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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 28, 1912)
SEPTEMBER 28, 1912. t ! il 1 i! Tee Omaha daily sex FOUNDED BT EDWARD ROSEWATER VICTOR ROSK WATER, EDITOR. EEB BUILDING. FARNAM A.VD 1VTH. Entered at Omaha Polo'fiC. as second- tlass matter. Characteristic. It look now as If the progressive party would have a place on the Nebraska bal lot, with the advantages that party name and party circle give. When there Is no longer any chance to (ail In this, the Roosevelt men on the republican electoral ticket will doubtless do as thorn In like TERMS OF SUCSCTitKriON Kt.7u Irl Tear""..'!"..... situation in other states have done.-Lin- ' ' . . t. (Vl ) . Daily Bee (w.thout sunaayj one -rr rY coin journal. w,yVyiER." How kind, and yet how character- Daily Bee (including Sunday) per mo.c igtic. 'TtfXSJttM The "thou-shalt-not-steal" elac- In delivery to City Circulation Dept. fnpa ajmn holding places on the baV- REMITTANCES. i0t belonrin to Taft electors, but i. -f ..nrpu iir sosiai oruei. --- XUSiniL Ul UlCkAfc, -- .. I ... . . payable to The Bee publishing company, refuse to vacate unm mey are sure Only 2-cent stamps nee w in ,aw wH1 be 6tretched to rive a party cept on Omaha and eastern exchange, not accepted. OFFICES. Omaha The Bee building- Bouth Omaha-2318 N St Council Bluffs 14 No. Mam su Lincoln-26 Little building. Chicago KH1 Marquette building. (Mu-ll.llinra hlltldmK. j wenucuiu". the law will be stretched them a party column and name ot their own. If the law is held to be what the smartest bull moose lawyer, "Mike" Harrington, says it is leaving" no recourse (or new entries but to run by petition then the Roosevelt elec- N.w York 34 West wJhK?s Propose to keep the stolen label correspondence. . and force the Taft men to tak the JSZSZrZSKir .tTu SHM peUtionroute. Omaha Bee. Editorial Department In other words, although, caught with the goods, the Roosevelt elec tors in Nebraska will return them, to their owners only if compelled to or furnished with something they be- AUGUST CIRCULATION. 50,229 B..- . W.hrs.ba. CountV Of DOUgtSS. S. Dwlght Williams, eircutawwu "-?-! of The Beo Publishing company; being jieve equally as good. duly sworn, says mat me -ry rtr.nirton for the month of August, w tea DwiGHT wiLUAMs. sieepine Car Ventilation, H mii nranM and sworn Imnrnveil methods of Ventilation OUWCTiuw w , i.niphr I to before m Uus 2d day of wptemoer, ,,,- rftiiwav Unln eara BnHKHTHUBfft " ' (Seal) Notary public. are demanded by the Congress ot Hygiene in Washington. An expert callc attention to a new system of expelling foul air, which he says la a great boon to the traveling public. The need for Improvement is recog nized, as th construction of the Hurling epithet is neither making I older car8 reckoned little with aanl- SsoksiBaclaWard Iks Day inOmalia FROM BEE rilE-a 1 r 1 J SEPT. 88. i; Thirty Years Ago A call for a state convention of the Young Men's Christian association by toe executive committee Is signed with these names: P. 8. Lelsenrtng, chairman; George & Hoaser, secretary and treas urer; Leavltt Burnh&m, Warren Switzler, M. a. McKoon. William Fleming and L. D. Temple, all of Omaha, and J. C. Bonneil and J. N. Davidson, Crete. After the battle of the preceding even ing the Woman's Suffrage ladle recon vened after repose In the arms of Morpheus. An uncomplimentary editorial in The Herald served as a punching bag. "The ladies on the stage were, tastily at tired In bright and Imposing colors, whieh contrasted pleasantly with the surround ing scenery." Mr. Hitchcock's challenge for a debate was put in cold storage. Mrs. N. J. Ed holm, wife of the well known jeweler, Is said to be lying quite low with typhoid fever. Jeff W. Bedford will furnish the county with t(s winter supply t soft coal at $5.50 per ton. The debate on the woman suffrage question between Mr. Edward Rosewater and Miss Susan B. Anthony, which was to take place next Monday, will not IN OTHER LANDS THAN OUES Current Events of Importance in the Old World. I London market without the aid or con are formed Knt ho Interested powers and their take nlace until October 1.1 nn account of Miss Anthony being ealled away from j nn-wle tr!ke this fall to emphasise the city. Subscribers leaTtag the eltr temporarily should have The Bee aialted to them. Address will be changed as ea qoeated. votes nor speeches. tation. Ye,t. "In the dining car ahead" something also remains to be Ak-Sar-Ben is too old a bird to get d0M before tt tourUt.g comfort and raffled by a few cool breeies health are adequately provided for. f . ...... nn H AAHir..tl.i You cannot blame even a mula for " ... . . v Mlnera ntn aleonlnff mi art era fni th kicking on that mysterious equine fct malady. waiters and cooks at night Is a very bad custom that should be abolished. PfPBlrlnnt Taft and Governor Wil- " " neither pleasant, nor healthtul son are able to meet and exchange to make a bedroom out of a diner, In 1. 1 ( 1 ..ll .... it 1 11 tips. reupie wuo travel w ruiiiuuu uuo, - - ii ... and eat in diners pay enough to get The hook worm might be put to the very best treatment, and they use by applying it to pitchers that should have it. are knocked out of the box. Hot "Tickled' at Wilson. tho nrsi iooi oaa wuur 01 Democratic organs ara at nalns to season may be attrmutea to mis o- put B eood face on tha party's ae vemoer weaiaer V oepwmwr, of Governor Wilson as Its I " ' I ctTart I o rr1fAQdiff ; km. a mAtf Af taet . , . I UVUUMUI U UVSa V m SS SMHtVVI V we Aluminum prices are said to have I .,m la UtAi T a rtnv urtth ftf hat rvf PAA. I 1 . T MfBBHMSsBMSVaWSSMSBMBBBaBMMSl I V V U i " ItU f U VII W Anvwaa. enforcement of the order 8al 0P Clark's cordial against lawn sprinkling' after 8 UuDPort of the ticket,. but, judging o'clock has ceased to be burdensome. D reports oi uarns speecnea, ow beau cannot be bursting with love "I feel like I have been In a cru- Just now Muie," exclaimed the colonel on en- Speaker Clark and Senator Stone tering Arkansas, Worse than that of Missouri spoke at the. opening of the democratic campaign in that The bewildering paradox of poll- Btate. Touching the nations! ticket. tics Is thati every candidate is sure ot Senator Stone, who It will4 e .'re election t-wo months before the votes Cftned was Clark'a manager It BaitL are cast, s more, said: : . ; , -v I still think Clark 'should have been Governor wusoa so eager W nominated, but the two-thirds rul. which let the people rule that he insists had not been enforced since 1844, stood. R. R. Orotte, general agent for the Bchliti Brewing company of Milwaukee, has arrived to locate here permanently. Mr. A. B. Huberman has gone to Chicago te meet Ms wife, who la to arrive fcom Europe. The republican state central commit tee met at the Millard with its chair man, George W. E. Dorsey, to' arrange campaign work. Twenty Years Ago - 8am Morton, the genial ex-manager of the Minneapolis base ball club, was In the city n the Interests of a liquor house for which he was traveling. J. R. Kllng of Blue Bprlngs, about 60 years old, fell dead at Twelfth and Har ney streets about 7:S9 o'clock la the even ing. Several passengers on a Harney street car saw him fall. Their names were taken by Police Captain Haze. E. W. Sherman resumed big old position as cleric at the Murray hotel. Uttle Donna Agnes Moyer, 7-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Moyer, died and brought anguish, foot only to the hearts of . her parents, but of her little playmates as well, with whom she had always been a special favorite. Th Eighth Ward Republican club held a meetingat Twenty-fourth and Cuming streets, B. H. Roblsoq talked on the tariff, R. A. U Dick appealed to the young men to cast their votes for Har ruton and Messrs. Breckenrtdge, Baldrlge nd Powers spoke for the republican ticket. ' on dictating the gubernatorial nomi nee for New York democrats.- - Speaker Clark, in a very serious and candid vein, followed: 1 don't profess to be tickled to death by the nomination ot Governor Wilson, for I am no hypocrite. Plainly, neither Stone nor Clark are going any great lengtn in smoothing over their feelings, or in "Any one who will lie to get la concealing their disappointment. And office will trick' you put of your tor effect many other democrats are rtghta if he gets in office," Bays the working for the ticket in this same third-term. candidate- .And he ought half-hearted way to know. The learned doctors at the hy giene congress have discussed infan tile paralysis, but offered nothing in the way of diagnosis or remedy. . Special School Work. . As auxiliaries, athletics In Reports from Kansas City says a As auxiliaries, athletics in . the native has just been taken in on the grammar grades may be turned old coin matching trick to the tune greatly to the advantage ot the pupil of U.400. Kansas City will soon be but, after all Is said in their favor, In the Council Bluffs class. The district attorney is said to have obtained additional evidence in criminating that New York police lieutenant. That ought to make enough to go round the force pretty soon. . j .. the fact remains that they are not the fundamentals. Only by keeping that fresh In the pupil's mind Is it possible to do with these specials what was intended.. That requires something of an effort, too, both on the part of the teacher and parent Most every vigorous boy is apt to . After aWlarln his first choice to Nnk or ' n, record ,n Jumplij, be Harmon, and then submitting to tmnias and vaulting than arithme instrtictions for Clark, our distin- c- grammar and spelling, unless an gulshed United States senator from older head center hi8 Mention on Nebraska will now nose 88 the chief the real DUBiness m nana, ucn chamnion of Wilson. , care must be exerted, therefore, to maintain .the proper balance m ma Ex-Judge Grosscup used to be de- child's mind of the main purpose of nonnced as one of the worst corpora- the school and the extras or specials, tlon capper! on the federal bench, Of course, in this day we are not but now that he has publicly es- golpg back to the old system of pub poused the third-term candidacy of lie schooling when bodily develop course he has become an unselfish ment was entirely excluded, although and patriotic tribune ot the people, even under that imperfect system a few youths grew into manhood with fairly well seasoned sinews. Ae rule it requires no strenuous effort to Induce a boy to run and tear as And to think Mr, Bryan was much as his physical development re- willing and ready all the time to do quires, while it i more or less dif- them and more, too, in a single term ficult to rivet that same boy's mind of four years. - down to book learning Mr. Roosevelt had seven years In which to do things. Now he wants four years more eleven in all In which to really do them. The Commoner. The Nebraska Photographers' as- An exposition of "Made-in-Omaha eoclatlon has voted to hold its next goods ia on the boards for the com annual meeting In Kansas City. The ing winter. As recognition of the excuse for going outside of the state principle that the people most be is that the , national convention of educated to demand Omaha made photographers r will be In session products, this is all right, but the there at, that time. But that doesl campaign of education should be not look like a good excuse to us. continued all the year round through the newspaper' advertising Ci7umna our amiaoie contemporary tries to lf tt !b hlve tne aesired effect. explain the ., difference between demo-pop fuBlon and bull moOBe-re-l The long list ot applications for publican fusion as the difference be-J pardons or commutations filed with tween voluntary and , involuntary I the State Board of Pardons, would union. : The Bee denounced the either indicate that the convicts in fusion fraud when perpetrated by tho penitentiary think the new par the demo-pops, but. of course, It don board is easy or that some im makes a difference when the labels pecunious pardon promoter has been are changed. , , , .; busy among them, Revolts of Commoitn, Constitutional monarchies on and safeguarded by the homer and privilege of aristocracies and property. Plural suffrage and property suffrage give to the few controlling voice In gov ernment, thereby holding the multitude In the minority. Rarely are any of these privileges voluntarily surrendered. Aris tocracy and property regard the common crowd as a collection of human atoms doomed to pertain the coarse work ot the world and contribute to the ease and comfort of the one and the increase of the other. But the multitudes of sub jects In Europe are awakening and de manding equal rights with ever-growing strength, from- the Thames to the Danube. The rioting ia the Hungarian Parliament appears to be a rude and unseemlngly manifestation of political disorder, yet a searching of the causes reveal the oppression of the privileged classes, their refusal to accede to rea sonable reforms .in suffrage, for which the fisticuffs of members was. the vis, ible and emphatic expression of popular wrath. What could not be had from the ministry in an orderly way was de manded in a disorderly fay, thus riveting public attention on ministerial opposition to suffrage equality. In Germany sim ilar demands of the people for equal suffrage are pressing for settlement and cannot long bo deferred. The social democracy of Belgium, defeated by plural voting in the last election, promise a Ten Years A go- Mr. and Mrs. 3. R. Dewar ware back from a visit with Mr. Dewar's folks at London, Ont., and were domiciled at 2423 Cass street Omaha took the odd game from Indian polls in the series of five, giving the Rourkes three and the visitors two. The fifth game was played In the presence Of 5,000 fans and won by a score of 8 to L Mmer Brown pitched for Omaha and Keliuin'fof the. Hooalers.. , " . Amaha lodge of Zapadnl Cesko Brataska Jeduot, observed its twenty-fifth an niversary. The South Omaha lodges awl some members from South Dakota aitd one from Kansas Joined in the celebra tion at the hall on Thirteenth and Wil liam streets. A parade including about ,000 members was a feature, with R. Havlka marshal of the day. Charles Stlger, lodge president, presided over the exercises. Prank 3. Sadllek of Wllber. formerly of Omaha, one of the founders of the society, spoke" in Bohemian and Judge Berka In English and John Roelcky reviewed Its work for the twenty-five years. In the evening "Karel Havllock Boroveky," Bohemian play of historic and patriotlo character by , V. V. San- berk was presented under direction of F. Bandbauer, . vnaer "Two nags" was presented at the Boyd. Miss Jane Kennark, an old Omaha stock company favorite, appeared as vtgaretie vivanaiere. People Talked About the demand for the suffrage principle of one man, one vote." The British Parlia ment at Its coming session is expected to abolish plural voting, a system by which the landlord class exercise unjust power at the ballot box. Slowly, but surely the common people of Europe are learning not only their rights, but hpw to as sert them. Every advance marks a. re treat ror aristocracy and a shrinkage of "tne divinity that doth hedge a king." '' The StraaslUar of Persia. Coincident with the appearance In Lon don Of W. MorK&n 8hustnra itnrr In hook form, of the leatructlon of Persian independence the Russian and .British foreign ministers are conferring on plani tor taking formal contnl ff the country Russia, Is eager1 for action on the terri torial loot already . in hand. Russia" troops and Russian officials are in pos session, informally, of northern Persia. and have bung or Coesacke4 such of the Persians as enterUliii doubt of th? benevolent intentions i f the csar. TJnde the agreement of 1T Russia was a signed the northern "snhew of influence' and Britain the sou'.hnrr.. TI.e guarantee oi Persian independence written into the agreement proves to ;uvs been the means of diverting suspio.or. Mhllu preparations for the .tragedy - wen', on Eusel foi intervention were easy q find. The bear more aggressively than ilie Ion, charged the Persian iamb with tainting th stream below. ConseqMeatl?".the' lamb is now in the hams at ti tear and the feast will proceed deeoruusly. as soon as the lion's appetite 's keen enough to flout responsibility ! for tha tiagedy, While some delay may ecu.- th end is cer tain. 'The crime against Tarsia,''- de clares the London ewi, ' is already con summated. The Aog'o-Rur.slan agree ment of 1907 still blaml and Persia whose independence Is guaranteed, lies mangled and ruined.", ' i . - Chinese Financiering..' The - slx-poirer group -of" bankers who were anxious to loan millions to the new government of China on teitain controll ing conditions, are now in position to appreciate the demure peculiarities of the Chinaman, immortalised by Bret Harte The Peking celestials proved to be not only pecui'ar, but held up their capacious sleeves packs of winning cards which they played with surpassing skill, beating the syndicate bankers at their own game and putting Chinese securities on ths banking favorites. , The factor m tn astonishing feat is an American promoter named A. Wendell Jaeksoo,"who realises $75,000 on the $30,000,000 loan. ""Jackson's feat,'' says the New York Financial World, "may go down Into financial -history as an exploit worthy of the ro mantic feats of the knights of old. That Jackson could drop suddenly Into London and, unknown and without influence among the world's big bankers, take this big undertaking from under the noses of the most eminent of the world's finan ciers who thought they had closed all the other sources from which China migut get aid, Is something, that -has' set the financial writers ,of two coptlnents by the ears.'' v'-ii Thrift Natloaal Evil. The people of France are eeteemed the world over a shining examples of thrift It Is the nation's conspicuous trait, the source of its strength as the leading banking power of Europe. Put with the strength born of thrift alBo comes . the weakness of habit mastering the indi vidual. Thrift has such a masterful grip on tbe people of France that an Amer ican observer, writing in the Century Magazine, holds the national oharao- teristie primarily respoj)We tor uecun lnr population and the growing repug nance to large or moderate families. To have more children means mors expendi ture, and conseauently a division of a competency parents insure one cwm. "In this national trait of thrift," says the writer, 'Is found one ot tne great reasons for the lack of vigor, strength, daring and purpose in French industry, The French are not travelers or emi grants, As a rule they are failures as colonists, notwithstanding the fact tnat the Frenoh colonies and protectorates have an area twenty times that of the mother country and contain a population ,O0O,OM in excess of the population of France itself. A hundred years ago Frenchmen wbo emigrated had their property confiscated, and the descend ants of people who made such laws are well content to stay1 at home- Travel means to them an expenditure in excess of the returns. The emigrants, as a rule, leaves nothing behind him and, omitting the poorest class, virtually every Frenchman is tied to his native land by his Investment. Be It large or small, as the case may be, it Is the core of things for him, and with it he prefers to stay." French Troops 1st Morocco City. The Imprisonment of French cltisens In Morocco Cltv. the oapltl of southern Morocco, caused the dispatch of a strong French expedition to the 'nsursunt c!t The probability of meeting opposition on the march of seventy-five miles through a country peopled by thousands of fanat ical natives provoked some alarm and Induced the military authorities to take every precaution for safety and success. But the fears proved groundless. Dispatches announce the unopposed en trance' of Colonel Mangin's advanqe column Into Morocco City and the flight of, the insurgent chief, El Hllla. The flight of the pretender and the liberation ot his prisoners mark the collapse of the most serious native movement the French have yet been called upon to meet, save perhaps the revolt In Fes, Morocco City Is the most beautiful, at least in site and monuments of all Moroccan cities. Situ ated In a level plain surrounded in a halt circle by the Grand Atlas, whose summits are higher than Mount Blanc. Its out look recalls Pau In the Pyrenees,, while Its famous Kutubla, the twin tower ot the Qlralda In Seville, serves as the landmark for many miles in air direc tions. With possession of Morocco City, Franco will dominate southern Morocco, a region not yet occupied by any con siderable "force. This work was to havt been postponed, but the; seizure of the French citizens has made it inevitable. . THESE GIRLS OF OURS. Miss Oldun It is not for lack of oppor tunities tnat 1 nave remained single. Miss Pert No, dear; you nave given the men plenty of chances to propose, I'm sure. Boston Transcript. - Madge Why are you going to changn your shirtwaist? ? Marjorie This one is. too ngnt coiorcu. I'm going to sit in the hammock with Charlie this evening. Mrs. Jlmlee-One thing I do is to teach my children etiquette. Mrs. Knox-Yes; your Jimmy just nu my Waldo very politely witn a ciup. Boston Advertiser. 'She has certainly earned the gratitude of her entire set." As to how?" 'She had her divorce hearing in open court; insisted on it, instead of having it tried secretly behind closed doors." Baltimore American. "That's a terrible noise in the nursery, Mollie," said her mistress. "What s tne matter? Can't you -keep the baby ulst?" .. ; ... sure, mum, repuea ouie, x t i keep him quiet unless .1 let him make a noise." Lippincott's Magaaine. Shn entered the erocerv store with a Jar of marmalade in her hand and fire In her eye. see here, sne saia to me clerk, "I bought this stulf because the card in your window says it Is an excel lent substitute for butter." "Yes, ma am; so it Is. ' "Well, it is a grand subatltute, I must say! I tried frying a bit of , fish with K this morning, and the taste was so awful I had to throw the fish all away. Boistoa Transcript THE AUTUMN SONG. New York Times. r Blow, light winds, o'er the meadows bars, Blow o er the golden rod's fallen Plume! Blow where the weeds trail, lank and spare, Down near the miU -tream's drying flume. Blow your blast? in ti.i ading trees And scatter leaves oh th pathway wide; Blow, and hum, with the droning bees. The song of the russet autumn-tide. . 4 Sing, sweet bird, 'neath the arching blue The brave, true blue of the summer Sing of the flowers that lately grew ' In the golden sun when fond love wag nigh. Sing of the lassies, with cheeks rose red, The lads who danced on the verdant green; ' - ' ' i' Sing of the fields with the harvest spread, ' The joyous song of the autumn scene. Tell, O winds, to the highest steeps, The deepest dell and the farthest plain. Russet and gold now their love tryst Summer and autumn betrothed again. Sing, O bird of the bygone bowers, Chant your praises in anthems strogg; Sing-thet the heart of the coming hoars May throb with joy pf the autumn song. feijsHeollnfulOoaliiiesioferosa i Prof. Prescott, of the Univm ity o f Michigan, explains why Royal Baking Powder adds healthful qualities to the foocL Testifying before the Pure Food Com mittee of Congress, the Professor stated that fruit acids were excellent articles of food and that of these cream of tar tar, the add of grapes, held rank witb the highest both in itself and its effect in the process of leavening and baking. He regarded the results from cream of tartar baking powder as favor able to health. Scientists and hygien ists are in accord with this opinion. Royal is the only Balling ; Powder made from Royal -Crape -"Cream of Tartar f3 LET THE PEOPLE EULE Sharp Recall of Decision of Bar Association, ' Washington post. people of San Francisco, for V Instead of the Inkwells of other days. members of the Hungarian Parliament now emphasise point of disorder with canes and fists. The marriage of the son of a Brooklyn Ice man to the daughter of a Brooklyn coal man Is set down In Wall street as " combination In restraint of trade." The youngest girl town official In Massachusetts Is Miss Blanche Coffin, 18 years old, a graduate of the Nantucket High school, class of 1913, wbo was re cently appointed public weigher in that town. Since John Lawrence Sullivan joined the bull moose herd, the distinguished Bostonisn has been urged to take the lecture platform and elucidate for the benighted the "parallel of the three cupa of coflee. v A beaker of the wine of Joy for the hairless elect is concealed in the story of a Mlaeourlan who was so badly frightened by a Joy-rider toot hair sprouted on his bald head. As a hah- raiser joy riding promises to surpass alt the tonics on barber shelves. Prof. Moerehead, who has been making archaeological explorations la Maine, reports that be found at Orland the oldest graves ever discovered on the continent. The party secured more than ADO Implements used by prehistoric ln habitants of the region. - Elisabeth Atwood, Infant daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Benjamin Weston Atwood Of Whitman, Mass., Is well supplied with grandparents. She Has two grandfathers and two grandmothers, three rreat-gnand-fsthers and two great-grandmothers and on great-great-grandmother. Richard Pale, a banker, and the grand son of Commodore Richard Pale, as socjste of John Paul Jones ia the War of im, is dead at his home in Philadel phia, aged 15 years. He was the pres. Ident of the Order ef the Cincinnati and a member of many patriotic societies. Unheard of for half a ce.itury and be lieved to have been killed In the Civil war, John Areford, after startling his brother, Alexander Areford of Khedive, Greene county. Pa., by a telephone mes sage, appeared there this week and is enjoying , the return to his boyhood haunts, . , The some reason or other that is not quite clear, are very much disturbed be cause Miss tucy Goode White, the first womaa in California to receive a judicial nomination, has failed to pass her bar examinations. Miss White, who is a socialist, received 7,000 votes tn the re cent nonpartisan judicial primary. She had been studying lav, and ber friends thought she ought to go on the bench. Now they are afraid she will not be able to take her seat because she is not a lawyer. What nonsense It is to argue that Mies White should be a lawyer In order to take her place on the bench! Are not the people back to her? Did she not receive the approval of the majority ot voters, wbo, we are told, cannot err? What does it matter that ehe does not know enough law to pass a bar examina tion? Such examinations are for young men Just out of law college. There Is no excuse for demanding that a woman should take such an academic test. It is enough that she was able to go out into the highways and byways and con vince the people that she should be a Judge on the bench, ' " Captious reactionaries may ' say that Miss White, not knowing enough law to pass an ordinary bar examination, might not make a very good judge. But Is not such a sneer an Indictment of the people? Let the people rule, we say! Let the primaries the Initiative, referen dum, and recall flourish; and if the peo ple . take to putting architects on the bench and electing lawyers to the jobs now held by doctors, it simply will be proof that the "boasts4 are no longer running this great country of ours. HieBelderBo: -n- ' A Voice froiu tne Haalce. EPDYYILLE, Neb.. Sept ?6.-To ths Editor of The Bee: Will you please pub lish the enclosed letter, which ' I have written to the secretary 'of the bull moose republiean state committee. W. J. LAWSON. Republican Precinct Committeeman. EDDYVILLE. Neb., Bept 26,-Mr. I. A. Reneau, Lincoln: I hereby acknowledge the receipt ot your letter in which you say (among other things) your committee believes that the republican party ot Ne braska Is essentially the party for the people and therefore in reality the peo ple's party. Why stop ia Nebraska? Why not have the, manhood to say tt is as good for the nation? The first vote I ever cast was for President Lincoln, I bare always been a republican and am yet, from President Taft down, but am opposed to any who are doing aQ they can against the national ticket- - ' W. J. LAWSON. Limited -to Fifty. - , OMAHA. Sept. 26.-TO the Editor of The Bee: An article entitled "Democratic Camp Divided." Is likely to convey a wrong impression as to the selection of the Woodrow Wilson reception commit tee by the state committee on arrange ments. The Impression Is conveyed that the eomtntttee on- arrangements for the Wilson meeting at Omaha, of which Sen ator Hitchcock and myseif are the Omaha members, had contemplated arrangements for the Woodrow Wilson meeting at the Auditorium without Including certain very prominent democrats. The truth is this committee was dl- eeted by the' national campaign commit .ee to make arranyenrtehts according to certain fixed roles " govethtng Governor Wilson's itinerary, and were'llm.ted to the selection of fifty members to serve upon reception committee. The ' committee attempted to make a selection of fifty of the mast representative Wilson demo crats, but found It would be easier to select a thousand than fifty. No one on the committee ever thought of omitting the name of Mayor Pahlman or any of the national or state party officers. There is no division In the democratic camp for Wilson and Marshall, but such absolute unanimity that the trouble Is going to be to get a hall big enough to hold us. J. W. WOODROUGH. Strength and Economy Make it tho Ideal Coffee Substitute !!, V.. .' 300 CUPS TO THE POUND. - i ONE TEASPOONFUI. 1&AKES TWO CUPS. r Published by the Growers of India Tea. - Moose Tracks' la Maine. ' Boston Transcript ' There seem to ! be trouble ' brewing about the next United States seftatorshlp in Maine. Tho bull moosers are Intimat ing to Mr. Burleigh that If he will make a noise like a moose he will be the next United States senator, bat not otherwise. It ia one of ths possibilities, therefore, that the Hon. Obadiah Gardner may succeed himself after all, unless the' bull mooeera withdraw their demand on Mr. Burleigh. , lledata on ImngnBttjr Baths. Indianapolis News,, ,: 'However, the lack of Immunity -baths at the harvester trust trial at. Chicago is not likely to Interfere with the en thusiasm of the leaders of the bull moos propaganda for regulating the trusts. Avoid Impumlk for Infants and Invalids - TJ It means the Original 'TP and Genuine P D L K Bfl.AJL.TED f The Food-Drink for all Ages. Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form, For infants, Walids and gt jwing children. Pure nutrition, upbuilding the whole body. Invigorates cursing mothers and the aged. More healthful than, tea or coffees Agree with the weakest digestion. Keep it on your sideboard at home. A quick lunch prepared ia a minute, AskforHORUCK'S. Take no substitute. HORLICK'S Contains Pure Milk