Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 11, 1913, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1913.
THE OMAHA DAILY BEE
KUllNDEO 1T HOWARD nOBBWATHIl
VlCfOJl ROBBWATKR. BD1TOH.
UKK IHJILUINO.
FARNAM AND 17TH.
Kninrui rim.ha nnatnfflce oa second'
ciais mailer
attnolMilirrmN:
Sunday Bte. otle year ,....imj
Saturday Bee, one year
Dally nee, without Sunee.y, one year., j w
rt tvpnftl tiv f'AM.MElt.
UEtm j unnu . . .
Evening and Sunday, per month.. ...
Evening without Bunday, per montn
Dally Bee. including- Sunffay. per mo
400
I6o
6&C
4SC
Address all complaints or Irregularities
In delivery to City Circulation UePt.
REMITTANCE.
Remit by draft, express or postal orter.
payable to The Deo Publishing; companJ.
Only J-cnt stamps received in P
of small account. Personal checks, ex
cept on Omaha and eastern exchange, noi
accented.
Omaha-The Bee SUIIdlna-.
Bouth Omaha 2318 N street.
Council UlUffS-14 Nofth Main street.
Llncoln-K Little buiidlna-.
Chicago 1041 Marqu:te building.
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CORRESPONDENCE
Communication relating to news ana
editorial matter ahould be adflresaea
Omaha Bee. Editorial department.
FEBRUARY CIRCUIiATION.
50,823
State of Nebraska, County of Douglas, ss:
Dwlght Williams, circulation manager
of The Bee Publishing company, being
dul. sworn, says that the average Jally
circulation for the month of February,
19IJ. was 50.K3. DWIOHT WILLIAMS.
Circulation Mansa.r.
Subscribed In my presence and aw.irn
to before me this 7th day of March. 1913.
ROBERT HUNTER,
(Seal.) Notary Public
Subscribers lenvlntr (be city
temporarily ahonld hare Tito Ilea
mailed to them. Address Trill be
chnnired nm ofteu n rrquentcd.
City
today.
charter convention election
March means to prove ltsolf the
beat little lamb In the Nebraska fold.
Tho two remaining Madoro broth
erB are talking' of another revolt
JiiHt talking of It.
Mother five at any. rate was not
bothered with-tho problem of how
to live virtuously 6n $5.n week.
Ia tho fellow who persists in Jam
ming the aisle of the street car tho
one who, complains' most about "bad
service?"
No wines or liquors are to be
served at the White House In tho
next four, yeftfs. . 8(1)1, that will bo
no deprivation, to most of us.
The Immedlato causo of our fatal
hotel fjro has not been discovered,
but the effects are apparent enough
to call for certain corroctivo methods.
The judges bt the district court
have told what-fine fellows tho law
yers are. who pr&ctlco before thorn.
Jit's up totio lawyers now to say a
few Hind wprdsTabout tho judges.
Only five bills passed by the pres
ent session of tho Nebraska, legisla
ture up to the governor so far. Dut
then one of tho five appropriated
the money to pay tho legislative sal
aries, A California wqtnan caused a sorl
ous explosion by lighting a furnaco
in which natural gas had accumu
lated. What If Bomoono were to
strike a match in tho halls of tho
Nebraska lcgttlature?
For sixteen years wo had ono Wil
son in the cabinet, and now another
-Wilson Bits at tho tablo. With this
record and precedent, no presidential
cabinet of tho future will pass mus
ter as genuine without a Wilson in it.
Our amiable democratic contem
porary already sees a good democrat
appointed by our domocratlo gover
nor to hold down that $3,000 elec
tion, commissioner ,Job, and cannot
restrain 'its exuberant. Joy over tho
propect. '.
Yes, Tho Deo is against labeling
the voters of Omaha as more dishon
est than the voters of other cjtlos
and towns Jn the state. If a partit
ion system is good for Omaha. voters,
why not let it bo applied generally
without favor or discrimination?
A young woman, representing ' tho
federal bureau of labor as Its special
agent has come to Omaha to study
retail prices In connection with tho.
high cost of living. 8ho should havo
no trouble In finding them providing
she has brought a stop-laddor with
her.
iour city government touches
you closer than your state govern
ment or your federal government,
That Is why you are vitally Inter
ested in the coming home-rule char
ter convention, and should help elect
the men who are to make the char
ter. Collier's Weekly declares we have
reached the point in this country
where the native birth rate must bo
speeded'up to counterbalance an im
pending falling off in Immigration.
Yes, but. the .Immigrant have as a
rule bees' thfe ones who have ex
pedited our native blrtb rate.
Some one has called attention to
the fact that during the administra
tion of President Wilson as chief ex
ecutive of Princeton not a single
negro Jtudent was permitted to enter
that Institution. It is no wonder
that our colored cltiuns are a Uttle
apprehensive, as. to where they
come In,
If You Do, Vote for Heafcy.
If you want to continue to pay
tho present exorbitant water rates
and endorso tho repudiation by tho
Water boaid of Its promise to rcduco
them, vote for Heafey.
If you approve the secret water
meter deal that makes you pay $3
profit for a 16 meter, vote for
Heafey.
If you favor special rebates on
water bills for personal pets, or po
litical pull, voto for Heafey.
If you endorse that private sale of
$7,000,000 water bonds for $200,
000 leas than could havo been had
through compotltlvo bids, voto for
Heafey,
If you favor tho scheme to make
tho Water board separate and dis
tinct, and superior to and beyond
the control of tho people of Omnba,
vote for Heafey.
Federal or State Control.
The country Is justified In assum
ing from President Wilson's Inaugu
ral utterances that ho means to pro
mote development and conservation
of our natural resources along ag
gressive lines. He could not do less
and live up to tho platform pledges
of his party In tho campaign last
year. Tho presldont deplores our
"Inexcusable waste" and "shamefully
prodlgnl" habits with reference to
our resources, tho human cost of
which ho implores the nation now to
stop and count. But the Question
propounds Itself, what will bo the
tendency of tho president as between
federal and state jurisdiction? Will
he yield to a disposition of demo
crats In congress to divert a largo
measure of control to tho state?, or
will he favor tho more practical policy
of national control of national re
sources? Doth his Inaugural ad
dress and the platform aro silent on
this point. The inference most natu
ral from both is that federal author
ity will be paramount, with perhapo
just a flavor of tho old state's rights
idea. The country has come to view
conservation as a federal question
and, while duo rights of states must
bo recognized, It seems hardly prob
nblo that federal control will not be
come the policy of tho new adminis
tration. Commisiion Plan in Lincoln.
Having elected to come under tho
commission plan of city govornmont,
Lincoln is sooti to choose tho officers
who sro to Inaugurate tho new de
parture for tho city second In sizo In
the state.
As applied to Lincoln, tho commis
sion placo provides for ftvo elective
commissioners, or councilmon, who
aro to recelvo $2,00t a year, and are
to conduct all the affairs of tho city
without any exceptions, and nlmoBt
without limitations. One of tho
$2,000 commissioners will be good
enough in Lincoln to 'run tho "water
department along with several other
branches of the public sorvico, and
In thl Lincoln will havo tho advan
tago'of escaping conflicts and clashes
botweon Independent municipal
authorities, and avoid costly duplica
tions of work.
Under tho commission plan, too,
Lincoln will for the first time era-
ploy the so-called nonpartisan ballot
In a municipal election. It will be
Interesting to soe whether the experi
ence there, as hore, produces a con
test merely between groups of candi
dates self-linked togethor across
party linos, and divided purely on
local Issues.
In an effort to arouse' public In
terest In the Impending change, tho
Lincoln Journal bits the nail on tho
hoadwhen It says;
It la now admitted that there it uoth
1ns miraculous about this system, and
that It la Juat aa Important to have good
man In the offices as It Is under th old
form of municipal Kuyernment.
Hearst and Snlzer.
Mr. Hearst Is pounding away In
his newspapers at Governor Suiter as
vigorously as If he had always op
posed him. Ho has recently excorl
ated htm editorially under tho blaok
type caption, "Sulzer Has Put tho
Job Through for Tammany and Wall
Street," with this declaration In the
course of his fulralnatlont '
Governor Sulier's pretense of lndt
pendence of the Tammany alliance with
big thieves and little thieves was dissi
pated at the first hint from Fourteenth
street.
During the campaign for tho nom
ination and eloctton Bulzer was
adopted aB Hearst's apodal candldato
and praised as the ono patriot quail
fled by experience, association and
Aspiration for governor of tho Em
ptre state. His election was hailed as
a Hearst triumph nnd was undoubt
edly due In some measure to Hearst
Influence. Dut now the tables aro
turned and Bulzer 1s donounced as
the pliant tool of Tammany, and other
evil Influences.
The Dodge-Hltchcock-Howoll Der
tlllon system of registering voters la
specially designed to make It dlffl
cult for forelgn-bbrn citizens to vote,
and to disfranchise those who have
not had tho privilege of schooling.
It practically establishes new qualifl
cations for voter In Omaha and
South Omaha that aro not demanded
of voters outside of these cities
Note that to save that part of their
bill designed to make them Immune
from the home charter, the Water
boarders are now ready to trade off
the revenue from tne stock' yards,
which they originally Insisted was
tho only thing they were fighting for
and would never ylel
BackWatd
liOOKltU
ThisD
itiOraalia
COMPILES TROM DEE. FILES I
OOP MATtfTTT 11, ? OOP
Thirty Years Aro-
A feast was spread at the Millard hotel
In honor of Charles McDonald, the Far
nam street merchant, about to leave for
New York for a prolonged absence, dur
ing which time ho Is to annex aa his wife,
Miss Anna Ryan, a beautiful and accom
plished lady of that city. Tho gentlemen
who gathered to give him a proper send
off wero: Messrs. P. P. Shelby, John
Rush, N. II. Falconer, (', V. Oattagher,
John McCreary, M. A. McNamarn, C. F.
Brennan, E. A. O'Brien, William Gentle
men. F. D. Cooper, Frank Dellone, John
M. McMahon, a P. Reynolds, It. E.
Rlckerby. Thomas Tallon. W. A, L. Gib
bon and M. McGuIre of New York.
Henry Slert, one of the substantial
members of tho Gorman colony, died,
leaving a wife and three children.
William A, IIIcKlnf. president of the
Omaha City mission explains that pa'tt
of the pravslons collected at tho schools
for tho mission have been diverted
through misrepresentation, and appeals
for further contributions to replenish the
cupboard that Is bare.
City Attorney Howo Is of the opinion
that the new viaduct law Is unconstitu
tional. Andreen & Valeln have been awarded
tho contract to construct In the basement
of their new bank a series of safety
vault under the supervision of A. D.
Avery of Chicago, to cost 112,000.
Twenty Years Ago
John Rush, marshal of the day, gave
nut the line of march and a few other de
tail agreed on for tho celebration of St
Patrick's day, which was to be upon nn
elaborate scale, Richard O'Keeffe was
plnce in charge of the procession.
Matt Goring, the Plattsmouth lawyer,
addressed the .Tacksontan club In the
evening on the "Issues of the day."
David Bennlson of the firm of Bennlson
Bros, wa making fine progress with the
erection of his 112,000 rusldenco on Bouth
Twenty-ninth street. Just north of Leav
enworth. Rev. W. Franklin Smith, pastor of First
Universal church, resigned.
Tho jclttzons In that part of the city
known as Gibson made emph&tlo protests
to Mayor Bemls against the practice of
tho South Omaha .stockyards dumping
their offal there.
Ex. Governor James E. Boyd took oc
casion to deny knowledge or authorship
of reflections upon Secretary of Agri
culture J. Sterling Morton, attributed lo
him In a Chicago dispatch. He had never
heard of or seen the assertion, he said.
until he read them In the newspapern.
and they did not represent his views of
Nebraska's distinguished citizen.
Ten Years A co-
Union Paclflo passenger and frelgnt
trains collided at Gllmore at 10:30 p. m
killing C. P. Hayes, fireman on tne
freight, who lived at tho Metropolitan
hotel, and Injuring Joo Hawley, engineer'
of the passenger, who lived at the Bur
lington hotel, and Mr. Churqt, a bag
gageman. The collision occurred at the
end of tho double track.
Miss Alma Eggers, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Peter Ersers of MUlord, and
Mr. Frank Hanson, of Omaha, were mar.
rlcd by Rev. Charles W. Harned at the
home of A., 8. " Hnllenbeck, 224 South
Sixteenth street. Tho groom Wait a motor
man for tho street railway company.
About thirty guests attended tho cere
mony. Mies Maud Pearson, head of, the refer
ence department of the bma.ua .library,
resigned to accept a position with the
Steel club library at Jpllet, 111,
Hazel IE, Cochran, 11 years of age,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Elbert II.
Cochran, 1007 South Thirty-sixth street,
died at the family home. . '
Mrs. Goorge Hardy of Perry, la,, .was
tho guest of her slster-ln-la.w, Mrs.' $t A,
Haskell, I82fl North Eighteenth street.
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Love were prepar
ing to open their country place near tho
Country-club during the coming week.
People Talked About
Uncle Joe Cannon Ms. going .on a trio
around the world. Pleasure beckons the
old warrior to scenes that wlil';blot out
of his mind Washington's' spectacle of
woe.
Parading suffragists ore urged to tern
per their Indignation with pie thought
that th democrats haven't had a real
blowout for sixteen long, weary years.
and Just- naturally overdid things In
Washington. (A few fingers of the wine
of charity will help some.
Medicine Hat doffs Its cady to 'Calgary
as a weather ructory. Dunns- a recent
fire In the latter town, Medicine Hat
vouches for the statement that a stream
of water directed at a third-story window
was frozen on the spot and the Imperilled
people on that floor slid down the ice
pole to safety. Can you btat it?
Dr. O. W. Richardson of the depart
ment of physics In Princeton university,
has been elected to membership In the
Royal Society of Great Britain, nn hon
orary sclentiflo body. Dr. Richardson is
honored because of his Important experi
mental discoveries fundamental to the
electrto and kinematic theory of matter.
Ono of the eleventh-hour Jokes of the
late congress struck Senator O'Qorman of
New York In a tender spot The senator
objected to the extravagant size of tho
pork bar'!, which carried 13,000,000 for a
public building In New York City. The
accommodating house struck out the Nov
York Item and turned the knocker into
a screamer.
Including tin vieo president among the
officers manning the democratic ship of
state tliern are seven of the twelve
trained for the law. two are educators
by profession, one an editor and pub
lisher, one a manufacturer and one
miner. Only two of the lawyers followed
the profession m to the present time,
three were officeholders and two Bryan
and McAdoo, drifted Into other lines
of activity. Ten of the twelve aro native
born.
"I have been insulted by a congress-
man," exclaimed a speaker nt the Equal
Suffrage league meeting In Chicago a
few evenlnga ago. The sympathetic aa
embly for over an hour poured vocal
wrath on the head of the absent states
man, and was about to adopt ringing
resolutions of censure when a demure
suffragist asked the nature of the Insult.
Tho offended woman explained that ner
daughter, seated on a symbolio float, nad
been Jeered at and when she complalnod
to the congressman he simply aald:
'Madam, you should have ktpt your
daughter at home." Whtreupon the
league adjourned to think it ovr.
I 1 .
Seeing Omaha
Beatrice Bun: Omaha will have a
spasm of Investigation and a few fire
escapes will bo put up, and possibly
somebody will pass some fine resolu
tions. Nebraska City Press: Omaha has had
a lesson and is now willing to do Its
Investigating. For yeara It has been a
notorious fact known by nearly all strang
ers with Its gates, that Omaha hotel
facilities are fifty years behind the times.
Albion Argus: A great deal Is being
said about the small wages girls are
paid. While they aro asking for higher
wages and scrambling and crowding each
other for places In stores n,nd other public
places, free, room and Board and light
work wait them In homes of people who
find It Impossible to find compctont and
willing help to do housework. It Is no
trouble for a girl to get 15 a week In
Omaha with room, board and extras
thrown In, two afternoons and all even
ings out,' and only part of the work to
do, but the glrln don't want to do the
work that by heritage nnd tradition they
should do and could do safely and profit
ably, both from financial and propriety
reasons.
Ellgln Jlevlcw: The fire ought to be
an Incentive for hotel keepers to tako
every precaution for the safety of their
guests. The Omaha. Bee has detailed a
special reporter to visit all of the Omaha
hotels and each evening prints ti couple
of columns about the hotels und tells of
the conditions as they exist. By reading
these descriptions It Is seen that Omaha
has very few hotels that are fireproof
and still fewer are provided with ade
tiate fire escapes. The Bee Is doing a
great service in showing up tho con
ditions, and should result in a great
amount of good, .
Pender Times: The Omaha Bee is play
ing peanut politics when It continually
charges up every Uttlo eat of the Ne
braska houso of representatives (It
doesn't like), to democratic inefficiency.
The legislature is getting' along nicely; Is
passing some good measures and will
probably enact n law or two that it
shoudn't have, but this thing of brow
beating legislatures is getting chesnutty
and makes Intelligent people weary.
Fremont Tribune: It has been discov
ered that tho Omaha Water board bought
several thousand dollars'' worth of me
ters at a secret session. Doubless an
other rebate proposition. The question is,
who gets It?
Bridgeport News-Blade: The Omaha,
Bee Tuesday had a cartoon showing a
company of suffragettes marching to the
music of fife and drums; but the women
were all standing on their heads. And
the editor of The Bee Is a married man,
too.
Grand Island Independent: . There is
always something now under the sun.
Who, for Instance, ever anticipated such
a bitter quarrel at Omaha over waterT
Twice Told Tales
lie Blessed It.
A teacher of et SUrtday school' class
trliid A "Impress: Upon" her 'Vodng charges
the toeeislty'dfl blessing th -food before
eating. -s
''Billy," she asaed of a Uttle fellow
whose father was an elder In' the church,
"what prayer does your father say be
fore you eat your dinner?"
"I dun know."
"Well, what did he say this morning
before breakfast?"
Billy meditated; suddenly he remem
bered and beamed.
"He said, 'You kids go slow on the
butter nowl It's ' 40 cents a pound!' M
Judge.
Fi tin My Kxclninatlons.
A Cleveland man who makes a prac
tie of chooslnc his words "with care, a
practice which he has endeavored to In
still Into the family circle, made a mem
orandum of the misused words uttered
by his son and daughter during a recent
breakfast. Here Is the result:
Elegant, nineteen times.
Awful, eleven times.
Dandy, six times..
Fierce, four times.
Great, two times.
When the meal was over the head of
the household called the family around
htm In the library and gravely read the
totals to them'.
"Gee, that's fierce!" said the son.
"isn't It awfull" said tho daughter.
Cleveland Plain Dealer,.
Unusual tiholr.
An old farmer and his wife lived near
the village church. One warm Sunday
evening whllq they sat dozing on the
porch the cricket set up a'loud chirping.
"I Just love that chirping noise." said
the old man drowally, arid before .the
cricket had stopped he was fast asleep.
Soon afterward the church choir broke
Into a beautiful chant.
"Just listen to thatl" exclaim od his
wife; "ain't It beautiful?"
"Yes, murmured the old farmer sleepily,
"they do It with their hind legs."-P. I. P.
Political New Brooms
Nevada has ratified the amendment for
popular election of senators.
Mother's pension bills have been
squelched In the senate ot the Indiana
legislature.
Salary raising bills are the moat popular
brand 01 atatemanshlp on exhibition In
the Nw York state, capttol.
A "blue sky law" on the Kansas plan
has passed both houses ot tho Iowa legis
lature and by the legislature of Vermont.
A slam at the middleman whom "no
body loves" these days. Is proposed by
a bill In the Wisconsin lagtslature. pro
viding for an Industrial commission,
which wlU procure and distribute In
formation which will bring producer and
consumer together.
A bill for an act to make Justice fret
for pc-jr people is pending In the Kansas
legislature. It grants authority to off!
clala of cltlea, towns, villages and coun
ties to appoint a Judge, vrho will serve
without pay, to .hear and aettie auch mat
ters aa small .debts, lndlvldua'wage. dis
putes,' etc. No lawyers, no technicalities,
no feet. Parties to the dispute will do
their' own taiktng to the Judge in his
office or at his "home as may be con
venient TJie objtct is to stop court costs
In minor cases. Illustrated by a bill of JIM
taxed against a wag dispute Involving
About the Water Hoard.
OMAHA, March 10. To the Kdltor ot
The Bee: I am addressing this letter to
all honorable legislators. The 10th ot
February, 1913. I received a monthly
water bill from December 10, 1912 til.
January 11, 1913. According to tho meter
100 cublo feet wnu consumed, tho mini
mum tax Is TO cents per month. Jt Is
visible I was forced to pay &0 cents per
100 cubic feet or 21 cents moro for noth
ing. March 8. 1913, I received a water
bill, from Jonuary 11, till February, ttlj
tho water bill states that 300 cubic feet
of water was consumed. I read tho water
meter every week. February 15 I read tiio
water meter, 200 'feet of water was con
sumed, worth 53 cents. They demand
now 79 cents. This makes 26 cents to piy
for nothing 36 and 24 cenus I am skinned
of BO cents for nothing.
The present water board Is a pestilence;
It will drivo the small consumers to re
bellion. We havo a republic, but this
Water board Is a disgrace to our repub
lican system. The Wuter board charter
has no room In a sensible republic. The
dcspotlo Water board drives tho Inhab
itants from Nebraska.
To improve the bad condition the city
government must havo the supervision
of everything thnt belongs to the city;
henco the Water board must bo abolished.
It wns an unpardonable idiocy to estao
llKh a separate Water board Independent
of tho city government. We have home
rulo. Every honest and intelligent legis
lator In Lincoln without question will
support horn rule Intact.
The legislature may enact a law that
the Omaha Water board haa no right to
enact, a new regulation without consent
of tho city council. The above sontl
mcnts aro Indorsed by scores of consum
ers of water. M. TBL.T8HIK.
627 North Twenty-first Street, S. O.
Home Utile In Elections, Too.
OMAHA, March 10. To the Editor nf
The Bee: I notice that there Is pending
before the houso tho election commis
sioner bill for Douglas county, and that
It puts tho appointing of the commW
sloner In the hands of the governor.
This bill should be amended bo that the
commissioner will be elected at the next
general election, allowing the governor
the appointing until that time.
It seems to me that If wo are going- to
have a pure election, that If the election
commissioner cannot come under the
some law, as all other elective offices,
than what is tho good of this office.
We believe In home rule. That has been
the cry for a long time. The laws should
be amended to that effect.
FRANK WILCOX.
Hard Coal Cinch
St. Louis Republic: The profligacy of
tho coal trust in giving Its laborers
$1,000,000 out of 13,45O,0O0 taken from the
public on their account is excused by the
fact that tho trust had to.do it.
Indianapolis -News: When the coal men
can Increase their prices 26 cents a ton
as a result of increasing the pay of the
miners 8 or 10 cents a ton, the ultimate
furnace feeders begin to understand why
they had to spend their next summer's
vacation rconey for their last winter's
coal.
Pittsburgh Dlspotch: The anthracite
coal "gentlemen's agreement" Justified Us
advance in the prices on the ground of
the Increase in wages. Tho. Department
of Commerce, however, shows that of
'tho 113,400.000 advance In prices last year,
M000,000 was due to Increased wages and
$9,4110,000 was tacked on because the com
panies could do It. Therein do we get
a line on the whyness of tho high coat
of living.
Boston Transcript: The report ot the
United States Bureau of Labor, that
since the anthracite coal strike last
spring the companies have paid $4,000,000
more in wages and taken J13.450.000 more
from the publto is rather startling. It
shows that In nil strikes that affect the
necesarles of life it Is the public tltxt
pays, though not In all Instances ure
these extra burdens Imposed to such an
extent nt the source of supply.
New York Tribune: This use of a strike
as an excuse to mulct tho coal buyer
was In accordance with the custom o
coal operators. After the Btrikcs of 190
And 1902. they raised wages 32 cents a
ton an'd prices to the public Jl a ton.
The Tribune last spring estimated their
profit from that transaction at more than
J300.O00.0OO in a decade. When there Is
so much money as that in strikes will
the anthracite coal Industry ever be free
from them?
Editorial Snapshots
vtr..himrin Post! The famluhed -.owd
at the pie counter maka New York" la
mous bread line look ilko In ilr.k tea.
Chicago Uecord-lIeraU: Piobably Colo,
tiel Bryan meant nothliu by his refer
ence to his tenure of office as "uncer
tain." Ho has lived long n :gl to nutv
most things are "uncertain" and poll
tics doubly so.
Cleveland Plain Dealer: At the same
time it will be many moons bfoxe tha
name of the new secretary of agricul
ture becomes as much of a household
word as wan that of his predecessor.
Chicago Inter Ocean: It mayn't be a
cabinet of "legal luminaries" like Mr.
Taft's, but thf fourth cstnte gets Its dues,
with Editor Bryan, Editor Daniels and
former Reporter Lone in the seats of the
mighty.
Houston Post: Our patriots want to
serve because they lovo service and not
because they love money. Of course, they
will want, their vouchors to come
promptly In order that the business repu
tation of tho administration may not
suffer.
St. Louis Globe-Democrat: The chief
distinction of the new attorney general Is
that he assisted a republican administra
tion to prosecute, convict and dissolve
some of the greatest of the trusts. And
that is not a small distinction, by the
way.
Indianapolis News: Notwithstanding
the change of administration, there are
still some demoorats that arc not happy.
And thby won't bo happy until they know
whether they are goln to get a govern
ment Job or wl! have to keep on Vot
ing for a living. -'And maybe, they won't
be happy even. then.
Iot, n Sure- Sign.
Cleveland Plain Dealer. -The
fact that President-elect' Wilson
rave up his seat In a car to a woman
doesn't necessarily mean that every man
who' hereafter practices this act of court
esy ti necessarily a federal offlccseeker.
JOLLIES FROM JUDGE.
The harp that on. e through Tata's hnlls
Hent forth Its thrilling tone
Neglorted hangs on Tara's walls
They've got a graphophone.
"Does your wife want th vn7"
"No. She wants a larcer town hnu.
a villa on the seacoast and a new lim
ousine car every six months. I'd he
pleased most to death If she could fix
her attention on a small matter like the
vote." Washington Star.
Gerald Pratley Is an awful tightwad I
Oeraldlne Is he?
nraMT .... - - ...
... .u - .iiuuiu r.n.3 no IHUQni 1 1 T
Won't PVPfl fall a tnM. n t.l. - -
pense!
read Mrs. Newlywed from a new cook
book. "Oh, dear! I can only cook this
r-gg oncel"
Me If 1 rnll n "twin" whi. t
, . ' - . WfT, , t.J Will b J
rail ma "mop?"
Bhe If you do, she'll wipe the floor
With you.
dlndvi Hrlan i.rilnU. 1nnlrA
In church this morning!
.Mpojsviiicnuv she had nothing on her
mlntl but her Knsler hot!
"A famntiu nmtn linn fl,l,.....t.
faVBriln chair at a sale In London re-et-ntly."
"At ny rto, hn will find Hhakospearo's
elial? uuBlur to fin than his shos."
fliwnueF (ineeUnR ae'iualntanoej-irallo,
Pfrnrtl Oh, I bay, do you believe dreams
aa hit Annt m ! ah
mart j nn,
3potiger-Well, I ilrcnmt larl ulcht that
K nr. st
piy interns?
ircawniJiii
io CkmstioatiSft
1 WW "
, U i -tvajsTU-ATJOir
I -t
tjoocOTx
Cor
sr rv""T "vmw i
2aLS5.S!y?l,;'?iSr
fiKkoav AucXoxb mm HO
JTMUHUTnl. on fen
or 0, trot , botUo
Your printed matter is absoluteljyithout
value if it is .not read. " '
If It Is well illustrated, you will bo stire people
will read It. Furthermore, o picture often tcflo tho
story at a slnglo glance.
If you havo your cute and illuetnitionH
mndo in a newspaper engraving plant, you
may bo certain that they will print woll,
Tho requivoniontB of making outs for news
paper illustration aro go severe that It re
quires tho vory host ability and machinery,
Our RrtUtn, our plant, eonnlstlna of thn finest,
newoat and latent equipment, nnd our skilled work
men nro ol your command &t the vory lowest rates
for all klnda ot art and engraving work,
Bee Enrfravitirf Depatrhtietti
MM)
bEAUTIFULLY DARKENED WITH SAGE TEA.
Says ,Sago Tea Mlxod With
Sulphur Restores Natural
Colorand Lustroi
tirnv, faded i.r turned beautifully
dark and lustrous almost over night, l
a reality, If you'll take Uii trouble to
ml sawe tea and puiphur, but what's
tho iis, yuu Bit n large bottle ot the
reuiiyttn.ues tente, palled "Wyelh'a flam
and Bulphur Malr Itemed?'1 at dmj
atorac lfirr tor about M petUs, Millions
of bnitlsi of: '"Wyeth's" are sold an
nualiy, paj'S 4 well known druggist,' ba.
cause It darkens the hair so naturally
and evenly that no one can tell It hu
boon applied,
you just dampen a sponge or soft brush
with Wyeth'a Pago and flulphur and
DR. BRADBURY DENTIST
f 30ft Faroatn Bt.
SO Xaxm B
Ertrecttng 25c Up
rllllncc aoe t r
Crowns (2.SU I p
nrlrfgewQri. . . SS.HO I"p
rutec
...... icwj up
Pmtmet
Yourself
Ask for
ORIGINAL
GENUINE
The Food Drink
I asker ou for the loan of $10 and you
refused.
Nthart Then that proves my theory
you're not going to ask me. Good dayf
Boston 'transcript.
"Paw." Inquired the humorist's bimhIJ
son, looking up from Ills picture book,
"whnt Is r. toreador?"
The humorist rubbed his Mnmussary
glnnd for a minute,
"Well, my win," he replied, with tie:
liberation, "a toreador Is a bully boy of
Spain."
AN ANALOGY,
Boston Transcript.
V
"Pot
nan pfceralilui; cigar,"
p ho. 111; 4 a AiR
ft mi Is iJauail
To meet hit; mate
eh soma (ia, . "
Just pa am) titnn tha wan flatcs up
And. like tha 'weed" st; ped,
Wlltoi) us a ml a preeerist) the fact
lael Bonn dnth lose his head.
A man, like p, plgar, Kelt; I'aljort,"
And pemeUmoa nf tha town
Hoenmea the hiltt-ho also piav
Jie by a friend "thrown down;"
Same weeds, and Bums mun, tou. ace'
rank,
Pome Beareeli' have a flaw,
Pome nro Ilka aotors. Uiouh'h Veil puffc
They can't be made tn draw,
Wives see another likeness still
(Thnutjli Jhla Ihulr hiiBuanrts fjnut)
A man, like a olgap, la spoiled
It hfl b let ho out,
Anil lasily, this analogy
ThPli' finish does pot mar
Jlnth cwmo tn pshea In the end,
The man and tho cigar,
ear
r-
th ordlnftrr mi . nrr aim-
wostt oooat it, takes any old
ssvorwi tw a-quicx action,
cofttinuous reminder that yom
at any Druir stora to-dor.
rJMrl! An RRflV ffl?
draw It threueh your hair, UUIna n
emal strand at a time, Those whom
hlr Is turnlnar uroy, beonmlnfl; faded,
dry, Borasely and thin have a urnrjs
awattlnti them, leeaus4 after Just pun
application the aray hair vanishes and
your leeks become, luxuriantly dark and
beautifully all dandruff, goet, scalp itoh.
Ing and falling hair "taps,
This. Is (ha age ef youth, BTtiy. haired,
unattraatlve folks aren't wanted aroilnd,
pu get busy with the Butsa and Qulphiin
tunluht and you'll ba HniHawl nt ymir
youthful appearance and the real beauty
and healthy condition' of your hair With
Jn a faw days, Jmiulry at drutf more
hers shora that they sell je(a v(
"YVyeth'a flatja. and Bulphur" and tin
folUa UElnif it are cnthuslasn,
Phorman A MeOonneli Drvtj Ca joj Po,
lethi W So. lathi 997 N, milii Nth and
Farruim His- Advertisement,
ornca. Phono Dan.,
Mlsatns Teeth supplied
without Plates or Bridge
work. Nerves removed
without pain. Work irnar
auteetl ten year.
for all Ages Others are Imittiloai
SHBHsSBsBHaVa