Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 01, 1912, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, FHIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1912.
THE OMAHA DAILY BKl
fOUNUhU UY BUWCTb KQ3EWATKK.
VICTOU KOaKWATBlt, KlMTOlt ,
BSK HUIUU1NO. FAUN AM A.NU Iff!!
Knlere n umaha Pustoitice a seconu.
data mat .r.
TKUM8 OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Sunday Uee, one year Itto
Saturda) Bee, one year t '
Dally Bee (without Sunday), one year.M.On
Daliy and Bunday, one year
DEUVKUKU BY CAUIUK1L
Rvenlng and bunday, per montn. ...... .4Ji
ISvenmg without Sunday, per month.. c
Dally Bee including Sunday), per mo. 6..
Dally Bee (without Sunday), per mo e
Address all complaint or irregularities
In delivery to City Circulation Dcpt
1USM1TTANCKS.
Itemlt by draft, express or postal ordet.
payable to The Bee Publishing 'omJ,,'1
Only 1-ccnt stamp received In Pymein
at small account. Personal ch".
cept on Omaha and eastern exdiange. noi
accepted. .
OFF1CKS.
Omaha-The Bee building.
South Omaha-3l N St
Counci, Blufi-14 No. Main EL
Ltneoln-W little building
Chlcaso-lWlMarquette building.
Xanas City Bellance building.
New York-M Wrst Twenl-thltd.
St- Louls-401 Frlaco building. ,
vvasmnaten iii Kourtennth nt N. v.
Communication relating to new and
editorial matter should be addressed
Omaha Bee. Editorial Department.
SEPTEMBER CinCUMTlON.
50,154
Kate of Nebraska. County of Douglas. st
,'Dwlght Williams, circulation manager
Sot The Be Publishing company, being
duly aworn, says that the average daily
clrculaUon for the month of ePt"2ber
lilt, wa 60,154. DWIQIIT WILLIAMS.
Circulation Manager.
Subscribed In my presence and
to before me thla 1st day of October. 1VU.
ROBE11T HUNTKlt,
J9el.) Notary Public.
James Schoolcraft Sherman.
Tho death of Vice President James
Schoolcraft Sherman creates pro
found regret throughout the country
Mr. Sherman made no'pretenslons to
brilliancy In oratory nor genius In
statesmanship, but he was ono of
those substantial, conscientious, en
ergetic and lovcl-hcndcd leaders dc
vclopcd in our public life thor
oughly typical of American citizen
ship. In every capacity In which ho
was tried ho showed himself In
tensely devoted to his duty as he
saw it, and In addition possessed
personal traits that cemented the
affection of thouo who know him.
Perhaps strongest among these traits
was unwavering loyalty to friends
and Innate appreciation of friend
ship. A staunch partisan, ingrained
with - republicanism, ho yet always
accorded his. opponent the same
rights he claimed for hlmsolf. In
gratitude to individuals, or to a po-
lltlcal party, was listed by him
among tho cardinal 'Bins. It was tho
personal liking, combined with the
outspoken courago of his convic
tions, that gave Mr. Shcrmun his
position of leadership, amorig men,.
Subscriber leaving, the city
temporarily should hare . The
Bee mailed to Ihem. Address
trill be changed often as re-sjaeated.
Service In lifo Is the true standard
of greatness in tho world.
Tho casd of tho sick man of ..Eu
rope grows steadily worse. '
The man, who court the whlto,
light of publicity must havo noth
ing to hide.
Well, Isn't anyono going to yell
about Third ward false registration
and vote colonization?
So far ac we navo heard, Bourko
Cochran has not changod his polit
ical allegiance for a week.
Japan has ordered flvo giant ships
for Panama canal trado. Atld tho
United States how many?
As a white hopo, what is the mat
tcr with Madoro, who has met and
bested all comors thuB far?
That Kansas City man arrested for
lilting a young woman on tho anfelo
doubtless thought ho had an Omaha
peach.
What can ronfatn to bo said after
defeat on November 5, with all tho
vituperative words usod up boforo
hand 7
sokiK( Backward
Iks Bay in Omaha
".NOV." if
1
ALONG THE BALKAN FIRING LINE
Strategical Points Mentioned in Dispatches from the Front.
Adrlanople rise In Importance nbove gariana, Is thirty miles northeast of Ad
all place on the war map In the strategy rlanople, and owes It Importance to the
eo far developed In the r&mpaign of the ' conjunction of branch roads and It po
It may be' recalled that Colonel
Bryan has also sovoral times packed
Madison Square Oarden to overflowing,
And who would have thought that
our old frlond, Henry W. Yates,
would join William J, Bryan in sav
ing tho country?
"As vice president, Johnson could
do littlo or no harm," observes tho
Brooklyn Eagle. "As president ho
Is simply unthlnkablo."
Jim Corbott Is running for public
administrator it) a Missouri county.
He should bo able to knock his op
ponent through tho ropes.
Our reform democratic shorltf
seems doomod to got his 'share of
official troubles, The straight ftn." birablo
narrow pain is usuauy saicsu
Stop Twisting the Facts.
Berajise the republican party In It na
tional cnnentlon nominated Mr. Toft,'
and these electoral candldatrs who still
persisted' In culling themselves repub-
Meant; were unwilling- to vote -ror- me
nominee, therNcbrAska supreme court re
moved them from tho republican ticket
Lincoln Star. " ,
Our Nebraska supremo court did
nothing of tho kind. Six electoral
candidates nominated as republicans
removod themselves from tho repub
lican ticket by bocomlng bull mooso
electoral candidates, tho two posl
tlons being conflicting and lrrccon
citable. ' By becoming bull mooso
candidates thoy repudiated tholr ob
ligations aa republicans nnd aban
doned tholr places on tho republican
ticket. What the supreme court did
waa merely to recognize tho undis
puted existenco of this stato of facts
and to order tho secretary of sto'te to
accept tho nomination certificates of
tho candidates named by tho' duly
constituted republican stato commit
too legally authorized to fill tho va
cancies. Defective Philanthropy.
Tho Now York modol tenements
eroded by tho VandorblltH and oth
ers to boIvo tho problems of tho very
poor aro pronouncod utter failures
because they aro so flno that tho very
poor cannot afford to livo In thorn.
Thoy are modelH in convenience and
sunltatlon, but must bo closed to
tboso for whom thoy woro lntondcd.
Tho designing architect, In adversely
criticising tho enterprise, says:
The model tenement is pot oply Itself
too hlghprteed for tho very poor to Jive
In, hut It preseiroe In tho neighborhood
raise tho rents of Inferior dwelling and
make tho Ivolialng problem for tho poor
families one point worse than. It was
before.
A good doal of such philanthropy
springs from Inadequate knowledge
of tho conditions to bo mot. Tho
best of Intentions and unlimited
funds nmount to littlo without a real
Insight Into' tho heart of tho prob
lom. Tho social proWom Is porhaps
tho largest with which Now York
has to cope, and It has boon only a
little more confusod by this blunder
ing attompt to solvo it. Any bono
factlon for tho rollof of social dis
tress that does not help tho man to
help hlmsolf Is defective
Thirty Years A no
A young elk Imported from Evanston,
Wyo., ha Just been placed In Uanscom
park.
Joseph Fox sold to William A. Paxton
its farm nix and a half miles west of
Jinuha for $10,009 cash. I
The pet of the fire department, "Kmo,"
had hi photo taken .In cabinet slxe In
evcral attitudes at tho Bee Hive studio.
A sextet from the Omaha Ulee club,
.onslstlng of Messrs. J. Northrup, A. 11..
Morris, Will Stephen. W. B. Wilkin,
i. Asley Wllk.ns and 11. W. Snow, went
vcst to give concerts at Clarksvllle and
Schuyler,
Tho worklngtrien'n and farmer' con-,
ventlou nominated this legislative ticket:
For state cnator, J S. McCormlck, and
J. H. Brown; or representatives, Itob
ert Cuudell. A. Burmelster, W. a. Whlt
more; Allen Hoot, William turtle, E. It
Overall, John Hoyo and Frei Behm. i
About twenty-flvo young people met
at tho residence of Mr. and Mrs. T, VV'r
(tackburri on Convent street In honor
of their brother, Will C. Blackburn.
Oeorge Pritchard, one of tho guests, pre
sonted hi friend with a beautiful mils
tacho cup, which yourig Mr. Blackbujrn
nope soou to have uso for.
Tho wedding of Lieutenant Oeorge jvj
.-viorgnn arm aihs atom urojynsqn,
daughter of Major Brownson, at Trlnl.ty
cathe'dral, was a gala event Bishop
Clarkson, assisted by Dean MllUpaugh,
performed the service. Tho ushers were
1. W. Barkalow and Arthur Safe, and
Tlalsy Doane and Daisy Brownson, pretty '
little flower girls. fi. reception followed
at tho homo of the bride' parent at Chi
cago and Twenty-second streets, where
allied Balkan state against the Turks.
It Investment by the rnaln army of
Bulgaria I said to be comple'te and It
Isolation made effective by cutting' com
munication with Constantinople and tho
advance of the Invader toward the Turk
ish capital.
Originally tho town wu named Had
rlanapoli In honor of King Hadrian, who
was Instrumental In putting 'It on the
map In the first century of tho Christian
rltlon on the flank of the direct railroad
lino to Constantinople via Eakl Baba
and Lulu Burgas. About twenty-five
mile to the west of Constantinople are
the famous lines, extending across the
peninsula from the sea of Marmora to
the Black sea. Intended as the first line
of defense for the protection of the capi
tal from attack by land. These are
known as the lines of Chatalja and were
begun In 1877, when the llusslan army
era. Hadrian waa something of n land) waa advancing on the city. The position
pirate and freebooter In hi day. He
loved campaigning for tho loot It yielded
and frequently searched what waa then
ancient Caul for valuables to satisfy his
artlstlo temperament In one of hi sum
mer visits to what Is now Britain it I
supposed Hadrian encountered one or
more of the forebears of the Englishman
Is one of great natural strength, consist
Ing of a ridge, some M0 feet high,
flanked by -broad lakes, with numerous
marshes and swamp In front. Along a
front of about fifteen mile there have
been erected somd thirty redoubt and
tieveral earthen batteries. In two or three
line, adapted to the ground. The flanks.
V. n t1tn Mt.... ......... 1 1 1 ..... I ...... .4 r4,l n
locomotive headl ght and the parlor, dee-'0"" and. I,roltl
of today and In thn mlxun that followed cannot be turned, and the position. If
had his "H" knocked pieces. In Properly derended (It would require . u,w
those busy day history took little note i men' would be Impregnable.
of trifle, but history records the fact i The hilly approaches to Scutari should,
that both head and tall were whittled . according to data of the Turkish war
down to the Adrlanople of today. i office, be covered by artillery, but It Is
Goth, Ottoman and Slav have at dlf-by no mean certain whether the Krupps
fercnt timet contended for supremacy tn ordered three years ago were ever d
and about Adrlanople jind Its life history llvered. This element of uncertainty
Is a record of conquest and reprisal ' must always be taken Into account In
and blood and fire. The Cloths won' a dealing with Turkish tactic. On the
great victory there tn 32S and tho Avar other hand. It Is now known that the
Hun another In W6. The Russian have Montenegrin have sloge guns of which
occupied Adrlanople, twice, the first tlmo I no mention has heretofore been made. In
)u 1S29, when they forced Turkey to slgi I the army report.
a treaty giving Independence to Greece.'! Tne ntraiegic importance oi uskuu, or
now fighting once more against nor for-' Skoplje, a It 1 locally called, may be
mer masters. Again during the Russo-' gathered fr6m the choice of tho site by f
Turkish war of 187S the Russian took the th Roman for the capital of Dardanla.
town without resistance The modern Although the communication around
Adrlanople 1 a scattered, uncarcd forj8har tBh, cither by Kachnlk Into Ko
city, which ha lost all of It former vo or by Kalkandele Into Albania, ar
plendor, although (some of Its forty I scarcely better than In Roman tlmee, th
mosque are fine example of archltec- command of the three most Importan
H"rc. Its people number about 80.000. half i sections of railway in Macedonia anu o
Turk, the rest Armanlun. iarniiiie. anrt the two great trunk lines-northeast vin
I Greeks, except for a handful of Cath-l?Hrnftnova t0 Berv,ftn Bnd BiintwUri
frontier, ana souiueasi via ivoprmu ime
THESE GIRLS OF 0UBS.
WlllUT-nst nlirht I Inoked through the
keyhole Into the parlor where alster
with her beau.
Mabel-What did you find outT
Wllllt The ga. Boston Transcript
"Would vou trust your future to R mn
like Baron Fucah?" . t
"No." replied Owendolyn. "out
hi hern needlnr .-- little credit. The
baron I such a notorious fortune hunte'
that If he keep trying to propose to un
it will Insolre confidence In fathers
financial standing." Washington Star
"You encouraged your wife to take
part In politics?" , ,
"Ye. She soon gave It up, but she U
more thoroughly convinced of her super
iority than ever. She say nobody but
man could take much Interest In any
thing so stupid." Philadelphia Ledger
POOR OLD FATHER.
"Sentiment of a Sophomore" In Chicago
Record-Herald.
Poor old' father never hact a college educa
tion.
He never scored a touchdown and lis
never kicked a goal;
Poor old father never won a wild crowd's
approbation.
The praise of cheering thousand never
thrilled him to tho eoul.
Alas fOr poor old dad,
What a sad life he ha had!
He ho never won distinction by his
vaulting, with a pole.
Poor old father never Joined a Beta or e
. Sigma,
He had to earn his living at a very ten
der age;
He 'never naicd a freshman and escaped
without a stigma.
Nor with a glee -club ever set hi foot
on any stage.
He wasted all hi days
Plodding In i roi-alc uys.
And his name was never ,prlnted large
on any sporting page.
"Kit. I wish I could fall heir to
million dollars. In that case I think you a .
marry me."
"How strange It Is, George, that o
beautiful a wish can be the father to
ueh an ugly thought" Chicago Tribune. poor 0j father never had a chance to be
Daughter Papa, Harold said some' ljc never won approval from the captain
seaiea propaiais came id yuur mum jet.- or nis team.
terdav.
father So they did. dear.
Daughter (anxiously) Were any of
them' for me? Baltimore American.
"Our cause Is Just and must triumph,'
concluded the suffragette In ringing ac
cent. "And now. If any lady- care to
ask a question. I shall be pleased to
answer It."
"How do you get that smooth effect
over the hips?" asked a lady In the rear
of the hall. Chicago Record-Herald.
Mr. Newrlch We're going to live In a
better neighborhood hereafter.
Mr. Keen Ah, so are we.
Mr. Newrlch Then you are going to
move, too?
Mr. Keen No! we're going to atay
right here. Boston Transcript
All Ms triumphs have amounted to a poor
and simple zero.
Ills llfo was never brightened by a soli
tary gleam. .
Poor old chap, he never bowed
To a howling, whooping crowd;
He ha never guessed what gladness
comes to one who is supreme.
Poor old father! All hi life has been In
consequential; He never did n thing to cause an cagci
mob to shout;
He never had tho knowledge that hit
presence was essential
To keep dear alma mater hopes from
going up the spout.
Poor old patient, plodding wight,
I must write to htm tonight.
For I find that my allowance has al
most petered out.
orated with tho national colors and flow
ers, Tho bride wore a white brocade
atln dress with white lace and orange
blossoms, pearl earrings and necklace,
an heirloom which her mother had worn
at her own wedding, and tho groom was
In full military uniform. .
Tongues that shortly befqro won
heaping calumny upon' tho good
name of James Schoolcraft SUcrman
are now lisping tholr tributes of
honor and sympathy.
A Board of Control.
Tho pending constitutional amend
ment providing for a stato. board of
control proposes a reform which is
universally regarded as highly de
Truo, some object to the
manner In which tho board Is to ho
made up, and thb Indiscrtmlnato
conjuncildn of education and penal
Institutions, but no ono dtsuonts to
tho ono proposition that all our state
Institutions Bbould bo taken out of
tho political spoils arena as far as
possible and the managoment.nut on
a basis of competency and efficiency.
As an illustration 'of tho pernicious
ncss of tho present system wo havo
tho exhibit of a contribution of $060
from tho "Hastings- Insane asylum
(and this is not tho only ono of the
kind) to, the IjuII mooso campaign
cammlttco, which moans that tho
practico of shaking down physicians.
nurse.3, guards and Janitors for "vol
untary" donations will continue In
The sultan, it will be noticed, ex- Nebraska o long as the state lnstl-
presses satisfaction when ho hears tutlona remain among the perquisites
that human beings havo boon tor- 0f political office.
tured to death, whereupon ho lifts
You cannot fool the stato press of
Nebraska. They afe alort to. recog
nize imerlt. Notlco the testimonials
they have gv$n to The Dee's big Ne
braska development number?,
Former Governor Folk says that
"with tho democrats tn power tho
trusts would fade away like evil
spirits with the dawn." Ono moots
such funny folk In Missouri, anyway.
Twenty Years Aro
V. 8. Howell, a lawyer of Albion, was
registered at the Dcllone.
Ed Dickinson nnd J. II. McConnell of
uio union i-acino omaai tamny leu lor KuraoerLn travel I onlv at Dart of
ft. i . i --- - - -
Kirk-Klllsseh (the town of forty
churches) already captured by the Bui-1 army.
Bridge) makes the place of superlative
Importanco to the advnnce of the Servian
HOME LAND OF BEAUTY
Growing Appreciation of American Incomparable Scenery.
Baltimore American.
B. II. Barrow left for Chicago oil
business connected with tho literary bu
reau of tho Union Pacific, over which
ho presided, . )
George W. Hlnes. of the Union l'aolflo
freight department left for Chicago.
whore ho' had been mode assistant super
intendent of transportation of the world's;
fair. u .
General C. II. Van Wyck, populist can
didate for governor, aecotnpanlcJI by
Mr. Van Wyck, camo In town early In.
tho day to enable the general to Inspect
a few weak places In hi fence. .
letters sent to many democrat : over
the state by Governor Boyd, urging them
to "voto for weaver and you will elect
Cleveland president," began to come to
light and cause new discussion In politi
cal circles.
Ten Year) Ais .
Completo registration figures were given
out a follow: Total for Omaha, 18,35;
MI.lll.HnnK. 11 fWt. .1AMAn.M IT1". ...
I rfUUIIVMIIP! UGIIIUVIUIO) 1IMJ, l'ul'
31; no answer, 2,416. Thera was .a total
deficiency as compared with 1900 of 3,300.
Mr. Mary McAvoy, who died ,at the
homo of her son, P. T, McAvoy near
Benson a few days before, was laid a't
rest Slio had been a reuldent of Omaha
for seventeen year. She wo born
In County South, Ireland, In 3910.
nuslncsa men and frfehda of Edward
Dickinson, who for thirty years had been
with tho Union Pacific, ten a general
manager, gave htm a farewell banquet
at tho Omaha club, which was i remark
ablo social function. He waa, on tho eve
of departing for Kansas City to tako up
tho duties of general manager of the
Orient road.
News came from Colorado Spring of
the sudden death of W. IV. Itlbbard, for
merly a prominent Omaha business man,
He had boon associated In the early day
with Edward- Crelghton In the budding
of telegraph lines from Omaha west and
'waa superintendent here of the telegraph
company, being ucceeded by J. J. Dickey.
Miss Helen Hlbbard, a teacher In the
Omaha public schools, waa a daughter
und Frederick Hlbbard, a brother in New
York.
A half billion dollar spent annually by
tourists through tho beaten paths of
tho
i
tribute of the people of thla country toy
the usages of the post. Foreign trav'cl
Is delightful, but It 1b a derivation front
tho paat, w)von the provincial forms of
American life were such that no persons
of. wide culture was regarded as quite
finished in his education without travel
ing abroad at great expense and under
the primitive conditions of the times. Tho
southern planters sent their daughters
to Europe for a finishing education. Tlie
tribute of thl country to the old world
In respect to travel 1 the last vestige ot
the adulation that was commonly ex-,
pressed toward everything European,
even to politic. There is and will al
ways bo an Increasing volume of Euro
pean travel, but America must come to
It own. .
Ono of tho bent qualified of Baltimore
clergymen, who Is widely , traveled and
who received a part ot hi education In
the school of Greece, doclared, when
he flmt looked ncroa tho expanse oi
valley from thd highest point of tho
Blue Ridge at a well known excursion
resort, that the far-famed Vale of Tem
ple, was not so Impressive and so
beautiful.
Such tributes to American scenery may
be multiplied a hundredfold. But whSt
shall be said of such scenery' a that
which tho United States government Is
bent upon preserving for all time tn the
reservations It has set apart as natural
parks. Who can flew the Yellowstone,
or the Yosemlte, the canyons of Colo
rado, the magnificent sweep of the Sierra
Nevada; who can stand upon the ridges
of the Great Divide, where from the
glacier-topped peaks fun stream to
mako tho great rivers that flow Into
Hudson bay, the Mississippi and the Pa
cific ocean, and not feel that i he ha
here sceriery that the world cannot rival
In any one of a hundred respects?
As the queen of Sheba, coming to tho
court of Solomon, declared that the half
had not been told, so those who view
the majestic and overpowering scenery
of their own country declare that a tithe
of the exaltation and delight has not
been set forth In tho languago of de
scription. The recent visit of members
of the International body of geographer
who went through tho YellowHtone and
other places of scenic wonder of Amer
ica this last' summer have placed In en
during testimony the fact that thts
country 'ha tho most marvelous scenery
tof any In the world. And they dilate
In jrrcat detail upon .the things thut
swept their Imagination and left them
bereft of 'adequate speech.
It"ls not remarkable, therefore, that
the tide from Europo Is already strongly
setting tn. Nor Is It remarkable that
the tide of American touring la setting
strongly In tho direction of see America
first.
liieBeesUl
ETDOX
People Talked About
his voice In praise to God and Allah.
Receipt of $2,000 from national
headquarters to tho Nebraska dem
ocratic campaign is posted. We
thought the corrupt practices net
absolutely prohibited this at this
jtage of the game.
It jscems that J. P. ' Morgan has,
opened a freo employment bureau
on Wall street to meet the deluge
of demands for Jobs, while here in
Omaha labor bureaus cannot find
enough men to fill the demands for
men. Como west, young man,
Ten thousand and ton straw vote
cards, said to have been returned.
(rest Nebraska mailing lists used by
La Follette in his preconvention
campaign, disclose a preference of
only 231 of them for tho bull
mootser, being less than one-fourth
of the total. If this is a true reflex
some bull moose computations ueed
tq be revised downward.
i1
Thoro are a great many moro good
reasons for a democrat to voto this
year for a ropubltcan president than
for a republican to vote either for a
democratic president or a third party
president. There Is no more reason
why a republican should not vote this
year to keep tho republican party In
power than t.here was in 1872, or In
1884, or in 1892, or in 1890, or In
1904, or In 1908.
That small gumboil on tho bay be
tween San Francisco and Oakland
has finally been officially named
"Goat Island" by the government in
stead of Buena Verba. Only a tew
of the oldest Callfornians ever knew
it as anything but Goat Island.
There's an easy way to protect
children from gambling games on the
Ak-Sar-Ben carnival grounds. Just
mako a few ot the subscriptions con
ditional on not permitting these
practices.
The 6llent voter reserve his nolse-mak-Ing
talent for Tuesday night.
Former President Dlax says he does not
expect to return tq Mexico, He likes It
but tho climate doe not seem -to agree
with persons of hi name, f
Does civilization really pay? Infantile
paralysis ho appeared among the Eski
mos of Alaska. They'll be getting ap
pendicitis and the hookworm disease next
Joe Tinker, anoted diamond artist of
Chicago, speeded up the auto given him
by hi teammate and fractured the speed
limit law of Evanston, III. Permission to
make tho homo plate cost him $10.
; Eleven thousand Greeks nnd 2,100 Serbs
have departed ,from .New York for their
native land to take a hund In the war
With their American experience they
hopo to supply modern music for tho
Turkey trot.
Billy Pupke, tho Illinois Terror, defeated
Oeorge Carpentter In a terrible seven-teen-round
battle In Paris, the Ktenoh
champion having all the' rouge knocked
from hi face and losing his powder puff
ill the melee,
live of the nine Justices, of the United
States supreme court have had their fa
vorite breakfast dish of egg badly scram
bled 'by the testimony of an expert re
vealing SCO, 000. 000 disease germs In an eg?
Only one day old. The disturbing state
ment came out In the froten rtG case, In
volving ie right of the government tn
condemn ancient hen fruit,
Mi Belvn, tLockwood has Just cele
brated her eighty-second birthday In
Washington. She enjoys the distinction of
being the first woman lawyer to be ad
mitted to practice In the supreme court
of tho United State, and she Is able as
To Whom Be TlimiUsf
BRADSHAW, Neb., Oct 30.-To the
Editor ot Tho Bee: It ha bctjn some
time since we havo Bald anything for the
letter; box. However, during our absence
wo have not been entirely Idle, and whito
our pen has been atlll our ear have
been alert and our eye have been open.
We have been watching the action of
the bull mooters of Nebraska In their
efforts to disfranchise a portion of the
voter In tha state, and while they have
not succeeded, to whom are the
the education they possess? A negro
who has been a slave will never vote far
a democratic president and the younget
educated negro who votes the demo
cratic ticket throws his vdte away. Wo
cannot afford to vote for a. democratic
president, for the democrat have given
us nothing. But tho republican have
given us our rights in, fact, all wo have,
and all we may expect.
JAB BANKS, an ex-slave.
HOTEL
ST. REGIS
NEW YORK
Rrth Avenue and Fifty Fifth Street.
NEW YORK'S FAR FAMED HOTEL
Located on one of the
world's famous avenues
near Central Parhi away
from the noise of street
' cars and tfaffic, yet
easily accessible to the
theatre and shopping
district.
Rates :
Single Room without Bath $3.00 and
$4.00 per day; with Bath $5.00, $6,00
and $8.00; and for two people $6.00,
$8.00 and $10.00 per day.
Suites consisting of Parlor, Bedroom
and Bath, $10.00 upward; larger Suites
1 in proportion. -All outside rooms.
R. M. HAAN.
i
A Little Itetroapect.
YORK, Neb., Oct. 8L To the Editor of
The Bee: I would llko to retrospect a
littlo, as well aa forecast a, little. In 1391
the cry wa "high price" and the "rob
ber tariff." The democrats promised to
reduce prices by taking off all the pro
tective tariff, and when tho people gave
Taft 1 them the chance every large manufac-
voter under obligations to tbank for tho J turer or heavy Importer, as well a In-
privilege ot voting for thetr choice for yesters and Ioaners, began tq hedge,
president? How many of the candidate which, of course, they had to do, or com
declar.ng thcmsolves ltoosevelt republic- I mt financial suicide, and In forty day
an (when no such thing exists) now hold- : after election over 3,400 factories in New
ing place on the republlcun ticket can England alone had closed their door,
anyone point to a entitled to any thank yor we went to boosting the mill and
from the Taft republicans for the prlvl- j faotorle of Europe, while ours went to
lege of voting for tho Taft electors? It the wall. But ere It reached this stage
wo a fight to tha finish by the bull 0f tne game. Mr. Bryan In his Joint de
mooser of thl taU that no Taft elec- ' Date wm, Senator Thurton In Omaha,
tor ehould appear on tho ballot, but ! aaja that the result of the election was
that, like California, uooseveii elector tno cause of the low price and wanted
should appear instead; and what do we
hear now, after tho court haa compelled
the bull mooser to get off,- and havo
to congratulate the people on the benefit
It would be to them, tie said when you
earn a dollar It will gq farther because
given Its decision that Taft electors I u wlll buy more- BlU wncn wo reached
should bo placed thereon, what do wo the thlr(1 degTeo m ns neVT order. In
hear? Is It not a pitiful begging that all ( wi,ici, we had no chance to earn the dol
repvibllcans should vote the state ticket lnr and tne peop0 began to complain
straight, and the cry goes up that since that cheapneaS s no benefit to us If we
the Taft republicans, after a hard fight, dou,t naV)J the prlcCi then ho saId t was
have gained their point, should gladly R trck lhe repuDlCang pjayed on the
flock to the bull moose candidate and peop,e .twenty.three year before that
help elect them and aave the republican that had cttUaed tho decIne m values,
party in tne atate? a Tne Btock market la at thl time hedg-
Now thq question come up before us ,nR unt tney can kn(m whftt they muet
like a mountain; Is tho republican party ) f(gure 6n ,n y,,,,. tran8act,on ftU
of the state saved by electing a lot or , Wfi w hRve tQ- do to repeat tna d0M ,
avowed bull moose candidate to office? , tQ e)ect at the Ume Mr -w,lson' ytH a
I,et Governor Aldrlch or any of the rest conBrelJ3 of trce trader and enough state
of ,the bull moose candidates answer that , ieg,g,aturcs that have eenator to elect to
question If they wlll. Of course It s like , Ky tnpm tha control and we wn haV8
choking down a very large lump tor an the yery 8am0 effecU ns betorCi andi as
old wldler who ha. been a lifelong repub- g beg,n if dHsl we w1 naye tne
lican to vote for a democrat, but tho lump same oM u caUwJ by
I. equally as hard to ,choke,'"JJ'h'" something the republican had done year
we nre asked to vote for R halfbreed, or
one who haa and Is lending hl Influence Mr Iu.ader Jun cllp tha saying
accessory to the assassination of the na- -.cti0 nd save th.m
THE STETSON s
I 1
4N
The "Stetson Last" will fit any
normal foot, and look well on
any foot it fits.
For 15 years it has never changed. You can
buy this season, and next, the self-same style
that fitted your foot and your fancy so well
last season many men think this an advan
tage in shoe buying. Let us put a Stetson on
you you will be surprised how so much real
style, nbt ultra-fashion, can be had with every
minute comfort
The Rrrs -""riMr! : t e,j,0 Merit
HAYDEN BROS.
Sixteenth and Dodge Sts, Omahd
"isietsons cost more oy chi puis out iet,u oy . year"'
tlonol republican ticket. The plea to
ave the atate republican ticket has no
cla'm on the Taft republican of Ne
braska whatever. Do you hear?
JOHN B. DEV.
A Wortl o Neuroen.
OMAHA. Oct SO. To the Editor of The
Bee: Mr. Patterson, here talking about
.ninr.il iiamocrats. may be prominent In
a veteran of what wa in her eurly day MusUogt, okla., but certainly not else
until the next campaign, and you will
have something to read, but don't try to
make them fit. for they won't do It
FRANKLIN POPE,
Another Kail for Hn(Be.
Boston Transcript
The Interstate Commerce commission
ha again stepped In to the aid of th
cemmon people, and has reverseu" till
next April Its order restricting the site
and weight of personal baggage. This
ThEn'inoBHdfillt. Stiff a littlo Kon.
don's, tho original and genuine Catarrhal
Ju op U ne.mii. lu ooUlk. bMllaa prop-
rtl oumir rnt jou. s uinf i
tr f tTcr, cold, aturra, tsr tbrot, wUnd
kMdtrh. dcfM. cu. told only la Uowd toe
unitary tubo. If ,0oO aniffgutt. tikis pi tn4
XOMVeM (WTO. to, allmen, Mtaa.
ot Ita championship a forlorn cause, to Kh.r. with hi own race. The ltuatlon
nee IU Immense progress alnce the days fUP different from the way Mr. Patter-
when She became the candidate of the lon put It What party made It posslb. give the proprietor of dog another op.
equal right party for president ot the fnr Mr Patterson and Mr. Bert to ex portunlty t9 plead (or the baggage car
United State. Jciclae their voUug franchise and enjoj , rights of that dowutrodden racj
7mm
HOT 12 1,8 AND IIBSOIITS
nsmnnc MOTEL
SltarMf Hint --)--';
i FlaectHdMest Attrewa i
dark SU ! i