Tin-nu-:fiKrAirA7AUTiiirTTH'hViJKiH-i. vino? 1J The o.i.t. rOCNl'FU HY EDWAKD KOSKWATKIl! VICTOR noKKWATKll. tDlTUH. Hiiteied t Om lav matter. ilia poitofflc aa vond- TF.KM9 OF SCliSClUI'TlON. Sunday Hoc. one year atunlsy IM, one Jr 1sily he (without Sunday), one year. 1 II v hri and Sunday, oiw 'r IJ.:,0 H i-ik-blVKKt-H UY I'AHIUBR. Kenlng Hee (Without Sunday!, per week Rc i.enlng (witn Suno:a per w,K-,-,V" 1'aliy H (including Sunla. per week.-iw J'ailv hra (witnout Sunday!, per week.is; Address all rmnplainti of Irr'gulailtles tn delivery to Cltv Circulation lirtmrtil. ufficf.s. omaha-Th ISer Building. South Omaha-Twenty-tout th and N Council im I IB l.i seott Street. Jnrom ill Utile Building. Chlragol. Marouette Building New York-ltoom No. S4 f 'I hlrtv-third Mrwt .,, Wshington-7:6 Fourteenth Ftreet, J.. vv . CuRKKSPONUliNClS. inniniunli'Htii.h relating to tie aryl editorial matter should be addressed: Onmha Uee, 1-lltoria.l Department. JU-.Ml'll AN(JtM. . lUmit by draft, expres or postal order pa value. ti 'i tie Bee 1'utniNiiing Company, only 2-cent a 'amps reoelved In payment of mail account, Personal rliecka except on Omaha and eastern exciiange not accepted. STATfcMKNT OK CIl'CLLATlOM. iMate ol ibraHka, Liougiaa lounty, : George B. iiscnuca. treasurer of 'Hie I' 1'uullaiiing company, be ne duly awotn, s that the actual number of full and complete copies of The i-iaily. Morning, keening anu Sunday Wee printed during itie. month of bepleiuber, liO, WM aa toi- lowa; J 44,080 1 43,870 43,130 40,000 t 44,130 t 4iM I to.oOO 1 43,600 1 44.4IMI 19 44,370 il 41.UV0 II.'. 43.M0 II 43,MMI .4 -,. 1 k 4aMI 1 It II ,43,300 .43,870 ,4,VO ,J,k4 11. 43,493 (1 43,400 U 43.4UU 40, MO 14 4J,4tf It 44.3UU If 46,tWW 17 44.1M II 43,afe II 4KJ 41) Xotal X.303,370 Keturuad Coplaa S,.a Mat Total ,3,0a iiy Average 43,11 UKO. B. TZdCHUCiv 'lreaaurer. . .Subscribed In iny presence- aud awotn to befoi me Una tuirlietii nay ot Sepiemoer. 11 1,. M. li v AL.ivliH, Notary i"uuiic. Snbaeribrr Irnvlns the cltjr tem pornrllr ahvl4 have Ik Be .mulled lo . Ikeio. Addreaa will b Register today. ' Kor the tentn time Hitchcock put it back? we ask, Will Last chance to register today if you want to vote this year. 1 Umaha doctors report the city as painfully healthy just now. Too bad. A tailors' strike is on in Chicago. What a lovely excuse for renting a full dress. Yes, but Just think back to July 2 7, wheu the thermometer . went, to . 104 above. '"liOBs" Cox, they say, is going to move to New York. He might as well until the returns come in. . Folks call these hobble skirts up-to-Jate, and yet our plainsmen were hob bling their bronchos decades ago. To be unregistered is not a crime under the law, but it is an offense against good government, just the same. Our trade boosters used to be known aa the "rain-makers," but this ; time they seem to have turned rain into snow. The St. Louis Browns may not have cut much ice in the pennant race, but they figured big in that race for the automobile. Richmond claims a population of "127,000 souls." Figuring on a soul to each person. How is that? No soul mates? A Boston thief stole a peddler's glass eye. Still he is not any meaner tbau the one who stole a St. Louis man's faUe teeth. It is reported that Secretary Bal linger has said that he would "do and tell things If he were footloose." Get off the man's foot, there. Hetty Green's son has bought 15, 000 post cards. He wilj have to bor row Jack Coomb's or Chief Bender's arm to write on them all. . 1 ; tolled for daily wages. From its ln- "Cap." Palmer cannot forget that j teptiou it has been the distinct friend hu was forcibly dislocated from a of labor. It first showed that frlend $6,0U Job by and with the aid and ship by emancipating the American content of Senator Burked. ! alave and destroying the institution As soon as the supreme court de cides whether a woman can recover $70,000 from her husband for beating her the game may proceed. "French aviator killed'" one day. "Italian aviator killed." next day. The Americans seem to have the beet stand-in with old Mr. Grim Reaper. .Mr. Bryan has rented the Lincoln Auditorium in which to mak a speech. That is another extremity to which the exigencies of practical politics hav driven him since the dark days of 1S9U. Now that Wood row Wilson has re signed as president of Princeton, what wouid ho do, asks a contemporary, should ho loso out for governor? Easy. Writo a book about it, or take to the chautauquas. It ia also a safa guess that if tho resignation of Hon. D. E. Thompson a ambassador to Mexico had not been roqutated and accepted tho Lincoln Star would not now bo so liberally ouotd ky douioc ratio organs. Building' Up One Welt. I program In the next session. It is' This movement of transporting pro-j ,n'rpfor(' necessary for It to have the pie to the ' far new west" can have support of labor In order to give it the nothing but the. bent influence upon j IpK Islstion it demands and Is entitled ; the states of the Missouri valley. No'10- ' j .i.rr, ,4 ho nrraiond aa to that. If people want to buy land in the states of the Rockies or Pacific roast, they are going to do It and If they want to go there to live they cannot easily be prevented. And there are ample opportunities to Justify them. But the middle west has nothing to fear, no matter how great this move ment msy become. It is going tc more than hold Its own and It Is going to advance Just as rapidly as the coun try further on and profit Instead of lose by this tendency of migration. Tho middle west needs greater outlet for Its trade and commerce and the multiplication of settlers and new homes In the far west will help to meet those needs. The middle west also has markets that can handle greater volume of products than they are doing and the opening up of this territory out west to cultivation will tend to give us the additional produce we are seeking. So we find ready compensation In this system. But beside that this movement of people from the eastern states toward the west Is going to re sult In the upbuilding of the middle west's population also It has been doing It for fifty years and there is no reason to suppose that it is going to work any differently in the next fifty. Where the family from Ohio moves to Idaho or California, the family from New York or Massachu setts may move to Nebraska, Iowa or Kansas. What we are interested in Is getting people to move west. We need not worry about what locations they select. No state and no section has yet or ever will have a monopoly on the Influx. We are engaged in building one country, a vast empire of wealth out here In the west and one part cannot be benefited without the other parts deriving a reflex ad vantage from it Befriitration. Today Is the last day for .regis tration of voters for the coming elec tion, and no voter who shall have failed to appear personally before the registrars of his voting- district and have his name properly enrolled on the registration books will be entitled to receive a ballot at the polls. The registration law is plain and ignorance of the law does not excuse failure to comply with tt. No regis tration of previous years holds good, but. on the contrary, this year's regis tration books are altogether new and complete in themselves. Registrars will sit from 8 o'clock in the morning until 9 o'clock at night in the respec tive polling places of the various vot ing districts. H devolves upon every legal voter in Omaha and South Omaha to see to It that this prelim inary step to voting is taken. The Bee has more than once called attention to the cumbersome and bur densome requirements of our Ne braska registration law. The law fmrl-it trt ha rhanppft art aa tn nermtt 4 , , ,. ,, . . of a permanent registration list sub-; , A . j .v t. , iect to Drotest. and thus make it un- . . . , . necessary for voters to re-register so .. . ... A. long as they continue to reside) in the , w . . . . same place. V e hope the law will be I . . , . . . i mose comiorts ana even luxuries they ! so amended by the coming legislature,!. . . ' , . . . , . . - , , . . , iuui ill lilt; imn vai iucic is umy uuc t way to qualify to vote, and that is to j register anew for every election. Republican Labor Legislation Laboring men in all clashes should take a vital interest in the present congressional campaign. Upon the political complexion of the next con gress they have much at stake. Leg islation in their behalf is pending which will not be completed if the republicans lose control of either house, for the best that could then be hoped for would be a deadlock. Two of the important issues, begun under t thA Toft artmtnlatrflHnn that dm tr be brought to fruition in the next congress are further safety appliance legislation and the definite fixing of a basis for workmen'a compensation in case of bodily injury. The republican party came into ex istence in response to a demand of larger liberty for the masses and greater opportunities for those who which throttled free industrialism. It next abolished convict labor, a per nicious system which partially grew j out of Blavery. Sin0e then it has given further protection to American labor by excluding the coolie from the orient, doing away with slavery in the Philippines and minimizing the dis advantages of competition with cheap labor of all foreign countries. Its whole system of legislation and ad- ministrative government has brought about conditions In which the work - man is better paid and better kept and has better opportunities than the ,n. ,i workmen of thia or any land ever en- iyl- In the last congress it did much for labor in the enactment of a law estab-j ing the principle of know-nothlnglsui ' unU,r 1re"'denl Cleveland, was i.n uc li.hlng a bureau of mine., guarantee-1 by denying foreign born citizens om-'i' Sl r iug greater protection to life and bet ter conditions to miners; the law re quiring railroads and varied indus tries to provide safety appliances; the law provldiug more scientific systems of boiler inspection; the employers' liability act, the first step toward fix ing workmen's compensation for in juries and tuany others. The party is committed to a completion of Ita labor - - Bi&hop Beecher. Tne Hoe has waited 'for the official announcement of the acceptance by Dean Heecher of his promotion to be Bishop of Kearney to extend to the new bishop felicitations and congratu lations. As dean of Trinity cathedral he has In a few years made many friends in Omaha and Impressed hip personality on the community In nu merous public movements for Its bet terment. He has, moreover, as a rule, j Tho campaign fund publicity law distinguished himself from many other j has been observed in both letter and clergymen by uniformly manifesting ' spirit by tho republican state orRanl sound common sense instead of vision- Uatlon, but as much cannot be said for ary Impracticability. We hope that J the democratic campaign money col as bishop he will enter larger fields i lectors. Just another ease where the for -usefulness and meet with success democrats are long on preaching and In all his undertakings. ; short on performance. Smyth to the Bescue. Former Attorney General Constan tine J. Smyth volunteers an extremely fine spun and Jesuitical defense of Congressman Hitchcock for borrowing state funds from a defaulting repub lican state treasurer and refusing to pay them back because the note out lawed by the statute of limitations whlln bis benefactor was In the peni tentiary. Mr. Smyth had much to do with the prosecutions and civil suits growing out of the Hartley embezzlement and he was much better for the prosecu tion than he is now for the defense. Mr. Smyth knows now, if he did not know then, why Mr. Hitchcock's World-Herald tried at every turn to block his efforts to put Bartley In the penitentiary and to recover the stolen money for the state. Mr. Smyth knows now, If he did not know then, that all those Bartley edi torials in the World-Herald were in spired by the borrowed state funds In Mr. Hitchcock's pocket. Mr. Smyth knows now, if he did not know then, that those democratic apologies for the republican embezzler were as much of a sell-out as was the espousal by Mr. Hitchcock and his World-Herald, about the same time, of the republican A. P. A.'s, secretly sworn to put all Roman Catholics out of office. Mr. Smyth knows now, if he did not know then, where some more of the stolen money is, and if he were still attorney general he would doubtless institute suit to make Mr. Hitchcock put it back. Luxury and Life. Dr. Mary Noble, the missionary from India, speaks of "an appalling sense of luxury'.' which impressed her as she arrived in the United States from the orient. She felt it, she says, when she stepped on an American! - - - - steamship In England and when she! overlooked in the Roak. entered a Pullman car at New York I Washington Herald. , . . . . ,, , . Curious as It may seem, there are really and she has observed it all along thetwo or thrM) ..tminen lawyeril )n th line of life in the United States and country who have escaped being- named comments rather chidingly upon It. possibilities for supreme court justices. What -Dr Noble is reproving us ifor. of course, is the element of need-' , , ' , , i less luxury, the lack of economy in i ' I our living. She certainly would not . . . , wish her people to restrict their lines . ... . . , , , of life to the limit of doing without A. . . s " - v . u wj ""'ft' live auu lull KUU which form the essential groundwork of modern life today. We in America undoubtedly live better than do the i people in India, or any of the oriental countries and, of course, the contrast must be striking to one Just coming from those lands. But our present ' BlanaaroB of living are tne logical re- Suits of a constant progress that be- gan when the foundations of this re public were laid, and. while there may be ample room for economy and fru gality, there Is no such thing as retro gression; we are not going back to the standards which our ancestors lived by. They would no more meet our demands than our ways would have suited our fathers. Of course. Dr. Noble does not propose anything of this sort. She only believes that we go in too much for luxury when we might be putting the money spent for that into missions. While we are putting vast sums Into luxuries every year, we are like wise putting vast sums Into missions, more vast than ever before and we are doing it on a systematic basis that ia bringing wonderful results The fact is the American people are ope- . i aim cuwitij uu a vast system to day. It is not so much a matter of readjusting ourselves to lesser and former conditions, as it is to adjust ourselves to larger and new customs so nicely that we can observe them, can enjoy their luxuries and at the same time practice decent economy. Through his great newspaper he t.Mr liltrncock) dedicated his fortune to the i defense of the rights of the many agalnht ! the claims ef ih iirivii.,rri ..... tine J. Smyth. ; Of course. He and his newspaper October oa. laio. proved it, too, when they at the crucial John Keats, the celebrated English P'wt. : moment oined with those who were''"8 born 0eloU,'r ,n London '"i . . . . . idled In liume In at the early age of j banded together in a secret oath-bound . but nol untll nud niadc nU ,.Mt. 'society with the purpose of proscrlb-j ing name as a pout. ing every Roman Catholic and apply-i T,1ornaa F. Bayard, secretary of tute clal participation In their own govern - nient. i Yea. Vehraaka will hava nnlv . ,t ,. m , ' the first batch of postals saiug banks established by the government. If the democrats had bad their way in congress we would not Lave any. Pos tal savings. like rural free delivery. I has to have a start. The first rural free delivery route In Nebraska hasj been followed, up by hundreds of oth- rrs, until every fsrin house In thei state receives msll every day ss a con- j sequence of beneficent republican leg-j ilslstlon and administration. Remember that the democrat ic ticket is the corporation-brewery ticket and that the brewers and priv ileged corporations are pouring In the money for the democratic candidates from the top to tho bottom of the ticket. They absolutely controlled the democratic state convention and fixed things up to suit themselves, and they are standing by their creatures. And now it's a "yellow dog" speech that Senator Cummrns makes all be cause he advises republicans to re elect Senator Btirkett. If Mr. Hitch cock's newspaper had only had a pre monition of this It would never have thrown all those bouquets at Senator Cummins. Now that Mr. Hitchcock has ad mitted taking from Hartley money that belonged to the state and refusing to pay it back, one may get a glimpse of his reason for protesting so vehe mently against Andrew Carnegie giv ing his money to the State university.! Charleston, 8. C, will have a league ball team next year if the News and Courier can brin'i it about. It well says the city needs one. Every up-to-date city does these days, and we hope the News and Courier will suc ceed in its undertaking. As usual, some of the laggard pav ing contractors are being nipped by cold weather. Every paving Job in Omaha could be completed before the first of October if started not later than Jily and kept under headway until finished. Omaha has made good progress dur ing the last five years in spite of Being handicapped with a cowboy mayor, and tt will continue to go forward even if Mayor "Jim" Is not trans ferred to the governor's office in the state house. "Prof. Woodruffs denunciation of Colonel Roosevelt Indicates a desire to get into the Chancellor Day class of educators," says the Pioneer Press. Yes, or some class. The local bossed prevailed on the democratic nominee for congress to .go to the front for the voting machine combine. Why make him the goat? Same Old Condition. Louisville Courier-Journal. "UnreHt," says Senator Bourne of Oregon, In a magazine article, "exists today through tho civilized world." It might be added thut the condition has existed throughout the history of the world. A Long; Kelt Waal. Philadelphia Preos. The whole country and every businesn in it, suffers from the lack of a cheap parcels post, except the express business, and this hlKhly profitable traffic ought not longer to hold up a neceaaary public poatal re form. llnRKlnar the Crowd Line, St. Louis Globe-Democrat. as tar as population l concj-ned C anada ! ,s cn,efl" a narrow belt of territory along the northern boundary of the I'nlted States. Our Lady of th Bnows hearken to the call of the busy crowd rather than that of the wilderness. Regeneration of Deadwood. Washington Star. Kerm Is marching on. At laat Dead wood haa been reached. No more gam bling there. No more all-night saloons. Warning has been given that the law will be vtrictly enforced. No wonder the Amer ican "sports" ore trying to arrange for bus iness in both Mexico and Cuba. The "wild and woolly west" han passed. In that busy and progressive section now tha men In control are regulating affairs by a stundard milted to the new times and the bright prospect.". Htmlness before pleasure, and ploavuie no longer a carouse. IrOta of Money for l.nxaries. Springfield Iiepubllcan. The activities of the New York custom officials In watching amateur Importers of precious stones does not appr-ar to be ad- verMely a,fectln ,h" -rious business, and I the Maiden line dealers claim that the figures for the entire year wilt record breakers. Already over $.C,0u0,0uu worth of stones have come In. and It is thought that the next two months w Jl bring the annual total to $40,000,00". American Im porter recently back from Kurope say that they had difficulty In procuring fine gems, ax the London syndicate was letting but few get Into the market. There must be. plenty of money available for luxuries. Our Birthday Book 1 bfor going into th cabinet. j Frederick N. Inne. musician and- bund- ' master, la 62 year old. He was born In ' London. Inne and hi hand have been I favorite In Omaha. nd made a special hit , at our Tran.MiisiPpi exposition. John Y. Hill, former gmtrnor of Milne and now acting chairman of the republican national committee, is .S. He waa born In Klllot. M , and has been successful In the lumber business and In publications known a the Vlrkary A Hill list. In Other Lands Rid Lights oa Whit l Tran. plrlag Among th Kar aad rax station of th Barth. In psce as in war, the loncrst purse pulls down the pennant. Turkey has been obliged to accept the t.-rms originally demanded by the Ottoman bank f Paris, bscktd by the French government, for placing the loan of :.W.tW. llrmn bankers, realising the Importance of get ting a financial hook on the Turkish gov ernment, endeavored to handle the loan, but the best they could do was an install ment plan of payment, which method would not relieve the urgent needs of the Turkish treasury. The French terms re quire the money shall be disbursed for the purposes for which the loan was negoti ated. A Frenchman Is to head the newly created office of Turkish auditor, who I will supervise the disbursement, and In a Kenernl way protect the Interests of French nioney lenders, who now hold about f per cent of the foreign Indebtedness of the Ottoman empire. Hy means of the latest financial hook on the crescent, France checks the Austro-Uerman Invasion In the southeast, and vetoes further dis bursements for discarded Uerman warships. I'nder tho persuasive spell of the French auditor of Turkey, It Is reasonably certain that future disbursements for Turkish mili tary and naval equipment will move on rubber-tired wheel to French foundries and mutiuy.ine.-i. In a recent speech before the Scottish Conservative club, Mr. Halfour displayed In fine form hi atistlc skill as a poktlcal fence rider. The question he discussed was the payment of member of Parlia ment, u question forced to the front by tho Osbomnt decision, rendered some time Bgo, forbidding the employment of trade union funds for payment of members of the House of Commons. The leader of the conservative party made it perfectly plain that he was opposed to the Innova tion, but members of the party were at liberty to act as they pleased on the ques tion. He would not favor reversing the Osbourne decision, yet II would grieve him very much to see labor representation forced out of Parliament for want of funds to pay their nay. To his mind payment of salaries would be a deplorable solution of tho question, but would not venture an alternative remedy. The salary plan, how ever, seems certain of adoption. Practi cally all the liberal party papers favor It, and more than halt the leading opposition papers. Kven the rejuvenated Iondon Times, commending the movement saya: "It Is a mockery to pretend that the pay ment of members throws the field equally open to all classes." a The loss of his throne Imposes on the late King Manuel of Portugal, a task even more perplexing than ruling an Insurgent people. Royal etiquette forbids him seek ing relaxation or recreation in any kind of a Job. He cannot start a weekly paper In which he could air his grievances and remind the "dear people" that he stood ready to serve them at the tap of the bell. He cannot lend his name to any enterprise for a handsome salary, and Is so hedged by royal union rules that a joy ride on the Chautauqua circuits would forfeit his membership. Promoting an Ananias club would he highly Improper, and pleading the statute of limitations an unforgivable offense. The only pcr- mlssable Job for the young man Is to pose as a country gentleman and look aa pleas ant aa he can while his money lasts. A succession of disaster has not chilled th ardor of the Zeppelin airship passenger line in Germany. Business is to be resumed at Uusseldorf early In November. Alt the novel features of the earlier Zeppelin air craft ar embodied in the "Deutschland," now nearing completion. Luxurious cabin accommodation will be provided for eigh teen peaple and meals will be served aboard the airship. During the alrBhip ser vice of the "L,. Z. tt." the predecessor of the "Peutschland," thirty-six actual air voy ages wore made on eighteen out of twenty days, or an average of nearly two trips a day under all weather conditions. The dis tance covered in nil was 1,830 miles, or an average of nearly 175 mile a day. The en tire distance of l.fcsn miles was traversed In sixty-five hours, or at an average of twenty-nine miles an hour. In eighteen days the passage money amounted to over S15.0C0. which yielded a profit despite the unusual expenses of the new venture, so that the air line paid from the start. The constitution of the Australian com monwealth ia not. ten year old, yet a move ment to amend it in the direction of federal centralization la now under way. The labor party, which haa gained full control of the federal government, la the respon sible agency In the turn of affair. As It now stands, the constitution follow the American model In defining the subjects with which the federal Parliament may deal and In leaving the residue to the state Parliaments. Koclal legislation passed by the labor party haa been gt aside by the courts as unconstitutional because tt wait not within the power" of the federal Parlia ment to enact It. The present labor minis try, consequently, proposes to change the constitution and to that end has Introduced a measure which. If finally adopted by the people tn a leferendum, will give to the cen tral government full legislative control over tiade, commerce, corporations, industrial disputes, employment, wages, trusts and monopolies. Tht rapid growth of public feeling In England ;lnst the continuance of the Indo-Chinese opium traffic especially now that China Is muking strenuous efforts to free hereelf from the domination of the drug la shown tn the influential appeal that has Just been sent to all churches and ChriMlan communities In the Uritlsh em pire. This appeal proposes that each con greaa Ion, of whatever denomination, shall address the government, urging that China be fonnrlly released from the treaty obliga tion to admit opium into her territory, and that the connection of the Indian gov ernment wlih the opium traffic be brought to an end. It alt-o recommends that every minister, of whatever persuasion, shall preach, on an apinted date, a sermon et tlnK forth the whole painful story of (ireat riritain's opium connections with China, and of the efforts which China is making, at gTeat icuiiary loss, to free heitelf from the opium curse. Kruiu I'oll tics to Hnslnraa. Philadelphia Press. The New York, New Haen & Hartford railrond has managed In the last two years to add only IHti.oOO to lis operating ex penses and to Increase its gross earnings by 17.M;! o0. It h.t cut down the cost of conducting transportation from ij per cent to per cent of Its gross earnings. It has earned a surplus over its K per cent divi dend. President Mellon, who has ac tompl shed these nsuli, has had the ad ditional wisdom of announcing that his lead, which has Just secured control of the Boston Mslne. will keep riiior'iusly out of politics, securing the legislation 't wants by rmnlnn its rosd so w-ll that lex slatures will rare to irive additional ad vantages because It Is ilain that :hey are a-nlng to aid the public. This Is tlie wise rullroad policy to which all curpoiations must corn. POLITICAL DRIFT. There Is no such word s apology tn Mr Hoosexelt's lexicon. Those who refer to the piece, dings a "a whirlwind campaign," hit the buU'-ee at the first shot. Franc' K. Alcihuern. bachelor candidate for governor on the republican ticket In Wisconsin, pledges h'mselt to marry If elected. A sure way of calculat ng the number of brain storms In New Yolk Is to rottnt the speeches made by Theodore Roosevelt. Every speech starts a storm. In the opinion of the Wisconsin supreme court a vote cast for a dead man Is a blank. Fortunately the dead ona won't see the point until election night. The fsct that s Cornell collece professor proposed a candidate for membership In the Ananias club strengthens the suspicion that the New York campaign Is wide open. Thomas W. Lawson breaks Into print with the remark that he has 1M to hot on the election of the democratic candidate for governor of Massachusetts. He man aged to hedge when asked to split the pile. The uncommon vigor of the New Jersey campaign thin year Is explained bv the fact that tli new governor will have the appointment of about M0 officials, with salaries ranging from 11.000 to $10,000 a year. Fight of the Jobs are Judgeships. Petting odds favor !lx In New York. A like condition prevailed Jut before "the white man's hope" was paralysed at Reno, and less than two weeks aco thousands of anient "fans" bet their pile that the Quaker Tnfl nns couldn't smear the lake front with Cub scalps. You know what happened In both cases. Five of the even men indicted for graft In connection with the building of tho Pennsylvania state rapltol have been con victed and sentenced. Two of the five are dead, and ono of the two untried has dis appeared. The last one to receive sen tence Is Architect Huston, who has taken an appeal from an indeterminate sentence of two year and a fine of $5,000. After March 4 next Secretary of Ptate Philander C. Knox probably will get J 12.000 a year salary, equal to that of his fellow members of the cabinet. The State department budget will make such recommendation. Mr. Knox, aa I'nlted States senator, voted for the bill Increas ing cabinet officers' salaries, and could not share In the Increase until the full term fur which he was chosen senator expired. ABOLISH TIIK litA'VK, Free Poatal PrlTelea-e a Groaa rnblie KtII. Washington Herald. Postmaster General Frank M. Hitchcock, who has declared that he I going to wipe out the annual deficit In postal rev enues, and, among other things, hopes to establish 1-cent domestic pontage., now proposes to recommend to congress the abolition of the frank. He doe not hope to do away with the franking privilege, but proposes a change In form. There can be no doubt that the frank ing privilege has been most seriously abused, it la not too much to say that It has been used to defraud the government out of a great deal of money, and the worst of it Is that everjon who receive an Improperly franked package or letter reallxea that the government Is being de frauded. We know it 1 a matter of common knowledge that under the present system the frank has been diverted from the pur pose for -which It was originally designed. We have had congressmen sending type writer through th mail under their frank; other hav used th frank to send out their laundryt to send Christmas pres ents to their friends, to say nothing of the ton upon ton of printed pohe printed free through special privilege at the gov ernment printing office, and which, while supposedly quasi-public documents, are, In effect, nothing but campaign material dl Htmlnated abroad for the member's private behoof and emolument. All this should be stopped. It Is a petty dishonesty, unworthy of men elected to legislate for the nation. It Is proposed by Postmaster General Hitchcock to stop the Issuing of franks and to Issue In lieu thereof free stamps to the members of congress. This, we be lieve. Is an excellent Idea. The stamps t-hould be of a special Issue differentiating them from the stamps used by th gen eral public, and the Poatoffice department should be required to keep a ledger ac count with each Individual member of congress and with all government officials entitled to the free use of the malls for business purpose, showing just how many of these free stamp arc requitUloned for and used. PASSING PLASASTIES "I understand you hired a magazine man to run your newspaper." "I did." "How Is he getting along?" "He quit. He couldn't wait until Christ mas to Issue the Chritmaa number." Kansas City Journal. "I want my son to be a polished man of the world, prepossessing In appearance, tactful and skilled In the accomplishment of a gentleman. " "I'm afraid you have been reading novels. Your description tallies exactly with the description of the hero of th latest thief atory." Washington Star. "Is that man wide awak In hi buwl ness methods?" "Good heavens, no! He's Just patented an Insomnia cure." Baltimore American. "I understand the rh-h professor I going to marry the homeliest girl In the summer school. How did she attract him?" "Hy distinctly sounding the first 'e' In aeroplane." 4 'ievela nd Plain JJeaier. "It Isn't what a man earns that make him rich," said the morallzer. "No," rejoined the demoralises "It's usually what his father saved." Chlcauo New. Shoeless he climbed the stairway, opened the door of the bed room, entered and cloaed It after him wlthoat being detected. Just as he was about to get into her bed hi wife, half aroiMied from her slumber, Oldest National in Nebraska. This Bank is now 54th IN ITS During this time its stock holders have frequently in creased the Capital Stock in order that the growing re quirements of its customers might be properly cared for. It now bas 1500,000.00 .$900,000.00 Capital Surplus and I n divided Irofit. mmymv Tmmn 1 -- vny Tin Tl Absolutely Puro Its active principle is derived from healthful fruit 9 No Into phosphatase Alum baking powders derive their active j principle from sulphuric acid Study tho Label m.jm.- , f.'.-.tr. turned and sleepily said: "I that you, Fli'o?" The husband, telling th rest of the story, replied; "For once In my life I had real presence of mind. 1 licked her hand." Cleveland Leader. "So you are going to Kurope? How long do you expect to remain ovei there?" "Just long enough to send poetal card! to all the people I know and gat ni) satchel covered with labels." Chlcagt ltecord-Hei aid. STORY OF THE APPLE. W. D. Nesbit in Chicago Post. A farmer picked this apple In hi orchard In th west And put It in a barrel with some othsit of his best; Because they were so splendid he declared the price must climb. And so he raised his figure on that barrel by a dime. The man who bought that barrel stuck a a label on the top, Then told the Interviewers of a shortage In the crop; And when he came to sell It to a buyer on the floor He added on his profit and a half a dollar mot e. The man who shipped that barrsl stack his label on it, too. And talked of early freezes and th dam age that they do; The man to whom he shipped It said the grower's price was high And raised the price two dollars more than In the day gone by. The man who stored that barrel told of shortage In the pick, Of scale and other pests that make Hi apple orchards sh-k; And he put on five dollars to th cumulat ive price And so It went, each handler taking out his little slice. Oh. when you eat this apple, may It fill you with delight To know flat some one profit on eacli nibble and each bit. And. oh. be glad you do not live so very far away From where the apple started, for think what you'd have to pay! MSB?' Bank i:'"r"T"r ' llt i . 1 . i-. v. . no alum a ir -r I lite mm , itf.i j kr-f ' (if). YEAR m" fiVl