4-B THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: AUGUST 11, 1911 ! The Omaha Sunday Bee. Bounded bt edwarp rosewater i victor rosewater, editor. EES BUILDING, FARNAM AND 1TTH. Entered at Omaha Postofflce a second elasa mattr. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. Sunday Bee, one year .-.....tl.B tsaturaay Bee, one year . Jaly Bee (without Sunday) one year.4.00 Dally Bee and Sunday, one year DELIVERED BT CARRIER. Evening Bee (with Sunday), per m..2Sc Dally Bee (Including flundny). per mo.fec iDally Bee (without Sunday), per mo..' . Address all complaint tr irregularities la delivery td City Circulation Dept. ; - REMITTANCES. ! '( Remit by drift, expre or postal order, payabl to Th Bee Publishing company. Only 2-cent tamp received tn payment oi small account!. Personal checks, ex cept on Omaha and eastern exchange, not accepted. - ' - - , . , . OFFICES. ' Omaha--Th" Bee building - ' South Omaha-HW N St. Council Broff-r78 Soott 8t . Llncoln-IK Little building. 'Chlcago-lOtt- Marquette .building. . .Kansas Clty-Rellance building. New Torlc-34 West Twenty-third. NWaBhlnEton-725 Fourteenth St.. N. w. , ' : f - CORRESPONDENCE. j .'Communications relating to news and editorial matter should be addressed ' Omaha Bee, Editorial Department JULT CIRCULATION. ' 51,109 . I ' gtate of Nebraska, County of Douglat, at, D wight Williams, jlrculatlon manager, 'of The Bee Publishing company, being duly sworn, says that the average daily (circulation for th month of July, 1913, was 61.100.'' D WIGHT . WILLIAMS, - - X-lrculation Manager. V Subscribed .In my presence and towrn to before me this M day og Auttist, 1011 .(SeaUi R08BHT HLNTLR. i ,. v " . .. , ' ... , Notary Public. . i tabaerlbers . leavia t eitt ; i 'temporarily afcoaU The . Re , mailed ; to. them. Address will enansed as alien aestVr- --v.-.- . i The -dictagraph it the little boy ,with tha parlor secrets all right. i And now the trust butter are try ; Jug to paste the billboard combine. '-i ; , . n . , . The . church , that does, things seldom has much trouble setting a hearing. Speaking of bumps, Nebraska is used to bumps, the kind that come ; 'from bumper crops." , v :' Nor is the time for all good peo ; pie to keep their feet on the ground While the band play. j '':.' , "The door of hope" was opened j Just wide enough to throw the col ' ored brethren out of U. " , - The summer resort pleasure-seeker learns what real enjoyment. Is only after he .returns home. s . ' . i A one of the bull mooseri says: ''But just think of the glory of help ing to form a newpartjr.,. ' ' .' i . . .' -j.-,: " At any rate, when the stationery mn are entertained by Ak-Bar-Bon 'they will not be stationary. : j, Colonel Watterson thinks the bull moose is no longer dangerous. In his view, just a muley moose. Wise . preachers never raise' the 'question, "Why men don't go to church T". during the base ball season. sz,:.lr!'L .' ' . ? I Everyone ., will agree with Lieu- tenant Becker that "It's an awful plight for an innocent man to find himself." . . i , ' ii i i i ,. -! Railroad passenger agents put the blame,for light travel upon the auto. We'll, the automobile Is as good a goat as any! , .-;" , If. Detroit reaches its 1,000,000 population' mark ,by 1920, perhaps It will bo able to pick out a full set of honest aldermen. " v j ' u " If these political spouters keep on clouding the issue they-j may get caught In the worst thunderstorm ever. experienced, No one can blame "Mike" Harring ton for objecting to being called .to account for what he never said, when he has said so much to be called to account for.. . ' , ', The inventor of the adage,5"There , Is nothing new under the sun,"' un fortunately died too soon to attend Jie moving1 picture show or he Wouldn't have said it.. . A Sl Paul preacher says he would rather have a robust burglar for a father than a, consumptive bishop. But dignified preachers should not be judged by such nonsense. Wonder if the democrats have ever thought, since this graft upheaval In New York, of the. beneficent fate that steered them around Mayor Gaynor as their presidential nominee. Tit it sometimes a little uncertain Just where. John O. . Yeiser's share of the' glory comes in. Colonel Yetser seems to have carried the water, while the other just crawled under the tent. ' In rainfall we are two Inches ahead Of. last year, and nearly tlx Inches . ahead or the year before, which Is at i good assurance of a full corn crop as . the weather man could be reasonably , expected to give ua. ; i ; The threatened street car strike in ; Chicago has , been, put over for on week, but absence oC names most j'' famiflar on the' side of the striker! t during Omaha's street car troubles V. must be regarded as the most encour .'-..aging feature of the situation. A Doubtful Compliment. The special-decree addition of four women members to the ner party national committee strikes us as a decidedly doubtful compliment to the sex, and directly in conflict with their demand for political equality. If California, or Colorado, or Wyoming, or some other suffrage state, had named a woman as its representative on the commitee, tne woman member would have bad a coutltuency and occupied a consistent position of equality with the other members As it is, however, the women have been denied political equality, while accbrded a special privilege, and the purpose behind fche move is so trans parent that it should not deceive any Intelligent person, man or woman.' . The object is undisguised to throw this sop to the women as a bait for their votes and Influence. The. only wonder is that -" four members-at- large were not added to the commit tee for the labor unions, for the church-goers, or for the base ball fans. , TKe territories, the District of Columbia and the insular possessions were denied delegates in the conven tion or voice In the party manage ment on the excuse that their inhabi tants contribute no electoral votes, although by moving Into a state and possessing the other requisite quali fications they can acquire, voting cltl- senshlp, and yet special dispensation is made for women In anticipation of votes they hope to have in the future. The able women who have led the suffrage movement in this country have always protested against any treatment that makes women either Inferiors requiring special protection or a separate class enjoying favors instead of exercising rights. Community Dwelling. ' The large number of apartment bouses and family hotels in course of construction In Omaha reflect the trend toward community dwelling, most pronounced in larger and older cities. It is not necessary to delve into the reasons which lead so many families to prefer' living that way. It is worth noting, however, that what only a few years ago seemed to most people to be the idea of an Ideal city a city of detached houses, each surrounded with - Its . own plot ', of ground no longer prevails. It was thought that this ideal community of one family to a house, and one house to a yard, was possible In a place like Omaha, starting out with wide streets, spacious building lots and unlimited growing room.; put Omaha Is fast treading the path of other progressive cities, and while home' ownership is still within easy reach of any ambitious and industri ous mechanic or laborer, the com munity dwellings are here to meet a real demand, and a demand that is sure to increased 1 1 ; What is a Billion Dollars t . According to common belief John D. Rockefeller Is worth 11,000,000,. 000. This Is doubtless greatly, ex aggerated, but what would that moan to the ordinary individual, except that the possessor would have many times more millions than he has any use for or could ever hope to use; bo much richer than the CroeBus of old as to make him seem an Impecunious beggar by comparison. No one can possibly comprehend the meaning of a billion dollars; not even Mr. Rockefeller himself. Ex perts in the national treasury at Washington are supposed to count 4,000 silver dollars an hour, 32,000 for a day of eight hours' work. In thirty-one days and two hours they could count, up to $1,000,000. If an expert kept up that pace for ten years ho ould have counted only $100,. 000,000,' approximately, To count $1,000,000,000 It would take one man at the rate of eight hours a day 102 years, putting in every work day. ; Ships and Tolls. . Under the Canal government bill as It passed the senate three vital points are made clear, even If not settled ' permanently. -' American coastwise vessels may. pass through the canal free of toll;' American for eign' trade vessels may pass through free if their owners -wllKtirst agree to sell the ships at reasonable, prices to the United States in timer of war or great emergency; railroad-owned ships are barred entirely. ' v Even in the United States opinion Is still divided as to the final wisdom of these plans, and it is possible they may not be final short of a decision by The Hague tribunal. For that reascn . it seems unnecessary for Britain to' work herself into such a pitch Of Indignation over the action of congress. . Great Britain disputes our right under the Hay-Pauncefote treaty to do any of these things and says that if that policy Is adopted foreign ships will continue to use the old routes in preference to Panama. They doubtless will If they find the old routes more , prof Itable and not otherwise. But as for the treaty, most of our own statesmen believe we have not violated our obligations. It may be for The Hague to deter mine' whether we have. England Is especially exercised over the exclusion of Canadian ships, most of which are railroad-owned, and the ; admission ot our non-rallroad-owned ; vessels free of , toll. Thus far . no other means have ap peared available for preventing rail roads from monopolising traffic. , As for our admission of our own vessels free, the canal is ours, built by us on American territory, and with the light we now have we seem to be pro posing only what England or any other nation would do under' similar circumstances. American Energy. One of our greatest national assets is energy. American energy it In dom liable. It essays and succeeds in tasks the most gigantic. We have the heart to undertake most any thing that is worth while and the spirit that defies defeat. : But as Americana it behooves us to go a little Blow in vaunting this distinction of energy, for our histor ies tell us that it is one of the pio neers of our land. It 'was energy that finally Impelled' the Pilgrims to come to this strange land In quest, not of power or wealth or territorial aggression, but simply to find a place of civil, and religious liberty. And during the last century some 30,000, 000 people have come trooping to our shores from many foreign lands. They, too, most of them, came be cause they were so energetic they could no longer content themselves with conditions In their , homeland. They 'felt the need for Improvement, saw the possibility of It and migrated to the country where they believed they could get it. ' All this required energy of the finest type. It takes energy for a man and woman to turn their backs upon home and native land and fam ily and friends and all that these precious associations mean to them, and go thousands of miles beyond the seas to new and strange lands. In deed, each year they come, ' these aliens, to infuse new energy into our American lives. So we have in this country a combination of selected energy, so to speak, ; the . best im pulses from all lands, and that surely gives us the indomitable sort. But we must always be generous enough to allow for the help we have re ceived.. Children Do Hot Sear Themselves. One often hears it told that the child reared with least restraint is best reared. It is an old principle, only a counterpart of the theory that the government is best that governs least. Parents have to practice that principle, however, with a . delicate discrimination or they may miss the whole point and absolutely, cheat themselyes and their children of re sults. " ' ' ' . Children, after all, do not and can not rear themselves. They are not able always to differentiate between what they want and what they need, so that it is unsafe to leave them to decide. A certain degree of restraint Is always necessary. It is well enough for an easy-going parent to comfort himself or herself with the habit of letting the child take care f Itself, but the price of unwar ranted liberty must be ultimately paid, most probably by the child, the unfortunate victim of an over-Indulgent parent. , Proper parental control at the right time will do a. lot to minimize the necessity of outside interference of - public Institutions for juvenile correction.' ; . Inferior Eubber, In spite of all the lurid tales of stock promoters about the fabulous discoveries of new raw rubber, no one has ever heard of rubber prices going down. The fact Is they have steadily risen and at the same time the quality, of rubber has deterior ated. This is appreciated by 'every person who buys and uses rubber. All the tricks of the rubber trade are not confined to the atrocities prac ticed by avaricious masters upon the serfs that gather the plant.'; The visitor to some of the rubber factories will readily admit that when he sees the immense piles of old rubbish, pieces of hose and other scraps, that go into the manufacture of the new article of commerce. With these facts well Impressed, the public will continue to await with Interest the developmeent of the Brit ish chemists' plan of producing syn thetic rubber, which they contend can be made just as satisfactory for all' practical purposes as the "real" article, v The experts making this ex periment say the artificial product can be successfully produced for 24 cents a pound. With what Is palmed off for natural rubber selling never lower than 62 cents a pound, this would certainly be tempting to the consumer. But it has proved so easy to stretch facts with reference to rubber that the public Is a little skeptical on every phase of the sub ject. . . ' Lean and Fat Years. One of the Kansas college agricul turists is making an effort to get farmers in- the western portion ot that state to sow fewer acres to wheat this coming season and devote more attention to intensive culture to Increase the yield. He says If this Is done systematically, thus encourag ing Industry, It will have the ultimate effect of stemming receding tides ot farming population,' which the census flgurec show carried a good many people out of several Kansas counties. People flock in during the fat years and out in the lean. His proposition is to adopt such farming methods at will minimize the results of a lean year and hold the farmer on his farm. If sound, the same advice Is equally - good for farmed in the newer counties in Nebraska, where similar conditions obtain. vThis can be done by more attention to forage crops and live stock, as well as sci entific cultivation of the soil and se lection of the seed for raising wheat. No farmer should neglect hlr live stock, for it will often save the day when nothing else will. ( A careful observer said that in' traveling west through New York he could measure the deterioration of farms by the diminishing herds of cattle, while in Canada all the farms seemed to be in a prosperous condition and all were well stocked with cattle, hogs, sheep and horses. Improved methods of farming should make the difference between the lean and the fat years less and less appreciable. First in Talk. We, Americans are the greatest talkers in the world. . . It might be hard to demonstrate that fact beyond the reasonableness of a doubt so far as ordinary conver sation i .concerned, but when meas ured In talk over the telephone our primacy is undisputed and indisput able. ' "-!..'. Statistics carefully compiled for the American Telephone and Tele graph company, based on actual fig ures of the number of Instruments and wire mileage in use in all quar ters of the globe and other exchange data, warrant an estimate of 22,000 million talks transmitted by tele phone in the year 1911, of which 14,500 million were within the bor ders of. the United States. Of every 100 telephone talks we Americans perpetrate sixty-six, so that the com bined number for all the rest of the World is but one-half of ours. I v Our facility for talking is also llustrated by the relative use - we make ot the telephone as compared with the telegraph and letter mail. Taking only Europe and the" United States, European letter talks in 1909 were three tiroes those over the wire, while in this country the telephone messages were half again as many as those that went by mail. All this may be partly due to the greater perfection and development of the telephone In our country, or rather to the combination in larger degree of all the elements that make the telephone popular, but no one, We "believer will deny that it amply supports the claim that we Ameri cans are the greatest talkers in the world. Immigration and Emigration. If aliens coming to our shores were - better distributed over ' the country and not congested in the thickly, populated centers,' such a thing as l an Immigration problem would.' speedily disappear from our minds.' For, as a matter of fact, this so-called ' stream of aliens . Is not steadily on the Increase. Official figures on the influx and efflux up to June 30 show av decided falling off in net gain of foreign population as compared with former periods. For a Period of ten months ending with April the net arrivals of unmarried Italians were only 24,817, as com pared 'with 95,995 Inthe previous twelve months and 167,492 in 1909 10. v A diminished movement also is reported for the last year from Scan dinavia, Greece, Holland and the United Kingdom. For the. first six months of this calendar year a total of 247,046 aliens emigrated from our shores. , ; ... , These figures, no matter .how deeply gone into, reveal no Justifica tion for alarm about excessive im migration, or for the many political schemes of more rigid restriction. Two facts stand out In front of all social prejudice or political .bun combe, first, that thlB country, still needs the able-bodied alien, and sec ond, that it is not being overrun by newcomers. If they contribute to congested centers of population, it Is our fault more than theirs that they do not seek the sections that need them. The Outlook announces that in its future issues It will regard the Chi cago republican convention as past history and will direct the attention of its readers to the real issue before the country. ..That must mean that the "fraud" cry has either petered out or served the purpose of Its In ventors. , Australia Is going to carve out a new federal capital on a specially picked site, where a city is to be made to order. For tips on what to do, and what not to do, the Austral ians are invited to come over and in spect Washington, D. C, and Lin coln, Neb. . - ; People who "saw It first" are writ ing letters for publication to claim parentage of this, that and the other thing in the colonel's platform. If what all of them say Is true there Is not a proposition In it that has not been stolen. The battleship Nebraska has been seriously damaged by collision with an uncharted rock. ' As no news is good news, it is safe to assume that the silver service presented by the citizens of the namesake state is still intact. . ' Photos of the colonel and his run ning mate shaking hands are offered to us at $2, apiece. Who gets the moving picture proceeds? ilocktaBatiaWaril AUGUST 11. Thirty Years Ago . The B. & M.'s opened their new grounds with a match game with the Spalding of Chicago and won by a score of f to 3. The B. & M.'s batUng list was: Kort- man, first base; fiulltvan. third base; El lis, eccnd bae: Jones, left field; Crosby, shortstop; Jam son, right Held"; Bent, cen ter field; Grant, catcher; Durkee. pitcher. The Union Pacifies played the Council Bluffs nine, with a score of H to 7. Whitney and Door pitched and Traffle caught for the Union Pacifies.. . . The street railway company hat taken up the curb leading : from Twentieth street into Cuming. The electrlo light is still something of a novelty here, r A 3,000 candle power Brush light is being exhibited at Davis & Marcy'a Omaha Novelty works, their new motor being used for this purpose. The Standard dub Is preparing for a grand banquet and ball at Standard hall neit Monday In honor of the silver wed ding anniversary of Mr. and Hrs. Henry Pundt. ' Hon. Aehmead Bartlett and Baroness Burdette-Coutts,' .being the wealthiest woman in England and her husband, the latter a young American, are stopping at the Millard. They are making a tour of the United States. Rev. H. W. Kuhns, one of the pioneer religious workers in this state, now lo cated at Westminster, Maryland, is In the city, and to be the guest while here of Hon. J. B. Detwller, Herman Kountze and other old friends. C. B. Matthews, formerly with the Pal mer house, Chicago, has accepted the po sition of steward at the Millard. Twenty Years Ag 'Jockey" Strauss and Abner Dalrymple, two old time ball players, stopped off in Omaha cn route from the Northwest Pacific league, where they had played until the ghost ceased . to walk regularly, when they hied them to eastern fields, hoping tohDok on to. better, bertha. Miss Valeta Ambrose, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Ambrose, returned to the city after three months of outing. ; J. C. Ambrose, the noted Chautauqua lecturer of Evanston, 111., was visiting his brother, George W. Ambrose. George Larson and Mary Larson were among those to , Whom Cupid supplied legal licenses to wed. V i Postmaster Clarknon . was preparing a new schedule for delivery and collection of mall in the business section of the city, showing the exact minute at which a' collector visits the boxes to gather tip the deposits. ' Attorney General George H. .Roberts of Idaho, formerly attorney general of Nebraska, was In Omaha enjoying a rest after the severe mental strain of the outbreak tn the Coeur d' Alene mines, in which he was the legal adviBer of the state of Idaho. .The Library board sprung a surprise On the Board of Education by deciding to move Its quarters Into the new city' hall. This was distressing to the Board of Education, for there was not room available for both and if one went In the other would have to stay ou. for the time being anyway. ", Ten Years Ago -. v , :' i' Z' ' The announcement was made . of the marriage on August 19 of Miss Emily Wakeley, daughter of Judge and Mrs. Eleaaer Wakeley, to Mr. Charles Edward Craln of Springfield, O. The news was received as a surprise to the many friends of Miss Wakeley. . ; . , William B. Ostrander died at his home, 203 South Twenty-fifth street, after a brief Illness. He had been afflicted with typhoid fever and then appendicitis. The McKlnley club was making efforts by correspondence to have the plans of President Roosevelt changed M as to get him to make a speech while Mn Omaha in September. His Itinerary bulletin con tained the notation: "No speech In Omaha." DOWN TO HARD TACKS. How Facta Refute Assertions of Ball . Mooseri. New York Post Rival committees, one for Taft and one for Roosevelt, have put out long statements about the rljrhta and wrongs ot the republican 1 contests at Chicago. This conflict being what It is. there is the more reason tor giving heed to such an impartial examination of the evi dence as has"beon made' by" Senator La Follette'a former law partner, Gil bert E. Roe. He publishes his conclu sions In the last number of La Follette's Weekly After passing In review case after case, with th allegations made on either side, he sums up by saying that Roosevelt never had a chance of getting an honest majority In the Chicago con vention. Hit "nomination was impossi ble even it every delegate to which he had any shadow of claim, or which could he regarded as doubtful, were counted for him." "At the worst," de clares Mr. Roc, "the national convention seated less than fifty Taft delegates on insufficient evidence. Those in charge of the Roosevelt campaign trie to teat more than 130 delegates without any evidence at all." To this comet down the loud assertion of "naked theft." Mr. Roe ends Ms study of the whole matter with these words: "If the command 'Thou shait hot steal' It to have a place In the platform ot the new party, I suggest that th promise 'We will not steal' be coupled with It. The promise would certainly be as ap propriate a the command and would be more reassuring to the country. Klaar Corn Promises Reliefs Springfield Republican. With beet prices scoring new world's records almost dally and the syndicate popular restaurant In the big cities add. lng 5 cent to the price of a plate ot hash, the corn crop ripening on the great western lands lookt Ilk a life-saver. It could not yletd too many bushels tn this year ot limited meat supply. , For a great corn crop means cheaper feed for catlle. and cheaper feed consequently means more cattle, and more cattle mean cheaper steaks and hash. ' , The Mltlennlnm Sidetracked. Pittsburgh Dispatch. Th man who predicted the millennium for this year has poitponed.lt till next year. A study of th political situation is enough to convince even tha most con firmed millennium predictor , that it will have to be put off. Tvndfner ( th Times, ', . Boston Herald. The government and the banks are sav ing Jl. 000.000 by cutting down the site of our banknotes. The tendency every where is toward the microscopic dollar. People and Events "If you want to be beautiful," exclaims a doctor, "do your own washing." Laundry-men who stand off their doctors are entitled to the knock. Two women over In England recently engaged in a stamp-licking contest. Po lice and minister view the Incident as a grateful symptom ot peace.- Despite the thunderlngs ot candidates and the dang of battle-axes, whetted for the pray. Uncle Joe Cannon wears his cherubic smile and laughs the clouds away. A federal Judge In New Tork rules that a magnate with a salary of 125,000 a year cannot Invoke the bankruptcy act to evade paying his bill. Such old fash toned notions help to swell the scream for Judicial recall. -v j ,( . Owing to the preststent saltiness ot the ocean at Bar Harbor, Me., women carry cocktail canes, from which suitable re freshment is drawn without attracting undue attention. How the men fare is a mystery, unless you know Maine., , The old canteen, hallowed by genera tion of associated thirsts, has been out lawed at the encampment ot the Ken tucky militia and Individual drinking cups substituted. It soldiers are to be denied the gurgling Joyt of the canteen, where wilt intplratlon for a fight come from? . . , Wilbur Glenn Vollva, successor of Brother DoWle.'of Zlon City, oppressed by the conviction that th bull moosers failed to blanket tbe whole field of hu man uplift, start put as a crusader against tobacco, dancing and oysters. Minneapolis has been chosen for the first attack. ; Judg Shattuck of Denver la dispensing package of hot stuff to local , editors who scoff at the dignity of the court. Editor Bonfils of the Post got slaty days 'n JalK and a fine of 150, while editor Spear of the Time got five days in jail nd $10 fine, both for contempt of court. The difference tn th penaltymeasures the relative esteem of the court. . " In th section -of Portuguese East Africa, where summer is on the Job all the time, . efforts v to compel native women to Wear skirts have been defeated decisively. The old reliable fashion of earrings, a-dash of paint on. the .bow, or a decorative postage stamp are so well entrenched In the affections of so ciety that the duds of civilisation are not In the running. ; 1 A nainted picture of '. the sea and chrome-tinted waves . breaking on the beach, an Atlantic City hotel keeper deemed a fulfillment of his promise of a "sea view" to prospective patrons. Two JlO-a-day victims of the lure, preferring realism to art, made an outcry sur ficlently loud to be heard by the grand Jury. Now the nervy boniface has an Indictment for fraud added to his art Collection.: v . '. SECULAR SHOTS AT. PULPIT. chlcasro Record-Herald: A Denver nrenrher tnftlflta that it Is a sin to kill a fly or break an egg. Stilt we don't believe killing flies or breaking egg Is as bad as swearing at a golf ball on Sunday. riftveland Plain Dealer: One Dr. Smltn tells the public press: "I would rather have a robust burglar for a father than a consumptive bishop." Well? We wtw mv ho sav In the matter and therefore draw consumptive burglars for parents wish to know what Old uoo birmn is going to ddbout It. ' f u TnHlanabnlls New: Now comes a m- cago pastor and blether from hi pulpit that "no divorced Woman shouia oe i inwftd to teach in our schools; tt matter not what the cause was that led to her As., the fact of the divorce disquali fies her as a teacher." There's a hot gospeler, a swift mlslnterpreter or tne loving humanity of ;our Lord and Savior, Slamming the gates Of mercy and forgive ness on womankind. Washington Star: Perhaps the coatless Minrrh mill enme Into voeue generally. This idea la worthy of serious considera tion as a means of making places oi wor ship more attractive, at least less repel lent, to the very, class whom It Is the ambition of every preacher to bring within the range of his Influence. If a mnn ran hfl assured that he will be pnys- lcally as comfortable In a church pew as he Is on his own front porcn in sum- tnpr time he is more apt to accept me invitation to lsten to a good Sermon, naitimnr American: Throughout tha ages the men of attainment,- of Intel lectual : brilliance, Of talent or aouny, of power, of prowess, of true manliness; the women who have been the Rachels and the Marys and the Deborahs and the Dorcases of the world such men and women have testified unerringly, that they were what they were by the grace of God. The unlimited promises, the sweep of holy impulses, the vast reserves of grace-all these things i have been opened up to those who have seen the whit light of truth-the truth that makes men free shining from tne hoiy jamp oi falta at the altar ot religion. POLITICAL SNAPSHOTS. ' ' St. Louis Globe-Democrats Th. colonel call hit platform, a contract.:; HI pledge not to run for a third term must. have been merely a platform. . Pittsburgh Dispatch: The Illlnolt pro gressives' nominee for governor !t tald to be worth 110,000,000. Who can explain th mysterious affinity between A''progre slveness'Vand plutocracy? ; V New ,. Tork World : Abraham Ltna jln opened the "door of hope" to the colored man. The colonel slamt the door in his face, which thowt, of course, that the colonel Is the modern Abraham Lincoln. Indianapolis News: With Raymond Robtrins pledging . 100,000 majority In Illi nois for the third termer and Glfford Plnchot promising SpO.000 majority in Pennsylvania, It looks as If the least Cecil Lyon could do was to come across with a guaranty of GO0.000 majority In Texas. , a ; , ,' Philadelphia Bulletin: . A song that aroused much enthusiasm at the bull moose convention was an adaptation of the "Follow" hymn that tias been sung for years by the Salvation Army and the young people of the Christian Endeavor ocleties and the Epwortn league. The revised version substitute the name of Roosevelt for that of the second person in the Trinity. Hero worship, . however trended, should stop Short of sacrilege. A Strug) Wort. Watching. ' Batimor American. - Following the abolition of hell .by , a convention of students, a psychic mes- saae ha been received, a alleged, from k spirit there, In which th existence of the Dlace is positively affirmed. The pes simistic peychlsts and the cheerful stu dent will have to fight out the ques tion between them, while a deeply inter ested world lookt on. SQUIBS OF SATIRE. i Judging from photographic evidence, that newly established , "women's fire brigade" of Vienna Is more likely to kin dle tires than to exUngulsh them. There are no technicalities by which one may escape the laws of nature. - New Tork has assigned 10,000 police to combat the fly plague. There 1 nothing new in this, as we have had fly cops for many years. ' ., Many a man who thinks he Is a bird Isn't able to feather his own nest. Love laughs at locksmiths, but the poor little fellow, weeps aloud in the open door of the modern man's club. '; . The Manhattan youth who became sea sick on a park lake has had all the ef fects of an ocean voyage with none of the expenditure. .' ,; Some preachers' son become mlssion ariet., tome go : to. the legislature tut occasionally one turn out a good d?al better than was expected. . . . , Penny wives; gowned foolish It's al. wayt so. ... . r.-, i : Sfany a woman'i flgur ,' ha been - man' price. .. , . : Most men favor , abbreviated : bathing costumes for other men's' wives The young man who understands women has wasted time. He understands nothing else. r.. . ;. . .. SUNDAY SMILES.. "Is voiir hiikj ':' 1 ... too'" v. over pate Bail, "Oh, no. He inherits it.- He had an me?Ullyd"lrCh0,USin anced mentally. -Chicago .Record-Herald. Mr. Peck (scowUng)-What? "Tc- fi.'?!h",W tI,I"k ey could easily run a R.ncord."ePartment ln. th Congresslonal ,.'!S.W would, they do It?'" "t . " ("8a I-was.",,- ; ''Jdon't see any auto?" IOU haven't Iaaw u ,l. - language!" t0 h?Aa imb .; I'What ' for?" ; : ' "So's the next tlm'e-I go after a hrM What Is the difference?" . With a monoplane I believe you hit thA oartk n liai . . 'vu 1111 oomes."Lo'j8ville Courier-Journal. Jl r"lVe b.een tr'ln for years to get my brother to take a vacation. ' ' mf i.n1. he won,t ao n? Tv,. , " a D" 'onesome away know. rk- He' SWropodJst. y"J He-A chiropodist.. Wliy don't ymr'su. teat his spending a few a v at. the of a .mountain ?-Bot,tfttr rcrt y Detroit Free Press.' :. i Let me. be a little kinder'? k ' Let me be a little blinder i' ; To the faults of those about me, Let me pralsa a little more Let me be. when I am weary,-"' Just a little bit more ehery. -. , Let m serve a Jlttle Better V I Those that I am striving for.- : Let me he a little braver' 'T':i when temptation bide me waver; ; . Let me trlve a little harder " i : To be all that I should be;" . V wLm.lt aJW meeker: v;"; Lp V.h,brutI,er thttt ' weaker. : A, t, h? Pk,more y neighbor And a little less of me. Let me be a littlo swester, V Make my life a bit completer- ' By doing what I shouW do t Every minute of the day- ' s Let me toll, without complaining t, t h2mbI tesk aisdalnlng wL nmon, calmly : VVhen death beckons me away DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED U you have neglected , having your Furnace, Steam or Hot Water Heater Inspected, you will BUreiy be disan- hil.J , " t,u,ulBQ' ." wl only be a short time before you will need heat aC ast mornings and evening' forty days you will need heat ail the time, it costs you absolutely nothing for expert Inspection and if repairs are needed we will advise you;'C " How. about that New.; Furaaee? We have the very best arid -solicit your IhQulrles. ' . . . ; ' '...'. 4 Combination heating by putting Hot Water Heaters in your Furnacand Radiators in your, cold roOmsX 'rtiis Is the most economical- method of heating known. '. '..;."- v .4 OMAHA STOVE REPAIR WORKS Tyler 20. ., 1206-1208 Douglas St. Thc Things You Want-Not , "Somethinij Jnsi.ar Good" v Among the "just a good" things there may occasionally, be some thing that really 18. But tt will not happen verjr frequently ami should not be depended upon to' happen at all. f 8o that When you come her and sk for a particular article and ; ask for it by aame, we assume that you not only know what vou! want, but that you know why. And we will be able to sell it to you if It Is an article, or a brand, or a "make" of something that ha "made good." If we should not be able to tell it to you, we will not, try to persuade you that you don't' know what you want simply be cause we may not have It ln tock. That 1 a compact come in and tewe it tV . Sherman & McConnell . Drug Co. . ;