r.T-wwyyw.-nu Jli I ,W WHIffl., l,! WjJH I .fim it- i 6 fllie Commoner. vault, and with a free mind swear that they least $50,000,000, and possibly would be double haven't it. For all they know the vault was that amount. Thus, and in view of other con robbed over night. The like devices by which the siderations, it is believed that the yearly loss of sensitive salve their consciences for the perjury over 700,000,000 credited to injurious insects in arc infinite. But the sensitive are in the minority. the United States is much below the actual fact. The hardier majority just swear their way It is a frightful tax upon the people, and the prob through it and have it over with. The art of tax- lem of lessening it is the most important that is dodging has developed to a point where the man presented to the economic entomologist." who tells the assessor the truth must pay any- .-0 where from five to twenty times his just propor- READER of The Commoner asks if it is trae iviom SClnnrn0V5q!mnt?fd 7 A that a man named Smiley wa indicted, ?n worn, JnHnE T JlntJ ?0h' tried and convicted by the federal authorities in ing woith mentioning is done to change it. KanBM on the chapg of vlolating the sherman - anti-trust law. E. J. Smiley is secretary of the THE POPULATION of Oklahoma, according to Kansas Grain Dealers' association, and he was William E. Curtis, who writes for the Chi- tried and convicted for having violated the anti- cago Record-Herald, is now estimated as being tru3t lav,' of the state of Kansas. The newspaper between, 700,000 and 750,000. Commenting upon reports have conveyed the impression that Smiley this statement tho Record-Herald says: "Ordi- was convicted under federal law. nary methods of calculating the probable rate vC of growth arc of little service because the country has held out such remarkable attractions for im- A DISTINGUISHED citizen of Kansas to whom migrants. There is very little waste laud, and - Tne Commoner referred the question makes What occurred during the decade 1S90-1900 was tnia statement "Several years ago, Smiley was an unprecedented change from a wilderness to convicted of said offense in the district court of a fully equipped modern community having a one ot the western counties of this state. Smiley density of population above the average in the appealed to the supreme court of this state, as west. The area is less than that of any of tho sailing the constitutionality of the state statute, states admitted since 1S20, except West Virginia. Tl.e supreme court of this state overruled his The population in 3900 was greater than that of contention, held the statute constitutional, and any one of those stales at the time of its ad- affirmed the judgment and sentence of the court mission to the union. We might make some in- below. Smiley prosecuted a writ of error from teresting comparisons in this connection with the supreme court of the state to the supreme some of tho older states, whose meager begin- court of the United States, upon the ground that nings aro forgotten because of their antiquity, the state court violated rights guaranteed to him but, considering tho growth of the whele country by the constitution of the United .States. The and the radical changes in the conditions of life, supreme court of the United States' affirmed the perhaps figures nearer our own time would be decision of the supreme court of this state, sus thought more significant. We give, therefore, the tained the conviction of Smiley, and, consequently, area and population of the states admitted since Smiley is compelled to serve out his sentence. 18S9 as they appear from the federal census of The newspaper clipping is misleading, in so far 1900, with Oklahoma's added: as it refers to ninety days sentence by the su- Area, Sq. Miles. Population. preme court of the United States. The sentence Junlio 84,800 161,772 was originally imposed by the state district court, Montana 140,080 ' 243,329 and the supreme court of the United States simply North Dakota 70,795 319,146 sustained the action of the district and supreme South Dakota 77,650 401,570 . courts of this state. Though the last court in yta", , 84,970 276,749 which the case was heard was the supreme court Washington GD.180 518,103 of tho United States, yet the offense of which A yenning . . . . ; 9790 92,531 Smiley was convicted and for which he was pun- UKiaiioma 39,030 398,331 ished, was an offense against the state law of "v-" Kansas. The decision of the supreme court of AnnnrmTxrr. ," thls stato was made b Chief Justice Doster, luukding to a writer in the Saturday Even- who was elected by the democrats and populists of ,i 'e 0 ' fc csts more to feed the bugs of Kansas. Judge Pollock, our present federal "if co,l"ltry than lt ioes to support the govern- judge, then a member of the supreme bench' dis- S?ifi 1. Tri eii, placAcs lhe entire national sentcd. The case will be found in volume 65 of r?v twnfw ?? "T. $700'00000 a year, and the Kansas reports at page 240, and has, of course, say mat that is the minimum annual tax imposed also .been published as decided by the supreme a nl?SieiC UD?!1. th oop of the Unlted states. curt of the United States in some recent number Accoiuing to this authority farm products, which of the supreme court reporter." represent a value of about $5,000,000,000 per annu-i, suffer a shrinkage of at least five hundred millions every year by the depreciations of insects, TV vr ARTIN M. FOSS writing in Peirsnn' Mnr Sf thS dameToTrf'f , H10 CSt M zine, mata iS inSeSTMSS forests an2 fumbor oto Zt' f In3ui7 wlth respect to "the cket-shops of the bol tasects ?n th rcomtrv rinHnt CaUSed by rl(L" Mr' Foss ss: "There were 8,291 books nrfl rLl , s country d uringan average year published in the United States last year of which are reckoned by experts of the department of 1,320 were" new editions leaving a total of fl 1971 2dfonffi Wffi hfy neW b0lS- f thiS Ulnbe" perha moo we e ?0,UOO,000, fruits, $27,000,000 forests and forest read the still-birthq of nnfiinra ?n iTi e never storage, $100,000,000. Total, $785,100,0P00aUCtS Sose boXiub!fshedSby Ve'LVoopera' Jive publishers' or 'authors' publishers and those np HE "HONORS" are distributed among the t?S2iWiawJUfh0PB themselves- The 'coopera- 1 insect kingdom by the departmenT of aSi- Ij E lZ SSUf b,tS at the author's ex" culture, and the statement showing Se mhiimum ov thlv ' fT ?in a11 ,o tbe profit How" annual damage done by fourteen" of So mSSt aulnorslifn witl Y flnttorf UDn tbe faIth of destructive insects as follows: Grasshopper .50- S iLLTr flattery, trickery, and deceit, 000,000; chinch bug, $60,000,000 Hessian flv' S40 ften capped by downright fraud such as few 000,000; Corn root worm, $20,000,000; corn $ear" Shn Jnf18 100? h, are " worm, $20,000,000; cotton boll weevil, $20,000 000- BhopB C lhe book worl(L 2n?f nS?11 ST' ?12'000'000; cotton leaf worm, -x ?b,uoo,000; codling moth of apple, $20,000,000; nn HE DiqHRAPTPMTTsjP t potato bug, $8,000,000; grain weevil smnnnnnn I JJibJUiiARTBNING experiences of the $298,000,000. T ffiS'l - Then the ambitious novelist receives aiefters HP HE POST writer says that a considerable "A: ,nf"f adam: We have rQad with the 1 item to be included in the annual insect JS?,n!!' ?0te eSt youp nove1' Hortense's Revenge, Is lhQ ,cost of Protection against the bugs S 1 t11 to GXPress our enjoyment of it. which attack the houso and food supplies, cloth- buroly yu have done an admirable piece of ing and carpets, and adds: "Screening against Yrk, re, strong in plot, clever in characteV- mosqultoes and flies and protection from rSaches Sf nf ? brGathless interest. We feel col clothes-motlis and various small parasites, with 5J??, of sook, and our head editor especially and without wings, are. a charge on every domes- ?Ye:aict a brilliant success for it. Unless we err tic establishment. If the. sums expended for de- ilT Ju5ment, it will be one of the hits of the fense against such posts were tabulated for the ?Bon' We 8houl(1 be most naPPy to issue your whole country, the annual total would be at" b? n 0Ur llsual terms-the author to pay half of the expense of manufacturing and marketing VOLUME 5, NUMBER 2t J? and t0 receive one-half the profit on. publlshinghouses pay the author but ten no, het of the retail prico as royalty." per cent TEW RESIST this temptation, according to Mr J7 Foss. In most cases tho money i3 ,innr: for "half the cost of manufacturing and mnrwd ing the book." Mr. Foss explains: g ffiw place, only one book in fifteen out of all tw It published pays a day laborer's wages, i K second place, the cooperative press charcca Cn $500 to $600 depending upon its judgment 0 S amount that can be procured. To manufacture an edition of five hundred or a tno--anu book? including the setting up of the type, the electro! type plates, the binder's dies, paper, printing and binding, costs perhaps $400, made as such books are made. If the author has 'ideas' as to how the book should be ornamented and illustrated the price jumps in a double ratio. So much for tho manufacturing. When the publisher has finished his work he has a neat profit of from $100 to $200 and often much more. But 'marketing!' Ah! that is the magic word behind which the publisher baffles the timid and dodge-; the insistent. A few copies are sent to the press, perhaps a few are placed on consignment with friendly booksellers, advertisements are inserted in a little magazine which such houses issue for just this purpose and which has no general circulation and that is all." THE authors can rarely prove anything, even if they try, and asMr. Foss says, "very few authors will try." He explains: "To 'jring action in the courts will be to reveal the maimer in which they found a publisher. If the book had sold by hundreds of thousands ah! that would only show that their faith and judgment were superior to those of the publisher. That would bo a glorious triumph! It is quite another story to go into court in an endeavor to prove that only two hundred and fifty copies had been print ed. When a man has posed for months beforo admiring friends and proud relatives as an author, he prefers oblivion. It is indicative of the charac ter of many of the men who enter this sort f business that they are frequently caught by the law in more ambitious thefts. Clever criminals usually fail because they tire of the small, safe deals. Cooperative publishers have wrecked thefr concerns by individually plundering the treasury. These are recorded facts. The unrecorded facts can be found only in the ashes of hearts that glowed with faith; in the lines of faces that have lost hope and in homes that have been reduced to discomforts. The masterpieces which jour neyed with eternal hope are in the scavenger's pots." WHAT IS KNOWN as "The Acre Club" has been organized in a neighborhood twenty miles southeast of Muskogee, in the Cherokee Na tion. A reader of The Commoner writes: "Far mers in this community under the leadership of Campbell Russell, have organized the Acre club. This club is composed of the meat progressive farmers in this section and each member agrees, on joining, to cultivate one acre In some useful farm crop, adapted to that locality. This aero is to have especial care. It is to be made to produce, as near as possible, a perfect crop. A written account must be kept of date and man ner of preparing land, planting and cultivating crop, and all expenses connected with the same. When the crop is ready to harvest, each member of the club is invited to come and bring his wife and spend the day. The men gather the crop, measure or weigh the same, and learn just what the acre actually does produce. After dinner the report of the farmer raising this particular acre is received. All members learn, not only just what the production is, but the cost of the same. An opportunity ir; then given for all who wish to criticise the report, and suggest where im provements might have been made in the produc tion of the crop. The membership of this par ticular club U limited to twenty members, not because there aro not enough suitable crops 10 go around (each member on joining must select some crop not already on the list); but because it is believed that a larger membership would be difficult to handle at times. There is no limiw however, to the number of clubs that may W organized, nor any patent on the idea. Incident ally the club has seen fit to offer a nice piece 01 silverware as a premium to the lady who provides the best and most appropriate dinner. Tnjs..l be awarded on a ballot vote at the end of tne year, vote to bo secret, so that each man can vote entirely according to the dictates of nj own stomach. We can not allow tho men miica credit for this, as there is evidently a seliisn motive behind this premium." &y 1 - ' li'iiilr 'i"i "t nUV'T'liliiifMiriii -J A ,kiin ii - " - '- - - . . IMftk Ml, j .. M - . T" im irrTBifiTiMfliMi nriMman -J---