Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 02, 1910, Page 6, Image 6

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    V
Tim BEE? OMAHA'. FRIDAY.
SEPTEMBER
1010.
The pmaiia Daily Dee
FOUNDEt. BT EDWARD RDSBWATER.
VICTOR EfWKWATER, EDITOR.
filtered st Omaha postofflce eecond
elaaa matter.
TERMS OF srKBORIPTION.
Pally Bee (Including Runday). pef wek..l&c
lelly Bee (without Sunday), pr
Pally Be (without Sunday), one year..4 0D
Dally Bea and Sunday, one year 100
DELIVERED BY CARRIER.
Kvanlng He (without Sunday), per week.fte
Evening Bee (with Sunday), per week..10o
Sunday Bee. one year
Saturday Ho, on year ,-")
Address all complaints of Irregularities In
delivery to City Circulation Department.
OFFICES.
Omaha Tbe Be Building.
Routh Omaha Twenty-fourth and N.
Council Bluffs 1 Scott atreet.
Lincoln 61S IJttle Building.
Chicago IMS Marquette Building.
New Tork-Rooma 1101-1KM No. 34 Wdt
Thirty-third afreet ...
Washington 7 Fourteenth Street. N. W.
CORRESPONDENCE.
Communications relating to newt and ed
itorial matter should be addresaed: Omaha
Bee, Editorial Department
REMITTANCES.
Remit by draft, expreaa er postal order
payable to The Hee Publishing Company.
Only 2-cent itampi received In payment of
mail account. Personal checks except on
Omaha and eastern exchange not accepted.
STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION.
State of Nebraska. Douglas County, :
-orge B. Tischuck, tn-asurer of Tha Bee
Publishing Comi-any, being duly aworri.
says that the actual number of full and
romplete coph-a of The Dally, Morning,
Evening and Sunday Bee printed during
tha month of August, ll'io. waa aa ioiiows:
1 48,870
2 43,490
S 48,470
4. ........ .4,610
6 48,800
6 .43,540
T 40,000
I '..42.800
.45,830
10 48,730
11...., 43,780
12 , 43,640 ,
13.., ....... 43,730
H..........89,00
15. .........40,900
1.... ...... 43,100
Total
Betnrned eepies
17
IS
1...
40.
21
21
23
24.........
4,700
43,480
43,350
43,800
...40,100
...43,540
. . .43,380
...43,460
. . .43,300
.. .43,490
...43,490
...40,100
25.
24.
27.
.28.
2.
43330
43,440
43,990
JO
: Si. ......
..1,339,730
14,987
Bet total 1,315,443
Dally average 48,433
.georoh; b. tzschuck.
. . . Treasurer.
Subscribed In my presence and sworn
to before me this 1st day of September, 1910.
M. B. WALKER,
. Notary .Public.
Sebacrtbera leaving; the) etty tem
porarily should have Tke Be
Mailed to them. Address will be
chanced as oftea aa reqaeated.
Uncle Sam is a great old hunter. He
was able to find 533,000 persons
through the smoke of Pittsburg.
The tax collector can always come
back.
Omaha holds out the glad hand to
the colonel.
Now if the weather man will only
be good to us.
Might as well keep Father. Elkln's
denial in type.
I
There are many high fliers who do
not use aeroplanes.
But then, Lincoln did not vote for
water In such large volume.
Mr. Edison may never hope, how
ever, to make politics wireless.
Guess the American people know
now what to do with their ex-presl
dents.
, f
Boston now has a paper called the
Common,, tut Mr. Bryan's Is the Com
moner. Colonel Roosevelt has given no one
authority for saying that this is a fare
wel tour.
Still Korea managed to run along
quite a time without Japanese pro
tectorate 518 years.
The disappointed young authoress
who shot herself probably had been
leading of Jack London's success.
1
That St. Louis preacher who stole
seventeen watches now wants to go to
the penitentiary. Due time he will.
)
The St. Louis Times propounds the
question, "What's in a sausage?"
Nice question for a St. Louis paper to
be asking. '
Another paving war out at Dundee
What'a the matter? Doesn't the juris
diction of the paving brick combine
reach out there?
A family aervant in New Jersey
after thirty-five years In that house
hold has received a raise in wages.
"A rolling stone gathers no moss."
A Kansas City man who memorised
10,000 names has lost his mind. What
profiteth it a man if he memorize the
whole world of names and loso his
own?
Of course, Mayor ' Jim ' is for re
counting the whole primary vote of
Nebraska, on governor, but evidently
would ather not begin with Douglas
county.
The' colonel told the Cheyenne folks
he would attend the next Frontier day
celebra-tion and bring a lot of friends
with him. Guess that ia aome adver
tising for the Frontier day, eh?
It isstrauge that the world should
get excited over Emperor William's
enunciation of the divine right idea,
for he has always believed in it and
never tried to conceal the' fact.
There are ten montha of King
George's probationary period yet to
run before he gets his crown. Good
thing a new , king in England draws
his salary at the outset or he would
not be different from other folks.
Colonel Roosevelt in Omaha.
Omaha is to be honored by a tlslt
from Colonel Theodore Roosevelt and
his party touring the west and will
accord hlro the true hoapltallty for
which our city haa become noted.
Colonel Roosevelt cornea as the
guest of the citizens of Omaha as a
whole rather than of any particular
party, faction, club, association or or
ganization, and the entertainment that
Is to be provided for him is entirely In
keeping with the character of hla visit.
Colonel Roosevelt honors Omaha
by staying here an entire twenty-four
hours, and the opportunity Is utilised
for a varied program. At luncheon
he will meet Informally representative
cltlxens, not only of Omaha, but of all
Nebraska, and his address at the Au
ditorium at 4 o'clock in the afternoon
will be entirely public, so that everyone
who dealres to hear him may do so to
the limit of the capacious hall. In
the evening the dinner la necessarily
more restricted In numbers, but Is to
be followed by an excursion to the Den
under the auspices of the famous
Knights of Ak-Sar-Ben, who will show
him some things which he could not
see even in Africa.
It is needless to say that Omaha
bids Colonel Roosevelt welcome as the
nation's most distinguished, private
citizen, and with fond recollection of
his former visits to this city, both as
a private cltlien and aa chief executive
of the republic.
Omaha and Nebraska extends greet-
ing to Colonel Theodore Roosevelt
Adapt Seed to Soil.
A scientific farmer in Oklahoma has
produced a species of corn under the
dry farming system which he calls
Mexomer that yields sixty bushels per
acre and which he hopes to bring up
to 100 bushels per acre before he has
ceased his experiments with it. The
secret of his wonderful success is
adapting the seed to the soil, which
is the secret of any and all successful
farming. He looked, for a variety of
drouth-resisting corn, since the sec
tion of Oklahoma he waa in was a dry
section and he finally discovered what
he waa looking for by crossing old
Mexico varieties with home seed, pro
ducing a corn that was entirely
adapted to the soli and climate of Ok'
lahoma.
Here is the explanation of this
whole scheme of Intensified farming.
Soli and cultivation are to be sure,
important factors in producing results
and the proper treatment of seed is
another immensely important factor,
but before both of these comes the
proper adaptation of the seed to the
soil. When the farmer gets that he
haa the largest part of his problem
solved. Irrigation, fertilization of this
sort and that nothing can count for
so much as the science of selecting the
kind of seed that is best suited to the
particular kind of soil.. Of course this
system of selection requires careful
study and research, but why should
that' deter the plans or progress of a
farmer?
The dry farming congress that
meets In Montana wm do Well to take
the case of this Oklahoma farmer in
hand. . It aeems to offer something
Just a little in advance of anything
which the other dry farmers have yet
achieved. A seed that will yield sixty
bushels of . corn to the acre with rain
or irrigation is worth investigating.
Eoosevelt at Osawatomie.
It is natural that the occasion of
celebrating John Brown day at Osa
watomie should have Inspired Colonel
Roosevelt to talk-about the reform
program. His utterance is noteworthy
because of the comprehensive ground
it covers and the far-reaching changes
he advocates. Tet most of the things
he urges are not new to him and many
of the proposals are even now being
put Into effect by the operation of
laws enacted by republican congresses
carrying out recommendatlona of a
republican president
Two lessons may be drawn from
this occasion, namely, the need of the
new era" to strike a proper medium
between ultra-radicalism and ultra-
conservatism and that, what substan
tlal reforms have come in this coun
try, have come through the agency of
the republican party. Both of these
propositions receive emphasis in
Colonel Roosevelt's address. As to
the first he says:
I do not want people to follow men
whose Intentions are excellent, but whose
yes are a little too wild to make It safe
to trust them.
And there Is ample emphasis
throughout the address of the latter.
This new era, which affects business
as well as politics, has unquestionably
come to stay in this country, but its
destiny is yet to be worked out. It
haa but made Its advent and its form
is yet indefinite. While it brings us
as a nation to advanced ground from
which, in the dispensation of a wise
statesmanship, there will be no reces
sion, it Is nevertheless still incumbent
upon the people to find the equillb
rlum ttween the two , extremes al
ready mentioned and that equilibrium
Is neither insurrectionary nor reac
tionary, but an evenly-balanced pro
gresslvlsm, such as that for which the
republican party, as the party of prog
ress and action, stands and toward
which it has alwaya moved. In this
era of transition when tke people are
looking tor the solution of new prob
lems to fit them to new conditions,
they will have to rely on the only
party that has achieved anything
worth while since the beginning of the
civil war the party of Lincoln, Mc
Klnley, Roosevelt and Taft. It Is the
only political party in this country
that has succeeded In governing the
nation, because it Is the only party
that has successfully governed Itself.
That Is why factional discord must be
but temporary and lead to a greater
unity of strength afterward.
Where the Feople Come In.
The street car strike in Columbus,
O., furnishes a conspicuous example
of the total disregard for public rights
by parties to a labor controversy. No
matter how Just or righteous either
side to the issue may be, a continuance
of the strike is an imposition upon the
people upon whose patronage both em
ployer and employe alike depend and
if either aide had sufficient regard for
this fact a settlement would be forth
coming within a very short time.
This strike has been waged too long
already for the public good. It has
been too long to expect that the pub
lic, as the Injured third party, will be
Inclined to take a very moderate view
of either phase of the controversy. It
is difficult to see how public sympathy
might be enlisted either by the strik
ers or the company, or how the people
would be expected to take the most
rational and dispassionate view of
the case. Even the authority of the
state government has been defied and
the governor's resort to state troops
mocked as a means of bringing the
strike to a successful termination.
If the people of Ohio have not by
thia experience been brought to see
that there may be justice in such a
thing as compulsory arbitration, then
it is difficult to imagine a condition
or state of affairs that would suggest
the wisdom of such a recourse. It is
entirely aside the question -to try to
determine the blame in this case to ar
rive at the conclusion that it is one
of the most aggravated situations
arising from a labor dispute with
which any city or state haa in late
years had to contend. It emphasizes
more than ever the fact that both
capital and labor owe first considera
tlon to the public.
A Strang-e Anomaly.
A strange anomaly of the antl.
saloon movement in Nebraska Is found
in the post-election comment of the
official organ of the anti-Saloon league.
From this the only inference to be
drawn is that the organized forces for
which it speaks were all exerted in the
recent primary for Governor Shallen
berger without consideration for any
other candidate. For example, It says
Many anti-saloon men, ' seeing the hope
lessness of their own candidates, tilrned
democrat and voted for Bhallenberger and
Metcalfe. Moat anti-saloon men felt that
Governor Bhallenberger deserved another
term and voted for Mm regardless of
Party.
And in another place it gives this
additional endorsement:
Mr. Bhallenberger haa been a model gov
ernor and deserves a second term.
, Here we have open acknowledge
ment that the anti-saloon reformers
preferred to take a democrat running
on a platform opposed to county op
tion, which he had helped to make,
rather than a republican running on
a county option platform, which they
had themselves made for him. Al
though Governor Bhallenberger had
been elected in the first Instance by
the help of the liquor dealers' votes
and money, and probably expected the
same. support again, the anti-saloon
men were also for him In the primary
and apparently ready to join again
with the liquor crowd to elect him
later. This, however, is no more
strange than that these two antag
onistic forces had united behind the
same democratic candidate two years
ago.
Thirty-four out of the 133 demo
cratic legislative, nominees failed to
sign up "Statement No. 1" under the
Oregon plan which the late democratic
legislature transplanted into Ne
braska. ' Some pf the democrats ap
parently are not fully convinced that
this scheme will work out here the
same as it did in Oregon, with the
resulting election of a democratic
United 8tatea senator by republican
votes. I
The democratic ple-biter who poses
as chairman of the populist state
committee is said to be In a quandary
aa to what to do with the populist
nomination for governor in case he
has a vacancy on his hands. The
answer is easy. He will try to trade
It in for a promise of reappointment to
his present Job aa superintendent of
tbe State Industrial school or some
thing better.
Please take note that while Colonel
Roosevelt has said something about
effective means for prompt removal of
faithless public officers, he has not
as yet put special emphasis on the re
call for federal Judges, as promised
by our amiable democratio contempo
rary.
The Lincoln street car company's
report filed with the State Railway
commission shows a deficit on opera
tion for its last fiscal year. A blind
man can see tne company laying a
fine foundation for an appeal for the
lifting of that alx-for-a-quarter order
and the abolition of the occupation
tag which Lincoln set such store by.
The Sioux City Tribune says It is
now generally admitted that Governor
Shallenberger owed his election to the
brewers. Did not tbe Anti-Saloon
league vote, which waa also pledged to
him, count?
Custer county's census population
haa been announced as 25,668, show
ing an increase of nearly 10 per cent
in ten years. We remember the map
In our achool geographies on which
Roosevelt on Mendacious Journalism
Tha Outlook.
In the New York "Evening Post" of It merely scientifically and descriptively.
Friday. August 24, there appeared In nn
editorial artcle the following statements:
"I will make the r&rporatlo is come to
time," ahouted Rojnevelt to tha mob. But
did ha not really mean '.hat he would
make them oome down with tha cash to
elect htm, aa : aid before? For a man
wlth Mr. Rooaevelfs proved record It Is
simply disgusting humbug for him to rant
about the corporations, upon whose
treasurers ha fawned when he was presl-
dnt and wanted their money for his cam-
paign. Does he think that nobody haa a
memory whioh goes back to tha life In-
sura nee Investigations, and that every-
body has forgotten tha fnO.OOO taken from
widows and orphans and added to Theo-
dora Roosevelt's political corruption fund?
Did ha not take a big check from the Beef
Trust, and glad to get It? And now he la
going to make tha corporations coma to
tlmel One can have respect for a sincere
radical, for an honest fanatic, for an agi-
tator or leveler who believes that ha Is
doing God's will; but It Is hard to ba pa-
tlent with a man who talks big but acta
mean, whose eye la always to tha main
chance politically, and who lata no friend-
ship, no generosity, no principle, no moral
scruple stand for a moment between him-
aelf and tha goal upon which ha haa set hla openly to buy votea or for any other pur
overmastering ambition. poee. Whoever wrote tha article In the
This champion of purity, this roarer for
political virtue, la the man who for years
when In publio life, hand In glove with the letter in which I had written to Mr. Har
worst political corruptlonlsts of hla day: rlman as follows: "What I have to say
Who toadied to Piatt, who praised Quay,
who paid court to.Hanna; under Mm as
president Aldrich rose to tha height of hla
power, always on good terms with Roose-
velt; It waa Roosevelt who, In 1906, wrote
an open letter urging tha re-election of
Speaker Cannon, against whom mutterlngs
had then begun to rise; It was Roosevelt
who asked Harrlman to come to the White
House secretly, who took his money to buy
votea in New York, and who afterwards
Wrote to "My Dear Sherman" yes. tha what I had to say after election if It re
tains Shrman reviling tha capitalist to ferred In any possible way to getting money
whom ha had previously written, saying:
You and I are practical men."
The "Evening Post" la not In Itself suf-
flclently important to warrant an answer,
but as repreaenting a class with whose
hostility it Is necessary to reckon in any
genuine movement for decent government,
It Is worth while to. speak of It There are
plenty of wealthy people In thla country
and of Intellectual hangers-on of wealthy ma to tell Cortelyou to klva him aid for
people, who are delighted to engage in any the atate campaign. Mr. Cortelyou Is fa
movement for reform which does not touch mallar with the facta. In other words, "ttie
tho wickedness of certain great corpora- statement of the "Evening Post" oa not
tlona and of certain men of great wealth,
People of this class will be In favor of any
aeathetlo movement; they will favor any
political movement against the small
grafting politician, against the grafting
labor leader, or any man of that stamp,
but they cannot be trusted the minute that
the reform assumes sufficient dimensions
to Jeopardise so much of the established
order of things aa gives an unfair and lm-
proper advantage to the great corporation,
and to thoae directly and Indirectly re-
sponalve to Ita wiahea and depending upon
it The "Evening Pdst" and papers of the
earns kind, and the people whose views
they represent would favor attacking a
garg of small bosses who wish to control
the republican party; but they would, as
the "Evening Post", haa shown, far rather
see these small .bosses win than sea a
movement trtuinphwhich alms not merely
at the. overthrow ef the. small political
bass, but at depriving the corporation, of
its Improper influence over politics, de-
prlving the., man-of wealth of any ad van-
tag beyond that' which belongs to him as
a simple America, citizen. They would ba
agalnst corporations only after such cor-
! poratlona had bean caught in the crudest
klnd of criminality,
GAL. TWO MENDACIOUS JOURNALISM
I have never for one moment counted
upon the support of the "Evening Post" against the wrongdoing In the future. It
or of those whom It represents In the ef- la but another Instance of the peculiar base
fort for cleanliness and decency within tha ness, the peculiar moral obloqulty, of the
republican party because tha "Evening
Poet" would support auch a movement only
on condition that It waa not part of a
larger movement for the betterment of so-
clai conditions. But this is not all. In
tha struggle for ' honest politics there is Roosevelt refera Is not primarily the con
no mors a place for. the liar than there earn of the man assailed; it is primarily
la for the thief, . and In a movement de- tha concern of decent cltisens all over the
signed to put an end to the dominion of tha country; Its harm to the Individual In thla
thief, but little good can be derived from case can be disregarded; but Its harm to
the assistance of the liar. Of course on- good government is Just as real, and, so
Jectlon will be made to my use of this far aa It extenda. Just as deep as the wont
language. My answer la that I am using act of the corruptionist. The Editors.)
Custer county appeared right in the
middle of the label, "Great American
Desert." 1
Omaha'a bank clearings for the
the month of August are nearly 9,-
000,000 more than the corresponding
figures for last year. The banks can
not clear more paper unless more
business is done.
)
At least one democratic candidate
does not want a recount, and does not
hesitate to ask the courts to help him
hold a nomination which he fears he
would lose if bis opponent were given
a square deal.
Booker T. Washington has written
a brief "squib" describing Bert Wil
liams aa the greatest colored come
dian, but with all regard for Dr. Wash
ington's authority, it was not needed
In this case.
CoafasloB ef the Propheta.
Washington Post.
It becomes more and more probable that
both tha republicans and the democrats
wilt control tha next houae.
Prosperity for Paper Mills.
r Wall Street Journal.
If tha railroads submit Individual argu
ments to the Interstate Commerce com
mission In the rate hearings, paper manu
facturers at least should reap a rich har
vest. Bam 'Old Esperleace.
Indianapolis News.
Cheer up. Mr. Ripley! The ultimate
consumer haa had precisely the same ex
perience aa the Santa Fe. There never
haa been a time when hla pressing de
manda did not amount to three or four
times hla earnings.
' Oat la the Opea.
Chicago Newa.
It Is nicer ef the railroads to say they
wish to raise the ratea because they need
the money than to beat about the bush
and allege that they feared the coin would
rust and otherwise deteriorate In the peo
ple's sagging pocketa.
Th Llaalt la t'arloaltr.
Philadelphia Ledger.
While an Ohio mob waa engaged In hang
ing a person offensive to Ha aenae of fitness
a woman drove Into the crowd wltb her
automobile, and, it is affirmed, stood up In
n1 because no other terms eapreaa th
facts with tha necessary precision. In the
to (h- difnM of hM , prwtnt etjnXrol
of th. republican party In New Tork
state, whom It haa affected to oppose In
the pant, the "Evening Post," through
through whatever editor personally per-
sonally wrote the article, practiced every
known form of mendacity,
Trobably tha "Evening Post" regards the
decalogue aa outworn: but If It will turn
to It and will read the eighth and ninth
commandments, it will sea that bearing
false witness Is condemned aa strongly as
theft Itself. To take but one Instance out
of tha many In this article, the "Evening
Poat" says: "It waa Roosevelt who asked
Harrlman to coma to tha White House
secretly, who took hla money to buy votes
In New York, and who afterwards wrote
to 'My Dear Sherman'1 yes the same Fher-
man reviling tha capitalist to whom ne
had previously written, .saying: 'You and
1 are practical men.' " Not ony la avery
Important statement In this sentence false.
but tha writer who wrote i knew it waa
false. As far aa I waa concerned, every
man vtsled the White House openly, and
Mr. Harrlman among the others. I took
no money from Mr. Harrlman secretly or
"Evening Post'' In question knew that this
was the foulest and baaeet lie when he
wrote tha sentence, for he quotea tha same
to you can be said to you aa well after
election aa before, but I would like to aea
you some time before I write my message."
I am quoting without the letter before me
but tha quotation la substantially. If not
verbfclly, accurate. That statement in
thla letter to Harrlmarv Is of course on Its
face absoluely Incompatible with any
thought that I waa asking him for cam
palgn funds, for It Is of course out of the
question that I could tell him equally well
before election. This la so clear that any
pretense of misunderstanding Is proof posl-
tlve of the basest dishonesty in whoever
wrote the artcle In question. As a matter
of fact, when Mr. Harrlman called It waa
to complain that tha National Committee
would not turn over for the use of the
state campaign In which he was interested
funds to run that campaign, and to ask
only false . and malicious, is not only In
direct contradiction of the facts, but Is
such that It could only have been made by
a man who, knowing the facts, deliberately
Intended to pervert them. Such an act
stands on a level of Infamy with the
worst act ever performed by a corrupt
member of a legislature or city official,
and stamps the writer with the same moral
brand that sumps the brlketaker.
I have teen only a telegraphic abstract
of the article, apparently containing quo
tatlons from It Practically every state
ment made In these quotations la a false
hood.
To but one mora shall I allude. Tha ar
tide speaks of my having attacked cor
poratlona, and, referring directly to my
Ohjo speeches, of my having "sought to
Inflame the mob and make mischief." . In
those speeches tha prime stand I took was
against mob Violence aa shown by the labor
people who are engaged- In ' controversy
with a corporation. My statement' was In
affect that the flrat duty of the state and
he first dnuty of the officials was to put
down disorder and to put down mob vlo-
lence, and that after auch action had been
taken, . then it was the duty of tha of-
flolals to investigate the corporation, and
If It had done wrong to make It pay the
penalty of ita wrongs and to provide
"Evening Post" that It should pervert the
truth In so shameless a fashion.
THEODORE ROOSEVELT.
Cheyenne, Wyoming, August IT, 1910.
(Such an article as that to which Mr.
the machine, with a demand that the victim
be pulled higher so that aha might see him.
Now that this woman haa been arrested
perhaps she will realise that curiosity may
be excessive. What this particular person
is charged with specifically la not known,
but almost any Jury would convict her
of It.
Our Birthday Book
aptember ft, ltlO.
Henry George, the. great American polit
ical economist, was born September 1, U3,
In Philadelphia, His book on "Progreaa
and Poverty" has probably had mora
world-wide reading than that of any other
American author.
William P. Frye, United States senator
from Maine, la T9 yeara old today. He
waa born at Lewlston In that state, and
now has the record for longest continuous
service In the senate of which for awhile
he waa presiding officer. '
Hoke Smith, who has Just been nomin
ated for governor of Georgia, la celebrat
ing his fifty-fifth birthday today. He
waa born In Newton, N. C, and was a
I member of the cabinet under President
Cleveland.
General Charles f. Humphrey, United
. states army retired, waa bom September
1, U44, In New York. He was stationed
In Omaha aeveral tlmea and haa many
friends here. He roae to tha position of
quartermaster general, which he occupied
at the time of hta retirement.
A. U. Bpauldlng, base ball magnate, la
Just SO. Ha waa born at Byron,. Ill-, and
now lives In California, where he ia trying
to make a borne run aa candidate for
United (States senator.
Frederick Starr, anthropologist, waa
born September i, 1858, at Auburn. Ha Is
the professor In the 1'nlverslty of Chicago
who predicted that the Hons would eat
Colonel Roosevelt when he went to Africa.
Casper Whltrey, author and authority on
sports, is 49 years oM today. He waa
born at Baltimore, and la a traveling ex
plorer and haa written books about his
experience.
Rev. Newell Uwlght Hlllla, pastor of
Plymouth Congregational church in
Brooklyn, waa born September I, 1S58, at
Magnolia, Ia. He waa ordained a Pres
byterian minister In 1887, and is also an
author on religious subjects.
Jeremiah W. Jenks, professor of polit
ical economy In Cornell university, la Just
M. He waa born at St. Clair, Mich., and
was first a professor In Knox college at
Galesburg. He delivered the commence
ment address at the University of Ne
braska at Lincoln last June.
SMILING LUTES.
Friend So your great Russian actor was
a total failure?
Manager Yes. It took all our profit to
pay for running the electrto light sign with
his name on it. Pink.
Miss te Plavne la It true that you said
my face waa enooah to make a man rllmb
a fence T
Mr. Doris Well. I er meant, of course.
If the man was on the other side of the
fence. Chicago News.
"Would you take SlO.OnQ to fly from Al
bany to New York?"
"Why not? our cannier took only si.ww
to fly lo Kurope." Puck.
Mr. Church t see one of those Kalome
dancera has returned from Kurope with
sixteen trunKs nnei witn names.
Mr. (lot ham For gracloua aakes! What
la ahe going to 'do with the clothes?-
"Whv didn't vou atop to ascertain how
badly the man waa Injured?" demanded the
Judae. . .
"Why." explained the cnaurreur, "i Knew
I could find out from the dally papers."
Louisville Courier-Journal.
Mrs. Crlmnonbeak Heen to see the doctor?
Mr. Crlmsonbeak Yes. Just came from
there.
'Did he find out what waa the matter
with you?"
'Yes. He discovered that I naa k mat
he wanted." Yonkera Statesman.
'I observe that you have cut the funny
stories out of your speeches."
"Yea," replied senator eorgnum. "rne
Talks for people
"It pays to advertise," said a man
tbe other day, but he said It flippantly
as a joke.
And this aame man Is connected
with a firm that has built a country
wide reputation through advertising
he holds his Job through the power of
advertising, because it has created a
market for the goods he sells.
It doesn't pay to advertise if you re
gard it aa a Joke advertising is a
plain, simple, everyday business prop
osition, and to make any business pay;
you have got to give the best that's in
you all the time.,
Hugh Chalmers says: "The founda
tion of all business is confidence. And
advertising and publicity are the
greatest builders of confidence known
to the business man."
And Mr. Chalmers is not alone in
his belief in advertising there is King
C. Gillette, for Instance, and Coward
Shoes, E. Howard Watch Works,
Steinway & Sons, Cowan Furniture,
SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES.
ellevue
Located in Omaha'a beautiful suburb, offers:
FULL COLLEGIATB COURSES leading to the degrees B. A., B. B.
and Ph. B.. . . ,
NORMAL COURSES leading to Sate Teacher's Certificates.
Regular Academic and Special Courses for those not candidates
for degrees..
MUSIC, PAINTING AND DRAMATIC ART taught' by specialists.
FOUR MODERN RESIDENCE HALLS. Good equipment Faculty
of eighteen experienced educators. Pleasant social life, successful
athletics and debating. Moderate expenses.
GOOD TROLLE SERVICE. Omaha'a new scenic boulevard enters
the college grounds. " -- ' Cvi-
IDEAL FOR OMAHA PATRONS. Far enough away for students
to be on their own resources in the thick of college competition, yet
within a few minutes trolley ride of home. .
VISIT THB COLLEGE personally or TELEPHONE the president's
office South 17942.
C 'JLiLlllUitei w!ft tke UaiTertity at NWt ia .
TF YOU are going to take up
a means send for eur catalogue.
aardlnr tha advantage of this achool
have a Faculty of forty Artist Inatructora in all branches of muale. and
4 atudloa and practice rooms. There are two two-manual pipe organs
for particulars. X notable feature Is our aerlea of Artist Concert.
Our achool of public performance la of Invaluable training to pupils.
Tha following courses are offered: Post Graduate, Academic. Teacher's
Certificate, Publio School,. Mualo, Piano Tuning and Preparatory. Buildings
modern and located in close proximity to all places of Interest in the city.
Term opana Sept. 6th, For catalogue, addreas '
The Univenity
WZXiXiAJtS XXHBSlUn
MILITARY
ST. ANDREWS SCHOOL
A BAT BU7XOOX. FOB BOYS
(trade and high sohool work. Stndtata prepared for tha aaivsrelty. Individual
attention. Moral aag rellgleaa training, iba maatera are university graduates,
Tall tana begins Bspt. 14tn. Bet. . X. Tynsr, bead master, 3848 Cbarlas Street.
Omaha, Fbeae Karasy BM3. x
IVcntworth
Ttf
Highest rating by War
sunlit. T'mirc! rtk mtt
v. vm etuuj 1 V'flig IVfS V III" vi ! tlvr f UUVeilllllClll
Academies or for Business Llle. Accredited by North Central
Association of Schools and Colleges. Manual Training. Separata
Department for Smalt Boys. For catalogue, address
rKjeafijjjae
pc ROWMELL fl n ALU Academic and College Preparatory
m ' t2.l courses. Art. Music, Domestic Science
l.'.J SUB. HESatSsa li U L ISO and Qytnnaatlca, Native French and
German teachers. A school for girls
with all tha advantages ef Fas tarn schools. Certificates admit to Wellesley,
Smith. Vaasar, University of Chloago and State Universities. All girls in special
charge of experienced house-mother. Year book sent upon request. MISS MARS
pKH. Prlnrtr.nl Omehs Neb
ui...,,-! m:Iis.m 1.I. educates tha Wkele Boyl Open Sept. Jtth, undei
MISSOUN Military ACaaim ,p.Ildld UgPu-e. uuarsnteea auueets. No failures.
Teacher to every ten boya Delightful home, lieat association. Full athletics. Free
Lyceum Course. Bxcnrslon to new Orleans daring Merdlgras festival I Number
limited. Least cost. Enroll today I Address C'Ol. W. 1). Fonville, Mexico. Me.
KEARN EY
MILITARY
ACADEMY
With our Academic, Classic.
Scientific and Commsrclal
' Courses that prepare tha Boy
for Life Wi aim to build up a
aound body, develop character
and create habits that make the
Boy the Manly Man.
Write for catalogue.
Henry N. ItoaaelL Head Master,
Kearney, Neb.
applause for a funn story Is nfien mls
lesding. Incieail or ru"ring yi.r argu
ment the auoienie ma,v i iyie. ptir.
in It spriei'iauon ut life mid vnia. "
Washington Htar.
THE MAN OF TKE WEST.
Hllss t.'arnwii.
Who Is thli hardy tigure
Of virile fighting strain,
With taior and wmvlctlon
In titan Hint (nu and brnlti?
fipiuna from our old Ideals
Ti serve our lmr n-e.u
He la the modern Ruomlliend
The man who tide and reads.
No pomp of braid atiri fahere,
v.. flu,.!, nf hut uNhed tcenr.
He wears the plainsman s outfit
HuflHlent and se'ere.
With no In'perUl chevron
Upon ila khaki sleeve,
He thinks by no mun's doctrine,
, Ha spt-aka by no man's leave.
The breed and creed and schooling
Of Harvard and the plains.
Hi hundred years of fighting
For freedom In his vein
Let no' one think to w heedle, v
To buv, coerce, nor cheat.
The man who love the open.
The man who knowa the atreet
He rides not foa vainglory,
He flghte not for low grain.
But that the range "f freedom
fnraveled shall remain.
Aa plain aa IMble language
And open aa the day
He challenge Injustice :
And bids corruption stay.
who sell , things
B. V. D. Underwear, Vulcanite Port
land Cement Company, Mitchell. the
Chicago Hatter, ' the Scandinavian
American Bank it Seattle, and many
others right herejn Omaha.
To none of these men and firms li
the phrase, "It pays to advertise," a
Joke. They know it pays because they
have tried it out. put It to work in
building up their own business. . Ad
vertising will pay you, Mr. Merchant,
if you have the right goods at the right
price it will build cbnfldence'for you.
If you live up to your statements.
It isn't necessary to use big space
to win confldenee-you can talk sound1
truth in a moderate space.' Be plain,
direct, simple and candid, offer tha
people something they want, be sure of
the quality, make the price right and
keep everlastingly at it. J '
The Bee can , furnish a service oi
advertising copy that will make your
small space yield big results.' '
Phone Tyler 1000 and a representa
tive will call on you ,
the study of music, by all
We invite Investigation re-
over other school of mmric
School of Music
Director, xaneoln, Nebraska.
College
Nebraska Military Acadeaif
UeTCOX.?, XIU1.IKA
BOARDING SCHOOL FOR
BOYS OF ALL AGES
xma SKTsiooz. txajs ofxits shupt. is, isio
Special Instruction given to boya who do not fit Into
regular claaaea'ln public achool. Back work easily made
up. .
. Illustrated Catalogs TaUtag tke trbola Story of
Military atobool Lift Meat free for tbe Asking.
For Information, address
B. . BATWAM9. uperlateogent .
Phonee, Bell 1711; Auto. IttO. xaaeolm. Vabraska
41 tl end Charln Strait
Oni Block From Car.
r.ZUltarv Academy
Department
Iniantrv Artillatrw nA C auil rr
All nran.ra 4rva 1 Itiitiarci tin4 r.ouarnma.
totllilitillWlifOiH
aOon's tx MtiaiiM with
mJl Alary or a poor poeri turn.
IxwTl dptHl upon put! to
yuti loi. Ii't tit irVitevd ma a
Or woniri that aarna tha alff
aatary. Wa rfr a practical
Du4iakS training at a rvaaon-
f bta rat. TM H a aiatlrvf
rvly kualfkaas train mat ahooL
Will a rauulatton tor Irvurouirrl w
a or . i ne? young
ana mm tha (arm wiM ftn4 a kualnasa training of
graat valua. Waasirl our nrpduatttalo find gooa
soaitluna. jaad lo-4i'forourcataitttua. It fraa.
CMmf, M lav IP Uaaota, la.
Til OKAU BXB la tha recognised
maoism for sobool advertising ta tbe
antral west. It la the paper that goes
late tbe borne.
ft
4
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