I Mr, I'.Mv UM.MIA. llMUAi. M IvUl.hK 4. 1!10. The Omaha Daily Hek. FOT"NrKD I!T T THVAV.D l'.OSF.WATK.Il. VICTOR r.i ISKWATKII. KI'ITOIl. Kntercd Hi Omaha j-nstofftce lis second lass mutter. . i 'A . . 01 . it" 10c TKIUIS OP SI'BSCP.IPTIOV fcut )v Be one ear Saturday ;, n jear lHily Bee wltlintit Siindavi. cm year Pa.ly Bee and Kundav. iu if nr.. HKUVK.KKH HY t'AFtlilKU F.venin- Bee (without ? . nxlsi v . per week i:vrnln wit h Holiday). I" r week Iall Bee llnelildllie Sundavl. per We.R..i'.r I tall v Mw (without .ur-bo . per week I'T Address all ooniph.int of irregularities In delivery to City ' mila'l'in I icpartment. OmahaThe IW 11 ! ding. Sotith Omaha Twenlv-f"';i th mid N' Council frl uf f s- 13 .""n't S'reot. Llnroln ids Little ui:din. 'hlciign li4 Muniuett" Building New York Flonw.s It"' -I If.' Thinv-lrdrd street. . Washington 75 Kniii-'oenth Sirert. N. W en r n f si i r. n i i . 'omtnun!tion f. latin.: to ne Mid editorial matter should lie adih es-o-.l Utnaha Bee, 11 tnfiat I 'epai-tin-nt. KKMITTANCLS Hemit by draft. ex n-y or postal order paahle to Th Hue Publishing Cmpcn.:. Only X-oent manipii revel ved In payment of mall accounts.. Hersunal checks except on Omaha and enstern exchange not aecpted. In 1900 he pre- "Intcrests" on the , dieted that If we retained tho Philip- Washington Life one Intonating FtaHl ana Condition Observe at the Vatiea-a Capita. Unwarranted Distinctions. !)' "'i wnH' v"u promised in the two ratio the farmers would never realize , Vlj ,, . tr.urlyesrs just passed." -wheat at $ I a bushel and the country f Vahra.u. William .1 llrv.n is de-1 The republican party, then, stands I would go bankrupt nl,l.., ih .lomnrrAtle indicted ll.V the nominee for governor, as the tool of enacting laws for the vvhol-; pin, g the Fourth of July would. fease the Lrew..rs and li.,uor dealer, and at; PO")'!'-- The trial .onus olf next j to I,- celebrated in the flitted Slates, the same time Putting iu a word for Tu. s.ly and the people v, Ul a. t as the ; In 1m.s he foretold the doom of the Gilbert M Ilitthcock. the democratic , Jury. What will be their verdict? 1 republic if the republicans were con-nom-nee for Tinted States senator, "'"! th.-y vote to convict or acuuit ofjtin.ted In power. Of course, since all when th,. i.rp..r. h,.ve linked up in this charge, this party mat has dared of these calamities have come true, double team with Iahhn;ui I fight for the riphts of sll as against!. Mr. H'-yan stands as the peerless trading stamp firms: and similar business . '. . Jth.. i.rivllipo nf the feu Have t he I nronhct of the aiies. in the maior boosters, w ho received a knockout from the combine is j Pll as much confidence in the word class, too, not minor FEOPLE TALKED ABOUT. A l.ivr et .acted by conaiess u olilMtina; Kift eitet n ises 'n tlie lMtt ict of t'oltimbia was tiroiialH up throunh tliei coutts by Nebraska by the hrcwers' jbelnu spent for Dahlman and Hitch cock Jointly. Mahlman -would not have been nominated had Hitchcock's of the republican party as the "inter ests'' have? The issuo ;g clear-cut and decisively There Is no room for doubt. " Went BTATEMK.VT OF CIP.Cl l-ATION. S'a'a of Nebraska. IoukIbs f'onnty. as.. (iftorpte B. Taaohuck, nensurer of Tl-e Itre PubliahinK company, belnn duly wnm aaya that the actual ' number of foil and complete coplea of The Oally. M'.Ttum,'. aOveidnK and HunduV line printed dttrlnu the month of Ootubi-r. iwi. was as roitows 17 is.... 1 ! L'O L':t . . . '.' 4 . . . I 43,350 t 44,700 3 43,280 4 43,880 ft 43,440 , 43,640 7 43,780 . 1 43,630 43,700 10 43,650 11 . 43,1170 It 43,300 II t.. 43,340 14.. ...43,870 ' li 43.360 11. .... . .... .44.030 Total RetuVned Ctipla. . f. Nat Total ....... k l,33tt,39U IHtUy Atreraa 43,174 GKO. 13. T..Si'lll-('K. Treasurer. Subscribed in my preaence and sworn to befora ma thla Slat dav of October. IftlO. . M. I'. WALKER, t8el ) Notary Public. L'S. '.1 . 30. 31 . .43,370 . . .43.360 . . .43,320 . . .43,310 . . .43,430 . . .43,170 . . .43,450 . . .44,030 . . .43,380 . . .43,370 . . .43,390 . . .43,400 . . . 43,050 . . .43,600 . . ,45,680 paper done its duty, uor would he hnve!drnwn- a rhanco for election if : Hitchcock's -N'o one can be mistaken. It Is a con paper were not scrvinK now as the or- tinuation of positive legislation in be gan of the liquor interests. ,half of t,1(' ,u"lon u!,,,n the "e band' The brrwers' combine Is pouriuR out ja policy of preventing such legislation Dionev for Ilitchcoak. as the pit. e and M" behalf of predatory interests on the consideraiirm for Hitchcock's uewspa-j other hand; construction as opposed per support of Imhlmnn. 1 hey care Mo obstruction Where do the people nothinc iihout Hitchcock's part nership i stand ? The choice of republicans for with Hartley any more than they care;' be house and senate means a further carrying out of thet pledges to the peo ple. The selection of democrats will enable the "interests" to block such action. "Here is our money for your votes," the interests are saying. What answer will the people make? for Dahlman's stand-iu with the Ma bray gaiiK of swindlers. '1 he brewers" combine merely wains men who will do their bidding, and they have found such a pair in Duhimun and Hitchcock. What is more. .Mr. Bryau knew all this wheu h made his Lincoln speech de nouncing Dahlman and glossing over Hitchcock, although straddling the same beer barrel. Mr. Bryan impugns his own sincer ity when he refuses to support the brewery combines' candidate for gov ernor and at the same time endorses the brewery combine's candidate lor senator. I supreme court this week. As soon as the ! chief opponent of the law recovered from " " I the blow this sitfti appealed In front of Under substantially the same cir-,,r8n ,,,, t W,iows; "Economy m-opci ativo society suspended for rent auiiisulioti. Have your vouchers." Three h'ltitliei persons. moitly women. 'present 0,v ol .ht nut A ' the same ohioction. tie aol ' a .tut v to look at a I" i-":o-i ami lus fcit'iies vtlh a photon i ;i ph 1 I,, n tin hiKhi-el on" I I" tbc I.. mi !. to... id a view of the pi emuiptn e anil Inti lliKetf't of i more than i-w r lib- oi'.l to as freuuentlv lllustiat I. .Mm. MM.l llcllllllMlie the llll-ol'S tl juries it i find ho : 1 in 'cv Yolk cumstances Judge Troup has decided twice against the voting machine, and now once in its favor. In the lan guage of Mr. Bryau, "How can we tell when a Judge is going to change his mind?" j Vice President Sherman 1- in the s..utli , for the purpose, as he expresses it of I "concertina winner." His ionise is akin to engaging in fotelgn mlMonar woi k 'when rlttht at home the Wicked tluie ; In appalling number. A New Yolk man lm has r.one i bar to lirltish Colutiib a to hunt has been shot for a deer No known tea son exists why a man should bo shot f..r a deT. There is not een the faintest resemblance to he,,,,, u j,,, v IP uuaht. as Ihe sopreiti,, Cited as an exi use. kuhu-st s, be given cte.llt for ordin.i Huron 1. F.. von Itodefiliausen. ho is , idliKctico Htid honest now In this couiuty at the guest of .Indue Klbcrt 11. Clary of the Fnlte.l States .Mod corporation. Is a very distinguished nun. I lie Is a director of the great Krupp nice! i works at Ksscu, Uermati. He is bIso an I officer of the (iermaji atin. ; roi-trl occasiotiallv api'. nrs the men In the b. ' rtl'e ttie ollel.oeis i.i.iki i...... . ! ;t the bur. If h man Is ipiiilifie.r' CHEERFUL REMARKS. to I. . Judge Troup's decision in favor of the machine calls out very vociferous applause In ihe democratic organ, which always approves that brand or nonpartisanship that goes mil of its way to favor the democratic ticket. . 1,350.740 11,343 Sabarrlbara leaving the elty tem po r aril r ahvala . hare The ttee mailed to tham. Addreaa will, be rkaaatd aa often aa reqnaatrd. For the fourteenth time Will Hitchcock put it back? we ask, Duplicity. When John F. Boyd won the repub lican nomination for congress in the Third Nebraska district his victory was heralded by democratic organs as j a triumph of insurgency over a stand- pat opponent. Now the democratic nominee for congress is flooding that district with literature falsely label ing Judge Boyd as a standpatter. Such duplicity must be transparent to intel ligent people. Judge Boyd is a pro gressive republican, as are all repub lican candidates for congress In Ne braska, and such willful lying ought to react iu his favor. - Tha colonel hamr evidently decided not to wasita any fire on Mr. Koraker. The only tliin to do, then, is to pull the republican lever and scratch if you inuat. If Captain- Peary should return to hla job there might be a big stick in tha navy. . Or. Crlppen ia to be executed on our lection day. He,' seems to have no opposition. v Tha atatute pf limitations has been aptly described as Ihe statute ef legal ised larceny. - ' Keen It Dark. Wall Street Journal. If ou ve ever done an. thing ou don't want published don't accept a nomination. Tammany oiighr, to remember that the colonel ba brought down bger came than atrtped tigers. The national nut growers are hold ing their convention ,in Florida. They ought to have a cracking time. The fact that Berllnera paid $40 a ticket to hear Caruso shows that all the easy' marks are not In the United States. The editor of The Bee la now charged with being unable to make a public speech. To this we plead guilty. If Judge Parker were in earnest about going on the trail of Koosevelt he would have little trouble In finding the trail. The devotion of the World-Herald to the cause of the democratic, candi date for United States seuator is in spiring to behold. A Pennsylvania man bought a wife for $72. Well, that Is some advance ever the old Virginia price of a few pounds of tobacco. The government now says those Minneapolis and Taeorua enumerators counted many people twice. They ought to sober up. More Money for Good Roads. Those states that aro Indifferent to the demand for good roads are but putting off the evil cay to come. Good roads is one of Ihe big ques tions of the day. It represents one of the most insistent demands that the economy of progress is making upon the people. "It has to be met and the sooner it is, the better for all inter ests. States aud the federal govern ment have a duty here in vol veil. Some of the money that Is spent by both In other directions could be devoted to this' cause for in.tl(gical order it pre cedes many thatere getting the pref erence, Many of the big problems of com merce and colonization turn, directly, or have a vital bearing upon this sub ject of good roads, lr cuts a tremen dous figure in the matter of transpor tation aud therefore in the matter of agriculture and manufacture. Good roads do not stop with beautifying a country; they have a far more utili tarian mission than that. They shorten distance, they lighten weight and they lessen the ultimate cost of transport ing raw material, which, in its turn, affects the expense of hauling finished products. They have innumerable ramifications,' the accumulative ad vantages of which are simply not to be compared with the minor element of initial cost of the Improvement, or even, added to this, the expense of maintenance. Much has been done to promote the good roads movement and in some states the w ork is not lagging now, but in most it is. In most of them the actual construction enterprise Is not as great aa the agitation. In very few, of course. Is there any positive oppo sition, in none where a sane view is taken of the situation. But more than sentiment or agitation is needed to push this movement to any adequate results. It is one of the strange things of the present-day determina tion to exploit our natural resources and advantages that aa a whole the people have done so little in the mat ter of improving their highways. As to Broken Pledges. A vote for Lobeek. tiie ilenioerutlc caididuto for congress. Is a vote to take tlie house of t epresentHtives out of the I control of the party thut has broken Its pledges to the people. World-Herald. That would be a very telling charge if It were true, but it is not true. The fact is that never before iu the same time has any party written on the statute books so much good legislation promised in a party platform as has the republican party since Mr. Taft went Into the White House. For tes timony on this point we quote the fol lowing from a speech delivered by Wil liam J. Bryan at El, Paso. Tex., Sep tember L'S, If the democrats go before the people and attempt to make a fight on tha tariff, to what can' w'e point? We can not point to the members of our own party and their record on tariff revision. Where is th4 democratic record to point to when we ko before the people and ask them to trust us for another term? Three-fourths of the democratic senators voted for a tux on lumbar, although the democratic party was pledged to free lumber. What i the use of mak ing promises' to the people if we don't I'roarrss or Stsitnatiim f San Francisco Chronicle. In a week more U will be known whether businesH is to continue to move forward or will experience the first real check since 1.S92. when the last democratic house of repreaentativea was elected. silence Waa Impossible." Brooklyn F.agle. v "lo hire a hall" Is advice often given to William Jennings Ilrvan. He has taken It at last. It was hla only course, after being barred off democratic platform In Ne braska, silence was impossible Not In Darkest Kaaala. Chicago News. Three thousand men were killed in the coal and tn. tal mines lust year, not in darkest Russia, but In the United States. However, the rescue cars of the United States bureau of mines will help to lessen such horrors henceforth. Wiser Than lie Wu I'lctnrrU. Pittsburg: Dispatch. The stiltun of Sulu seems a level headed ruler. His idea of civilising Jolo to introduce achoola and railroads. More Impressive sovereigns, like the late shahs of Persia, have returned homo with the Idea that civilization consisted of a bevy of music hall dancers and a few recipes for mixed drinks. intend to keep them? What can the democratic party do in a national fight If til go before the people and say that we have a platform, but do not con alder it binding? A man who gets votes by Indorsing the platform be does not believe In Is on the same level as the man who secures anything else of vain dishonestly. It is a fraud. It is the democratic party through its representatives in congress whom Mr. Bryan accuses of repudiating plat form pledges. If the voters of this congressional district want sent a rep resentative to Washington who will do what he says he will, they will Issue their commission to Judge Sutton, the republican candidate. Two Years Ajjo. Two yeai'8 ago Douglas county sent a solid democratic delegation to the legislature that by the time adjourn ment was taken had become a stench in the nostrils of all decent men. After drawing a salary of $300 for living in Lincoln three months at an expensive hotel one state senator took a trip to the Sandwich islands, another rusti cated at Hot Springs and another be gan rolling around South Omaha in an automobile. One member of the house delegation spent several weeks touring California, another rested up at Kxcelslor Springs, still another went to Europe and several others amused themselves exhibiting more money that they were ever known to possess at one time. Some of these same democratic law-makers have been re nominated witn a view to repeating their performance at Lincoln. Is that what Omaha and Douglas county want? Pass lug Vp Home Opportunities. Springfield Republican. The Michigan Central railroad, having failed to float bonds in the Paris markets at a tolerable rate, Is borrowing there on one-year notes on terms which cannot be regarded as easy. Yet Wall street bank ers are grabbing for a JoO.000,000 Chinese railroad loan and are understood to have got It. Is It so that we have capital for hinese railroads and none for our own? Western Shorn Men Uoff Yoke. Philadelphia Record. It may not have been worth while for the United Shoe Machinery corporation to spend 15.000.000 of Its surplus in buying off the competition of Thomas Q. Plant. few minutes after the deal with Plant was closed several hi western shoe manufac turers called on nnt to offer him financial backing. As they were too late. It Is re ported in Boston that they are organizing to fight the machinery combination thom nclves. They plan to manufacture the machines on which the patents have ex pired and get other machines invented. One of these firms la said to be paying 6tl,0i)0 a year to the fchoe Machinery conv puny simply for duplicate parts, aside from royalties and has a bigger business thun Plant has. Those Kansas women who organised tha Anti-Tightwad club must have raad Mayor "Jim's" famous "Jar loose" proclamation. The suggestion comes to ua to nom inate Judge Troup for appointmeut to tha first vacancy on the supreme bench to bo filled by "Governor" Dahlman. Tha folks who have been enjoying special farora from Mayor "Jim" should remember that he could do them no good aa governor down at Lincoln. Mayor Gaynor says, "The assertion that Mr. Dlx was selected and his no in ination forced by a political leader hereabouts I know of my own knowl edge to be false." Then what about those democratic newspapers of New York that said there were more trust lobbyists at the Rochester convention than delegates, and that when a dele gate wanted to propose the name of a man for gubernatorial candidate he "went, hat in hand, to room 212 and waited meekly upon Mr. Murphy with the request. These papera also said that no convention was ever more "mercilessly held In the grasp .of Tarn many" than this one that gave Mr Dlx to the democrats, through Boss Murphy's selection, as their nominee for governor. Who is right, Mayor Gaynor or these democratic editors who are bending every effort to elect I Mr. Dix? If Hitchcock's partnership wKh Bartley is helping him so, why take so! uiucu iiuuuio iu rApiaiu n aay ana i Justify his biding behind the statu. e! of limitations? Democrats Have the Boodle. Perhaps in no other election ever held in this country was the line of li avage more closely drawn between iv. o parties by the boodle brigands than In the present one. From New York to Nebraska without exception the democrats in every state have the barrel and all the accumulative power that goes with it. And from Nebraska on to the Pacific, from the north to the soutu, it is the same. I nose iu-1 Tlle ji0be-Democrat says Colonel terests that seek to . control politics j pr)an ls not making his customary for their own apgrandizement ' have i nullll)er of speeches this year. No. not never been more. Insolent and more i Bj,,,.e ,!e Nebraska democratic state brazen m their enuiis than tney are ! committee raised the sign, "Go, hire . r with vou.lris to lutfn, read the sign and made such tvmai k as usually flow from tloiso win aie 'lung. VroOahlN iu woman had fewer than "'.n stfl'iips and the nM'rae l. tmher held by o e person, it is believed, would he In the neighborhood of . The amieint of merchandise represented by loO.Oeo coupons would be sufficient to furn ish two or three houses. This may easily he sern from the fact that an entire idna closet call" tor only s.tHO coupons, while a chi! f nier e.iitld be bought for a like number. A stained glass window is placed over the fn.nt balcony of the old James O. Blaine residence, now occupied by the Creorge Wt stinghousea of Plttsbui a The subject of tlie window is a typical old-tiino southern mammy, in blue and white apron and gaudy bandana. Across Dupont Circle Is the home of Lais Anderson, who thinks so much of his cciuitie priae winners that be has built a JJ'fi.onO marble stable for them. Nearby Is the palatial residence of the late Thomas F. Walsh, the Colorado mil lionaire, now occupied by Mrg. Walsh and Mr. and Alts. Kdwaid Beale McLean. On the low marble wall that runs around the bass of tlie portico is a gold ore stone, taken from the mine In which Thomas F. Walsh got tiie. firsl "pay dltt." Baroness lletiielmueller, wife of the Austrian ambassador, has a mirror room in the spuciotiH embassy, fitted up an an aviary for her pet birds. Another real life room is the "monkey room" of Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth. In this room are trees'., swings and poles to accommodate her two pet monkeys. Mrs. I.ongworth also cherished her "bride's corner," a room In which site has arranged her many thousand dollars' worth of wedding presents. Secretary MacVeagh has Just announced plans for the competitions Instituted by the government for the designs for the three magnificent buildings to be erected woi'llt of Pennsylvania avenue for the State department, the Department of Jus tice and the Department of Commerce and Labor. The aggregate will be about IT.iiiO.OUO. congress providing Jl.900.0ou for Justice. IJ.OO.COO for State and a.6."i0.0t) for Com merce and Labor. These buildings will corstltute a splendid architectural group fitting harmoniously Into the picture now- formed around the White House ellipse by the White House, the Treasury and State, War and Navy buildings. Half a doien city blocks, extending from Fifteenth street and Pennsylvania avenue to the Washington Monument grounds, will bo given over to the sites for these new edifices. They will occupy tlie land bounded by Pennsylvania avenue, the Mall, Four teenth and Fifteenth streets, which already has been acquired. This goes a long way toward carrying into effect the plan for the transformation of the entire southern side nf the avenue ylnto a colony of gov ernment structures. The buildings of the Departments of State and Justice will be three stories high; that for the Department of Commerce and Labor five stories and basement. I ne, ground area of the last named structure will be 90.000 square feet, that of the Mate building 72,000 ttquare feet and that of the Justice 57,. The architectural competi tion will close December yo. 1910. I'eter l.lebach. the miser. In whose little I hut perched high on the hillside, near , Pittsburg, was found $;s0.ono in coin a year ; ago. is tired of his way of life and wants ' a wife. Although i eats old be has never, spokm to any woman except his mother, j und sho bad been dead twenty years. Disguised as a working girl and ussuming the namu of "Mamie Mot.) old rick." .Miss Mary Boyle O'Kellly, has Just completed an Investigation of buby farms In southern New Hampshire. She believes her work will ultimately result in legislation that will abolish the inhuman features of such places. Miss Dorothy I.. Frooks, ears old, a student at tlie WadleiRh High eehool, New ork, who aspires to be a Judge some .iy when the suffrajeltes have conquered and the divine feminine portion of hu manity lias its rights, Is to be one of the peakers for the Independence league this campaign. The Joseph Medill mansion ou Cass street in Chicago, which cost more than fciSO.OilO atid was the scene of some of the most elaborate social functions of a quarter of a century mo. is to be torn down to make way for one of the great factories that have Invaded what as once Chicago's ex- lusive resident district. Mrs. Helen K. Hoy of New York, has been summoned as a municipal law ex pert by ltwrence Gressner, who Is being tiled for neglect of duty as borough pres ident of Queens. Mrs. Hoy ls said to be keen logician and has an exhaustive knowledge of municipal law, both of which will be valuable to her client. Candidate '.'liv did u .'i.. out for the silt nt vote.' Ills Polil cul Manager Because the mm Wte Is all In your favor. Chicago Tribii'i. On ni SIMSSS TIHS ON Stll.AM. General Prosperity Uels a Move Heaardlesn of Poll) lea. Washington l'ost. Tlie revival of business has reached a stage which no longer permits a waiting attitude. Crowding doubt and uncertainly aside by sheer . pressure of offerings at primary points, the revival of prosperous times on tha seals of the "McKlnley boom" of twelve years ago has begun In good earnest. This event has been pre dicted to follow upon the November elec tions, but as Secretary Wilson's constitu ents go more by the local weather prophet than by the politician's danger signals, the goosebone augury of an early winter gave the cue to tha farmer to de liver the goods betimes. The farmpr has more to fcell than vet- before, consequently the hauling rapacity of the railroads will be put to a new test. Their earnings will be limited only by tbelr rolling-stock equipment, and as the backbone of the stock markets automat ically stiffens there will be something doing on tha floor whether or no. The farmer never gets panicky. Who ever heard of lum discharging his help and curtailing production because the re sult of the township election was In doubt or because congress was tinkering with the land laws? Should the tltrle ever come when he ls seised of the silly fears that operate to paralyse centers of fl nance and commerce, then the country will witness all kinds of panlo. Hut there Is Co danger of hid losing his presence of mind. Success this, year encourages him to seed more acres for next season, und perforce put another crimp In the chi mera that the farmer la leaving his happy noma for a pigeonhole apartment In the city. Peeing that the welfare of by far the vaster section of the country and the bulk of population ls not locked up In the result of ballotltpr, whichever way It turns, It ja easy to predict that pros pcrlty will take no account of what hap pens on Tuesday. The battle Is won, vote aa you will. today. They int.'"" ro pretense a' rtc- a hall." aud the Indiana state com- The New. York Juror charged with soliciting and receiving a bribe says the whole thing ls a mystery to him. Then the court probably may help to unravel It for him. nyin,; the fact thru they are financing 1 miUtr.e w ithdrew its invitation and the itue democrat it: party's campaign. They t Iowa t.0,u,utee did the same, and the make uo effort to deny that it is for j committees of several other states for- the one purpose of preventing needed j got lo St.Iui any and his favorite candi leglalatlon and there the w hole mat-J date for the senate in Nebraska has ter rtsts. , I been proved a partner of the a'ute The republican party has been i treasury embezzler, taken at its word by the "interests."! " ' It has pledged itself to complete the! When the biographer goes to com- Not one of the democratic candi dates for county commissioner could get a Job in a reputable business house at $100 a month. Do the taxpayers of Douglaa county want to hire such people to spend $1,000,000 of public mosey for tbeux lb, next ytr? pile the narrative entitled "Life of William Jennings Bryan," he should give htm greatest distinction aa a work of coustructivt; legislation thus far begun under , the Taft ad ministration and the ''Interests" have replied, "We belie to you 1 prophet. The man's wisdom in thla and therefore we w ill endow the i particular has been bo unerring as to democrats with limitless boodle- to ' teem almost superhuman. In 1S96 defeat you on November 8. We be- he predicted that without frttf and un lieve. you mean wbax ou aay because I limited coinage of silver at his sacred Our Birthday Book "You n.'to no sprtng chkRon wlnh I nm r ed ou:" shouted the liusbah ' No. but 1 whs a s. . she nne.e.. disdainf iiH . -Buffalo i:pri 'S t "U-n't it remarkable that our i.-','i.'-tun ii Is mi cheet fill ' "Wl.y is 11 remarkable ?" 'Because It Is lis business to le in the dumps." -Baltimore American "Yon should try to do soiiirH.ipr. in I U that will encourage people to r'rit o.i another w.th smiles.-' "That's my id-a. " f,ile-d tin .-Mid - outh. "That Is why I have decided lo t e come a f 'rst-c;ai dentist."- Wpsii.ni;N n Star. Maud-Jack Is oi.e of tha nicest h.. under the sun. Kthel Ves: hut lie s ever so tnucii m. ei under the moon. Boston Transcript ' said otio uf his younij l e . done the i.s u. I mortgage on my hi.us.- COMMON SKSK VPIUCLII. Urneral Technicality 1'ahorsed bj Supreme lonrt. Pittsburg Dispatch. The supreme court of tha United Stales administered a daath blow to certain f lo tions n Judicial procedure, once deemed all Important but of late years being sus pended by a more enlightened view. A man sentenced to life Imprisonment for murder baa appealed on tha plea that his cunsHtumonul rights had been violated by the trial Judge In permitting the Jury to separate and to read newspapers during the trial. In failing to send the Jurors out of the room during arguments on the admission of evidence and by requiting the accused to put on a coat alleged to have been worn when the crltno charged was committed, thus "compelling the prisoner to testify against hlmstilf." The supreme court holds that while the trial Judge has gone to the limit in the ex ercise of bis discretion during tho trial he had committed no reversMue error. The more conservative course, Judge Holmes suld, would have been to exclude tho Jury during consideration of admissibility of confessions, but there was force In the Judge's view that If tlie Jurors were fit to do their duty they would be nble to do what a Judge baa to do when he tries a case on tha facts without thum. Aa to allowing the Jurors to separate, Justice Holmes observed that If the mere oppor tunity for' prejudice and corruption was to raise a presumption that they rxist It would be hard to maintain Jury trial under "Well, professor married friends, thing: I've put a and lot.' "Have ou anything to chauffeur It?" in quired the professor. Chicago Tribune. "':ll jou always be trim?" asked the broker's suspicious daughter when younn Sportlelgh had thrown himself at her feei and begged for b.r hand. "As ti'te as steel'" he cried ''Common or preferred?" she Inqiine.t still suspicious. Chicago News BACK TO FATHF.lt I am going back to father. Father whom 1 love the best. And I'll snuggle up and nestle Safe upon his kindly breast. Though he sent me out In nngrv To a world of rampant wrongs I am coining back to nheer him- Home Is where my trust belongs Naught shall mar the holy fitness Of a meeting long deferred; 1 am going home to father- I'm the short and ugly word. New York Kvening Sua. BUCKWHEAT CAKES; Chicago News.' In the chilly days of autumn. When the frost is on the ground. Or In cold and dreary winter. - When the snow lies all around. There's an article of dlul. That e're might glad to lake. A dedcloua, toothsome viand That is called the buckwheat cak. When the buckwheat's on the griddle How Impatiently we wait Through the tlmo that s Intervening. Kre the cake gets on the plate. Then the butter, or the honey, Or molasses, noon ls spread, And the work of demolition Of that cakes goes right n.hen l Just ua one is disappearing There's another takes Its place. And a smile of satisfaction Spreads across the eater's face. Boon again the plate la empty. Hut 'tis only brief delay, For the cakes Just keep on coming Till enough are stowed away. All in vain Is Indigestion To the buckwheat eater preached. For the cakes hot from the griddle Have the right spot always reached. Whether early In the morning Or at noon, of even night. They are always warmly welcomed, And they soothe the appetlts. .Jest when butihwbuat.was dlscoMoe.l ls a fact we do-'not know. Hut we're told It was a viand Heveral centuries ago. On thai point we re not. disputing. For were apt to make mistakes. Hut we bless the man or woman Who Invented buckwheat cakeh. The six rescue cars sent to coal mining regions by the new mining bureau and me.nned with experts to demonstrate the use of the latest appliances In mine disas ters, contain, each, eight so-called oxygen helmets, a supply of oxygen In tanks one dozen safety lamps, one field telephone with 3,000 feet of wire, resuscitating outfits and a small outfit for use In demonstra tlnn and sctusl practice of equipment re lating to first-ald-to-the-lnjured In connec. tion with mine accidents. One end of each car will be fitted up as an air-tight room to be used In training the men In the use of the so-called oxygen helmets. This room will be filled with noxious fluids, and the miners, wearing the helmets, will remain Inside for two hours In an atmosphere that would kill without the helmets. These are the helmets that permit one to enter a mine Immediately following an explosion. while It Is still filled with poisonous gases. and breathe artificially.- The absence of tho helmets at great catastrophes In the L'nlted States has. It Is believed, rosulted In a greater loss of life than necessary. Frequently miners who have not suffered physical Injury by an explosion have been entombed In tha mine to die slowly from the Inhalation of the poisonous gsses. Had It been possible to reach these men within a few hours, their lives might have been saved. The helmets proved their worth at the Hl-fated Cherry mine disaster, when the rescuers succeeded In getting twenty men out alive after they had been en tombed seven days. In a number of In stances miners have been saved from terri ble deaths Jay the prompt arrival of helmeted rescuers. oTsmber 4 1910. Lloyd C Crlscum, former ambassador to Italy, was born November 1. 1x7:.', at HIv erton. N. J. H. Is now chairman of the republican state lomtn'ttee prosecuting the caniiaiKii iu New York, lie was in the diplomatic corps for nearly fifteen yeurs. Willluni P. Hepburn, for a long time member of congress ftom Iowa. Is 77 yea -a old today. He was boi u at Wellsville. O., and ls the ajthor of the Hepburn railway rate bill. He retired two ears ago aud has been living at Ids home In Clariida. Jay lAverty, manager of Itvrrty Broih era live Stock commission at South Omaha, was born November 4, Km'.. t Import City. la. He taught school seven years befoie going Into his present bjsiness in 1'iC. James C. Lindsay, with the Do.Iih Printing company, Is 61 He is u i ait . of (ilavgow. Scotland and came to A.i.c i : In l.). and has been a member ol the tkbool board for two teruis. puti'ru vbk ok mo run c.n. KleM for r'relaht Movement Huge and Inviting. Philadelphia Record. No other Industry has grown so rapidly In tlie L'nlted States In the last ten years as the motor car Industry. The capital in vested has Increased from 6"t.uu0 to fluO. 000,000. The number of persons employud In making automobiles and In accessory oc cupations has Increased from to 'J7S.0lj. Thus far motor cars have been mamly made for the touring and pleasur.ng piwr poses. They have been a luxury of the well-to-do rather than a convenience an. I advantage for th.i mass. As capacity ot production Increases and supply bus meas urably overtaken demand the motor cur makers are beginning to turn their atten tion to a wider development of their busi ness. The great field for motors In the future will be as curriers of freight. There la va--d waste In all forms of initial ttans poitatlon which may be lurgtly saved by inotur truc.ing. Motors will be made to run between the farms and the rails, cuiry lng twice the load at twice the sliced of wugons pulled by horses. Motors will budge and shorten and facilitate all prt-s-trit uistauce between the shop and lot ciiftomer. They will make rural free de livery of both mails and parcels. They will furnish cheap competition for the d.-ar rxpresnes. They will make the building of good roads an .always profitable Invest ment for all thickly settled area. What has been in the main for the last ten yeais :u access of faeiity und luxury In tne 1 fuiti'.H of going about on the common hlgh - wa.s In the next tin years will become as ! decisive an access of utility for all forms uf urban and suburban tranelt. I jii niiimiii hi ii i i minimum i iiiiin i t .!!i!.L-. --1 jjp if nil' "I 'I 1 WilMf) j! I jj III ,J i:::': j pti '" i Iv : 1 s 'J sT ' I Adler's Collegian Clothes conform first of all to the necessity of giving the wearer a becoming garment, and then meet the requirements of prevailing style with a result that they are the clothes preferred by men who desire tone, individuality and distinctiveness without attracting attention by extremes. Men who recognize these features in their garmeuts also recognize our unusual quality of cloth, linings and in terlinings. Foremost dealers in all sections are showing our overcoats, suits and raincoats at $15.00 to $40.00. Our style book will thoroughly post you. Mailed upon application. David Adler&SonsClothingCo. Nobby Clothes Makers Milwaukee r