Tug, Omaha Daily Bi;k KOU.NnEl) liV KIVAltl no.xKWATr.il VICTOR ROS F.WAT Kit, Km Toll Entered at Omaha postoffice aa secnmi claw matter. TERMS OP sri'.. nU'TloN. Funday bee, one year I? V (atnrtlay Iter. ( ne )er 1 I 'ally He (without Sunday), one vear. 4 o Daily Hee an.1 Fundav. one yesr i 0" VKUKD HV OAllUlr.ll Kvenlna; le (with Humlayi. per month. ;:. I 'ally Hee (InrlmlinK Siimlnyi. per mo..''.-'.e l'ally Hee f without Sunday). p-r mo. ...4.' Address all rrimi'loinin f Irrea 'ilnrltien In delivery to Citv Circulation I'ei't. IlKMITTANCK. Remit by draft epr or p mt.il order, payable to The Kee PuM'shlntf mini any. Only I-cent atampti received In pavment of small account lvrsnpal clink, ex cept on Omaha and aastern exrl',ane, not accepted. f )F:rKS. Omaha The lice IlnlMlns;. South Omahn 2H1 N SI. Council Hiuff.-1;, Sn.'.t St. k Lincoln rt I.lttle Hull. line. fhlraao IMS Marnuetto ItolldtnK. Kanaaa Clir-Itcllnnre Hullrl rrn New YiTk-34 Wl Thlrt v-1 h;ri M'af hlnptor Komteenih St., N. W. CoriRKSI-oMiKMT.. Pomrminleatlon relating ti new and editorial matter should I" addressed Omaha TW, Editorial Iicpartnienl. HnrTEMr;r-:n cir.cruTio.N'. 47,398 Fthte of Nebraska. ' unity of ImusUs. fit lwlKht Williams, circiilatUin manager of The Bee 1'uMlehmg company, heint duly morn, auyi that the average lull circulation. le. npolh d, unuiu-d nnd te turned copU-a for tbe month of Heitmb-r, Jitjl, m f,:w. '. DWIOIIT WILLIAMS, Circiilntlon Mar.atrer. piihocrlhed In mv iireen' end sworn to before me this Id 1v of octohcr VOL leal ) IlDMEIIT lll'NTI.H i; Notaiy public. Kaharrllicra leaving the city rinpornrlly ahoold have Th Vice infilled to them. Address Mill '' '" rqnetr4 . jhut can Indian nummor come back? r, . ;A box broker in Now York beat larry Lauder. Louder. ! The real blooda of Tennesee are at' relatives of Davy Crockett. jfcan V. Stephens: Whose check beok are you using this time? r . "Dig Six" Mathcniion might now bp. referred to aa "Little Joe." ---------- When Jt cornea to real trust bust irjg, though, Mr. Taft bna them all beaten, Mr. liryan not excepted. i No wonder our old friend, Edgar Howard, did not want to go up gainst the check book this time. 1 f MM II Just think bow sorry a certain number of lawyera must be for the poor Steel trust, that it baa to go to court. . Smash the machine by making "Charley" Fanning boss of the court house aa well aa of the city hall. Can you beat itT, y ANMMMMBMMMI Many New Yorkers will doubtless want to go to Philadelphia now when they feci like having an unusually hilarious time. After going into Copenhagen aa he did, nobody will doubt that Dr. Cook at least had nerve enough to go to the north pole. ( v That farmer who lives on (the boundary of four elates has sue ceeded in spreading nimaeir over a lot of territory. They have unearthed an Ideal Juror In Missouri one who baa never heard of he Hyde citse. They will have to show him. . -- jJGovernor Aldrlch is to apeak In Qiaha. To the governor, Omaha ia rijt nearly ao much the enemy's coun ttf aa It used to be. n ' Still, with conditions as they exist 1 Tripoli. China aud Mexico, there iff.no use lor jack Jonnson to go cit of the fighting business. or. "I " I if r. Rockefeller's board baa sliced ihi another financial pie for the col lides, but before tbey may eat it they 43at get other pies of larger size. )ut In 'Denver they find no time ftr the dissolution of the Steel trust, tij-lr tiilnds being absorbed in the itjtempt to dissolve the school sorori ties. ii r ilow atrangu it la that in spite of ll$ assertion that this country goes rjht along making vital mistakes, it alio continues In greatness and good- T- i jMr. Bryan persist in complaining of j the biased minds composing the f, feral supreme court. That must ti; why ho never pleads a cane before ttfra. :i - ' i Tba emperur of China is so young that he may never kuow he was em petor unlec some loose-tongued mfraber of the family tells him years hence. 'J : Natural causes are the only ones that ever Influence the rise or fall in price of trust-made article. The formation of the trusts was only an Incident. : That is to say, the present admin istration las written "N. O." across Mr. Morgan's license to the Tennesee Coal aud Iron, as Cartoonist Ma cauley pictures it. Considering that Jt has four out of the twelve candidates for ata'.e of fice on the two big tickets, Uncoln surely has lis nerve in trying to shut out the oaly Omaha man who Is up. Keorpinitinf the Tobacco Trot. A layman might Rot the notion from reading extracts of the plan that the proposed method for reor ganizing the Tobarco trust was fair and rafe to both skies and such aa to restore the competitive sysUm of trade, for the statement appears lurid nnd quite Mrong as to that on certain points. Kxperta, however, ntnong whom are Independent to bHero dealers, producers and their attorneys, strongly oppope the plan, nllenltiR that It will neither prevent monopoly nor permit competition. Attorney (i neral Wlckersham la not. entirely aa'lsdei with 'thr plan, thctiKh he does not condemn It In tolo. It forms unfortunate that, there Is room for such wide and sharp dlf fereiire of opinion, but the attorney general submits some further condi tions, which, if compiled with, he be lieves will come ii g near us possible to effecting the desired end. It Is doubtful, as Mr. VI kcrshftin points out, whether the precise effect of nny theory or set of theories can be de termined by anyone beforehand. But It dors seem as If dlatrlbutlon of stock and complete separation of managements and revenues, of sales and purchasing agencies, clerical forces and capital stock would et near to restoring the preceding Ktntus. Of course, It la not these stlpula tlona with which the? Independents have found fan!'.. They are r.ot In tho plan of reorganization as it now stands. Added to all the conditions the attorney general Insists upon, Is a request for an Injunction prohibit ing apoclfkially the recreation of the combination or any similar combina tion. That is thrown in as a clincher and, whllo tho Tobacco people have heartily embraced tho original reor ganization plan, they have not yet approved the amendment! offered, through Mr. Taft 'a attorney general, nor are they likely to, voluntarily. The Canal and Hawaii. The operation of the Panama canal undoubtedly will benefit the Ha walian Islands. Judge Sanford 11. Dolo, former president of the Ha waiian republic, Is confident this benefit will 'be .very pronounced upon the business and social Interests of America's mid-sea possession. In an Interview wlthi a Boston paper. Judge Dole says: Many panacnger oblpa plying between the Atlantic and oriental countries will Hop th-ra ui oidar to Rive tliclr pa. tui kits a day or two on shore. Other thlpa will stop there for coal and aup piles and aoind for telsraphlo conv municatlon. (Thn the dry dock which rho I "n I ted States la building at Pearl harbor, which will be open to merchant Ship, will undoubtedly bring many ships to Itjnolulu for repairs. All this Is obvious enough and the effect will be to stlmuUto Industry at Honolulu and Illio, the two principal cities. The revival In time should be come very considerable and If so It will add vastly to the drawing powers of the Islands. Hawaii Is prosperous aa things are, according to ex-Prealdent Dole, and It also appeara to be quite conserva tlve in the. tone of Its Industries, When asked If the Planters' associa tion, headed by the so-called big "5" companies control tho Islands, Judge Dole said: ' The sugar companies have a large In fhionce. They aaalat In the financial ex pvnaes of elections fur the aide that might be called the conservative one. Hometlinea the party which has their ympathy and support carries the elec tions sometime fulls. This Influence of this control, not to use the word "domi nation,". Is. on the whole, to the ad vantuKe of the Islands, although It la probably true that In some reapects their interests conflict with the public Inter ests. .This aeema to be an exceedingly frank statement of the situation. It will not be aurprlslng, however, that Judge Dole, whose life has been wrapped up bo completely in tho de velopment of Hawaii, should be an ultra-conservative. Proving Too Much. Ou amiable democratic friends are gleefully pointing to the registration shortage In the Third ward as Justi fying their loud alarms, and proving conclusively that they have prevented a great republican conspiracy to pad the vote there through fictitious names. . Hut If the Third ward registered between 400 aud 500 leas than last year, what does it really prove? It proves that laBt year the democratic machine inflated the vote in the Third ward to that extent In the in terest of Mayor "Jim" for governor and Mr. Hitchcock for senator. That ia exactly what The Bee charged at the time, and followed up by expos ing several nesta of voters colonised by the democratic bosses. If the democrats have this year de sisted from their fraudulent prac tices, we congratulate them on their reform, but we see no reaaon for them, thus self-convicted, to try to unload their shame. upon the repub licans. If the deficit 'in the Third ward tbla year proves anything. It proves that the democrat perpetrated rank fraud in last year's registration, and as tbe statute of limitations baa not yet rin, and the prosecuting machin ery is all lu democratic hand, there Is no good reason why they ahould not begin prosecuting themselves at once. Certainly, there Is no good reason why decent voters of Omaha should approve "and endorsa these demo- TUK HKK: OMAHA, cratlc frauds by voting the ticket named by the same democratic bosses. Safety Ap-liaace Decision. Whether, as suggested, the su preme court's ruling that obliges all railroads to observe the federal tafefy appliance act foreshadows complete control of the railroads of the country by tbe Interstate Com merce commission, It cannot be doubted that the tendency Is In that direction, and yet there havo been exceptions to the rule, notably In the rase of tbe employers' liability act, where tho court has held for state rather than federal control. Lul tli's Is a big qucptlon yet to he fully threshed out, this cuienUon of federal or stute control of rail road Bc-paratlon of Interstate! and Intrastate traffic. In this particular case at hand, neither traffic rates, ns wo understand It, are Involved nor directly affected by tbe ruling of the piifoty nppllancc! net. Quite apart, however, from the hnsic Issue of stale or federal con trol, the public Is vitally concerned In a ruling by tlio federal supreme court that compel the moBt complete Installation of safety devices or ap pliances on the part of all railroads, and It would seem, for uniformity's sake, federal control would produce results swifter than state control. Tho railroads, themselves, would naturally prefer this, for as to safety appllancea In particular, It would be far easier for them to obey one cen tral authority Instead of forty-six or eight. The County Judge. Never In the hUtory of Dougla county ha the office of county judge, which is the probnte court In which estates of all deceased citizens are administered, been run In as busi nesslike a manner, and completely free from graft, aa it has been during recent yeara under County Judge Leslie. There baa been no scandal attached to the office during his in cumbency, and Judge Leslie Is prop erly to be elevated to the district bench. Tbe Importance of the office i of county Judge requires that there shall he no step backward. Tho place ought to go to a tried and trusted lawyer of level headed Judgment, and real responsibility, and the candidate presented by the republicans in the person of Judge Bryce Crawford pos sesses these qualifications In eminent degree. On tho Justice bench, nnd aa police magistrate, Judge Crawford has. demonstrated hla ability, and, what la more, has satisfied every one of his thorough honesty and impar tiality. People who want to make sure that estatea that pass through probate will be conscientiously ad ministered, and scrupulously ac counted for, will vote for Judge Crawford. In the belief that the renents should be fairly distributed over the state muny democrat will vote for Mr. Lyford, the only candldute of either party residing outnlde of Doug-la and Ijncastor coun ties. Lincoln's sincerity In wlchlng to Rive the office' to the- state ran ho proved in no other way than by throwing a largo democratic, aa well n republican, vote for Mr. Lyford Lincoln Journal. Evidently tho size of Lincoln's politics la too email to Include the only candidate for state office run ning on either ticket, who Uvea in Omaha. Theirs la a dangerous j?;ime to play when there are so many can dldatea for state offices residing in Lincoln. If Nebraska people should get the habit of throwing everything to the atate, Lincoln and Omaha would find themselves both in the Joint attitude or holding the sack. It ia aald that the supreme court decision foreshadow annihilation of Jurisdiction of atate railway commis sions over Interstate common car riera, which would practically put the atate railway commissions out of business. The competition to con nect with the pay-roll by being elected to membership on our state railway commission, however, will not be called off. The democrats have found their combine controlling the county board so profitably politically that they are pulling every string to rescue it from threatened disintegration. The bell wether of the combine did not have the nerve to stand for re-election, but his chief lieutenant thinks he can pull it across, if be can only fool em. The Treasury department is being swamped with paior money people are sending in for fear of microbe. If that apprehension ever strike Messr. Rockefeller. Carncglo aud Morgan, the government will need to erect a new treasury building. Mr. Pryan has a chance now to use hia democratic congressional ex hibit in the Third district a an ob ject lesson from which to draw a moral about the corrupt influence of the limitless use of money In politi cal campaigns. What about the moral misfit on your democratic t'eket, Senator Hitchcock. Aren't you going io warn people against him tbe same as you have warned them against the unfit republican scliool bourd candidate? Crelgbton College Is a bne educa tional Institution and one we are all proud of. Dut still, that is no rea son why It should be the whole democratic party lu this ballwlck. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER PJooklncf 13 ackvsard IIiisDav in Omaha i COMPILED IHOM DF.R flLfS .NOV. 1. Thirty Veara Agi The Phllomethenn club opening con cert waa a aucce musically, although not very well attended. The principal olnlsl were U. F. Seuer. Martin Caitn and Julius Meyer, and a etrliiR quartette made up of Muaars. Bauer, Schultx, Cahn and Pnyder. KtiKlne compnny No. 1 held their an nual election of officer and banquet. The election renulted tor J. V. Nichols, prl dent; CJ. A. Hill, vice president; I. W. Lane, secretary; OeorRc. !lwi, foreman; tleorne Kroecr, firm assistant; Joe Ahl qui ,t, second asiatant. Speechifying was done by General C'owln, cx-l'ollce JuiIkp 1 law ix, Colonel Clmae, Mayor Hoyd, Councilman 1'unham and Colonel J'.. T. Hmythe, who presented Tony lfcrreld with an cltKant gold badge, both beauti ful and valuable. The Ne. strom murder caic i on In the dlHtrlct court. CJeneral Agent Davenport of the Chi cago, Lurbngton A Qulniy railroad went west, accompanied by Mark Morton, the ti'uvcliriK UKd.t of the Chicago, Hurling ton & Qulncy. Tim Iirlckluycrs' association gave I beni fit bail In Central hall with about seventy-five couple present. Mrs. Samuel Walker was declared the best lady waltzer, atid awarded an a prixo a hand some toilet et in a velvet case, and Charles Willi received a gold pin fur eelllng the grralent number of ticketa, Internal revenue receipts for the month of October were J,700 13, the lariest ever collected here In a single month The boys In the L'nlon Pacific head quarters have lost their reckoning. They state that the first of the month ha arrived and no ubecrlDtlon l.at tor a supposedly charitable object has been passed among them, an omtsslm which never occurred before. Mrs. James K. Boyd and her little son Juy, left for a visit to her mother in Hair Francisco. Kdwrnd Rosewater returned from the east. Miss BDlnncr Is home from a visit in Colorado. Miss Mamie Baundera visited Mra. Horace Everett In Council Rluffs, over Sunday. MIhs Carrie Millard entertained at a din ner party at her residence on Capitol avenue the following: V. II. Ross, Miss Rumsey, O. D. Thayer. Ml Hoyt, Exra Millard, W. F. McMllllaln, Miss Hhlverick, K. C. Uullock, John Hingwalt, Itena KoB. Ml Woolworth, J. M. Roas, Miss I'oppleton, Mrs, Millard, Miss Rlngwait and L, Drake. A pleasant Hullowe'en party was,glven last n.Rht at the residence of Mr. Thomas Kilty, at Seventeenth and Cau. Twenty Years Ago Mr. and Mis. K. W. Arthur, late of Des Moines, were occupying their new renldence, 914 South Thirty-third street, Detectives Haze and Vizsard arrested a number of men charged with entering the dry gooeds store of Ernest Kaiaer, 2406 Leavenworth street. It was discovered that one W. A. Over beck, appointed Judge of election In the Tenth district, had been dead for more than a year. The appointment was purely an accident, It appeared, the laugh for which was on Mayor Crushing, r'tate Senator Bwltzler, another promt nont democrat, cume out In a public statement in The Bee, In advocacy of the election of Judge A. M. Post, the, republi can nominee for the supreme court over KUgerton, the democratic nominee Around this office the storm of the state campaign beat most fiercely.. ' W. II. Carson, who had been promi nently Identified with Darrow A Logan, left for the east aa buyer for their suc cessors, Gibson ft Co. Ten Veara Ag' The flist real large ball of the season was held at Metropolitan hall. It waa given by Mr. and Mra. F. L. Ingram and Mr. and Mra. H. L. Whitney to about 250 guests. In tho receiving line were Mr. and Mra. Ingram. Mr. and Mrs. Whitney, Mesdames J. H. Munrl, S. L. Kelly, W. II. Sherradan, Charles Crquehart, Palmetler and C. M. Van Burcn. The first team crossed the new Twenty fourth atreet viaduct. Mrs. Frank Romenaka, S22S Bouth Eleventh atreet, asked the police to as sist her In locating Husband Romenaka, who had been missing for several days. Tbe terms of surrender for Mr. Pat Crowe expired and the police were In the dark as to his whereabouts or plans. John I. Redlck procured a temporary restraining order from Judge Dickinson preventing iie city from constructing a ewer in North 'Omaha to provide faclll tie for the territory bounded by Twen tieth, Twenty-fourth and Bprague street and Ames avenue. Joel P. Clark and Mlsa Leon P. Ketcham were married at the residence of the of ficiating parson, Rev. C. W. Savldge. People Talked About A New Yorker who had nerve enough to write to Hie major protesting against the regular uunuul uplift in tuxes was huipiy reminded that It la not a tax laer'a place to ask why, but dig down and cough up, or words to the effect. Dr. Cook a lackdoor and back alley flight from the Insulted Danes In Copen hagen tend to show thut a .Munchausen' come back ha it.i drawbacks. There'll bo "something rotten lu Denmark" while the doctor remains there.. "lie good and ou'll be happy" will con tinue the stiindby motto of Krnest M. Matluwe of New Haven. Conn. By giving hla sleeping car berth te an elderly spin fcter he la lemeinberud with a bequest of IllC. WO In the woman' will. The Cambridge preacher in jail in rtosi'n on the charge of poisoning a dis carded sweetheart held forth In a Kan sas City pulpit front 101 to IM. Temp tation of Young tiiiia in a City." waa hla great them In that pulpit, and It wa great stuff, very appealing to moth er and fascinating to the girla. Inter view with member of the old conju gation In the Kanaaa City Star show that the clerical hrartbreaker hd many of the girl at hla feet, and their father and brother didn't wake up until th? I preacher urBed that the glass In the church windows be painted. Before th-j p&lnting Job was Undertaken, cn dea con observes, three women together con fronted the roator In open meeting with his promUes cf marriage. As the pas tor could not accommodate all three tlmultantoutly or consecutively he fled from the scene and the aeandal was huahfd -for tbe k of the church," 1, 1911. Bryan, Hitchcock, Dahlman & Co. Bloux City does not, The Om. ha World-Herald concedo that Mr. Bryan la to be honored by the democrats of Ne braska with a seat In the democratic national convention of 1912, but It Is un reserved In It Judgment that "the next democratic national convention is to be of the most exciting character." It would be aa well for the World-Herald to get Into the open with referenre to a matter of such Interest In Its stute and In the country at large. Mr. Bryan has given notice in the plainest spend thut bo is cand.datc for a seat in tho convention, snd be has declared, a If recognizing tl.e existence of home opposition, that If the democrats of his state refuse to place him on the delegation he will attend the convention anyway. If there Is n fiaht on Mr. Bryan In his homo state It would seem a violation of democratic principle to niuJie the fight from ambush. The World-Herald proceeds to say, as If by way of explanation cf the antici pated excitement In the convention, that "there will be at least five candidates be fore the convention, all of whom will have backing from the very first." There may be more that five, and to reduce the field to that number will Involve broken promises, but say tho number Is to bo five. "They are," the World-Herald says, "Harmon, Wilson, Folk, Marshall and Champ Clork." It will be noticed by the critical reader that the names are nut given In alphabetical order. The conclu sion may not be far wrong that they are given In the order of preference. On this hypothesis there I deep significance In the fact that the name of Harmon leada all the rest. Mr. Bryan will notlco that. As a man of discernment and as a man Intimately acquainted with condition and relations in Nebraska, he cannot fall to notice with some rising of suspicion, thjt the name of Harmon is given the post of honor. I'ossibly a key is pro vided to the energetic declaration of Mr. Bryan in hla address lit the Nebraska campaign of thl year that he will be in the convention of next year, whether or no. Mr. Bryun himself ha made It clear, through his Commoner and otherwise, that he cannot look with approval upon NEBRASKA PRESS COMMENT. Kearney Hub: Evidently the World Herald has a severe case of Rosewater on the brain. Fremont Tribune: If the bakers' meet lng stimulates Fremont housewives to make better bread, their visit will be of Inestimable value. Albion News: Dan Stevens In too much of a silk-stocking plutocrat to impress on aa being in sympathy with progres sive political principles. .Madison Chronlole: The democrats aeem to think that they have something to do to beat Elliott. They are getting Champ Clark, the speaker of the house, to speak -at Fremont and West Point. Loup City Northwestern: Brer. Beus- hausen thinks he saw at least 1.500 people out to hear Bryan while here. Even a prohibition editor sometimes lays him self under auspiclon by seeing double. Lincoln Star: T. H. Tibbies Is justly indignant at Secretary of Stale Walt for ruling that there ia no populist party, evidently feeling aggrieved because Secre tary Walt seem to have overlooked him entirely.' Pawnee Republican: Just forty year ago Mother O'Lcary's cow kicked over the lamp that fired Chicago. And we'll wager a couple of railroads there Isn't a lady in Pawnee City who remembers the Incident. Pender Republic. When- men like Con gressman Norris and Senator Brown lay aside their own personal aspirations and take an active part In this campaign, their friends should follow their example. These men realize that the election of the atate ticket this fall is important, and after this campaign Is over, then their personal aspirations can be brought to the front. They urge their friends to earnestly support the republican ticket and do everything In their power to elect every candidate this fall. EDITORIAL SNAPSHOTS. Washington Post: Champ Clark claims to hall from ao many state now that when he hit the old-home-week cir cuit he'll make Mr. Taft' swing around the circle aeem like a mere afternoon call. Cleveland Leader: "Mr. Taft will not be nominated," declares Senator Cum min of Iowa. Still Is might be well for the senator to consider what he will do In case Mr. Taft should be nominated. Washington Slar: China not being suf ficiently enlightened to relieve popular emotional stress by tha discussion of votea for women, government ownership and the Initiative, referendum and recall, has plunged Into a atate of utter bellger. ency. St. Louis Republic: Civilization Is march'ng on In Tripoli, where mere than thirty Arabs have been caught red-handed by the Italians and shot. Next weeU when we hear that the Arabs have re turned the compliment there will be pain ful rumors that the Mad Mullah 1 loose again and is proclaiming a holy war. Judge: Omaha has at last become a commission-governed city, but, after all. she ha nothing on Utile old New York In thla respect. There la a popular Im pression abroad that New York ha been commission-governed city for many years, with all the commissions flowing steadily Into th pockets of Tammany; whence th expression, Tammany haul. I i Hear the llooheo Hoar. St. Loula Republic. An Important lumberman at Pes Moines. Ia , says of the latest prosecution of tho Lumber trust. "To me the whole thing looks like a piece of- politics, brought about to curry favor in th coming pres idential election." Tho Lumber trust It self was originally a piece of politics brought about to curry favor In various presidential elections. Why complain now that the tables ore turned? Spices of Quality V the finest the .C world grows come to you kSCr 10c in Tone at - our bo xes. grocer's. 'V Or we will send VOU a full lie nark. any kinJ oa receipt of 10c tons saoa. Dm sua., u. Journal. the candidacy of the Ohio governor. Jud- sorj Harmon, distinguished member of the Cleveland cabinet, for the Bryan succes sion In the race for the office of president of the I'nlted States. The World-Heraid 1 entirely familiar with this Important fact. Nor can it be Ignorant of the fact that the distinction It gives to the name of Harmon Is next to declaration of war nsainst Nebraska's most conspicuous democrat and citizen. There Is reason for presumption that it was so Intended. The owner of the World-Herald Is Sen ator Gilbert M. Hitchcock. In the last campaign Mr. Hitchcock supported for the governorship of Nebraska the mayor of Omaha. James Charles Dahlman, and Mr. Bryan opposed the Dahlman candi dacy. Tho election fell to Chester H. Aldrlch, republican. The result was dis quieting, ond Mr. Dahlman still lives. Does Senator Hitchcock find that he is not In position to say a kind word for Mr. Eryan? Does the senator fear that Intimate political association with Mr. Bryan would imperil a second term In the si nate of the t'nlted States? Mr. Bryan's course was not approved by what may be termed the liquor Interest of bis state. Are the liquor Interests disposed to put Mr. Bryan down and out? If so. Is Senator Hitchcock In such situation that he fears to Intervene In Behalf of h'.s old friend, philosopher and guide? The game of politics is selfish and too often cruel. Can it be possible that back of all is a plan for a potential Dahlman Hitchcock machine for the dominance of democratic politics In the city of Omaha an tho state of Nebraska? Mr. Bryan Is entitled to a fair show, to an open field and to civilized warfare. If thought of peace Is to be dismissed and a fight Is inevitable. , The appeal In the state of Nebraska Is necessarily to the people In this particular instance to the democratic people.. There Is no oc casion, to fear thai Mr. Bryan will be taken by surprise, and the first evidence that he la on guard comes In his reiter ated announcement In this campaign that he Is a candidate for delegate to the dem ocratic national convention. t The Omaha World-Herald should trust the . people really and fully. . liirni 1 i1 alty S3 eSSSKs! Oi I J B1 11 Delicious Cake Healthful Food made wiUi 11 w , Nv gg ininy U 1 IT5 mil 11 I 11 The product Grapes ox six Generations" the U. S. Its age is guaranteed by the u. s. Government. Its purity by the Schenley Distilling Company. Its quality speaks for itself. When you buy Rye, buy Schenley. At all dealers. Schenley Distilling Ctx, Lncco, Pa. GUARANTEE FUND LIFE ASSOCIATION ORGANIZED JAM'AItY a, 1903. FLitK ritOltXTKUi l.NSlllAXCE Ascot. October 1, 111 , ltc-scrve Fund, October 1, 1011 aiecuriUe with Mate Itepartuient I To Secure Ou Hate per thousand, age 33 (other age in proportion). $8.75 lU'oitorr Hank appointed 8HO. ilcred la California. laalaaa, Iowa, Xaaaas. Moatana. H.braska. Dakota. Or. on, Souta Dakota, Xabo, WaairoaT Tim Wa- PMBf to eater Cltaol a ad aUablri. Ka tapabl of products tt beat elaaa of boaUes waaiad a tat Maaar.r. aad Solid to.-. " ' X.OOK VP OV KECOB9. Home Office: Brandeis Building. Omaha. Neb Telephone Dougla TOIil. ' " PASSING PLEASANTRIES. "Well, old man. how did you get along after 1 left you at midnight. Oet borne all right?'' "No; a confounded noisy pollcemaa haled me to the station, wher 1 pnt the rest of th night." "Lucky dog: i reached home." Boto Transcript. "He took hla nips regularly and used profanity all his long life." This, hspllly. Is from the obituary of a famous parrot. Cleveland Plain Dealer. "I believe I should like to work on a street car,'' raid the theatrical manager. ' What for? ' "It must be cheerful to be around where business is always so good that they're standin' 'era up in the aisles." Washington star. Beggar riease, mister, give me a dime for my three hungry children. Pedestrian ((hurrying on I Don't heod any mure, ihunK you. Baltimore Ameri can. 'i think Ml propose at the parly to night." No: yoti won't." "Why won t I?" "My sister knows the young lady In tha case, and it has been arranged for you to propose at the hall next week." Louis ville Courier-Journal. "The public once In a while demands candidate who ure unfamiliar with prac tical politics." "Yes,'' replied Penator Sorghum, "one in a while, the tame as they occasion ally llko to attend the theater on amutcur night." Washington Star. THE AFTER CLAP. Oh. say, did you go To the gorgeous 1-and show, Where the big apples shine And the big peaches glow? Ami did you remark On the size of the fruit 1. Did you open your eyes? Did the sight make you mute? Did you see in the booths All thoso product of wonder? Did you think the producers on their land made a blunder? Did yon see the alfalfa Just like It was growing. And read of the crops 1 That aro yours for the sowing? Doou know that for you. With your strength and your grit There's a fortune in land r If you rustle for HT And when It has gone. Can you now fail to guess That this Land show of ours Was a howling success? Omaha. BAYOLL NE TRELE. Hi ome aked Biscuits of II GENUINE RYE IS 68 , - II fr?FlI Properly aged with a mellow, delicate flavor that you "can't beat 4 times distilled makes it absolutely pure. Bottled in Bond Each bottle is sealed with Government Stamp. October 1, 1011 ...... .9504,641.70 408,720.45 ii9J.550.0U Iuqmbu r.t... . ". i amWM RYE isj ra t