THK. RKE: OMAHA, MONDAY, AUGUST 28. 1011. TlIK OMAHA DAILY BEK I OI NDK.U lit KDWARI) nOSKWATKrt. VICTOR H08EWATEH, KKITOR. Entered at Omaha postnfflte class matter. seeond- TKR.MU OF SUBSCRIPTION. Sunday Bee, on year ... Saturday Bee, on year Pally Bee (without Sunday, one year Dally Bee and Hunday. one yrar ..MM .. 1 W .. 40 .. .00 delivered by carrier. Kvenlnr le (with Sunday). per month.. 2: Pally Bee (Including Sunday), per mo.. c Pallv Bm (without Sunday), ret mo 4Ac Address all complaints .of Irregularities In delivery to City Circulation Department. OFFICES. Omaha The Bee Building. South Omaha f,2 N. Twenty-fourth St. Council Bluffs 15 Scott St. Unroln 2 Utile Bulldinn. ChlcHKo IMS Marquette Building. Kansas City Reliance Building. New York 34 West Thirty-third St. Washington 725 Fourteenth St., N. W. CORRESPONDENCE. Communication relating to new and editorial matter nhould be addressed Omaha Bee, Editorial Depnrtment. REMITTANCES. Remit ly draft. express or postal order nnvahlji in Thp Bn Piihllnhtn company. Only 2-cent stamps received In payment of i mall account. Personal check except on Omaha and eastern exchange not accepted. JULY CIRCULATION. 47,931 Slat of Nebraska, County of Douglas, . I wlght Williams, circulation manager of The Bee Publishing company, being duly sworn, say that the average dally circu lation, less spoiled, unused and returned coplea, for the month of July, 1911. wa 47.B31. DWIOHT WILLIAMS. Circulation Manager. Subscribed in my presence and sworn to before me thia 2d day of August, 191 J (Seal.) ROBERT HUNTER. latiaeribera leaving tke city tem porarily should have The Dm mailed to thorn. Address will be changed aa eftra a requested. The weather man must be reconsid ering the motion. AU good things eventually have an ending. Likewise the base ball season. King Manuel loves the smell powder, so we are told. It must talcum. What sort of courtesy is "street car courtesy?" asks a correspondent. Same old kind. Now watch Champ Clark add 1,000 a, week to his income by talking more and saying less. Senator Owen Is destined to get a lot of newspaper boosting he hag praised Mr. Hearst. The chautauquas had to wait on congress this time, but a late spring generally brings a late fall. Some folks might begin to think Mr. Bryan a poor detective; he has announced no discovery yet. The old saying that one Is afraid and the other is glad of it seems to apply to Germany and France. ' Anyone can verify it for himself by looking on pages 12, 15 and 17 of the constitution of the United States. 1 ravel around and see aa many other cities as you can. It will make you appreciate Omaha more than ever . i The real base ball enthusiast be' lleves thoroughly that ' a poor excuse is better than none," when It comes to the game. Those explorers who ate the skins of their fur coats probably would not object even to embalmed beef or cold storage eggs. "Who hath despised the day of small things?" If Zacharlah. were llv lng now he would know that it was the fan of the losing team. When the Ice man In Kansas City, St. Joseph, Des Moines or Denver sees how easy the hold-up has worked In Omaha it must make him green with envy. i I An uplift paper has a tediously long editorial on "A Word to Mr. Taft On ,the Porch at Beverly." Some folks imply will not let a public man rest even when In his home circle. The pull-backs who advised folks not to sign The Bee's commission plan petitions have hitched on behind. It was that or be left standing at the curb while the procession passed on. Senator Martlne of New Jersey says that not even for the sake of sena torial courtesy can he become a clam. Now, what a fine thing senatorial courtesy would be If it also kept men from becoming lobsters. Down at Lincoln the recount Is re sulting in increasing the majorities against those who thought they were getting the worst of it In the original canvass. Evidently a recount Is just aa likely to recoil as to hit the target. The editor of the The World's Work says that Mr. Bryan has ceased to be a burden on the democratio party and become a nuisance. The World's Work man must have been listening at the keyhole of the Dablman club rooms. j j Labor day will be celebrated In Omaha with a big parade by the unions to demonstrate what an Important element of the community organised labor Is. The right kind of publicity Is as essential to the labor union as it Is to the business firm or corporation. The outlay for repeated revision of registration In Omaha this year would more than pay the cost of a permanent registration and election bureau, which would do the job much more satisfac torily. Registration reform should be a top-line item on our next legislative program. Clearing the Decks. The democrats eagerly accept the president's word as true and final when be says they pursued the course of statesmanship In forcing the enact ment of the Canadian reciprocity bill at the extra session, but they deny his authority for the criticism that they played politics In inviting vetoes of their half baked tariff laws. The demo cratic leaders must not Imagine that they are to sit in final judgment here, but should know that that will be left for the whole people in 1912. President Taft's Massachusetts speech, in which he goes straight after the democratic and Insurgent coali tion for playing politics In their tariff program, is hardly to be regarded as the opening gun of the next presi dential campaign, but it will help clear the decks and leave no room to mis understand bis attitude toward this coalition, the leaders of which on both sides he has clearly enough Indicated. This Is much better than beating about the bush or glossing over the situation for fear of Jeopardizing party harmony and trying to hide the purpose of the plot to "put the administration In the hole." It Is a good thing to have known that, at the final test, only seven of the thirteen insurgent repub lican senators lined up with the demo crats. In this same speech the president does well to announce that when the report of the tariff board Is made to the next session of congress he will recommend action, but that revision will be along scientific lines and not of the superficial character as was proposed in the bills vetoed. It is quite worth while to reiterate, as the presi dent, has done, the fact that Clark, llnderwood and La Fottette," the lead ers of the coalition, were among the foremost In demanding last winter tariff revision according to "scientific plans," such as would he laid down by the tariff board. When It .comes to sincerity and consistency the presi dent has by far the better record. There is no need of the public being deceived by stage talk so long as the facts are so easy to get at. The Franco-German Dispute. An armed outbreak between France and Germany as a result of the Morocco dispute is the last thing to be thought of, and yet they seem to be thinking and talking of it in Paris and Berlin. The Algeciras treaty is a recognized failure. It never settled anything, permanently. It was noth ing more than a temporary expedient to avoid war at the time it was drawn and signed by the various European powers in 1906. It never satisfied Ger many and the peculiar feature is that it was Germany's closest friend, Aus tria-Hungary, which In this 1906 con ventlon was so pacifically predisposed as to bring negotiations to a close without giving Germany anything like the footing it demanded and still de mands In Morocco. The Algeciras treaty has always been weak because nothing but a com promise between several nations. It created an open door in trade and left ultimate political authority to a con cert of the powers, yet reserving to France a predominating control, aim ing to make It In Morocco much what England Is in Egypt. Germany later conceded this protectorate authority to France and yet has always insisted that the general situation was subject to the control cf the Algeciras conven tion. It cannot be doubted that Ger many has Intended to press Its de mands when the proper time came. Neither can it be doubted that France's frequent changes of ministries . and shifting policies have had a good deal to do with Germany's dissatisfaction. It Is even believed that but for these facts the emperor's warship might not have sailed so abruptly for Agadlr. In any event conditions are peril oualy near a crisis that may call for something more than fine spun di plomacy. The Idea of England having a footstool In Egypt, France in Morocco and Russia In part of Manchuria, while Germany's whole - national problem Is territorial aggression, does not tend to allay Germany's inherited animosity toward France. One thing seems cer tain, if there is to be another Algeciras treaty it will give Germany a much larger slice of the Morocco pie than it now has. The emperor is in as good position to urge demands as the French republic, more or less rent Internally, Is to Juggle or evade them. Need of a Permanent Elections Bureau The Bee has more than once pointed out and emphasized the need of a per manent elections bureau for Omaha and never has It had such reinforce ment by object lesson as now. Within a period of six months, we will have held here In Omaha, five separate and distinct elections. For the regular election, to be held In November, we will have had a complete new registrar tlon of voters by registrars sitting on three different days and for each of the other four, a one day's revision of registration. All this Is not only costly, but confusing. Worse still. It Is not necessary and what good It ac compllshes could be done more effi ciently by a permanent bureau at less outlay and without the annoyance and at the same time shut the floors more tightly against fraud. There Is no good reason why a quali fied voter should not be able to have himaulf registered any day of the year by personal application at some office in the city ball. There Is do good reason why a man changing his resi dence should not be able to have the change recorded at once on the regis tration rolls. There is no good reason why the report of a voter's death at the health office should not extinguish his name from the registration rolls. There is no good reason why a voter residing continuously at the same ad dress should have to register and re register every year The only reason for the costly and bunglesome system Is that an an tiquated law requires It. The law ought to be changed, but It will not be changed if the people who complain do nothing to apply the remedy. The Old Compass Good Enough. Henry Van Dyke has said, "What we need is not a new compass every year, but a determination to steer straight, by the old compass." Dr. Van Dyke was referring especially to the spiritual and moral life of the nation and his "old compass" was the Bible. But to day the epigram has forceful applica tion to our political, as well as our social and business life. There is a constant tendency In all of these spheres of activity to seek new com passes, new standards and rules of action. If half the time thus spent were employed in trying to follow better the old compasses, the results undoubtedly would pay for thei effort. A nation that has come through such a labyrinth of difficulties and attained such an eminence of success as has this nation surely can afford to be careful of the old guide pests by which It has walked in the past, guide posts that have marked the way along to Its present position of world supremacy. Of course, a progressive country has to keep pace with ever-changing times and conditions, but it need not change its fundamentals. Our republic, democratic in prin ciple, may not have perfected all the principles of self-government, but that It has steadily moved toward Improve ment is not to be denied and, unless disturbed In Us progress along estab lished lines, it will continue to move more closely toward the ultimate goal. Now and then people become imbued with the fear that the nation Is out of plumb with the principles of democ racy, but this view Is always due to a perverted viewpoint. It may be that the vision is deflected by personal am bition or selflBh interest. The obses sion that the republic must be saved from Imminent destruction by depart ing from all the old and tried thor oughfares is not specially uncommon. but almost Invariably the byways prove to lead nowhere and real progress is made by getting back to the safe and worn road. The recall in Seattle seems not to have tempered men's minds to modera tion, for they are hanging In effigy Judges they cannot recall out there. Well, we shall soon be relieved of the humiliation of seeing our rich neighbors go away to the high-priced summer resorts, anyway. The English railroad man gets" a minimum of 15.60 a Week, the Atneri can about that a day. That's one dif ference. Some folks are learning that the present president can also use plain language. President Taft would have no objec tion to applying the recall to Judge Lynch. . A Measare of Safety. Indianapolis New. Judging from the list of people who are to attend Senator Cummins' conference on trusts It would appear to be wise to have each one searched aa Jxt enters the ball. qnlnt that War. Indianapolis News. Nor doe the threatened Increase In the rrlce of sugar tend to convince the ultimate consumer that the Sugar trust ha done much In the way of reorganising on a reasonable basis. Pass It Along;. Boston Transcript. Judge Lovett of th Union Pacific has pilloried the malcontent In lower New York by calling them th "He factory" of Wail Street. It Is a good phrase and deserve the greatest amount of circulation. Kped Checks at the Soarce. Baltimore American. The suggestion ha been mad that the speed of motor machine Intended for pleas ure riding should be restricted In their manufacture. This I a sensible Idea, since no amount of reason will Induce speed maniacs to confine themselves to the race track. See Hack, Speak Little. New York Tribune. Admiral Togo will leave our shore with thunderous honor, with the cordial re spect of an admiring nation and with th enviable .record of having probably seen more and having certainly Bald less than almost any other distinguished visitor. Asrree to Dlaaare. Sioux City Journal. Speaker Clark Issued a statement In which he reviewed the session's achieve ments; and Minority Leader Mann Issued a statement reviewing the house demo crats. It I unnecessary to add that th statement ware far apart In their con clusion DeservlnsT ta Wis. Chicago Inter Ocean. Bo the extra session close with Mr. Taft and the regular republican both atronger than at It beginning, and with ' the In surgent practically eliminated from re publican counsel. It I for the regular republican to go on, and deserve to win, by continuing to appeal to th party of sober mind against th party of open mouth. Harrlasan Lines a Maaey Maker. Kansas City Times. A statement in a pre telegram from Omaha that "the Hariiman railroad have made no .money for th laat ten months" must be taken wtth considerable allow ance. The Union Pacific' annual report for the year ending June K. Ull, show that net earnings er equal to about U per cent on th company' $217,000,000 of common stock after paying all fixed charges and nearly $4,000,000 In dividends on the preferrred stock. It U true that th surplus wa about $6,600,000 iea than In the preceding year, when It wa equal to 1$ per cent on the common etock. But net earning equal to 1 per cent on a great railroad company' capital stock 1 not to be aneesed at I QlookiiiBackwanl llikDnv InOmnlin r COMPILED FROM DF.t IlLC 3 U tJ AUitST 28. Thirty Years Ago The streets of Omaha were aa thoroughly dull this Sunday as could well be. The saloons were all closed as far a could be learned, both front and rear. The prudent man had laid In a supply, and he was about the only contented man to be found. The other store generally were bolted and barred. There were exception to thl rule, however, for several drug stores did thriving business, and there wa quite an exodus to Council Bluff during the day. A runaway of somewhat serious nature occurred at 11 o'clock whan the horses attached to the United States mall wagon tore along Harney street until they struck a hydrant on Tenth street. The driver, A. V. Smith, fractured two bone below the knee. Mr. and Mr. Keith hve returned from the east, where they procured a large stock of goods. K. A. Benson of Davenport, la.. Is in the city. Colonel Matt J. Patrick and bride have returned to New York. Colonel Patrick will take up his permanent abode at hi present home on Saunders street. George W. Oray arrived home from a visit In the west. John Fitzgerald, Lincoln' muat repre sentative man, spent the day at the Crelgh- ton house. Major Ouldo Hges, United States army. waa In the city today, the guest of General C. II. Frederick, who used to belong to the same regiment. Crow Dog, the murderer of Spotted Tall, passed over the Union Pacific In charge of the deputy United State marshal of Da kota and two officer of the United States army on hla way to Deadwood, where he will stand trial for his, crime. Twenty Years Ago The Starlight Bocial club gave a phantom party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Couns man, 1610 Sherman avenue. Mr. Counsman made an address of welcome to" the club and a response was made by Mr. Chris Butler, Others present were: Misses Etta Rosenbury, Pearl Reese, Lulu Tompsett, Ella Lee, Maggie Murphy, Kate Marnell, Minnie Millard, 8. Green, Grace Nlcols, Nellie Carlln, OUie Foley. Myrtle Miller, May Reven, Marie Klrtley, Lulu Truckey, Hattle Chesbro, Nettle DeBolt. Carrie Alt haus. Lydla Harpster, Aggie Riley, Kate Clark. Ttedfield, Nettle Elliot. Gertie Thorn ton, Tlllle Norton, Messrs. Fltspatrlck, W. W. Hurlhold, Hilt McBeth, Jess Tompsett. Charle Ooodenough, Julius Epeneter, Will Willi, Charle Althau. Bert Scrambling. Fred Simpson, Ray Counsman, Howard Bruner. Julius Dahlstrom, HoWard Prich ard, Clyde Ratekln. The club members present were Carl Potterfleljl. Charle Dut ton, Arthur Longphrey, Chile Butler, Ed Marnell, J. Epeneter, Will Counsman, Mr. and Mr. H. S. Counsman, Mr. and Mr. J. Counsman, Mr. A. M. Althau and Grant Couneman.N ' The Fifth Ward Kickers' club held a hot session, at which the matter of granting a franchise to the Metropolitan Street .Rail way company wa the subject of debate. The chief debater were Messrs. IJokner, Sohnaake and C. W. Slattery. The Sixth Ward Republican club met and elected these officer for the year: Presi dent. W.-A. Measlck; vice president, Loul adUlefleld; secretary, Harvey J. Wells treasurer, Carr Axford. Senator Paddook passed through the city en route from Washington to Beatrloe. At the meeting of the Board of Park Commissioners a communication from Ml Anna Wilson wa read In which she of fered to donate to the city a fine bronit fountain that stood In ber yard on lower Douglaa street, the fountain to be used in Hanscom park. The gift was accepted with thanks. Dr. George L. Miller tells the Park board that before ten years It would see that he was right In laying that land should be bought for a large central park. Ten Years Ago It was finally determined that William EL Cutshall, the young Omahan found dying under a bridge at Grable, la., took his own life. He had been a atudent at Bellevue college. The parlors of the Young Women's Chris tian association were filled at noon with women to hear th address of Miss Ger trude How of Hull House, Chicago. John Btltt. an 11-year-old boy living with hit parent at 204 South Tenth street, found In currency between $8,000 and $6,000 In a lumber yard at Ninth and Farnam street. The boy' parents were quite poor. In honor of her sister, Mrs. Gocky and her nleite, Mis Qocky, Mr. George Snlvley gave a aunflower party at her home from 1 to 6. Misses Edith Dumont, Florence Temple ton and Ruth Wilson gave a lawn aoolal at th home 'of Mis Dumont In th even ing In honor of Mis Bertha PhUlippl. Misses Marian and Kat Hamlin returned from a visit In the east, taking In Buffalo, Niagara and ether point In that vicinity. People Talked About Th spectacle of women sliding down th bannisters at a bargain rush come at th right moment to confound men preachers who attribute th hlh coat of living to extravagance of women. How those youngsters grow a th years speed on? Rumor has it that Miss Esther Cleveland, a Whit House baby of 1893, Is engustd to wed Kaudilph L. West of New York next October. After a successful literary career of thirty year Marlon Crawford leave a fortune of $4.0u0. Thirty years of promotion, com bination and stock gambling netted John W. Gates a fortune of $40,000,000. Owners and promoter of cold storag poultry and egg may think th world Is their oyster Just now. But there will b something doing whea th "Order of Royal Roosters" gat together n Washington next month. Abraham Teacheut, a rich manufacturer of Cleveland. O , who has Just celebrated hi ninety-fourth birthday, but disdains not to put In six day of work eauu week, says a man who 1 in good health at 0 oommlta a grievous wrong If he retire trora active work. Bdlsen is delighted with th wId dis trict of France and 1 surprised to find so much work don In a country where vary other day la a holiday. H ! learn ing with surprise that In some part of the world people regard Idleness as a safe antidote for worry. Vera Mabel Gammon I th nam of th llttl blind deaf-mut who ta often pokn of a th Helen Keller of Minnesota. Bh was tea than 4 when she became blind and less than a year afterward she lost, ber hearing. When placed in th slat school for tha deaf la Minnesota she was believed to be without the average Intelligence. Her taacher 1 Mia Blanch Hanson. Tl' D I II R lneDccsLaicruox IT Hesenta the I sly Humors. SOUTH OMAHA. Aug. 2B.-To the Editor Of Th Hee: As Is always the CHse when a cltlsen demands the enforcement of the law In any respect and particularly In regard Ni ahe liquor traffic, there Is being per sistently circulated certain rumors regard log the motive of thuse behind the prose cution and especially of the undersigned. Of these rumir. two are being Klven the greatest publicity: First, that I am "sore" because the board refused to "put me back on the police force," and second, that I im looking for a piece of money." Relative to the first, 1 wish to say that have never been dismissed from the force, that I am still a legal member of the poMrs department, and therefore not looking for "reli. statement." The statute provides the manner in which persons shall be discharged from the police force and until followed, I am a member of the force And entitled to dra my wages from the city. Again, even before the expiration of my ninety-day "lay off." I had secured evi dence of the wholesale violation of the liquor laws by a larg number of local saloon men, and at least two members of the fire and police board, John J. Ryan and Joseph Plvonka, will not have the temerity to say that they have not been acquainted with these violations, yet with no effort to prevent the him, While still actively on the police force, I hud made different ar rest for these same violation and in some case the offenders were never brought to trial, while in the rest of them the board, for reasons best known to lUelf, stead fastly endeavored to make themselves be lieve that I was mistaken and that the offender hud a corner on the truth. After uch experience, It seems self-evident why I did not bring still others under the Judg ment of thl self-same board. As to the second charge, that I am "looking for a piece of money," I would suggest that such a charge should not be made nor accepted hastily, against one who ha seen fit to give up hi position and later his business in order that he might do the right thing for the sake of the right. Certainly this charge could not have come from those who have been base enough to attempt to avoid the publicity of the whole affair by offering me bribe money If I "would only lie down," although the record of recent trial would indicate that some of our citixen are enpabte of offering a bribe, and upon failure to make good in their nefarious scheme, have never theless circulated the report that they were successful. I have been a member of the police de partment of South Omaha continuously for the last eleven years, and I say to you, after careful thought and consideration, that In all those years, police matters have never been in as bad condition as they are at this time. NELS TURNQUIST. Onion Powerful to have. BRADSHAW, Neb.. August M.-To the Editor of The Bee. In glancing over The Bea of the 23d, our eye caught this caption, "Onions Powerful to Save," and after tak ing In the subject matter our mind started down the line of thought, and It came to ua that we might put something In your "Letter Box" that might start people to thinking on a subject not often presented, and we give It In the form of a question. Why Is It that the average refined lady will turn up her nose In disgust at the slightest odor of onions on a gentleman' breath, but will huddle up olose, smile pleasantly and look, oh, so pleased while In company with a gentleman whose breath la saturated with the fume of tobacco and cigars, strong enough to make a stale egg appear a veritable pot of perfume? Onions are a healthy and nutritious veg etable, while tobacco and clsars are con ceded to be unhealthy; yet tobacco 1 per missible in the company of women while onions are not, and just why such a state of affairs should exist In society, 1 hard to guess. It is a generally conceded fact that the women of our land make, to a large ex tent, the characters of our men and boys, that Is, they uphold or break down the Customs and habit of men; therefore If women would protest as vigorously that no gentleman would present himself In their company wtth a foul tobacco breath as they do that no gentleman will present himself with the odor of onions, the to bacco fiend would soon become as scarce a the man with the odor of onion on his breath. What do the women think about our proposition? JOHN B. DEY. Cnrtl Agricultural School Location. MINDEN. Neb., Aug. 28. To the Editor of The Bee: An effort la belne marie hv two or three cities of th district which wa ellxlble for the Aarluultur cnii recently granted to Curtis to prevent the committee's action belnr carried nut Th. tactics used are rather of a whipped dog' style. These men are not loyal cltlsen of Nebraska, they do not want a lajffAr Ne braska, their conception only goes as far s their city. Tha state legislature apnolntad a. commit. tea on location, confident that this commit tee would be conscientious In their decision. Any one conversant with th method and the careful procedure of this committee, realise that th final decision wa made with only th best Interest of the bill which gave birth to thl new agricultural school. After viewing with various cttle proposed, and after many hours of debate, ma commute located th school In the logical center of Nebraska' drv farmlnr district of th southwest. These men are trying to Indue lawyer to have an injunction served unon thl. committee' decision. They Intimate that this committee was Incapable, not know ing their duty. Ona of the cities which Is making such a fuss admit having spent over R.000 in try. lng to hav th agricultural school located In their community, and even (on so far aa to say they had pledged the governor of Nebraska to favor them in the final decision. An Injunction only mean delay and a larger fight, with a large expense, and no real good accomplished. The district surrounding Curtis Is In larger need of a college to develop dry farming, than th district surrounding North Piatt or Holdrege. Why ahotild North Piatt and Holdrege be trying to In fluence thia committee? Why are they not loyal to th governor and to the state legislature? Curtis did not put up any money to get th school nor did Curtis Send a lobbying committee to the capltol. Th committee ha decided upon Curtis, and concluded that Curtl 1 th logical center for th agricultural chool. All loyal cltlsen of aurroundlng cities, MInden and ether will stand by th decision; why not North ' Piatt and Holdrege do the am? q. e. P. Karuiers, Antolst and Good Roads. SILVER CREEK. Neb., Aug. IBTo th Editor of Th bee: No on will deny the advantage cf good road, and no on ap preciate their value more than th farmer. But what I a good road for th farmer. I not necessarily a good road for th owner. of an automobile, Th farmer wants a good road from hla farm to th nearest town, where h market hi crop and get hi supplies. H never hauls a load from on town to another, and thnra- 1 fore has only an Indirect, or sentimental Interest In through roads. The automobile man on the contrary has no direct Interest In these local roads, but has a very great Interest tn through roads. In fact h wants lust as good a road midway between the towns, that Is often little used by the fHrmrr, aa anywhere else. During the rainy season Of May and June we usually have our worst roads. Hut bad ronds at that season of the year Is a matter of small consequence to the faimer for then he Is busy putting In and tending his crops and has little use for the public roads. Ills hauling to town Is montly done In August and September, and In the winter months when the roads are most always good. The automobile man on the other hand wants a good road dur ing the balmy months of spring more than at any other time of the yesr. Hence his demand for stone roads which are as good In wet weather as in dry. In winter, no matter how good the ronds are, he Is little In evidence. The farmer uses the ronds mostly as a business necessity, while the automobile man use them mostly for pleasure. I submit that It would be better for all concerned If the manufacturers, and In dividual owner of automobiles would frankly recognise these differing and often conflicting Interests, quit their everlasting talk which deceives no one of the wonder ful benefit Rood roads would be to the farmers, be honest and say that they want these fine, throush roads primarily for themselves. Why, to nttend good roads conventions and read good roads articles, one would think It was all for the farmers, and scarcely suspect there was such a thing as an automobile on earth. The automobile Industry Is a big thing and growing every year by leaps and bounds; It has come to stay, and automobile owner are Justly entitled to grext consideration In the matter of road-making. But they ought not to try to hog the whole thing as In the last Nebraska, legislature, thus keeping the farmers from getting any good legislation and getting none for themselves. If they would come out flat-footed and say what they want, and be reasonable about It, I think legislatures and the people would meet them more than half way and they would have no Just cause of com plaint. CHARLES WOVSTER. Equal Production Day or Night Why not enjoy the satisfaction of having a splendidly lighted factory with a reliable twenty-four-hour electric power service ? Electric light and electric motors furnished by us will assure you the highest production by night as well as by day. An expert will show you in plain black and white why our unfailing twenty-four-hour power is vastly more efficient and economical than any other kind. Thone now. OMAHA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER CO. Announcement No. 79 To the Black Hills Hot Springs, So. Dakota Endorsed by the U. 5. Government at a National Sanitarium la in the heart of the mystic region of the Black Hills, at an altitude of 3,000 feet Its climate is unexcelled at all seasons of the year. Its medicinal waters and big plunge baths restore health and provide recreation. The Best ot Hotel Accommodations. Direct Train Service Through Pullman Sleeping Cars and Re clining Chair Cars to Deadwood and other points in the Black Hills, leave the Union Station daily at 3.55 p. m. Through trains at convenient schedules to points in Eastern South Dakota. Low Rates Daily throughout the summer to Hot Springs, Deadwood, Lead, Rapid City, S. D., and Douglas, Casper, Shoshone and Lander, Wyo. ( fomeseekers' tickets on sale first and third Tuesdays of each month. NW1S11 BREEZY TRIFLES. "Wasn't that elopement story highl colored one? r "I should SHy It was. The fsther wa purple with rss. the strl re. I with appre hension, her chum sreen with envy, th minister white with f.-ar. the fellow showed a rllminct vellow streak, while the wh"l wedding party were blue at the outcome." Baltimore American. "Ta." Hld the small boy, "wht Is a 'gentlemen's agreement?'" "A gentlemet.'s Brement. my son, i the understanding that a number of capl tnllsts reach when each Is compelled to admit that all the other. are lust as clever at a bargain as he Is. " Washington ttr. Jmlge Prisoner, you were found with thl lantern. Jimmy, screw driver and contorMi In vour DojsesKlon. Whst have ynu to hi ' r'r'soner-I'm an Innercont ottermolihsi yer honor, ten' that's me lamp an' ,rei'r kit. Boston Transcript. loetlcnl Lady I there anvthln. on earth' that you long for at times with a groat yearning? Mere Man Yes. there Is. When 1 draw two carils to three nci there Is one spot that I yearn for with all my" Hut the lady had left him. Toledo Blad THE REST CURE. rrey Shaw. In New York American. "You're overworked." said the doctor, "tint out In the open and rest; I should say a spot by tlie water Would settle our problem best. i(on't dream of a thin tint pleasure. Won't think, smoke, worry or write; F.at well and try to be merry Better pack up your thins tonlaht." With Jov I forsook the city. Where It's battle full tilt, or fall. And I hailed the peaceful ocean. Whore the breeses of leisure call. I rose with the sun for a bathing, A breakfast enormous I ate: I played at tennis all morning. And 1 golfed through forty holes stiaiaht. At dinner I spared not the menu; Did I smoke? oh, well. Just a few; Three sharks enticed me to auction, I rolled Into bed about 2; At 4 I went deep-sea fishing With my old friend mnl-le-mer. And thouuh 1 tried to be merry, It was rather a forced affair. I burned my noe In the sunshine. And I rowed till my arms were sorei I danced with a million maidens In my short sojourn at the shore. And when I returned the doctor Umlled upon me as doctors can. "Sou see." he observed, "whst quiet rnd nature will do for a man." M100 llluitraUd folders with full particular! at Ticket Offices 101-1403 Farnam Street Omaha, Neb. nJ i