Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 07, 1907, EDITORIAL SECTION, Page 10, Image 10

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    10
THE OMAHA DAILY REE: SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7. 1907.
FOUNDED BT EDWARD ROBEWATER.
VlCTOn ROPE WATER, EDITOR.
ijitiil m Omaha Poetofflce a aeoond-
matter.
TERMS Or SUBSCRIPTION.
Luily I (without Sunday), on year..$4 00
I'anjp Hee and Sunday, one year
Sunder Bee, on year
Saturday H, one year 1
DELIVERED BT CARRIER.
Dairy lift: (Including Sunday r. per week..l
llly Bee (without Sunday), pet wk,.10c
tivanlng l (without Sunday), per week e
Bver.lng llee (with Sunduy), per wk...lOo
Addinss all complaint of Irregularities In
lollveiy lo City circulation Depsrtment.
orricES.
Omsha-Th liee Building.
Ortuth Omaha City Hall Building.
Council Bluffs M Scott Street.
Chiraao 16i) Unity Building.
New r ork-l&iw Home Life lnauranC Bdg.
Washington wn Fourteenth Street.
(XJRHESl'ON PENCE
rVwnmunlcatlrnia relating to newi and edi
torial matter rtoit1d le addressed, Omaha
Bee, Editorial Department.
filTMITTlVCM
Remit hT draft, exoress or postal order
syable to The Bee Publishing Company.
nry I-ccnt stamps received in pivmfni vi
mil Irnnnl. iiiMnnnl eflorkS. XCPt CT1
Dmaha or eastern exchange, not accepted.
mil Omaha Daily litb ; - e
vnne tne federal courts in ruosi 01
the southern states have been prompt
In Issuing injunctions restraining the
enforcement of state laws regulating
railway rates, pending a final hearing
of the cases in the higher courts, Judge
Speer of the federal court In Georgia
has denied the application to enjoin
the operation of the state law as asked
by the railways. The refusal Is based
on the fart that although the railway
had months In which to litigate the
matter It waited until the last day
before asking for relief. Judge Speer
stated that he could not grant an In
junction, under such circumstances, but
would fix a hearing for a future date
and that, in the meantime, the railroad
must obey the state law.
The decision of the Georgia federal
court Is significant, as It comes at a
time when the war between Governor
Comer of Alabama and the railroads
of that state has reached a critical
stage. The railroads of Alabama have
issued a pamphlet, in which their case
Is reviewed at length, and much of
which Is devoted to personal and po
litical assaults upon the governor. The
entire document looks more like a
campaign circular than a petition or
showing to a court of Justice. Out of
the discussion of the Georgia and Ala
bama cases has come a new element
too, frequently overlooked In the settle
ment of railroad matters In the courts.
The stockholders of railroads In both
Georgia and Alabama have united In
a statement to the effect that they do
not approve the action of the railway
managers. These stockholders con
tend that the managers. Instead of
being progressive, are always Intoler
ant of change and spend too much of
their time in predicting disaster from
state legislation, although their rail
roads have prospered constantly.
Tne Speer decision has served to
Etrengthen the hands of the stock
holders and may result in convincing
the railroad managers of the south
that the interests entrusted to their
care are not to be promoted by fighting
every regulative law Irrespective of Its
merits.
STATEMENT Of CIRCULATION,
ttate of Nebraaka. Dnuglas county. Jv
Oeorg B. Tischuck. treasurer of The
Be IMhllshlng Company, being duly
worn, say -that the actual number or
full nnd complete corls of The Dally
Morning. Rvenlag- and Sunday Bee print!
during- the month of August, 1907, was aa
Tollows:
1
4.......
6.
7..
S
11
10...'
11
12
13.
14
15
16
Total
38,750 1 7 3S.040
36JMQ . ..It .3B.B00
37,040 5 9 37 ISO
38.S0O 20........ 37.000
37.440 $1 36.640
36.C30 It 36,3
36,700 . 21.'. 86,980
3M80 24 36,990
36,000 2 5... 35,600
3880 28 " 88,780
35.6BO 27 3680
37.840 iS a6 40
37.110 . 29 86,500
30,700 30 36,540
38,770 SI 38,140
36,650
1,138,320
Net total 1,1J6,374
Dally average 36,354
GEO. Ii. TZ3CHCCK,
Treasurer.
Subscribed In mv presence and aworn to
before mo this 31st day of August, 1907.
Seal) M. B. H UNGATE,
Notary Public.
WUEN OUT OP TOWN.
altarrtbers tearing; the city tem
porarily ahonld hate The Bee
' Mailed to them. Addicn will lie
. chanced aa often aa rcwiareted.
Uncle Sam has denied the use of
the malls to Prof. Jay, a love expert.
Blue Jay?
. Did you ever notice how few auto
mobiles are wrecked on the way to
church on Sur.day morning?
Stockmarketltls is a disease almost
entirely confined to New York and en
virons. The west is lmmuue.
retirement The new order should give
the younger men a chance to show
their mettle.
CHARACTXR1S TIC.
It Is characteristic for the demo
cratic World-Herald to trim Us sails
cn the republican candidate for su
preme Judge before even the vote of
the primary has been canvassed. Dur
ing the preliminary campaign Judge
Reese had nil its sympathy and encour
agement. As viewed through its eye
glasses, he was the first choice of re
publicans who were really enlisted In
the cause of reform and was being op
posed only by railroad lawyers and
corporation retainers doing the bid
ding of old ring bosses. The railroad
machine was pictured as straining
every resource to prevent the nomina
tion of Judge Reese.
Bucketsfull of crocodile tears were
shed for poor Judge Reese and every
rope of sympathy was thrown out to
the Reese followers by the democratic,
organ to make it easy for them to
climb into the basket of the demo
cratic balloon in case Judge Reese
should be defeated for nomination.
Had Judge Sedgwick won, the World
Herald would' Immediately have told
every republican who voted for Reese
that to stay with the republican ticket
would mean to turn the party back to
the railroads and that their only con
sistent course would be to fall in line
behind the democratic standard
bearer. But now that Judge Reese has
proved victorious In the primary, the
sympathy game has been promptly de
clared off. According to the World
Herald, Reese Is now nothing but a
fake reformer. It Is now sure that
the railroads were not really against
him or he would not have come out
money. Those Cincinnati traveling
men must have it figured out that
Bryan is to continue on the road mak
ing Chautauqua circuits for an indefi
nite period.
Colonel Bryan has not struck a very
happy phrase In calling Secretary Taft
"The Great Postponer." Colonel
Bryan started out for government
ownership of railroads, but then an
nounced that he was willing to post
pone It until after he should be given
a chance to prove that government
regulation Is a failure.
Some timid souls are imagining that
the American fleet will be in danger
from hostile forces If it undertakes
that proposed Journey to the Pacific.
Possibly. But way back In the Amer
ican brain Is a lingering notion that a
battleship was built with the Idea of
meeting dangers and overcoming hos
tile forces.
The State Railway commission is
wasting a lot of valuable time on com
plaints against the Lincoln Traction
company, which Involves only a local.
Issue, at best, and which on the sur
face looks like part of a stock-Jobbing
game. Such local affairs should be
sidetracked until the main line Is
cleared.
If Omaha's streets are dirty, at
whose door is the blame if not at the
door of the democratic city administra
tion? The street cleaning force Is di
rectly under the control of the mayor
and council, who cannot shift respon
sibility upon anyone else.
Burglar Burrler has been arrested
for violating the terms of his parole
and Is In danger of being returned to
the penitentiary bv Governor Cnm-
aneaa.. u nas re-aiscoverea mui ne mn.
' Consul General Michael sagely re
ports that India Is feeling very blue
over a Mortage of the Indigo crop.
' Thr Washington ball team Is rain-
bouna In Boston, but the team Is not
wording a bit. Its position' is cinched.
! Score a victory for Esperanto. The
giest Of honor at a society affair, In
'lx Angeles la referred to aa the
Mark Hanna is blamed for the or
ganization of the Coal trust, but it will
be difficult to hold him responsible for
its continuance.
The Increased tonnage reported by
western railroads is not all due to the
fact that Mr. Taft has been traveling
In this section of the country.
It Is rot true that the Society of the
Colognelal Dames is responsible for the
movement to have the bathing beach
at Newport properly perfumed.
Railroad managers are now wishing
they had spent more of the earnings
In betterments In the last few years
Instead of using them for dividends
on wal-srcd stock.
bacb nror. Knr local
The race question Is presented In a
new form by the riots at Belllngham,
Washington, In which nearly 1,000
Hindu workmen have been driven from
the lumber camps and forced to return
to Canada, to secure protection from
the British authorities. The Belllng
ham incident seems to have been fully
as 'disgracoful as the assaults upon
the Japanese by the "unwhlpped mob"
of San Francisco.
Details of the causes leading up to
the rule of the mob are wanting, but
It Is evident-that the law was defied
and little effort made by the civil au
thorities to protect, the victims from
the fury of mob passion and prejudice.
It remains to be explained how, the
Hindus were admitted to positions in
the sawmills of the Belllngham dis
trict It must be accepted, in the ab
sence of information to the contrary,
that they complied with the rules and
regulations of the Immigration bu
reaus, In which case they were entitled
to the same protection that is pledged
to American citizens.
The difficulty at Belllngham, as in
San Francisco, New York, in the south
and wherever the law is overturned
by the mob, seems to have been that
men did not stop to investigate the
question of blame. Whites side with
white and black with black without
investigation. The men do not ask
what is right, but simply back their
own race, preferring to help with their
own race In crime rather than to make
an effort to suppress crime.
The remedy for the situation in
Washington, as In the south and
wherever mob rule obtains, Is punish
ment for the guilty.
has a bad record, which alone Is re
sponsible for his defeat the last time
he ran. It is convinced that those re
publicans who voted for Judge Reese
at the primary were misguided and
those who voted for Judge Sedgwick
should refuse to accept the verdict.
It follows that to please the World
Herald every republican should get
ready to vote the democratic ticket.
This Is the regular performance of
Our amiable democratic contemporary
every year and It Is on the boards to
be repeated with countless variations
from now until November.
After all tho arguments have been
nndo, if the president of the United
State wants the fleet of battleships to
go to the Pacific, it Is a safe wager
that tho fleet will go.
Omaha's public school teachers have
been officially notified where they are
to guide the young Idea during the
coming year. Applications for trans
fers are now in order.
. William Randolph Hearst's Labor
day address was a pretty good Illus
tration of the kind of advice to be ex
pected from a man who has done alt
his hard work by proxy.
Judge Parker says he does not want
office. The only time he decided he
wanted to be president the peoplo re
versed his decision and he can find
do good ground for appeal.
'.The president has thrown away his
straw hat. The temperature may be
lower In Oyster Bay than It Is here
and then, again, the president may
have the price of a new derby.
Turkey and Persia threaten to go to
war. Let them go. Most of our Turk
ish cigarettes are made In Tlttsburg
and nearly all the Persian rugs are
manufactured In New Jersey.
What does It mean." asks a Phila
. delpMa paper, "when a young man Is
allowed to go from hts'botel to a res
taurant for hi breakfast, clad only In
his nyjamss?" It means that Phila
delphia nrei's n new police force.
"Tc'ldpt" t in Is beaten Is sure
tha i' e rntiirtnt'.on of party tickets by
dlf "'ru:'ry vote is a bad thing and
aM'iV. ho a'ny with. The randi
er' vr t-s out is convinced that
, lb ''ert nirr.aiy Is the true way to
register the voire of the people.
rtvyctR xayal officers.
Naval circles are all agog over the
announcement that the president has
decided completely to reorganize the
official staff of the battleships that
will make the trip to the Pacific this
winter, by relegating most of the pres
ent commanders to shore duty and fill
ing their places with younger officers.
Eighteen vessels are to participate In
the impending demonstration and it is
stated that only four of these are to
be commanded by their present cap
tains, while the other fourteen are
committed to younger men.
Much discussion of the plan and
more or less protest on the part of
the friends of the older officers may
i be expected, but the decision will
doubtless have a beneficial effect upon
the service. It will serve no purpose
to argue that Admiral Dewey was over
60 years of age when he won that
victory In Manila Bay and that Schley
and Sampson were well advanced lo
years at the time of the Santiago fight.
The fact remains that the chief source
of complaint among officers of the
navy Is that promotions come too
slowly and that the best years of a
Junior officer are spent In subordinate
commands. It Is contended that the
services of the older men are In de
mand In official capacity in the depart
ment at Washington and at the navy
yards where their experience Is an as
set of great value, while he men who
are In their physical prime are better
fitted to endure the stress of active
campaigning.
The proposed plan Is not necessarily
a reflection upon the older men, but
Is designed to give. the younger cap
tains an opportunity to gain experi
ence valuable to the country In future
years and future campaigns. Under
the present system, the naval officer
does not normally reach command until
within a very few years of compulsory
fibsMESS AND CCRREXCY DJMAXD.
Secretary Cortelyou's success in re
lieving the money market for the fall
crop moving campaign without in any
way aiding or Interfering with the
plans of the speculative- Interests in
Wall street has won prompt and em
phatic approval from the business pub
lic nnd the bp.nkers of the country.
For many years, since Secretary Bout
well first went to tho aid of Wall
street, about thirty years ag6, It has
been the custom of secretaries of the
treasury to transfer federal money to
the New York bunks, In times Of stress
and strain, and a very, large share of
this money has found. Its. way Into tho
hands of the speculators. Apparently
there was no way to prevent this, but
Secretary Cortelyou has undertaken to
solve the problen by disassociating the
federal treasury with the needs of
Wall street.
Under the Cortelyou plnn, the fed
eral money, of which there 13 a vast
accumulation In the treasury, is being
released In weekly installments, not to
Wall street, but to national deposi
tories In the region where the funds
aro needed for crop moving. He plans
to place about 30,000,000 In the
banks In the west and central west,
recognizing the fact that from the
middle of August "funds" In all forms,
lawful money and bank credits move
westward. In the meantime, gold is
flowing into the1 treasury from the cus
toms houses and Mr. Cortelyou is de
positing this with eastern banks, as
He should write at once to El
mer E. Thomas, to Intercede for him
again.
"I have salved my conscience for
the last time in voting for a man who
steals the raiment of democracy," says
George Fred Williams of Massachu
setts. Oh never mind. No one would
care to steal the remnant of the raiment.
One of the wealthiest women in
Paris has made a will dividing her
estate equally between her lawyers and
her physicians. That must have been
done to save time In getting the money
where It would go eventually.
riling; l' Tronble.
St. Lou la Globe-Democrat.
The west Is making all Kinds of trouble
for the railroads, chiefly by raining more
corn than the railroads can haul.
Retreat for the Hoo-llooa.
. Portland Orcconlan.
Attacked on one alo by the railroads In
the wny of prohibitive rntea on the mill
product and threotened on tho other by the
government, the Lumber truat may have
to take to the woods. '
OTHER LAMDS Tit A Ot'RS.
Japan) la proceeding with its plans of
Vaorbmg Corea with characteristic vigor.
The dlacontented native elements which
resist hasty assimilation and have taken
up arm In defense of Corean autonomy,
have been pursued Into remote sectlona of
the country, and the captives disposed of
In a way that puts them ot a permanent
peace footing. Rigorous treatment of re
bellious natives has cooled the ardor and
sealed the lips of those Coreans who pre
fer living under Japanese rule to a hole In
a hli:.de. Outwardly the majority main
tain a peaceful front. As a reward of
merit Japan pulls a soft glove over the
"mailed fist,-' pays the expenses of a
ceremonious enthronement of a Corean
dummy emperor, and votes a large subsidy
for replenishing Corean finances, and
stimulating business. The Hermit King
dom, long a buffer state between China
and Japan, Is aa good as wiped off the map
and securely anchored to empire of Japan.
It Is not nn unexpected event. Prom the
moment Japan made Corea a base of sup-
pllea In the war with Russia, the doom of
the peninsula aa an Independent state was
sealed. It wua vital to Jopan In war; In
pence It forms an essential part of the em
pire's policy of aggrandisement. The fate
of Corea .would have been the same had
Russia won. How well It will serve the
Imperial plans of the enlarged empire time
will determine. Forming the land route
Into Manchuria, which Japan seeks to
dominate nt the expense of China, It Is
likely to become a powerful factor In the
predicted struggle for supremacy between
China and Japan.
a
The tribute paid in Europe annually by
American tourists Is sufficient to keep the
wolf from the doors of hotelkeepera. shop
keepers, and the large and small fry lean
ing on the purses of globe trotters. F.stl
mates of this year's distribution of Ameri
can coin abroad puts the sum at 975,000,000,
enough to knock a larga hole In America's
balance of trade. It Is definitely known
that 150,000 Americans crossed the ocean.
Fstlmatlng the average expense of each at
$500 produces the total of $75.0,000. This
Is a very simple, though not an exact way
of figuring the total expenses of Americans
abroad. Doubtless a great many travelers
of moderate means spend less than $500.
Where ona lteepa below that sum two will
exceed It, and others rcunt the cost by
thousands Instead of hundreds. A large
percentage of rich Americans spend monsy
lavishly. They have created new and
more costly standards of hotels In Eu
ropean cities, and next to royalty are the
most liberal patrons of , jewelry, picture
and clothing shops. In London alone ona
writer calculates that Americans this year
have spent $7,500,000. At one of the largest
hotels which has housed 6.600 Americans
since March, the average bill has been $30.
There are at least five hotels which can
give similar figures, and Resuming that the
average American spends besides $125 In
London, which Is not an extravagant esti
mate, the writer reaches his total as the
result of his Investigations. Even the beg
gars, who line the road to the crest of
Mount Vesuvius, report a season of greater
prosperity than any In the records of the
profession.
The Yellow Book Issued by the British
Board of Agriculture presents Interesting
statistics In regard to the consumption of
meat In the United Kingdom which reveal
one of the causes of the Increased average
price of meats of all kinds. Over $1,000,000,
000 worth of food was Imported Into Great
Britain last year, a larger amount than
usual, and the Increase In the amount of
meat rurchosed abroad was greater relat
ively than that of the other food products,
Conviction Forced Home.
Philadelphia Inquirer.
Wall street may fume and fret, but
when the people see. their coal bllle In
creasing and know that there Is no reason
for It except the reosop of gTeed they get
the Impression snmfcbow that President
Roosevelt Is on the right track when he
seeks to control great corporations In the
Interests of the public.
PRINCE WILLIAM OF SWEDE.
Visitor Revive Meaaorlea of Early
rredes la America.
Boston Ulobe.
Time's kaleidoscopic changes are Illus
trated In the visit of rrlnce William of
Sweden, who was entertained In part by
descendatts of the kin of old Teter Stuyva
Bant, who destroyed the transient connec
tion of Sweden with the colonial history of
the United States by driving the Swedish
colonists out of the country In the middle
of the seventeenth century.
The young man who will be enter
tained by the city of Most on Is not, of
course, a lineal descendant of the royal
house of Sweden that occupied the throne
In those days, but he must be familiar with
the history of his country, and he must
have been Interested In meeting tha de
scendants of the houses of Stuyvesant.
Beekman, Fish and Livingston, who were
of the family of Peter Stuyvesant, the
testy but vigorous Putch governor of New
Amsterdam 250 years ago.
There was a time when the Swedes were
making an heroic effort to colonlre perma
nently In America. Just 270 years ago the
Swedish West India company sent out a
colony of Swedes and Finns, who arrived
early tho next year, and, purchasing all
the lands from Cape Henlopen to the falls
near Trenton, erected a fort at the mouth
of Christina creek.
They named the country New Sweden, or.
In their own tongue. Nja Svertge. Subso
quently they settled mostly within the
present limits of Pennsylvania. The Dutch
claimed the country by right of discovery
and settlement, and they prepared for the
expulsion of the Intruders.
The struggle did not last long, the
Swedish forts were reduced and all the
colonists who refused allegiance to Holland
were sent to Europe.
Sweden at that period was one of tit
greatest nations of Europe. Its powerful
monarch, Gustavua Adolphus, was dead.
but his brilliant daughter, Christina, who
succeeded him. had made her court famous
by Inviting to It the greatest scholars and
philosophers of the time, and when she
abdicated It waa In favor of her cousin,
Charles X, who made Europe ring with
hla military exploits.
Charles XI, who came after him, proved
himself an administrative genius, and ha
was succeeded by the most brilliant, though
not the greatest figure. In Swedish history.
Charles XII, who, If he had concluded
peace at the height of his success, could
have been for many years by far the
mightiest potentate In northern Europe.
It was during this period also that Rus
sia emerged as a united and growing state,
and that Prussia began to display some of
those qualities which ultimately made It
aupreme In Germany, while the house of
Brunswick occupied the throne of Great
Britain, Sweden's glory declined colncl
dently with the ascension of these powers.
It la Interesting to note that the acquisi
tion of Norway, which was one nf the
dreams of Charles XII, was realised by
the ancestor of our royal visitor, Prince
William, the French Marshal Bernadotte,
who was Invested .with the Swedish crown.
POLITICAL URIFT.
Since his eplel at Jamestown aome Wall
street critics regard Hearst as the most
conservative In the presidential class.
Mayor Ha hood of iuitlnore Is s. wise
one. He dodged the Job of umpiring
baby show.
A Mr. U'Ren aspires to represent Ore
gon In th United Staes senile. The
New York Sun's hall of fame misses murb.
Inspiring material.
Politics continue warm and breety down
south. Tom Watson solemnly asserts
that Alabamas senator-to-be. John Shar;
Williams. Is "a corporation doodlebug."
The mayor of Erie. Pa., has been ousted
from oftVe because he violated th b v
against campaign treating. Cigars, prob
ably. The punishment occasionally ins
the crime.
Senstor Forsker has written a letter
decrying the polliw of divorcing munici
pal government from part
Cl.lo senator neglected tc
cautionary postscript,
Congressman Theodore tlurton of Cleve
land has decided to make the race for
mayor of Cleveland against Tom 1. John
son. The latter Is finishing his third
term and has uch a grip that a strong
man Is needed to give him a Jolt. Bui
ton belongs to the Jolting class.
The penal cod of New York state ha
been enriched with a law, effective Sep
tember 1, regulating campaign expense
by committees, candidates or corporations.
The law grew out of Hearst's race for
governor, which cost $i$0,090, accordln
to his own statement. In the future
ex Tenses of candidates for various office
are limited, as follows: Congressman,
$4,000: governor, $10,000; other stat offi
cers, $.000; state senator, $2,000; mem
ber of state assembly. $1,000; other P"b
llc officers, $600. .The law allows csjvll
dstes In the latter class to burn ?3 addi
tional for each 100 votes over 0,000 cast
at the last preceding general election.
divorcing munici
larty politics. "VVj
to add the tnmrr
Burn this."
SOLID AS A ROCK.
Why Amerlcnn Prosperity Success
fully Resists Attack.
Chicago Inter Ocean.
According to figures collected by the
American Agriculturist the earning of our
farmers this year, with crops averaging 10
per cent less In volume than last year,
It Is pointed out by the British authorities will be $1,000, 000,000 greater. This Increase
that this Is significant. In view of the fact Is the result of Increased prices.
There should be no delusion ebogt the
meaning of these figures. Higher prices
cannot make up to everybody directly the
deficiency of products which causes thorn.
In one sense, and In a very direct way, the
millions of people who are not fanner
will "pay for the prosperity" of th farm
ers. However, the situation will In time
that there has been no diminution In the
home supply of meats. It Is proof that
the people of Great Britain are eating more
meat than formerly, owing to Improved In
dustrial conditions. This Is further shown
by the fact that the consumption of Im
ported breadstulTs has Increased to a
smaller extent despite the fact t'.int there
was a reduction In the home supply. The ; adjust -Itself, and the more easily because
facilities for packlnc meats hove been very j the situation of the farmer Is at the very
much enlarged during the Inst twenty-flve ! foundation of the general welfare. As the
years, and the murkets of the world have j American Agriculturist says:
been opened to the packers bv Improve- i The farmer was never In so healthy n
mnt In trananortiitlon under refrigeration. ! position as he Is today. The Increase In
Mat FnriiM fpnm l.ltlamnfau " . .. ....'tne value or Ills real estate nas ben prortl-
nr i . I This has made tne torcisn mem consume Kiolis. He owes less money than overbc-
v orld crK. trihntarv in tVis American Daeklnsr trade : fore. He has greater asacta than ever.
juane u Bcepi m, iuv.tb irmnj a)tered calculations as to supply ami
any litigant or possible litigant. There ,jemana, xy,, maiVt for meats is never
was a Captain Stone, a friend, connected gluUed nowadays, and in consequence the
with a telephone company. Captain Stone J fM of bef mutton nnd pork ,re higher
was requested to render his bill for Judge , throu(rnout tne yettr. Tlie demand upon
Taft's private 'phone. The bill did nofap-jthe Amerlcan meat Buppiy will Increase as
pear and the Judge sent for tt. He added j U)e conrtlUon of ,n foreign consumer Im-
a message that If It was not forthcoming
he would be compelled to have the 'phone
taken out of his house. His attitude was
the same toward railroad passes. He never
rode free except on his own receivership
roads.
Sanctimonious Coal Trast.
Indianapolis News.
There never was an anthracite trust;
proves, and therefore prices will tend up-
HIs wants are greater. He la In the mar
ket lor more and better breeding stock,
farm Implements, household gouds and
other merchandise.
The farmer has had eight or nine fat
yeuis. Even this year is not a lean one,
but merely less fat than some others. H
has paid his debts, even on what are some
times called the "Impoverished" farms of
ward unless there Is an increase in the j the east. No Industrial group of our peoTle
number of cattle, hogs and nhecp. j ao generally free from debts.
a I The farmer has accumulated n surplus.
The French lawa against the congrega- He has made and Is making Improvements
tlons sometimes entails great hardships, i of all kinds. He has money In the bank.
At Chartres. there Is an orphan asylum j Of course there are Individual exceptions,
known as the "Maison Bleue." Founded j the victims of their own unthrlft or of
half a century ago by the Abbe Lscomte, It I special misfortune. But they are the excep
Im. taken care of hundreds of poor ' tlon. As a rule, the prosperity of our
Sl.NSV OEMS.
there la none now: the roads and coal com
panics never mad any combination; they 1 oruhans. teaching sewing and various kinds , farmers Is deep, broad and exuberant.'
are all doves of Innocence, they are; they I 0f manual labor, besides giving a fair' It is fortunate for the whole country that
are the true forerunners of the mlllenlum, ,i, .ration. Now Its doors must be closed this is so. It gives our prosperity a
the Importers are largely in the east. I they are; all they are striving for Is the only an extreme antl-clerlcal could look i strength In Us foundations which enables
He is carrying about $60,000,000 of
government money In the national
banks and adding to these deposits by
placing the additional money where
there is Immediate demand for it in the
channels of legitimate trade and com
merce. As a result, apprehension has
given way to assurance and the threat
ened money panic is now a thing of
the past. If the results are as satis
factory as they seem, the Cortelyou
plan of dealing with such emergencies
will doubtless be made permanent.
good, the true and the beautiful; they have jon tni, .potlatlon with complacency. As It to withstand the many, attack made
never sinneo nor areamea or sin, put. j-enn- ; onB wrter put It: "There must now be an upon it. inai w nave noi in mis country
eylvanla and th United States have failed j nventory made of the modest patrimony today a general depression, and even panic,
to give them the protection that their right- cf tnMB children, of their humble beds, we owe not to the wisdom of our states
eousness and beojevolence entitled them to; cio(ne, ad even the wooden benches upon ; manshlp, nor to the sagacity of finance,
and so forth ami so following and some h,ch jhey once Hat n the refectory." This but to those blessings of Divine Providence
more. But meanwhile competition In an- , d ,ne caie ot llie two sisters manifested no amply In the frultfulnesa of
thraclte remain, absolutely eliminated and j who artPr tnelr con. ; the .oil.
obliterated and outrageous prices arc sonu- n forbldden , . Whlle many of us have been, and still
now maintain. .,e snuirscn. P-P' togPthrr DecaU.e they would then bo are. about as destructive In our conduct M
mv tw the ana-ela that Haer dcacrlbes: but .live logenn uou-v ' ... . . .
' . ' "...mmunltv" or "consrrcgatlon.
If they are they hava succeeded In so care
fully and completely disguising their char
acter and quality that no single person In
this broad land has ever even suspected
they wer whiter than th thing they
deal In.
r: tub Minorni.
Lincoln newspapers are criticising
severely the Indecent character of many iNaviaratioa as Means of Cheapening
of the side 6hows licensed to prey upon
state fair visitors and are calling on
the state fair managers to establish a
censorship cf the Midway for the fu-
Coal Sapnly.
8t. Louis Republic.
With a safely ravlgable channel In the
Missouri river as far up as Omaha and
Sioux City we should hear no more talk
ture. Omaha's Alt-far-Ben carnival iof coal famine In th. northwest during
the billiard season.
From the mine of Illinois, close to the
has weeded out the vulgar and objec-
tlonablo pretty well, but it must seo rivri barges would, during the summer and
to It that the bars are not let down at i early fall, carry all the coal needed to dis-
any time. Tho clean character of Alt- I tnbuting points along th river, whence th
or. ... , . . . ! rallroada would carry it by short hauls to
Bar-Ben s entertainment has had a jth nolgUborhod. , whlcn (l bMrnM.
great deal to do with its pre-eminent with such a channel the hundreds of
success and the standard must be kept minions of bushels of grain and the nun
up.
It Is reported that Governor Shel
don Is going to Inquire into the death
of James McGlrr, supposed to have
been murdered by a mob of Greek la
borers In Merrick county. What is
the governor going to do about the
death of Lorls Higglns, known to have
been murdered by a mob of farmers
and farm hands in Thurston county?
Is one murderous mob any better or
worse than another?
Cincinnati traveling men have given
Mr. Bryan a fine trunk and traveling
bag as a souvenir to recompense him
for aa address recently delivered to
them for which be refused to accept
In an Interesting article In th current
Harper s Weekly, Saint Nlhal Sing of th
Punjab says of hla country, which Lord
Curxon declared to be "the pivot of the
British empire." that It Is on the brink of
revolution: "Already bloody demonstration
have taken place In different parts of India
The Punjab, at ono end of the country, is
rent with riots. The two Bengals, at the I
other extremity, are proclaimed hotbeds of
i sedition, im (iitiiucnur. -j
Madras are disaffected. The unreet In
Calcutta, the uprisings In Rawalpindi, the
riots In Lahore, and the agitation In Bom
bay and Madras, separated from one an
other by hundreds of miles. Indicate that
community of Interest Is binding the races,
nationalities and castes of Hlndostan to
gether. Inspiring tliem to act In concert.
A subtle chord of sympathy appeara to run
through the length and breadth of the land.
Thla Is a new development for India. The
country, notorious for Its antagonisms of
castes, creed, color, custom, climate, and
language, now seems to pulsate at its
vital centers with the same heart throbs."
"Any Port In a brw."
Kansas City Times.
When th aubject of 2-rent fare was be
fore the Kansas legislature the abl rail
road attorneys protested that the question
one that should be left to me uoara
It Is possible for human beings to be.
thanks to the amplitude of Its foundations,
our prosperity still endures.
"What kind of lace trimming did that
lady elocutionist have on her drers at the
entertainment I mean, the one wno re
cited 'Selections from tho Celtic Wit?'"
"1 guess It. was Irish point." Haltlmore
American.
"What'd ye say ve win lookln' fer, n.is
ter? "Local atmosphere."
"You hit the rlht place. We're In tin
heart of the cyclone bell.,' Washington
Herald.
Alice I rather like that young Thompson.
He has such a good, firm mouth and chin.
Hasel Goodness! Has he been klasin;
you, too? New York Telegram.
"That candidate Is not what you mic'.-.t
call a brilliant man, but he newr deceived
anybody."
"No," answered Senator Sorghum; "he
never deceived anybody, but that 1 a
much due V the alertness of popular per
ception aa to frankness on his part."
Washlngton Star. v
"John has wrote a sketch," said the nit
man, "and had It printed In the paper."
"(Join to be a IIUrary man, is he?"
"I reckon so. He's Just drawed on nn
for $50!" Atlanta Constitution.
"I told the governor I had engaged
tutor to get me on ahead, and the o6
man was so pleased that he sent me an
extra check for the tutor's expense."
"I didn't know you were having prlvata
coaching."
"I haven't. He Isn't that kind of a
tutor. He'a a chauffeur." Philadelphia
Press.
"Don't deceive me. doctor! Tell me th
truth! Will my boy get well?"
"Get well? Why, madam, he Is In n
more danger of dying than you are. Th
car wheels didn't touch him. It was th
rear platform he was trying to grab."
"The little rascal! I'll whip him within
an inch of his life for giving me such a
scare." ChlcagoTrlbune.
'You can't show mo a single reason."
l U-iru VI IB 1 1 i " ' ' . " ........... -
down here for the month of September.
"What!" cried his wife, pointing to tholl
quartet of marriageable daughters; "I can
show you four single reasons." Philadel
phia Press.
Wife (scornfully) Oh, I've no doubt you
were at your literary club reciting poetrj
till this hour of the night. And. pray, whal
wer you reciting?
Husband (remtiilscently) I think wash
something 'bout "Chips that Pash In tin
Night." Baltimore American.
"Johnny, how do you ' like your new
teacher?"
"She's a peach. I'm going to marry her
when I grow up,"
"That's what you aald about the teachet
In your room last year. Don't you love hei
any more?"
"Naw! She let a big, ugly man marry
her about two months ago." Chicago
Tribune.
STILL A IIOY.
Frank H. Flanner In The Reader.
"Still a boy" we heard one say
To another, half In Jest.
Then fun wrinkles Joined In play
With a laugh of merry seal;
And the Jolly frame of nlm
BhooH with bursts of sheerest Joy
As he anrwered back with vim,
"Well, I'm glad I'm still a boy!"
Still a boy aye, true enough
Glad, yet gentle; pure and kind;
Molded sure of manly stuff
Kind of boy It's hard to find.
Kind of boy it's good to see
Man-boy, wholesome; simple; true
Kind of boy you'd like to be
If the choice were left to you.
Still a boy how many now
Have forgot the solemn eye
Have forgot the wrinkled bcow
Is the boy's that once came by?
Call him back It Is his due;
Ijet him come with youth and Joy
Back Into the heart of you.
Laughingly, and still a boy.
Still a boy ah, well-a-day,
Uoy are sea ice enough at best.
With the rippling roundelay
Lei the )oy still be your ffuest;
Let him cleave unto your heart
In boy confidence and hold
Still a boy the man apart, ,
Long, long after he la old.
dreds of thousands of cattle and hogs
grown In the productive slates of the Mis
souri valley would be marketed at a sav
ing of freight rates that would build up
the wealth of thes states at a rate hitherto
unthought of. With such a channel in the
Missouri rails, ties and other material of
railroad construction and repair could b
conveyed cheaply by watar to Kansas City.
f l . n,4 Int.,m.i1l.l. nnlnt. t i.m Aim
trlbution to th roads eaat and west of the of Railroad Commissioners. And when th
river. Thcr would oa a great saving to j
the roads In transporting this material and
the congestion of their Und traffic would bj
relieved.
If the state of New York can by the
expenditure of $100,000,000 make a channel
twelve feet deep In it Erie canal, th
Vntted Btatfs can assuredly by th expen
diture of that sum make a similar channel
In th Missouri river. To th comtnerc
of Missouri valley states the betterment
of navigation would be worth ta time
lb expenditure.
railroad commission takes up th question
of t-cent fare the railroad attorneys pro
test that the subject Is one for the legisla
ture to deal with. Can you beat It?
lajaaranre la Bliss.
Chicago News.
Jim Hill says it Is a mlstak to think
that th whole country doe not suffer
when Wall street la In th dumps. That
may b true, but If the rest of the country
doe not know U suffars Ui pais Is not
very acut.
he
Finest
E A DY -TO-WE A II CLOTHING is made by
Browning, King & Co. in their own modern
factor)', under their own supervision and
by the most skilled artisans of the tailor
ing craft.
Our line of sack isuits for this fall com
prises six or seven of the most graceful
models re have ever shown.
Brown mixtures are here in a big variety.
Our topcoats and raincoats will please you.
REMEMBER
"No Clothing Fits Like Ours
Browning, Ming & Co
R. 8. WILCOX, Manager.