ft THE HEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1911. 1 TlIR OMAHA DAILY BEE t'DCM'KI' BY K.nWAKO KnSKW ATKU. Kntered at Omaha posloffice as second els mall'r. 1KKMS OF fTBrteilU'TION. funds? Hee, on year IJ..V) fsturday he, one year.... .41 .M llly iwt (without Pundayl, one ymr.M' Ialiy He and 8'inclav, on JHf K DKI.IVK.nKD MY CAKKI fcR. Fvenlns Bee (with Pundarl. per month. Kc Pally lee (Including Sunday). per mo. 8-0 lelly Hee wtthout Sunday), per mo..,.jc Addrea all complaints of Irregularities In delJvary to City Clreuletlon iJept. IU MITT A NCI-J!. Remit by draft, express or postal order, payable to Tim Hee Publlshlns company. Only l-ent stamps reoMved in payment of amall accounts. Wrconal checks, ex cept on Omaha and eastern exchange, not arepted. OKMCKS. fimaha The bee llulidlnfr. fonth Omnha-2m N St. t'oundl Uluffs Id Feott Ht. l.triroln g little Building I'hlcaao to4M Mernuetto liuildlnK. Kansas City Ktllance. Building. New York H West Tlilrty-lhlrd. Washington-;? Fourteenth ft., N. W. COKHKSl'ONOKNCE. Communications reladng to news and editorial matter should he addressed Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. OCTOBER CIKCUkATlON. 50,703 State of Nebraska. County of Douglas, a. Dwlght Williams, circulation manacer f tha Bee I'ulillshlng company, beina July sworn, says that the average daily circulation. lens spoiled, unused and re turned copies, for tha month of October, 311, was 60,7(4. DWIOHT TVILMAMH, Circulation Manager. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to .before ma this 1st day of Novembir, Ml. (Seel.) HOBEHT MlNVKFt, . Notary Public. bacrlbera lea t In a, tha ellr tenapararlly should bve Tfce Be mailed ta them. A dress rlll b cbaas-ed as aftest aa reej seated. "Goat's milk will care drunken ' ness." Bah-h-h-h. Some superlative folks simply can not talk In the positive degree. t This Is the first time Mr. Bryan was ever shipwrecked in aa "oft" year. "Oh, they do such things and they act such ways" In Ehady Bend, Kan. Only cine killed by foot ball this fall. No more than one base ball nine. Fishing for dynamite Is spectacu lar, at least, as those lake-faring sailors proved. i Anybody else In the Nebraska l-enitenltary who wants to be par doned or paroled? Hetty Green at 77 has at least passed out of the verdant pastures of business experience. Champ Clark, reports say, will write a book. Playing Into the hands of the enemy at the outset? The foot ball season 'being over, perhaps those British suffragette will stop rushing Parliament. Harry Thaw Is studying law, la order, no doubt, to find out how hit highly feed attorneys did it. The governors' train li carrying the executives of nine western states. Just so the number Is not thirteen. Those nine western governors going, east might challenge a nine of eastern governors to a ball game. A forest fire In what used to be known as the "treeless state" is an ' anomaly which Nebraska presents with her compliments. t Btlll, It Is possible to celebrate Thanksgiving day without turkey If the great American bird roosts too high In the butcher shop. f J-!-' The foot ball enthusiast will soon 'have to subside or turn his attention 'to scsaotherr exciting sport like auction bridge or bowling. : ' If Mr. Bryan la so taken with j wireless telegraphy, It may be pre sumed he will try next to Inaugurate ,a system of wireless politics. ; It seems a little far-fetched for ;the suffragettea to throw stones ..through windows to impress men with tha dignity of their cause. It does not cost anything to mention your favorite for commis sioner under Omaha's new plan of lty government. Name your man The Joachim family of steamships seems to be in hard lines. San re cently went ashore In the Great lakes and Prlns was stranded In the south. Carter Harrison is the latest to enter In the democratic presidential free-for-all nomination race. The country awaits Monitor Bryan's rate carding. John Hays Hammond may bo en tirely correct In all he says about the late Oom Paul Krueges, but he must admit that he is a trifle late In pre ferring the indictment. SMPBBssajBBBBBaiBBaMSBBBBiBaaaaBSBBBBBBBiM A New Yorker resents the "Jeering bloodhounds," Insisting that the ani mals are nearly as Intelligent as some politicians. But why make In vidious comparisons? If the city should acquire tho Au ditorium, it will have to be run by the people and for all the people, and cot merely for the people who can jay grand opera prices. Future of the Auditorium. The management of the Auditor ium, erected by the people of Omaha ss a convention hall, publicly admits that It Is face to face with the ne cessity of determining what the fu ture of that building Is to be. Without revamping the costly blunders of the construction era, and without discussing whether a different policy since completion would have produced better results, the real question Is whether the Au ditorium shell be retained as an available meeting place for largo public gatherings and exhlbitiona of educational or popular character, or shall pass Into private hands to be converted ultimately to uses of private business. The editor of The Bee many years ago foresaw the unescapable ap proach of this situation, and to pro vide against it procured the enact ment of a charter amendment spon sored by Representative Michael Lee authorizing the city to Issue bonds and buy In the Auditorium when ever It should go to sale. Should it be decided, therefore, that the Au ditorium ought to become a public building, maintained for public use at public expense, the city will be legally In position to take it over If it can be had at a fair price. The Bee takes It that the argu ment Is all one way In favor of keep ing the Auditorium for rise as a con vention hall. The same reasons that impelled our people to respond so liberally In the first place to the call for subsucrlptlons and contributions to build It, are equally urgent how. No city the sire of Omaha that assumes to entertain great national societies and associations Is without such a building for their accommo dation. The convention hall project In many cities has been a municipal undertaking from the beginning. If acquisition of Omaha's Auditorium by the city Is forced upon us, It will probably prove a blessing In disguise. The Switch on Voting; Machines. The taxpayers of Omaha and Doug las county ought to be getting their eyes open to the grfroe of politics which the democratic combine la the county board has been playing. On motion of the democratic member defeated for re-election the county board baa just gone on record to abolish the use of the rotlng ma chine, something against which these very same democrats protested stren uously only a year ago when repub licans sought to have a paper ballot used because the capacity of the machines had been overtaxed. At tbat time these same democratic county commissioners not only in listed on using , the machines, but voted to go inte the treaamy for up wards of 15,000 with which' addi tional voting machines were bought to supply the' new voting districts All the time this was going on the local democratic organ was likewise raising a hubbub and din about a pretended great "republican con spiracy" to mulct the taxpayers by throwing 150,000 worth of Toting machines Into the Junk heap. It goes without saying that our democratic friends are fooling no one Who does not want to be fooled. The reason they wanted the voting ma chines retained a year ago waa In order to get the benefit of the straight party lever, which they knew would be pulled for the benefit of Mayor Dahlroau's candidacy for gov. ernor. To have ditched the voting machine laat year, when the party lever meant a straight democratic ticket, would have been a terrible crime, but this year when the party lever advantage went to the repub licans, the democrats Invent an ex cuse for getting rid of the voting machines on the ground that they register Inaccurately. Of course, the machines registered this year Just as accurately or Inaccurately as they did last year, but they registered re publican this year instead of demo cratic, as they did a year ago. That explains the sudden somersault of the democratic glooms on the voting machine question. The Drink and Opium Becords. The report of the commissioner of Internal revenue fails to support the belief that this country is decreasing its use of alcoholic drinks. The total Internal revenue receipts for the year were 1322, 518,299. the greatest In the history of the country. Some 7,000,000 gallons more distilled liquor waa manufactured than ever before. All along the line similar In creases are recorded. In the face of the activity in re strictive legislation this showing can not furnish reassurance for the hope that the American people are getting way from their Indulgeuce In intox icants. Yet some other recent sta tistics showed that, while our aggregate consumption of beer waa increasing, cot so our per capita consumption, but whether thla la also true of spirit liquor drinking Is not disclosed. But another and more distressing feature of this statistical report is that it reveals a widespread use of opium In this country. This Is one of the most degrading forms of In temperance. It has been borrowed from the lower element of Chinese and under the spur of American In fluem-e, China has been aroused to the awful consequences of the habit and la now carrying on an ant! opium warfare. Our prattlce In this country has, of course, not yet as sumed like proportions as In China, but It Is extensive, enough o put Americans on their guard. It calls for a more Intelligent resistance than has yet been offered to It. Safe and Sane Foot Ball. . Only nine foot ball players killed this season only. Some forty-ceven others were Injured. Many foot ball devotees "point with pride," aa the politicians say, to this record, forgetting, perhaps, that it Is an average of about two fatalities a week. The 'foot ball season Is very short, about a month of actual playing. This record, then, while it la an Improvement over previous years, still offers nothing to boast about. There should not be nine deaths on the foot ball field In one season. There would not be It the rules of the game were safe and sane, If they were whst they should be. Foot ball men need not fly off Into a tirade for being reminded of this; they must not blame fathers and mothers for shuddering with anxiety every time they see their sons go into a game. Nor must they try to consider the casualty list a closed merely with the dead. It counts a little to have another, list of forty seven Injured. How many of these may die? Four of the 1910 Injured have Just recently died. These are referred to In the reports as "bold overs." How many 111 hold overs will show up In the death rolls xf 1912? How many of these forty- seven will be crippled or Injured for life? A great many people not ordinarily classed aa mollycoddles are of the oplplon that foot ball may be made it whole lot safer without losing any of Its sporting qualities. At least another effort should be made. The Dividing Line of Unionism. The Atlanta convention of the American Federation of Labor haa served to mark a widening breach between tho socialist and anti-socialist elements In organized laboi and to make certain an ultimate divorcement of relations. Through out this convention a division of spirit and action has been apparent. The socialists tried to force Gompers and others to retire from either the National Civic Federation or the American Federation of Labor, as the socialists in control of tha Mine Workers' union had done with John Mitchell, but the conservatives de feated them. The socialists at At lanta tried to have the federation ap propriate money out of the federa tion' treasury to defend the Mc Namaras, but the conservatives pre vented that. The miners, In the Western Federation and the Mine Workers union threaten to withdraw from the national body of union la bor. The Western Federation has not affiliated with the national or ganization for many years, and both miners' associations have steadily gone toward socialism and are laid to be now dominated by It. If this divorcement is to come about, the conservative forces of unionism have nothing to gain from concessions to the socialists. Many level-beaded union men are ready to believe that such a separation cot only Is desirable, but la actually necessary to save organized labor. Perhaps socialism, Itself, might be better oft outside of these ranks. Sooner or later such a division, it seems, will come, and this Atlanta convention evidently has done much to draw the line of cleavage. Only a year ago Senator Hitch cock's democratle organ was tearing Its hair and shrieking with all Us lungs over an alleged republican conspiracy to throw $50,000 worth pf voting machines into the junk pile. Now, lo and behold, a demo cratic county board Is undertaking to put the very same voting machines out of commission. What a chance for the rescue act by the former faithful guardian of the chee-lld. Omaha has six theaters and about twenty-five moving picture shows catering to the amusement-loving public. In fact, no one who wants to go out for the evening now haa even an excuse to stay , home any more. People Talked About A village official in New Jersey given tha Job of checking automobile Joy rides through town, perched himself at tha window of a church steeple and with a spy glass spotted the rushing crowd. A polite note by mall Informed tha sur prised speeder where he could hand In tha fine and avoid further trouble. One dose reached tha spot. Mary Pugh, U yea re old. of Bkowhegan. Mkh , last week aocorapllshed a feat said to be unsurpassed by any other woman of her age In the country by walking (mm her home to F.ast Madison and back, a distance of thirteen milts, in on day. Lst winter Mlsa Pugh made It a habit to walk one way between the two towna at least twice a week. Lvi P. Morton, vice president duilng tha Harrison administration, railed at the New York City tax department laat weak and cancelled aa asitassment on po.tO) worth of personal property by showing that ha la a resident of Wash ington. 1. C Mr. Morton la the senior In term and years of the three former vice presidents now living Theodore Roosevelt and Charlea Warren Fairbanks being the others. Booking Backward HihRiv fnOmnlin rmUDiirn r unit n-r 1 1 vrs syrssi' m hwiti sa-J a ua. 'v I 1 NOV. 811 Thirty Years Ago- Tha second annual reception and ball of Omaha telegraphers took plaoe at Cen tral hall and In addition to tha local dignitaries of tha profession a large num ber of out-of-town visitors ware present, as follows: Alexander Washington, chief operator: Mr. UcOowsn. Miss Katie Johnson, Visa Anns Wilson, Miss Oeb of St. Joseph. Mr. C. K. Annette, chief operator, Cheyenne; M. M. Runyen, oper ator Clerk Creek, Neb.; B.' H. Josalyn, Union Paclflo manager, Orand iHland; M. C. Hope, superintendent, 8t. I'aul; Miss Oohaney, Council Bluffs; U. J. Brann. R. C McDonald, Alex A. Stevenson, Chi cago. ' Judge Savage Is holding court In Wash ington county this week. Governor EL John of Kansas sneak a In Omaha December IS on temperance.. Colonel Harry Brownson 1 rapidly re covering from his stroke of paralysis. The t. IS. Kimball hunting party re turned from Ogallala leaded down with game of all kinds. Tha new atreet cars for Captain Marnb'a trunk lino have arrived from tha east. one for tha red line and one for tha green line. They are of the old bandbox pat tern. The weather now is moro like Mav than November. These delegatea to the Chlcaaro Land league convention left a? follows: Messrs. drove. Rush, Brennan, Nichols and Pat rick Ford. Meaera, Charles K uhlman it Cn. h,v. Just opened a magnificent etoek of druga at m Douglas street., northeast corner of Tenth. The proprletora apeak English. German, French and Scandinavian. Tha second commerce party given by Mr. and Mrs. Bennett to Miss Hnvt an. tertalned the following. The Mtsaea naunaers. wuriey, sharp. Dora and Nalla Lehmer, Carrie and Lou IJama. Wood. Mlsa Etta Wells and Messrs. Lehmer, Stebblna, Bharp, McCormick. McMillan, Jewatt. RlngwaJt, Mose Barkalow, Rem ington, Redlck, Oarllchs end Harbaugh. tt la explained that It Is catled ."com mence" because there la so much trading of seats during the evening. Twenty Yeara Ag The Misses Hoagland entertained a few friende at even dinner. Alexander Wygant, formerly of Minne apolis, took a position as night clerk at the Murray. Mrs. Charlea Block and daughter of At lantic, la., ware vleitlng Mr. and Mrs. M. Block, 2304 Davenport atreet. The approval of the bond of City Treas urer Henry Bolln In the city council chamber led to a free-for-all, hnock-down-and-carry-out fist fight In that auguat assemblage, whereupon much gocdly gore Was ahed. President Lowry finally called the council to order by suc cessfully pounding hie desk and the bond of l,eS0.000 was ealled up with these sura ties, qualifying In various suma: William Gentleman, W. T.Lerensen, L. D. Fow- ler, i. Brown, Ouaa Andreen. Hbv Voea, John F. Ooad, g. a Rogers. Fred wets, sr., Louis Schroeder. W. H. IJama, A. B. Huberman, Ed Wit tig, J. M. Couna man, Fred Krug. Heery pundt. Max meyer, u. KaapKe. C. J, Karbaoh, H. J. Meyer. W. A. Paxton. C. Hanson. (., Helmrod, T. C. Bruntr, Wrs. W. Peunian, Ed Meadlmbar, John. II. Eck, George E. Barker. Councilman bond be approved end ail except Burdish. morearty and Blumor voted aye. Before tha vote waa announced Chaffee rh,n, to "No,M and Bechei ui Oathoff followed suit. Chaffee then moved for a reoonsld oration and all but Burdish, Morearty and Blumer supported the motion, which car- nea, witn nine arflrmatlva votae. Davis wanted a roll call: denutwu war moned to bring In the absentees. Morearty waa Insisting that soma of the sureties had qualified for more than they were worth. ine piot thickened, the clouds gathered, tha wind came up. IlKhtnlnat fla.ht thunder roared and rain fell In torrenta, The real combatanta were Chria Specht and Flits Blumer and thav hat . h banged each other good. Once while Bpecbt waa uown, Morearty aimed a kick at hie head, mlssir.g goal, lis waa about to be penalised by a aiectator atandlng on tha lines, when ex-Councilman nronnnr pushed his way onto the gridiron, whereat W. A. Grant threw him Over tht ralllnv hand O'Connor, pussled to know what had happened to him, glared at Grant, da- manaing to Know what waa up. Ten Yean Ago The Omaha High achool foot ball team beat the Genoa Indiana la Omahu n n a Crelghton university beat the Lincoln iea lea s to 11' Blehop Bcannel returned from the esat While In Washington he attended the ceremonies Incident to tbe elevation of Dr. Conaty to the Episcopacy. Whiu th.,. ,h. bishop preformed the delicate task of ef fecting a reconcllatlon for Father Crow ley, s priest who had been disciplined for dleobclence. George P. Cronk was reported aa .ln. lug ateadlly In his race for the highest office the Elka have to give. The North End Improvement club an nounced It would promote a olan ta hava a publio library established at Twenty- lourtn street ana Ames avenue. A simple ceremony attending tha tin. veiling of a tablet to tha memory of Charlea Henry Gardner. D. D., former dean of Trinity cathedral, was observed there. The ceremony opened with a creed and prayer by Dean Fair, whe then called on Senior Warden Henry W. Tatea for an address. , Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Macomber of Carroll,- la., spent the day with Judge and Mrs, J. H. Macomber. Mrs. J. C Cortelyou and family left for Los Angeles to make thalr borne. Tha Metropolitan rlub gave an unique entertainment Thanksgiving evening. It was a take-off on a beer garden, la vaudeville. Some of the principal contrib utors to tha program were Abe Handel berg, Mrs. Hugo llrsndels; and the actors were Henry Rosenthal, Harry u Cohn, Morton Hitler, Mrs. Henry Hitler, Mrs. A. Simon, Mlsa Rebecca Eplesberger, and Mrs. Ray B. Cohn. Carroll Johnson of the Orpheum waa a guest who helped out by request. Perils ef Abaeat Treatment. Philadelphia Record. The Postoffl- dertmaiit la forging to the front as one of tbe greateet forces in tbe moral uplift. Pretty much everybody who la doing aay sort of erooked business ran, be held for fraud ulent use of the malls, and the postal eftlelaki are so vigilant that anyone who tries to set money from others by the absent treatment U pretty aura to tall Into tiir hen- The BecS Ldlcr Box tt BJ Tkeae Swell Dola's. OMAHA, Nov. 17. Mister Edtter: I am a great feller fur perllte savslety. I think that It Is duraed site better to be perllte than It, la ter be honest. I swan a feller whot la real honest must git awful lonesome In the real swell circles like what I move In. I'm a great feller fur the artistic, so when I heered tell that Gertrude Hoff man wus cumlng tew town I M said to myself, I'm going to see her dldoa If It costa I1M. No feller what has any idea of eddlcatlonal values kin afford to mlsa sleh a htferlutin, spectakular, emotional, varlgated doins. e I got to the box office mlty early so aa to be sure and git a good aeat. I wus dound aartln to git the full benefit of the artlHtlo end educational value of this here show. I got one of them thar front eeate where I wuddint miss nuthln'. I tell you. Mister Edlter, that thar wua some awell dolns. That thar Cleopatra wus a mlty slick tookln' gal and I don't blame that thar Amoun feller el tin stuck on her. But I awan I can't list see what made her make him take thut thar plzen. So fur as I could aee he didn't da nothln' but alt on the floor and hug her all night while she reposed on that thar lounge. If that wus all he done what did she want to kill him fur? Or did she want .ira to do something else? I awan I hain't right sure whether I got the artistic meaning of some of them thar capers: they wus too elusive fur me to'gIL My mind kept trying to won der away from the artistic. I wunder If any other feller's mind trieu to do that. Or la It becus I wussen't brot up right T I wus brot up on the farm, and when that thar gal come out prancing around with nothing on her lega a representing spring, I tell you right now there was aomethlng what I cud appreciate. The feller what ftggered that out got r'fht back close to nature. Them are the fel lers what have the real artistic ldear. I nate like blasea to aee the artistic clouded and dimed by any kind of duda. It seems so blamed coarse and spoils the real spirit of the occasion. ' That thar harem scene wus almost to much fur me. Them thar folks laying around there on them thar ostermoor mattresses wus jlat a Utile more than I oud fathom. . I wussen't Jlat sure what they wus a-glttlng at. I jlat got a hunch that my artistic eddlcatlon ain't complete somewhere. v But I tell you right now, mister edlter, t am going to keep right at It until thsj hain't nobody what can git thead of ma when It comes to interpertlng the artistic. GEOKQE WASHINGTON BCHAGG3. Tke Serosa Seattle Bfvardier. OMAHA. Nov. 27. To the Editor of The Bee: Henry Clay Beat tie, jr., committed a terrible crime,' and every sane man and woman ahuddera at the thought of com mitting auch an act But the crime of Henry Clay Beat tie, jr., dwindles into Insignificance bealde the more atrocious crime oommltted by a nation and sanc tioned by the cttlsens of that nation. I refer to the electrocution of Henry Clay Beattle, jr. Henry Clay Beattle, jr., waa a moral pervert, a morej Imbecile, we may aay, If the history that has come to light of his life and hie habits Is correct. Look In any large Institution for feeble-minded children and you will find the same moral type in abundance. We protect the Other cases from them and ws protect the publio from them by keeping them under the care of competent guardians. We do not electrocute them. For Henry Clay Beattle, jr., there Is the excuse of a perverted and degenerate mind. Must we advance tbe aame excuse for a nation when it commits the same crime? From among all the lawa, just and un just, of a great nation, capital punish ment stands out aa the deepest stain, a relic of barbarism. In the past it has been claimed for capital punishment that It tended to lessen the crime of private murder through the fear of death which thf example thua afforded Instilled "Into the mtnda of partlee who ahould contem plate Jhe crime. Thla we know to be an erroneous hypothesis and it Is no longer claimed by even the moat enthusiastic advocates of capital punishment. A mur derer commits the crime In cne of three mental attltudea: In the first he la actu ated by the Impulse of the moment, anger. jealousy, or whatever It may be, and haa no time for the weighing -of oonsequencea to himself, or for the consideration of penalties which he may Inour as a result of bis action. In the second he meditates tha crime for money greed, revenge, jeal ousy or any one of the numerous causea for which such crimes are perpetrated. But In all hla premeditation the thought that he will poaaibly have to pay the death penalty for hla act never enters Into consideration. His belief that ha will escape, any penalty, or at least the death penalty. Is absolute from the ftrat. That Idea being firmly fixed In hla mind It cancels absolutely any Influence that might be expected to be exerted by laws for capital punishment. Third, and laat, there Is a class who are willing to give up their lives If necessary If first they can have accomplished the death of the proposed victim the cauae of their real or fancied wrongs. AH three types are unquestionably but types of Insanity, but whether they are or are not does not concern us here, except to emphasise the brutality of capital punishment. The faot. however, re mams that in no one of the three la the queatlon of possible or probable capital punishment a factor of any weight whataoever agalnat th consummation of tha crime. In the last type cited it Is even possible that tbe murderer sees a justification - for his erlme In the fact that he Is willing and will probably have to pay the penalty by forfeit of his own life, tone other claim la advanced for cap ital punishment. Thla la to tha effect that the people would be at an added expense by taxation for support and maintenance of institutions were cap ital punishment abolished. In illustra tion: A murder la committed by some Individual as a result of his lnaane gresd tor money, for a few dollars or a tew hundred dollars; then tbe capital punishment advocate sanctions a sec ond murder the murder of the first of fender tor the aama cause that brought about the first murder, with only the exception that the money for which the second murder Is committed Is of smaller amount, being for a few mills of a cent, or a few cents, or rarely, a few hundred rents. But tbe second murder Is laudable, and the ftrat remains a "horrible crime." Before the days of correct a sepals and antisepsis surgeons spoke of "laudable pus." Today the term Is ob solete except as used to a reference) to the past. By the efforts of the sclentlfle members of the profession It haa been demonstrated that there is no such thing as "laudable pus." Likewise when mod ern peoples have thrown off the re- manenta of barbarism It will be re cognised that there can be no such thing as laudable murder and capital punishment will be a thing of the past. The responsibility for the death Is easily shlited to the "government?" but the shame, In that a severnmeot of a supposedly civilised people Is allowed to continue with lsws that countenance such barbarity, rn'ist rest upon the shoulders of the people CHAP. E. REMY. IS. D.. 2108 Cuming 8t MERRY TRIPLES. That foot bnll game waa a wild and exciting occasion." "Yes. but you ought to have seen the celebration afurward." Washington Star. Visitor So you've had three doss. eleven cows and two horses killed by autos so far this year. Why don't you put In a complaint? Farmer Never! I m willing to take my medicine. I was one of the yaps that kept hollering for good roads. Puck. "Is It n good show?" "Fine." "One you would wish your daughter to see?" 'Well er not exactly, but why should a girl of J8 go to a theater, anyhow?" Chicago Kecord-IIerald. 'ThA French cnmntaln that we Ink our nlmtaureii sniilv." remarked the nlav- Wright "Yes, a gooa many oi our comeaies are v) 7 m Absolutely To have pure and wholesome food, be sure that your baking (A powder is made from cream B of tartar and not from alum. Tho Labci villi guido yots Royal is the only baking powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar II o Alum iSo Limo Phosphates Your Guests tliey are geftuig tke test Leer arewe vhen Pabst , BlueRibbon TLs Bear of QuaKty It xm ricK tut not lieavyani just enough nf 'the delieioua &t oi Kops wxtLout tee Order a case today. 1 -j' iw4 A !; J. 'JV -V. '.; f- - V$ivll r ilr -Ft s'rvV-t t'.'-ra n on . i'i'm -in m it . . i ... i , w iwriT-ir-Ttf-1" -"i-,al ' irvinioiat His i In the New Home You want the best when starting in the new home. Above all, you want that home to be snug and warm and comfortable. You are sure of warmth and comfort with a Perfection Smokeless Oil Heater. The Perfection is the best and most reliable heater made. v It is a sort of portable fireplace. It is ready night and day.' Just strike a match and light the wick. The Perfection is all aglow in a minute. The Perfection Oil Heater does not tmefl nor smoke a patent automatic device prevents that It can be carried eaOy from room to room and is equally suitable for sny room m the house. Handsomely Biushed, with nickd trimmings; drums of either turquoise-blue enamel or plain steel yj Smokcles r1 1 taken from the French." remarked the dramatic critic Philadelphia Record. BECAUSE OF HER. Mabel S. Freer In Ainalee s. With bare brown legs and faded gingham gown. 1 aaw her first-a lovely little girl. Her slender fingers clasped within my own. With low. sweet laughter, et my heart awhtrl. From out her wondrous eyes of darkest blue Shone forth a eoul all pure and unde tlled. . And all tnlnga youns and beautiful took on An added charm because ahe was a Child. Again T saw her as n maiden grow, A half-ope'd blossom, whose raro t;race fulfilled The promise of the bud, and yet cave hlnte Of greater Blrles, when, If God ho willed. The half-grown rose should ope to fullest flower. I brought my glfta of frankincense and myrrh, To lay them at her feet; and evermore I reverenced Womanhood, because of Her. , And now I watch her rorklng to and fro. And crooning low within the dimming light; A tiny hend la pillowed on her arm. A tiny form la cuddled warm and tight, A glow la on her face a light, mcthlnks, That never In the land or sea did reet. AH Motherhnod Is sacred now to me Because It is my baby at her breast. Know you eerve n acnetizind flavor excessive titter. Tbe raaet Ceaisany 1307 Lssveawarlh t Tsl.Deules7laadA147S A r-ur JmW la ttmm yea s PtHeciwa SnekrlnaOil llcuo.ae wnu lot omaifim wcaKr sWscl at ar mm mi Standard Oil Company UnourporatMlJ