlement of the country and the establishment of new towns or communities and shipping points. This act and the one clearly defining the power of the president to with hold from settlement any land for the conservation of water rights are two of the most Important conservation measures passed. Prevention Better Than Cure. With all due respect to William Krug, who lost his life as a result of an auto mobile "accident," we do not think the cause of his death la any more criminal til an was that of the dornestlo who was ao unfortunate as to be "accidentally" killed last year at Sixteenth and Far nan.. The automobile madmen will go on killing one another and the public without police interference until we have one big, grand lynching bee. West ern Laborer. Correct so far as the culpability for the killing of a domestic being equal to the culpability for the killing of a prominent business man. Prevention is better than cure, and what is wanted is not venegeance, but security against repetition. We do not want any lynching bees in Omaha, but we do want automobile drivers and owners to respect the rights of other people and to desist from reckless overspeed lng. The thing to do, as already pointed out by The Bee, is to make every automobile driver take out a license subject to limitations of age and competency and suspend or forfeit the license for every violation of the law. . , . Beyond Heading1 Off. Our local democratic contemporary seems to be laboring under the impres sion that it can head oft the filing of the petitions being circulated to put Mr. Bryan's name on the democratic primary ballot as candidate for United States senator. It evidently has an idea that its preferred candidate would fare better If Mr. Bryan could merely turn a deaf ear to this popular upris ing and Btand by his alleged promise not to run. But these petitions are beyond head ing off. They must be filed with the secretary of state In due time, and Mr. Bryan must by his own act respond, or refuse to respond, to the demands of the petitioners. In other words, the petitions cannot be smothered or thrown into the waste basket like Mr. Bryan's letters to the dollar diners, without incurring the penalty of the law. The primary election law of Ne braska In its penal provisions declares among other things which are pro claimed to be unlawful: Any person, who. being In possession o nomination papers entitled to be fllrd tinder this act or any act of the Wlsla ttlre, shall wrongfully either suppress. neglect or willfully fall to file or cause to be filed St the proper time In the proper office, shall 6n conviction, be punished by Imprisonment In the county jail not to ex ceed six months, or by a fine of not to ex ceod five hundred dollars ($300), or both such fine and Imprisonment, in the dlscre Hon of the court Whoever may be In final possession of the petitions that have been signed up to put Mr. Bryan's name on the pri mary ballot will, therefore, have to file them before the expiration of the legal time limit, and Mr. Bryan will have to say "yes" or "no." The theory of the law Is that anyone who procures signa tures to such a petition In the number required is the trustee of the signers and legally bound to perfect the noml nation process. This obligation Is Just as great if only twenty-five signatures are attached as if 26,000 are affixed A Pike to Pike'i Peak. The pathfinders who biased the trail from the middle west to Pike's peak fifty or sixty years ago could scarcely have dreamed that a half cen tury later their path would be made into a smooth, shaded boulevard over which automobiles, vehicles of which they had no conception, would be glid ing from the Missouri river to the sum mit of the Rockies. Yet that is an achievement of twentieth century progress now in process of realization From Kansas City to Pike's peak a rolled, stone-dressed boulevard, shaded aud beautified will be constructed; in fact, is being constructed, for the work is already under way through Kansas. When completed it will af ford right-of-way to the autolst, who may speed to his heart's content along the historic trail which the pioneers of the frontier made in their "Pike's peak or bust" crusade when all this land was a wild prairie and Indian fighting a common part of travel. The New Santa Fe trail will be fol lowed for some distance and a road from Kansas City to Newton, Kan., will form another link. The state of Kansas is giving generous support to the enterprise and In the western part of that state the work is well along. No doubt Is entertained that Colorado will join with Kansas in bringing the turnpike to a successful completion Neither of these states could well hesi tate to balk at such a task, the most severe part of which had been done by those sturdy torchbearers of civiliza tion who mapped out the path so many years ago. It will not only be a tribute to their early work, but a token of what the good roads movement means to this country and of what it may yet become. Need for Sanity and Honesty. Governor Hadley of Missouri told the graduates of the University of In diana that the performance of political and official duties is a practical and not a theoretical proposition, and that the country needs no parlor politicians nor Idle theorists today. He was speaking on the duty of citizenship and he might have added that useful citizenship today demands nothing more than a sane, sober thought and judgment, an honest and fearless con viction and an unselfish motive. The peril of any nation that under goes social or political changes in marked degree Is the clever mounte bank and the Ignorant demagogue rad icalism. Against both of these the United States has to guard, for both are broad enough today. Governor Hadley puts It mildly when he calls them parlor politicians and idle theor ists. False prophets are generally shrewd persons, intrenching them selves behind some popular reform sentiment, secure In the knowledge that it is hard to attack them without seeming to assail the cause that pro tects them. But such periods of political unrest have come and gone in this country more than once and the people in the end have generally been able to sepa rate the wheat from the chaff. It has cost us dearly at times to find the truth and to hold to it, to keep our heads amid the whirl and din of the fake crusaders, but in the end we have come back to safe ground. If commencement day orators would pursue the line of thought which Gov ernor Hadley baa and try to lay on the young collegian the prime Importance of individual honesty and effort as a prerequisite to good citizenship, and seek to show him the danger of the political charlatan, they would be do ing a real service, not only to the grad uates going out to meet the world, but to the old world as well. The Lincoln Journal seems dis tressed because The Bee ventures the opinion that those who expect the political millennium from the federal campaign publicity law are likely to be disappointed by the same short comings as have been disclosed by the Nebraska campaign fund publicity law. That does not mean that The Boe op poses the law. Quite the contrary, us this paper has always uclvoc-ited and upheld it Everybody knows that the publicity law In this state haa been flagrantly Ignored or evaded, and most flagrantly by the Bryan political family, which makes the loudest noise for reform. "What are you going to do with the populist?" asked a delegate in the Fourth district democratic convention and added. "Without the populist votea we cannot elect a congressman." The answer is easy. The democrats are going to steal the populist votes again by misbranding their candi dates, Just as Mr. Bryan purloined the votea belonging to Tom Watson by masquerading his democratic presiden tial electors under the populist label. The Omaha Automobile club haa resoluted to protest against fast and reckless driving by Irresponsible per sons, but it has not yet expelled any body from membership for going the pace that kills. The club might do well to send down to the police court for a list of the auto speeders who have been arrested and fined. The net earnings of the railroads in April were greater by nearly $3,600,' 000 than they were in April of last year. The poor railroad magnates, however, can see nothing but bank ruptcy ahead of them unless they are permitted to raise the freight rates and make the shippers come to their relief. With Omaha's editor-congressman claiming credit for the passage of the postal savings bank bill and Willie Hearst assuming responsibility for all the good features of the railroad bill it clears up all doubt at the outset as to whom we shall have to thank for these measures. No intention to speak ill of a man but George Bernard Shaw, who finds it Impossible to like Colonel Roose velt, Is now trying to find out what his wife's income is so he can tell the assessor something about his family possessions. William E. Curtis has just written a letter about the capture of Miss Ellen Stone by the brigands and Colonel Watterson asks is he a Journalist or an antiquarian? Neither, but perhaps he is a historian. Mr. Roosevelt has Bet up a prece dent that will make it rather embar rasslng for another former chief ex ecutive to submit to the question, What shall we do with our ex-presl dents?" Those Fourth district democrats were unable to agree upon a candidate for congress to be endorsed, and there fore agreed not to endorse any. Let the people rule. A Doable Surprise. St Paul Dispatch. The Department of Justice at Washington has borrowed Speaker Cannon's Bible. That the Department of Justice should not have a Bible Is quite as surprising as the fact that Mr. Cannon has one. The Short and Simple War. Boston Transcript. Mr. Bryan gives the missionary confer ence at Edinburgh a short and simple way for bringing about everlasting world peace. He says It is to make war Impossible. Ills copyright has been applied for. Chasing; Man Into the Air. Baltimore - American. Woman, contesting man's sway on the earth, Is determined that his supremacy fn the air shall not go undisputed, as shown by the announcement of a female aviator that she will contest for some of the golden glory that awaits the daring. Compulsory Reform. Philadelphia Record. The sugar trust is trying to reform. John E. Parsons, who has grown old and very rich steering It through the laws, has resigned. The value of his services may have been overestimated. He received a fee of $400,000 for or ganizing the original trust which as held by the courts to be illegal. His later legal acumen has been diacredited by the success of the government in Us civil and criminal suita. PERSONAL AND OTHERWISE. The sultan of Sulu, coming with $250,000 worth of pearlB, has successfully inter viewed the silent oyster. Nevada Is the haven of the prizefighter, the chosen home of the divorce hunter, the habitat of the Jackrabblt and It name may be utilized for an imposing bat tleship. Those Barnard college girls who demand husbands with brown eyes and a sense of humor will find that the buff pay envelope with Just plain, common horse sense also haa its attractions. York, Pa., boasts of a hailstone weigh ing fifty pounds, this season's crop. The ice harvest must be short In that section, or the town is competing for the general headquarters of the Ananias club. Homer Davenport, the discoverer of the world-famous Roosevelt teeth, was com plimented by Mr. Roosevelt on the trip over. The finder of these political nuggets was not aware of the quality of the ivory he pictured when he first drew them at Cooper Union meeting during Mayor Strong's administration. Dayton, O., an industrial city unsur passed for its slzo, tops its achievements with a Journalistic plunge that will bulge the eyes of boastful metropolitan publish ers. Two hundred and two pages comprise the one hundred and second anniversary number of the Dayton News. The occasion was the occupancy of a handsome news paper home, fully equipped for expanding business as is shown In the quality and quantity of the boom number. The publishers have warrant for claiming the number to be "the biggest newspaper ever published In the world," and may also credit themselves with producing a splen did article of Its class. Our Birthday Book June 87. 1810. Jefferson Davis, United States senator from Arkansas, was born June 87, 18(12. He is a native of Arkansas, and was attorney general and governor of that state before going to the senate, where he Is In the same luss with "Hen" Tillman as a fire-eater. Frank Dewey, deputy county clerk. Is 48 years old today, lie was born In Cedar Rapids, la., and is a bookkeeper and ac countant by profession. He has been handy man around the county clerk's office for many years. George F. Btdwell, formerly general man ager of the Northwestern railroad at Omaha and now retired, was born June 17, 1847, at Danville, N. Y. He commenced railroad work as a common laborer In l&ta, and kept steadily going to the top until compelled to quit four years ago because of falling health. Charles O. McDonald, sttomey-at-law In the Brandels building, la Just M. He was born on a farm in Spencer, la., and gradu- ted at Oberlln college. He 'studied law at the University of Michigan, and has been practicing in Omaha since 1900. Washington Life oaa XntervBtlaf pitas aa OemdltlaBs Okearrs at the Katua-s OajsitoL When tlio short session of congress olowed Inst year, members knew how they wera fixed for another terra, and tha sail ing dates of Europebound steatrwrs were studied with pleasure and anticipation. This year studious eyes and thoughts are turned to maps of congress districts. "Th session baa been a long and trying one, remarks the sympathetic Washington Herald, "but the real work of the repre entaUva begins with his arrival home, no gayety of tha European capitals this year, but conferences at tha county seats and heart to heart talks will occupy his time from now until November. Some of th mora fearful members have already hustled to their homes and are busy with the electors. Tho who are still in Wash lngton have extra dorks sending out through the mails literature for home con sumption. For fear that soma of their constituents have forgotten how they look many or trie statesmen have bad new half-tone cuts mad from their latest photos and are sending duplicates to th papers scattered throughout their districts, The press of the various states will be embellished most likely for months with faithful reproductions of Mr. Represents tlve, who Is again seeking the votes of bis beloved constituents. Colonel Thomas D. Murphy, of Augusta ua., th only simon-pure democratic post master on Uncle Sam's pay roll, has been looking things over at th capitol lately Beside being a warm personal friend of tha president, Mr. Murphy is a newspaper man of long and excellent standing, and does not make politic th burden of his life. II accompanied tha president on his memorable trip to Panama; made himself very agreeable. Indeed; renewed th ac qualntanc whan the president sojourned in Augusta last winter and I now th post master of that beautiful and charming southern city. That's all. Murphy I a democrat, all right but ha Is also post master. How did he turn th trick? Ask Murphy and h won't tell you I Anyway, he has th job, and he Is as fine a fellow along with it as on would care to know. The clerks in Senator Beveridge's room wer almost thrown into a panlo when the postal clerk brought In a suspicious-looking package for the senator, about ten inches long. Tha clerks approached th package cautiously. They finally mustered up cour cge enough to carefully open it. Inside was a part of the. bone of some large anl mal, with a picture, artistically drawn thereon,, and the following inscription Bwana Kldogo McCutcheon regrets that he had such poor luck as to miss the Hon. dog eat given by the esteemed chief of the Rocky Boys Band of Wandering In dians In February, but hopes there may be something doing in the way of eats in the future. He will await in bis tepee for the signal smoke on the hill that calls the bone-pickers to the crimson feast." The picture represented a hunter chasing a Hon, elephant, rhinoceros and giraffe to the tall grass, and was drawn in Cartoonist McCutcheon's cleverest style. The novel message Is much appreciated by Senator Beverldge, chief of the Rocky Boys. xnere is one way in wnlcn th new school of doctors with their continual harp lng on preventive measures to fight disease in its inactive form has done a great service to users of paper money and inci dentally haa cost Uncle Sam a pretty penny," said a treasury official the other day. "It is In teaching1 people that money Is filthy lucre, Indeed, when It is mide of paper. Within the last few years the amount of paper money returned for can collation has doubled. Now the treasury redeems and destroys about $2,000,000 in bills dally. Most of the notes are of the smaller denominations, the tt and the $2 variety. "People have learned that death lurks in the dirty currency. They like the Idea of clean, new crinkly bills in their pockets. The banks have learned that their custom ers like this, and they are usually ready to redeem the old bills, because only the ex press charges stand between them and get ting all the clean money they want. "Formerly a note would Stay out for three or four years. Now I think the aver age Is not over fourteen months. So, roughly speaking, the entire circulation Is. renewed about once In every two years and a half. Tha government finds it costs little mora, but it encourages the re newal for all that Tha old bills are put into an electrlo machln that punches and then slice them at a rat of sometimes 1,000,000 notes a day. And her la an unusual little bit of information also. Do you have any Woa how many new $1 bills it will take to equal In weight a $20 gold ptoce? Probably not Hardly on out of a hundred you meet and ask will be able to give even a good guess, well, It takes twenty-six new ones. After they have been used and soiled and crumpled it take only twenty-five. You can see how much dirt those notes must have absorbed to have gained a whole note In weight." So necessary has the American tin can become to th people of the Malay penin sula that to be deprived of Its manifold uses after having served the purpose of a container would be real hardship to the Malayaslans, according to United States Consul General James T. Dubois of Sing apore. It is used for everything from nutmeg graters to falsa teeth framework. Th Malay peninsula produces about 65 per cent of th total output of tin In the world, which amount to nearly 58,000 tons, valued at $41,000,000. One-fourth of this Is shipped to th United States and a quantity of it finds Its way back to Maluysla carry ing oil and canned goods. It requires 1,300,000 one-gallon cans to carry petroleum to that part of the world from the United States, and the purposes for which the cans are used after the oil has been consumed Is varied and peculiar. Thousands of the cans are used as water buckets. The Interior of a Malay tamll, or home, contains American tin cans of all lies and shapes, put to some usefttl pur pose. Sieves are made by punching holes and dustpans by removing one side and attach ing a handle. Baking and cooking utensils of all kinds are skillfully manufactured. nd for storing articles of food against ant onslaughts the tin can In Malaysia Is s blessing. Hundreds of men are engaging," says Consul General Dubois, "in manufacturing from the tin cans pepper and salt casters. tea and coffee pots, ladles, mugs, cake pat ties, Chines pipes, oil pumps, money boxes and even the framework for false teeth." No llrtorn Ticket for Haters. Baltimore American. Congress will not reinstate the nln cadets who were dismissed from West Point for hastng. With mora of thii upholding of discipline and of th mili tary academy's authorities, th practice can b stamped out As long a cadets and midshipmen feel that there Is easy appeal to th sympathy of congress, dls- Ipllne, th most essential point to l upported at th naval and military na tional academies, will be at th mercy f their own sweet wills, and they can afford to snap their fingers at their uperlor who attempt to enforce it PASSING PLEASANTRIES. "To Isn't never storr t de Palace hotel befo' Is yo', Ho,?" inquired the col ored man who waa piloting a Just-nrrlved traveler from the railway station to the hostelry. "No. But what makes you so stir of itr "t'h-kase yo swine dar now, aah." Puck. "You never saw a man mora delighted than Klutterby Is!" "What's the cause?" "He's going to get a public bearing for his poems at last." "In print?" "Not exactly. He's been sued for breach of promise and all his poems are to be read In open court" Cleveland Plain Dealer, "I thought surely you'd sell that lot of sausage," declared the grocer. "You praised it highly enough." "I praised it too darned much," said his assistant. "It overheard me and wagged its tall." Courier Journal. "The fortune teller told me that my hus band would not die a natural death." "Well, I never thought that he would." Y didn't?" "Nope; I've always thought that you would stay at home some day and have his supper ready when he got home, and he would drop dead." Houston Post. "To illustrate tho point I am making," said th lecturer on "Th Wonders of the Human Body," "some women have such perfect control of the muscles of their feet that they can turn the great to straight Talks for people It la all very well tor a manufacturer to advertise hla goods or his trade mark he gets all the benefits, but the retailer can't advertise that way. So say many retailers. Take Lord'& Taylor, in New York they are retailers, they don't manufac ture a single stocking, yet "Onyx Stockings" and "Lord & Taylor" are synonymous. It la a good stocking Lord & Tay lor see to it that It ia kept up to their standard of quality. It is advertised constantly and consistently, and it is backed up with the name of a high- class dealer. ' Now, Mr. Retailer, what have you to sell that you cannot advertise and back up with your own reputation? Select any article In your store and you can advertise it and reap the bene fits if you are willing to back it up with your own trade-mark your own name and reputation. It ia the eoodness of the article Itself, and constant reiteration of its qualities in your advertising that sells it. An advertisement In The Bee will reach 120,000 readers dally. A four inch space will cost you $3.92 per day and we will furnish the copy and Illus trations to make your selling argu ments complete. Ia this worth your consideration? 'Phone Douglaa 238. THIS FRIGID SUBJECT MADE VITAL What the newspapers can do for small expense has been splendidly illustrated by an advertising man occupying an ordinary salaried position on a New York news paper. The New York manager of the refrig erator concent which makes the Bohn Syphon advertised extensively in the maga zines had' occasion one day to insert a want" ad. He was then seen on display advertising and it developed that, like most men, he wished to increase the business the sales in his territory. It was further developed that he was willing to spend $1,000 of good, hard ROUND $!fl50, 41.85 and 43.20 U New York $i1fl60 and 44.60 4U (( J8?!ill SEALED OOXES t j Tg BmsmjtMmwrMBCi Leu 9 jS?nf 6? Boston, Mass. S1935 and 46.35 q Portland, F.le. $OQ00, 33.00 and 34.00 6 Buffalo, H. Y. SifflTOand 41.00 qu Atlantic City $9C60, 32.00, 33.00 and 34.00 &3 Toronto, Ont. QO Pontreal, Que. $9900, 33.C3 and 34.00 d Hiagara Falls Tickets on sale daily. Ticket Offices 1401-1403 Farnam Strut , Omaha, Ntb. tip and the next toe straight down at the same time." "Any woman can do that!" shouted ' the married men In the audience. Chicago Tribune. Husband (to wife, packing trunk -Hut how am I going to K"1 my things In? Wife I don't see that you ne'd to take much, my dear. You look very well as you are. Life. "What makes Mrs. Fllpporty look so dreadfully discouraged?" "Haven't you heard that all the Reno divorces may be declared Invalid" "No. lias Mrs. Flipperty a Reno di vorce ?" "Mercy, she's had two!"-Clevelanl Plain Dealer, ACCORDING TO THE CYNIC. Trust no man, however pleasant. You hav never seen before; Trust the men you know at present Dess as you may know them mora. Tender smiles and ardent glances Who would put his faith in these? All too fragile are romances Shun the one who striven to pleiLte. People's actions all remind us Life 1 but a hollow sham, Divide us up and you will find tin Half th wolf and half tha lamb. For we live to work each other. (lain our way by honied pliraae; And also for that poor brother Who knows not tho old world's wnvs. I J. MAY. who sell things money if he could a th additional orders coming hi way. The advertising pioneer1 got him to o Into the newspapers with his $1,000, and, with keen foresight, persuaded him to tell th story of th Bohn Syphon refrig erator in his own style "Just like talking It" So without any trace of anxious Eng lish, without apparent thought of IokIo or of climax, In rugged, homely language, tha human Interest side of refrigerator:) In general and the Bohn Syphon refrig erator In particular was given to tho people of New York city through the newspapers. Tha first ad was three columns wide, full length, set In twelve point caps, writ ten throughout In a personal style and giving a lot of first-hand information of the making and selling of refrigerators, and told why the Bohn Syphon had an ticipated the health, convenience and dally requirements of it users. It was a mighty Interesting advertise-' ment, partly because it gave a lot of In teresting facts and principally because it had honest conviction in every statement. This ad was followed by' six short "talks," each engaging about 300 lines single column, on the "Uses and Abuses of the Refrigerator," in which the stories went right into the routine and problems of every day horn life. They showed, practically, the dangers of the Ice box and visualised the Bohn Syphon refrigerator in active service rigat tner ia the kitchen or pantry, and the writer of these stories gave the reason in each case why what lie said was so. The plan sold the refrigerators? It couldn't help It Telephone calls and let ters were received at the newspaper off lev from pcoplle who had mislaid the address, asking where the Bohn Syphon refriger ator store was located. A single order ftoiu an apartment house builder paid for the wholo campaign! All of which goes to show that news paper advertising, rightly conducted. Is Immediately responsive. There are cases other than this which have been conducted with equal, success. -..:u-. . The occasional manufacturer here and there is seeing a great light; ho la having some pleasurable business experiences with the neswpapers but Just here and there. Deep down In every manufacturer's heart. and frequently on his Hps, is the profound wish to know his public and to have his public know him. And It Is tho business, the mission and the duty of newspaper men to show him how to do It Newspaperdom. TRIP City Liberal return limits and favor able stopover privileges. 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