6 THE BEE: OMAHA. TITOSDAY. DEOEMBrTR. 1, 1010. 'Hie omaiia Daily I'm: ror.NDtl) BY EDWARD ItOSKWATHIl. V1CTOK ROSKWJTBR, EDITOR. Filtered at Omah rlass matter. postofflce aa second- TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Ftinday Bee, one year rintuiday Hw. onr year.... I 'ally Bee (without Bunday), one yea Dally Bee and Sunday, one year ..2.r . .? IhO . .4 i ..ix.oo DELIVERED BY CARRIER. Evening Bee (without Sunday), per wffk f Evening Bee (with Hunda . per week lc Pally Bee (Including Sunday, per week..lic Daily Bee (without Sunday!, per week..Kic Addrese all complaints of irregularities in deilvery to City Circulation 1 'epartinent. OFFICE. Omaha the Hee Building. 8'Mith Omaha 6-S North Twenty-fourth Street. Council Uluffs 1.1 f-'eott Street. Lincoln .' Utile Building. Chicago l.VCi .Marquette hulldlng. New Ynrk Roonia 110l-ll'2 No. 34 Weal Thtrtv-third Street. Washington 7Z.. Fourteenth Slreet, N. W. CORRESI'UNDENCE. Communications relating to news and editorial matter Hhould be addressed: Omaha fe, i-lltrial lN-partment. REMITTANCES. Wttiit by tli-Ntt, apri.a or postal order payable to The Hew Publishing Company (iily i-cent stamps received In payment of mall account. Personal checks except on Omaha, and eastern exchange nut accepted. STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION State of Nebraska, Douglas County, s George H. Txsrliut k, treasurvr of The P-we ruhllHhiiiK company, lx'1 n ttul) worn says tlrt the actual number of full nit coiriph'le copies if The Dally, Morning, Evening ami Sunday lie printed during the month of November, 1910, was aa follows- 1 43,680 2 43,600 3 43,060 4 43,570 1 43,930 44.300 7 43,330 S 43,310 9 04,660 JO 48,470 11 44,640 12 43,830 It 44,300 14 43,360 15 .43,960 16 43,850 17. . 18 ' ' ' ll'nan I Total ; x,33O,080 ! Returned copies 15,436 ! Net Total Dally Average GEO. 1,306,454 43,615 B. TZSCHUCK, Treasurer. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me thla 30th day of November, 1910. M. P. WALKER, (Seal.) Notary Public. Subscribers learlna tha city tem porarily aboald kan Tha Baa mailed to them. Address will bs chanced aa often aa requested. If you have the price, Christmas shopping early. do your The lure of the city Is aa strong in Nebraska as It la anywhere else. Can it be that those official reports of peace In Mexico are exaggerated ' Thus far no reports of people being killed by the falling prices have come in. "Germany Is now ready for war." News l(m, What d' you say we don't fight? ' tt --------------. ". ! 'i ')1 r"rtTr ; Mrs,. Sage's model town will be a grand success if she can persuade any body to live lo it. . Industries of the west are reported to be running on full time, at least tha Reno divorce mill is. i Uurray for the Kingdom of Gage! ! It atlll holds its proud place aa third 1 in Nebraska's counties. Taken all in all November waa a very satisfactory month, especially with relation to the coal bills. Chicago's worth has been computed at something over 12,500,000,000. How much did they figure the Cubs in for? Convicta in tha Minnesota peniten tiary make binder twine. Maybe that accounts for the few hangings they have at Stillwater. Talk about- apeetfy. Justice!- Thla man Gallagher ' shot Mayor Gaynor some five month i ago and they have him indicted already. Arthur Mull en; .get a nice little trip to Washington at tha expense of the state. Tha moribund bank guaranty law is Mowing aoma good. Nemaha county shows a shrinkage in population. Church Howe and "Tom" Majora ought to get together at once on thla question. Ethal Lenav says aha wants to get behind something where aha will be alona with her aorrow. We hope she will not get behind the footlights. Home products should be used by borne people. But home manufactur era should take care that home people know where to Cud home products. "Is a bold lover in earnest in hla wooing?" asks an emotional editress Now, of course, the case of every bold lover can .be infallibly determined by that rule. Billy Sunday got ao uaed to signing contracts for every engagement while playing ball that ha finds It difficult to pursue ny other method In bis evau gellst work. Those British suffragette ara sue reeding admirably in making them' selves heard, and aeen. but how adml rably ara they promoting tha causa of woman suffrage A New Jersey woman lost her reason when told she had Inherited $150,000. Yet a St. Louts girl of IS stood tha strain, of being told aha had fallen heir to f JO.OPp.OOO. Governor Shalienberger proposes to urge civil service for state Institutions Ha didn't hava this in mind when ka waa finding places for hungry demo crat. .-.'... ....... Primary Pledge Menaced. Reports from California Indicate a movement to thwart the will of the people as expressed In the primaries last August In the cholte of A. O. Spalding for United States senator. HI nearest competitor In the rare, John D. Works of Los Angeles, and hla friends, are Raid to be quietly plan ning to override the primary' pledge and beat Mr. Spalding In the leglsla ti're. Repudiating pledges, political or otherwise. Is not In Itself, a moat hon orable thing to do. But It Is an open question as to bow much criticism may justly be offered of a repudiation In the case of one of these primary pledges. Sooner or later the practice Itself must be broken up and the first step toward that end probably could be ro easier taken than through just such a movement. The proposition is one that should te considered In the broadest sense and not on any personal grounds. The constitution of the United States pre scribes how we shall elect our United States senators. It simply says they shall be chosen by the legislatures. It does not delegate to the people the right to make any part of the choice, except as the people speak through their legislators whom they have elected by direct ballot. This thing Of 19 43,760 ! compelling candidates ror tne logisia- 20 43,9oo ' ture to pledge themselves before elec- 43,910 jtlon to vote for the candidate for the o3 ' .43 930 ' annate receiving the highest number 24 43.630 j of votes in the primary or general elec- 25 43,740 jtlon is a recent device that contravenes 43 980 the 0r8anlc law. It may be a good 28!! . .!! .! .!43,38oi way to choose senators. The popular 29 43,340 j election by direct vote may be atlll a 30 4a'8eo I better way, but the point Is the federal constitution does not prescribe either w ay, and either way, therefore, Is not I compatible with the only law that has anything to say on the subject. In the California case the friends of him who received tha highest popular vote are charging tha other fellows with "political brigandage" in their attempt to circumvent the popular ma jority, ut when it comes to that, what are they doing but insisting that the constitution shall be. obeyed and the senator shall be elected oy legal process? Indeed, who Is the political brigand, the man who attempts to set aside the organic law of he land, or the one who insists that It shall not be set aside? But there, of course, conies In that "primary pledge." It is regarded as bad sportsmanship to go back on an agreement and Mr. Spalding was a sport before he was a politician, but the constitution of the United States wa not framed primarily to govern the amenities between sports. When it comes to a mere matter of law, isn't it an old principle that a bad pledge broken Is better tharjjf .carried out? Home Products. 'He who tooteth not hla own born, the same shall not be tooted," la a maxim pregnant with,-wisdom which s just coming to be understood by the manufacturers of Omaha. . For many years they have been content to slip along on gum shoes or rubber tires, making aa little noise as possi ble for fear, perhaps, of disturbing the community. Now and again tha news papers have undertaken to give pub licity to tha fact that certain lines of manufacturing prospered extensively in Omaha, but these efforts have ben to a large extent thwarted by the re luctance of tha manutacturers them selves, who have preferred to conduct their business quietly, if not secretly. Sentiments expressed at the get-to gether dinner on Tuesday evening in dicate that a change Is coming over the spirit of the dream J.n this regard and that tha Omaha factories are be ginning' to make a noise In tha world. If the men. f who are at the head of tha various manufacturing en terprises now beinr carried on in Omaha will only follow up tha sugges tions of some of the speakers at that panquet, they will soon find that tha tooting of their own horn will draw to them such public attention as will necessitate the enlargement of their plants. Judicious advertising cer talnly brings results. Railway! and Good Eoadi. Tha good roads movement has lacked juat the kind of strength it will get from the co-operation of tha railroads. several of whose presidents have gone into tha new association for tha im provement of highways. These men will be actuated by no sentimental mo tive, but by the purely practical pur pose of increasing tha sources of reve nue for their respective companies. They will also have both the skill and facilities to afford the best sort of help. With mora than 400,000,000 acrea of land yet untitled in this country, we have one view of what good roads would mean to railroad transportation. It will ba necessary, before developing much of this land, to build good wagon roads between it and tha railways. Railroads occasionally have what ara called car shortagea. They ara very disastrous in many ways. And these situations ara often caused by a lack of good roads. That la, farmers will not attempt to haul their produce) to market for shipment during the bad road season and thla naturally atores up oa tha farms great quantities of freight. When tha roads become pas sable It Is rushed to tha train and the railroads are congested. Tha bur dens are numerous and fall on many shoulders. ' All this will be avoided when the good roads movement geM to working properly. Tha active participation of these railroad presidents. therefore In; Is one Industry capable or greater de this great movement means much for j veiopment in Nebraska It Is milling, it. Such men as President Mc'rca of Nebraska wheat makes the best flour the Pennsylvania. I.. W. Hill of the and the best bread obtainable, and Groat Northern, Kinley of the South- I Nebraska mills can manufacture flour ern, Yoakum of the Fris' o and Rip- of as tine quality as can be obtained In ley of the Santa Fe would add strength and virility to any cause or movement. It will be observed that every section of the I'ntted States is fairly well rep resented In this array of presidents, too; another very good thing for the highway propaganda. The Leaven of Sanity. The governors assembled at Frank fort. Ky., to discuss uniformity in leg islation w ill find, as Dr. Woodrow Wil son told them In his address, that "No absolute, uniform set of rulea is likely to fit the infinitely varied circum stances of the states and their peo ple." Yet there Is one principle that may with vast profit be generally ap plied, and that ia the principle of sane thought and action, which formed the very keynote of Dr. Wilson's address. Dr. Wilson added hat the people are calling for ofcen leadership today "and they wilsh their leaders to be men who represent them all." True enough, but in addition to this demand for per sonal Integrity dwells deep in the heart a most Insistent appeal for aane leadership, for the spirit of sanity as the leavening Influence throughout the country. It is needed In the making of state lawa and their execution, and it Is needed in the co-ordination of state and national governments. If the conservative element of this na tion and by that we do not mean the reactionary element can evolve out of the confusion of new ideas a princi ple of sane leadership that can be fitted into the "infinitely varied cir cumstances" of the states and their people, it will have done enough to Justify itself. That is the only hard and fast rule that we know of that can be applied in common. Unquestionably one of the big prob lems of today and tomorrow is in the proper relation of state and national authority. The nature of the new ia sues which development of natural re sources forces upon us makes this so. These problems are going to perplex the best, minds. They ought, there fore, have the beat thought that all those in authority can give them, and under no circumstances should they be made the means of promoting selfish ends by appealing to sentiment rather than sense. Says Dr. Wilson: W have no foolish or pedantic Jealousv of federal power. But we do not believe the Intervention of federal powers either necessary or desirable. We are not at tempting a task of mediation; neither are we trying to fend off revolution. A good code for the governors to follow. No 111 Is likely to come to either state or federal power so long as their co-ordination is left to sane and "honest leaders. It is a thing over which straw men should not be set up merely to knock down. We are at the point now where mistakes of that sort count most In the summaries. What needs to be kept constantly la mind Is that every change in. method or policy of government Is not necessarily an im provement. First Duty of the Legislature. The census return for Nebraska re minds us of the most important task that will be before the Incoming legis lature that of redistrlcting Nebraska for legislative purposes. Tha shifting of population In thla state baa been such aa to make the present distribution of membership in both branches of tha legislature so un just that no argument in favor of a reapportionment should ba required. This matter baa been before the peo ple now for twenty years, and one leg lalature after another has avoided or evaded ita constitutional duty, per petuating an injustice until it can no longer be tolerated. Countlea of con siderable population have been carved out of what was unorganised territory at the time tha atate waa last dis tricted, while other counties that then existed have Increased their population many fold. It is true that the older countlea of the state have made de cided growth also, but not in propor tion to that of the newer sections. It is also a matter of simple Justice to those people who have settled in the western half of Nebraska that they be given representation In tha legislature on a basis that will be fair and equi table. While wa ara about It, we might as well take step to obliterate the tradi tional division of the state on North find South Platte lines. No good rea aon can be found for perpetuating this political absurdity.- It has entered into politics for many years and baa had soma effect in ahaplfig tha course of events as to the representation in con gress. But tha time baa coma when Nebraska should not be divided by any lines, eaat or west, north or south. Tha people of the state are patriotic and consistently loyal In all other direc tions, and why they should ba divided amongst themselves on the basis of tradition passes understanding. If the next legislature will take aucb acticn aa will give tha people of Ne braska proper representation In tha general assembly -and clear tha way for the obliteration of sectional di vision, so that tha atate shall coma to be considered a a whole, it will per form a public service greater than that of any of Ita predecessor. Tha "flour fight" that is now going on la central Nebraska calls attention to an anomaly in our procedure. It seems absurd that Nebraska wheat should be shipped to Minneapolis to be ground Into flour and then sent back to thla state to ba eaten. If, there the world. Those convicted land fencera will not be permitted to serve their term of Imprisonment at a fashionable club, but they will apparently note little difference. It la getting so It Is a real pleasure to go to Jail under proper circumstances. Illinois makes a better showing for rural population than New York. Chi cago contains only two-fifthe of Illi nois' total population, while New York City contains one-half and a little more of the population of that state- Destruction of a factory by fire was hardly an appropriate way to mark the manufacturers' banquet, but If It be rebuilt bigger and better It will ahow the proper phase of the Omaha spirit. James J. Hill predicts that within a year thousands of men will ba Idle be cause of the country's waste. But then Mr. Hill has cried "wolf so many, many times and the wolf came not. The late candidates may find some Interest in studying the table pub lished In The Bee. It will give them a good idea of what hit them and where It landed. The republican majority in Minne sota is atill climbing. At last accounts it had passed the 60,000-mark and it was somewhere up in the Red river valley then. Invasion of American Ideas. Springfield Republican. Among Premier Asqulth's moat demagogic policies, In the opinion of his conservative opponents, la the payment of salaries to members of Parliament. Paid members suggest the Amerlcanliatlon of British poli tics to the Insular mind. No One Ublla-ed to Bite. Chicago Record-Herald. While it Is true that tha robbing of easy marks by means of get-rich-qulck schemes Is a depraved practice, It is worth while to remember that persons are not vic timized by these swindles unless they yield to the deolre to get something for nothing. "Let la Be Thankful." Chicago Inter Ooean. Whatever the faults of our American women, let us ba thankful they are neither such nervous degenerates, nor euch sexless hooligans aa to behave themselves as do their British sisters. And let us again be thankful that It Is really Impossible for American men even to Imagine American women so disgracing themselves. Inexperience Brightens Hope. New York World. The fact that 120 representatives in tha next house never; sat In eongresa before muy prove a j-eal public gain. If they know less about the methods of pushing special claims . and private pension bills and working the patronage game in all Its details they may have mora time to devote to what Is really public business. v Reformed Diplomacy. Boston Transcript. Ambassador Reld says that if there ia a nobler profession connected with merely human affairs than diplomacy no man has yet found It. ; Diplomacy has, indeed, greatly Improved since the Ellsabethan definition of an ambassador a "an honest man sent to lie abroad for the common wealth," and even since Napoleon said, "I wish I had a gentleman In my service who could He like Monsieur de Metternloh," but It Is not yet quite guileless. NO OPFKNSE MEANT. Why Amerlcava Sqaadroa Cat Ont North Ben Porta. Washington Merald. The visit of the American battleships to English and French ports without touching at German station ha annoyed that na tion, which sees In the episode a deliberate slight. We cannot subscribe to such a version. Certainly no insult was Intended. Admiral von Reventlow' statement, that "the lack In respect of courtesy requires to be regis tered." seems altogether out of place. But In vain we' search the column of the preaa of thla country for a plausible reason for the" omission or this international courtesy, etlll, the cause Is plain. The North sea Is on of the mcst treach erous bodies of water In the world. Choppy, short waves, submerged reefs, a steadily receding sea, and the danger thus laid bare to levlatbana of the present day, and to those who are not absolutely sure of their charts and their channels, make It anything but safe for a foreign man-of-war to aall thla highly dangerous sea. No doubt the Navy department had this In mind, and while possibly trifle too careful, and per haps sneered at by wiseacres, It Is far better to avoid unnecessary danger than to court It, especially at this time of the year in northern cltmea. We should all know the saying that an ounce of prevention Is worth a pound of cure. No doubt the emperor understands our apparent "diacourteay." Our Birthday Book. December 1, ltlO. Queen Alexandra, widow of King Edward VII and mother of King George V, waa born December 1, l&H. Sue la a native of Denmark, eldeet daughter of King Chrts- tion XIX. and Slater to Empress Dagmar of Rusala and King George I of Greece, Elmer J. Burkett United Btates senator from Nebraska, ia celebrating his forty third birthday today. He was born In Mills county, Iowa, and his first expedi tion into Nebraska waa as a member of aa amateur baae ball team. He repreaented the first district in eongresa several terma and waa promoted to the senate, being de feated last month on a popular preferential vote for United States senator. Laweoa G. Brian, atate treaaurer of N braska, was born December 1, U61, at Blalrstowa. Ia. He located in Albion where be was a prosperous business man at the time he waa elected treaaurer four year ago. H waa re-elected for a second term. John A. BootC real estate maa, who was elected eounty commissioner last fall, but died shortly after taking office, would have been celebrating hla birthday today. Ht waa born in latil in Lancaster county, Penn sylvania, and looked after the Interests of j tna Aai estate In it realty holdings in I Omaha, PERSONAL AND OTHERWISE. King Corn is steadily extending his do minion In the land of cotton. County rorn shows are quite fashionable In Ken tucky. A mail car full of maKailnes burned on a New York railroad the other day. The spectacle of Incendiary literature burning luelf is a novelty worth noting. The demand for martyr's croans among the flKbting suffragettes of tendon threatens to drive present styles of head gear to the millinery Junk pile. New York has had enough experience to be convinced that the best means of suppressing the smoking automobile Is to turn the exhaust pipe upward In front and give the driver the full benefit of his own smell factory. The right of school teachers to paddle their unruly pupils has been affirmed by the courts of Washington, raddles are useful In emergencies, but the old reliable slipper beats 'em all for resiliency and mastering the curves. It Is pathetic to not that John G. Car lisle should have been so poor at the time of his death that hla family oould not provide means for his burial at his old home In Kentucky, yet every political wind jammer in the country seventeen years ago accused him of selling out to Wall street. H. C. Henry of Seattle, railroad builder, banker and philanthropist. Is about to add pawn brokerage to his aotlvltles. His pur pose Is to loan small sums of money at low Interest rates on collateral that la not usually pawnabte. Only enough profit to run the establishment Is sought, the main idea being to help the worthy poor. There recently died In St. Louis, at the age of 61 year, Pierre Chouteau, lineal descendant of the founder of that city, who was the Instigator of the Louisiana Purchase exposition. It was natural that Mr. Chouteau should have been an active member of the Missouri Historical society, to which he gave valuable charts and books that had come down to him. BIG RASCALS, LITTLES FOOLS. Confederacy of Frand Gxclvded from the Mali. Baltimore American. One thing stands out strikingly In the re markable story of wholesale swindling that has come to light through the efforts of Secretary Hitchcock, and the men under him. It is the fact that big rascals thrive on little fools. That a great confederacy of fraud should be concocted and send out Its scoop nets through the United States and gather In the guileless In multlmllllona Is a curious commentary upon the caustic re mark used by Carlyl with reference to the people of his own country that they were mostly fools. The same instincts of the weak and ig norant have been played upon that are al ways played upon by men who seek wealth by Ingenious fraud. Here is a chain of bogus corporations linked together and employing the service of persons to asslRt them In their fraud who were full of guilty knowledge of the real character of the concerns or who, having such knowledge. became so Involved In the operation aa to make It hard for them to get out. The multitude of Investors In the en graved paper of the bogus crew represent the host of weak fools who always come to light whenever there Is a bursting of the Inflated bubbles. The big rascals plan the harveft and the little fools do the sowing. The first have the situation entirely In hand; the other have as their asset their credulity. Borne way they have the "suck ers' " dream In which their small funds are made to create vast revenues. The get- rlch fever Is In their blood, and they remain awake at nights to count their prospective Any kind of a proposition serves to tell on those who, lacking the capability of earning money by application or being for tunate In the possession of easy wealth, seek to get ahead of their bank account by the alchemy of Investments, the real nature of which they do not know. The only protection the Unlte-1 States can offer Is to close the mails to such concerns after their real nature has been made known. In the meantime the mischief Is don, and the "easy marks" have been separated from their money. Now that the Postofflce department has gotten together upon the trail of the ras cal and rounded them up It Is to be hoped that It will not expend Its energies upon the minor agents and employes, but land the leading rascals of the aggregation in jail. Yet all the government can do to pub- nsn tne Dig rascals will not avail to more than check the depredations, for as long as men are born In folly the shrewd and unscrupulous will make each their prey. W KNOW IT IS THERE." Activities of American Dollar In British Pelltlra. Chicago American. Distressfully sparring for time In their present contest with the TJoyd-George com bination, the English lords have recently fended by bitter allusion to "vulgar Amer ican dollars in British politics" meaning the contributions of Irish-Americans to the home rule cause. To which Lloyd-George counter with a sharp rejoinder that "many a noble house I tottering to It fall which had Its foun datlons underpinned by American money" meaning American money which crossed the water by way of marriage settlements Whereupon the duke of Marlborough, feeling himself especially slammed, retorts that "It Is cowardly to attack the lords through their ladles!" The noble duke' defense sound lofty but It ia evasive. The liberals are not attacking titled Rngllsh ladies of American origin, but the solecism of noble husbands using American dollars to boost a Tory reaction) And the point seems to be a good one. When Dickens' character, Lavvy Wllfer, pronounced the word "petticoat" In the presence of company and waa aharply re buked by her mother, Lavvy's admirer, Mr. George Sampson, rushed to Lavvy's defense by saying: "After all, ma'am, we know It Is there!" After all, ws know that the American marriage dollar are there hard at work to shore up the obsolete House of Lords; and between such dollars, employed In such a causa, . and the unselfish contributions of Irish-Americans made to establish Amer ican Idea In their native land, there I no room for doubtful discussion. FLYERS CARRYING FREIGHT. Prospective Package Delivery System by Aeroplane. Cleveland Plain Dealer. An aviator has flown from Dayton to Columbus carrying $1,000 worth of silk. He covered the sixty-five miles at the rate of a mile a minute. The load wa not bulky and It could have been shipped In som other fashion. The proceeding, however, was Interesting as indicating that light freight ran be carried by the air line In much lea time than by any other means of transportation. The aeroplane. If It Is to continue Its ad vance, must have some potential commer cial use. As a plaything It Is not worth. while. As the science of aviation ad vancea, however, there I every reason to believe that practical uais will be found, and that the development will be along these lines. Offhand on is Inclined to predict that the dirigible, or lighter than air sky ship, will have a greater usefulness than tha Dior LDlereaUng aeroplane. It froaaibjli. Crullers, All Cakes Biscuits. More Tasty, A 1 Absolutely J' X! j. . I 0 ' ties for commerce seem to be much larger. We can conceive a passenger or a freight dirigible, but at present an aeroplane tie- voted to these uses Is beyond imagination. It Is, however, very unsafe to prophesy as to the future of scientific development. The railway locomotive, the steamboat and the automobile all seemed to be Imprac tical plaything when they were first de vised. STRANGE FRRAK OF FORTUNE. What Happened to Ownerless Con federate Money. Brooklyn Eagle. When the southern confederacy fell, it fell. Like the one-horse shay, it went all to pieces, nothing first, Just as bubbles do when they burst. Well, when the confederacy thus col lapsed, It was relying through Its agents on money for cotton stored abroad. The eotton had run theDlockade. The money ran the blockade Uadt to the south and It was received by the agent who had transmitted It more than once before to the Richmond government. At the very last there was no Richmond government and no confederacy. The last Installment of money for cotton was re ceived after the confederategovernment had ceased to be. It could not be returned to a government that had ceased to exist and whose officers were fugitives. The agent who received that last Installment did not feel like handing It over to the United State government. The latter did not know the money existed, and, there fore, could make no claim for the money. It did not know the agent existed. It could make no claim on him. He Just retained the money. There was no one to return It to here. There was none to whom It belonged here. There was none who claimed it here. The man kept It, came north, Invested It, made more money with It, and became one of the richest and most Influential business men In New York, dying on Friday a multi millionaire, respected, unimpeachable and allied through the marriages of his chil dren with some of the most distinguished. families In the United States and Great Britain. AVe may add that this ex-confed erate agent and subsequent metropolitan multimillionaire became one of the most liberal supporters of charity, education and religion, south and north, and made them the beneficiaries of the growth of the for tune of which the events suggested had made him the sole conceivable custodian. What he gave away an hundred times ex ceeded what events laid In his lap. What he "made" a thousand times exceeded what he received and has bequeathed. And we may further Incidentally an nounce the death of Richard T. Wilson at Ml Fifth avenue, In Manhattan, on Friday midnight A Safe Deposit Box f ',u.'m. vt-ysvw. .v- 1 vyw 1 at the rentals charged is most economical Insurance. The popular size costs but $3.00 per year. You cannot afford not to keep insurance, policies, deeds and other valuables in a Fire and Burglar Proof Vault, such as is found in this bank. Entrance to Vaults 807 South 18th Street, THE OLDEST NATIONAL BANK IN NEBRASKA V) er Hot Bread Economical, n ww . it v 1 I Healthful lj w - ; SUNNY OEMS. "Yes, Bella Is very busy. She write pamphlets on 'Good Bread' and 'Safe Salads' and Troper Pastries.' She has become one ot tne loading authorities on culinary sanitation." "Is Bella a cook?" "No. Blie's an essayist." Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Why do you want to voteT" "So as to keep my huahand home mors," replied young Mrs. Torklns. "AH I will have to do Is to take the opposite side of a question. Then we can be paired on very election and give ourselves no further concern about It." Washington btar. "How did that spiritualist exhibition make out?" "ll was what you might call a reverse failure." "How so?" . . "It was a show of a ghost which didn't result in the ghost of a show." Baltimore American. "Emerson says theie Is always a best way of doing everything." 1 "Is there? I wonder If he ever found a best way of wearing a pair of shoes thai were about a slae too small." Chicago Record-Herald. Clncinnatun had returned to hla farm, "Back to the land!" he chuckled. At a later period, In spite of the pro longed and agonized howling of the New York papers, he assumed the dictatorship again. Chicago Tribune. "Why should you be so discouraged. Mrsv Wattleson? It seems to me that you are always complaining. Yet you have neres suffered a great loss." "Haven't I? Our cook left day before yeas terday nnd she weighed at least 09 pouadsv - Chicago Record-Herald. , "What Is that patient doing over thr4) in the corner?" "He's a craxy circus man who is draw ing up a catalogue for an entirely original menagerie." "What animals has he catalogued at far?" . "A sun dog, a moon calf, an ocean greyhound, a sea puss and an Irish bulL" Baltimore American. WILLIE ON THE NEW BABY. llarper's Weekly. We 'm got a new toy up four house. It ain't no biRger ner a mouse. Its eyes is blue, like sister's dnIL An' it 'a no 11101 e hair n a billiard ball It makes such faces, ye never saw Their like In all your life before. He's soft and squashy as a oat, . An' seems to love to sing an' chat. Though ro far, far a 1 have heard, "Goo-gah" 's his one and only word. Be says It ninety tlmos a day, Though what It means I cannot say. So far I think It's mighty queer They do not like to let me near. An' when I've ast to take him out They holler, "No!" My, how they shouti But l aw and Maw, they do a pile Of playiu' with hlin all the while. I hope some time the day will come When 1 can play round with him some. For 'f all the toys I ever see , Me is the best of all that be. You'd almost think, to hear him squeal. That he waa really, really real! Patriotism s j The stomach is a larger faotor ia " life, liberty and tb pur suit of happiness" than most people are aware. Patriotism can withstand hanger but not dyspepsia. The confirmed dys peptic "is fit for treason, stratagems and spoils." Tb ssan who oct to the front for his country with a weak stomach will be weak soldier and fault finder. A sound stomscb makes for good citizenship as well ss for health and happiness. Uisesses o tb stomach and other orgsns ul digestion and nutrition are promptly and permanently cured by the use of Dr. PIERCE" GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERT. It build up th body wltb mound tltab mad molld nnci. Tb dealer who offers s substitnte for the " Discovery " ia only seeking to mske th little more profit realized oa tha sale of less meritorious preparations. Dr. Pierce's Common Seas Medical Adviser is sent frit on receipt ol stamps to psexpense ol wrapping and mailing . Send 31 one-cent stamps for th French " cioth-bouaa book. Address: World's Dispensary Msdical Atsooiatioaw Dr. B. V. Pierce, President, Buffalo, N. Y.