Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, February 24, 1912, EDITORIAL, Page 14, Image 14

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    14
THE BEE: OMAHA. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1912.
THE O.V
AHA DAILY 7 BEE
rOl'NIEi f Y EDWARD ROfKWATEK
VICTOR yOSE WATER. KU1TOR.
ISEE BI IUH.Nq FARXAM AKU lDTM.
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cept on Omaha and eastern exchange, not
accepted.
OFFirTS.
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Soulh Omalu-WlS N St.
Council Bluff s-T Scott St.
IJncoln Utile Building.
hlrago-lSi Marquette Building.
' Kansaa Clty-Rellan.-e Building.
New York M West Thlrty-thlcu.
' WasnlnKton TS Fourteenth eit- K W.
CHRRESPONDK.VCB.
Communications relating to newt and
editor; matter should be addreesed
Otnalia B. Kdltorial Department.
JANUARY C1RCV1.ATION.
49,728
Bute of Nebraska. County of Douglas, s:
Dwlght Willlama. circulation manager
ef The Bee Publishing company, being
duly sworn, aay that the average dally
circulation, less apolled. unused and re
turned coplee. (or Lhe month of January,
1311 waa O.T3.
D WIGHT W1U.TAMS.
tirrulstlon Manager.
SinVcrlbH In my presence and aworn o
before m tfcls Kb day of February. 1MX
(Jieal.) ROBERT Ilt NTER,
Notary Public.
' Saberrlbera leaving- the Hy
temporarily should have lis
llee nailed tkeea. Addreea
will ke ehaeged aa alien requested.
They will probably uie buckeyes
for bullets In the battle of Ohio.
The Men and Religion Movement
ought to do well during Lent, anyway.
' China baa ordered 141,000 Ameri
can hall, but none of the cocked
variety. '
The Auto show la coming gloriously
down the borne rtretcb with all geara
thrown on. .
Frealdent Taft aeema to bare
learned when to apeak out aa well aa
wben to keep silent
. Tboae Modern Woodmen are going
after each ether with their axes Just
aa if they were all democrata. '
A woman went to St. Lonla with
f 5,000 to And bnaband. She prob
ably can find 1,000 for that price.
It la evident now that tb corking
good tlmea of the present campaign
are not to be confined to any one
ran. " ' ,
' The adentlat who baa discovered
tbat plumbing Is 4,000 years old,
i probably got sore at bla landlord lor
Bit repairing his.
It may be' Impudent tor a little
old dictagraph to stick around wben
private conversation la going ou,
bat wa need the talk.
The' newspapers frequently offend; but
never so seriously eg when the. Ignore
Individuate who are seeking notoriety.
Bt. Louts Times.
Oh, bow true that t.
"Wben winter is over and I get
back to God'a country," writes Col
onel Wattenon to hia Courier
Journal. What, coming to Nebraska?
Welcome!
Governor AJdrlch baa been com
pelled to cancel speaking -datea be
cause of hoarseness. The dry air of
the Irrigation districts la very bard
on orators.
Since Mr. Hearst has formally put
hia brand upon Champ Clark, we.
will now hear that the apeaker la tbe
only really and truly grand candidate
In tbe race.
The Eloux City Journal invitee the
colonel In with the premise ttiat he
v'll find the water warm. . Tea, and
warming np with the approach of
spring and summer.
Perhapa the president felt that a
Jersey justice on the supreme court
beach could throw additional light
upon ths dark and devious waya ot
tbe trusts, most ot whom are New
Jersey institutions.
Some of the professional hold-up
men around the country must have
read that published letter about
there being "no police protection
within ten blocks," and bled them
selves to Omaha according1.
Colonel Wstterson says of Gover
nor Wilson that "under tfap Veneer
ing of scholarly polish lies the colled
lerpeut of ambition," Any man
abould esteem it an honor to.be de
nounced tn sneh elegant diction.'
Poital Telegraph.
In transmitting to congress tbe re
port of the postmaster general. Pres
ident Taft takes occasion to disavow
and dissent -from the recommenda
tion of a postal telegraph. The presi
dent expresses the view that govern
ment activity abonld not be substi
tuted for private enterprise here if
the service may be rendered by
francblsed corporations under public
control In a manner equally cheap
and efficient This is the real point
ot debate, the postal telegraph hav
ing been eetabliahed abroad, and
being now urged for this country by
Postmaster General Hitchcock as a
proper function for the PostofBce de
partment by which telegraph mes
sages, tbe same aa letters, could be
transmitted and delivered better, if
not cheaper. . "
The proposal of the postal tele
graph is by no means new with us,
nor even new with our postal author-
ties, as it baa been included in tbe
program of various successive post-
masters general for forty years. It
must be admitted that very recent
developments, J lining tbe telegraph
xnd the telepl one for operating pur
poses, hss made It a more compli
cated problem, and has unquestion
ably deterred tbe advent ot the pos
tal telegraph, which had previously
appeared to be fast approaching.
without resistance on tbepart of the
telegraph companies. The attitude
of President Taft takes the postal
telegraph oS of the legislative slate
for the present, but It will make a
reappearance at some not distant day.
' OipimVs Bec&IL
Colombia's action In promptly re
calling Its Indiscreet minister to the
United States, General Pedro Nel
Osplna, for an utterance that could
have no place In the delicate func
tions of diplomacy, is very gratifying.
because it Indicates a much better
feeling for tbe United States on tbe
part ot its little netghbdr to the south
thsn wo bad had reason to believe
existed. Of course, though all has
not gone precisely to the liking, of
Colombia, that country would bave
nothing to gain and all to lose by
taking offensive ground with us,
though it is not at all to be supposed
that because of the American gov
ernment overtowerlng strength It
would use Itunfalrly upon, weak
neighbor. No American Interest baa
anything to gain by unfriendliness
with or imposition upon Colombia, or
any otber Central or South American
country, and the sane men at Bogota
evidently appreciate that
The attitude toward Osplna Is In
marked contrast with the action
toward an American army officer who,
also speaking wholly aa aa Individual,
and not as a representative ot bla
government, waa severely reproved
for making an indiscreet remark at
a London banquet torn months ago.
It was in nowise as serious, however,
as the assertion of Osplna and yet
tbe administration frankly took the
Colombian at bla word when be said
tbat ho spoke, not as minister, but
aa Senor Osplna.' Tha administration
simply, declined to take any notice
whatever of tbe remark and to have
done otherwise would have undlgnl
Bed this government and over-dlgnl-
fled en apparently amall man front a
minor republic. The United Statea
thua comes out entirely the gainer,
the administration having reflected
distinguished honor upon itself and
the government
bench of thia district, and but one
change In the supreme bench of the
state, and in neither case because of
any special grievance against the de
feated candidate, .bat rather because
his successful competitor bustled
harder.
- The Caw of Mr. Schwab.
It baa been several daya since
Charles M. Schwab spoke so despair
ingly of the steel business, from
which be threatened to retire If con
gress tampered with the tariff, but if
be has acted upon hia threat the fact
has been withheld from the public
Before Mr. Schwab throws up the
sponge be might recall a statement
he made in the fall of 109. which
went far from indicating that tbe
steel business was altogether unprof
itable. He aaid tbat the capital
stock ot tbe Bethlehem Steel company
hia corporation amounted to
$15,000,000, all of which the Bethle
hem owned; tbat It waa divided Into
800.000 abarea at J 50 par; tbat
while nominally only ft a share had
been paid In, the surplus of the com
pany waa practically . sufficient to
pay the stock Is full and that the
company Intended to, issue stock to
represent the surplus. Those were
Mr. Schwab'a own words. Presumably
the company has since carried out its
intention and issued this stock to
represent the surplus.
In 1910 tbe Bethlehem company
paid a dividend of 10 per cent,
amounting to $1,500,000, on Its cap
ital stock. Surely any industry that
can earn dividends of $1,500,1100 on
an actual cash Investment ot $300,-
000 is In fairly good condition to
weather an adverse wind or two: at
least, it is fair to presume tbat tbo
principal holders of Its stock would
not be hastening to throw overboard
what they bad acquired. Or, putting
It another way around, a $15,000,000
concern with $300,000 of stock con
tributed In cash and $14,700,000 in
earned profits, is not in tha most
advantageous position to demand spe
cial privileges.
UmDav inOmnlin
f COMPILED fPOM BEE rilXS j
I r1 FEB. 24. ' J
The government lawyers claim to
bave three kinds of evidence against
the alleged dynamiters. Tbe gov
ernment is very modest in iu claims.
From showings made it aeema to
bv loo kinds ot evidence against
them.
The elty building inspector's de
partment is the one supposed to en
force thjOaJUjjiS. Ordinances upon
ton tractor., who take exclusive pos
session ot streets led sidewalks ad
joining Uetr work. This Information
simply to let the Comnierdal club
know to whom to direct complaints
on this score. " '.' '
Voltuiteri In Idle Army.
It is not at all surprising to learn
tbat many tbouaanda ot Chicago's
army ot unemployed ars volunteers.
The complete muster is estimated at
125,000 and the commission, ap
pointed by the mayor to Investigate
conditions baa already reported tbat
It has found many demanda tor work'
men unmet by tbe soldiers within
these lines. For instance, call for
$5,000 men to clear railroad tracks
and other property ot aoow fell upon
deaf ears. In another case 1,(04 men
were advertised (or In the morning
newspaper want ad columna and $50
responded.
No impatient teal tor work evl
dently anlmatea thousands of these
soldiers of Idleness. Others, no doubt,
would like a chance to earn an
honest living, but there is tbe un
answered call for the 25,000. Mace
donia is not' saved' that way. We
ventured to suggest, before that a
large proportion of this vast army of
unemployed consisted ot tbe profes
sional tramp and these early findings
ot the coamtssion seem to Justify
our belief. They put a very different
aspect upon the situation and will go
to discredit -any-attempt to make
political capital out of a condition ap
parently grave.
Industry and capital, of course, are
pursuing a conservative line ot action
for the present, bat upon tbe eve of
a national election aucb a condition
Is not entirely strange and it offer
no sort of warrant (or magnifying
any fault that may exist The day
was admittedly saved in this country
In 1907 by the concerted wisdom ot
tbe newspapers la carefully, avoiding
any exaggeration ot tbe depression,
snd such a policy could with greatest
profit to all interests be adopted now,
though conditions are far from
analogous.
The democratic World-Herald la
not happy over tbe appointment of
Judge Pitney to the supreme court
vacancy, although it baa no word to
say against blm. . But it is Inconsol
able because President Taft did not
give Louis D. Brandela the place aa
a reward for going up and down tbe
country attacking his administration.
W shall file thia recommendation
away- for the event, which w do not
think at all Imminent, of a. demo
cratic president with a supreme court
vacancy to fill, and see whether the
World-Herald will atlll be aa Insistent
for Mr. Brandela, notwithstanding be
avows bimselt a republican.
John Barrett urges the business
men of Omaba to start a campaign
of education on the value to this sec
tion of the Panama canal, and how
to make tbe most ot it aa soon aa it
Is opsn for traffic. The trouble Is to
determine which campaign ot educa
tion to start flrstew-oaa for tha Pan
ama canal or one (ot the Platte rive
power canal. .
That political calendar baa plenty
of red-letter dates, but they are badly
bunched. It would be more con
venient If we bad an election or a
primary, or a registration day, aay
the first and third Tuesday of every
month. We may come to It.
, Press dispatches say that Governor
Wilson's visit to Topeka brought out
tbe largest crowd seen there since
Mr. Bryan's visit In 10 J.' Why
mention It? Most any atranger who
will make a speech can draw a crowd
in Kansas.
Well, it "Mike" Harrington's red-
Ink circular la no more deadly 'to
Harmon than it was to Harman, Its
effect on the democratic primary will
be negligible, but it may be useful
to the republicans later In tha cant'
palgn.
I tefc far Publicity.
Chicago Record-Herald.
Senor Pedro Nel Osplna, may, on the
ether hand, bave thought that was the
only way In which b could over get upon
the front pages.
reerlag Threw h Ulaaaea Darkly.
Washington Star.
J. J. Hill's slightly prejudiced Idea of
a clash between the greet industries and
that of a nead-on collision by a tecoraj
tlve and s handcar. ,
A Oae-slded Areawsnraieat.
Pt Louis Republic.
To stimulate the Increase of population
tax reform- measure ban been drawn In
Iowa In which, soya tbe report. "It la
proposed to rllv a man of taxation en
tM for every child bo has." Will like
Inducement be offered to women to un
dertake the cares of motherhood?
The people of Nebraska had a
chance to recall their Judges last
year at tbe regular Judicial election.
but they made but one change In the
In Other Lands
Soaea Cldo Ufata em Wast la
TraaurptrUa sVaaoag tke
sa4 far nations at the Bartt.
Thirty Years Ago
A delightful musical was given by Miss
Rust In and members ot the Mendelssohn
quartet at the residence of Captain C. B.
Rustln at Harney and Seventeenth' streets
The Quartet, composed of Misses Rustln
and Poppleton and Messrs. Mayer and
Cabn. was assisted by Mr. O. F. Bauer
aa violinist, snd Messrs. EaUbrook, Wll
kins. Northrup and France la the vocal
numbers. .
A sociable waa given by tha young peo
ple of the Lutheran church at the resi
dence of Joaepb Redman on Sixteenth
street.
Prof. Samuel Aughey lectured in the
T'nltarlan chapel ea "The Growth and
Development of the Rocky Mountains' .
A fall of rain and oceans ot mud ware
not sufficient to stop The Voyage of the
Bristol" as the benefit performance for
Manager Marsh at Boyd's. . -
The Omaha Brick company, for the
manufacture of brick and rile with a cap
ital stock of &00O,' has been incorporated
by Orvllle E. Coombs, F. SUaton Lewis,
David D. Seamton and Charles 3t Mead,
Over twenty rich costumes have been
ordered from New Tork for the coming
Concordia society's masquerade ball.
Electric light will be introduced Into the
!W Millard hotel. Gas. water and steam
pipes are being laid, and the painter and
plasterer will soon be at work.
With tbo resignation of H. W. Tatea aa
cashier ot the First National bank the
stock he held wa purchased by Mr. Her-
nun Ksuntso, tho president
Thar la a hole In the gutter on Tenth
at the Howard street crossing that Is sup
posed to be a direct route for China. Bev.
era horses were floundered there today,
and It was necessary to get help to pull
them out
Edward Cpdlke of Harvard Is la Omaha
on a business trip.
Twenty Years Ago
C. F. Goodman returned from St
Louis, where he went with a delegation
of Omaha men to labor with the leading
committeemen to get the populist con
vention for Omaha In the summer. Other
Omaha men with him were W. K. Naaon,
secretary of the Board ot Trad, and J.
O. Phllllpl. Mr. Naaon has the promise
of T. V. Powdv-rly to favor Omaha.
Governor Boyd waa making changes In
the personnel of the fire and police com
mission. IX Clem vDeaver was out of
town, but the other newly appointed
members of ths board evidently had a tip.
for soon after coming down town Shields
and Gallagher made a be line for
Chat He Ogden's off??, where they were
handed commissions. Wllllsm Coburn was
also reappointed, but Gilbert, Hartmaa
and Smith failed to get commissions.
D. C. Patterson and half a dosen other
property owners In ths southwest part of
the city offered to donate to tha park
commission tb right-of-way for a boule
vard IN feet wide and about four miles
long. Tb boulevard would start at
Forty-second near Ambler Place, and
terminal north of Dundee about Ham
llton street
Rom Millar of Norfolk, until recently
one ot UM proprietors ot tn raxton
hotel, waa a guet at that hostelry.
, Elmer Frank; was reported, to. b In
precarious condition, suffering from ty
nhnla faver
It was reported that the t'pton Pacific
conductors and brakemen bad won a sub
stantial victory in computing overtime
Their grievance commute obtained the
eoncaaslons after long consultations with
General Manager Clark and Assistant
General Manager Dickinson.
Ten Years Ago -
Hope of a new fireproof hotel for
Omaha, to be built by tb Dean Brothers
of Kansaa City, were ones more revived.
P. R. Her brought them back to life.
The mayor and city eouneltmea of Red
Oak. Ia.. visited Omaha In a body. They
were Mayor Thomas Griffith, Aldermen
Oeorge Brown. Henry Peterson. John
O'Rourke, Charles Wilson and L. FTkes.
At "a meeting ot th tax committee of
the Real Eatat exchange W. S. Popple
ton brought tip the resolution ot the city
council to Issue current ex peas bonds,
and asked th committee It U would at
tempt to Mop the proposed tnue, and th
committee unanimously decided that it
would not
There was a break la tb democratic
trinity of Harry Miller, Walter Mots and
Ed Howell, Miller dome th breaking. He
declared that h would fight Ed Howell
as a- candidate for mayor to th WUr
no". - '
Th Board of Fir and Pofle Commis
sioner formally appointed Charles A.
Salter as thief of th Ore department to
succeed Jena Redell. with salary at fJ.
Tha agitation for two market house In
Omaha arose. Th first en waa already
located by th elty council on Capitol
avmoe - between Thirteenth and Four'
teenth, and th second on dec
eosnewher near Eleventh and Howard
streets. Councllmen Kerr, Trostler. Hi
call. Looser and Ztmman favored th
Idea. Robert 8mitb, a Douglas street
grocer, waa th apokesman for the duplex
proposition. . - ;
People Talked About
Letting; Is the Light.
Philadelphia Free,
Th supreme court has again held con
stitutional the clans in. tb Interna
commerce act of 191 which makes the
railroad on which a shipment originate
IJaM for loss or d area re Incurred la any
nan ot th trip. Aa long as railroads
reserv th right to rout freight Do rail
road can object to Ma being held responsi
ble for accident on a route which tbe
shipper doe not select
laemaay loaveea
Philadelphia Ledger.
If hah? th stories told about the dicta
graph are true that uncanny Invention
way be as serious a menace to the se
curity of society as th Maxim 'silencer"
tor firearm promised to be. Put to the
right neea it may be. a useful servant,
misused tt may become aa Intolerable
autaanes: as a detector of crime It has
been Justified, as aa Illegal means , for
th Invasion ef proper secrecy it will
soon call for some form of regrutaitiv
control.
Moved by "kindly Impulses and sanitary
reasons." Abtbame Is about t provide a
painless means of killing oyster before
bemg served on the half shell. ...
William Temple Emmet, who bas been
appointed superintendent of Insurance ef
New York state. Is a sreat-gTandzoa or
Thomas Add s Emmet, who was a brother
ot Robert Enunet. th Irish patriot.
The fact that Oeorge Washington waa
penalised by a Texas court for gun
toting tmplle gross ttreeerenc for a
great nam and a startling departure
tram th style which mads the Lone Star
Stat famous.
It is solemnly asserted that a Boot en
womaa weighing ninety-eight sounds beat
her Sfr-lb. husband Into unconscious res
Boston, th gentle, cultured, huaaane hub
ot tne commonwealth, shocks admirers
by emphasising with a dub tn ami en tut
refrain: Tiobdy love a fat aaan."
A New Tork financial paper expresses
th astonishing opinion that SN.M a year
each Is a ahas toe mark pay tor mem
bers of th Board ef Directors of th
Central Leather company. The porcine
equalities of the aUractors leave stork.
boiders gripping th sack. Hence the
roar. '
Edward U. Morgan, recently rap
pointed postmaster at New Tork City,
has been connected with tbat fflce etaca
1S7X, when ha waa It years aid. When
ke entered the effloa It did HNS. of
business and employed MS men; sow
there are about . employee and th
yearly business Is about ta.mt.tm,
Optlsatstie British Palttlca.
Beginning a session of parUament aa
momentous as that which repealed th
absolute veto of the peers, th British
ministry displays unexpected confidence
and energy. Th blunders and bluster
of opposing toroes sharply discredits th
reactionaries, and cheers tbe forward
march ot progress. Th situation
as viewed by American correspondents
la decidedly encouraging for' th liberal
party, and for th successful passage of
the three great measure, on the minis
terial program, borne rule for Ireland,
disestablishment of th Welsh church, and
manhood suffrage. Several conversing
causes contributed to this happy condition
of affairs. Tb Oast ditchers' of Bel
fast fumed and fussed, but tailed to pull
off th promised fight or "kick ths crown
Into ths Borne." Two "smashing
speeches' by th tory leader. A- Bonar
Law, have been so fatally discredited by
official facts and figures that unionist
organs -lament the absence it Balfour.
War Secretary HaMaae'a peace mission
to Germany is hailed aa aa amen of in
calculable good, the forerunner ot bene
ficial results to com from the coronation
visit ot King George to th Kaiser. Th
dtssaffectlon caused by Sir Edward Grey's
support of Russia In suppressing tb
independence ef Persia M being smoothed
over through diplomatic channels. Rus
sian troops are marching home and the
Intriguing agents of the Caar are being
supplanted by officials- Instructed' to
abstain from mixing in Persian politics.
but to hold on to th puree strings.
Evidently th clearing sky of international
politics aggravates the Ill-temper ot tb
lories, for only bad temper can account
for the incredlbl blunder of attempting
to boycott th king by absenting them
selves from th' initial session of the
House ot Lords Th success of ths min
istry In calming th troubled waters at
horn and abroad infused a marked dear
of buoyancy Into financial and business
affairs, fill th country with fresh eon-
fldenoe, and gives th ministry a free
hand to deal with the epochal national
reforms.
K
Threatened ladaetrial Strife.
Only one cloud of dangerou propor
tions flecks th British horison at th
present moment th threatened strike of
the ooal miners. Oa November It last a
conference ot the miners federation
formulated a demand for a minimum
dally wag for every Individual working
underground, tha wage varying accord
ing to the district from is lid In Somer
setshire and Bristol to cs M In Yorkshire.
Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire and South
Wales, but being uniform throughout th
district Th demand baa been sanctioned
by an overwhelming referendum vote of
the miners and notice has bean served en
the operators that unless th demands are
granted the meet will quit en February 9.
Estimates or the number of men likely
to he Involved rang from M.OOS te 1.-
Both elds are maalne the usual
outward show of determination te fight
te a finish. Operators are placing heavy
Insurance en their properttsa. and th
Lloyds ask prohibitive Insurance rates la
a gamble against a strike. Tbe govern
ment has not yst shown Ma hand beyond
making inquiries tor quartan for troops
In section likely te be disturbed, hut tb
energy it haa shown ra previous indus
trial struggles warrants .the prevailing
belief that It will exert Its whole power
la preventing by arbitration what would
prove a disastrous Industrial war.
. est r -
Olllaat th llassaa Maehlae.
In the struggle for tbe betterment of
the working masses the chief rests lane
comas from employers who fear th pos
sible expsase ot a, change. "Lat Well
enough alonaf Is th cry ot those whe are
so situated that they have neither tfme
nor inclination to inquire Into th well
being ot th less fortunate. It Is a com
mon brand of selfishness, a formidable
obstacle to every reform designed to
benefit the many. In the last three
year all th elements of organised greTJ
In Great Britain vainly resisted th bene
ficial measure of old ags pensions and
assurance against sickness and unemploy
ment Th well-fixed Brttlsbers merely
echoed the temper of German employers
when compulsory Insurance for. working-
men was first proposed. Tne splendid
benefits flowing from these great reforms
have transformed th fiercest ot oppon
ents Into ardent supporters- ot the Insur
ance syetam. Many ot the larger German
oorporetiott have added Independent tn-
surance ot their own to the system estab
lished by law, sometimes paying double
the sums paid by the government "If It
pay te oil a machine. It pays te ell a
human being." waa th answer of
Frankfort capitalist to a question whether
R paid to devote so many thousands ot
marks a year t tbe welfare of employes.
The Ferrer Ceavictlea.
Th disagreeable task ot eating their
awn words, comes io those Persons in
Spain and other countries who rushed to
tb defense of the. Barcelona eourt -mar
tial which condemned Francisco Ferrer
te death. After a lap of a few years
and the subsidence ef machine mad fever
the empress eourt at Madrid, tn a review
ot th findings ot the drumhead court
martial, declares there le a evidence that
Ferrer waa a participant In th rioting.
that none of the rioters acted under or-
Idera from him, and that there le no testl-
' i-,iit.. nwMr'a aneannetrv In the
disorder for wbtch he Buffered death.
Tb anarchy practiced by a military court
n a greater peril to th Stat than.the
anarchy taught by a schoolmaster.
violent Objections that were urged against
such men as Judge Hook and Secretary
Nagel. either ot whom would doubtless
hare .performed admirable service. In
finally turning to New Jersey and select
ing Chancellor Pitney for the- vacancy
mad by the death of Justice Harlan the
president reveals his despair of pleasing
th particular western folks who Interest
themselves In Judicial appointments.
Probably a host of objections to Judge
Pitney would have found their way te
Washington If the president had delayed
ending ths nomination to tbe s-nate for
a few daya No one can he mentioned
whom someone does not object to.
POLITICAL SNAPSHOTS.
Cleveland Plain Dealer: "I never was
a deserter," proclaims Colonel Roosevelt
But no. He baa always stuck to the
colors as long as the Oyster Bay Insignia
were printed plainly on the labeL
Sioux City Journal: The" very idea of
aa organised democratic fight la Ne
braska against Mr. Bryan Is startling.
But that la the movement And all Mr.
Bryan te asking la tha honor of attending
the Baltimore convention as a delegate-at-larga
from Nebraska; and, incident
ally, to be aura, th opportunity to get
in a few more licks en Governor Judson
Harmon and a few aide swipes on other
democratic candidates whom he cannot
consistently approve.
Minneapolis Journal: The Outlook may
be right in estimating that th president
has forfeited political strength, by lack
of quick, spectacular decisions. But sure
and dependable decisions will read as
welt It not better. In history than the
quick kind. If he has lost ths ear of the
people. It Is not because ot lack of in
terest In their welfare, but because he
did not speak In, the vernacular which
was for the moment popular.
Springfield Republican: There are
traces of a resemblance In tbe republican
situation to that In the spring or 192.
Secretary Blaine's friends . were urgent
that he should compete with President
Harrison' for the republican nomination,
but the "plumed knight" did not actually
resign' hia cabinet position until three
daya before the convention was .con
vened. Then he became an active candi
date. Blaine In that period waa the pop
ular hero of the republican masses. In
consenting te make th race against even
an unpopular president he! gave the final
tragic touch to his career.
sens Vetrr Live Relies.
Pittsburgh Dispatch.
Ex-Senator Bevertdge Is reported as
saying that the anti-trust act Is "a
relic of th seventeenth century." True.
It Is also a relle of the eighteenth and
nineteenth' centuries, . inasmuch as It puts
into statutory form the principles ot the
common law that hare existed since law
waa formed for the public Interest. Th
first derisions against the Standard and
sugar trusts were under the common law.
But old principles of the common law
are not necessarily effete. The Ten Com
mandments,'' for Instance, date back a
good many centuries before Christ..
WHITTLED TO A POUT,
Ton say your Jewels were stolen while
the family waa at dinner?
"No. no. This Is an important robbery,
officer. Our dinner was stolen while
were putting on our Jewels." Louis vtl.;
Courier-Journal. .
"I like those decisions the judge la giv
ing."
"Yes. they seem absolutely frank and
fearless. Do you know what they sug
gest?"
ro.-
"They suggest the sort of decisions sem
judges would give if the recall embraced
th judiciary." Cleveland Plain-Dealer.
"Mr dauarhter. nrofeasor. nlavs entirely
by ear."
And- aim t you having her treated lor
tbe trouble ?" Baltimore American.
"Is that man a ruler!" asked one ori
ental statesman.
"No," replied the other; "jndlng from
his extreme pliability. I ahould rather
rail him a tape-measure." Washington
Star.
Frayed Francis Ever have dyspepsy,
Dusty! ....
Dusty Rhodes-Wot s datt !
Frayed Francis Dat means ' trouble
after yer meals.
Dusty Rhodes Not me- My trouble
come afore nur meals. Boston Tran
script " Miss Gushlngton Love Is like a kitten.
It is bom blind.
Mr. Blunt-Yes, but it only takes a kit
ten nine dae-a to get Ita eyes opened.
Philadelphia Record.
' TEE WISE DOCT0B.
W. D. Nesblt In Chicago Post
She was weak, sne waa pale, she was
fragils snd trail.
And the trouble grew rapidly chronic;
She waa wan, she was weak, 'twas a task;
just to speak,
'And the could not respond to a tonic,
She could still go around, hut each day
It waa found
That she seemed less concerned with )
Just living,
And she rook with an air of the deepest
despslr
All the medicine that they were giving.
Many portly M. D.'s some an fat they
would wheeze - i
Came to make a renewed diagnosis,
And they talked, grav ot brow, ot tha
why snd the how '
And of cellular atrengtb snd osmosis.
They prescribed for her trips' on thi
trains and on ships.
They declared sh must do lots of
walking.
But ah shook her poor head and she
took to her bed,
While tbe specialists kept np their taik
. Ing. .. ,
Came a doctor quite new to see what he
might do;
H asked not of her eating and drinking.
But he studied her case as he looked at
her face
And he kept up a power ef thinking.
Then be ssld: "I am sura that I know of ' J
a cure. i
And he gossiped of Cranks and trans
missions. i . -
And of limousine tops and of magneto
pops
Which astounded, the other physicians.
Well, her husband was keen and he.
bought a machine.
And th doctor, when faced with the
question
Of how he waa so sure he could work
out a cure.
' Said he did It by aute-sugeetlon.
swam . aUnCMm.,...
DMIIIGPOI'DER
am
Greatest aid to home baiting
Makes the cake biscuits and
tot-breads of superior flavor
and healthfnli. ess
Absolutely from from alum and other
Injurious aubmtaneest
S , A
GettheWell-Knowu
Round Package
OAUTION
tva. vnM a aa fruitful as the
United States la the production and dis-
i i-..-r r .-wnLA BS-teka." What
tlttl protection te afforded the gullible
tn this country oomea tareuga in as
ivtia nf oatofne authorities, but only
.r,- (ha victim haa been seoerSted from
his money. The reverse ot tnts system w
k a rnsrh aewauusaUoa headed
by th noted economist Alfred Naymarck.
The society la backed by bankers aaa
h...i autharlUec. aad tta Purpose Is
l examine and report ea every propost
tjaa saw king capital aad te wage relentless
war en get-rtch-qulck fakirs.
rraasr Atrtema BUI.
aa last been called upon to
a sew and annasderabl payment!
for the gloria et hr latest Afrtcaa ad-1
venture. The expedition to Fes and the i
Incidental esmpalga ia the Atlas wiU east '
th. French taxpayer Juat assort of ga-
M.SW. Tbe casualties for th
eratlen exceed t,sa. aad aa
axes reaaalne In Morecce te
.aint Against
Substitutes Imitations
' - A
MALTED MILK
Made In tho largest, best '
equipped and sanitary Malted
Milk plant In the world '
We do not make" milk products
Skim Milk, Condensed Milk, etc.
. Be the Original-Genuine '
HORLICK'S MALTED MILK
Made from pure, full-cream milk
and tha extract of select malted frain,
reduced to powder form, soluble ia
water. Beet food-drink for all efea
PeTASK FOR HORLICK'S
Used an over the Glvbo
a swt. i
-"as
.Wttra.---
army et
K seeker Ksstk the) Wee.
BprinaTftetd (Mass.) RaeeuoOcaa.
The west km a member et th United
States supresn court
GUARANTEE TUND LIFE ASSOCIATION
ORGAXIZED JA.VTARY 1802. X
PIKE PROTECTION 1X2CRANCE.
Assets, January I, 1813 - $32,84.31
Reserve Fwawl January 1, 1012 615,013.90
Brftica with (Hats Drpwrtutent Jaawary 1, 1013 ... '343,350.00
(Te Si rare Our lasraraao Cea tracts.)
Bate per thomaaad, age as (ocber ages la proportion). $8.78.
dortalrti Caaat per $1,000 Ijiaarausce Meaa Amount. Year 1911, $3.10.
Depository Banks Appointed, 080.
Usaassd tn OaHfarala, Indiana, lewa, sTsasss, atoataaa, sTessssla. Sorts
Bekvta, Oreare. aota Dakota, Idaa, Waautiaartoa, Texas aad -Wy
assise;, aad preparing te atav rlla.la aad Mir, aire a.
koos vr etra maoomo.
aa account of tbe
Home Office: Brandeis Building, Omaha, Neb.
letepnone Douglas .tri.
I