0 xHE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY". DECEMBER 13. 1&12. THE OMAHA DAILY o( Npkn by :nVAfti noaawATKit VICTOB. UOSUWATKB, KIMToh. . Enured at Omaha postofflce as second- . uass niHtter. H.M l.W TKUMS OK SUBlrfltirTION. sjndav Bee. one year (.iltiriUi Tliwv nil. mt Daily Ht without Sunday, one year. 4. J) DaJv He", and Sunday, one yenr ... 6-w DEl.lVBKED UY CAHH1KK. '.ini- nn.l Kiimlnv tier month 'w! Miscegenation. A bill lias been Introduced In tho houso ot representatives for a fed-, oral law prohibiting Intermarriage ! ibotwoen whites and negroes. Us in-1 I troiliirtlnn wns iirnmntnil bv tin re-l cent spectacular orgy culminating In the marriage of a notorious negro' and a deluded white girl in Chicago As every respectable white and col aokbuf Backward lids Day in Omaha COMPILED t'ROM BKB FILM I) liC. til'. ll ACTIVITIES IN ARMY CIRCLES Current Events Noted by th e Amy and Navy Register. SMILING REMARKS. Evening, without SutuiHy. per monin. , ,innlornd and condemned .mil, ti. inrlnrilnr Sunday. Mr mo Pally Bee. without Sunday. P'r nlo... Oo Address all complaints or Irregularities .n delivery to City Circulation uopt. this affair, ho every man and woman with an intelligent respect for racial integrity, no matter what their color, laVfthi; to The i co Publishing Company would welcome an lnmipcrnuio nur- On'v I-ccnt stamps received In PHVinen i, rjor ,0 Mlrll miscegenation. Twen I small account. Remit by draft, express or postal order prwnBl rhecki. ex tM on Omaha and eastern exchange, not nccepted. OPFICBB. Omaha-The Bee building so ith Omaha-aiS N street count It Bluffs-it North Main street. inco'n-M Utile, building, f'hleago NM1 Marquette building. Kansas Clty-llellance building. New York-Si Went Thirty-third. ft tyuls- Frisco building. ahlnKton-7i". 1'ourtfcnUittjjjv. coiiniwroNnnNCK Communications relating to news ann dltortal matter should bo nddreweu )mha. Hoc. KdltoTlal Department. NOVEMBER CIRCULATION 49,805 State of Nebraska, County of PoukIhs. s Dwtght Williams, circulation manage: f Tho Bre Publishing company, bclnit Inly sworn, says that tho ttvcraKo dalll Irculatlon for the month of November. IS12. waslS.SOG. DWIOHT WILLIAMS Circulation Manager Subscribed In my presence and swor i to before me this 6th day of Ofcembe . M HOHEKT llt'NTBH. (Seal.) Notary Public, Subscribers leavlnur the ! temporarily shonlil linve The Bee mulled lo Ibeni. Address rrlll be changed ns often n re peated. Leas than two weks off now Thirty Year Aijo A lively time was on at the Methodist Kplscopal church nt Eighteenth Bnd Webster, growing out of the trouble between A. K Jett, superintendent of the Sunday school and Raw A. U. Mitchell, pastor of the church. George Iteven, the Eleventh stieet butcher, has found a dog which was lost some time ago. and everyone feels easier. Mrs. Callahan, residing at Thirteenth and Jarkson, met with a painful accident by h foil on an Icy plank at Thirteenth and Far nam The Young Mint's Christian association hits equipped Its rooms with a telephone, which Is advertised as a new attraction. Rev. George C Mlln appeared tn "Ittrh olleu" at Boyd's without maklnjf much of a hit. The old settleis of Douglus county are planning to hold a meeting on January 16, the. anniversary of the meeting of the first territorial legislature. Hx-Hcnator A. S., Paddock Is In the city I on his war to attend n nieetlnir of thi Plunder, rapine and murder hcciii to ruh commission in AVhshlngton. .if whim havo followed In the' w.akc of the he is a member. organized warfnre, crentlng much ty-five states. Including Nebraska, now prohibit Intermarriage of ne groes and whiten. If It Is wrong in those twonty-flvc, it Is wrong in the rost and it is a .matter for federal regulation. Conditions in Mexico. Information given the president by the American business men back from Mexico ns to conditions In that country tends to confirm private ad vices that have persisted all along. Mannl t'nrpa Kqnlpment. A board of officers of the signal corps Is meeting at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., for the purpose of considering the follow- ling questions The usefulness of the. present service buzxer. the packing1 of , the new too-cyclo radio pack set, the lm- African movement and develnmnent nt the field wire cart, the acetylene lantern and fireworks issued by the signal corps In connection with visual sla.na.llng. This board was convened In furtherance of the policy of the corps to constantly keep at work In improving the apparatus and If you haven't done it, set about it. And tho smoke floats o5er the "himney Just the same. Omaha has made goon hotel proposition. Next? on the This is tho day you can blame anything on tho calendar. worse conditions. Evidently noth ing but the starkest sham of order has been evolved out of tho chaos and If that Is nil thus far accom plished) the question arises, how long will It take to restore condi tions of safety to life and property? However dismal Madoro's fall uro in this regard may be, our gov ernment must not fall in its duty of protecting those of its citizens I who continue to remain there. The president indicates a determination to net Immediately In whatovor way is required. Out it is not Ameri cans who are tho chief .sufferers; it is Mexicans. Among them, It is Haiti, revolting crimes are com mitted. It is hoped that tho power which conquered the organized rebels will soon overcomes tho state ot an archy, but tho situation warrants no ompty visions. position to the nominations ot UneraJ Aleshlrc, Wothtrspoon and McClernand. There was considerable opposition, how ever, to the transfer of lieutenant Vinton, largely for tho reason that other officers who have sought similar transfers havo not been able to obtain favorable, nctlon on their applications at the War department. Nerr tileiltemi nl. Of the 100 candidate for appointment us stcond lieutenants in the inobUe a.mtv fifty-sis were found qualified and wilt be equipment used by It The present radio ; commissioned In the cavalry, field pack set Is considered satisfactory, but artillery and Infantry, being assigned to aome dlffeulty has been experienced In i the cavalry, fire to the field artillery, and pioperly packing It on pack mutes. There- thirty-four to the Infantry. After thee 1 Colonol YolBer did not go to Chi cago, but ho has evidently heard from there. Mr. Carnogio might bo able to set tie this war by offering to ponslon tho sultan. A lawyer's feo Is not tho soundest argument on which to opposo a smoko ordinance Colonel Watterson thinks it Is u pity South Carolina Insists on put ting its freaks In office. This much can bo snld for Johnny Hull ho lot Unclo Sam 'dig tho caunl. That's something. No ueo to insist on fair treatmont for J. Bull on tho Panama. He al ways geto that from Unclo Sam, Omaha would llko to havo dollar gas, but doesn't want it badly tmough to mortgage nil tho future for it. Tho cheapest as well as the mean est fakir is tho one who takes ad vantage of the sufferings ot ths afflicted. Dr. Sun Vat Sen, founder of tho Chineso republic, is coming over to touch us for a louu of $200,000,000, Shop early. It should not bo hard to advertise Nebraska, tho greatest of agricul tural states, und the heart of tho banana bolt. Advertising Nebraska. In deciding to organlzo the Ne braska advertising campaign under tho head of development rather than distinctly publicity, the Grand Island meeting of the publicity and Immigration committee of tho State Association of Commercial clubs, wo think, acted wlsoly. Advertising Ne braska is not going to be much of a task. All that needs to bo dono Is to get tho facts properly diffused. Dr. G, K, Condra, who represents tho university on this publicity board, calls attention to u Louisiana law that limits nil state publicity to actual- conditions That is all Ne braska requires. If . tho, conditions in this Btnte are effectively set forth, tuoy will enrry tholr own urgument and bring the desired results. It Is highly proper, thoroforo, that the campaign proceed under tub bond of development. Of course, tho state needs Judicious ndvortls lug, but It doon not need and cannot afford tho stereotyped kind that glosses over facts and conditions, painting weird pictures of Impossi bilities, which bring their own reac tion, It is developenient we want. Our natural soil resources, our ad vantages In point of geographical and commercial location, our trans portation, Industrial, educational and religious facilities, our climate; and our puople, should simply bo ropreBentod abroad for what they aro nud that will bo sufficient. Twenty V:irn Aso Mlfcs Maria Oiirfoyle, who had been the guest of Mis. Kennedy, 1S23 Jackson street . left for her home In Urooklyn. Mrs W. J. Hurge.ssi, wife of the man- ! ager of the Karnam Street theater, left for Chicago to spend the holiday with hrr parents. 1 8eth Abbott, futher of the late Kinma Abbott, was visiting at the home of Mrs. M. H. Dixon. 107 South Seventeenth street. The latest gift of John A. Crclghton was announced Ip a JTo.'W dispensary building to be. erected for the Crelghton Medical college. Mayor llomls fired a bombshell Into the city council In the form of a veto of an Item In the monthly appropriation bill of covering the November bill of tho Thompson-Houston Electric Light company, on the ground that It had not given the city what It paid for. The mayor accompanied his veto with a tart, brief message, concluding with these words; "1 utn In favor of allowing the Thompson-Houston Blcctrlo Light com pany to demonstrate, If it can, In the courts that Its bill Is correct." The Fnrnam Street thuater announcrd an rurly engagement of Frank Mayo In 'Davy Crockett." Tho overweening porsuaslon ot tho dollar 1b no hotter proved than tho necessity of providing child labor laws for fathers. A California towit has shipped ou, six carloads, ot onions to tho poor. Such warm benevolence is Htire to draw tears. Ten Years Ako Dean Campbell Fair of Trinity cathe dral, who was dangerously 111, paused a good night's rest. Tax Commissioner Fleming's final fig ures showed a total city assessment for 1S03 of J111,(M8,T(K, divided, real estate, $72.nW,0;X); personal, S3S,CB1,tr;5; Tho rail roads' Hhare In this was 113,024.040, Mrs. Henrietta Alioth, 702 Soutlf Thirty fifth avenue, slipped 6U the Icy platform of u cistern, fell In and drowned, dying a honlblo death, with her husband work ing, unconscious of his wife's fate, not sixty feet nway. The husband, wanting some help In his work from his wife, called to her, nnd, receiving no answer, Htarted to tho house. As he passed tho cistern he saw It was opened, nnd look ing down wad lionlfli'd at the sight of Mrs. Alloth'D dresses floating on the water. He got grab liookn and trloU to ralsii her out, but failed. Ilia 32-year-old daughter rim to a neighbor, Mrs. Pome roy, who notified firemen at engine house No. 7. Thirty-sixth and Jackson streets, iiml Lieutenant Kdward LaPagw nnd a'lpoman Cllnchuid hastened,.. to the res cue. The poor woman was finally drawn out of the water with a rope, but was lifeless. Illshup C'havles C. McCabe of the Meth odist church, whose diocese comprised Nebrusku, Iowa, Kansas and the Da kotas. arrived In Omaha, having recently returned from South America nnd Ku rope. Ills mission her at this time wns to reltuse Hunscam Park church from n Inrgo debt. foie, It Is one of the most 'Important mat teis being considered by the board li thl. The board consists of Major Carl F. Hart mann and Captains Arthur S. Cowan and Holland Itubottom. Iterrnrd for I'nMitiiia KnKlnrrr. Theie Is unanimity or approval in and out of congress of the proposition ad vanced by Itepresentatlve Mann of Illi nois, minority leader in the house, to create by legislation the office of general on the active list of lie. nrmy with the Idea that the appointee to tho grade shall bo Colonel Ororge V. Goethals. chief en gineer of the Panama, canal, Mr. Mann was of a party of fellow representatives, members of the house appropriations committee, who have Just returned from an Inspection of the Canal zone. They are Imbued with the justice of the pro posal that Colonel Goctlials shall be re warded In some substantial and perma nent way. None of them believes that there would be anything nearly enough adequate In the appointment of Colonel (oethals as chief of engineers of the army, with the grade of brigadier gen eral. upon the retirement ot General Hlxby In December of 1911 President Tuft In his meMsage to congress recom mends the appointment of Colonel Goe thals as a major general, with a pro vision that he be designated chief of en gineers upon the retirement of General litxby. Whenever Colonel Goethals' name Li mentioned In the house or senate there Is an outburst ot applause. There would he no difficulty, even In the present ses sion, In enacting the legislation whtch will recognize Colonel Goethals' eminent serv-Ices. l'riiillnu A mini n t nirnls. When congress adjourned last August there were pending before the senate military committee five army n6mlnatton those of Brigadier General W. W. W.otherspoon to be a major general Colonel H. J. McClornand to he brigadier general, Brigadier General J. li. Aleshlrc to be chief of the quartermaster corps with the rank of nwor general. Major B. B. nay. pay department, to be lieute nant colonel, and Second Lieutenant TV. F. "Wlnton, Seventh cavalry, now on duty In tho Philippines, to bo a second lieu tenant of the field artillery, tn all of these cases, with the exception of Ueu, tenant Wlnton, recess appointments were made, and the officers have now been renominated. It Is expected there will be no appreciable delay In acting on the nominations on the part of the senate military committee. There Is no op- appolntments of the vacancies In the grade of second lieutenant In the mobile Army that existed on June 30 tail about fifty wilt remain, and examination of candidates for them will commence on January 18 next. Of th vacancies In the grade of second lieutenant In the coast artillery corps that existed on June 30 last all but a few have been filled, and the number remaining Is not sufficient to warrant the holding of an examination Of candidates therefor. For- this reason no examination of candidates for the coaat artillery corpti will be held before next September. The papers In the cases of candidates for appointment as second lieutenants In the Phllipplno scouts recently were referred to a board con vened by the commanding general of the central division, and It Is expected that It will be some time before this board completes marking the papers and makes a report to the War department. Bllton Well. 1 suppose both your sweethearts gave you something for Christmas? What was It? Tllton (sourly)-Mittens. Judge "How did Biggs take the news ot his wife running away?" "Calmly enough. He seemed glad that the man ehc ran away with was Graft mann." "Why so?" "Graftmann, he said, was never known to return anything yet." Boston Trans cript. "your husband has made remarkable progress In art." "Yes," replied Mrs. Cumrox. "He Is rapidly getting where he can temembor the artist's name and forget the price." Washington Star. "That man Is a ery tricky sort of fel low." "Why. he seemed a very nice sort to me." "Well, but he's tricky; he has to be. He's a professional magician." Chicago Post. "Judge, why did you adjoin n couit for five minutes Just now7" "t felt that 1 had to sneeze." "Yea?" "And I feared if I sneezed on the bench the lawyers would make that the basis ot a demand for a new trial." Chicago Trib une. "How do you account. for the lack of enthusiasm In your district?" said tho In quiring friend. "Well.'' renlled Senator Potchum. "I had to make a lot of campaign promises. And you know a campaign promise Is very much like a Jacksnlpe. It doesn't look nearly so large when ou take off the feathers nnd get down to the meat." Washington Star. "1 put perfci't trust in you. Amaruu tha," said Dubbleigh, "and now I find that you nil- engaged to a dozen men all at once." "Now, Tommy, don t you be silly, said quires the services of a president and a board of dliectors?"-Harpr,s Weekly. Marks When 1 got home to supper last night I found my wife had been crying. Parks What was the trouble? Mai k She wouldn't tell inc. I don t know whether It wns something that hap pened at home or In a novel she waa read-ing.-Boston Transcript. The two friends were exchanging confi dences. "What ever Induced you to accept Toady Johnson. Mabel?" said Annette. "Oh why well," paid Mabel, "you sen Toady put hl-hls arm around my waist, and. to till the truth. I yielded under pressure." Harper's Weekly. "WHY DON'T YOU WHISTLE" Detroit News. Sometimes, when things look blcuk nnd blue And pa" upon my senses. When I've allowed myself to view The world throuch darkened lenses. When skies seem tinged with smoke and soot, , And oven flower a thistle This question to myself I put: "Old boy. why don't you whistle? No one. 1 II hazard, li immune From fits of melancholy: But power Inheres In some old tun To make one's spirit jolly. When every scene on this old earth With megrims seems to bristle. This recipe has wondrous worth: "Purae up your lips and whistle. Don't let some morbid blooding hold You In Its bondage fearful. But pipe some nrla of old Whose notes are sweet nnd cheerful, If you should ask me to indite A heartening epistle I'nto mnnklnil. this would I write: "Do not forget to whistle. ' So, brother. If you'd take up arms Against a sea of sadness. Most potent have you of nil charms To dyo that sea with gladness. Accuse no vague untoward fate. And sling no ranaom imssuc. Amnmnllia "Pave innflH.IK. Prtn'l I Vnlir wnes nnd fOCS CaPltlllntO you know that a perfect trust always re- When you tune up your whistle, People Talked About Iolng your shopping early develops a rudo icallzHtton of the cn'M restraints of an income under J5 a minute. A sure cure for the scarlet nose Is an nounced In time to relieve the pressure !on tho water wagon on January 1. Interest of New York bankers In tha "Victory Won by Porklns," says a head line. It refers simply to tho contest over location ot the head quarters, nothing more. A Wall street broker tolls the in vestigating committee about lending -15.000,000 in twonty-fivo minutes Just car faro that's all. Women rind Reform. Those for and ngainst woman's BUffrago may find now ground for argument both ways In tho results of municipal elections In Los Ango-, cuniI,eiltlong ltl Kurop, is skillfully pro les ami Han Francisco, where women portioned to tho Interest on war loans, vote. Los Angeles Is a hotbed of re- Thoae. critical persons who clas old form, nnd yet at a recent city elee-i i'1 0laua a 11 would be closer to tlon the women were credited with J!'" r,u;t by rw'n h!mTnc, the . i thing doctots. His unti-fat treatment for defeating drastic measures. Like-1 podjetbooks Infs nd rival on the market, wise in San Francisco, tho women pown lu .JXil!J uemocratlo housewives aro held responsible for the defeat uro advised by the chuf of the Houston of a proposed charter ainontlmont Pt to thtow a handful of corn '.o the that would have, nroatPil lnenl nnflnn , Christmas turkey and tilt the JUg and let units in residential districts, being i a decided advantage, for prohibition. , ' It leak over the ChrJatmas fruit cake. Three Bell telephone companies In the southwestern territory have beon merged ! reform, like morality, Is geograph-1 'orra; '"capual jical In some of Its aspects the con- enlargements are llkly for a Chicago Is to havo a woman I elusion Is inevitable thai women do! Judge. Why not, sho slta in judg- think on theso problems. That their ment on tho most important ques-'l),n,onH should bo in a degreo at tlon for every man, anyhow. Tho recurrence of murder for trifling causes Is a grim reminder of tho carelessness with which deadly weapons are distributed. Well, Elder Perkins brought home something that loked llko the bacon, and ho surely was entitled to that much, considering what he had paid out to got it. Union Pacific magnates are trying to find out Just what the court's order meanB. The first thing is tho original purpose of the road, ono continuous line from Omaha to San Francisco. Whllo the questions Involved In ; into one. with h-eadquartern In St. lula, tho California olectlons were of par-jT'" capital of the morged company will amount Interest loenllv onlvand ,,e M.ftiu, or JlO.oeo.ooo more than the until ui ine lepuruie uuus. iwiug io u no other while. In hla democratic monthly Norman E. Mnuk of Buffalo emphasizes tn Italics that Mr. Bryan "cannot fall to accept the call wlUch the country assumes la to come to him from the new pientdent to the post so honorably filled, by Jefferson. Adams. Clay, Calhoun. Webster, Marcy, Everett und Seward, by Blaine and Bayard, by Olney and by Hay."' The problem of the high cost of llrlnr has been solved by Ilaymond Prior San ford or Ithaca, a freshman In the Col lege of Agriculture at Cornell university, Aviation Development. Genera) James Allen, chief signal of ficer of the army, will make an effort n the few weeks which remain before his retirement by operation of law In February to have enacted legislation, presumably on the army bill, increasing the army signal corps on account of the Increasing duties derived from aviation work. It has -lieen carefully figured out tnat the Increase Is about $154,000 a year. This would afford an opportunity to give the additional compensation to those en gaged In the hazardous duty of mechan ical flight. It Is felt tbat this provision must be made If officers are to be en couraged to volunteer for this perilous undertaking. There were originally some sixty volunteer among young officers who wished to engage In aviation, but of these about half have been found dis qualified for one or another reason. There are at present fourteen officers on the duty, and an equal number are re garded as eligible. The United States has appropriated so far very little and by tne end of the present fiscal year will have not more than twenty-two machines Of various types. New construction work proposed by Oeneral Allen In connection with army aviation Includes a hangar for hydroplanea, which it was al first thought should be located at Governors Island, but which General Allen believes should be placed at Fort Wood, Now York harbor, where the signal corps has a station. It Is alao desired by General Allen to have a floating hangar at some place on the Potomac river. Thaie han gars, will each accommodate three or four machines of the hydroplane type. lleBccsyffBfflC I least colored by local conditions will bo admitted, for that Is true ot men. The main point at interest, though, is that the women ot Cali fornia havo shown that they aro not inclined to be blindly led Into the endorsement of any proposed reform, no matter what, And, if this is true of the women ot California, u' cutting down the cost of hla food to r;ia cents a wcck- un inia amount young tiauford, who Is a perfectly healthy young may It not bo expected their sisters elsewhere will act likewise? Brother lleujomln Fay Mills re member him? figures that under the colonel's plau of having tho membership pay dues tho bull niooso party will have $96,000,000 in the fund when the next battle of Arma geddon Is staged. This ought to be enough for the expenses of one short campaign. Lincoln will only ask CG,000 for a state library, Take that with tho f.uuo.uuu state nousc, tuo iuu,- Tho deposed Chicago base ball 000 addition to the postofflco and header, who was fcold for $l,DU0 by a few new buildings for the unlver- a vindictive- club owner to humiliate elty. and they ought to have a real i him, gets another Job at Uih highest '"nclude that eh has quite a talent for revival tn Duildlng down there. And' salary, reports say. ever paid umana is going to help them get 'player 'h . I humiliation that ended that h. Oivl Cars nt Store of Them. OMAHA, Dec. ll.-To the Editor of The Bee: I was amused to read In the columns ot your valuable paper recently where the right honorable and most worshipful council has agreed to lie down for three weeks and take a snooze while the strett car company Is gathering "data" with which to blindfold and flimflam them over the ordinance that Colonel Rydar has so courageously Introduced providing for all-night car service that Is so badly needed at this time. They are certainly a bunch of windjammers and braying who wish to make noise and expense on the taxpayers of the city, while they strive to make good fellow of them selves by f.iilse promises and misrepre sentation. They are afraid of the big corporation lest they lose the Job th common people gave them and refusti to get busy In the Interest of thr voter who trusted them and placed them In office at very fat salaries. We all know the big corporations did not vote for the men who were "on the squure" ticket, but rather for the "big seven" of the business men' association. That man Wattles Is holding the whip over their heads and will lash them Into submission If tliy do not do Ills bidding nnd make ordinances to suit him and tho corporation he represents. He wants a law made now. to lock up any person who. presents his conductors with an "old transfer" und keep them in Jail until hla wrath has been appeased by the stern hand of Justice. What an awful offense It Is to offer1 an old ttansfer in payment of car fare. Fomooth! True, Mr Wattle has given the good people of Dundee a small sop In the shape of one car twenty minutes earlier In the morning "Just to keep their d d mouths shut," but this will not fill th bill nor meet the urgent requirements of our great and growing city when cars should be run all night for those who are willing to pay the expense. People living In Dundee anJ in the West Farnam dis trict cannot reach any of the depot bo fore ft o'clock and that fact alone cause great expense or Inconvenience to people who ought to be provided with early car on the Farnam line. The Bee ha done excellent work in prodding up th com pany and I hope It will continue the good work until Omaha la provided with ade quate car service and better accommoda tion In this direction.' Very truly, F. A. JOHNSON. Ing political Job In South Omaha and those that sell goods to the city are.ot course, opposed to the consolidation of the two cities, but the great mass of the people of South Omaha are In favor of the consolidation. I for one am in favor of tlia legislature adopting a law for the forcible consolida tion of the two cities. Let them give us our high school, our hare of Improve ments out of the taxes we pay and our share of the official positions and then unite the two cities as should have been done ten years ago. Allegheny, a city of 1M.O0O people, was annexed to Pittsburgh by an act of the legislature, of Pennsylvania. The peoplo of Allegheny took It Into the courts and finally to the United States supreme court, but the act of the legislature w sustained at every point and Pittsburgh now has over soo.ooo people and Allegheny ts no mov. I do not blame those who are holding political positions for fighting for their Jobs, for I might do the same thing If I was holding a political Job. But the people as a whole will be greatly bene ficed by the consolidation and T hope It will comn before March I. People have to get up early In the morning to beat Victor RosewzUer, ens him a ther please. Yours truly, F. A. AG NEW. EDITOIIAL SNAPSHOTS. iium, sets all the nourishment required to sustain life normally. A release that traveled almost around the world has been filed at the Lebanon (Pa.i court house by Edward Shott, ad. mlniatrator of the estates of Tannine and Maria Atkins, tho amounts accounted for being about 1900 In all. The release traveled to the American consulate In Co lombo. Ceylon, where a consul got ii for etlcklng a nice little red stamp on the papers. Mr. Wilson wife of the president-elect, I said to have a happy knack of making an unattractive garden Into a thing of beauty, in tact, those who nave seen what she did with tho Princeton garden U ball ml'aVlln7 KAIUllllllg UIIU tUMIU IlUtC HlttUO . . . ir. , ..life I .MICA II4U 1IUI Most any man could stand crdanii ti,t ,n. .......i.i i it,.. Ud in the Unit. Annriivrn of th Consolidation. SOUTH OMAHA. Dec. ll.-To the fXlltor of The Bee; A number of my friend have said to me that they would like for mo to write to The Bee on the subject of the consolidation of the Omaha and South Omaha postoffloet, and here I so to It. I fully approve of the consolidation and hope that the legislature of Nebraska will finish up the Job thl winter, for It will ba the belt thing that ever happened to South Omaha to be a part ot the great metropolitan rtty and things In South Omaha will then move along. WW'e Omaha has htn building up tremendously we have been (tending still and we will stand still, tuo. until we get nw blood Infused Into the 11 f of South Omaha aod the consolidation of th two oltle I Just rat will be the making of thl part of the cHy of Omaha. Thus who arc hold- Boston Transclrtp: As amended for th railroad combines, "Loosed be the tie that bind." Washington Post: Will no champion of the poor Perkins children arise to thwart thl diabolical plot to throw George out of the bull moose pen? Sioux City Journal: The Union Pacific and the Southern Pacific are so near and yet o far. At points they are 1,000 miles apart, and the supreme court has In creased the distance. Washington Herald: Mr. Carnegie's Idea of how to die poor is to leave about i?5.0OO,OM behind. Rather a sharp con trast with the condition of thousands of persons who have to pinch even to have enough to pay premiums on a policy to provide for their burial. - Chicago Inter Ocean: Kllsabeth, N. J., effers a prize of St for a slogan to be used to promoting Its coming Industrial exposition. One ambitious poet, ap parently inspired by fits, ha perpetrated, vir.: "lit means bill" We hav no use tor tM, but we are glad Liz ha rlz. Let er kiss! Springfield Republican: Many pictures of the GaJata bridges at Constantinople, famous for th, cosmopolitan crowds to be seen there, have been published of late, ome of them with the mistaken infor mation that thl I th connection be tween Europe and Asia over which many Turks are returning to the old home of the race. As a matter ot fact, Galata lies not beyond the Bosphorua, which separates Europ from Asia, but beyond the, long narrow bay of tha GoMen norn, which extend from th Ksiphoru to the north and gives Constantinople Its match less harbor. Here the water I always quiet: In the Bosphorua Itself there Is a strong and troublesome current, unaf fected by tide and setting preciMly as Shakespeare described It, "to th Pro pontic and the Hellespont," to that (hip now and then In pasalng thrust their bow sprit Into the house along the bank, with ensuing suits for damage. tVet 'Br Cent, Ofereiand Plain Dealer, The next braak oonvea at 2hrtitma4, wben we'll all be broke. Indian. Blankets Here is something new Indian, Blankets that you can make yourself. They are crocheted in a stitch so easy that any one can master it in a few min utes. We have issued a little book of instructions giving detailed illustrations of the stitchestand colored reproductions of Indian Blankets. This book is yours for the coupon below. Send for it today and begin a blanket at once. They make the most effective decoration for den or living room, and no gift would please the average man more. Remember that for Christmas. The blankets are made of Fleisher's Germ&ntown Zephyr, 4-fold, one of the fifteen the yarns whose superiority is so generally recognized that four-fifths of the yarn users of the country will have no others. They are even, lofty, clastic and brilliantly dyed in all the wanted shades. Garments made of the Fleisher, Yarns stand the test of wear and wash. Look for trademark on every skein. KalttSv Worste Xtrcaeea Saxvnr Spanish Worn teal ! Floaa Gerxaaatowa Ker7t (4- aat 8-feld) Elteraawa Wl HSHEIH Superior lee Wool Shetland Zephyr Spiral Yarn Pamela Shetland Highland Wool Cashmere Yurg Angora Woel Golf Yarn Get One for Him for XmELS.... Any Portrait n a handsome burnished copper Watch-fob Reproduced from any photograph you send engraved on tho metal and abso lutely Indestructible. A fob that may be -worn by any one who dresses In good taste, at the same time a lasting novel picture. Price $1.00 Stnd photo and $1.00. Photo will be returned with car. BEE PUBLISHING CO. Engraving Dept. BEE BLDG., OMAHA, NEB. Orftr may t lrt t Bt Office J