Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 23, 1910, Page 6, Image 6

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The omaiia ' Daily 1u:y.
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VKTOIt HDSKWATKU, KMTOIl.
Entered at Omaha poslofflce a cond
clam matter.
tkrms op wrnscmrTioN.
Kunilnv He. one year..... I! SO
Pt 'j rein Hep. one yrtr II W
I.lty lt (without Sunday). one year..i
1'aliy He. and Sunday, one year V.'0
DKI.IVKRKIJ f'Y CAHIUKR.
F .'renins; Hee (without Hunitay). per week Kc
F.venliia: Hee (with Hur.day), per week.. lor
Jslly Mr- (Including; Sunday), per 'k.l
laliy Hee (without Punla . per week..ltc
A.lrlress all rotrnluinta of Irreaulnritle
In delivery to Citv Circulation Impertinent
OITH'KS.
Omaha the Ho HwllfllrlR.
Moinh Omaha 4 North Twenty-fourth
Btrret
Council Uluf fft If, fJr-ott Street.
Lincoln T..H Utile Iliilhtinu.
'hli ai lMh Marquette Hiillrilhg
Now Vork-Uooms llil-U02 No. M West
Thirty-third Mreet.
Washington- 12S Fourteenth Ptreet, N. W.
CORRKSilONI KNCE.
Communications relation to new and
editorial matter aliould be addressed:
Otiiaha Hee, Rilitorlal 1 epnrtnient.
nRMITTANCKS.
Remit by dr-jft. express or postal order
payable to The He Publishing; Company.
Only i!-rent stamps received in payment of
mail accounts. 1'ersonnl check except on
Omaha and eastern exchange not accepted.
STATEMENT OK rlRCT'UATION.
Btste of Nebraska. Potigla County. .
Ceorg R. Txachtii'.k. treasurer of The
new Publishing company, hem duly
worn, saya that the actual nutuher of full
and complete, oopte. of T,h. Pally, Morn
Inn, Kventng and Sunday H printed
during; the niontli of October, I10. u ax
follow:
1 43.S30 IT 43,370
t 44.700 II 43,360
t 43,960 ! 43.390
4 41.9B0 St 43,810
43,440 It ,,..43,490
.. 43,440 11 43,170
1 43,740 II 43.4S0
43,090 14 44,000
43,700 . t 43.3A0
1 43,SCO t( 43,370
11 43.170 17 43,90
It 43.000 tl 43.4O0
1 43.340 , tl 43,040
1 43.470 II 43,000
1 4300 tl 48,000
44.090
T.tal ' 1,360,740
fUturned Coplae 11,340
Not Total 1,338,390
lally Average 43,174
OKO. H. TZSC1IUCK,
Treasurer.
Siibacrlbed In my prefiire and sworn to
before ma thla 31st day of October. WO.
M. P. WALK ICR,
eal.) Notary Public
Sahaerlfcer. leavlaug (he vliy tem
porarily ikonll hare The Bee
mailed to them.' Address will be
rha.nre aa of tea it reejaeeted.
Plums promise to top all fruit cropa
text year.
Even tho rivers of Paris go iu for
the gay life.
Bourke Cock ran announces he has
retired. What haa he been doing?
Caleb Powers' latest term ia for two
years in congress at $7,500 per year.
"God'a pleasure ia at the end of our
prayera," said a great author. Amon.
. General Grant calla for an army of
150,060. What haa alarmed the
general?
One of the last great things Tolstoi
did was to express his opinion of Ber
nard Shaw.
Tho slogan of Buffalo is, "Buffalo
means Buaineaa." , Then It does not
mean that other?
The weather man will be entitled to
be included in the reasons for Thauks
giving celebration.
A late book tella how one may think
himself into happiness. The trouble
:omea when you wake up.
From his Interviews Jacob Rlis
aeema to be taking tho results of the
election much harder than Colonel
Koosevelt.
"The moment is not yet," snouts
Victor Napoleon, the French pre
tender. All right, Are when you're
Teady, Grldley.
Of course, If Madero and his foolish
Mexican followers really must have a
fight, those Texas Rangers can surely
Interest them.
Guatemala has adopted a 12-to-l
monetary system. Only four more on
the right side and Mr. Bryan would
have won down there.
If you know of any conventions
lying around loose that are worth hav
ing notify the Commercial, club, ao
that Omaha may nail them down.
The Belgium king complains bo
cause people keep throwing petitions
aver the tranaom at him. . The tran
out figured in young Mauuel's case,
too.
It is suggested that Jack Johnson,
aa a faithful son of Texas, be aent out
to tho border to meet those Mexican
invaders to open negotiations with
them. '
Those prohibition states that Insist
on searching trucks of travelera for
tho elusive elixir of life may compel
a man to hide it In hla stomach before
crossing the line.
Our amiable deiuocrailo contetn
porary refers to one of the apokeamen
before the city council aa "Union Pa
cific Whlttaker." That is the most
un kindest cut of ali.
Also, you may notice that when
meat "as advanced in price it went up
at Jumps of S, 6 and 7 centa, while in
this decline it comes down by the
-cent and Hi cents.
h. If w are not mistaken, there are
also a few people In Omaha who wish
I' the PostofflYe department had snuffed
Mjiut certain swindling mining stuck
j'4oiiferns btfoie they were atung.
12
Ml
Is it on Anti-Diat War!
Francisco I. Madrro, wbo wni over
whelmingly d'-foaled for president of
Mexico and, during the campaign, Im
prisoned by President Diaz, In tho re
puted leader of the anti-American
rioters In Mexico. Thin fact, when all
the eircumntancea are appreciated,
ought to allay any feeling of apprehen
aion ns to the friendly relation exist
ing between the povernments of the
two republics. Though the successor
to (leneral Bernardo Keyea, leader of
the anti-American party In 1908.
Madi-ro, In all probability, is, not try
ing to annoy the government at Wash
ington half aa much as he Is seeking
to harass President Dias by plunging
him Into trouble with the Vnited
States. If the disappointed rival of
the Mexican executive could precipi
tate such a condition It would no
doubt gratify him far more than would
any Injury he could Inflict on the
Americans.
The persistency with which . these
demonstration! have been carried on
and the seriousness with which they
are being regarded by the Mexican au
thorities suggests the guiding genius
of aome crafty and able leader. They
can no longer be dismissed aa merely
the desultory outbursts of Inflamed
fanatics. They must have a head to
them, and that head is Some ambitious
Mexican who would give all his pos
sessions to undermine Dias or to dis
credit his administration.
But the Diaz government may be
expected to guide the ship of ataie out
of the troubled waters in due time,
exercising its characteristic tact for
the preservation of peace with the
United States.
Goethali the Eight Man.
President Taft's visit to the Panama
canal has brought out plainly the Tact
that the right man waa finally obtained
to superintend the gigantic task of
building the canal and the president
may take all tho personal pride in this
he pleases, for he is the one who se
lected Major Goetnals of the United
States engineer corpa for the work.
The progress of the enterprise, ful
filling the promise of Its completion a
year before the time set; tho lack of
friction among the employes and the
good physical condition of the men are
separate proofs of the peculiar fitness
of Major Goetbals. The government
waa beginning to grow a little uneasy
in its quest for a man who would take
hold of this work and carry it through
to completion by January, 1916, and
the time lost in changes is only an
other evidence of the splendid selec
tion the president made iu Major
Goetbals.
Here is a suggestion of the great
value the government may make of its
army engineers, men trained at Weat
Point. Their operations mar aot bo
quite as dramatic or Kpectaculi.r- Li j
those of the officer on tho field of
battle, but we are not fighting many
battles nowadays and even if we were
it is doubtful If the leader of an army
of warriors could offer any service
that would rank higher for the genu
ine good of his country than that
which the army engineer may give in
peaceful enterprises similar to, though
even of far less magnitude, than the
one in which Major Goetnals is just
now achieving such fame for himself
and results for his country. The gov
ernment will have a vast amount of
this work to be done In tho next gen
eration, perfecting, its schemes of
reclamation and conservation and It
has only begun to see what splendid
resources it has in its military arm.
Railroad Expense Account.
In the railroad rate hearing before
the Interstate Commerce commission
at Washington Attorney Brandeis, for
the shippers, contends that what rail
roads need more than higher rates is
more science In their management. If
this were applied, he maintains cut
ting out waate and needleaa expense
they would have no ground on which
to base the semblance of a plea for
advanced schedules.
Whether unscientific or not in their
operating methods, the railroads
some of them, at least have shown
that no such, charge, may be fairly
made agalnat their system of book
keeping. For instance the New York
Central displays post-graduate skill in
its accounting department, aa reflected
in discoveries made In the course of
an official investigation. One of many
examples will serve to show the pro
digious science developed along these
lines. Before going into this, . how
ever, it might be well to state that for
years the New York Central has fol
lowed the plan of charging in every
month's expenses one-tenth of a full
year's depreciation. Examination of
the company's accounts for March is
said to show that Instead of charging
off one-tenth of the year's deprecia
tion, the deductlona covered three
months and under the plan, adopted
tho expensea for the month were in
creased by $373,523. And when an
order went out for the demolition of
thirty-five locomotives that were unfit
for use and the coat of them, placed at
$276,000, was chargel to operating
expenses for March, as late as June
these locomotives were still doing ser
vice for the New York Central.
This sort of bookkeeping may not
be common among railroads, but how
does the Interstate Commerce com
tulaalon know If they have found it
practiced by one of the leading roads?
Another thing that must be taken
into consideration in connection with
the purchase of new rolling stock is
the increased capacity nd the dimin
ished wear and tear of this equipment,
For the modern locomotive the boast
la that while It costs more than the old
type. It absorbs the extra cost In its
capacity for hauling greater tonnage
and the claim is made that the steel
car, which costs more than the wooden
car, also carries more and lasts longer.
So that it ia misleading merely to
charge against operating expenses
Items of this kind without specifying
their character. The trouble in all thla
rate hearing controversy is that there
are too many made-to-order statistical
exhibits and not enough frank discus
sion of facta as they exist.
A Public Defender.
Some member of the Douglas dele
gation to the coming legislature haa
an opportunity to sponsor a reform In
the method of defending indigent prig
oners that will' save our taxpayers a
substantial aum each year.
The Bee haa already called attention
to the fact that the existing system of
appointing special attorneys to defend
prisoners accused of crime, who make
affidavit of lack of means to hire a
lawyer for themselves, is proving
merely a practice achool for young
lawyers courting favor of the district
Judges, while the aggregate bills for
their services figure up between $3,500
and $4,000 a year, which would hire
a competent public defender at a fair
salary and leave the county treasury
from $1,500 to $2,000 to the good.
As the law now standa the Judges
of the district court have it quite
within their power to provide this
aolution of the problem, but they seem
to be indisposed to do so, preferring
rather to regard their right to appoint
defending attorneys as a part of their
judicial patronage to be acattered
around where It will do them individ
ually the most good. If the judges
insist upon being so wasteful with the
taxpayers' money perhaps the legisla
ture can be persuaded to come to our
relief by creating the position of pub
lic defender corresponding to that of
public prosecutor with a salary equal
to what la paid a deputy county attor
ney, the place to be filled either by
the Judges, the county attorney or the
county board. If this law is framed
so as to apply onl7 to counties In the
population class with Douglas it
should encounter no serious opposition
in the legislature.
After the Gold Brick Man.
It is to be hoped that the govern
ment's action against the gold brick
artist will not end until conditions are
created that will make it either im
possible or exceedingly dangerous for
this class of fakers to continue in bus
iness. And Postmaster General Hitch
cock seems fully determined on this
point. The Idea of the United States
mails being employed as tho chief In
strument in a system' of fraud that
o masses $40,000,000 or $50,000,000
to a set of wild-cat promoters is sim
ply astounding. The only criticism
to be offered in connection with fed
eral disposition is that action was not
taken long ago and the swindlers
nipped in the bud. If anything, the
government has been too patient with
these crooks. To be sure, it has
sought by other methods to stop them,
but these methods have proved thor
oughly Inadequate.
Now that these amazing frauda have
been disclosed the government should
have every popular encouragemeut
to go on even If it has to place a few
men behind the bars in order to es
tablish a safe precedent and warning.
It would be impossible to determine or
even approximate the far-reaching ef
fect of this class of swindling opera
tions. Not only have thousands of in
dividuals been defrauded, but legit
imate business Interests have suffered
Immeasurably. It should be made dan
gerous to engage in the fake stock
selling business. The brazen effront
ery of the gold brick vender using the
United States malls as the machinery
of his game Is enough In Itself to In
vite a severe penalty.
The democratic World-Herald seems
to be speculating as to what "gang"
Governor-elect Aldrich meant in the
statement coming from him from
Ohio. It is barely possible that the
"gang" Mr. Aldrich has In mind is the
democratic "gang" and their brewery
allies who put Governor Shallenberger
in the state house and have been run
ning things there through him and his
appointees for two years.
Perhaps the failure of election offi
cers in one voting district to keep a
poll list is due to the impression that
the voting machine not only recorded
the vote and counted it automatically,
but also listed the name of the voters,
too, and leave no burden on the Judges
and clerks of election but to draw
their pay.
It ia pleasing to know that the re
ported number of bacteria In our city
water has been greatly exaggerated.
The doctors who have been complain
ing about Omaha's distressing health-
fulness will have to look elsewhere
for relief.
Colonel Watterson's front page the
day after election looked like a bill
board advertisement of the Chantecler.
The colonel is excusable, though, in
view of the few chances the democratic
rooster has had to crow in recent
year a.
Attorney General Mullen ia not
going to miss any chance to play for
free advertising during the two
months that he has to strut in official
peacock feathers. What office ia he
framing up to run for?
"Ex-Bosa" Croker aaya he will re
turn to Ireland la the summer, but for
The Avalanche of "Noes."
Pioux City
Hewlldered mii pui lers of ' popular legle
latlon" in South Ikota are wondering
wht l the matter. Twelve proportions
in all ere ulmltted on tht aeven-foot
blanket ballot at the recent election. The
return- have not benn accurately tabulated,
but it Is plain that all the propooitioiiH.
lth poeaibly one exception, were anowed
under. The llet submitted com prided good,
bad and indifferent law. Rome of them
I had been enacted by the legislature, prac
tically without opposition. Confronted by
that awe lnnpirin; ballot. It appears that
the average voter to ik hla little pencil In
hand and marked a cros in the "no"
squares all the way down tha Mat. Theoret
ically he should vote "yeV on the good
laws and "no" on the bad or Indifferent.
Actually he took a wallop at all of them.
What waa the matter with the voter?
Waa he dHgurted over the siise of the bal
lot and the difficulty of voting his senti
ments intelligently? Was lie mad at the
county optlonlsts and equal suffragists for
not accepting previous expressions on the
same proportions? Waa he too indifferent
to the prlvllee of voting directly on legis
lation to try to Inform himself on the
merits of the questions submitted? Nobody
knows Just what was the matter with Mr.
Voter, but everybody agrees that the refer
endum wasn't worth the 1160.000 or mote
that It cost. And a great many former
ardent supporters of the referendum Idea
ara ready to admit that they want no more
such referendum. Indeed, the result of
the balloting- la generally Interpreted to
mean that this is the vt av voters feel about
it.
Supporters of tlis Inltative and referen
dum principle ara reluctant to admit that
the people do not want to be bothered
with direct legislation. They are more In
clined to seek aome fault in the application
of the principle. The firet guess is that it
has been made too easy to sat the wheels
of direct legii-lation going. In order to
propose a new law or to refer a law
enacted by the legislature It is necessary
to get up a petition containing the names j
the winter he wants a warmer clime.
It was the general understanding that
he left New York in the first place to
escape its warmth.
Our old friend, Edgar Howard,
spoiled the game of the lobbyists to
control the democratic legislative or
ganization two years ago, and he may
have to repeat the performance soon.
The wonder Is that that Tennessee
court did not have Judge Landls ar
rested for presuming to levy that fine
on the Oil trust in the first place with
out waiting for its aid or consent.
Colonel Watterson was right.
Colonel Roosevelt is the ' man on
horseback." To prove it he has Just
bought a new charger from a Ken
tucky neighbor of Marse Henry.
A Difference In the lomlii.
Washington Herald.
Now, aome of Air. Cannon's former -Hi-.
are insisting that Mr. Clark can have
nothing but a denatured speakership.
Talk About fiold Mines.
Chicago Reoord-Herald.
An Iowa man PaJS tios the mhtr a.
for ten eai'S of COriV Tet there are lunnla
who risk their lives Jiuntlng for gold.
tit-Hlng Away from Trouble.
Washington Star".
Mr. W. J. Bryan Is going hunting-.
There Is nothing like a ahot gun or a
camera to take a, man's mind off his
political troubles.
Fray Ins; for Knldawi-e.
Houston (Tex.) Post (dem.)
Now let the democracy consecrate ita
energies to the single purpose of showing
the country that Jt can be a majority
party without causing- Deoula to think
that tha world has placed a premium on
those mental and moral Deouliarltlea which
distinguish Idiots from rational beings.
Now Will Von Be Good f
Rockwell (Ia.) Phonograph.
The PhonrwraDh tin nin n f.ui, i.
the upright, progressive, political Integrity
o- ineoaore Koosevelt. and believes that
the bis Stick In his bands la never wlet.i.
In an unjust cause. With Roosevelt this
paper ia enlisted not lor ninety days, but
until the close of the war.
Take that, darn you
Sport that Tempt Death.
Baltimore American.
The theory that It is better to kill a few
boys in rough gam than to bring up a
race or mollycoddles Is susceptible of ar
gument It seems as though the resource
of this age ought to be able to bring np
a strong, healthy and couragcoua race of
men without making college sport a mat
ter of life and death, or considering It
necessary to have human sacrifice of fared
for the good of the rest. That Is rather
too much like a barkening b.ack to the old
pagan times to fit in with these enlight
ened ones.
"COBBLER, STICK TO TUB I. 4 ST,"
Const Tolstoi's I'nlqae Hernrd aa a
Bootmaker.
Philadelphia Record.
The story la told of Tolstoi bestowing a
pair of the boot he made with hi own
hands upon one of the countless tramps
ho get everything they could out of the
counts As soon a the tramp was well out
of sight of Krasnaya Polyana he threw
the boots away. He waa seen and taken
to task for this and replied: "Tha count
like to make boot and give them away,
but every tramp in Russia know that you
can't walk In them." Thla la supported by
another story of an American admirer of
the count, who asked a peaaant of the
neighborhood If the count made good boota.
"They are perfectly worthless," was the
reply. Probably the world would get along
better if the cobbler tuck to hi laat and
the literary man to hi pen. Brook Farm
waa established by victim of the common
delusion that intellectual workers ought to
be workers with their hands. After trying
the experiment for some time Hawthorne
taid It did Dot Improve hi literary work
to spend a part of each day "a chamber,
maid to a cow."
I
Our Birthday Book
ITovemVer S3, 1110.
Franklin Pierce, fourteenth president of
the United State, waa born November 'A
19W, at Hillaboro. N. II., and died in lau.
It was during hi administration that the
Kansas-Nebraska bill wa passed under
which Nebraska waa organised a a terri
tory. George II. MoCielUn, who wa mayor of
New York preceding Mayor Oaynor, I 4&.
He 1 the son of the union general of the
same name and wa born in Dresden. He
wa a member of congress at the time be
wa chosen mayor of Nw York.
Journal.
of only i per cent of the voteia. It is
reluctantly admitted tiiat no law enacted
by the legislature is likely to be so good
that S per cent tit the voters will not
slan a petition against it. And It is ad
mitted with equal reluctance that no law
proponed by Initiative Is likely to be
bau that 5 per cent of the vuteis
not sign a petition In favor of It. It
Is easier to sign a petition than to refuse
and justify refusal by argument. There
fore, it is suggested. If the power of direct
legislation Is to remain with the voters
the difficulty of appealing to it should be
Increased. This Is a humiliating admission
for any supporter of the principle to make,
but it is now being made freely In Noutn
Uakota by supporters of the principle.
Suggestions are offere,) that the required
percentage should be increased to 10. hi.
20. 25, or even 30 per cent. The suggestions
are logical. The bigger the petition re
quired, the more trouble and expense will
tie involved In circulating it and the
more chance the circulators will get tired
and quit before the necessary number of
signers lias been secured. The fewer propo
sitions submitted to the voters, the more
probability that they will deal with them
Intelligently and patiently.
If the law Is to be amended, rather thnn
repealed, there Is another point worthy of
consideration. Tha blanket ballot should
be done away with. The measures should
be submitted by title only, and the wording
of It should be made clear enough to give
the voter a good understand!
meaning of the law.
Still another lesHon Is suggested by the
South Dakota experience. Decisive defeat
of any measure at any referendum should
put It out of the running for a period of
years. The votevs do not want to pais
upon county option and woman suffrage
and similar matters at every election. Once
defeated, they ought to stay defeated for
awhile. If this result cannot be attained
In the Interests of political peace there Is
likely to be a popular protest that will
throw the whole machine into the discard.
Around New York
Xdpples oa the Current of X. fa
a Been la the Great Amrloaa
afetropoUa from Day to Day.
There la something funny and fakerish
about the way apartments are rented In
New Tork. In nearly all Instances when
an applicant asks what the price of an
apartment is. he Is told that It Is "so mtich
a month, with one month free." Occa
sionally two months free are allowed, and
this cuts the rent materially. The reason
for this Is because the owner of the house,
who may want to sell, likes to show that
the monthly rent roll Is a certain sum the
larger the better. That is all very fine, but
the investor who is thinking about buying
a house knows that the tenants have had
their apartments one or two months rent
free, and he figures accordingly. No one
1 deceived and no great harm I done,
except such harm as follows a deception
a transparent a a glass trust.
"I'm lookin' for some of mah folk to
come to the front and fight for me," said
an aged negro as he walked Into the cor.
oner's office In the Criminal Courts build
ing. "Mah boy Jid is charged with killing
a man."
"Who are your folk?" .xked Coroner
Winterbottom.
"Mr. Jltrtmy Osborne, "replied the old
fellow,
"You don't mean James W, Osborne?"
asked the coroner.
"Yessah; that's Mlstah Jimmy Osborne,"
wna tha reply. "Tell him old Uncle Peter
la yere and needs him."
A clerk waa instructed to commuunicate
with Jamea W. Osborne, former assistant
district attorney, over the telephone.
"tTncle Peter!" came back the response.
"Tell him either I or a man from my of
fice will be with him in a minute."
Ina few minutes James W. Osborne, a
nephew of the former member of the din
trio t attorney's staff, reached the coroner's
office to look after the interests of Uncle
Peter's "Boy Ed." It waa learned that
the old negro had been a slave on the
plantation of Osborne's father near Char
lotte, N.' C, before the civil war.
For hiore than a quarter of a century the
bridge commissioner ot New York City
and New Jersey have been considering
plans for a bridge across the Hudson river.
For a time Fifty-ninth street waa consid
ered a a favorable point from which to
tart the structure, but on account of the
high cost of land in Manhattan needed
for the approach that bad to be abandoned.
After many conferences One Hundredth
and One Hundred and Seventy-ninth
streets were selected as favorable points
of departure, the choice between them to
be determined by minor conditions. On the
basis of recent testa of the river bed, how
ever. Dr. Kuni, chairman of the geological
section of the New York Academy of Sci
ences and also the president of the Scenic
and Historic Preservation society, delivers
the expert opinion that nowhere below
Storm King ia there a bedrock accessible
to support the piers of a bridge. The dis
tance between shores, starting at the two
points designated, are 3.9U0 and 4.4U0 feet,
respectively, and a middle pier would be
essential to the support ot tha proposed
structure. No single span for such a dis
tance would be safe or feasible.
In the opinion of Dr. Kuns this part of
the river waa In prehistoric times a deep
arm of the aa and Its depth In preglaclal
times must have been about TOO feet. The
borings recenly made at various points
went down a far as VQ feet without find
ing anything more solid than silt and aand
mud, and this, it is claimed, must dissipate
the hopes and dreams of all those who have
wished and expected to see In the not dis
tant future a splendid structure spanning
the noble river.
Plana for underground connection of lo
cal transportation system with the new
Grand Central station provide for four
uperlmpoaod subway beneath Forty-second
street. Of these the uppermost will be a
concourse, from which access may be had
to any of the three levels below it, which
will no doubt be extended east to Lexing
ton avenue, connecting there with the
propobed trl-borough route. Below this
point concourse la tha 'level of tha present
lnter-borough subway.
The floor of this tunnel will become the
roof of the station of the McAdoo tubes
at the Orand Central, and below that will
be the Belmont tunnel to Kong Island
City, the operation of which seem to be
getting within the range ot probability as
the result of the luterborough company'
latest proposals.
Taken as a whole, the new plans af
ford a most striking Illustration of New
York's underground development. The
new terminal will provide facilities fur
handling iOU, 000,000 passengera a year
mere than five times lis present capacity
but with the arrangements which have
been made for reaching and leaving the
station without coming to the street the
immediate neighborhood around the Orand
Central will give only alight Indication of!
thla great Increase In traffic.
"NoAIuml"
Ko Lime
ess,Wlsa .r I -,r- -4V r 4x
VAlvm La food mt
Pnf. J
Read tho iabct. Duy no
baking powder unless tho
Cream of Tartar puarantco
la civenm
riTi r--i riTfo)
CRCAM
Ml MEM
A straight, honest. Cream of Tartar
Baking Powder. Made from Grapes.
Malccs better, more healthful food.
Ccld vitlsaut desertion
a
PEOPLE TALKED ABOUT.
Yankee ssllors seem to be having a good
time abroad. When Jack Is ashore he
doesn't care much whose shore it lb.
A murder eight years old haa been un
earthed in New York, and the police serin
Just aa much interested as though it were
one of the fresh ones.
Juan Burcei, a Mexican, has Just died at
San Diego at the age of 122 years. This
country waa only twelve yeara old when he
was born. In some respects his own
country Is not yet that old.
Mrs. Campbell of Philsdelplila told the
suffrage convention at Harrisburg that she
wanted to vote because she paid taxea the
same aa a man. There is a calm and
logical spirit Iu this far more effective than
the hurling of a brick through a parlia
ment window.
"John D. Rockefeller has Just been at
the horse show for the first time in his
life," observes th. Brooklyn K&gle. "The
horse I not run by gasoline, but only in
rare Instances, when fed on by-product
gluten meal, bought at 25 Broadway at
$-' a ton, doea the horse contribute to the
Rockefeller lnoome. The horse, there
fore, like the landscape, may be enjoyed
by Mr. Rockefeller as a pleasing anterior
arrangement."
SMILING REMARKS.
"How Is your wife getting on with her
social settlement work?''
"Great. She' had her picture In th
paper twice thla month." Detroit Free
Press.
"Pop. will you tell me one tiling?"
"What ia It, my on?"
"When they have pets on shipboard, do
they prefer old aea dog to ocean grey
hounds?" Baltimore American.
"Well," said the cheery citizen, "Thanks
giving day will soon be here."
"Yes." replied the apprehensive man.
"It'a going to be the aame old struggle
with mince pie and turkey and sage and
MOICH HI
t aline X
BLAC.s i WHITt
' HOuat o cchO"i
i
I
Rr Social Arrangements
Social life iu forty thousand Americnu cities and
towns has been made brighter by the Local and I.on Dis
tance Lines of the Hell Telephone System.
Dell Service is today serving tie social Hoods of
twenty-five million of people over fiv million tele
phones. One pcrsou in every five in America uses tbe Hell
Telephone every day, because it Is tbe only telephone that
gives universal service.
& NEBRASKA TELEPHONE CO.
r
Pliosphaic X
aeMa.'ej3WWa1saaage. s V v.
therefore act aa a poise."
YmU Vuvmity.
onions and things. 'Couldn't we xtsrt s
movement to make Thanksgiving one of
the safe and sane, - .holidays'.'" Chicago
Journal.
Bawlln What ran you do with, a bo
that's full of pure cussednesa?
cliayne If It's strictly' pure, with no ad
mixture, nothing. Chicago Tribune.
Dr. Thirdly I fear you didn't enjoy the
sermon this morning. 1 was Buffering with
neuralgic pains In my head.
Mrs. Jones, me. doctor, I wotildn t
have thought from your talkln you had a
pain or au thing in your head.--Llfe.
"A waiter was arrested at the club to.
day rii.1 the policeman asked me where h.
could take him to question him."
"What did you say?"
"I told him to take him to the grill
room." Haiti mo te American.
Cousin Hob So Arthur proposed, last
night?
Maud Yes.
Cousin Bob And did ydil accept blm"
Maud I was ho awfully exalted I don t
know whether 1 accepted him or not. T:
he comes tonight 1 did. and If he-ilo,..-n i
1 didn't. Kansas City Journal.
SARTORIAL CLERGY.
(Clarence Snyder In Puck.t
The north wind slirleks the knell of sum
mer days,
The falling leave foretell tha coming
snows;
My last year's suit has gone Its devious
wavs.
1 And 1 mu. have an overcoat, Ood knows!
i I
Now fades the glimmering five-spot from
my sight,
A lonely meg la all my pocket boasts;
The rest, It does appear, has taken flight
And lined tip with the dead past s other
ghosts.
Benea
th this straw-lhatched lid. this light
relght ntt. ' ' ' 'r,'-' -v.
Where heaves the akin In many a gooae-
pimp'd heap,
Kai-h in his cosy nook ambushed for loot.
The rude germs of tuberculosl sleep.
The breesy call of some tailor's ad.
The dummies leering from behind th.
glass,
No more can make my youthful heart beat
glad
The credit man has done his worst. Ala.!
ZZ3
BLACK & WHITE
SCOTCH WHISKY
All article to become popular must
have merit. That is -why Black k
White has a larger sale than an j' other
Scotch whisky in the United States.
IS ALL RIGHT
Ij8MMj"ffffffIMjn:
A. F. McAdamty Local Manager.