r The Plattsmouth Journal ri'liMSIIKI WEKKLY AT HLATrSUOUTH. NEBRASKA. It. A. IJATKS, I'l KLisiiKU. nten J at itoflii-' at IMattsmoutli. Ne liraska. as s:i;onlcl:i.v uiattT. Colorado's legislature has pass ed an anti-cartoon hill. Doubtless some of the portraiture has been too faithful. A Chicago trial divorce judge discovers that babies are home sav ers. They certainly have been found to be a tie that binds us to home duties. Surely these be strenuous days in Persia, with 800 widows starting simultaneously husband hunting. No, thanks! Nebraska's good enough for us. Tin-: recent earthquake is said to have dried up some of the Texas oil wells. Perhaps the bottom fell out and the oil just moved to another location. Sciknck now scares us with the discovery that there are 3,000 col onies of microbes on a single pin Ioint. Here is a chance for some one to invent an antiseptic pin wash. Lobbyists will now have free ac cess to the floor of the Nebraska state senate. The bars have been laid down and lobbyists, as usual, will have full sway among the mem bers of that branch. Senator Root last Monday aim ed a decisive blow at the railroads. He introduced a resolution requir ing railroads to furnish copies of all their tariffs and rate sheets to the legislature. The resolution was adopted. The state senate has recommend ed the passage of a bill preventing the bribing of employes by the giving of tips. Some of the mem bers have doubtless had to tip a waiter in order to get something to eat at some of the Lincoln hash foundries. A bill is before the legislature to prevent judges of the county, dis trict or supreme courts running for office during their terms as judge. It appears that too many political lawyers use the power of their posi tion on the bench to promote their aspirations in other directions. The most miserable creature in the world is the man who is jealous of the prosperity of his neighbor. In this broad field of endeavor there should be room for all. and each will be rewarded according to his just deserts. No man gets and en joys more than is due him. while most men get all that is coming. Senator Bailey has been re elected to represent the state of Texas in the United States senate, despite strong opposition. The charges made against him will, however, not be dropped. On the contrary, additional charges have been preferred, and he has consent ed to resign his office if, upon pro per investigation, these are sustain ed. During the past week two of the leaders of the opposition have been burned in effigy in various parts of the state. The Nebraska senate is opposed to the granting of Fourth of July pardons, the practice of judges of the courts of record running for other than judicial office, the ship ment in original packages unmark ed of all liquors into dry towns or districts and to the reversal of court judgments on technicalities. All these bills have passed the senate. and were introduced by our own Senator Root. The state of Iowa has long had a good railroad law but the present legislature will attempt to enact in to law a two-cent per mile pessen- er rate. This should spur up the Nebraska solons to their duty. Our people demanded a lower freight and passenger rate in the late campaign, and some of us be lieve that platforms are made not only to stand upon but to be carried outlby the successful party which advocates said platform Census of Child Labor. The census bureau is late in pub lishing its statistics of child labor, gathered in 1900, but the pleasing quality of the facts revealed by the figures compensates foi the delay. The broad fact revealed bv this report, and the most pleasing one, is that Americans, as a rule, keep their children at school until the age of 14 or 15. The million and three-quarters of children between the ages of 10 and 15 listed as breadwinners are only a little more than 2 per cent of the population, and of these, nearly two-thirds were in agricultural em ployment, by far the most healthful, morally and physically, that young sters could engage in. Furthermore, it may be presumed that most of these juvenile farm workers attended school . during some portion of each year, since from Thanksgiving Day until the spring work begins there is not much for them to do. More than half of the entire num ber were over 14 and about one third had attained their fifteenth . - -. - ii year, an age at wuicn it is wen enough for boys to begin learning business or a trade unless their par ents are able to give them a liberal education. That nearly three-quarters of these child laborers were boys, con firms the general fact that American parents are careful to safeguard their girls with the influences of the school and the home as long as their means permit. Take the further facts stated in the report, that the percentage of child breadwinners is much higher among the negroes than among the whites, and higher among foreign born than among native-born white children, and it is apparent that a very small percentage ot native white Americans deny their child ren under 14 or 15 the advantages of the schools. With rare exceptions, due to pinching necessity, those who do so have no good right to retain the custody of their children. Bv the Massachusetts ballot law, which might be adopted in Nebras ka, the children of such are disqual ified from voting, and no parent has a right to bring up children in a wav which unfits them for the ex ercise of all the rights of citizenship. There is a bill pending in con gress that we hope to see become a !.w and we believe there are many others who have the same opinion we have. It is a bill that provides for a pension of $12 per month to veterans 62 years old, $15 per month when they are 70 and $20 per month after reaching 75 years. In the majority of cases this means an increase of allowance, many in this vicinity coming under the $15 limit and several being eligible to a pension of $20. The bill origina ted in the house, passed that body and the senate and has now been referred back for final passage so that it is very likely that it will be come a lav. It is estimated that the new law will increase the pen sion budget about six million dol lars a year. The veterans, how ever, are dying at the rate of five thousand a month so that the in crease expense to the government will only be temporary. A grate ful people are willing to make the final days of the boys in blue as pleasant as possible. Unless the measure is killed when finally presented for passage in the general appropriation bill, members of the president's cabinet, senators and congressmen will have their salaries increased, beginning March 4. Senators and congress men will be advanced .from $5,000 to $7,500, while the vice president, speaker of the house and cabinet members willget $12,000. Strange as it may appear, there was some opposition by the members of con gress to the bill to increase their stipends. One of the points ad vanced is that many eomgressmen had not received a salarj- equal to the present one before they became "servants of the people." Again, it is said that the cost of living is no greater for them than for the voters they represent. The legislaturehas adopted rules for the government of lobbyists and the lobbyists adopted rules for the government of the legislature some time ago. If an item of news in which you are interested does not appear in these columns, don't blame us. We simply didn't know it and you didn't let us know about it. The Journal columns are always open to real news items, whether you are a friend to the paper or not. Several more bills have been in troduced in the Nebraska legisla ture for the relief of the people from railroad oppression. It is the easiest thing in the world to intro duce bills under the present arrange ment. The enactment of laws that the courts will sustain is another proposition. Several radical anti-liquor bills will he passed during the session, Senator Root has a measure to in validate the license of a saloon keeper when he is convicted of any offense in the district court. He has outlined a measure to make the the saloon question one to be decid ed by a majority vote every five years. If the courts do not vindicate the right of the state of California to control its own public schools, in its own way, the litigation which President Roosevelt has instituted to test that right is likely to outlast Teddy's presidential term . As long as California refuses them, no treaty can make the Japs stick in the schools which California founded and supports by state taxation. A learned society woman re cently spent an entire day discuss ing the question whether it was an apple or lemon that Eve offered Adam. We don't know if much light was shed on the subject, but we may be sure that whether it was apple, lemon, or some other fruit, the blame will still be laid upon Eve. If anything goes wrong it is always the woman that is in fault. They do things down in Mis souri and don't always have to be shown . Saturday the house passed a bill, which if it becomes law, will tax undivided profits of institu tions, such as building and loan, banking, insurance and kindred corporations. These corporations have been exempted from paying taxes on undivided profits in the past but it is now proposed to assess them on all excesses above 50 per cent. Bury the little hammer, put your shoulder to the wheel, and help boost the old town. By all means keep the hammer buried even if it aches to place your shoulder in a position where you might be of some good to your community. If you are not satisfied with the town there are plently of trains running here daily on which you can move out at any time you have the money to pay the freight. The other ham mer men have been looking for you and will give you a hearty welcome in moving to their present abode, which may be in the bottomless pit of hades the final landing place of all chronic knockers. The Iowa legislature is working for the passage of a reciprocal de murrage bill which provides that, inasmuch as the law permits a rail road company to collect demurrage where a car of goods is delivered to the one to whom it is shipped and it is not unloaded promptly, that the shipper who makes a demand for a car in which to ship, or where goods shipped are delayed and do not reach their destination prompt ly, that demurrage for delay in fur nishing car or delay in transit shall be paid by the railroad to the ship per. A law of that kind would mean sauce for the goose as well as the gander. A bill similar to that of Iowa has been introduced in the Nebraska legislature and the Journ al hopes to see it become a law. A law of this kind, if enforced, would do much towards adjusting the grievances of a suffering public. As it is now, if a freight shipment is not unloaded from the cars as soon as the car is side-tracked the consignee is compelled to pay de murrage. But if the shipper starts his freight by train or goes as a passenger he must take the railroad service as he finds it, and be thank ful if he or his freight ever reach their destination. The railroad companies of Ne braska should have care as to their conduct at this time. There exists great discontent among the people. It is no doubt the opportunity of the demagogue and the agitator, but it is also an era of earnest in sistance by honest people upon a redress of old abuses. Many meas ures will continue to be introduced in the general assembly whose pro moters are perhaps insincere, and measures may be introduced which are honest in purpose and yet may be injurious and unjust in opera tion. These considerations, how ever, do not argue that nothing at all should be done. Upon two things public opinion is fixed the lobby and the free pass. The rail road companies have been the chief representatives of the one and the sole manipulqtors of the other. They are both evil and only evil.' No legitimate interest of the state needs a lobby to protect it, and the railroad iaterests cannot afford longer to employ the free pass as a means of controlling legislative ac tion. A novel tariff bill was intro duced last week by Congressman De Armond, of Missouri. It proposes that all goods made in this country and protected by a tariff of 30 per cent or more shall bear printed la bels stating the extent to which they are protected by tariff. It further provides that it shall be un lawful except for the one who has purchased such goods for actual use to remove the label and that to do so will be punishable by a fine not exceeding $5,000. DeArmond says that this plan would educate the people as to the precise effect of the present tariff and that they are entitled to such knowledge, as they pay the taxes. He insists that in no other way could the people be so impressively advised concerning the hardships and inequalities of the present tariff. Congressman Adam Bede met Champ Clark of Missouri in the capitol corridors the other day. Bede extended a careful military sa lute. "What on earth are you do ing that for?' askedClark. "Well, things have come to pass in Wash ington where distinctions have to be made. A salute shows that a man is in favor of a military gov ernment, while, if he is for consti tutional government, he just shakes hands." "Shake," said Clark. "I'd like to," said Bede, "but I can't. I'm a Roosevelt Republi can." Notwithstanding the hue and cry that has gone up against lobby ing at Lincoln we notice that al most every state institution has one or more persons at the capital lob bying for increased appropriations. The heads of these institutions to gether with the junketing commit tee certainly know what they need without paying an agent to go to the capital to lobby. A lobbyist is a lobbyist, no matter what his line may be. Apply the anti-lobby rule to everybody if you would be en tirely fair. The legislature proposes to pass a law requiring any man in business who desires to sell his stock to give notice to all his creditors five days before the sale is consummated. This is about the foolest bill yet in troduced, and there have been a great many fool bills read before the present illustrious body. The legislature expects to make every body but its own members honest by legislative enactment. And now Harriman, who poured out money to elect Roosevelt presi dent, declares it would have been better for the country to have elect ed Bryan for the reason that he is saner and more conservative than the hot-headed, impulsive, re sentful occupant of the white house. Thousands of prominent republi cans hold similar views but are afraid to express them. The Nebraska legislature may be composed of reformers, but the peo ple have not seen anything emanat ing from either branch, as yet, that would entitle them to the appella tion of "reformers." 'i'I1' i iTTTTTiTTn. n,, n.7n'" 'Si"i'iMtiMmiiHMt.iw"tiii"iti IcVmmh Afcgetable Preparationfor As similating the Food and Keg ula ling the S tomacbs aMBowch of PromotesDigC3lionlieerrul ness and Re stCon tains neither Opium .Morphine norMincral. Not "Nah c otic . Mx.Smn mm. fWrm. A perfect Remedy forConslipa Tion , Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ncss and Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. on? UK! u 81 Q EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. A Farce of Peanut Politics. Foraker's backdown gives Roose velt a temporary victory over his enemies in the senate, and makes a farce of the proposed senate in quiry into the Brownsville mutiny and riot. The only new light which the senate could throw upon the affair would be an explosition of the Pres ident's powers under the law as commander in chief of the army. But inquiry of this sort is waived by the compromise which Foraker and Aldrich have agreed to in order to cover up, for a time, the break which already exists between the president and the majority of his party in the senate. With the high question of the president's lawful power to disband any portion of the army in time of peace shoved into the background, the senate's thrashing over of the facts in the Brownsville affair will degenerate simply into a pandering to the negro vote. If the Foraker-Aldrich senators were aiming at anything more than the propitiation of this vote they could score heavily on the presi dent for turning the battalion out of the army before making adequate effort to detect the rioters and mur derers in order that they might be brought to justice. But they are proceeding upon the theory that the negro soldiers are martyrs, and even questioning the plain fact that some of them com mitted murder in the streets of Brownsville on the night of August 13. They do not want to convict the guilty men. They desire only to convict Mr. Roosevelt of having done them an injustice. The only question left in the matter is whether Roosevelt or his Si Nursing baby? It's a heavy strain on mother. Her system is called upon to supply nourishment for two. Some form of nourishment that will be easily taken up by mother's system is needed. Scott s Emulsion contains the greatest possible amount of nourish ment in easily digested form. Mother and baby are wonderfully helped by its use. if ALL DRUCGISTS: ZOc. AND $1.00 M8 A r-' For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bough! ,4, T 1 t sears mo y x Signature AYf In Use For Over I Thirty Years IS) it liiiu TMS OSMTAWR MIHUT, mW VMS MTV. enemies shall control the negro del egations in the next republican na tional convention. Demagogy ami peanut .politics were never morecon spicuously displayed in the senate of the United States. In the enactment of a child labor law the legislature should exercise a little care or it would promote an abuse greater than the evil legisla ted against. There is nothing more degrading than idleness. The child had better be encouraged to habits of industry in tender years than to be raised in idleness. W'e see the evil effects of idleness on every street corner. Ivvery evening we see young hoodlums smoking cigar ettes on the corner when they should be at home. A law making work as well as education compulsory would not be a bad thing. In this section of the country there is much more danger from the habit of idle ness than from overwork. Drastic measures are necessary to protect children from the sweat shops of the east, but there are very few who are hurt by overwork here in in Ne braska, especially in the smaller towns and rural sections. Carmack, of Tennessee, making what is probably his last speech in the United State senate, comes straight to the point. "The soul of wit" must have been delighted by the brief manner in which he diagnosed one of Roosevelt's faults: "He has loved the negro not wisely, but to well." Tillman's attempt to make a tninistrel show out of the senate has made the people smile an inscrutable smile, and not entirely because the interlocutor has been deserted by his troupe. o 4 O O (0) ,1 Hcl SU UC U mm