THE BKE: OMAHA, TtTESDAY, OCTTOBER 11; 1010. The DMAiiA Daily Bee. FOUNDED BY EDWARD RUSE WATER. VICTOR KOSKWAIEH, EDITOlt Kntered at Omaha postofftc as second claoa natter. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. Hundsjr Bee, on yesr W Saturday , on year lally has (without Sunday), on year..M DsJSy Bra and bunday, on yr lLVKi BT CARItlKH. Evening Be t without hunday). per week e tvenlng lis (with hunday), per wee. ...Wo l'ally He (Including Hunday), per week.l&o Dally Br (without Sunday). r .. 10c Addraa all complaints of irregularities In delivery to City Circulation Department. OFFICES. Omaha-Th B Building. Houth Omaha Twenty-fourth and N. Council li lulf 14 fccott Street. l.nroln 61X Utile bu.ldlng Chicago 1441 Marquetl Uulldlng. New 1 or Room llul-iiui No. M Wt Thuty-tmid Sirt. Washington-m Fourteenth Btre. N. W. CORKK-PUNDENCl- Communication relating to nw and editorial matter mould b addrsd: Omaha fie. Editorial Department. UEMlTTANCEri. " Rmt by draft, xpre or postal order pa.ys.DI to Tha Uee Publishing Company. Only t-nt tnp reoelved In payment of mail aooounta. Personal ehoh eicept on Omaha and aatra exchange not aooptd. STATEMENT OF tinCULATION. HM of Nebraska, Douglas ooualf. .; Oaorg B. Tsaohuok, traurr ot Th B publishing oo nip any. Ming duly worn, says that th actual number ol full and oomplet copl of Th Daily, Moraine. Evening and Uuaday B Brlntwi durlag ill moma of apuubr, HIS. a iuwa: 1 MM , IS s.00 I a.iT if MT0 t,lH II . -.O,0O0 I 4-Su I..... 4H.1M 10 iS ...., 11 ,0 7.... a.ao9 - tl s. I s,sso II 4hMQ I 4S.4S0 14 10 .....S,8T0 11 41,000 10 SSTO 11 4,S30 l HIM II ..43400 tl 4S.M0 14 43,300 It 43,0 II 43,300 10 4S-SSS Total Keturnad CoplM S,S Nt Total 13.M8 Dally Avrag 43.UT - GEO. B. TZ-CHUCK. Treasurer. Suborlbd n my praaanoa and aworn to Deror m tnia tnirutn aay tember, Itlti. H. B. WALKER. Notary PuBllo. Bataorl-ars Waving! ta alty poraxlly aaaala aav Th B nalla t AddrM will B rhaar4 ( aa . Now lot Edgar Howard come across with ta goods.. Was tn Old Guard defeated, or just overwhelmed? King Manuel seems to make a fairly good exile, anyway. Spain begin! , to feel anxious lest Portugal beat her to it. ' . i This Is a windy season in Europe. Thrones are tottering and crowns fall ing. -tr- I Looks rike'i division into reaction aries, regulars and insurgents In our Commercial club, too. At any rate, people can live la Ne braska with perfect assurance of safety from forest fires, t According to the political barometer we are to have a small-slsed Ananias club right here in Nebraska. It would not be appropriate for the bands to play "Dixie" for Dlx, whose first two names are John Adams. For some unaccountable reason Mayor "Jim" has quit boasting how he used to brand other people's cattle. Btlll, those Mississippi negroes who sahl they did not know Colonel Roose velt may Just have been playing 'possum. If we adopt the Bernard Shaw method of buying our fiction by the pound, will it be troy wetght or avoirdupois? It will be noted, however, that 1. P. Morgan was among those present when the collection pan came back with $172,000 In it. Mr. Hearst has accomplished the latest thing in political bossing. He has run a state convention from mld-ocesn-wlreless dictatorship. That part of Kansas City, Mo., ly ln govervthe line In Kansas has a population now of 82,000. These state lines sre sometimes a nuisance. Wonder If Congressman Hitchcock will also deny thalhe had a slip in the essh drawer when City Treasurer Bolln's shortage was uncovered. Of course, none ot them ever bor rowed state funds. Bartley stole the money first an t'aen accommodated his Influential friends with it as his own. King Manuel might do worse than put in his spsre time studying the srt of representative government and than return to Portugal later and run for office. And if the British parliament should do such a thing as finally paas the bill to exclude Isbor from repre sentation, it too, might be thinking ot subjects akin te some that have flashed across the innocent mind of young Manuel ot Portugal, soon. Our old friend. D. B. Thompson, may hare over-stepped the limits ot propriety in talking brass tacks to the Luly city reformers of his home town, but what he said seems to have hit the vital spot. A progressive city has to be ruff' on broadgaugs pUns and not on specifications drawn, tar a creas roads vUUga. - . Side-Stepping. Democratic candidates and cam paign managers In Nebraska would like very much to keep the liquor question to the fore to the exclusion of every vital question In which the people of Nebraska are Interested. They are trying their best to side-step every other Issue that Is Involved In order to make people believe that nothing else Is st stake In the coming election but the demand of the sntl saloontsts for the enactment of a county option law. The fact Is, snd we believe the fact will not be overlooked, that much larger Issues are at stake. While the liquor question must, in the very na ture of things, be settled locally by the choice of members of the legislature, the personalities of the candidates, ir respective of party labels, will have to be considered In the interest of good government. The voters must realise, as most of them already do, that the democratic ticket Is the corporation ticket almost from top to bottom. Ths democratic nominee for gov ernor was twice elected mayor of Omaha by the help of the brewers, liquor dealers and franchlsed corpora tions. He had previously served on the State . Board of 1 Transportation long enough to make himself, solid with the railroads, and In his present campaign he has the unanimous back ing, not only of the brewers and liquor dealers' organisations, but also of the railroads and .ther big favor-seeking corporations. The democratic nominee for lieuten ant governor, who might, If elected, become governor under certain con tingencies, was ths corporation bell wether in the lower house of our late democratic legislature. The lobby bunch tried to make him speaker, and It was not their fault that they failed, and they are now irylng to make him presiding officer of the senate in its next session, where he can be equally useful to them. The democratic candidate for rail way commissioner, .which Is the next office most serviceable to the corpora tions, has been belled as a corporation trusty ever since the days when Tobe Castor was in the game handling dem ocratic politics for the railroads. Doing down the line, the trail of the corporation serpent can be seen right through the democratic ticket, and when it comes to legislative prefer ences the brewers, tha railroads and the allied corporations have found ready lodgment for their creatures and agents In the democratic column, which explains why they prefer an other body of democratic law-makers to repeat to them the harmless pro gram of the last. Eomeleii on Verge of Winter. The devastating fires that have wiped out homes and towns along the Minnesota-Canada boundary have pro duced want that must be relieved promptly and adequately, or more acute suffering will come with the rigors of winter, which is not fsr off in that section. Reports indicate ap palling wretchedness; lives lost, homes and Industry wiped out; people without shelter or clothing or food. It Is a terrible state of affairs and calls for heroic action. The Canadian Northern railroad and big lumber firms are rendering valiant help to ward carrying people to places of safety and comfort and preparing to erect new temporary dwellings. But there Is the great crisis temporary houses on the Canadian boundary make poor defenses for the rigors of Canadian winters. These recurring conflagrations are appalling enough to bring some thought of an attempt to prevent them. There must be a way at least of limiting the possibilities of such disasters. Of course nothing can be done with great flames during a hur rlcane, such aa swept this country to the north, but It !s generally agreed that even forest fires may be pre vented, and if they can, then such catastrophles ss this one, which licks up whole towns, ought to be subject to some sort of repressive Influence. At any rate the end will Justify most any means employed, even as an ex periment of prevention. The Commercial Club. The ruction stirring the Omaha Commercial club will prove to be a good thing If it results, as It promises to do, in msklng the club more rep resentative of all the busluess Inter ests ot Omaha. The Bee has more than once been criticised tor criticis ing the Commercial club for misrep resenting the sentiment of our people. In former years during the regime of free passes and rebates the Commer cial club was generally recognised as an echo ot railroad headquarters. But fortunately It has emerged from this stage, although apparently It has not yet completely thrown off some of the methods of transacting business thst then prevstled. The chief fsult found with the Com mercial club In these later days has been that it la almost completely dom inated by the big wholesalers and Job bers, giving the retailers and smaller lines little voice in its proceedings, and still less attention In its work. What la wanted Is a Commercial club that represents, not the railroads as against the shippers, nor the Jobbers aa against the retailers, but a club that includes and truly represents all the legitimate commercial Interests in the city and gives them all a propor tionate say ta its deliberations. What is wanted Is a club tbst, when it speaks,, speaks the real views of the majority of its members and feet merely ths wishes of throe or four sell-eeasUtated gpokeetne! U U dees this, what It says will csrry wetght; If not. It will have no force. The Commercial club of Omaha Is an Institution necessary to Omaha's growth and business prosperity. It will contribute much or little toward that growth and prosperity according as It Includes all the business elements In the community and voices their real sentiments on questions within the scope of Its srtlon. Democratio Tariff Cant. Evidently the big card ot the dem ocratic campaign Is to be played against the possibility of further re vision of the tariff by the republicans, the purpose obviously being to dis credit the republicans before the peo ple. That Is undoubtedly the meaning of the reported plan of the "Interests" to kill the entire tariff board propa ganda In congress and of the circula tion as campaign material of Champ Clark's speech delivered In the house Msy 21. 110, In which he denounced the tariff board plan and the pres ident's earnest effort to seeure a per manent tariff commission, in these words: Th laat motion of the sundry olvll bill; that is, th on appropriating tam.OOO per annum to creat a tariff commUaloh, hould b entitled, "A motion to postpone th verdict of the people on th tariff bill." This speech is bslng sent In pamphlet form broadcast under the frank of Congressman Lloyd as a dem ocratic campaign document. In Itself It is notice enough of the democrats' In tention to defeat. If they can. alt fur ther revision of the tariff and every attempt to secure a permanent tariff commission. At the same time their plan of campaign Is to denounce the republicans for not making greater re ductions In the tariff. And for years their leaders have been telling the people that what the country needs is a permanent tariff commission. But back of this subtle scheme is the co operation of the powerful "Interests" which would be benefited If all re vision of the tariff were dispensed with; the interests which the demo crats serve, while pretending to de nounce. With this whole plan for sham bat tle effectively exposed, It will be strange If the people are deceived by It For years the popular demand in this country has been for a non-politi cal tariff commission, composed of experts, and, under President Taft, the first step was taken toward the de sired end when his tariff board be came a fact. Now, Just as the work is getting well under way, comes this concerted action on the part ot the democratio party and the "interests" to stop it. This is another subject the voter wants to keep in mind when he goes to the polls this fall. . Does he desire to cast his ballot for the republican nominees, who are pledged, with Pres ident Taft, to proceed with tariff re vision; or does he wish to vote for the party of negation that has agreed to block all revision that does not pat us on a free trade basis? - Where Eooievelt is Unknown. When Colonel Roosevelt toured "Darkest Africa" he was greeted with lusty cheers from the benighted na tives, even In the most inaccessible jungles, and when he departed they wept because they would see "Bwana Tumbo" no more. In Egypt, along the Nile, skirting the shores of the Medlterrsnean, in the squalid quarters of small Italian towns, back in the vll lageg of Germany wherever, In fact, this mighty hunter went in the Old World he was known, greeted and ap plauded.as the former president of the United States. But at last Colonel Roosevelt has come to a town where he Is unknown. where the people simply stand and gape with Incredulous inquiry at his distinguished smile thsy do not even -recognise that when he tells them he Is "Mr. Roosevelt." They had never seen his picture in the paper, had never heard Just how he looked; they did not know whether it was he or not snd they stared in silence al his train steamed out with him, the most distin guished man in the world, standing on the rear platform. This town Is In Mississippi, and Mississippi Is in Mr. hnosevelt't own native country the United States Proud Mississippi! Proud town! . In fifty other towns Colonel Roosevelt's train stopped thst day and he spoke briefly. The people all knew him and cheered, but in this one In grand old Mississippi, the state that once had Vardaman for governor, folks Just stood and stared. Doubtless if Var daman had come along they would have asked him who this Roosevelt was. It is an unique town and the cor respondents were very thoughtless in falling to supply the name of it, for here is a town that deserves to have a notch cut for Itself high up on the scroll of fame. One can only wonder how placidly the stream of life must drift down there. Also how the rail road ever came to pass that way In the first place. Colonel Roosevelt probably knows now thst It Is all a mistake about him being a world-wide figure. Bishop Morrison of the Episcopal church urges that money for missions be spent first among American ne groes, then among the oriental heath ens. That Is what many aggressive churches sre doing. One of the lead ing missionary churches spends five times the amount on home missions that it does on foreign missions, but thst Is largely because foreign mis sions can be conducted for less xaoaey than home. It Is a matter of record that these churches most sg- gresslve abroad are also most Instru mental in the work In the home field. Better Trade with Canada. The Dominion of Canada bought 1188,136,860 worth of merchandise from other countries in the fiscal yesr ending in Msrch, 109. Of this smount 1170, 058,178 worth was bought from the United States. The United States, then, supplied 62.20 per cent of Canada's Imports, a very good showing of trade. On the other hand the United 8tates received only 81.18 per cent ot all Canada's exports, neither as good nor yet very bad. It is generally believed that reci procity between these two countries would vastly promote their trade rela tions and not only tht, but establish a system ot mutual benefit by which each country might increase Its bust ness at horns as well as abroad. Henry M. Whitney, writing In the current Atlantic, brings out this point very forcibly. He contends that if tariff barriers were entirely removed manu facturing enterprises would soon find their way to the western extremity of Canada, Just as they have to the west ern coast of the United States and that along from the Atlantic to the Pacific would be way- stations of pow erful revenue-producing sources like Milwaukee, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Des Molnea, Omaha, Kansas City, Denver. Salt Lake. This chain of trade and industry would be continuous. Un doubtedly such development could be facilitated by a reciprocity arrange ment, such as President Taft Is seek ing to effect. The opposition to this treaty now seems to come chiefly from Canada, but there Is some in the United States. To this Mr. Whitney puts the question effectively when he says that even if reciprocity now on broad lines Is not possible, "Why shouldwe deny our selves the advantage that would ac crue to us from at once allowing the products of Canada's fisheries, farmB. forests and mines to come here free of duty?" ) If the Uhlted States, without reci procity and With unfavorable tariff barriers, supplies Canada with 58.10 per cent of Its imports and receives from Canada 38.18 per cent of its ex ports, the question naturally arises, how much greater could both of these ends of trade become under a system of more friendly and favorable Inter course? It would not only help com merce, but it would help develop the country and establish a stronger mu tual friendship. The ordering of additional voting machines by, the democratio members of the county board at an expense to the taxpayer ot several thousand dol- lars, with bo- authority from the board as a whole ljf characteristic of demo cratio management, of . county affairs. If th people'1 who foot the bills are alive to their own interests they will see to K that the three republican candidates for commissioner are elected nexj month and put an end to diversion ot public funds for political purposes. Mr. Bryan's Commoner la repeating hie demand upon candidates for con gress to pledge themselves anew to recognise a platform promise as bind ing. We suggest that Mr. Bryan di rect himself to Congressman Latta. who, when . voting against postal sav ings in spite of the Denver platform, remarked, "Well, it Isn't binding on me." Congressman Latta, by the way, has been renominated on the demo cratic ticket in the Third Nebraska district. Portugal's boy king, SO years of age, lasted Just about aa long as Nebraska's boy orator. St. Louis Ttms. Well, If Manuel could cash In his crown as high ss Nebraska's boy or ator did hi "Crown of Thorns and Cross of Gold," he would not need worry about a little thing like a throne. The American bankers can get Into better business than working for the repeal Of the postal savings law, as urged by their national president. Help make the law a success that would be better. Dr. C. H. Parkhui-ct says anarchy begins In the home vien parents al low their children 1 (earn the lesson of disobedience. At any rate that lea son does nothing to uproot the seeds of anarchy. "Friend Mabray" would doubtless gladly contribute to the democratic campaign fund in Nebraska if his law yers had not gotten It all away from him before he and his fellow mikers wsre sent over the road. Time to round up those paving and public Improvement contractors who ar behind in their work and admon ish them to finish their jobs before freesrng weather sets in. i-Swnli f JaSlrlal Ml." Boston Herald. President Taft' autograph letter to re tiring Justlc Moody is a "human docu ment" that not only will cheer its rs rlplent, but Increase popular regard for th preldent It will bring Solac to th heart of a man who ambition has ben thwarted by waning physical power, and at th same tlm It Indicates subtly that the president still longs for a calling with Its "sweets." la which his ambition waa thwaru4 by hi consent to beeosne a can didate for president. But though an ex ecutive, Mr. Taft can tlll b a Judg lu spirit and method, and at a tlm whs titer ar lmpraUvly add. HalaM ta Slarht. Wall B treat Journal. A reduction la th prlo of autonMla), coming upon th hl of th cut In radium, ought t 4 niplalau oa tk high vt f gvtag. Army Gossip atatof f tVrrt Oa aaS Sasfe f lb nrtmg X.t S)laaa froai tk Araiy a4 BTavy Bt"ltt. A nw type of army ambulanc has b.-en teatml at various maneuver camp during th summer. Thl Is a two-wheeled ve hicle, which may be drawn by on or two horee. and which Is designed to be taken Into th country, wher th larger snd heavier ambulance could not b taken. This Is th vehicle whloh used to b known as th "galloping ambulance," but It baa bn found adrlsabl td change th tltl to "light ambulane." elno th drivers of th wagon appeared to think that th hore must be galloped upon all occasions, sometime to th manifest discomfort and poMlbla Injury of ths dleabted occupant. It has been found In the experiments con ducted at th camps that the light ambu lanoe Is destined to serve a tieeful purpose tn medical department transportation In th field In tlm of war. It Is probable that Some of thm will b adopted to meet the special demand likely to be mads for that class of ambulanos. The latest estimate for army subsistence la based on the cost of th ration at 21 cents. Th appropriation for the current fiscal year was mad on th calculation of a ooet of JO. 7 oents aa against 19.66 cents of th previous year. Th requirement that the estlmat be submitted fully fourteen months before th appropriation waa arall abl for expenditure, necessitated th cal culation of ost vn longer In adva.no of th date when It waa to b ud. It waa found that there waa a steady advenes In ths price of food and that under ths most favorable conditions existing the cost was increased to &.M cents and at 11. 0 cents up to February, IMS. Ths deficiency ap propriation of laat year for army subsist ence Was mad on th basis of a ration editing 22 cants. That coat has steadily advanced until it Is now 33 oents. By tha time ths subslsteno appropriation Is avail able It may b even more, but th judg ment of th experts Is that th limit has been reached. - It has been recommended that firing at 200 yard offhand Should not constitute a part of th redord firing of th soldier. In .this connection Major J. B. Erwln, In spector ' general. Department of th Mis souri, says: "A Sufficient, preliminary in struction in offhand firing at this rang should bo gtvn, but, as under battl con ditions, there will be no offhand shooting at 200 yards, th soldier should not be re quired to practlc that which h will have no occasion to use it in tlm of war. Th provisional firing regulations tn us for the first time during this year's season havs thrown stricter safeguards about ths sys tem of marking and recording shots and, therefore, preserve .better the Interest ot th government than formerly in th mat tar of giving additional pay to the soldiar for certain qualifications. So far aa can b determined, tha oourse prescribed I much more difficult than that of former years, and ths classification of the army this year will not be as high as that of 1&M year. A board of effloera has been ordered to convene at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., on Ootobr IB, for ths purpose of considering matter pertaining to th organisation, equipment, and training of signal troops serving with a division. The board will consist of Major Edgar Russel, assistant commandant of th army signal school Captain Carl F.' Hartmann, commanding Company I of the Signal corps; Captain 'William M. CruJckshank, commanding Com pany A; Captain Arthur S. Cowan, on duty in th offlo of th chief signal of officer of th army; and First Liautenant Sebrlng C. Megfll, commanding Company D. Companies D and I hav been ordered to proceed by marching from Fort Omaha to Fort Leavenwdrth, where they will b available with Company A, already at the latter place, for employment by th board In connection with Its work. Th board will go Into th establishment and main tenance of field line of Information, the Use of field wtrele apparatus with ref erence to Its edapablllty for cavalry troops, ths organisation of field battalion of sig nal troops fr use with divisions, and drill regulations for flsld companies and battal ions of signal man. Th standard field wireless sets now In use have a normal rang of from twenty-five to thirty miles, and It la feared that thl Is not sufficient for a division of troops when operating over a somewhat xtandd territory. The signal corps is in possession of one set ot field wlrelMS, however, which has a range of 100 mllaa, and the board will de cld whether It Will be possible to furnish th army with mora of these sets. The new reel vehicles of the signal oorps will also receive attention from th board. Th vehicles ar constructed with tour wheels and each Is made up with a two-wheeled front unit and a rear or limber unit. In some ot th vehicles, the reel is located on th front unit, and In other on th roar unit Th board will ndavor to ascertain which la th better arrangement. The vehicles ar equipped with mechanism for both paying out th wire and taking up. The signal corps have five field companies, tit thre being atssmbled at Fort Leaven worth, one at Ban Francisco, and one at Manila. Each consists of seventy-five men, all mounted, and has ninety-eight horse and mules. The board will make rMommendatlon as to whether or not any Chang i desirable In this organisation. Our Birthday Book October 11, 110. Harry A. Garfield, president of Williams oollug and son of President Qarfleld, was born October 11, 1169 in Hiram, O. lit prac ticed law for awhile in Cleveland, taking a professorship in Princeton from which he was called to his present position. Henry J. Helna, the pickle man, I sixty six today. He was born at Pittsburg, and Is tli originator of th "fifty-seven var ieties." James Knox Tailor, supervising architect of the treasury department, was born Octo ber 11, 1S7, at Knoxvllle. III. He I to be credited with designing the Onuilia post- office, which design ha been almost dupU cateJ In th postofflc building at Wash ington. HJchard L. Metcalfe, associate editor of Mr. Bryan' Commoner, la Just 49. HI birthplace la Upper Alton, III. II 1 a printer by trad and was In th newspuper business In Omaha for many year, and recently nourished an ambition to b Unit! States senator. Judg HowaM Kennedy of th district court, waa born October 11, U68, at Ne braska City. H is a gradual of Wil liams college and In law of th Washington university st t Louts, beginning prao tie in Omaha In 1ST1. H ha been en th district bench now for six years. Dxtr L. Thomas, stterny-t-law and r4 etate. offlcing tn Th Be building, Is Just yare old today. Ha tudld In Illram col.ege and graduated from th law department Of th l'nlTrlty f Mlrh Igaa In ISTO, locating th saais year In Omaha. H 1 a union veteran of th civil war in whloh h participated In many a-ttons. NEBRASKA POLITICS. Tork Republican: A man who could not be tolratd In th worst day of Tx. will hardly do for governor of Nebraska at this late stage In the proceedings. 8hlton Clipper: Ha.1 It occuriel to any on that with Ilryan against Mm lah!mn tanrtu a mighty good show of being elected? Ilryan Is pretty much of a hoodoo. Furnas County Democrat: The ssrcastlc observation of Oeneial Grant, "you ran alway depend upon a democrat doing the wrong thing at th right tlm," may need apply to th open primary law passed by th 1st state legislature. Edgar Post: Dahlman doesn't Ilk preachers or farmers. At Ueatrlc he called preachers "retailers of hot air" and at Syracuse he wanted to know what busi ness ths blanked farmers have to "Inter fer" In th affairs of a town or village. Kearney Democrat: Colonel Bryan still neglect to tell his Commoner readers why he refuses to support the democratio can didate for governor of Nebraska. Hasn't th colonel a good enough reason to let th democracy In other states hear of It? Beaver t"ty Time Tribune: Th Bryan letter that was sent to the managers of the democratic banquet In Heaver City was suppressed In the Interests of Dahl man and the antl-Kryan gang. Do you remember who suppressed the letter? Have you heard hi remarks about Norrls? Bah! O'Neill Frontier: Th republican ticket Is deserving th support of sll republlosns. Whll soma of th candidates were not the first cho'c of many of U, the ticket is composed of good men who ar worthy th support of all members of the party and thoa from other parties who believe in the policies of good government. Pender Republlo: Mayor Dahlman says whatever may be his own fsults and mis doings h has a wlf and some daughters who ar pious and respectable folk. That Is doubtless true. It always was a puxsle how some ot us old degenerates managed to tweedl good women Into msrrylng us. But w do and Dahlman Is doubtless guilty along with the balance of us. Hastings Republican: Edgar Howard says Bryan cannot consistently bolt Dahtman and support Hitchcock for the United States senate. Howard contends that Dahlman stands tor th (home) brewers and Hitchcock represents the National Brewera' association which the Columbus editor takes exception to in th following words: "Whn It comes to making a cholc in that direction, I am for the Ne braska brewers every time as against the National Brewery association. Stand up for Nebraska." Broken Bow Republican: The democratio candidate) for offlc find themselve in rather an embarrassing position politically. They are politically under obligations to support the party nominees from the least to the greatest. But there Is the rub. They are afraid to deelare themselves for Dahl man, their candidate for governor, for fear of loing votes among the antl-Dahlman crowd. Upon the ether hand, should they declare themselves against Dahlman they fear that hi exporters will not support them. In fact, there docs not seem to be any excuse for a democratic candidate In this campaign. Alma Record: The Record does not ap prove of the methods of a few gtod peo ple who brand as boozers, bums and brew ryhlfellngs every voter who does not espouse prohibition or county option, for th reason that we believe every man has a right to his opinion without being called a big hard name. Such methods if con tinued will create a big silent vote In favor of th opposing candidate. The Rec ord favors th election of Aldrlch because h reprnt republican ideas In govern ment and th county option question Is merely a local lasu that will be settled by th people in the senatorial and rep resentative districts. As usual, the demo cratio ticket is th corporation ticket, while the republican ticket la free from any corporation dictation. Hastings Republican (dem.): A certain bartender well known in Hasting says h will not vote for Dahlman. He gave th reason for this deolslon that In his opinion the election of the Omaha mayor would precipitate a campaign for state wide prohibition and that In his estimation It would be safer for every saloonkeeper In Nebraska to take chances on Aldrlch and county option rather than to lect Dahlman with all his radicalism on the liquor question. This bartender la also a democrat and he thinks the only sane course for the democratic party In Ne braska Is to turn Dahlman own and the member of the party make a strenuous effort to elect the congressmen and turn their votes on governor to Aldrlch. His logic is that a defeat of the party on gov ernor would In the long run prove a vic tory for th party, for It Is his belief that If Dahlman Is elected the party would be put out of commission In this state for years to com. We give thea facta as presented by this bartender to show the variety of opinions on the gubernatorial situation. LAUGHING OAS. Silas (reading morning paper) I see, Mandy. they're having another war of the tongs down thar In Chinatown. Mandy Land aakes! Yew'd think, with all them Chinese laundries araound, that flatlrona would be handier tilings tew fight with. "Why don't your boy enter college?" "He couldn't pans the examination." "Lo they have to pas an examination? I thought all a college boy needed was some funny clothes "Pittsburg Post. "You must try to get on without the luxuries. Confine yourself to the neces sities." "That's what I'm doing," replied Mr Chugglns. "I'm cutting down on beef and potatoes so as to meet the repair bill on my automobile." Washington mar. "The. man died eating watermelons," someone said to Brother Iilckey. "Tea. sun." It said. "Providence some times puts us in paradise befo' we gets ter heaven." Atlanta Constitution. "I don't wish to say anything disrespect ful about that spaniel of yours," observed 63 me XIWo, Sb tl r a UARN MORE ABOUT STOVES AND fTANOCS GET THE WHOLE STORY Illustrate, descriptive books mailed free on opplirolion. CHARTER OAK STOVE & RANGE CO.. ST.LOUIS. Importunt properties of the Grape arc transmitted by Absofufaty furc to the food. The food is , thereby made more tasty and digestible wi..A, i ....-ii f the doctor: "but for a dog he Is th worst busybody I ever saw." "If you had ss many fleas as that doK has," said the professor, "you'd be a busy body, too." Chicago Tribune, HotI Clerk (to rural guest oloatng front entrance) Hey, there! What ar you try Inn to do? I'ncle PJben Don't git excited, young feller! I text thought, seeing a how I was prob'ly the last one In tonight, I'd do the rlvht thin and lock the doors 'fore going to bed! Puck. City Nephew Now, Just look at this anctt-rt statue, uncle. It represents a Greek athlete throwing the discus. I'ncle Hardapple By cracky! Bo there were cats yowling 'In the alleys even in them old days! ChlcaRO News. TO AN AUTOMOBILE. Good Housekeeping. I have a humble longing that has nevar been confessed, A longing 1 have striven !n vain to bury In my breast; I want to take u ride once mora, when daya are hot and muKjcy, Behind a little JnKgtng horxe In some old shabby buggy. I oft am hurled along the road in some one's t;.-e machine At such a pace I cannot tell a brown field from a grein. I want to ambit on at peace, unheeding what they Hi y, And watch with Joy an ancient hore fllrk ancient flies away. I never see a landscape now thst Is not scudding by In gale of wind and clouds of dust be fore my goKgled eye; The pensive sows sre galloping, the hens ar squawking past; If anything seem peaceful I know It will not last. . I have no great ambition and I don't de sire to shine As a heroine of ancient In th automobile line; This my plebeian longing, without qulhbl or remoree I want that shabby buggy and I want that ancient horse. lg.li.iH ill A-t