Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 04, 1911, Page 6, Image 6

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THE liKK: OMAHA. MONDAY, DKCHMUrjK 4, lull.
THE" 0mHa YEMiMP, REF
HU'MiKl) BY fc:rv AHti nCKWATKR
VI'JTOK KOSEWATKR, EPTTOn.
Tha Be Publishing Company, ProiTlntor
KVKRY ArtKRNOtJV EX. SUNDAY
BEK BUILDING. FARNAM AND 1TTII
OKKICIAI. PAPKR OK TIIK CITY
OFFICIAL 1V4PBH OF TMH fOlWTY
Kntered at Omaha I'ostoffic at eoen
rlti mur.
UFF1CBS.
.mha Th Bn BMldtn;.
Couth Omaha 8I( S. Bt.
Council bluff 15 Boott Pt.
Lincoln J Little Building.
Vhlcnfo l&tt Marquotl Hulldln.
Kansaa City n Itellanc Build in
New York M Wait Thirty-third fit
St. I.ouls44 Plrce Building.
Washlnctun 72$ Fourteenth Bt. N.
XV.
CORRESPONDENCE.
Communlfatlone relating to ni and
editorial matter should be addressed
Omaha Bee. Editorial Deoartmant.
DELIVERED BY CARRIER.
T.venlnf Boa. with Hunday, per month. Ve
Daily Bee. without Hunday, par month. Vc
Dally Bea. Including- Sunday, per mo..
Atldrm crnnnlalnta of Irragularltlat In
aellery lo Uty Circulation Department.
OCTOBER CIRCULATION
50,703
Ft at of Nebraska, county of Douglas. -.
Dwlght William, circulation manacet
ef The Bee Publishing company. ben
duly sworn, aaya that the averaga dally
Irculatlun. leas toiled. unused and re-
turr.ed copies for the month of October,
mi. waa 50. vox
DWIOHT WILLIAMS.
Circulation Manager,
flubarrlbed In my presence and sworn
beforo ma thla let day of November. Ml.
tSeaO ROIJERT HUNTER.
Notary Public
baarlbera leaving; the city
temporarily ehl have The
tie mailed them. Address
Trill be rhaageil mm mm re
peated. The foot ball raah Iff over, now
for the Christmas rush.
' The left-over turkey may as well
come down off that high perch.
, The Doaton Globe dlacuaaea. Mr.
Rockefeller' chance. Which one?
Of coune, Wharton' Barker will
yT no attention to thoee demands
for proof.
Italy foes right ahead eating
Turkey as If Thanksgiving day lasted
the whole year.
Mr. Carnegie'a Income, they say,
'amounts to 144,000 a day. Does he
work on 8unday?
Mr. Carnegie left Ty Cobb out of
his twenty greatest men list,' mani
festly by oversight
The play boy of the west did not
prove to b the candy kid , with that
New York audience.
Pennsylvania asks that hunten, si
a precaution, dress in black. Most
of them do eventually.
What Is left of that fl0,000 put
up to defond the McNamaras It to
b refunded. To whom?; ' .
(Good morning, Mr. . .Congress I
Hope you have enjoyed your vaca
tion as much as we have. " " ' '
It is to be noted that Hetty Green
does not repine, like some old folks,
that she has nothing to live tor.
Experience does not teach that the
good trusts favor investigations any
more readily than do the bad trusts.
Owosso, the little northern town
f rlrlran Kv etAPm ann n4 1 1 1
aw saw a IWI IU( SSVU UUgfl 4J nV m
thirsty German calling for a drink
t water.
Seeing bow Mr. Bryan hat laid out
the course so minutely, the task of
the democratic house majority should
be very easy.
t Paris was never more startled than
when the little newsies ran through
the streets yelling "Entry! A duelist
Injured In a duel!"
in-bad clubs should fa sat en to
amend their charters to they may
adopt the more timely and appro
priate name of Out-Patleat-of-Bedlam
society.
Above everything else, this Los
Angeles situation proves that un
bridled radicalism Is a dangerous
force, whether employed by one side
or the other. In any great contro
versy.
Mr. Darrow says McNamara had
,no criminal intent. He and his con
federates must have been engaged in
the profession of dynamiting build
ings purely as a humanitarian enter
prise.' ,
; Our old friend, Edgar Howard,
gives "Billy" Thompson's senatorial
boomlet a beautiful boost. Still, the
game is young yet, and the color of
the chips msy look different by the
time coats, vests and collars are off.
Mr. Compere says organised labor
has been sadly Imposed upon. Folks
usually decline to be the victims of
the same impostors twice. It Is up
to organized labor to shake off
til the dynamiters, cutthroats and
strong-arm men.
The candidate who expects to shy
hla castor Into the commlsslonershlp
race who baa cot yet gotten his next
bst friend to mention bis name
among the eligible is foregoing a
lot of good, free publicity. Come
i.loGg don't be bashful-
Ai to a Presidential Primary.
The following correspondence on
a live political topic Is here printed
for whatever public Interest it may
posses:
HE.VK8AW, Nov. 30. lMt . Vlrlor llnse
water, Knq., Member Reputillran National
Committee: My IVar Sir Tou are no
doubt awara that there, la In contempla
tion the offering of a resolution at the
meeting- of the republican national com
mute next month requesting at a tee. that
do not have a preaSdentlal preference
law to provide through their atate com
mittees for auch a primary aa a party
rule.
Representing a Hat that has provided
for auch a primary by law, and the
author of the law being- a republican. It
would teem to be fit tins that you support
ucb a resolution. A one of your con
tltuenta I respectfully request you to
do ao. I am, very truly youra,
I. D. EVAN3.
OMAHA, Dec. 2, lHll.-Hon. I. D. Kvans,
Ktnraaw, Neb.: My Dear Sir I to
acknowledge receipt of, and to thank you
for, your lettrr with reference to th
queatlon of a presidential preference
primary, and encloae a copy of a letter
which I wrote to Senator Hourne nearly
two month ago on the aama subject. I
am also enclosing an article contributed
by niu to the Review of Review lat
winter on the Oregon primary law.
perusal of which may direct your at
tention to aome of th difficultly still In
the way of a nation-wld primary on
the tame plan.
By my efforts In part, the call for the
republican convention Issued four year
a co wit o framed a to recognise elec
tion of delegate by direct primary In
thus atats where the law ao required.
The national committee, however. In
fiamlng the convention rail Is limited to
th authority conferred on It by the
national convention by which It war
created,' and the laat national convention
unanimously adopted a report of It com
mittee on rjii specifying th number of
delegate to be apportioned to each atate,
territory and Insular potaeealna aa Well
as the tlma and manner of their appoint
ment. To what extant theae rule are
directory, rather than mandatory, la for
the committee to decide. While I take
It that the committee could not, for ex
ample, change th apportionment, I be
lieve the call should again recognise the
credential of delegates elected by di
rect vote Instead of by state convention
from state that have ao legislated on
th subject even though the rulea re
ferred to provld for convention-elected
delegate only.
To require direct primary election
everywhere, or Instruction of all delegate
by a presidential preference vota, would
neceaalut uniformity, or , at ltaat no
discrimination, but there ts no machinery
to conduct auch ' a primary In moat
aoutbern, and many northern, atate to
nay nothing of Alaska, the Philippine,
Hawaii and Porto Rloo. My own per
sonal opinion la that all the committee
can properly do, or should do, is to make
It permlaaive for each state or territorial
organisation to provide any fair method
of chooalng delegate that it may ana fit,
and to hav their delegate Inatructed
by primary, or by convention, or be left
unlnstructed, aa th republican of the
respective state may desire. Thl opinion,
of course, U predicated upon the existing
lack of preference vote primary (escala
tion In all but six state, and th present
inability et th committee to organise and
conduct a national primary hwtlon for
Itself .''',
Thanking you for your kindly Interest,
and assuring you that I shall always be
glad' to have youV suggestions on any
matter ! jnay .hav to deal with In a
representative capiclty, I have the honor
to be, very truly yur,
t VICTOR ROSSJWATEB.
OMAHA, Oct. IS, MIL Hon. Jonathan
Bourne, Jr..- President National Progreaa-
ive Republican. League, Washington,
D. C. : My Dear Sir I beg to acknowledge
receipt of your tetter under data of Oc
tober 1L addressed to ma a member of
th republican national committee, with
reference to the election of daiegatea to
the next national convention by direct
primary. Nebraska lias, aa you know, a
law requiring the election of delegate
In that manner, and I do not conceive It
to be the purpose or province of the na
tional committee to Ignore thla law. Very
truly your, - victor rohewater.
How Far . Bight it 8mootf
That la a mercilessly candid state
ment which Senator Smoot of Utah
makes with respect to congress In
tention of playing politics and put
ting the president In the hole this
winter. It is correct? Has Senator
Smoot summoned ' a little more
courage than others, and called a
spade a spade, laying- bare the truth
for the truth's sake, letting the con
sequences take care of themselves,
or has he gone further In denounc
ing agitators and reformers than
th circumstances warrant?
It Is an Interesting situation he
presents. He says:
What la congress going to do at th
coming session T 1 answer promptly and
frankly. Play politics from beginning to
end. Kvery recommendation made by
President Taft to eongree will be consid
ered not a t whether ita enactment
Into law will be a good thing for th
country, but for th effect It would hav
upon um individual' candidacy for th
prealdency. or the result It might hav
upon th opposition party' presidential
candidate. XV m must remember that the
political fight now being mad by In
urgency 1 not for principle, but for
men tor office and political power.
This much we know, . that from
the beginning to the ending of the
recent extra session of congress a
siuatea ana persistent errort was
waged to "put Taft in a hole" and
nut lor wnicn the extra session
would have lasted about one month
Instead of more than four. Senator
8 moot may exceed the facts In lay
ing all the trouble at present to the
muck-raker and his votaries, for
there is no gainsaying that "big
business" had badly misbehaved and
Deeded correction. At the same
time, that the situation has been
and Is being unduly exploited by
self-seeking propagandists, cannot
be denied. And that hurta. We are
not going to be able to cure one
abuse with another. If instead of
playing politics and trying to put
Taft In a hole, all elements would
throw away selfish considerations
and. unite at the cemlng session of
congress for the country's Rood, we
would get pomptlilng done for which
nobody would have to apologize.
Clearing' the Truck for Alaska.
One good result of Secretary
KlRlier's Alaska trip Is already evl
dent In the decision of Attorney
Rrandeis for the bouse committee on
Investigation of the Interior depart
ment's expenditures, to abandon the
Inquiry Into the Controller lay case
The decision Is made as the direct
result of Secretary Fisher's findings
and reports.
The chief effect of continuing the
investigation would have been fur
ther to retard action by congress on
Alaska's case, a matter which presses
with Imperative urgency upon con
gress this winter. With this "In
quiry" out of the way, congress will
have small excuse for not getting
right down to business and proceed
ing to enact laws offering relief for
the Alaskan situation.
All that Is Implied In Mr. Hrandeis'
purpose to sidetrack this invenL1ga
tion and give Secretary Fisher's
recommendation the right-of-way en
courages the hope for n sane disposi
tion at last of these demands, about
and over which so much tlmo and
energy have been expended. Secre
tary Fisher must have got down to
the tap root of the situation. He Is
a live conservationist, yet of the sane
order, who believes In business more
than billingsgate, and, undoubtedly,
the secretary is working In closest
coincidence with tho president in all
bis recommendations.
A",t Line for Men Who Work.
Chicago has an organization call
ing Itself the ' Antl-45-Years-Age-Limlt-League,"
whoso object Is to
fight the alleged rule of crowding
men above that age out of employ
ment. The organization Is Incor
porated and assumes the air of seri
ousness. It is of some standing in
point of time, but remained inactive
until recently a man advertised in
the newspapers that "the best wo
man In the world" was starving to
death because be could not get a
Job.
One prefers, even If this is a gen
uine case, to believe that it Is not
typical, but quite sporadic. Yet
Chicago is not the only Industrial
center where tD Is trend of prefer
ence is'runnlng against the man of
advanced years and toward the
younger worker. It may not be done
to the extent of deliberately turning
men off, but that it is done In the
matter of sifting forces and filling
vacancies cannot be doubted, whether
the exact limit of 45 years Is rig
idly observed or not. Some rail
roads, however, and probably other
Industries, look for their mechanical
forces among men much younger
than 4 5 years, and yet at the same
time they are not letting off all their
older men. , ' - , '
. The prospect Is one; not entirely
without Us tragic aspect for the man
dependent entirety on Ms dally wage.
It should have a cohering effect upon
him. . Industry could ill afford, how
ever,! to hold out such a poor prom
ise or reward for faithful youth, and
the tlma must not come when contin
ued years of good service and ex
perience do not count as factors in
favor of the old employe, no matter
how much industry must look to div
idends. Here again this country Is
brought to see the necessity of some
stable form of old-age Insurance.
The astounding collapse of the Mc
Namara case will come nioro nearly
to being a complete triumph when
the originators of the dynamiting
scheme and the sources of financial
supplies are disclosed. Others be
sides these three men the McNa
maras and McManlgal are Impli
cated and would have to share re
sponsibility If brought to justice.
Organised labor, whose national head
confesses to having been imuosed
upon, owes it to Itself to do all It can
to locate all the culprits and shake
oft the whole brood.
Superintendent J. C. Randall of
the state reformatory at St. Cloud,
Minn., was one of the prominent
delegates to the recent Prison con
gress In Omaha. According to a re
port of an official investigation made
by the state into his official conduct,
be recently brought a recalcitrant
boy to time by giving him the water
cure, turning the hose on the lud
until he did what the superintendent
wanted him to do. That was one of
She reform methods not emphasized
at the Prison congress, however.
The Lincoln Journal again reminds
us that several constitutional amend
ments are to be voted on In Nebrabka
during the coming yc-ar. It will take
more than one reminder to focus
public attention on these amend
ments sufficiently to secure intelli
gent action on them.
WorrylntT the Melon Makers.
Pt. Paul Ptoneer Iress.
Wore than lOO.Ow) complaint, agaln.it
th cxpresa companies have ben filed
with the Interstate Commerce commis
sion. That la oil cl&aa of advertising
that doea not pay th company.
Work Both Wa.
Mloux City Journal.
Of course. If Fenator Stephenson Is
not punished for spending good deaJ
of money In the primary to get where
he Is. Senator La, Follett ,lot to
punished for accepting a good dial 0f
money from Buiator Mephetiaon In prior
campaigns In Wlscoualu. in the Interest
of raforeu, .. .. '
llookinBaclwani
V w m mW m m asaa-aa
r compiled moM pr.E rim "
Thirty Years Ag
A benefit of "The Daughter of the
R-Klment" waa given tonight at Turner
hall for Julie Orossman, who. himself,
took the roln of Culprit-. Mltw Trea
son was . the Marchioness, and Mr.
Llndcman, Phlllpp, Mlsa Grossman,
Annette. Mlxs Rushman, Tnnlo, and
Mr. Huck, Leonvlllc. Mre. Merter
presented Mr. Uronsman with a gold
headed cane as a token of appreciation.
The Sabbath school announced to be
opened In the Northwestern depot haa
been given up because the room could
not bo secured.
Miss Daisy Jewett left for Toledo, where
she will spend the winter.
Kx-rjovernor Hnilth and family of New
Hampshire arrived here from a western
trip.
W. M. liaxter Is acting managor of
Ilnyd's during the absence of Manager
Marsh.
Mrs. J. H. N. Patrick has returned from
New York.
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Thurstoh are
bark from Wisconsin.
Tom Rogers haa gone to New York
on a buslnesa trip.
Tho main supply pipe of the water
works on Cuming street between Twenty
first and Twenty-second burst and kept
a gang of men busy all night repairing
tho break.
The death of a young man named
Pnyder discloses that Dr. Vpjohn of
'apilllon I coroner of Sarpy county.
Willis M.Wates advertises that he will
save his Customers $1 on every sack of
flour bought from him.
Twenty Years Ago
At 1:30 a. m. .the city official of Blair
telephoned to Omaha that their town waa
burning, asking for help.
J. W. Kller, county judge-elect, spent a
part of yesterday famlllarUIng himself
with the office ha wa to occupy.
The First Daptlst church filed its arti
cles of Incorporation In the county court.
Officer H. S. Drummy put a box of
cigars on tap at the police station. "It's
a boy."'
Theae doctors announced their candi
dacy for the office of county physician:
Connell, Coulter, llorlmer, Worley,
Wlrth, Van Camp, King, Keogh, then
the Incumlent,
Judge Hopewell broke the court record
and refused a divorce. A woman applied
for a decree on th ground that her
spouse waa lazy and the judge held that
to be an inadequate excuae.
Connections were all completed and ev
erything was In readiness to turn on the
heat In the furnaces at the new city hall.
J. A. Connor. II. O. Clark. C. P. Good
man, W. N. Naacn of the Omaha Board
of Trad committee on conference with
the rallroada on grain rate returned from
Chicago, where they ' conferred.
L. M. May, fish commissioner of Ne
braska, moved to Omaha, taking a resi
dence on lilnney street, in Kountae
place.
Bert Wilcox, accompanied by Charles
Kundlett of Bed Oak, la., came near be
ing killed In a runaway on Q street in
South Omaha, both men being thrown out
when the horse ran away and demolished
the buggy in a collision with a beam of
th viaduct.
r - -.
Ten Years Ago
General Manager Did well of the Elk.
horn rood returned from the terminus of
the Verdigris brunoh, where be act a
party of surveyors to work, running out
the line to be followed in extending the
road to Niobrara.
Mrs. Grace Wood Mat took a. wtf. nt
Dudley Mattocks, and mother of Mrs.
Maro Perkins of Omaha, and Mr. T. fl.
Burgess of Bun Prairie, W Is., died at her
home. 43 Cuming street.
Mr. Mllla Wyman, widow of William
W. Wyman and alater of Mrs. J. A. Lil
lle, aged 84, died at horn. 811 South
Twentieth treet.
Agent A. J. Sampson' of the Wells.
Fargo Kx press company took occasion to
deny reports that hi company waa to
abandon Ita office In Omaha.
It. C. Peter & Co. aold ih r..u
dene of J. R. Buchanan on Thlrty-eightn
atreet. north of Farnani. to John II.
Brown for tlO.oob.
After eight year of litigation. Rwlft
& Company paid In full th Judgment for
personal injuries ebtalned against it by
Frank Holourbeck, a former employe,
amounting to $9,OT8.73.
Editor of local weekly tunm
d reused the Real Estate exchange on th
mutter of consolidating the city and
county governments. J. a. Kelly of the
South OmffAW Journal-Stockman favored
It. aa did aaf J. K. Reagan, editor of tlx
gulll, whose policy, he affirmed, would
be subject to th will of pouglas county
democracy, while Clement Chase of the
bxcelslor wanted to get th question of
constitutional limitation out of th
before proceeding to consolidate.
People Talked About
A marked demand for A merles n wi,j.
mills In KKVPt is reported. Tl hM.
stirred up by Mr. Rooseevelt must be
doing some butanes at th old stand.
Ability to apiel In fourteen language
failed to save a New York woman, with
out money, from a jail sentence. Thn
judge was deaf to all sound that dMn-i
carry Vncle Ham's notes.
The raising of Commodore Perrv'a n.
ship Niagara, which has Iain at the bot
tom il TJiKe tune tor nearly a century
will furnish a notable contrast between
th olii and the nw navy and partially
appVa th hunger of souvenir hunter.
Pending th poa of a law oerniit.
ting women voters to register their age
aa "over tl," registration officers of Cali
fornia ar required, where th applicant
refuges to tell, to determine age by test
ing her pulse. Middle aged men prove
th most satisfactory tester because of
their familiarity with "holding hands."
It appears from the final returna that
the overthrown democratic bosses In New
Jersey did not tie the can on Governor
Wood row Wllsou. The aggregate vote in
th state hw a majority of 3,100 for
tha governor'a candidate for the legi.
lature. But th surplus was not distrib
uted In th right district to capture th
leglsUtur.
The king of Chicago gambler h ....
rendered to the host of reform and beg
th city to hand him S&MW0 for hi idle
plant. Located near th stockyard and
built of armor plat, th king's gam
bling den was a verltabl fortreaa, aaally
resisting th feeble raid of th poilc.
but a "turning movement' In th rear
of th poltc acnt Ui whit flag up th
flagstaff,
The BeeS Ldtcr Box
-ir-
Ivanaa City a Kxample.
OMAHA, Dec. 2.-To the Editor of The
Bee However well me may think of
our city and of Its advancement and pro
gressive conditions looking to the welfare
of Its people, we nevertheless may lerrn
from other cltle who have made spe
cial etudlea of certain features of mu
nicipal life and from them learn certain
Ideas which might be profitably used in
our city.
Kansas City lias a board of publlo wel
fare, composed of patriotic cltltena who
servo without s.-lary, the object of which
Is to seek the root of evils In municipal
life and apply corrective measures so
far aa Is possible. Employes of the board
are paid from a subscription fund. It hns
department?, as follows:
The general office research bureau
association, service department, depart
ment for the homeless and unemployed,
welfare loan agency municipal reform
department, women's reformatory and
parol department. As I understand It,
the board of public welfare grew out of
the board of pardons and paroles with in
creased power, enabling It to dent with
all problems committed to it. Hinco the
beginning of the board of public welfare
In April, 1!I0, it has pardoned 4,000 indi
viduals, 75 per cent of whom were re
stored to the ranks of useful and pro
ductive cltlxens; M0 are now on parole
and are earning an average of flO a week,
which Is turned over to their families.
Formerly men and women were kept In
a workhouse In Idleness; now they are
trained In habitH of Industry. Kansas
City hag a municipal farm of 133 acres
where small offenders are made to work
who were formerly dead expense and
trained 1n Idleness; but the new systejn
reap its best results tn its character
building and encouragement of the indi
vidual, whereas under the old system
deep resentment toward the government
and Boclety followed their Imprisonment.
Under the new system when they are re
leased from Imprisonment they have
learned a trade and are strengthened in
body and mind for the future.
It waa found that 25 to 35 per cent of
the cases of unemployed were th result
of lack of work to do, greatly due to In
efficiency, Htsslpatton and hlftlessness
and other conditions over which the per
son haa no control. During certain parts
of the year seven to eight thousand em
ployea of packing house are out of em
ployment and want results frequently.
Under auch conditions, good workmen
turn tramp and become unfitted foi
future labor. Kansas City haa a rock
quarry to relieve hls situation where em
ployment haa been given to Z.sOO persons
for a total of 16,000 days, the cost of the
experiment being $15,000 and the amount
received, $13,500.
There 1 also provision made for relief
against loan agents. It Is said that In
New York City 30,000 workmen pay trib
ute to loan agents; also 2,500 school
teachers pay 130 to 180 per cent interest.
Kansas City has a municipal loan agency
at work and $50,000 has been loaned at
rate of IVi to 2 per cent per month.
Provision Is also made in Kansas City
looking to the housing conditions and
abolishing of the alums and reducing the
evil of disease. Th city 1 divided into
Ix districts with a superintendent in
each. The dance hall is carefully con
sidered and provision mad to protect
young girls from the dangers of these
places to which they go a the only place
for fun and amusement. Aa ha been aaid
by one of the worker: "Our work has
been to relieve humanity, to bring the
contented and well-to-do in touch witn
the great, throbbing heart of the despair
ing, the needy and infirm, to ' relieve
misery, to build up hopes, to put down In
justice; to bring about th realisation of
the brotherhood of man and the father
hood of God."
One of the most Important features of
the work of th board of public welfare
Is child welfare. On November 3, 1911, an
exhibit was given in Convention hall.
which waa a revelation to those who
have never studied the question and the
possible result that might be achieved
by energetlo labor of public-spirited ti ti
led. The exhibit wa a much to In
struct aa to warn and encourage, for all
Intelligent philanthropy must be based
upon knowledge, a foundation upon which
Sympathy find It easier to build. The
exhibit might be classed under the follow
ing heada: '
1. Health; babies' hospital wards, dlt
kitchen, pur food exhibits, rollk sta
tions, baby camps, ward for. crippled
children, a dental clinic and X-ray
machine.
2. Home; a model nursery, giving sug
gestion to parent on th fitting out of
a nursery; boys' workshop, home library,
good and bad housing conditions.
3. (Schools ; school room classes of an
Interesting, nature where parent could
see how their children ar taught;
classes in cooking, sewing, woodwork
nd th like.
4. Recreation: model playground with
suggestive plan of playground as
sociation and park commissioners, also
showing other investigations of moving
pictures, dance halls and other amuse
ments. The boy scout formed a part
of the exhibit Kansas City ha about
twelve playgrounds under th control of
th park commissioners. Each haa a
superintendent who instructs in physical
exercise, moral and habits. It ha also
public baths, on or more, consisting of
a spray attachment to hydrant In a con
gested part of the city where in hot
weather boy and girls, men and womeu,
dressed In their old clothing, find
pleasure and health.
i. Settlement and . educational move
ment under'1 which were included t tie
Young Men' Christian association, the
Young Women's Christian association
and various other organisations wnich
work, to enrich .th life of the individual
and th community.- '
6. Churches; showing what - churches
and tiuuday schools ar doing for
children; charities and corrections, show
ing what haa been don and may be
djn to car for delinquent, dependent
and deficilve children, including many
photographs and pictures, showing th
work of th Juvenile court and proba
tion officer.
7, Industrial condition; showing con
dition of children In th city.
Much more could be said mm to what
our sister city is doing and Intends to do
by means of its public-spirited . cltlsens
aided by It city government. Now, it
veins to me that a city like Omaha, with
so many 'public-spirited cltlien.i, so pro
gressive in various Hues of achievement,
end which ha th conditio ' of tl
citit and which wer fouad la Kansas
City, might well consider th movement
now going on In, Kansas City and tsk
steps to not only profit by It but adopt
it in o far aa th plan Is applicable
and perhaps add new features with newer
sad bolter result.
W. W .SLABAUUH.
POLITICAL SNAPSHOTS.
Washington Poet: About the only way
a Demo, ratio possibility can make a hit
with William J. Bryan la to mak an ass
himself.
. New York Tribune: If Mr. Bryan Is not
mor diplomatic In hi effort to promote
a Clark-Underwood feud the genial Pike
county statesman will not deliver those
votes which are to start the Bryan stam
pede In the democratic national conven
tion. Pittsburgh Dlwpatch: The chairman of
the democratic national committee as
serts with confidence thut the democrat
have a sure thtng of the election -next
year. That Is recognised as a regular
occupation of the national party chair
man for about two weeka before and
perhaps 12 hours after the election, and It
will probably do as much good now as 11
months hence.
Bt. Louis Republic: Worse and worse!
It is now raid that Wall street Is not only
Infatuated with Roosevelt, but that It
longs for La Kollette also. Its love for
Roosevelt arises from his recent attempt
to save the steel trust from prosecution.
Its affection for !,a Follrtte Is probably
due to the revelation Just made In that
gentleman's autobiography that he .ad
mired Matk Hanna almost as much as he
did Hob Tngersoll.
JC33
A Bell Telephone
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Business and profession
al men in 50,000 American
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i
Personality in
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IF YOUR SALESMAN is a man of person.
ality he will dominate in his class.. He will
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So it it with your advertis
in(. Put alcsmaoship on paper
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Darlow Advertising Company
528-40 City National Bank Building- Telephone P0"" "
Mod. A-15I6
Haste !
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Western Union "Day
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s2
THE WESTERN UNION
DOMESTIC PLEASANTRIES.
Betty Reallv. Kate, how can you s.iy
that I Yon know I don't think seriously
of marrlairp.
Her Mairled Sifter Oh, as to that, you
won't, naturally, until after you are mar
ried. Nobody does. Boston Transcript.
"Do you know of any really good wav
to break a niHn of smoking In the house 7"
"Certainly. Let hla wife buy his cigars."
Bultlmore American.
"No." ssld Mr. fiimrnx; "I don't In th
leat disapprove of my daughter's mar
rying a title."
"But you seem dissatisfied."
"I am. Whnt I objert to Is the fellow
that goes with It" Washington eStar.
Phe What did you mean by kissing me
when 1 was asleep In the hammock this
morning?"
He I only took one little one.
Hhe You didn't. I counted at least seven
before 1 woke. Kllegende Blatter.
"Didn't you go on n wedding JourneyT'
"Ouldn t afford It."
"Why not?"
"The minister soared me so that I gv
him a month's salary for a fee." Cleve
land Plain Dealer.
"Old Hunks Is tho meanest man In tha
community."
"What liss he been dolne; now?"
"Got his wife out of the notion of buy
ing a fHshlonable muff by telling her
that murfn are made larger than thev
used to be because women's hand ars
growing bigger." Chicago Tribune.
NEBRASKA TELEPHONE CO.
Bell Telephone Lines Reach
Nearljr Everywhere.
Salesmanship.
into your store.
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TELEGRAPH COMPANY tJ