Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 21, 1911, Page 6, Image 6

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    IHE liEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, MUVEMUEU 21, 1911.
THE QMHA EVENING B EE
' nCXPKt P.T EDWAPM ItnSRWATKH
VHTOK KoSKWATKn. I'TUTOR.
Yhe l'cn PtilillphtiiR Company. Proprietor
KVfcrtY .MTRHNOON KX. B1XPAY
PKK mil.l'INtl. KAKNAM ANI) 17TM
opritiu. rrmi or Tin: city
OKKKItl, PArr.lt OF TIIK Cl SltV
Postoffico a; ecom)-
Knterod at Omahi
class matUT.
OFFICES,
.imeha-The llee. Rulldtng.
fntith OmKhn-MH N. Ht.
t'ouroil Hluffs 14 Srntt St.
Lincoln? Little Hiitldlitg.
'hlrn;o15l Mirmi'ftt Building.
Kinrtt City 422 Reliance Rullrttng.
New York-14 Wet Thirty-third SI.
t. l,oulsl4s Pterc Untitling.
ft.'lilhetoii Fourteenth St. N. M.
CORnKSruXPKNCK.
romnninlratlona relating to new and
editorial matter should be dlrsei
nisha Boo. Editorial Department.
BEUVRRKU BY CArtnlF.R.
I:enlng IW. with f undoy, per month. Zc
lillv He, without Kiimlay, per month,
Dally Pee. Including Sunday, per mo., 0..C
Aiidreea complaint of irregularities In
deiUery to City Circulation Department.
OCTOBER CIRCVLATION
50,703
Utata nf Nehraka, county et Douglas, aa:
Dmlght William, circulation mansger
of The IIm Publishing company. being
dnlv sworn, saye that tha average dally
-Irriilailon. less spoiled, limited and re
turned roples for tha month of October.
Ull. wa M.T.
DWtdHT WILLIAM".
Circulation Manager.
Subscribed In my presence and sworn
bttore ma Ihla let day "f Nnvmnbr. lilL
(Sal) ROBERT Ht'NTEn,
Notary Public.
Subscribers leaving tho rlr
temporarily ehosl
lira mailed la them. Adea
wilt ha ensnared aa often ne requested.
The Law'i Delays.
TIio law's delays ar vexatious,
fOKtly, uncertain, and visually un
neresrary. Many Instances of long
drawn Ian suits are to be ascribed
to defectives Judicial machinery and
artificially stimulated mania for
litigation. Hut no law suit is often
unduly delayed except by the delib
erate design of the lawyers on one
eldo or the other, and tbs complacent
co-operation of the Judge.
The machinery of the courts rest
upon law and constitutions, which
can be changed only with difficulty,
and at beat very slowly. The law
yers and the Judges can change their
dilatory tact Its whenever they want
to. Remember that nearly always
there arc two sides lo a law suit, one
of which wants to hurry up, and tbs
other to go flow.. In ono case tho
lawyer who wants to hurry up Is the
same lawyer who In the other case
wanted to go alow. If the Judges and
tho lawyeis really wanted to speed
up tho wheels of Justice, they could
do It without waiting for the old or
consent of any constitutional amendment.
Is strange that, if that be the rase,
the attorney general should be ao
poorly Informed of the facts as to
feel under necessity of going to the
troublo of bringing suit to get an
explanation. Tho fellows who make
so much of the mote In their
brothers' eyes too often are found,
upon clone Inspection, to have a little
beam In their own crafty optica. Evi
dently Vardaman Is to bo discounted
at the outset of bis senatorial career,
however this little charge of Irregu
larity may end.
That weather man of our la ver
satile, all right.
A 1 4,600 salary Is not
sneezed St by many of us.
to be
The "rooming after" Is usually
deferred as latin the day as possi
To be sure, those packers would
Ilk to stow their case away In cold
ttoragO.--t t - " ,
The old-fashioned turkey raffle
also seems to have become a back
numutr.
Mr. Morgan 'ell with the eolleo
tlon plate, money at last causing bis
downfall, - ,
uocior vv uey r ignis aubiuiub.
Headline. Bo do many others who
ahqull let It alone.
Thla lone alienee on the part of
'John D. surely mutt mean something
Interesting for Mr. Carnegie.
No wonder Holland , la the clean
est country la the world, when it
makea 10,000,000 pound of aoap a
year.
It la in accord with the eternal fit
ness of things that Dr. Eliot goes to
'China and Tripoli to study world
peace.
Team Work in Politic!.
Our amiable democratic contem
porary endortes and reinforces a plea
for. better team work on the part of
of pig-skin stars In the democratic
firmament. ''A foot ball team of
Individual atars each working ou fats
own hook," . It save, "would stand
llttlo chance against a team com
posed of inferior players who were
coached In team work. It Is thla that
ails the democratic party too many
Individual stars, and too little team
work." Thla demand for better team
work, we are also assured, does not
mean that any democrat shall be re
quired to forego the luxury of think
ing for himself, but unless differ
ences of opinion be threshed out and
harmonized "then disruption and dis
aster threaten." .
From a democratic atadpolnt thla
Is mighty good advice, but it la alao
Just aa good advice from a republi
can etandpolnt. There Is Just, aa
much necessity for leadership and
team work on the republican aide of
the gridiron aa there ia on the sldo
occupied by their political oppon
ents. The democrats would like to
have all the team work among their
players, and keep disorganisation
rampant with the other fellows. But
in thla they are not consistent. Re
publicans who show signs of work
ing together under a coach are lm
mediately accused by these same
democratic organs of surrendering
their Independence, "and letting tome'
one else think for them. It la only
republicans who refuse to do team
work, and thus Jeopardize the suc
cess of the game, who- may alwaya
count oft democraW..,aiilauge and
apotbosl w .'
Booking Backward
IhbDay InOmalmJ
1 XOYi St'. L-g-jry
The Republlo of China is now an
assured fact. Dr. Wu has bad it pro
claimed to the world by W. R
i Hearst.
, Menial city employee may strike as
in Now York, but you never heard of
a high-up city official doing so raBh
athiug.. .
Governor Woodrow Wilson i
asked to rid New Jersey of mos
qultoes. But h tackling the bigger
' bugs first.
Congress should keep in a good
humor, hut not get so soft that it
will forget to bring Russia to time
en that 1831 treaty.
Old Doc. Cook says tbey peltedl
liim with bad egga In Denmark. At
present prices, they probably could
hardly be expected to afford good
eggs.
Some call it "team woiV' In poll
tlca. Othera call it "the machine."
Still othera call It "the movement for
reform." But It is all the same
thing.
Governor Plaleted should remem
ber In demanding a settlement of the
Jlquor question in Maine that- the
atate has to keep before the public
some way. 1
ThS'Arreit of Eeyei.
It la rather coincidental that
letter from Gomes, threatening a re
volt against the Madero regime,
should come to light Just a General
Reyea is arrested at San Antonio
upon the charge of conspiring against
a country with which the United
States ia at peace.. The coincidence
tends to discount Reyes' denials of
all revolutionary plans. It will be
recalled that when the former Dias
array commander fled from Mexico
4urlng tho campaign in which Madero
was elected president, the rumor fled
with him that he had gone to prepare
for a counter revolution and his own
explanation that he fled for refuge
from "personal menace was discred
ited. .
Presumably, trouble on the border
is not permanently disposed of. if
so, the United States is not erring in
keeping troops stationed there. Until
the Madero regime has had time to
prove its ability to cope with condi
tions in Mexico, to maintain peace
with the enemy and satisfy its own
adherents, it will do no harm for tho
United States to keep Its eye on the
situation, it would be remarkable
it all the old Mas spirit, that had run
unbridled for more than thirty yeara.
could be stamped out completely
ltlln a few months.
The government .. at , aphipgton
has determined.'lt'seeruB. that com
what may arnqng the Mexicans, no
more revolutions shall h organized
on American soil and it la a wise de
termination. , v.'. ' ' '.
Gompen on Socialism.
President Gompers must knaw
tho sentiment of tho American Fed
eration of Labor when be promise
the socialist that that organization
will exert Ha Influence to elect Job
Ilarrlman, tho aociallat candidate,
mayor of Los Angeles. Socialism and
organized labor are not and havo not
been synonymous term; in fact, at
tlmea sharp lines of differences have
been drawn between the socialist and
antl-soclallst factions In the highest,
as well an lowest, councils of union
ism. On the floor of the convention
of the American Federation of Labor
In Toronto a few yeara ago, tho two
factions clashed in a most acrimoni
ous contest, ths anti-socialists tri
umphing. Mr. Gompers, himself, is not pub
licly identified with the socialist
party; he has usually worked with
the democrats. Other organized labor
leaders, conspicuous on the floors of
the federation s conventions, are
known antagonists of socialism, yet
It appears from Mr. Gompers' state
ment that as a whole their moral In
fluence will go to secure the election
of the socialist for mayor In Los
Angeles.
Does thla mean that socialism Is
engulfing union labor? Not nece-
aarlly. It means, we think, the re
bound of public sentiment from the
fierce and unrelenting and unwise
warfare against union labor as an
organism which for years has cen
tered in Los Angeles. Had the fight
been conducted upon less radical
lines, appealing moro to the popular
sense of fair play, undoubtedly the
recoil would not have flared biek aa
far as it has. Reports emanating
from ordinarily reliable sources say
that many conservative buatnens men
In Los Angeles, who have never been
union advocate, are found on the
side of the socialists In this fight,
not because they have espoused the
principles of socialism, but rather be
cause they have decided to rebuke
the unreasonable demands of the
other extremlats.
This city election in Los Angeles
will be remarkable In another re
aped It will be determined, it is
believed, by tho 60,000. women, who,
under the new law, "have registered
aa voters. On the surface It Is a fight
between a "good government" candi
date on tho one band and a socialist
candidate on tho other, both men of
admittedly strong personalities and
high abilities. But personalities are
lost In the larger conflict between the
ultra antl-unlOnlsts and the other
forces, who appear to prefer what" is
called socialism to radicalism of the
opposite type. . . . '
Thirty Yesr Ag
Trealdvit Boyd of the Board of Trada
haa appointed tha following delegatM to
the liver lmprovemnt convention at fit.
Joaaph, martin NovtmMr 2 and 80.
Chairman It. G. Clark, John Evana,
Charlea II. Dewey, F W. Gray, U. W.
Ur.lnger, flcorje A. Hoafland, C. 8.
Chaae. E. Itonawatrr, J. P. Brady. Sam
uel Burn, John O. Cowln, C. C. Howaall.
P. C Hlmebaurh. MK Meyer, 8. P..
Johnson, Ccorne . BokS. N. B. Fal
coner, c. H. Goodrich and J. A. Waka
fielrt. Mr. V. B. TV'llklns ha her signature
attached t tli! announcement: "I hav
rcrafd a new light running Domestic
acwlnz machine awarded to me In the late
fair d:utrluiitlo.i. advertised by L. YV.
palmar, general agent of the company'
Office on tha fair grounds. Purlng the
week of the fair 1 received a numbered
ticket In tha distribution. Tha maahlna
delivered to ma Ja first clasa .in every
particular and I offer my beat thank u
the company for their generosity."
George B. Ijine, superintendent of city
schools, left, to be absent week, visit
Ing school In 8t. Joseph, Leavenworth
Shd 8t. Ioui.
A call for a meeting of the Bricklayers'
union la algned by 'William Turtle, presi
dent.
I"or the annual Thanksgiving- dinner for
the children of the Industrial and Babbath
schools of tha Omaha City. mission
friend a fa Invited to leave' 'word at
Fleming' store of article to b called
for.
Kllia. wife of Nelsa Heleroe, died, aged
thirty, at their residence on Webster
street between KeVonteemb. and Ktgh
teenth.
Miss Edda Dickson was surprised by a
party of her schoolmates, who made an
unexpected Visit en rnao,u to her home
on Fourteenth Street. The young ludy
soon recovered from her surprise and
entertained her f.-lcnda handsomely.
Washington correspondents are dili
gently seeking a line on the political
effect ef Trealdent Taft 13,000-mile
journsy through the west and along the
edge of the south and his exposition of
the administration's policies. Did they
help or Injure hi chances? The Boston
Transcript correspondent Impartially dla
cusees the question a follows:
Before he left Beverly the president
wa rilled with advice a to what na
must do to be aaved. A mental map of
the political danger spots of the country
w laid before him. and hi adviser
pointed out the place he should avoid.
He wa told to be silent on the tariff at
Woolpack, to keep oft trust topic at
Pteelvllle and not to breath of arbitra
tion at Mar Hill. In fact, he wa given
lust uch good, old-fashioned advice as
every American president ha had thrust
upon him by well-wisher lnc the time
of presidents began. What he did en
tour, consequently, w of hi own do
ing. He went out to the people In hi
own way and cheerfully Invited the re
sults. '
Talked to Millions
rveatdeat Taft' Capoaitloa ef
ASmjaletratioa rolled on Bla
lS.OOO-MU Journey.
The BeeS Letter Box
IT
IT
South Omaha wants a new system
pf municipal bookkeeping. South
Omaha people Just turned down an
' opportunity to let Omaha keep the
books for them.
According to dUpatchea, the in
dicted packer have been conferring
with their lawyers "in secret." Did
anyone expect them to hold a con
ference in public? I
What's the uso of having a choice
for commissioner under Omaha's new
plan of city government it you do
not let others know. Write The Dee
and nam your man.
The new Russian ambassador who
Las Juat arrived in this country, will
be permitted to travel here wherever
be pleaaea, without being asked what
faith or sect he belong to.
Somebody haa gotten into Gover
nor Willson's l.enrookt la Kentucky
and about a year from now the same
. TolV.a may be stealing Colonel Wat
jtci-on'a tanpa)gn cp.tct
i t r i 4 ;
" Goinsr in tfuder a Cloud,,
i Governor Vardainau seem to be
going Into tho Senate from Missis
sippi under a cloud.. ' What a vhock
It must be to tho galleries that so
often applauded hla grandstand' acts
of honeaty and courage to hear that
the attorney general of hi own state
of MUsti8ipil haa brought suit to
compel Vardaman, uoV senator-elect,
to make an uccouutlug of several
tnousana aoiiara oi atate money,
which was not fully accounted for
by htm when he finished his term as
governor. It Is Intimated that Yar
daman padded aome of hi Junket and
expense bills and that he did not
keep his peraonal depoaits as well
divorced from certain state funds In
the bank as he might have. done.
This circumstance might pass al
most unnoticed were it not for the
fierce show of self-righteousness Var
daman alwaya made. It wa the torn
torn that he beat while governor and
during hla spectacular campaign for
senator. Of court be may not have
done anything radically wrong; he
may be able to satisfy the attorney
geiieial hu the time cornea, but It
A Nebraska preacher has written
a novel on the race Question, taking
some second-hand observations on
which to base, hi deductions. Many
a man who ' has given years of
patient first-hand study to this ques
tion has concluded, after writing
upon it, that be and the question
would have been better off had he
written on something elae. But fic
tion pays.
It transpires that those voting ma
chines are accurately self-registering
so far a the count goes, but an ele
ment of error comes In In copying
the figure from the dial to the re
turn blank. If some scheme could
be devised to make this copy by
photograph, It would not be neces
sary to reopen the machine for veri
fication and correction.
Tight-bottomed wagons are uot all
that is needed yt keep dirt haulers
from strewing the contents on the
pavement. The wagous can over
flow at the top as well as at tho bot
tom. Preventive measures would
save the city a lot of money, and the
public a lot of inconvenience.
Brand Whltlock, mayor of Toledo,
certifies that his election did not cost
him one ceut. Probably not , for
Brand gets paid for his campaigning
on the Chautauqua platform.
J a t Ice Speeding; 1 .
8t. Louis Jlepublte.
Only on tobacco-chewing judge remain-
ing on the supreme bench of the United
Sta.es, the Justices are beginning to talk
about expediting buslnes.
Twenty Years Ago
Fpoit Item: "Lee epratlen punches the
bag dally."
Hal McCord, who acted a general over
seer lor the Uhah ball team after it
ortan.sutlon, received a letter from Harry
Wright, the veteran managtr of the Plul
adelphU National league team, Interced
ing In behalf of the reinstatement of Dad
Clarke, evidently with the purpose of
getting him for the QuaKers.
Mr. T. W. Talleferro Went' to Chicago
tor a short visit with her (later, Mrs,
Henry 11. Symonds. .
Mrs. George Hobble, who had been in
Chicago for a month, returned with her
daughter Georgia to the Merriam, wheat
the lamlly lived.
George F. Cants, formerly with The
Bee. but now editor of the . Saratoga
(Wyo.) Bun, was In the elty for th seo
end time during' the month.
Mis Kate I.onergan of Chicago arrived
to be the, guest of Mr. h C. McBhabe,
104 California street, for a week.
Mr. Krehmann, Thirty-sixth and LeaV
enworth streets, boxed up a crate of
chicken and aet them 'out In front of
her house to take to market. While' h
wa preparing for the trip to town-
stranger earn along, loAjJed the chicken
on Ms wagon and Drove off with them,
paying no attention to Mr. Krehmann'a
trantio appeal.
Judge Dundy la confined to hi heme by
lokn.
Ten Years Ago
Mr. Anna Margaret Ulrkson, wlf of
W. D. trkon, died at their horn at
I. ft) after yeara of Illness. She had been
prominent in church and charitable olr-cle.
Blanche Walsh, the actress, wa at th
Her Grand and W. W. Uandall, advance
man for Frederick Warde, wa at tn
Liellone. . ,
Edward Day, who gained a good deal
of cheap notoriety by "rescuing" hU
brld from the clutches of her parents,
turned out to be not such a loving hero
after all. Mrs. Pay appeared at the po
lice station with th report that her hue-
band not only had deserted her, but
tailed away with a borrowed horse and
buggy.
Fifty of th upper classmen of the
Crelghton Medical college met In Arling
ton hall and organised the Crelghton
Medical association. These officers wer
elected; J. II. Brown, president; it. J.
Newell, first vice president) H. James
Bcott. second vice president; Mervln 11.
Smith, recretaiy; Dwight W. Weitfull,
treasurer; Zltnotby J. I'wyer. sergeant-
at-arms.
A conference of the rural free delivery
mall carrier of this district wa held at
th Paytou , hotel. W. K. Annin, agent
In charge, prtsldvd, and these others wore
present: John T. Uoyland of Iowa, Cap
tain It. A. Clark of Cheyenne, C. F. Ma
son of le Xiolnes, C. K. Llewellyn of
Omuh.
Mis. F. It. Ingram returned from Den
ver, where she had apent two weeks.
General and Mr. Manderson enter
tained Mr. and Mr. John Patrick at
dinner...
Mr. and Mrs. Harry -Wllklna. MlaS
Edith Smith, Mis Allen, Mr. Paxton, Mr.
Ben n, Mr. Heth. Mr. Jo Baldrlge, Mr.
Gtorg Mayn of Council fctlufr coin-
posed a bot party at the Boyd. The even
ing ended with a lata supper at the home
of Mis, Edith Fruit h.
Th preMdant went to the place he
wa told to stay away from, ne more
than mentioned the tariff at ooipaca
and he more than breathed peace at Mar
Hill. v He 1 satisfied with th restut.
The men who went with him and came
with him holding his Interests at heart
are satisfied with the outcome.
It Is not likely tht Mr. Taft will take
exception If his Journey 1 spoken ot In
hi prence as a campaigning trip. He
did not ask for votes. Neither did he
go forth with the first, or even the
second Object of Boeklng vote. He went
out to "explain" hi acts to people Who
may, have had only one side of the tory,
or may have had neither side. He re
turned to Washington unquestionably be
lieving that he had acsompllshed what
he had aet out to do, to give the country
an understanding of his own views and
hi own intention and to let it declue
thereon for ttelf.
It has been said frequently that the
president- speeches on hi long Journey
were repetitions ot speeches' tntt J before.
To a degao this Is true, to a large de
gree, perhaps, but people who live In
big town have ihe Idea that everybody
read what they rfad. The Vig city
dwe'.ler often makes mistakes, and he
made one of tfffcm when he took It for
granted that what he had heard and read
all other American clttrens had heard
and read.
One of Omaha's Blsaiest Thing.
OMAHA, Nov. 18 To the Editor ot The
Bee: I am wondering If It ever o'Cur to
anyone that one of the biggest thing
done today In thla great western city I
the fact ot the Old People' Home en
Wirt tret. It i running It fullest ca
pacity now With twenty-five Inmates.
The member of the Women's Christian
association set out rrxre than twenty
years ago to do philanthropic work. After
many effort In, different direction they
centralised on the ear of the old people.
With a tentative K bill with which to be
gin btialneea they bave managed to enlist
helper and money and today they can
house anl caro for a family of twenty
five. Just how many mora may be able
to find a home under the root .when tne
Anna Wilson bequest are transferred
and Incorporated Into their working capi
tal remain to be seen.
That numbt rs are turned away for want
ot room make us wish for a capacity
large enough to house the needy aged.
The Wilson bequest, until the estate I
entirely settled and tha seventh ot the
residue after paying the definite bequett
Is paid, turniahe not a penny for main
tenance.
The member of the association have
sent out their bag, as' usual, for Thanks
giving donation and hope for a liberal
response. '
Only those who take pains . to observe
have an Idea what It means to make a
harmonious family out of th representa
tive of twenty-five households and that
after tho greater number of year allotted
to life have become history. The ethical
side of the problem must be worked out
with Infinite patience. It I. after all, the
Important, fundamental part of the whole
proposition. It I not enough to furnish
roof, fire, food and clothing. The people
have come together for a home with their
fixed habit and well nigh unchangeable
Ideas, all of Which must be adapted, aa
far a ptsslblf, at an age when they ar
aensitlve as children and not so Open
to conviction. A tremendously difficult
part of the plan to handle In the present
close quarters where people must live,
physically, close together. The hails, little
more' than three feet wide, small room
and every Inch of space utllixed. Good
air, a comparatively happy, contented
family, warmed, fed and clothed, is. it
eetn to me, one of tho biggest fact In
this big city. A READER.
that period c( ntrast with the toer ex
tension of telegiaph nd telephone on
land during a similar length ot time fol
lowing their discovery.
M1HTKIUL BtMASKS.
"My doetor Is a paradoxical one.
"How oT
'"1 he more he reduced the swelling, the
higher the bills grew "Baltimore Amer
ican, Harduppe Is Wigwag honest?
Horrowell Well, he earn around to my
house the other dav and stole an urn
biella 1 had borrowed from lilm Phila
delphia Record,
"But you believe In heredity, don't yeu,
Squallop?'
"Not much. My grandmother could
raise a pretty good beard, but I can't
da It to save my life," Chicago Tribune.
Messenger Hoy-Who's the wll guy ye
was taimn' to, Jimmy?
Newsboy Aw, him and m" wolked to-
gedaer tor years, lie th editor o' one
o' my paper. Life.
Motormaniae What do you think Is the
most difficult thing lor a beginner to
team about an automobile?
Frankenstein 'to keep from talking
about it all the time. Toledo .Blade.
nn't t tlmrl Tee Sown,
Washington Ktir.
Hereafter communities will wait on
the action of the commerce court before
Indulging In any general rejoicing over
an action by th Interstate Commerv
commission.
M'kit'i h leaf
Indlanapolt New.
And now. Just a the harvester trust
wa making elaborate arrangements to
reorganise on a reasonably baala It has
been bounced out of Missouri What' th
us of trying to be good?
Easing l'g) a breach.
Houston Poet.
Th Be tell u that Nebraska apenda
2J) per year per pupil te teach deaf one
how to talk. Judging from th kind of
languag generally emitted from Ne
braaka. we Infer that the state i not so
particular about th children who can
bear.
Th. nrMntlal SOeech. Which I
printed In full In the great city paper,
la not printed In full In tho smaller, coun
try paper. It 1 true that only part of
what the president said at hla different
stopping place In the weet and north
west wa printed In tho great cltle of
the eaat. Th city people had read th
epeechea at an earlier day It they were
on aubjocts hitherto untouched they were
printed In full, but otherwise not. How
ever, in nearly all the paper !n each
state which the president entered hla
speeche were'reported fully.. They were
"local lues." In the village nouse aoa
the farm house of the northwest the
president' word of explanation and of
argument were read. He reached million
with everything that he had to fay.' the
millions whe could not a,to th town
hall or to the railroad station.
From the administration' point of
view, an understanding one way or the
other now has been reached by the peo
ple who before the presidential Mill
had. perhaps, what at best wa only a
half knowledge. Mr. Taft wanted to
reach the people and he believe that he
did It. He doe not know what they
think, but he I atltld with uch sign
a have rachd him ot the reult ot hla
endeavor.
Th eeker after purely political in
formation get little comfort for h'a ef
fort to obuln It from men clo to th
administration, men so loyal that loyally
makes them equal to the tak of keeping
their tonguee from wagging. They have,
of course. Just as much knowledge ot
probable political effect a of the other
effect ot Mr. Taft trip afield, but
while he wa campaigning the prealdent
knew that It mut b an admlnlatratlv
and hot a peronl ambition campaign,
and o on politic chief advira are si
lent. Arbitration, it ia felt in administrate
circle, haa been helped materially by
the eftort put forth on It behalf by It
proposer end promoter. It can be aaid
that buaines revision of the tariff will
discover for Itself rnor frind In th
country than It balleved It could claim
after the veto of the wool bill.
Congress may feel the effeeta of the
presment talk with the ordinary Amer
ican cltixen. It I said that there Is no
lobby aa atrong aa a letter-writing lobby.
Arbitration may become a fact through
the presidents appeal to the people. So
many other thing become fact by the
earn errylng means. A few week will
tell more definitely than can b told to
day Just what good haa come to tue
Taft policle from th long Journey. Per
onSlly. there I n& doubt that r. Taft
think h ha brought upport to hi
cauaea It ha would say It to himself. .
NOT FOR OMAHA.
A Lusty Infant.
New Yoark World.
Wireless telegraphy a era, Wednes
day, twelve yeara old, la perhaps a lusty
an ' Infant a lnventional progress can
show. The extraordinary development of
wireless safeguards In ocean travel within
People Talked About
"Do you favor limiting the power of
the court?" .
Just now," replied the statesman, "I m
in lavor of extending them. What I want
l aome way to get an injunction that'll
prevent publications from putting all the
funny torlea Into print before I get a
chance to tell 'em to my constituents.
aolnngion 8tar. .
"Pononby I awfully unlucky. What's
the troubl.'"
'Why. h h invented a military gun
for shooting aviator on tue wing.
'Well?
'They' always tumble and get killed be
fore h gets a ahot at them.' Cleveland,
rlain Dealer.
"How long have you been married?'"
So long now that 1 can quarrel with,
mv huaband without bursting Into tear.
Detroit Free Pies.
The object of the average explorer
seems to be to acquire enougD material
for a lecture." ... ,
Tea; that I my wife' aim when she
explore my pocket." LouUvill Courier
Journal. DO IT EAELY.
W. S. Nesblt, in Chicago Pot.
Do your ChrlBtmaa shopping early, do tt
early, mother dear,
Alao sister, aunt and cousin, and all
kindred far and near;
Make your list tomorrow morning, put
down all those you'll remember
And you'll find that you've forgotten nine
or ten late In December, ,
Make your Christmas slipper early, maks
them for your pastor dear;
Make the dollies and the pillows that
deprive us of our cheer;
And you II find the one to whom yoa
hip the rich hand-painted dishes.
Bends you back a little card that gold'
tinseled: "Chrlstm Wlshe!"
Do you Christmas shopping early but
you'll find, as sure as fate.
That yowr list will grow, the longer at a
simply awful rate.
And on Christmas eve you'll etrtiggle
through the crush, all grum and surly.
Trying to make one last purchase that
you kept postponing early.
Where the finest biscuit,
cake, hot-breads, crusts
or puddings are required
Royal is indispensable.
Royal is equally valuable
in the preparation of plain,
substantial,' every-day
foods, for all occasions.
The only baking powder made
from Royal Grape Cream ol Tartar
No Alum No Lima Phosphate
Ellen Hum. M year old, 'ha been
found In Philadelphia working sixty-one
yeara as a aervaut in on family.
On of the' lespected seniors of the
Pennsylvania bar I Colonel John O.
Frees of Columbia. He I (till practicing
law diligently, and celebrated hi eighty
sixth anniversary last Saturday by mak
ing two buaines visit to th court house.
Mr. Clara Elisabeth Lee and Mra.
Emma Tom Leung of Oakland, c1.,
clalra .the distinction of being the first
Chines women In th history ot th
world to vot. Both women are Aniert,
can bora, but cling to Chinese costume.
They have regUteied as republican.
Solidified beer from Kanaaa that may
be chewed haa been . placed upon the
market. The troth, when bitten, ha th
penetrating flavor of ground glasa and
th amber-colored part work up into a
toothaom ball much like a caramel. Beer
in thl form may b taken Ilka cough
drop la church without exciting svandal-
oua comment: .
Meeting? PUes f Densocratlo Na
tlonnl Convention.
Bloux City Tribune.
The Lincoln Btate Journal auggest
Omha aa the proper place for the next
democratic, national convention.
Thl. th Journal ay. would be a com
bll men l to the wt as an offset to the
i fact that all the democratic candidate
are east ot the Missouri river, and it
adda that a convention at Omaha would
placate Mr. Bryan."
The Journal suggest that It waa Omaha
Influence that Vut up th Grand laltind
convention Job on Mr. Bryan a year ago.
that Omaha mistreated him In that same
campaign when lie undertook to apeak
there, hiring hla own hall, and that thla
year Mr. Bryan was not Invited to speak
tn Omaha, aitnougn ne canvassed tne
entire slat outsld of Omaha.
'Ihe Journal forget that th World
Herald, th monst conspicuous democratic
newspaper In th atate, la strongly anti
Bryan now and that l'nltd state Sena
tor Hitchcock of Omaha, la hardly on
peaking terms with him. The Journal
forgets, too, that Dahlman la at Omaha.
No, that suggestion will not work.
If the Other Kellbw Knew.
St. I'aul Dispatch.
Attorney Oeneral Wlekeraham says
be doee nut understand bow the "beara"
work In the market transaction. It other
people understood how they work, the
btar would bave to go out of business.
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