CM TIIE BKE: OMAHA, THURSDAY AUGUST 25, 1910. I TJie-Omai ia " Daily ' Bee roUNDED Bt EDWARD ROSEWATER. VICTOR ROSEWaTER. EDITOR. Entered It Omiht postoffic aa second class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. tlly Bs (Including Punflay), per week..l5o Ielly Bee (without Sunday), per week..lte Ially Be (without Sunday), one year. .M M lially Bee and Sunday, one year tM DELIVERED BT CARRIER. Evening Bee (without Sunday), per week.. to Evening Bee (with Kunday;, per week. ...10c Sunday Bee, one year M.W Saturday Bee, one year I.M Add reus all complaint of Irregularities In delivery to City Circulation Department. OFFICES. Omaha The Bee Building. South Omaha Twenty-fourth and N. Council Bluff IS Booft atreet. Lincoln tig Little Building. Chicago 164S Marquette Building. New York Rooms 1101-11(8 No. M Weat Thirty-third atreet. Washington 725 Fourteenth Street. N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to new and ed itorial matter should lie adreaaed: Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or poatel order payable to The Bee Publishing Company. Only t-rent stampa received In payment of mall accounts. Personal chwikii, except on Omaha and eastern exchange, not accepted. STATEMENT OB WRCITLATION. . State of Nebraska, Douglaa County, : George B. Taschuck. treasurer of The Bea Publishing Company, being duly sworn, aye that the actual number of. full and complete eoplee of The Dally. Morning, Evening and Hur.day Bee printed during ins montn or July, U10, was as ronows: 1 44.S70 17 40,3 BO .... 40,40 41.860 4..... B,00 .... 49.729 ....41,860 T 41,830 41,440 . 41,840 40400 11.... 41,860 11..... 41,510 II 41,630 14 41,740 It 41,880 II 44.870 It 49.890 to..... 41,800 Jl 49.190 It.... 49470 II 49.040 ti 40,900 tS 4X310 t 48.9M IT 49,300 II 49,410 19 49,330 10 49,400 II 40,300 v. 48,380 Total 1,393,810 etaml soptes Jt7 9T total 1,310,043 Dally average 49.9M GEORGE B. TZSCHUCK. Treasurer. fhibststbed In my presence and sworn to before ma thla 1st day cf August, 114. V, B. WALKER, Notary Public Subscribers leavla the city teas (Krsrllr aboald ksn The sailed to thens. Address will hm ekaaged as eftea as requested. He's coming west. Somo advantages In treeleas pralrlei occasionally. To , re-count or not t'o re-count , that la the queston. Those prize-fight motion pictures have not, created much commotion around here. ' V Give the - Nebraska farmer a full corn crib and tk rest of us will take care of ourselves. A boom for Hoke 1 Smith for the 1912 democratic presidential nomina tlon is now In order. , It Is easy to play the hand bold when some other fellow furnishes the chips. Ask Mayor "Jim." We are for Dahlman World-Herald. Governor . Sballenberger and his friends should paste this in their hats. Aeroplanes are quoted at from $2,600 to $5,000. As the supply on hand Is limited, don't all speak at once. Why pay railroad fare all the way . to Reno for divorces when they may be bad so expeditiously In Kansas City? The Eagles are holding their na- ' tlonal convention at St. Louis. Hope the brood Is bigger than it was hero ' last year. The hope of the railroads lies in a big crop bringing top prices. Then If they raise the rates the farmers may not miss it. When the colonel publicly declares that there will be no compromise, folks may rest assured that there will be something doing. According to latest advices Georgia Is another state where a democratic governor serving his first term has been tripped up on the liquor ques tion. After our street railway company discards those flat wheels, it will also confer a favor by having those Jerky air-brakes put la smooth running or der once more. A fifty per cent attorney's fee, pulled down by a democratic United States senator from Oklahoma, makes a ten per cent fee claimed by a mere lobbyist look like small change. The League of American Munici palities, vmade up mostly of city of flclals, is outspoken against attempted assassination. Still, few of them are such shining targets as to tempt a marksman. Now if the Oregon law transplanted to Nebraska works out the election of a republican United States senator by the votes of a democratic legislature its sponsors will be clamoring for Its repeal also. We fall to note in the reports o campaign expenses filed by candidates in the late primary anything to show how much "Would-Be Senator" Sor enson paid for the very flattering vote bo received. If as "Al" insists he wss barred from even voting for himself, and he spent no more than bis $60 fee surely got his money's worth. Roosevelt on Sural Life. In selecting "Rural Life" as the subject of bis initial address on bis present speech-making tour, Colonel Roosevelt bas made use of the op portunity to restate some homely truths which cannot be too often re iterated. The problems of rural life are the problems of more then half of the people of this country because we are still essentially an agricultural nation and agriculture as an occupa tion far out-tops all others on the list Colonel Roosevelt's observations are plainly facts based and gathered and presented by the country life com mission which he set in motion and go to the necessity of elevating the standards of farm workers, not only In the matter of up-to-date methods of scientific cultivation, but also In the matter of household economics, co operative organization and social and religious activity. A characteristic Roosevplt thought is found in this contrast of two farm types: The rich man who spends a fortune on a fancy farm, with entire Indifference to cost, does not do much good to farming; but, en the other hand, -Just as little la done by the working farmer who totally refuses to profit by the knowledge of the day, who treats any effort at Improvement aa absurd on Its face, refuses to coun tenance what he regards aa new-fangled Ideas, and contrivances and jeers at all 'book farming." The ideal farmer In Colonel Roose velt's estimation is the farmer who not only makes his farm pay but makes country life interesting for him self and his wife but for his sons and daughters, and equips himself to render the service to the public which every nation needs. Colonel Roosevelt does not, in this address, differentiate between rural life in different parts of the country. If this phase were to be Impartially studied the farmer of the newer west would, without question, measure up much more closely to the ideal than the farmer of the older east. The western farmer is, on the average, more adaptable to changing conditions, more alive to sew ideas, more ready to make experiments promising Increased yield or smaller outlay, more apprecia tive of the need of business-like methods In buying and marketing and more awake to the possibilities of sociability and culture in the farm home. - While cities have grown fast in the weat, their expansion has not been so much "a growth at the. expense of the farm," which Colonel Roosevelt deplores, but rather a consequence of the increase of rural population. The western farmer, too, continues .to be active in public affair exerting a pro portlonate influence in the making of laws and directing of the government. Every movement to Improve farm life will therefore find its stronghold in the middle west where -much has al ready been accomplished and further progress Is assured. ' , Exit Sibley. The plight of "Joe" Sibley, the vet eran congressman from Pennsylvlnia, who announces his retirement from public life after capturing an nomina tion which he admits cost htm $42,000, furnishes food for thought. - Congressman Sibley has figured prominently in politics for twenty years and more, originally as a dem ocrat, where he stood high in the party councils as one of the pioneer cham pions with Mr. Bryan of the free coin' age of silver at the ratio of 16 to 1 without waiting for the aid or consent of any other nation on earth. In his book called "The First Battle," Mr Bryan tells how In 1896 a conference was held in Washington attended by a number of leading bimetallisms, which drew up an address to the friends of free sliver and suggested the name of Hon. Joseph C. Sibley of Pennsylvania as the proper person for the forces favorable to bimetallism to unite on aa their preferred candidate for presl dent. It was only in later years that It was disclosed that this great advocate o the poor, down trodden people was the-) specal representative of Standard Oil who, after playing hi role as the next best friend of Bryan, pretended to turn republican to hold his seat In con gress from a district in which the re publicans had regained their majority Publication two year ago by Mr. Hearst of the stolen batch of Standard Oil letters, in which those written by Mr Sibley were numerous and enlight ening, completed the Job of ending his usefulness in the halls of national leg islation. Whether "Joe" Sibley bought his last renomlnation legitimately or Il legitimately may be open to question, but the people will be disposed to take his excuse of bad health for what It Is worth and let him seek retirement In his old age, wondering only how he succeeded in keeping to the front so long. New Grief for Automobilisti. As if the cup of joy and sorrow of the automobillst were not full, here we have a suggestion of new grief In the recommendation by General Frederick D. Grant in his annual report as a de partment military commander rf a law putting all machines capable of transporting four or more persons at the disposal of the government in time Of war. General Grant calls attention to the great improvement of our roads and the perfection of automobile lo comotion as foreshadowing the iio great distant time when troops will be moved long distances almost exclu sively in motor cars. Up to date, at least, alt the automobiles built are, as he resalBds us, purchased by private citizens as rapidly as the manufac turers turn them out so that there Is nothing of a reserve stock on hand to supply a sudden demand for the large number which would be required for use in the military service In times of iieccssity. What General Orant advises, therefore, is the ensctment of a law requiring registration with the na tional government of all automobiles equipped for four or more passengers and Imposing the legal obligation the government on demand. The balm for all this grief Is con tained In the further recommendation that the government pay for the ma chines when thus appropriated, "a sum of money not greater than the first cost to the owner," which would mean the purchase by the government of second-hand machines at original prices, inflicting on the dispossessed automobillst only the hardship of wait ing for the factory to turn out new machines to supply bis demand. Gen eral Grant believes that even on this basis the cost to the government would be vastly less than It would be If It had to pay arbitrary prices for rush orders or keep on hand expensive motor car transportation and waiting for emergencies. The only question is whether, when the army marches in automobiles and the navy sails in air ships, war will still be what General Sherman said it was. I - , , I Badly Mixed in Law and Fact. Governor Shallenberger's explana tion of hla demand for a recount shows that he Is badly mixed In his law and fact. The governor apolo gizes for giving us the open primary and promises to recommend its repeal, but seeks to Justify his approval of the measure by making claims for it that have no foundation. For exam ple, he says: The open primary law bas some valuable improvements on the former law. The pro vision for rotating the names upon, the bal lot, the change of the date of the primary from conflicting with the state fair and the section providing for representative con-en-tlong to make platforms, are all provisions which Improve the old law and should be retained aa proved benefits. Governor Shallenberger has over looked the fact that the changes made in the primary law by the late demo cratic legislature were made by three or four separate bills and were not all included in the bill which afflicted us with the open primary. The pro vision for representative state conven tions to make platforms Is in a differ ent bill, the Oregon plan of pledging legislative nominees on United States senator is in another bill, the so-called nonpartisan Judiciary ballot is in still another bill, and there was no good reason whatever for the governor to approve the open primary because of any other feature, because that was its sole inspiration and motive power. The change of date In the primary and rotation of the names could easily have been brought about by simply amending the closed primary law with out opening the door for wholesale crossing from one party to another. The idea with which the democratic law-makers were infected, and the governor along with them, was that with the open primary the democratic ticket would be made up by agreement renomlnation being conceded to the governor as a matter of course and the democrats would be left free to go Into the republican primary and try by their votes to foist on the repub lican party a candidate for governor whom they thought they could most easily beat In the election. That is what looked "fair" to the governor when he signed the bill, and It Is only chickens coming home to roost that In practice this vicious democratic law has worked out precisely the reverse of what Its sponsors expected. Another place where the governor has lost his legal bearings is found in his supplementary letter expressing willingness to Join with his competitor "In waiving the technicalities of the law and having all the counties re counted." The governor seems to have a notion that he can suspend the law at wtll and set aside its provisions by stipulation. The primary law per mits a recount on demand of any candidate who has lost out, but he must first subscribe to an affidavit set ting forth "reasons for requesting the same," and no candidate Is entitled to a recount unless it appears that a re count would change the result. A demand for a recount by the success ful candidate Is nowhere contemplated by the law; and a recount where no reason exists for believing It would change the result could not be legally had because the necessary affidavits cannot be sworn to. The University of Nebraska, with it 1,000 pupil; is In Itself a prize for which any other enterprising city In the state could afford to pay millions Lincoln Star If Lincoln people could be made to realize this potent fact they might modify their demeanor In several re' spects. Each legislature appropriate! approximately $1,000,000 out of the state treasury for the university, but a small fractional part of which is paid in by taxpayers in Lincoln where It is spent. Let Lincoln people try to Imagine their city without the univer sity and the state house and they may appreciate faintly the special privileges which they enjoy at the expense of the rest of the state. The stupidity of democratic law makers seems to be equaled only only by the denseness of democratic office holders. Out In Kearney county the democratic county clerk left the ton stltutlonal amendment off his printed ballot In complete disregard of the plain letter of the law. If these ballots should be held defective and thrown out altogether It would be a pretty mess and might change the re sult on one or more state officers. The Independent Telephone com pany of' Omaba is to be Jacked up by the State Railway commission for falling to file its report as required by Isw. That's nothing. It has also failed' to pay in the agreed royalty due the city of Omaha by the terms of its franchise or the occupation tax levied on ita gross receipts. These special privileges evidently are not always what they are cracked up to be. i I California Is to have a special ses sion of the legislature to authorize a $6,000,000 bond Issue for the Panama Pacific exposition in San Francisco in 1916, "providing congress designates the California metropolis as the ex position city." Inasmuch as congress does not convene until next December, it would seem as if those Californlans were crowding a little. In spite of Mr. Bryan's advice and iittl ruction, Texas democrats declared against his pet hobby of free raw ma terials. Mr. Bryan may hae to divide his time and try to convert those Texans to free trade In between efforts to, convert his Nebraska democrats to prohibition. Congressman Hitchcock must have given his exchange editor instructions to search diligently for bouquets for his senatorial candidacy and to dodge the brickbats which are flying fast and furious. Pick a posey and get a free want ad. Suggestion for a Teal. . Washington Herald. Mr. Bryan might undertake to commit Nebraska to the proposition that it will not have any more of Mr. Bryan's political notions in Its business. The Indications are that he would carry every precinct on that Issue. Specific for Cariosity. Indianapolis News. f If you don't know where that additional $1,000,000 a year which the Treasury de partment expects to get from the tobacco tax will come from. Just weigh the pack age of tobacco for which you pay the usual price. Radicalism that Looks Good. Philadelphia Ledger. Doctor Wiley says that he cares more for the public health than for the money Invested in the manufacture of foodstuffs likely to Impair the public health. Of course, there Is a shudder at such radi calism, but not on the part of the con sumer. The Modernised "Poor I.o." San Francisco Chronicle. The Chickasaw chief who stood In with the attorney that got the big rake-off from the Indiana shows evidences of rare financial ability. . Sometimes "poor Lo's" untutored mind, is underrated. The descrip tions we hav,eof him by the poets and novelists do not ; always fit In with our more recent; , knowledge ; of Mm, all of which suggests, that if he la given a chance he will do vera; well Indeed. Fornlnst Heavy Thinking. , Springfield '.(Mass.) Republican. James J. Kill, commenting on the re cent removal of Dr. Eliot's five-foot shelf of books from the library cars of the Bur lington railroad1, says: "His books require too much heavy thinking, and people .these days are averse to heavy thinking, espe cially when traveling." Among the books substituted by the Burlington managers are Railway Transportation," "Railroad Freight Rates," "Cost, Capitalisation and Estimated Value of American Railways" and "Railroad. Statistics of the United States." Thus, according to Mr. Hill, there Is nothing about railroads calling for heavy thinking. I Democracy's Picturesque Leader. Washington Star. The cowboy mayor of Omaha appears to have been nominated by the democrats for governor of Nebraska. If he wins at the polls he will be known aa the cowboy governor. A picturesque quantity In poli tics, and a fighter. While a Bryan man he went all lengths for his leader. When he left that line and set up for a leader himself he withstood Mr. Bryan to hla face, and has won from him. Next In national interest to the Ohio campaign, where the president has a personal stake, and the New York campaign, where presidential politics Is centering, comes the campaign In Nebraska, where Mr, Bryan is personally concerned. Our Birthday Book August 85, 1910. Bret Harte, the popular American author, was born August 2S, 1836, at Albany, N. Y He was a newspaper worker In California, and hit the top notch of fame with his Heathen Chinee." Silas A. Holcomb, former governor of Nebraska and later Judge of the supreme court, la 62 years old today. He was born In Indiana and located In Broken Bow, where he was elected by the populists to be judge of the district court. After re tiring from the supreme bench he removed to Seattle for his health, but returned again to Nebraska and Is now living at Broken Bow. Richard Henry Little, Journalist and war correspondent, was born August 5, 18o9, at Leroy, 111. He bas been staff representative of several newspapers, and president of the Chicago Press club w here he still holds forth. John A. McShane, capitalist and former congressman from this district. Is cele brating -his sixtieth birthday anniversary today. He was born In New Lexington, O., and was associated with the Crelghtona in many of their big enterprises of western development in early days. As congress man he procured the first appropriation for Omaha's postofflce building. Clarke G. Powell, president of the Powell Automobile Supply company, was born August 25, 1876, right here In Omaha. He started out with the Omaha Electrical Works ten years ago, but soon launched Into the automobile business, now dealing exclusively in automobile supplies. Dr. Henry L. Akin, the stomach specialist offlcltig In the McCague building, Is Just 3t today. He was burn In Leavenworth Kau., and educated at Princeton university and Crelghton Medical college with a post graduate year In medicine studying In Vienna and Berlin. H. It Uould, manager for Nebraska, for the Prudential Ufa Insurance company of flctng In The Bee building, was bam August !J. 1K0. In Michigan City. Ind. He waa for many years with the McCormlck Harvester company, going into the Insur ance business In 11. having held hia pres ent position fur nearly tan years. Forest Infernos Flame-Swept Idaho Closely mivals the Minnesota Tragedy of Sixteen Tears Ago. Just sixteen years ago the present month, a section of Minnesota forests swept by fire entailed losses of life and property ex reeding in the estimates the present disaster in the Idaho panhandle. The number of known dead In the Idaho calamity la placed at thirty-four, and the Indication points to a total of of Uvea lost under 100. In Minne sota the death roll mounted to 365, of un known 900 perished In the destruction of the town Of Hinckley. Four other com munities besides Hinckley were swept away at the time, but Hinckley was the largest of the settlements reduced to ashes In that appalling storm of flame and amoke. Many stories of heroism and sacrifices came out of the Minnesota Inferno, the most thrilling and traglo being the flight of a train Jammed with refugees through seven miles of road walled In with fire. St. Paul and Duluth train No. 4. south bound, with eighty passengers, ran Into Hinckley at 2 o'clock In the morning of August 30, 1894, and proceeded thence to Mission Creek, two miles further south, only to find that village in ashes. Conductor Sullivan issued Immediate orders to his crew to bark into Hinckley, but before the train, running at twenty miles an hour, could reach Hinckley, the place waa in flames. The train stopped at the depot one fatal minute, during which the woodwork of the engine and the baggage car caught fire. The train quickly resumed its back ward Journey toward Duluth, and the very motion of the cars fanned the flames to fury and they soon enveloped the sleepers, passenger coaches and the smoker. While the train was stopping at Hinckley nearly 200 panlc-atrloken persons of the place rushed upon the platforms and into the cars.' When they discovered the train was on fire, they began to moan, shout and pray, which, with the roar of the flames, made the picture of Satan's realm perfect. A mile out of Hinckley those on the plat forms were made lunatics by the heat, and In their terror began to jump from the cars and plunge into streams, into sand heaps or into amokerencompaaaed forest. A little farther on, those on the cars stifled with smoke, began to smash the win dows of the coaches in a frantic attempt to get a breath of fresh air. Driven back by the flames making their way up the sides of the freshly varnished coaches, they stood in baffled amassment for a moment, when doxens of them In sheer desperation, tumbled themselves out through the open spaces to the ground below, some being In stantly killed by the fall and others linger ing in the horrible heat and smoke until suffocated. In spite of the fact that the train was on fire from engine to rear end brake, the train crew bravely stood at their posts and ran the train back six miles to Skunk Lake, where the passengers rushed out and into the water. Some of them were In such a state of exhaustion that they, were unable to walk and half a doxen were entirely unconscious. All of these latter were rolled In the mud and water and laid on their backs Just far enough out in the lake to keep the water from running Into their mouths. All around the lake the forests were roar ing. Many of the people in the water were in such a state of excitement that they of fered prayers In a loud voice for deliver ance. The scene was one of the most re markable ever witnessed. Engineer John Root, who had so bravely piloted the train through the six miles of furnace, waa found to be fatally burned. Conductor Sullivan, cool and collected all through the terrible Journey, had, after it was all over, become a raving maniac. A little later he was put aboard a special and taken to a Duluth hosplta Along toward nightfall many of the pas sengers, most of whom were bound for St. Paul, began to make calculation on how to get home. As a rule they agreed that it would be best to go to Duluth and make a circuit through Wisconsin. Three men, how ever, resolved to walk back by way of the track to Hinckley. These were James Ed ward Lodbell, of St. Paul; James Anderson, of Minneapolis, and Charles Holt of Duluth. The thrilling story of their trip thus told by Mr. Lodbell: 'I had been a traveling man for the past dozen years, and had been over the Duluth line so many times that I felt safe In mak ing a trial. I was so well acquainted with the location of the streams that I thought that if we got in a tight place we could run into one of them and save ourselves. We had lost all of our beggage, as had the rest of the passengers, and we had nothing whatever except the clothes we wore and each a light overcoat. Mr. Anderson had loat 112,000 worth of bonds which could toot be replaced. We got along pretty well for the first half hour, but we then ran Into smoke so dense that we could not see i feet in front of us. We were in Imminent danger of being suffocated. We could not see the track, and the ties were burning beneath our feet Each of us took an over coat and wrapped It about our heads, leav ing only a small opening from which to breathe. To add to the horror of the situa tion, we frequently came across a dead body. We were only saved by occasionally arriving at a railway cut where there was generally but a little smoke." NEWEST "POLITICAL MACHINE." Perils ef Aatomoblle Campalgnlng Polntcd Out. Cleveland Plain Dealer. The automobile ia, according to the Omaha Bee, the newest American political machine. But It Is a machine that must be used with care lest It develop the pro pensities of the boomerang. For instance, the vote seeker who goes Into the rural districts and runs over prlxe rooster whose dignity will not permit him to flee too rapidly from the path of the monster Is not likely to make many votes. The owner of the rooster will surely align himself with the opposition, and will go as far as he can to take his friends with him. Hoi polio! in the cities, too, according to the Bee, do not relish the sight of a friend of the people dashing about In his Panhard or Mercedes. Hoi pollol are likely to be sensitive. Hoi pollol feel that the candl date's touring car Is somewhat of a slur upon their own lack of touring cars. But for all these drawbacks the auto mobile has come to be almost Indispensable In politics. The candidate who Is compelled to cover a great deal of territory, especially toward the close of the campaign, who Is endeavoring to speak at half a dosen meet ings every evening, w ho seeks to get close to the voters by mingling with them here and thre, ran hardly get along without the automobile. True, he got along without It before It was Invented- In the same way we once got along without railroads. But once any useful thing comes Into general use It straightway becomes indispensable. In Cleveland, at least, a political campaign without automobiles Is something not to be Imagined. What Mlsat Have Been. Denver Republican. The Oklahoma dlscloeurea suggest that If William Penn had only been a lawyer there would never have been much but Pennsylvania In what we now know as forty-eight states, PERSONAL NOTES. Mrs. Mason Adams of 8towe, Vt , who will be 87 years In November, recently Pieced In two weeks a quilt containing WO pieces. The memoirs of Goldwln Smith are to be published shortly, clvina a verv full ac count of hl life, beginning with his early aays ana ending with certain chapters re lating to his later years that were dic tated only a few weeks before his death. olin 1). Rockefeller's share in tl cent quarterly dividend declared by the St anuarci un company Is said to be $1,- 630 men his share of Um ft ne ...it dlvl luend of the last quarter was I2.I3O.OO0, and of the IS per cent for the first quarter oi tne year. I4.0KO&W George W. Ferguson of Lenox, has har vested 417 bushels of wheat from 10.7 acres, a crop which lie thinks has naver equaled In Western Massachusetts. The wheat and straw were Bold for 11.M2, which makes an average of more than tuu worth of wheat raised to the acre. An Illinois widow about to marry a hitherto woman-hating bachelor explains that she won him with hot cuniinli md sugar cookies, and gives the recipes. It is only the Instance which Is new. The namo ia legion of the woman who knows that the only true love philters the world has ever known have been concocted on baking days. William J. Murphy, personally known in thousands upon thousands of lith h entered the water at Revere beach, Mass., Detween 1W7 and 1900, a life guard who was credited with saving seventy-five lives and whose most priceless possession was a medal ror gallantry" bestowed upon him by the Massachusetts Hu man inrlntv was killed in New York by falling from a noiei winaow TRUTH I. QUAINT GARB. Ind las, Lawyer Floats Isilsmtl. and Explains. New York Sun. Mr. J. F. McMurray, who expected to obtain a fee of $3,000,000 for selling as phalt and coal lands belonging to the In dians In Oklahoma, has "branded" as false a story relating to his collecton of a fee of $760,000 from the government in the Oklahoma citisenshlp rases in 1905. We quote from a report of the Investigation now going on at Sulphur, Mo., Mr. McMur ray being on the stand: 'It has been said that you drew the money from the Treasury department in the form of $760,000 In 11,000 bills, and that you carried them in a valise to a hotel, where It waa divided between certain per sons. Is this the truth? ' It Is not,' said McMurray. 'A warrant for $760,000 was handed me. My two law partners and myself went to the Rlggs Na tional bank, and upon surrendering the warrant we each received individual checks. That la all there is to all those stories.' " Thus is malignity confounded. One can Imagine how evil imaginations would have perverted the truth if the McMurray firm had had occasion to collect the $3,000,000 which ia now In suspense. Nothing but an express motor wagon would have availed to carry It. Talks for people The following story is a good Illus tration of what advertising can do if the merchandise Is right. ' A lady went Into a store, and asked for a : widely advertised brand of Mocha-and-Java coffee she was told It was not to be had In that store. But," said the clerk, "we have Mocha- and-Java coffee that Is just as good;" and followed up with a long rigma role about advertised and non-advertised goods. As final argument against the advertiser, he said: "What right has he to take the coffee that all dealers sell and advertise It under a brand of his own? Our coffee Is as good, in every way, as bis." "Your coffee may be good," an swered the lady, "but I know nothing about it. I do know about the other why should I change on your say so, especially when you can give me no reason except that your coffee is Theodore account of his Hunting the Great Rhinoceros of the LddOf illustrated with photographs of living animals in their haunts by KERMIT ROOSEVELT, is published in the 3 SEPTEMBER (Wfu LniULQJLlULLni In the same number: Mr. Roosevelt in France, by William Morton Fullerton, the Paris correspondent of the London " Times." This is not a mere personal eulogy of Mr. Roosevelt, but a thoughtful and authoritative statement of tha political conditions in France that made his utter ances so significant and the causes that made his reception by the French people one of the most re markable in history. you have not subscribed to Scribners you will want to. It Is the one magazine you cannot afford to miss. Next year will be another great Scribner year S3. OO a year; 23 cents a number , Charles Scribner's Sons, New York Fresh Kilned Hard Coal $10. 5C Havens-White Coal Co" 1618 Farnam St. Omaha, Neb. Telephonee-Douglss 630, Ind. A-1201. TAK ON THE FUNSYBONE. "I don't see how I could Insure ymi' li., Avlstlon Is a dangerous calling " "Hut. my dear Mr, don't you see, It us out of reach of the automobile" j Naturally the policy was won. Phllsib phla Ledger. "Iflram," exclaimed Mrs. Corntossel, "thnt candidate you don't like Is coming up the road. Whnt'll 1 nay if lie wants lit kiss the children?" "Don't sv anything. Just call 'em back to the kitchen and give 'em plenty of hrea. Hnd butter and inolassos." Washington Slur. "When I went to Kate's hriiKei)l morn. Ing the whole pluon wss In a fernVut." "Had she been quarreling lth " hus band again?" I "No; the preserves were worftrntf." BaU tlmore American. Marsaret rld you tell ti girl's at the tea thnt secret I confided to you and Jose phine? Katharine No. truly I didn't. Josephine got there first. Harper's Baxar. "There's a gas works norh ff you. a slue factory to the east, on the aouth you have nn abattoir and the reduction plant is to the west." , "What's the advantaff?'' "You can always tell the direction of the wind In an Instant." Cleveland Leader. The proud heiress looked scornfully at the handsome young man kneeling nt her feet. "Is that the best you have to offer?" she asked. "I am sorry but It Is," be faltered. "Then you haven't a pair In the store that will fit me. 1 shall go elsewhere." Again the familiar tragedy. Another sale lost. Chicago Tribune. Anxious Wife What Is it, -John? Has anything gnne wrong? Gloomy Husband O, yes: It's the same old story. Bvera was put out of the Rtmo for chinning the umpire. Chicago -iriDune. "What became of those two brothers you were so much interested In?" "One became an actor and the other an engnieer." "What extreme occupations!" "How extreme?" . "One taking to the footlights and the other to the headlights." Baltimore Amer ican. , "You let two automobile acoroliers gel by without saying a word to 'm!" "Don't you worry," replied SI Stmllti. T reckon I know the constable business. Bv lcttln' a few go past I set up a fealln of confidence an' by an' by Til git. a bunch wu'th while." Washington Star. GROWING THINGS, . St. Nicholas. Oh. I am a child of . tbe country, and 1 Inv. nnt tVio rllWm Slim. My heart is Bkin to the wild things and the woonlanns vast ana mm. Where the winds and the brooks make muslo, and, . faint from bis cool re treat. Comes the voice of the thmeh at even, la a madrigal wild and sweet. i Oh, I am a child, of the country, and the orchard knows my tread, When the boughs shine white with blos soms and the buds lie, jLiik and red. And hand In hand, In thai TrToouJlght, go my foul's beloved and I. And we need no words to question, no words to make reply. Ch, I am a child of the country, and t love the fields at morn, Where the air comes fresh and fragrant and the Joy of the day Is born; Loud carols the cheerful robin to the Hn net over the way. And the growing thlnun and the birds, ana I welcome the dawn of day. who sell things only as good, not better s than I am using?" ' ":, The public will not be fooled aura enough. If your goods and prlcea are right, If your advertising' la constant reiteration of factB, you will win out every time. Advertising will win and keep customers when Intelligence and honesty are put into it and when p, persistent and consistent policy is pursued. The Bee Is read in thousands of homes in Omaha every day, The ad vertising columns of The Bee will plai your store news before 120,000 di.ft readers and they will respond 'o good, honest straight-to-the-point ad vertising. 'Phone Tyler 1000 and our repre sentative will call and show you an advertising service which' will help you to win and keep the confidence of tbe people of Omaha. o. 3