I 1 t t ' ' 1 i 10 THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1912. fTHE Omaha daily Bee fOL'NDED BY EDWARD ROSEWATER VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR. BEE BUILDING. FARNAM AND17TH. Entered at Omaha Postofflce as second Class matter. . TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Sunday Beo, ooe year 12.60 Saturday Bee, one year $1.50 Dally Bee (without Sunday) one year.M.OO Dally Bee and Sunday, one year $6.00 DELIVERED BY CARRIER. Evening Bee (with Sunday), per m..23c Dally Bee (Including Sunday, per mo.65c Daily Bee (without Sunday), per mo..45o Address all complaints or Irregularities Jn delivery to City Circulation Dept. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order, payable to The Bee Publishing company. Only 2-cent stamps received In payment of small accounts. Personal checks, ex cept on Omaha and eastern exchange, not accepted. " " OFFICES. ! Omaha-The Bee building. ; South Omaha-2318 N St. i Council Blufts 75 Scott St. ; Llncoln-a Little building. Chicago 1041 Marquette building, i Kansas City-Reliance building. I New York-M West Twenty-third. Washington 725 Fourteenth St., N. W. ni.iiiii.-ii on M r Jr. N p V, 7 Communications relating to news and editorial matter should be addressed Omaha Bee, Editorial Department. JULY CIRCULATION. 51,109 fetate of Nebraska, County of Douglas, ss. fDwIght Williams, circulation manager of The Bee Publishing company, being duly sworn, says that the average daily circulation for the month of July, 1912, Was 61.109. DWIGHT WILLIAMS. I Circulation Manager. : Subscribed in my presence and sworn to before me this 3d day of August. 1912. MSeal.) ROBERT HUNTER, .: K Notary Public. t' ; C I Sabscrlbers leaving the city I temporarily shoald bave Vke f Bee mailed to them. Address wilt be changed as oftea as re I quested. ' I Almost caught up with that precip itation deficiency? ' . Poor little Astor baby, born with k handicap of 13,000,000. I Prudent men like Mr. Bryan will discount populist endorsements. ' What a. thick-headed dunce Solo- fnon would be today in comparisons The Taft special will, not even frhlstle for the crossing at Armaged don. ; , . f I Where does money come from? fesks the little boy. ourse. Oil and steel, of Brand Whitlock, report says, will to back to literature. Is that what e calls it? , , r , : r To the Stationers: Try a few other convention cities, and then come Wk.to Omaha - " The colonel's real objection to the southern negro is that he does not outvote the other, fellow. That suit to dissolve the moving picture trust might be put on the bill aa a dissolving view.. Japan's Up-to-TJate Buler. The ancestral spirits of the new emperor of Japan were duly in formed of his accession, which was solemnized with all the mysterious ceremonies of Shlntoism, and yet Yoshohito Harunomiya is far from being fossilized in his ideas and man ners. Holding to oriental formal isms apparently means nothing in his case so far as anti-occidentalism is concerned. His dress and that of his wife and three children is west ern; his sympathies are broadly cos mopolitan and his vision modern and progressive. Young, he belongs to young Japan. And so his acces sion Is hailed as another step In Japan's forward course. No fortuitous circumstance brings so ardent a cosmopolite to the Japa nese throne. It Is the logic of evolu tion as inspired by the advanced reign of his illustrious father and predecessor, in whose time the na tion rose from inconsequential ob scurity to a front rank among world powers. It is befitting, therefore, that the United States and other great nations should send special rep resentatives to attend the funeral of the father and pay the respects of their government to the son. This event should mark another era of good will betweeen Japan and her neighbors and serve effectually to allay Jingoistic prattle about war, at least for a while. Inflaming; Eace Prejudice. Senator Newlands of Nevada, a democratic statesman born in Missis sippi, goes Colonel Roosevelt one better on the negro question. The colonel. In his bid for the white southerner's vote, refused admission to his convention of the southern negro delegate, declaring that In the south his new organization was to be a "white man's party." Senator Newlands comes out for an exclusive "white man's government," and a constitutional amendment withdraw- lng the, voting franchise from unborn members of the negro race. A former president of the United States cannot tread upon such dan gerous ground as this without Invit ing mischief. So long as the reins of government rest In safe hands the negro will have some one to appeal to for his constitutional rights. Nevertheless, It does no good to in flame ' smoldering embers of race prejudice by preaching disfranchise ment.' Our nation poured out money and blood, almost' without limit, to extinguish the color line, and it must never be drawn again. "It is for us, the ' living, v to' see ' that 'these dead shall not ' have ' died In vain." Demogogy would never have enabled Abraham Lincoln to fulfill his mission. The way that these political suit ors are flirting with Miss Suffragette is something too awfully awful. .- Chicago retailers have been having a "Made-in-Chicago" exposition. Omaha retailers beat them to It. .. , Jack Johnson had hardly retired jthan some money-mad pug fired a challenge through his bedroom win dow. " V"-';." It is now referred to as "The In evitable Party," Yes, It was bound to come, - for ambition knows no limit. ' ', The St. Paul girl .who, wrote, a novel with her toes Just couldn't help : but make a good many foot notes. . ' , That senator who favors abolish !ng the .Congressional . Record, per haps could find no other way of breaking Into It. Congress has evidently reached the stage of the bashful young suitor, wno couia not rake up courage enough to leave. ine most oiting accusation we have heard of late is that of the Cln clnnati soldier, who says his wife stole and wore his false teeth. To some of us it looks a little in consistent for Governor Aldrlch to he opposing a second term for PresI- dent Taft while urging a second term for himself. : Up to last accounts Orozco refused to recognize the American govern ment, , If we are correctly advised, the gentleman does not recognize any government. ' ' ; The state tax rate for pext year to to be one'milf less than, this year, This Is about the only real argument against the ; proposal to reduce the frequency, of elections. 'ii These third termers Just will not It down. "We stand at "Armaged don," shouts the bull moosej "We are really standing for something, says Miss Jane Addams. u J i . i . ... . I La Follette's magazine is as pro gressive as ever, but it seems sud denly to have lost its standing as the inspiration source of the prbgres- ilves In favor of the Outlook. After reading Mr.' Bryan's com ment on Governor Wilson's accept ance speech, the impression remains that no other similar document ever pleased him better, barring only three acceptance speeches 'of his own. locking Backward 1Kb Day inOmalia COMPILE l FROM BEt FIXE-a AUGUST 17. Thirty Years .i.jro Military headquarters is agog with re ports of a threatened uprising of Sioux Indians at the Pine Ridge agency, In dissatisfaction with Agent McGllllcuddy. There are quite a number of cases of typhoid fever in Omaha. Henry Slert had his place on upper Farnam street photographed today by a traveling artist. Miss M. A. 8mlth, chief clerk of the Union Pacific ticket department and niece of Thomas L. Kimball, while swinging a friend on the grounds of L. A. Ooss's residence, became entangled in the guide rope, and was badly, though not seriously Injured. Mr. A, H. Hasklns. formerly with the Grand Pacific at Chicago, has been engaged as clerk at the Paxton. H. C. Brome of Norfolk is In the city. Ben Gallagher has returned from Sidney. United States Senator Charles H. Van- Wyck is In town. John Swaclna at Bohemian hull, South Thirteenth street, offers a reward for Information leading to the return cf a large black sow, weighing about 250 pounds, lost from his premesls. Currier, Omaha's. leading photographer, 1212 Farnam street, wants a boy not less than 15 years old to learn photography. A first class girl who must be a good cook, washer and Ironer, may have work at M Der week by Inquiring at the of fice of Lee, Fried and company. John McKInnon employed in the B. ft M., residing at Mrs. Wilson's on Nineteenth and Dodge, died yesterday. Mrs. J. S. Shropshire, of the Union Pacific freight auditor's office, was mar ried to Mrs. Cordelia Crowe by Rev. J. W. Ingram.X Twenty Years Aa The Union Pacific base ball team was advertising for games for Saturday, of fering to play for "money, beans, chalk or glory." Will Fulton was receiving the challenges. There was no fire In the city hall, but there was a red hot roasting of J. M. Wilson, sidewalk inspector, appointed by Mayor Bemls. Major Balcombe of the Board of Public Works did the roasting and Wilson was not allowed to reply in his own defense, but Wilson made a de ntal in The Bee. Mrs. Charles McDonald and sister left for New York, which was to be their fu ture home. Hon. Lorenso Crounse and his daugh ters returned from Washington. He was to be In the state In the interest of his candidacy for governor for some time before going back to the seat of govern ment. ' " '' WllHam A. Paxton of Omaha was among the Americans wno arnvea in Paris. C. J. Raymond, who had spent quite a time at Hot Springs, S, D., returned loud In his praise of the place. .' Mrs. . B. W. Nash, Miss Nash, , Mlsj Mary Nash and Miss Adeline Nash left for a trip through Canada, Mrs. Nash's old homeland. Misses Mary and Adeline after visiting Quebec and other eastern cities were to enter the Academy of the 8acred Heart at Manhattanvtlle, U I. Need of Better Fannin?. The United States produces 70 per cent of the world's supply of corn, 24 per cent of its wheat, 50 per cent of Its cotton, in fact, 31 per cent, or nearly one-third, of the world's chief agricultural products. This gives us distinction as the lead ing agricultural country, and yet statistics show that we are not in creasing this production as fast as we should, in proportion to ours and the world's consumption. -Some recent comparisons have been made which show that except as to cotton, the burden of maintain ing this work of supplying the world from the farm falls chiefly upon the middle ' weBt. These comparisons show, for instance, that in states like Massachusetts, New York and Penn sylvania, the average annual income of the farmer Is $388 ; that In states like Virginia, North and South Caro lina, It is 184; in Alabama. Mis sissippi and Louisiana, $189, and in states like Nebraska, Iowa, Indiana and Illinois, the , average annual in come of the farmer is $663. The average number of acres tilled, the average amount received for live stock and other things figure about In the same ratio. Now, even in the middle west we admit the need of more and better farming, and if the need is apparent here, what must be the case in those other sections, where land Is neglected or impoverished by Inat tention to intensive methods? Such comparisons as these while, perhaps, not entirely conclusive, ought to con vlnce anyone that the right kind of farming pays for all the trouble and expense it costs. Of course, land In the middle west and far west being newer is more productive, but in addition to that, it Is being better cultivated than some in the older sections, and yet not as well culti vated as even It should be. 1 Ten Years Ae W. A. Compton, a car builder, was robbed of a watch and $14 In cash by a man who pretended to be his friend. Dick Ferris was in Omaha. He had come from Minneapolis, where his stock company wa to play the winter and was enroute to Lincoln, where one of his sub ordinate companies was furnishing warm weather amusement. John White of Chicago, secretary of lodge No. 4, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, and who seconded Ken tucky's nomination of George P. Cronk as grand exalted ruler, arrived in Omaha from Salt Lake City, where the Elks had held their convention.. Colonel E. H. Crowder. T. 8. A., judge advocate, who had recently returned from the Philippines, arrived in Omaha an was the guest of friends. "Humanity is golnd mad over worldly pleasures," said Rev. J. W. Conley at the First Baptist church. Rev. P. F. McCarthy, chaplain of thu Convent of Mercy, completed twenty-five years In the priesthood, and the event was observed by the celebration of solemn high mass at I a. m. in the chapel of the convent, Fifteenth and Castellar streets. The national convention of popu lists consisted of Just six self-ap pointed delegates. Yet in Nebraska the populist label Is still carried on the official ballot by mlsbranded democrats bent on raking In a few thousand votes that do not belong to them. Old King Corn and Prince Wheat and Duke Oats and his lordship, Hon orable Apple Crop, and the rest of the imperial dynasty that rules this agricultural realm, are about to usher in , another golden age that will make Pericles look like an im pecunious straw boas. , Are they going to draw their edi tors of the endewed newspapers from the same old human family out of which cities, states and nation now get their public servants? People Talked About MOTHERLANDS THAN OURS Significant Events and Conditions Noted in the Old World. British Politics. The recess of the British Parliament until October, coming on the heels of two ministerial defeats in bye elections, starts a freshet of prophecies of the early down fall of the Asquith ministry. Currents of political 'ntelligence from London give evidence of concerted efforts to magnify tory victories Into liberal party disasters, and by suppreslon of essential facts give the Impression that the liberals and their allies are discredited at home. In the two recent tory victories at Crewe and northwest Manchester purely local condi tions determined the Jesuit In the Crewe division liberal and laborltes divided their vote between two candidates, thus allow ing the tory candidate to win with a minority of votes. The Northwest Man chester division formerly was a tory stronghold which was liberalized by Winston Churchill, now flrst'lord of the admiralty. ' Yet tory success was made possible there only by the tory candidate renouncing the party creed of protection and standing on the liberal platform of free trade. These two seats make a total of eighteen liberal seats captured by the torles since the general election of 1910, and afford good ground for the justifica tion of the victors. It is worth while noting, however, that tory jubilation transferred to cold print carries an ex pression of unfelt fear lest the ministry may not survive the two years needed to make the Irish home rule bill a law. Home rule is the nightmare of the tory household.. All the energies and resources of the party, every political scheme in genuity and experience can devise, are centered on the defeat of self-government for Ireland. Consequently every in cident which lends strength to tory hopes calls forth an excess of jubilation and prediction. Meanwhile the allied support ers of the ministry have a clear majority of 100, are thoroughly united on all vital Issues and equally determined to tarry out the ministerial program to the limit of Parliament's life. Joha Chinaman and His Pipe. The revolution in China has brought about a very curious situation with re spect to the opium traffic. In 1907 the government undertook to stamp out the vice, and India agreed to reduce her ex ports of opium to China by a tenth an nually, so that in a decade the trade would be stopped. At the request of China it was later agreed that this time should be shortened, provided China should meanwhile succeed In suppressing entirely the growing of the poppy. There seemed some Chance of this till the revo lution produced a temporary choas in the midst of which farmers In many dis tricts managed to resume poppy grow ing, which is difficult to suppress unless neighbors turn Informer. As yet the re public has not been able to establish such systematic local government as to re piles the evil, and consequently both poppy culture and opium smoking are increasing. But India In the meantime had been counting upon the revenue from the sale of the agreed quantity at famine prices, and the merchants are dismayed by. the slump caused by home competition. To enforce China's part of the agreement Is impossible.' and as the next best thing the India opium merchants are joining In the demand to stop ex portation, in order that they may work off the stock which they already have In China. Thus the government Is exposed to ' fire from these , curiously different quarters. ! ' '. '' '''' ; ' Armaments as an Insnrance. Tn a recent speech in the House of Commons Prime Minister Asquith em phatically declared that Great Britain has no cause or occasion for a. quarrel with any country in any part of the world. "Our friendships," he said, "are In no senss exclusive friendships, and for a very good reason. The greatest ot British interests remains, as It always has been, the peace of the world. ' If, as is unhappily the case, there Is In this country, as elsewhere, a growing and a lamentable expenditures upon arma ments, both naval and military, there Is no power In the World which does not know perfectly well, so far as we are concerned, and so far as we are com pelled to take part In the expenditure, that we have no aggressive purpose. We covet no territory. We have neither the desire nor the temptation to extend !n any way the range of our responsibilities. rut those responsibilities are world wide, and If we are compelled, as we are, to direct from other purposes more pro ductive and more advantageous to man kind the funds we are now spending on the maintenance, in particular, of our supremacy at sea. I am speaking what everyone In this house knows to be tho absolute and literal fact when I say that that expenditure is regarded by us sim ply as an Insurance a 'necessary In surancefor the enormous interests, both domestic and external, of which the gov ernment of this country and the House of Commons are or ought to be the faith, ful and vigilant trustees." A Troableiiome War. Unlooked-for economic results of a troublesome character are springing from the war in Tripoli. Europe Is feeling sharply in diminished trade with Turkey. The closing of the Dardanelles to mer chant ships weakened but did not break the corner on wheat maintained by Frenchmen speculating on the necessities of the war. As a direct consequence In France flour is held at exorbitant prices and bread is 5 cents a pound In Paris, the highest in the history of the country. What renders the situation acute Is a decided shortage 'In the wheat crop of France. Demands for the remission of the tax on foreign wheat are flouted by the government. To do so would endan ger the political support of wheat grow ers, and rural interests must not be sacri ficed for the general Interests. The ques tion, of Intervention rests largely on French initiative. France holds a large mortgage on Turkey and cannot safely urge a settlement on the Italian basis. Nor Is France disposed to offend its neighbor by pressing Turkish claims. With, the government in a predicament the French wheat grower and wheat syn dicate, safe from an Invasion of foreign cereals, are playing on velvet and taking all the traffic will bear. Owing to the vast consumption of bread in all French families the distress of high prices is general and discontent Is manifest in pub lic clamor for relief. Blllboaid in France. The French government has decided to legislate billboards out of existence by a ruthless scheme of taxation. Boards less than six meters in length will be taved HO a square meter yearly; from that size up to ten meters, 20 a year thi square meter; thence up to twenty meters. MO, and all above that size $80. Thus a signboard or hoarding fifty meters long and three meters high and there are not a few as large as that will be taxed 112,000 a year. That is prohibitive, as It Is doubtless meant to be. Even a sign only five meters long and two high will be taxed $100 a year. It is estimated that the average tax under the proposed law will be more than tl.feA) on each sign and It Is expected that in the great ma jority of cafes it will prove prohibitory. - United States Outstripped. Recent statistics show that In the last twenty years the foreign commerce of Italy has Increased by 150 per cent, while that of Germany, which is commonly supposed to have made the greatest ad' vance, has Increased only 130 per cent, and that of the United States, with all Its vaunted growth, 1 only 97 "per cent. Congratulations are due to Italy, which presents the most notable example In his tory of the rehabilitation of a fallen power; but there Is some Implied reproof to the United States for letting itself be so far outstripped by two European lands. One Obstacle to Armaments. - . After scraping together the millions of money necessary for the construction of monster battleships a new difficulty con fronts the nations. Without resorting to a policy of conscription they find it al most impossible to keep their . fighting craft suitably manned. "In time of peac prepare for war" is a hoary old maxim of the political engineers who find delight In turning pruning hooks into spears. It needs, however, the patriotic persauslon of actual war to keep armies and naviei In fighting trim. XN0X AT MIKADO'S FUNERAL 1HISE GIBIS OF 0UES. Philadelphia Record: Handsome is as handsome does, and soft words butter no parsnips. These two chunks of proverbial wisdom are applicable to our relations with Japan. It is flattering to the Japanese to send the nearest thing we have to a prime minister as special ambassador and representative, of the American people at the mikado's funeral. Philadelphia Ledger: Nothing but good can come from the closer insight by America and Japan of the national as pirations and needs of one another, and Secretary Knox will worthily represent the feeling of this country toward Japan and Its people, which, barring some oc casional exceptional vagaries, is one of kindly good will. Springfield Republican: Secretary Knox's mission to Japan, as special am bassador to the funeral of the late em peror, . may be productive of valuable results In the diplomatic field. In any event, the courtesy of the act of our government fn sending him will be ap preciated In Japan. The secretary of state and the president are to be con gratulated upon their decision to pay this high compliment to the JapanrSj people. Pittsburgh Dispatch: The designation of Secretary of State Knox to represent President Taft at the funeral of the late emperor of Japan directs American at tention once more to the Orient. This unprecedented official tribute to Japan is frankly taken as another evidence ot our desire to maintain the cordial re lationship that has existed between the two governments since the days of Com modore Perry. If, incidentally, it offers the American secretary of state the op portunity for first hand acquaintance with the statesmen of Japan there are a number of matters In which both coun tries are Interested. POLITICAL SNAPSHOTS. ..Philadelphia Record: If Curtis has 8,000 majority for senator in Kansas we pre sume that Stubbs, who has carried a ma jority of the assembly districts, . will re tire In obedience to the Roosevelt princi ple that the people should rule. New York World: The congressional In quiry into campaign funds Is a great success In showing that those who can best inform the committee are either dead or refused a summons by the committee itself. . Baltimore American: The head of die New York zoo has declined the offer of a genuine bull moose on the ground that all the specimens of that animal im ported die of indigestion in this climate. The bull moose now most in evidence will have probably the same trouble of Jhe species In attempting to digest much that it has lately swallowed. New York Sun: Some surprise is elici ted from nonprogressive lips by the ap parent readiness of the Red Sunflower Stubbs to take the primary nomination, his technically and by districts, for sen ator In congress from Kansas, although his republican opponent, Curtis, got sev eral thousand more votes in the whole state. The surprise must be ironlca!. The (right) people rule. "Jim. I want some money to get ready to go away with." "My dear Julia, you don't realize how real!.- poor we are. Why, the wolf is at the door." ' "He always Is when I want anything for myself. That wolf s a goaf-Baltimore American. Bessie-Wonder if Mamie knowo that we are looking at her new gown? JessieCertainly. Whut do vou 8UP pose she is walkinK down the street for?-Philadelphla Telegraph. Maude, indignantly: "Why, this isn't my parasol!" Maud's mother, warnlngly: "Hush, dear. That cover looks like real lace!". Cleveland Plain-Dealer. "Who says there are no woman humor ists?" . "I don't know. Why?" "My typewriter spells as funny as Josh Billings In his palmiest days."-Louis-ville Courier-Journal. . . "Yes, we bachelor girls often give a yachting party an never think of asking a man along." f . "Well, well. Don't you ever get. lone some?" . : ' "Oh, well. If we do we hug the shore." New Orleans Picayune. "So the engagement Is broken," said Maude. "Yes," replied llaymie. "I am glad I found him out in time. His ideas about the alimony a divorced woman ought to have are absurdly parsimonious. 'V Washington Star. , - Griggs When I don't catch the name of the person I've been introduced to I ask It it s spelled with an "e" or an "1." It generally works, too. Brlggs I used to try that dodge myself until I was Introduced to a young lady at a party. When I put the question about the "e" or "i" she replied indignantly: "Sir! my name Is Hill." Boston. Country Store Keeper Km afeard that new assistant won't do. Mandy. He seems a weak-kneed sort of chap. Mandy Weak-kneed! Why, I'ketched him yesterday with that fat Simpson gal on his lap. Boston Transcript. . "Are you going to send your son to college, Mr. Jenks?" - ., "No; he's always at his books, takes no Interest in sport o any kind, and : as he will never do anything on a foot ball team, I don't see any use In wasting1 the money." Baltimore American.. THE LITTLE REFORMER. s Baltimore Sun. Things have been growing better In every way. all along, Since he came down with his beauty, v His lilting of laughter and song. There are fewer and fewer shadows, And the care seems easy and light, And we go forth happy at morning And we come home smiling at night. ; Things have prown sweeter and calmer. And the fear and the doubt and the dread Have lifted like clouds in the summer. And the sun shines brightly Instead. He does not preach nor propound us, In fact he has nothing to say But there never was such a reformer, , With such a wonderful way. , When the day and its toiling are bitter. And we come home weary and worn; Why. we look at his sweet face smiling. And it's joyous we are with morn. He never gives voice to a doctrine. Nor tells us the wav to do, But there never was such a teacher .Of the beauty that keeps men true. , He couldn't talk much If he wanted, And he certainly cannot be wise. Except In the sweet of his smiling And the twinkle of mirth in his eyes. But that is enouKh God knows it To make a whole world reform; And his little bare-feet are so cunning. And his little soft cheeks are so warm OUR NEGLECTED OPPORTUNITIES A Surplus of Blowing, a Paucity of Results, in Many Instances. Indianapolis News. ' The consumption of beer during , the lineal year ending with June fell orr a million . barrels, compared with the pre' ceding fiscal year. A cool spring blew considerable foam off the brewery divi dend. .. - '- - ' ' V. Booze fighters striving to consume all the "ohbejoyful" in sight are up against large job. ' Over 250,000,000 gallons of whisky and rum are stored away in dls tlllery warehouses, training to dolivcr the usual solar plexus. While' the Detroit" grafting aldermen were filing Into court the other day a heartless onlooker merrily whtatld the tune. "Hail, hail, the Gang's All Herat" The unfeeling wretch was quickly chased out of the building. . , Mrs. Caroline Humblrd is the largest Individual personal property taxpayer In St Paul, Minn. She will pay taxes next spring on $231,750. This may be torn pared with J. J.. Hll's personal property assessment of 1149,600, and that of Freder Ick Weyerhaeuser, $18,800. Queen Wllhelmtna of Holland Is said to be the mot extravagant in dress among her peers. It Is said she spends $24,000 a year on- personal attire. The. queen ot Italy cornea next,- with an txpendttur of $16,000, a considerable part of which goes tor lace. , Empress Victoria Augusta spenda H2.S00 to $14,000 on her wardrob It is settled that the bull moose party will run Dr. A. O. Bewick against Con gressman . Nick Longworth in the First Ohio district , Nick la not complaining for publication, but the .'aside" remark of "Princess Alice" are warm enough to elt the spear that knows no son-in-law. v.' !.- - u ? v. Mrs. Agnes Rlddls, who Is a membw of the Colorado legtslatura, li also very domestic One cannot see how s.. could be more domestic, as she gets up at S o'clock in the morning that she nay Et breakfast for the men who start out each day with the milk from the Glen-Riddle dairy. She has succeeded in getting a number of hills for fanners passed, and thinks them oat as aha cooks and ews and sweeps In her ranch horns. Repeated demonstration that we are not equal to our opportunities ought to lessen the cry that opportunities are no longer equal to us, which is the slogan of those that would create discontent and profit by It. Wrv "do not know beans," Mr. Vancamp says. In the Inter view in which he shows that our packers Import two. million bushels of beans a year, from various European countries, paving a, duty of 40 per cent The con sumer, who has . been crying about cost oucrht to know what this means as to the tariff enhanced price and the pro ducer ought to know what it means in lost opportunity. Indiana has . the soil, climate and ajl that is necessary to raise more of this product but our farm ers do not raise It, and packers go else where for their supply, even -to Europe This is only one Instance. In, this land of boundless acres, and spares population we do not even raises potatoes enough for us to eat. Vast , quantities of this staple were importedlast year. Figures for 1909 show: that we are woefully be hind other countries tn raising potatoes, not only absolutely, but relatively. In that year Great Britain raised an aver age acre yield ot 221 bushels of potatoes. Germany 208, France 160, Russia Ut We tall the list with ninety-four. What ought' we to say to ourselves if we can not raise as many bushels of potatoes to the acre as Russia? For one thing. It meant importing that year $3,(77,034 worth of potatoes. . Soberiy spfaklng, are people, who vaunt' themselves, or are vaunted by their spellbinders, as the most ener getic. Industrious, intelligent, ingenious, etc., on earth. Justified In cjmplalnlng of the high cost of living? It we coulJ show that we led the world in the mastery of the soil and got from it more than any other people, and then faced a scarcity, there might be Just cause." As It is, it would seem that we are in the position of the woodman in the fable. Who cried for Jove to recover his axe which had fallen Into the stream. The answer he goUwas to set to work. that the gods only helped those that helped themselves. We face the same condition ull along the line. Recently we quoted the report of a scientist In out government ooil survey, who showed that we had land suitable for every kind of cf ape, but thai our opportunities were wasted. 3e showed, for example, that the whole of our present corn crop could be raised in Indiana, Illinois and Iowa and . with ten million acres of land to spare. But to do so we should have above forty bushels to the acre instead of twenty five, which we average. We should have two hundred bushels of potatoes to the acre. We should have half a bale of cot ton to the acre instead of a third. Our live stock produced $2,00,000,000 worth ot fertilizer a year. Half of It is wasted, and to make good we spend $130,000,000 a year for chemical fertilizers. Verily we need not complain about fading oppor tunities; about laws to do 'this, that and another thing for us, but to put our shoulders to the wheel and cur brains to the management, and get from the soil what It will give us If we apply the same care that the people of Europe apply to their work. Such care - would soon make an end of Importing beans and potatoes and other articles of food and leave us leisure 'tO) grow rich. Hoary Political Formalities. Boston Transcript ' -The American sense of humor Is never quite in full working order 'during the early stages of a political campaign, else the "formal notification" custom would have been long since abandoned, and candidates would have learned to put forth their "confession of faith"- without the excuse of "accepting" a nomination which they had been seeking with eager ness somewhere between' a year and a life time. . t do not take GettheWell-Known fU Round Package Til .OautionT v Mighty Factor la Prosperity. New York Journal of Commerce. The farmer Is still an essential factor in our national prosperity. Some statis ticians are estimating that the value of this season's crop will . reach the enor mous total of $3,000,000,000, provided noth ing happen to '. Interfere with present prospects. This is fully $500,000,000 more than last year's yield, and about equals the capital stock of American railways. riaased aa afyatery. Ksw York World. Senator Williams' amendment admit ting foreign built ships to American reg istry when owned by Americans !s a great step toward restoring the Ameri can flag on the seas. How It ever came to be adopted by this senate te a mystery. Siikstifaies of Imitdimns DJGCPS MALTED MILK Made In the largest, best equipped and sanitary Malted lillk plant In the world We do not make" milk products" Skim Milk, Condensed Milk, etc' But the Original-Genuine HORLICK'S MALTED MILK Made from pure, full-cream milk and the extract of select malted grain, reduced to powder form, soluble in water. The Food-drink for AH Ages. CwASK FOR "HORLICK'S" Used all over the Globe The most economical and nourishing light lunch. -no. on MILK MV DAILY TRAINS 4 TO 1 via CHICAGO, l MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY No. 26 leaves Omaha 7:30 a. m., arrives Chicago 8:50 p. m.; carries chair car, standard sleepers, diner, observation-parlor car. A first-class daylight train, making connections with evening trains from Chicago for all points east and south. No. 28 leaves Omaha 5 p. m.. arrives Chicago 7:20 a, m.; carries chair car, standard and tourist sleepers and diner. No 6 "Chicago Special leaves Omaha 6 p. m., arrives Chicago 8 a. m. A superbly equipped train carrying sleeping cars with "longer, higher and wider" berths, buffet-library car and diner, serving meals of the well-known high standard of the "Mil waukee" road. . ' . No. 2 "The San Francisco Overland Limited" leaves Omaha 7:50 p. m., arrives Chicago 9: 15 a. m.; carries standard sleeping car Omaha to Chicago, composite observation car and dining car. All trains electric lighted, equipped with electric fans and provided with every travel comfort and luxury. Try the "Milwaukee-," the "Road of Quality," on your next trip east. . TICKET OFFICES, 1612 Farnam Street (Phone Douglas 284) and Union Passenger Station. W. E. BOCK, . , City Ffesaenger Agent, Omaha. V ) i