THE BEE: OMAIIA, MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1910. I "iHt OMAHA EVENING BE FOUNDED BT EDWARD BOSEWATKR. VICTOR ROtiK WATER. KD1TOH. The Be Publish! ng Company, proprietor. EVERY AFTERNOON EXCfcf T SUNDAY BEE BUILDING, FARNAM AND 17TH OFFICIAL PA PICK OF TUB l'W ( OFFICIAL FA PER OF THE COOMTV Enured at Omaha postolflc cond " mall. WtUVEHED BT CARRIERS evening beo, without Sunday, per w'eK' f Veiilnn -He., with Sunday.. per weeX... Jjaily Bee. without Sunday Pr week....!' eunuay pr copy Wily Boa, Including Sunday, per "'' Adiir.t. complaint of Irreiiuiarllies dellv.ry to City ClroulaUon Departmeut. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION Elttt. of Nebraska, Douglas County, ss: jeorj;e IS. 'i fcsc-huck, treasurer ot The Be Publishing Company, belnK duly worn; ays that th. actual number of full and complet. copies of The Dally, Murning, Evening and Sunday Be. printed during the month of July, u)10, waa as follows: 1 44.870 ) 40,360 49.4$0 1 a'670 3 41,350 1 4a'aa0 4 BSJOO ' 10 -80 49.780 21 W ,....41,860 it W 7 41,830 21 42,00 41.640 1 4 .ao 8 41,840 15 48,310 10 40,-100 II. ........ ..48,390 11 41,860 T 48,300 12 41,810 II 48,410 II 41,630 It 48,330 14 41,740 10 48,450 16 41.630 II 40,300 It 43,360 Total 1,333,310 ateturn.d copies 13,867 Zi total 1,310,043 Dally arerag-. 48,869 OEORGE B. TZ3CHUCK. Treasurer, Rub.lbed la my presence and sworn to before me this 1st day if August, 1910. M. B. WALKER, Notary Public. Subscribers leaving; the city trm pornrlly ataoald hare ' The Be mailed to them. Address will be changed aa often as requested. That weather man will be given his . rating a little later. Likewise in primary elections, there's many a' slip 'twlxt cup and Up. "Are all new books trash?'.' asks the World's Work. No. Occasionally there Is an exception. The life of a poor working girl should be just as valuable to the com munity as that of a rich brewer. We are''for Da-blman. World-Herald. What If It yt turns out that Gov ernor Shallenberger Is renominated? Has anyone heard a good word for the open primary which the late dem ocratic legislature put over on us? We pause for reply. . The auto speeder is no respecter ot persons In his victims, and the law should be no respecter of persons In holding culpable auto drivers respon Bible. Prairie fires are bad enough, but forest fires are worse. Nebraska's treeless prairies have some advantages compared wth Idaho's wooded moun tains. Mayor Gaynor is pronounced out of danger barring possible setbacks in consequence of his wound. Another triumph for modern medical and surgl cal methods. When he hitched up for all those Chautauqua lectures and old 3etttlerV picnics Governor Shallenberger' evi dently overlooked, a few things, that have since transpired. A summer visitor out walking at Newport lost a 160,000 pearl necklace the other day. Let us be thankful that no such little diversions excite the social set hereabouts. Anyway, Omaha is universally known, and will continue to he known, as a live, bustling, busy, growing, prosperous western city, no matter what the census may hand out to us. If the vote for Associate Editor Met calfe represents Editor Bryan's per sonal influence with Nebraska demo crats, a Wool soap picture showing how it has shrunk would illustrate it mcst graphically. If upward of 10,000 republicans crossed over to the democratic column in the late primary, it is hardly safe to predicate on the returns any Judg ment as to the strength of insurgency within the rank and file of Nebraska republicans. Colonel Roosevelt's Omaha speech will be on the Panama canal. It Is too much, however, to expect Mm to tell us whether the exposition in cele bratlon of the completion of the cmAl should be located in New Orleans or San Francisco. , . . . If the neu house of representatives has a democratic majority Champ Clark will be speaker, but if the re publicans are In control there will be half a doren good candidates in the running, and your "Uncle Joe" Can non will not be one of them. "For the cost of a single cruiser we can have a whole fleet of aeroplanes," declares a French official. So can all the other countries. Even little Swlt serland, without a semblance of a coast line, can go into the aeroplane business Just as high as It wishes. Ex-Governor Folk of Missouri Is try ing to transplant his presidential boom to the east by organizing Folk leagues tn the New England and middle states. The MIssourlan has discreetly re frained from railing It the enemy's country, but the chances are he will have to show them Just the salt. The State Tickets. The Bee has refrained up to this time from commenting on the make-up of the state tickets put In nomination at the recent primary for the very good reason that It has not been cer tain, and Is not yet certain, who will be the opposing candidates. On the republican side It is fully demonstrated that the ticket will be headed by Chester II. Aldrlch, nomi nated for governor by a plurality ot approximately 3,500 out of a total vote greatly decreased by the defec tion of the liberal republicans who went our Into the democratic primary to vote for Dahlman. On the democratic side Mayor Dahl man has a small lead over Governor Shallenberger. His margin Is so nar row that a recount or contest may yet change the result. If Mr.f Aldrlch Is to be pitted against Mayor Dahlman the Issue will be sharply defined between wet and dry and will have to be fought out on those lines. If Mr. Aldrich has Gov ernor Shallenberger as his opponent, both of them committed to sign a county option bill if passed by the leg islature, that Issue will be relegated more to the respective senatorial and legislative districts, and the fight for the gubernatorial office will be waged around other issues as well. In either event victory or defeat for Mr. Aldrich as head of the ticket must turn on the measure of success his campaign scores in winning back the support of the liberal republicans and in appealing to the democratic and Independent voters dissatisfied with the personality or record of the democratic candidate. Automobile Regulation. Another serious, If not fatal, auto mobile accident in Omaha Is a re minder that nothing whatever has been done by our local authorities to put a check on reckless auto driving. It la only fair, however, to tho city council that it be known that its power to apply a remedy that would be effec tive has been questioned, and that it is doubtful whether any ordinance es tablishing a general license system, with forfeiture for violation of the conditions of license Issue, would hold water. Tho trouble is that our late demo cratic legislature last year enacted a state law for the registration of motor vehicles of state-wide scope, contain ing the following provision: Cities and towps shall have no power to pass, enforce or maintain any ordi nance, rule or regulation requiring- any owner or operator of a motor vehicle any license or permit to use the public high way, or . exclude or prohibit any motor vehicle whose owner has complied with this law from the free uaei of such high ways, and all such ordinances, rules and regulations now In force are hereby de clared to be of no. validity or effect; pro vided that nothing In this act shall be construed as limiting the power of local authorities to make, enforce and main tain an ordinance, rules or regulations, In addition to., the provisions of this act, affecting motor vehicles which are offered for the public for hire. ' The city council has the' right to pass an ordinance governing public automobiles offered for hire, and it Is Just possible it might make regula tions governing professional chauf feurs regularly or temporarily em ployed, but it evidently has no power to limit the use of automobiles by their owners or by those to whom they are entrusted by their owners, irrespective of t age or competency. The only opportunity, therefore, to enforce a remedy lies in arrest of drivers exceeding the speed limit and the imposition of severer , penalties than has been accustomed. In the interval those interested in the safeguarding of the automobile from the odium brought on it by den ant driving will do well to prepare and present to the coming legislature an amendment to the state law establish lng some reasonable qualifications as prerequisite to the right to guide an auto through our crowded city streets Exoneration of the Vice President. The complete exoneration of Vice President Sherman i from even the slightest suspicion of complicity in the alleged attempted bribery growing out of the Oklahoma land frauds should be accepted as final. It should be ac cepted all the more readily in view of the- assertion of Senator Gore, who dragged Mr. Sherman's name Into the case, that he himself never placed any credence in. the charge that the vice president was interested la the Indian contracts for legal services. The unfortunate part of the unwar ranted and Inexcusable use of Mr Sherman's name in this connection Is the undesirable publicity reflecting upon the integrity of our highest pub lic officials spread before the people of foreign countries who are ready to believe without further inquiry, and the consequent injury to our good name as a nation. It Is a sad but true characteristic of the average person to let good reports of a public official go In one ear and out of the other, and to repeat and exaggerate whatever evil Is said of them. In this case It was not a question of veracity as between Senator Gore and Vice President Sherman, as hostile critics have undertaken to make us believe, because the record and repu tation of the vice president is at least several notches higher on the scale than those of the Oklahoma senator, but merely the well-known popular dis position to believe ugly charges about everybody ot distinction, and to forget or overlook bis eminent services and tried Integrity. None but the thought less or malevolent could find In the evidence of Senator Gore anything to Impeach Vice President Sherman. But the truth must travel in seven-league boots to overtake a lie, aud even with this exoneration Mr. Sherman will suffer in some degree aa the vic tim of a wanton attack made without the slightest foundation. Banki Prepared for Harvest The western banks expect to be able to handle the demands of the crop movement with the ordinary help from the larger reserve centers, bo what apprehension has been felt on this score1 may now be dismissed. A can vass of the west seems to reflect this fact. There was much uneasiness for a while as to the ability of the western banks to rise to this situation because of the belief that they were over loaned, but it seems they were not so far overloaned as to give cause for such alarm. Their loans have been heavy; of that there Is no doubt,1 but the banks have been able to take care of all home demands, and today have a better reserve than they had sixty days ago. Of course business has undergone a general improvement in that time and this has had its Influence. For sev eral weeks eastern financiers have been insisting that the smaller west ern banks adopt a more conservative policy with reference to loans and the effect has not been in vain. The policy Is decidedly more conservative and this has tended to reduce the demands for the present of real estate loans. Not only Is this true in Nebraska, but In Kansas, Iowa and Illinois, and In none more than Kansas, where the extension of loans, it was felt, had gone too far. With a more stable tone to banking business and at least an 80 per cent prop coming on, conditions in the west are sound and offer no reason what ever for discouragement in the east, which is too much given to Jumping at conclusions as to affairs in the west. West Planning Conservation. Whatever actual influence the con servation congress of St. Paul is to wield, governors of western states propose that the sentiment and poli cies of their people shall not be over looked in coming to a concrete basis of action. They very wisely called a preliminary congress of their own at Salt Lake City, where a thorough Inter change of views might he had as to the means of reaching an agreement for a definite program at St. Paul. All the far western states have been repre sented by their, chief executives and representatives of the state and gov ernor ot Minnesota have been there to participate in the meeting. " Most of the conserving of natural resources is Just now -being done in the west and by the nature of things must continue to be, so that it is only right,. that In any convention ; of this sort 'the west should have a voice in determining its ultimate policies to be pursued. No doubt as 'between some of the expert conservationists of. the east and those of the west some sharp differences of opinion will be de veloped,. So much the better then that they eome at a meeting of this char acter, for out of the weighing and discussing of views it ought to be pos sible to reach, in part at. least, some formula that will be serviceable to the government in the ultimate shaping of its policies. " If the states like California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Utah and possibly Montana and Nevada can, out of the Crucible of debate at Salt Lake City, produce a settled, fixed view which they may offer at St. Paul as repre. sentlng that great section, the scene of so much present and future develop ment, the work of the congress will be greatly simplified and facilitated, but with these states at variance among themselves the congress might find Itself Involved in an interminable contest at the very outset. A murder mystery has been pro jected oat of a supposed suicide up In Antelope county on the strength of an autopsy conducted by Dr. B. Arthur Carr. Dr. E. " Arthur Carr is the doc tor who was rewarded for his dirty work in the 1908 campaign by appoint ment by Governor Shallenberger to the State Board of' Health. Better get the autopsy verified before going to the expense of a prosecution. Russian peasants have been led to believe that the cholera scourge Is a visitation of Divine wrath. The same consolation was offered to the victims of Mount Pelee'B eruption and the un fortunates made homeless by the San Francisco earthquake. The idea of Divine wrath la attractive to the Ignorant, but an Almighty who pur posely afflicts the innocent in order to punish the sinner is unthinkable. The railroad spokesmen are still busy paving the way for the rate in creases, which were stopped when the interstate commerce law was enacted. by giving out poverty interviews in every possible connection. But the shipper and the consumer will have their day la court, and the Interstate Commerce commission will have the last word. A Chicago divorce-seeking couple succeeded in imposing on the court with a fake letter, but invited trouble by making the letter compromise an innocent third party whose retaliation now promises to upset the divorce de cree. The collusive divorcees should sue their lawyers for malpractice If it was due to bad legal advice that they traveled such a poor road. New York is threatened - with a strike of stage hands, which, if It eventuates, may close down all the theaters. That Is one place where the public can stand a lockout without suffering serious or lasting injury. The real danger la that If the theater goer has to stay at home awhile he ma get the habit. If Emperor William gathers in the Nobel peace prise next year for pre venting a war between Servta and Austria there will be another bond of union between the kaiser and the colonel, who was awarded this prlxe in recognition of his part In bringing the war between Russia and Japan to an end. Blessed are the peacemakers. Nevada Is the only state in the union that has nonqualified to share In the appropriation made by congress for the benefit ot the state militia on condition that it is maintained on ac ceptable standards. Nevada Is too busy grlndtng out divorces and fur nishing immunity to prlxe fighters to develop a national guard. - : i Our taxpayers thought last year's taxes, which were 25 per cent above those of the year before, exceptional, but it looks as if the current year's tax burden will be just as heavy. It is always easy to boost the tax rate, but mighty hard to pull It down again. Chaise Sorely Needed. Washington Herald. Newspaper comment concerning Mr. Bryan's recent defeat In Nebraska has played out. If Mr. Bryan ever hopes again to get himself talked about he will have to get elected to something. A Thin to Be Reckoned With. San Francisco Chronlole. The aviator and the man below with the gun are likely to cut a flg-ure In future warfare. No matter how successful sharp shooters may be In' exploding floating gas bags and piercing airships,-' venturesome man will not be deterred from dropping dynamite on the decks of ship and In other places where they will inflict damage on an enemy. The aerial bomb Is a thing that will have to be reckoned with. Sanding- the Curve.. Philadelphia Ledger. Somebody haa Suggested that rubbing the body with sand will reduce the flesh. The theory does not seem ".ntenable. Suf ficient rubbing would not only reduce but umlnate it, and put a polish on the bones. Converts to the theory are tilling their grips with sand a they leave the shore. They might save space, however, by adopting sandpaper, which would be cheap, convenient and equally effective. Babel of Tongues. Philadelphia Record. Esperantlsts are chatting away like anything In Washington., but French and German patriots are protesting at the number of English words that are creep ing into common use In their languages; at all the Continental hotels and places of business more and more English Is spoken; and in Asia and Africa it Is be coming common for natives unable to converse with ch other In indigenous languages to get along fairly well by talking English. The universal language la -making Its way to the front without the help of Inventors and conventions. Turning; Barb on Roosevelt. Springfield Republican. The attempted murder ot Mayor Gaynor presented a temptation to certain English Journals which they were weak enough not to reslstt Uoes this ,dplprable event, they Inquire, prove that New Yorkers are un-i fit to govern' themselves? "Remembering Roosevelt's Guildhall speech," says the Westminster Gazette, "we hesitate, to think of what he will say regarding New York's capacity for self government."- It was the assassination qf . the prime minister of Egypt that moved Mr. Roosevelt to a de structive criticism of the home rule move ment among the Inhabitants of the Nile valley and to his condemnation of the pres ent British policy In that country. It is unfortunate, perhaps, for Mr. Roosevelt's position concerning Egypt that Mayor Gay nor should have been shot so soon after khe murder of Boutros Pasha. AGRICULTURAL. INCOME. Effect of Turning; the Product, of the Soli Into Money. Wall Street Journal. At last, after a summer of recurring crop scares, the income period for the farms of the country has arrived and the labors of the season are being turned Into money by the sale of produots of the sotl. Three nerthwestern markets are now taking nearly 1,000,000 bushels of wheat a day. The rate at which farmers are selling grain and cattle shows a degree of liquidation which the west especially needs. Soon the cottoa crop will begin to move on an en larging scale, into domestic and export channels, with the effect ot putting the country In a much better exchange rela tion than It has enjoyed for several months past, v A cereal yield of nearly 6,000,000,000 bushels and a cotton crop of 11,000,000 or 12.000,000 bales mean a purchasing power' of tremen dous Import not only to the farmer who grows these products, but also to the com mercial world with which the exchange them, to the Industrial world whose manu factures are demanded by him, and to the financial world whose advances have made production on the existing scale passible The gross value at the farm of a single year's crop now ranges from $8,000,000,000 to 19,000,000,000. Much of this will be consumed on the farm. But If only half of It passes out into the channels of trade by January 1, 1911, the railroads will have about as much as they can do to distribute these vast stores between producers and con sumers; the volume of merchandising set In motion thereby will stimulate industry and the profits of enterprise in all the differing pursuits will measure the extent to which farm Income has made It possible to ac quire new capital resources to enable the Investment world to lay wider and deeper its foundations for the future. Our Birthday Book Angus 88, 1810. Melville E. Stone, secretary and general manager of the Associated Press, was born August 2, IMS. at Hudson, III. In partner ship with Victor F. Lawson he established the Chicago Dally. News and laid the foundation for its success. lie has been a frequent visitor to Omaha. William L. Douglas, the shoe man and also once governor of Massachusetts, Is Just 66 years old today. He was born at Plymouth, and was mentioned for the democratic nomination for president two years ago, which ha might have gotten hid Mr. Bryan not wanted it. George P. Melklejohn. attorney-at-law, was bora August 12, 1867, at Weyauwego, Wis. He served as lieutenant governor of Nebraska and was assistant secretary of war under President McKlnley, removing two years ago from his former home at i Fullerion to uraana. I II. C. Roaacker, chief clerk to the car 1 service agent of the Union Pacific railroad, Is Just SS years old today. He was born In New York city, and educated In the Omaha j school. He hr.a been with th. L'nlou Jtino suite UM. Around New York lUpplea en the Current of life as Bieea la the Ores Amerioa Metropolis from Bay to Say. Mining stock ground out of the print shops of Colorado, purchased by the bale at t cents a share, with liberal discount tor cash, and unloaded on the easy marks at W a share. Is responsible for the sojourn of William T. Wlntermute. promoter, In the New Tork Tombs. Wrntermute played the game with gold-rlm mining stock. Per sonally , he passed up the common run ot easy marks, preferring to deal with "well bred ladles and gentlemen," anxious to get In on the ground floor. But his vocal as sociate, an ex-minister named Herman Warsswlak, chose the members of his old profession for his beneficence, leading them from the toll and hardships of poverty to the golden gates of affluence. None broke In. The two pals gut the money, and the victims dropped Into the subcellar. Among the foreign victims are the Dowager Count ess of Tsnkervllle of Tunbrldge Wells, Ens-land, $15,000; Miss Henrietta Elont Tun brldge Wells, 125,000; Misses Louise, Adele and Anna Elont, The Hague, eaoh $1,000; M. Houldey, Durham, England, $2,000; Mars M. Jacobs, London, $2,000; N. Beatrice Shaw, London, $2,000; Anna von Merlecke, Nottingham. $2,000. Wlntermute Is charged with using the malls to defraud. Speaking of typographical errors In news papers, James R. Tanner of New York, a former printer and newspaper man says: "Two articles had been prepared for a New Tork dally, one containing a sermon preached by an eminent divine, and the other about the freaks of a mad dog. Un fortunately, the foreman, when 'making up' the form, 'mixed' them, producing an article whloh ran something like this: " 'The Rev. James Thompson, rector of St. Andrew's nhurch, preached to a large concourse of people on Sunday last. This was his last sermon. In a few weeks he will bid farewell to his congregation, as his physicians advise him to cross the At lantic. He exhorted his brethren and sis ters, and after offering a devout prayer, took a whim to cut up some frantlo freaks. He ran up Timothy street to Johnson, and down Benefit street to College. At this stage of the proceedings a couple of boys seised him, tied a tin kettle to his tall, and he again started. A great crowd collected, and for a time there was a grand scene of noise,' running, and confusion. After some trouble he was shot by a policeman.' " John Purroy Mitchell, president of the Board of Aldermen, now acting mayor of New York has had a brilliant career In his short political life. Four years ago his name was practically unknown outside his own Immediate circle of friends. At that time he occupied an unimportant position In one of the New York City departments. Yet that was the beginning of his career. No opportunity has presented Itself to this man, so young In years, that he has not grasped and used as a foothold in his climb to political and civic prominence. Mr. Mitchell Is only 30 years old, a nephew of John D. Purroy, a former fire commlsisoner of the city. After leaving college he took up the study of law and graduated from the Columbia Law school. With his legal training to back him, Mr. Mitchell entered the corporation counsel's office, and when Mayor McClellan ordered an Investigation of Borough . President Ahearn's office It was young Mitchell who worked most tirelessly aa commissioner of accounts. It was this investigation which launched him on his career. Mrs. Frances Morgan lives with her hus band and two daughters on the second floor ot 969 Broadway, Williamsburg. She Is a little woman, but . possessed of grit and muscle, which Eugene Perst can vouch for. While the members of the family were taking an afternoon nap Perst descended the rear fire escape from the root and entered the Morgan apartments through a window. Mrs. Morgan was In a room ad Joining the kitchen, while the other mem bers of the family were in the front of the house. She was awakened by the noise made by Perst. Instead of fainting or going into hysterics Mrs. Morgan reached over and picked up a large, thick hickory stick. With that under the covers she awaited developments. She feigned sleep when Perst crept softly into the room. He went about the house picking up trinkets and other things that he could put in his pocket, and had Just taken Mrs. Morgan's pocketbook, containing $13, when she jumped out of bed. Perst bad his back to Mrs. Morgan, and she crept up behind hjm and dealt him a blow that brought him to his knees. He tried to regain bis feet, but she laid the stick across bis shoulders and back in such a manner that he begged for mercy. She made him stand up and empty his pockets, and then marched him downstairs into the bands of a policeman. HEW CENTER OF PROSPERITY. Unmistakable Evidence of tho West ward Trend. Washington Post. Has the center of prosperity overtaken and overlapped the center of population In Us westward trend T Or is the check to activity noticeable only In the east ot a temporary character? Various reasons are assigned for the falling off In bank clear ings at New York and other eastern money centers, .while at the same time Increases are reported from western and southern points in sufficient volume to bring the total above the corresponding dates of last year. Dismissing the explanations, whloh do not explain, together with others which are contradictory, there are ,efi for con sideration two or three things wblch unde niably sre among the factors that have brought about the anomalous result that depression exists In the east '.n face of in creasing prosperity west and south. One of the obvious masons why the east Is falling behind Is tbe heavy decrease in exports, which affects the earnlMs- of the railroads hauling them and the Bunks that financed .them. While the east last year was falling hundreds Of millions behind the high point, - the sc uthern ports were actually gaining over the previous year. . The drift of speculation away from the east has much to do with the decrease in bank clearings and telegraph business. The publlo is tired ot the game for one thing, and then it was found more profitable to put money in western farm lands and mort gages than In stocks. Thus, the western banks are turning their money over at a rate rarely experienced, while the New York banks are worrying over the alack de mand for funds to move the crops, not fully realising as yet that the crops do not move that way as of yore. While the decrease in exports and the slump In speculation are probably only temporary, and the east may regain all or more than It has lost from these two cause., more doubt attaches to the third and principal factor in the equation. This Is the higher cost of living. It cuts into the east's prosperity both ways, reducing its buying power and causing a lessening demand for Us manufactured products. All that the west has gained from inflated prices for foodstuffs has come out of the pockets of the eastern consumers, while the economies practiced on account of the high priced necessities hav. ptiralyged eastern Industrie to a point nut equalled In recent years. IAFT WILL STATE POSITION Executive Preparing; Speech and Let ter for Campaign Book. , WILL NOT ENTER CONTROVERSY Situation at Present Doe. Not Show that One RiUtt Mat ot Pro resslve Lesxlnatlou to Bo Cited. BEVERLY, Mass., Ai.f. tl As time goes on It becomes more and more apparent that no direct answer will be made hers to the reports ot a break between Presi dent Taft and Colonel Roosevelt and the charged alleged as a foundation for the rupture. Although the silence of the last few days Is still strictly maintained, It Is be lieved now that President Taft Intends to make his position clear In the letter he Is preparing for (the republican campaign committee hand book and the speech he Is preparing for the conservation congress at St Paul. Mr. Taft has been working on these two documents almost continuously for the last two days. The letter and the speech, so far aa known, will not be controversial. The president Is said to recognise no situation cabling for a controversy. Colonel Roose velt has made no statement In support of the reported break. There Is nothing definite upon which the president could act even It he had a desire to do so. With tbe Important work that he has In hand Mr. Taft evidently has concluded that this Is not the time to enter Into a news paper controversy with anyone. As to what his administration has accomplished In fulfillment of the party platform pledges and what It Intends to do in the future in the way of recommendations to congress President Taft soon will make theve mat ters clear and It la said he Is willing to stand or fall by what he has to say. Keep. Out of State Flht.. As to state fights, and It Is the New York state fight which Is alleged to have created a chasm between the president and the colonel, there Is every reason to be lieve that Mr. ' Taft will restate what he has said here many times of late, that he does not believe It to be the province of 4he chief executive to Interfere In state fights and that in dealing With state situa tions he has confined himself to urging upon the various leaders the importance to the party of an honest endeavor to adjust their differences and an agreement upon a harmonious program. That the president, ' disregarding local Issues, Is Mill Intent upon bringing about a situation in the republican party as closely allied to harmony as Is possible under all the circumstances. Is evidenced by the tact that his campaign committee letter Is reported to contain a declaration ' that there is no desire on his part, or on the part of anyone closely identified with tho administration, to read any person out of the party. No Fla-ht with Insurgents.' This Is taken here to mean that the pres ident has no fight with the Insurgents, but Is glad to welcome them as republicans. During the last session of" congress the president clearly defined his, position as to what constituted a ' republican. He held that all men who were willing to support measures which clearly were framed In compliance with pledges in the party plat form were entitled to be regarded aa mem bers' or -th. party, no matter what their position might be as to the house-rules or the speakership. , It Is also said her. tonight that President Taft will point to the fact that all of the legislation he has recommended and which haa been enacted has been in line with the progressive policy he outlined at the be ginning of his administration. So far aa he consistently Can do so, the president will endeavor to placate all fac tion, of the party. He believes the party already la moving ' ahead and he wants all Its members to "pull at tbe oars." Representative McKlnley of Illinois, chairman of the republican congressional campaign committee, when he was In Bev erly ten days ago, announced that the con gressional committee was ready to support regulars and insurgents alike, the only test being support of the president and of the party platform. Tariff Commission. As to the tariff, President Taft, It Is be lieved, will lay chief importance upon the results that it Is hoped will be accom plished through the work of the new tariff commission. The party platform called for a revision of the tariff on the scientific principle of difference In the cost of pro duction here and abroad, with a fair profit to the producers. 1 It also called for "Immediate revision," and the public demanded Immediate revis ion. In bringing about Immediate revision It was obviously Impossible to make that revision scientific. The meana of securing the needed information was not available and the time was too short. The president will point out what he believes to be the good features of the Payne-Aldrtch act and will declare that a real solentifio revision, based on the mass of Information the tariff commission will collect, will undoubtedly be had- It the republican party Is kept In power. Talks for people I Here Is a story which proves that . . . 't wort h m CAnt t rt thA incurs. ,cu man who thinks for himself: WhVn the present manger of the Union Hardware and Electric company of Providence, R. I., took charge, he knew that the common belief among dealers was that hardware advertising would not pay. But what others thought and believed did not Influence him at all. He came over from Wanamaker's New York store, had a thorough knowledge ot merchandising and knew from experience what advertis ing could accompllah. He saw no more reason why a hardware store should wait for customers and depend on chance sales than should a departs ment store so be applied the Wana maker idea to the Union Hardware and Electric company. He employed a competent man to handle the advertising, bought enough space in the newspapers to make a showing, held sale events, and adver tised quality and price every day in the week. A great deal of the advertising was Fresh Mined Hard Coal $10.5 Havens-White Coal Co. 1618 Farnam 8t. Omaha, Nob. Telephones-Douglas 630, Ind. A-1281. .PERSONAL NOTES. The fortune left to his grandchildren by the late John O. Carlisle was fully aa modest as anyone could have anticipated. It la thought not to exceed $40,000. An expansive but noiseless grin stretches along the firing line of the army. Dignity had to unbend when a court-martial ac quitted an offloer of charges ot "conduct unbecoming an officer." but found hint guilty of drunkenness. "v. It is a matter ot Indifference JwhrfY" the remains of Florence NlghtlngaU lie In the Abbey or In soms country churchyard. The work she did Uvea aft her, and her monument Is In the hearts of countless millions of the world s suf ferers whose pillows have been smoothed and whose burdens of sorrow have been lightened by her ministrations and those which she Inspired. This Is a Johnson year. Not to mention the polisher of Jeffries, there Is Chief Johnson of the Chickasaw Indians, who couldn't remember how his bank account came to be fattened by 175,000; Hiram John son, who swept California In ths race tor the republican nomination for governor, and the Chicago branch ot ths family greater In number than the Smiths, ths Browns or the Jones. Too much Johnson? Ask the family rivals. The "Prettiest Child In America" has been discovered In Everett Mass., and her name is Mlllloent Agatlne Oowan. She is T years old, and has already "received numerous offers for her services as a model" from New York artists. Milllcent, It seems, has already had some experience In posing, and one account Informs us that since hs was 3 years of age she haa bean posing for artists and photographers. At a meeting held In New York she wae awarded the title ot the prettiest child In America! SMILING REMARKS. He At the concert I noticed you were sitting between Jack and his fiancee. She Yes, 'twas a hot night and there's quite a coolness between them. Baltimore American. . Throgglns Five thousand dollars, I know, seems a high price for us to pay for thai house, but I didn't get it through any agency. 1 bought it at first hands. Mrs. ThrogRlns Yes, and we'll have to fill it with secondhand furniture. Chicago Tribune. . "So you are the applicant for the posi tion of typewriter T" "Yes. sir." "But your hands do not look as If they'd ever touched a typewriter." 1 "They haven't sir; I learned at a cor respondence school." Yonkers Utatesman. Antl If women had the vote the home would be destroyed. SuffraglHt Perhaps the home tJf Inebri ates might be. New York Sun. "Mr. Grimes," said th rector to the vestryman, "we had better take up the col lection before the sermon this morning." "Indeed?" "Yes. I'm going to preach on the sub Jet of economy." Stray Btorle. After the usual greeting by Mephlsto, the couple are Ushered to their apartment In hades. "I can't see," grumbled the husband, "that this place is any cooler than any where else we ever spent the summer." "Well," argues his wife, "I suppose you would rather poke off to some mud hole somewhere where there is no society at all.-Life. New York was In sight Th. ship was entering the harbor. "Ah, free America!" exclaimed a for eigner on the deok. "Free America, se land ' where efrybody has an equal ohanoel" "Going c to locate here?" inquired a friendly American. "Ah, yes, I haf ccme over to enrage bx se oil business." Washington Herald. - , WHEN FT ALL STARTED. - W. D. Nesblt In Life. . When Adam met Eve he was bashful and shy. ? And he stammered and blushed every time she came nigh. Till at last he grew bold and began to pay , court (You may put all your trust In this faith ful report), Ana np murmured to ner on an evening "You're the prettiest girl that I ever havi seen And that's how that started. When Eve, with a beautiful blush on hef face, Yielded shyly and sweetly to, Adam's em brace, And put up her Hps for the true lover's pact (You may set this all down as an absolute fact). ' She Inquired, while he breathed the fond , names on his list; "Have you said that to all ot the girls you have kissed?" And that's how that started. When Adam asked Eve It she would bo his bride, -She looked up and looked down, and she sighed and she sighed. And she let him take hold of her Illy white hand (This is history Mow, as you must vufJLF stand). Then she said, In a voice that was dulcetly low: "I must take time to think. 'Tie so sudden, you know." And that's how that started. When they had been married a few years or so. Then Adam told Bve: "We're Invited to nSs To a dinner and dance with some friend down in Nod. (This Is truly . authentlo, although It sounds odd), Eve replied with a sad and sorrowful air: "I can't go. Don't you see, I have nothing to wear?" And that's how that started. who sell things directed to the women ot Providence, and they responded every time ex ploding another fond theory, that women are not interested in so prosaia a thing as hardware. The business ot the Union Hard ware and Electric company increased enormously, will continue to increase under its very live, very wide-awake manager who goes out after business Instead of waiting for It who believes in his goods and makes others bellev in and want them. And thus it is that good advertis ing pays in the hardware business or any other business when Intelligence, energy ind honesty are put into it, and when a persistent policy is pur sued. There are numerous merchants la Omaha who could acquire great suc cess through legitimate, dignified, con vincing advertising. The advertising columns of The Bea are open to you, gentlemen, and Tha Bee can supply a service of advertising copy to meet your needs. Phone Tyler 1000 and a Bee repre sentative will call on you. i V f a )