10 lill HhK: OMAHA. THURSDAY. A TOIL 20, 1911. THE OMAHA DAILY BEE H.M'NDKIi BT Kt'WARn RfJSKWATRR. VHTUR RUSK WAT KR. kditor. I'.nterd at Umsha poetofflc aa second- i ii.s matter. TERMS UK SL'HSCRt PTION: funday Bee. one year II M fsnurtay Bee. one year 160 uafly Hee (without Sunday), on year.. t.'O 1 ) at 1 1 Ree and S'lndav. one )mr O A) IjKMVKRKD BY CARRIER. Kvenlng Ree (without Sunday!, per me..2Sc btenlng Br iwlth Bundnyi. per month. .fic I iv Hr (Including ruinriayi. per mo.. rally Bee (without Sunday), per month. .4io Andres all romplalnta nf Irregularities In tl'very to dry circulation le partment. OFFICES. ( :neha The Bee Rvilldlng. homo Uniaha -Kitt M. 'twenty-fourth St. l o urn II Bluffa It Scott St Lincoln- Little Building. hlcago IMS Marquette Hulldlng. Kanxaa City Reliance Building. New York .'4 West Thirty-third St. Washington T Fourteenth St., N. W. COR RESPONDENTS. Communication relating to newa and ed itorial mutter should he addressed Omaha Bee. editorial department. REMITTANCES. Remit hy draft, express or postal order, paabl to The Bee Publishing Company, only .-rent atamps received In payment of mall account. I'eraonal checks except on Omaha and eastern achang not accepted. MARCH CIRCet.ATION. 48,017 tare of Nebraska, County of Douglas, aa: Uwlght Williams, circulation manager of The, Be Publlahlng Company, being duly ro, says that the average dally clrcu. latlon, leaa tpolled, unused and returned copies, for the month of March, 1911. was M.1T. DWIOHT WILLIAMS, Circulation Manager. Pubirirlbed In my preaence and aworn to before me this list day of March, Mil. ideal.) ROBERT HUNTER. Kotary Public. eerfbera leaving the city tem porarily ahaald have The Bee mailed t them. Addreae will be rhanged aa oflea aa reqaeated. France may have her champagne riots, but Germany never. "Can Hearst coma back?" ask the Providence Journal. Where has be been? We do not hear much of an outcry just now against bull fighting in Mexico. One thing Infavor of thla year's Raster hat tho distance around It la not so great! Mayor "Jim" Is knocking on the rock pile, but the city council has the biggest hammer. The opera neck for atreet wear, of course, Is necessary during thai ei ceslvely hot days. Dlas loves. Mexico and peace, but ni lifeatly not enough to let Mexico have peace by resigning. Under the spell of the D. A. R. In fluence the Washington base ball team got Into first place for on day. "Stand back." says the big police man, Uncle 8am, to the crowd press ing on the border to see the parade. If a dog has been found that can talk, it would be Interesting to hear him express his opinion of the dog catcher". Red Lopez, who fights with a rope around his neck, shows great fore thought for the time and trouble of the enemy. The membership roll of tbe Omaha Commercial club has passed the 1,000 mark. The census of 1920 should find it double again. The British House of Lords haa de cided that a taxlcab driver is not a working man. No, but-he works many a man, all right. Senator Hitchcock will be thor oughly examined and inventoried by medical experts. Another recruit to the agitation for physical valuation ? Some of those protectionist soeth erners look at the proposed democratic "free list" a goodeal as a boy looks at the business end of a giant fire cracker. Olva R time enough and eventually the clinging vlna will get the goat of the giant oak Calveston Newa. Sounds suspiciously like a left handed Jab at Texas' Joeballey. Omaha's dally pictorial police ga tetta has ceased Its denunciation of crime-producing moving picture shows. Can It have realised the Im propriety of pot calling kettle black? aaaaaaaaBaBmaBBaBBBBBBBaawBai Now and then the caaa ot Harry Thaw ahowa tlgns of coming te the front and making some mora lawyers famous. Washington Star. Who ran name off-hand those it has made famoua? wt v vu think of a man who haa Keen raining hell all his Ufa and still de clares ha does not believe la It? Lincoln Journal. Think there la a hot time lu the old town ahead of him. . The west may be slow, but .we would like to see the east that can beat Reno, where a woman la divorced from one man at 11 a. m. and married to another at 1 p. m. No need of that assurance that our precloua (IS, 150, 000) Water board "intends to proceed slowly." It has been engaged In the work of "Imme diate and compuUory" purchase of the water plant now Just a little more than eight yeara. The Civil Service commission at Washington wanta mora Information bout the Omaha poatofflce shake down. If a complete new hearing were Inetltuted It would get a whole lot of additional evidence that did not come out In tbe first round. The Chinese Loan. Neither Japan nor Russia haa any good reason for criticizing the I'nltcd 1VT HB III ll'HUUIl ID wie ov, ooo.ooo Chinese loan. On the other hand, there is ample reason for com mending tbe course of our financiers throughout the whole process of iie j gotlallons, for originally thta loan was within the exclusive power of the American government and might have been closed up in that form. But, of course, this would not have been wise diplomacy or good business, for It Is I not merely the Immediate money aide i of this transaction that Invited our participation In It, and our nation readily perceived that fact. Therefore Jt let down the bara and bade Ger many, France and England to come in and share in the loan. Why and where, then, is the United ! States to be criticized even by Japan or Russia? As a matter of fact it required a nice bit of diplomacy to enable this government to effect an entrance into the financial dominion of China, and, having effected It, cer tainly It could not be expected to yield its vantage ground. The United States needed the advantage which participa tion in this loan offered. It needed closer relations with tbe enst and it proposes to establish them. It haa been taught a convincing lesson by tbe investment of British capital over there. It could not afford to omit any legitimate effort to improve its own position. This transaction is of a piece with Secretary Knox's excellent dollar diplomacy Idea and we propose to follow It up, whether it happens to suit the selfish fancies of one or two ambitious or envloua powers or not. Had' the United States gone ahead with the opportunity it had of closing up this loan without admitting any other nation then there might have been room for criticism, but as It Is no fault Is to be justly found, espe cially since we have not even now the footing in China that one or two of the other active powers have. Up from the Ranks. Aside from the victory of the Gould Interests in the contest with the Kuhn Loeb forces for control of the Missouri Pacific the choice of Benjamin F. Bush aa the new president of that system over David R. Francis is a triumph for the Idea of promotion up from the ranks. Mr. Bush comes within the category of the operating man, 'while ex-Governor Francis is - recognized chiefly as a financier, successful in various lines of business. The new president of tbe Missouri Pacific began his career as rodman on the Northern Pacific, rising rapidly with stops at various stations of service along the route to the position of executive head of the Western Maryland, another of the Gould properties. One of the domi nant characteristics of President Bush Is said to be a faculty for hard work, and by dint of patient Insistence he haa mastered the details of railroad operation,, being deficient, if at all, by lack of experience In the financial field, where ex-Governor Francis would have been strong. The election of Mr. Bush, brought about as it haa been by George Gould, who was supposed to have been com pletely shorn of his power to dominate the road longer, "Is naturally a surprise. It merely shows that Mr. Gould, al though unable to hold the place him self, has sufficient influence to control the choice of his successor, and at least prevent the Kuhn-Loebpeople from naming anyone not satisfactory to him. The Missouri Pacific as a rail road property Is awaiting regeneration and development, and the states of the middle west, Including Nebraska, fa which It operates, are vitally con cerned In having a management that will push It forward instead of letting It lag or fall behind.' - ' ; Asking Bryan to Stand Aside. Mr. Bryan now has a chance to do what he asked Governor Harmon to do "prepare to stand aside" for the demand has been made upon him from within bla own party in so many words. It comes from the Waco (Tex.) Tribune, one of Uhe demo cratic papers of the south, which adds Its voice to that of other southern newspapers, whose editors believe tte Nebraakan should get out of tbe way if his party Is to advance. The Mont gomery Advertiser, one of the oldest papers of the south, not only demands Bryan's self-abnegation, but declares that he Is "today the greatest menace of th militant democracy." Both the Waco Tribune and the Houston Post republish this approv ingly and the Waco paper, In com menting on It, says: If ha should succeed In dominating hie Influence would ba baneful. Few demo crats, especially in Texas, want to say any thing captloua or severely critical of the Nebraakan. But it la a fact that even thos eelf-eonetraJned and aelf-reatralned democrata feel that the graceful and Bar trtotie course for Mr. Bryan would be to abate hia seal and give his party a cha.no. It demonstrated In the November elections last year what It could do without hla help or advice. If he will give It mora freedom of action during the next year and a half It mar not only surprise, but delight, him assuming, as we do. that he would be de lighted to see a democratic president In the White House, backed by another demo eratlo house of representative!!. even though the president ahall be Woodrow VJ I eon or Judaon Harmon. "Assuming, as we do. that he would be delighted to see a democratic pres ident In the White House." A certain skepticism lurks In the hidden mean ing of that. What dlatresses the democrats most at this time Is tbe old tear that Mr. Bryan long ago decided that if he could not be president no other democrat should in hla day. This la why his apparent champion ship of Chsmp Clark at thla time ex cites only partial credulity among the democrats. Mr. Rrjan In to the dem ocratic party what the poor Is to the world ever-present. Anil there Is not one chance In one thousand of the Peerless Leader's heeding the demand for hlni to "prepare to stand aside." If he proposed to stand aside he would not have taken the trouble to go to Washington and Issue- a new set of orders to the democrats In congress. Milady's Dreis. So long as' there are extant por traitures of the dresses women have worn In the various periods of 'our brief national history It la idle for complaining man to mouth about the hobble or harem or any sort of skirt or even the fantastic extremes to which styles In hata may run. In spite of all the fun that has been made of the latter-day creations and hrtiven knows they are subject to criticism tbe extremest of them are almply not to be compared with some of those that tiave rome and gone. For Instance. as the pictures disclose, take the bodice and cap and the rest of the fashionable attire of the colonial period and then the affairs of the ante bellum days, tightly drawn around the" waist, or rather up under the arms, then civil war fashions, with skirts inflated beyond all reason by the hideous hoops, down to the advent of the bustle, and who will Bay that the hobble or the harem la extreme? Then, as now, styles .went to ex tremes. The difference is that where today the tendency Is toward contrac tion In the olden times it was towsrd expansion. Today the idea seems to be to emphasize the grace and beauty of the feminine figure, whereas yes terday it was to bury or lose the figure In a mass of fluffs and puffs, until, of course, the dawn of the bustle days, which, many think, was the acme of all absurdity in fashions. Even the waist line was as transitory and ca pricious years ago as It has been of late. One thing must be said for the present tendency, and that Is that, while It may not meet all the demands of modesty, It Is more In keeping with the spirit of brevity and convenience which forms such a conspicuous part in our present day life. Above every thing else that woman's dress seems to teach, however, is the fact that milady will wear what she pleases and mere man may like it or not, as he pleases, he cannot change or affect her Im perious decrees by one finger's weight. Log-Rolling. Tbe Lincoln Journal has been ques tioning members of tbe legislature as to changes In procedure suggested by their . experience In the late session, and the consensus of replies made public is that log-rolling is the worst abuse. The complaint is that bills are' put through or beaten by votes recorded, not on the merits of the measure, but in consideration : of trades between legislative ' members for or against other bills. -The log-rolling Is not confined to the voting in the two houses, but is even more effective In committees, and particularly in sifting committees, where the fate of a measure is traded up or down as a regular thing on the same principle as a swap at a horse market. Log-rolling is perhaps more In evidence on appropriations whereby a concerted raid on the public treasury proves more effective than a separate attack by each single-handed. Log rolling for appropriations, however. fit an additional danger-point to en counter, because the governor may veto individual items, whereas for other bills he must approve or reject as a whole. But the remedy for log-rolling Is not so easy. It is urged that relief may be bad by the adoption of . the proposed constitutional amendment cutting down the time for lntrbduclng general bills from forty days to twenty days, especially if it does away with the necessity of resorting to sifting committees. Out In Oregon an at tempt was made to solve the problem by Incorporating Into the legislative oath a promise not to be governed In any vote by the consideration of sup port or opposition of any other mem ber to any other bill, but nothing has yet come of it. If Nebraska can de vise some means of putting an end to log-rolling it will set an example wnich other statea will gladly follow. Wanted More Policemen. The indignation aroused In the community by the recent murders and hold-ups should not be allowed to die down like previous similar spasms without bringing about something in the way of preventive measures for the future. The police board haa nut up to the city council a feaaible and practical proposition whereby the police force may be strengthened at once by the addition of twelve men to make possible the patrolling of the residence district at night. The council ia asked to relieve the police fund of charges that have here tofore been made upon it for the maintenance of the city Jail and police court, including heating, lighting and Janitor service. These Items, together with a few other minor ones, aggre gate about $7,000, and are properly chargeable aa much, if not more, to the city's general fund as to tbe police fund. At any rate, there is nothing in the charter to prohibit or make such an arrangement illegal, nor la there anyone likely to raise a technical objection If the council undertakea to respond. If It manifested the usual disposition the council would doubt less merely retort with the question. Where Is the money t come from? But there will be no serious trouble in finding the money If the council really wants to do It. It simply calls for a decision whether a larger police force la more or less vital than some thing else. In a word, we can strengthen our police department and secure more adequate ' police protection, not next month, nor next year, but right now, If the council will do Its part. Some of our cily councilnien seem to be very much afraid that In fixing the closing hour for the pool halls they may do something to which tbe pool hall proprietors object. If the pool hall proprietors have It their way there will be no closing hour fixed. No one patronising these resorts purely for amusement and recreation will complain about being invited to go home in decent hours. Our amiable democratic contem porary waxes ironical about La Fol lette ahd refers to Jonathan Bourne, Rudolph Spreckels. GIfford Pinchot, William Kent, Charles R. Crane and William R. Hearst as "distinguished plutocrats." In Its lexicon . no . re former goes unless he puts on the democratic uniform and runs with the democratic machine. Writing from Mission, Tex., Wil liam E. Curtis says: "William J. Bryan la. the best advertisement this section of the country ever had." A thought which, no doubt, occurred to the shrewd land boomers from whom Mr. Bryan got his Texas "ranch." St. Louis papers contain photO' graphs of large numbers of people go ing and coming from church on Easter Sunday. They doubtless hope to prove that St. Louis people do some times go to church. Omaha owners of water bonds are meeting to protect their Intarnata Bn then, a few local investors got in on tne ground noor to profit by the Water Doara s mismanagement of the pur chase proceedings. Beating- a fiold Mine. Chicago Record-Herald. An original investment of 11.000 In the Funman company Is today worth 1100.000. In addition to all the dividends that It has paid. Some people have fortune thrust upon tnem. Escaped Without Damage. , Kansas City Times. A British gunboat landed marines at San Quentin. Mexico, last week and raised the British flag to protect aubjecti of King George. In the absence of any frenxied yelping It la Inferred that the Monroe doe- trine came through the ordeal without scratch. Interpreting- Battle Prophecies. Kansas Citv Timed The Mexican war newa is becoming more reliable. Nowadays the reader knows that when a battle is prdicted at Juarez thst the next day will bring- tidings of fightlng at cninuahua, and when a battle la pre dicted at Chihuahua there will be brisk righting at Agua Prleta. An Achievement In Klylag. New York Sun. Tbe aeroplane flight of the Frenchman Prler from Harndon, near London, to Parts, 190 miles, without alighting. Is the first really great achievement of the year, and it Is especially remarkable because Prler la a comparative novice and dared the channel passage without an attending boat, With the Improvements In aeroplanes re ported from both England and France the presumption Is that this record will soon be surpassed. ASTONISHINO REVELATION. Iowa Watchdog; Discovers a Kefarl- Contribution. New York, Evening Post. So long as there "are In congress men who are faithful to the teaching that eter nal vigilance Is the price of liberty, there need be no fear as to the safety of Amer ican Institutions. Such a man la Mr. Oood of Iowa. Concealed under the undistin guished name of Beer W. C. Beer Mr. Oood discovered the nefarious work of tba most formidable enemy of the nation, in the shape of a contribution to the demo cratic national congressional committee which was of "double the amount of that made by any other democrat In the United States." Having stated the portentous fact of Mr. Beer's great contribution, Mr. Oood wound up In this dramatlo faahlon: "That contribution was made the day be fore election, and at that time W. C. Beer was the confidential man of J. Pler- Pont Moraan dt Co." The "ajla.iiM on the republican alde'V with which this rev elation waa greeted will ever remain. In tba pag-ea of the Congressional Record, a proof to the future historian of the sound ness of the great heart of America In the year 11)11.. He may afterwards, Indeed, be little pu ruled when- he finds that the amount of the contribution was only 11,000. But he will still ba bound to feel that the traditions of the raubllo were In fine shape, though ha may conclude that the particular tradition Uluatrated In the case was not that of eternal vigilance, but the ancient and honorable tradition of bun combe. People Talked About Ambaaaador David Jajne Hill ia now open to engagements as a college presi dent. He waa formerly at the head of Bucknell unlveralty and the t'nlveralty of Rocheater. There are at preaent aeveral Important vacanclea In higher Institutions of learning. Including Princeton and one or two state unlvertltlea In the west. Reduction In the coat of electric light from 12 to 11 cents per kilowatt, hour and a promised cut In gaa from So to 77 cents per 1,000, puts Chicago conaumera perll oualy near speechlessnes. Should the cut ting fever become epidemic, living In Chicago will be worth while presently. Congreaaman Victor Murdo. k, the torch light procesaion of Wichita and Kansas, won't bo happy until he becomes manag ing editor of the Congressional Record. Several important reforms are needed there, particularly the featuring of Inaur- gent apeechea and shunting democratic hot air to the rear pages. The Wichita Eagle doesn't soar hih enough for the talenta of the Kanaan. I Mlaa Ixiuiae Trott has been elected clerk of the circuit court by the I'nlted States Judges In the Eighth circuit st Bt. Paul. Miss Trott haa , been deputy clerk of the court for mora than twenty-two yeara. She ia the third woman In this county to be elected clerk of a United States court. Id Kansaa City the office ia' held by Miss Adelaide Utter, and Miss Carrie TJavldaon Is clerk of the United States district court In Detroit. t Around New York Mpplee oa the Current of Life aa Been la the Great Amerloaa Metropolis from Day to Bay New York blew Hell date off the hinges some years ago to make the connection be tween the Kast river and Iong Island sound safely navigable. Now a railroad bridge is to he thrown ever the blasted spot, connecting I-ong Inland with the mainland. It Is to form the coupling for the New Haven railroad system and thst of Ixmg Island, and supplements the Penn xlvsnla's entrance Into New' York and Brooklyn. The three systems are under one control, . practically dominating the railroad situation locally as well as north, south and west from the meropolls. The Hell Gate bridge and approaches will cost t.'O.OiiO.OoO. On the New York side the struc ture begins In the yard of the New Haven road at One Hundred and Forty-second rtreet and proceeds by viaduct to the shores, of the Rronx Kill. The Kill Is crossed by a bridge of the lift type 300 feet long, to a viaduct that runs south ward along the eastern shore of Randall a Inland to Little Hell Gate. This viaduct Is about J.aoo feet long. A second bridge 1,000 feet long crosses to Ward's Island. A viaduct traverses Ward's Islnnd 2,S00 feet to the shores of Hell Gate. Hell Gats Itself Is spanned by a bridge 1.000 feet long. When the I-ong island ahore Is reached the four tracks which have crossed from the New Haven road's yards run southward to the Sunny side yards on a viaduct. Here connection may be made to th Pennsylvania st Ion In Seventh avenue, Manhattan, or with the lines running out Into Long island. As passenger1 tralna Will go direct f?j the entrance of the Pennsylvania tunner In the Punnyslde. yards It will be possible to transport passengers without change of cars from Quebec to Florida. A most interesting example of the use of finger prints In the detection of crim inals has occurred In New York. A safe waa robbed and finger prints were found upon the Inner surface of the door. The police believed that the robbery had been committed by some one In the establish ment, and they took the finger prints of every one of the 200 employes and com pared them with a photograph of the marks on the safe door. One, and one only, waa found to correspond, and though the negro porter thus Identified was Im plicitly trusted by his employer, he was Immediately put under arrest. If other evidence be found to convict him this will be really a great triumph for a system that haa not yet been taken quite as seriously In thla country, In spite of. Or perhaps bet cause of its Ingenious - applications In romance. Activity In . road making all ever the country, for which great sums were e pended last year, is summed up in a con denaatlon of state highway reports juat given out at Albany. New York spent about ts.000,000 and plans to spend nearer (9,000,000 the coming year. New "Jersey built at a oost of more than 1825,000 with contracta of about Stfe,- 000 not yet completed. Repairs and mainte nance amounted to more than $1,400,000. Pennsylvania spent considerably mora than $1,000,000 on roads, with contracts of $700. 000 not completed. Ohio had construction and repair bills of nearly $600,000, with work aggregating $620,000 still to be fin ished. The total expenditures of otlter states were as follows: Arlsona. $300,000; Call fornla, besides completing three out of seven state roads, voted $18,000,000 for a state highway system; Colorado, $1.29,000; Connecticut, $1,800,000; Delaware, $304,000; Georgia, $3,000,000; KanSis, $00,000; Maine. $420,000; Maryland. $1.477.00; Massachusetts, 1350,000; Minnesota, $80,000; Missouri, $100. 000; New Hampshire. $800,000;. North Caro lina. $800,000; Rhode Island, $400,000; Texas. $7,000,000, with estimates for about $2S,000,000 In 1911; Utah. $126,000; Vermont. $260,000; Virginia, $S50.000; Washington, $300,000; West Virginia, $1,160,000; Wisconsin, $2,000,000. Rebellion has broken out in the Jones family. It has become so numerous In New York City at least that the aupply of given names long since gave out, and so many have come to bear the same name throughout that great confusion results. One of the many William Alfred Joneses has accordingly gone to the courta for re lief from the name Jones altogether. He has been allowed by Juatlce Greenbaum to take the name of William Alfred Far mlngton on such representations aa the following: "Your petitioner has also suf fered many handicaps In business by rea son of the fact that hig name la a very common one, and It would be to his fi nancial advantage to change It to one not so universal. For Some years past, es pecially since residing In New York City, he has been greatly embarrassed and In convenienced by reason of the fact that there are so many persons bearing the same full name, and as a result of this your petitioner haa been greatly troubled and inconvenienced In a great many ways, particularly In that his mall la constantly mixed up- and delivered fo other persons of the same name, and that he Is con stantly receiving other persons' letters. The delay and miscarriage of mall has rauaed your petitioner to sustain consider able financial loss." Practically every box .of lemons brought Into the United States now carries to Its consumers a protest against the high rates In the Payne-Aldrlch tariff on lemona. Be ginning this week, the fruit Importers stationed men with stencils on all the plera where shipments of lemons arrive and they will print on each box a pithy proteat againat the tariff rate. "If lemons were free this box would cost you $1.26 less" Is a favorite stencil. Others are: "The tariff la Squeeslng me." "Revise the tariff and get me cheaper." "if tha tariff squeezes me much more I won't come here." and "The tariff Is msklng us sour on the I'nlted Statea. ' A 34-year-old son of American parents, with a good Irish name, but speaking only German, Is Ellm O'Shaughnesay, son of Nelson 0'8haughnessy, former secretary of the American legation In Vienna. Lit tle Ellm was born In Berlin, and on the theory that he would learn hla own lan guage when he returned to America his parants have taught him only German. And now F.llm'a father la going to the American embassy In Mexico, where the boy will supplement his German education with Spanish. Perhaps some day If the father becomea attached to the American ftaie department at Washington Ellm' msy learn a few English words. The Pace that Kills. Baltimore American. The famoua auto expert who broke hla neck In an effort to establish new speed records might have given hia life In a bet ter cause. A man, it Is true, ran eaally find out if human manufacture ran atand the terrific strain put upon it by these speed experiments, but If he finds to the contrary the knowledge ia seldom of any use to him, nor doea Ita acquisition serve even the minor purpose of being a warning to othera. The need of the age la to learn more how to enjoy life, rather than faster ways of rushing through it. STATE TRESS COMMENT. Nebraska City Press: It will be noticed that the Nebraska legtalsture did not adopt the recall, for the reason, perhaps. lht In most states where It Is used the recsll 'applies to the members nf the legislature. Stanton Ticket: The hsrem skirt baa not I made Its appearance on the afreets of Stanton yet. Stanton Is generally P to snuff and we can see no reason why some fair damsel has not ventured to 'spring It" on us. Aa an inducement tha Picket editor will give a yea fs subscription to the first lady who will adorn a "harem" anil strut down Nebraska avenue. Madison Chronicle: The Madison State bank haa made application to nationalise, and If the charter Is granted, which will undoubtedly be. It will be the Madison National bank. This Step Is being taken by banks all over the state and the biggest Joke cornea on Senstor Volpp who helped make the law. He Is nationalising Ms bsnk on account of the unjust law which he helped to mske. Ord Quls: The best legislature Nebraska ever had was the one four yeara ago. which was overwhelmingly republican. The worst was the one of two years ago, which was overwhelmingly democratic. The legislature lust ended la conceded to be an Improvement on the legislature of 1, but ) au see that It was not so overwhelm ingly democratic. From these three prem ises It ought to be easy to figure out the relative value of democrats and repub licans In office. O'Neill Frontier. Colonel Bryan received his worst snub since the Grand Island convention when" he went to Washington and undertook to dictate the house and senate organizations. The democrats In congress turned him down In a way that would Indicate they desired the thrice beaten candidate to go hack and sit down. The colonel has undoubtedly been enter taining further political artibltlons and be lieved If he could dictate affairs In con gress it would give him an advantage over other presidential possibilities now loom Ing on the horizon. Wayne Herald: The late legislature fol lowed the usual custom of stopping the clock. The session adjourned Monday, whereas the record will show thst It ad journed last Thursday. The members de cided on a time for adjournment, and not having finished their work, prolonged the session beyond the hour fixed for quitting. They stop the clock to make a technical show of adjournment on time. The record presents an Immense lot of business ac complished the last. day. It Is really an absurd custom, with no reason for It. Rach legislature does It because the previ ous legislature did It. Beatrice Express: The latest for Ne braska Is an ostrich farm. California par ties are planning to Install such an In stitution near Sidney, thla state. They say that the climate of Nebraska la even better for raining this necessary bird than that of California or Arlsona, where the business has heretofore had a monopoly. Nebraska ha bean competing with Cali fornia In tha matter of climate for aome time, and to have It thua officially recog nized is a aource of gratification to resi dents of tbe state. We hope no disloyal citizen will hint that tba ostrich la sup posed to thrive best in a desert, and throw brickbats at Sidney and vicinity on that account. Central City Nonpareil: E-Oovernor StlaJlenberger Is allowing no grass to grow under his feet, In manufacturing po litical capital out of tba location of the new agricultural college In the southwest ern part of the state. Ha ia making a tour of that section and st each town, delivers a apeech en tha "value of an agricultural college to southwestern Nebraska." - At tha close of his address the prominent Men of tha community are organized Into a boost' Ing committee to secure the school ' for their town. Everybody Is enthusiastic be cause everybody feela that their town la sure to land the plum. Incidentally every body Is Just now whooping It up for Mr. Shellenberger. The enthusiasm will soon ba so uproarous after the school has boon located and a number of the little towns like Oxford. Beaver City and Alma find that they were never In the race and were only used as pawns by a designing poli tician. Political snapshots. Pittsburg Dispatch: Senator Kenyon'a declaration for backbone rather than wish bone aa tba need of tha hour promises a sturdy addition to the senate. Cleaveland Leader: Looking at Larimer from all angles, on is forced to tha opinion that tba donors of that $100,000 slush didn't get their money's worth. Boston Transcript: There are now three United States senatora who own the State Unlveralty of Iowa aa their Alma Mater, Brown of Nebraska. Clark of Wyoming and Kenyon of Iowa. This ia a rather large proportion for a comparatively small institution. Mouaton Post: Omaha has Informed Mem phis that Jim Dahlman might entertain a proposition to move for $1,800,000. Jim, you remember, waa tha democratic candidate for governor of Nebraska last year, who failed of election because he wan stabbed In the back by his supposed friend, who lived In Lincoln. Chicago Poat: The Wisconsin legislature deplores the election of Lorlmer by shady means; frut It is pertinently suggested that It might do aoma deploring over a case naarer home. Rumor haa Intimated that tha election of one senator from that state also not wholly unconnected with (he lumber interests deserves aome Investiga tion. I.Iatea for th Veils. New York World. General Wood's theory that the two Americana' who were killed at Douglas. Aria., during tha fighting acroaa tbe Mexi can border were th victims of bullets fired by Americana la quite plausible. There Is a considerable contingent of Americana with th Insurgent forces and they have taken a pretty part in th fighting. If some of them were caught by the federals and in danger of being stood up against a wall and shot, frantic appeals no doubt would be addressed to the government at Washington to aave their Uvea. "Eeaaoasr as Is." Houston Post By cutting out tha free seed graft, the democratic house may run up tbe amount already saved to three-fourtha of a cent per capita. It la worth doing. Prudent peoplegdon't sneese at seeming trifles. WALT HAM WATCH IT you would make"your watch a lasting investment buy a Waltham adjusted to tempera ture and five positions. Any Jeweler will supply y V "IT Time You Oumsd H attkam. " S-WfWrisa.Ukla. aa. WAlTlUM WsTCH CO. JjAsL H:ic3 tTc3 Cskb E&sj 71 Pi Absolutely Puro Tha only b&ktargy powdor inada from ftayail Orcpm Oretun of Tartar CHEERY CHAFF. Mr. Jawt.ack My dear. I was en of the first to leave. Mrs. Jawbiick Oh. you always say thst. Mr. Jawback I can prove it this time look out In th hall and see the beautiful umbrella I brought home. Toledo Blade. "Jaggsby certainly does have all kinds of trouble." "What hi the matter with him?" "He got himself an automobile and It blew up. Then he got an aeroplane." "What happened to that?" "It blew down." Hnltlmore American. Mrs. Gnaggs I'll never forget th night you proposed to me. You acted a perfect fool. ' Mr. Gnaggs That wasn't anting Phila delphia Renord. "1 hear there was an election at your club yesterday." "There waa. and I am going to contest it and demand a recount." "You are? Whv, who was declared elected?" "I was." Chicago Tribune. "Pa." said Freddy, "What Is a social scale?" "Generally speaking," replied pa. "it's a place where they weigh monev. Bo hemian Magazine. Miss Newly Rich (who haa lust returned from a trip to Egypt) Oh, the Pyramids were wonderful, and Just covered with hieroglyphics. Grandma Sakes alive! Did ve git any of 'em on ye? Harper's Weekly. "I have rejected a dozen offers of mar riage In my time." "Well?" "Well, aren't you surprised?" "Yes, I didn't think you had near that much money." Houston Post. FORTY YEARS HENCE. Arthur Chapman in Denver Republican. It was an aged pensioner who stopped me on the street; "See here." he says, "my teeth ar gone It's hurd for me to cat; I lost them breakln' hardtack 'twas no Job that I choose In the year of nineteen 'leven, wher th Rio Grand flow a. "My digestion waa plumb ruined in that' long and hard campaign: I et atrawberry shortcake till all doct'rin was In vain; It was tough to be a soldier, you c'n take my Word or no. In the year of nineteen 'leven, on th edge oi jiiexico. "This arm of mine was Injured it has never been the same A-wrltln' endless postcards to th home folks and I claim There never waa campalgnin' that waa half ao rough on men Aa the row of nineteen 'leven, jest a tol lerln' nineteen ten." It waa an aged pensioner, who wept the while he talked. And limped like Rip Van Winkle when finally he walked; For he'd Injured both hla ankles thev had rusted from disuse In the war of nineteen ieven, when the Dlas cinch cam loose. nO, Sioon to-night Se round and bright You'll soon grow pal ana winner. 7 'hi would not be i vm like me At Camfttlft Sot tot dinner." You can't have good things with out taking pains. Somebody has to take a lot of pains to produce any thing as fine as ST0HAT0 ' Gjrjp But we do that part. We take the trouble and care to g-row the finest to matoes, select the choicest materials of every kind, and prepare and blend them into this perfect soup. Your part is to insist on having1 it when you ask for it. Do you take pains with that? 21 kind 10c a can Just add hot water, bring to a boil, and serve. Josses Cam r ill COMTAJir Camden N J Look for the red-and-white label Wholesale & Retail HAVEHS-WHITE COAL CO. 17tO FARNAM ST. D4 U. A 1231 I I COAL i I, I L .'Jjjx- I