t The - Plattsmouth - Journal r ) Published Seml-Weeklf at flittsnoutb, Mehriskn R. A. BATES, Publisher. Eiitered at the Postoffice at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, as second-class matter. $L50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE The Ohio river 1b on a big ram- less have to go out of business for Somehow the plan of the regulars to Ignore the Insurgents didn't work out as weir as the Cannon machine expected. -tor- confronts us" in these days of trusts and combines, fostered by a high pro tective tariff. -:o:- Thls week the harvester trust 1b cutting a 20-milloin dollar melon, which you'll have to admit is a very neat Job of harvesting. :o: "There are no idle rich," says Frederick Townsend Martin of New York. And this Is true to the ex tent, at least, that moBt of the rich are busy getting richer. :o: And now Congressman Murdock of Kansas has the temerity to suggest that the leaks in the postal service ought to be stopped. No doubt about it, that young Mr. Murdock Is not a safe person to be at largo in Wash ington. :o: Sugar Indictments are going up and have reached one of the officers of the trust. It is not probable, how ever, that they will get high enough to reach the members of congress who are responsible for the great tariff wall behind which the stealing of tho sugar trust have been securely sheltered; :o: When President Cleveland appoint ed Lurton to a United States Dis trict Judgeship almost every Repub lican paper denounced him for giving such an Important place to an Ex Confederate. Taft has Just promoted Lurton by making him a member of tho United States, Supreme Court. Do you hear any wall coming from those papers that assailed Cleveland? The king can do no wrong. :o: Wo are in receipt of a voluminous protest from tho Protective Tariff League against the corporation tax Imposed by congress. The protest Charges that the tax Is unconstitution al and urges newspapers throughout the country to oppose it. We protest against helping the protective tariff THE GUARANTY LAW. The Kearney Democrat expresses the Journal's sentiment to a fare-you-well in the following article. And not only that, but it expresses the sentiments of a big majority of the voters of Nebraska, also: A conference of the three govern ors of the three states that have had a bank guaranty law enacted by the state legislature, and which laws have been annulled by the courts, have called a conference to talk the Binuatlon over and determine If pos sible the best action to be taken In regard thereto. The governors of Kan sas, Oklahoma and Nebraska will rep resent the three states that have enacted such guaranty laws. These laws were enacted, not through or by partisan manipulations, but through and by the desire and the demand of the people of these respect ive states. For instance, take a look at the result In Nebraska. Governor Shallenberger made the guaranty bank law an Issue In a state that was nominally Republican by from 15,000 to 30,000 majority, and with an ex piring legislature that in one house contained but one member who did not belong to the majority party, and with only about half a dozen minority members in the popular, or lower house. And Shallenberger was met on the stump by what was considered a most popular governor , who was running for re-election. The result at the polls' even astonished the most visionary dreamer, the personal of both houses of the legislature almost reversing Itself, and the anti-guaranty banking law advocate was most vio lently defeated for re-election. That the people of this state emphatically demanded this guaranty law there can be no question, and It Is part of the duty of the governor of this Btate to use every honorable and consistent page and property estimated as worth ( some time to come at least. many millions of dollars is Bald to be in danger of destruction. The prin cipal seat of trouble is at Louisville, Ky., and Cincinnati, O., where every thing floating on the river Is threat ened with being sunk by the tremend ous volume of Ice which is rushing toward the gulf. Indications are that the rise in the Missouri will also reach the Mississippi Just about the time the Ohio flood gets there and the lower river will probably make a great deal of trouble all along its banks. Near Louisville there Is an Ice gorge sixty-five miles long which threatens to give way at any time and sweep the property along the banks to certain destruction. Little can be done to avert the disaster which seems almost certain. The elections in England so far as they have proceeded Indicate that the liberals retain power by a com fortable working majority and that the people have endorsed their taxa tion schemes. The gains which the conservatives made are bo small that they do not appreciably affect the total results and the probabilities are that the house of lords is doomed to be reformed. The contention of the lords and the moneyed classes that the liberal budget would ruin the country evidently has failed to bear fruit and the Increased taxes whirh have been carried in the bill, will go into effect. The members of the labor party who are supporting the government, are highly gratified at the result so far as it has gone and regard victory as a foregone conclusion. San Antonio, Tex., ha3 been having an epidemic of crimes the past few months which has taxed their police and detective force to the limit. Rob beries, burglaries and murders have followed each other with astonishing frequency. The local officers claim that the city is being over-run with crooks from the north driven there by the severe winter weather which this country has been having. The latest crime to stir the police up is an attempt to assassinate detective Frank Newman. Newman was shot while setting at his supper table sev eral days since, the crime being com mitted with a shot gun. While badly wounded he is now thought to be out of danger and is said to be on the highway toward recovery. The officers are making strenuous efforts to break up the gangs of criminals and one party arrested for vagrancy, has been given a sentence of a year on the rock pile. Mew Line To The Northwest Through The Big Horn Basin The Big Horn Basin is fast settling up and offers the greatest op portunities tor farmers, and especially farm, renters to secure fine gov ernment irrigated farms at the mere cost of the water, and often a sin gle crop can be made to pay for the farm, Ten yearly payments with out interest. And this is cheaper than paying rent in any locality. With the completion of the new line this promises to become a great wealth producing region. The oil, gas, and irrigation of the Big Horn Basin will make that ountry a combination of farm and industrial prosperity. Write we for full descriptive literature. Go with we to the Basin and let me help you select a new home. Dollar paid for rent are lost. D. CLEM DEAVER, General Agent, Land Seekers Information Bureau, Room 6, "Q" Building, Omaha, Nebr. Iinliiil!)riii lliiiiil; league to pull their chestnuts out of the Are. The leugue helped make the means to have such a law adopted and corporation tnx possible by aiding In the election of a Republican presi dent and congress. Ix't the league now make the best of a bad bargain. Personally wo believe in an Income tax and the corporation tax Is of next kin to it, hence we are not opposed to it. In the meanwhile the league can take up the battle and light It out with the purty it helped to put iu power. :o:- UK COMPLAINS. Several days ago we had a conver Batlon with a laboring man who has lived hero many years. He complain ed that for the first time In many years he and his family had no turkey for dinner this Christmas or New Year's day. "I Just couldn't afford to buy a turkey at the high price I was asked to pay and at the little work and Bmall wages I get We asked him how conditions were with him now as compared with the panic in 1893. He replied that they are infinitely worse. Bald he: "In 1893, I had more work to do than now and got about the same wages. In 1893 1 could buy from one-third to one-halt more for ono dollar than 1 can now. Then I could buy plenty to eat and wear for my faplly, but now I cannot make ends meet, even though we eat less meat and do with less groceries and good cloth ing." The experience of this laboring man Is tho experience of thousands of the laboring men throughout the country. However, the riattsmouth laboring man Is better off than the laboring men of tho larger cities, where rentB, fuel, light, water, meats unci taxes aro very much higher. In tho language of President Cleveland, "it Is a condition, not a theory, that placed In operation in spite of the partisan and political attitude of our courts which appear to take as great an Interest in having this wholesome law wiped out as do the advocates of the national central banking scheme. It 1b certainly Governor Shal lenberger's duty to attend the guar anty law conference, and If no other way Is mado clear, it is his duty to convene the legislature In extraordln ary session and re-enact the law, and keep on re-enacting It as often as tho courts repudiate it until the peo ple who deposit moneys in banks have the same evidence of protection as is demanded of the banks by these same courts in handling the funds of the government, both national and state Governor Shallenberger has noth tng to fear in fearlessly discharging the demands of the people of his state In reBpcct to bank deposits. The great aviation meet at Los Angeles yesterday resulted in some additional demonstrations of what can be done with the machines, both Glenn II. Curtisa and Louis Paulhan taking their machines out in a storm of rain and wind and doing: almost every conceivable trick with them, (o the great delight of an Interesting concourse of people who braved the elements to Bee what could be done, According to the papers Curttas got a Utile the best of the exhibition and did things which seemed Impossible of accomplishment. The two aviators got their machines under way and accd about the course side by side In the meantime cutting all kinds of circles and angles and swinging about like vertable thngs of lfe. The meet Ing 1b certainly the greatest ever given in this or any other country! -:o:- I UOM TIIK WHY WOULD. Richard Olney, the prominent Mas sachusetts Democrat and formerly at torney general in Cleveland's cabl net, Is reported as being quito ill at his home in Doston suffering from ab domlnal troubles. He la a very strong and powerful figure In national poll tics and has been at times spoken of as a possible candidate for tho presidency. That he may speedily re cover Is the slncero hopo of many who have known him by reputation as one of the ablest attorneys in tho country. At ono time he was general counsel for tho Burlington system when Perkins was its control ct ling factor. Ills best known public nc probably was the famous Venezullan message of Cleveland's admlnlstra nationality. Tho Yesterday was a day of disasters in the railroad world, there being three bad wrecks iu different points in the country. In Iowa two fast passen ger trains of the Chicago, Milwau kee and St. Paul road collided at Kaystone, la., there being one killed. one fatally Injured and nine serious ly Injured. In Illinois near Flnckney ville, one was killed and ten others badly Injured in a collision between a fast passenger train and a freight train on the Illinois Central railroad. Near Leadvlllo, Col., a freight train waa wrecked and four men killed and three injured, the train being on the Colorado Midland. While the bad weather is not blamed for any of the wrecks, it has had the effect of mak ing railroading very dangerous and exceedingly difficult. That more fa tal accidents have not taken place is due to the extreme care used in operating the trains. The enginemen and conductors on the Mexican railroads are said to be on the verge of quitting their places In a body, owing to a disagreement over salaries and also becauso of al leged discrimination against foreign employes. Several conferences aro be Ing held between the officials and the men and it la hoped to arrive at some kind of an agreement bo that the roads may continue to operate. Tho foreign employes such as the Anierl cans who fill the position of train and enginemen claim that they are being discriminated against on ac count of their nationality and that Mexican employes are being accorded special privileges on account of thel desertion of tho The Taft administration is deeply concerned over the fate of the sev- ral policies which the president advo cates in contradistinction to those known as Roosevelt policies. That the bill to amend the Interstate com merce law will pasB seems certain. As to the bill to amend the Sherman anti-trust act, there seems decided opposition as it really provides for the removal of the monster corpora tions from control by the several states and the people to control by the national government and amounts In effect to licensing them and pro tecting tbem In their vocations. The general run of the Republicans do not want this done. The bills for the conservaton of national resources is another which seems to have rocky sledding ahead of it. There is a ser ious question as to whether or not such bills do not validate the seizure of the public resources by the trusts and this Is something which is arous ing opposition to them. Altogether the prospect for the enactment of the Taft measures is cloudy jutt now but every effort will be made to carry them lato effect. What the people think of them remains to be seen According to the papers this morn ing the progress of the scheme for stopping the fight in the house of representatives between the regulars and the insurgents Is not encouraging. The latter are In a defiant mood and are strong in their determination to oust ispeaKer cannon from power. All the negotiations which have been on for some time In regard to get tlug the two factions together seems to be useless and the fight must go to a finish. One of the funny features of the war is the effort of Ylctor Rosewater and his paper to make Senator Burkett out as an Insurgent Rosewater, with a fine sense of hu mor, remaraa mat uurkett " was more often a thorn in the side of the Cannon-Aldrlch crowd than not." If the senator has been a thorn In their side what has La Follette, Cummins and the rest been? Burkett as a thorn Is a huge Joke. The real thoru from this state Is George W. Norrls of the Fifth district. Norrls has got some thing to show for his lnsurging while Burkett can show only forty-nine per cent Insurgent and fifty-one per cent conservative. The general trend of Nebraska Republicans is toward In surgency but It is not of the Burkett variety. The senator will likely find that he has not been a strenuous enough insurgent to convlne tho peo pie of his Intentions. The Homestake mines at Lead, S l)., will open today as non-union mines. According to the press dis patches there Is no trouble antici pated and the mines will be operated under a strong body guard. It Is probablo that most of the old union men have left the city and that there aro not enough of them there to make serious trouble. It Is to be hoped that the forecast Is correct and that the opening pussos'o IT without bloodshed which hns been feared for so long. destruction of property and delay to the monster liners which ply the deep. The Lusitanla arrived In New York Saturday with Its pilot house wreck ed, the result of an eighty foot comer which swept the vessel. According to the officers of the boat, the waves roared like an earthquake and look like a mountain. The Augusta Moll, a document (great stale paper. considered as a Americans would result In rrlpplin tho roads so that they would doubt ed Victoria was another vessel to suffer from the storm and put Into Ply mouth battered up. So far as known, however, no lives were lost. All doubt as to the triumph of the people in England over the landed classes and the moneyed men, are now removed. The result of the bal loting yesterday removed any lingeri ng doubts and reassures the return f the liberals to power by a ma- ority but slighly under that in the last house which was abnormally large- Yesterday's elections resulted in the return of John Burns whom it was expected might have a defeat or at the best a narrow majority. He seems to have won handily. It is almost certain now that the rejected budget will aow pass. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.'s., grand ury in Aeir York city which has. been deliing into the white slave traffic has located the price of a young woman in that place as $2.0'. Evidence adduced before them went to shov that a twenty year old girl was sold Into a resort in the city by two young men who are charged with abducting ber and selling her for $20. They have been held for trial in $7,500 bail. If a conviction Is sustained In their case, they should receive the extreme penalty of the law which Is not then severe enough for the enormity of the offense. Great storms on the sea the past sevearl weeks have resulted In much I The United States supreme court yesterday affirmed the sentence of John R. Walsh, the Chicago banker, who was sentenced to five years im prlsonment at Leavenworth, for mis applying the funds of his bank. He was the most bitter opponent William J. Bryan had In the campaigns of 1896 and 1900 when he owned the Chicago Chronicle. His paper bristled with denunciation of Mr. Bryan and those who followed his fortunes, there being no Invective too strong for it to apply to them. "Anarchist," "dis honest" and the like were mild terms Mr. Bryan is still outside the pen! tentlary and has the proud satlsfac Hon of being known as an honest man while this man who denounced him so bitterly, is wearing a felon's stripes. The conservation idea which has been so prominently to the fore for months past yesterday received an added Impetus when President Taft and ex-Forester Pinchot spoke from the same platform in Washington on the subject. The words of the two men were practically the same and each declared for conservation. The trouble sterns to be that Pinchot really has a record favoring con servatlon while Taft speaks that way but acts tho other. He wants a lot more laws passed to accomplish Just what rinchot has been doing, In other words. The greeting accorded Pin chot was fully as enthusiastic as that given the president and he Is gen erally accorded the distinction of be ing a man who really does things and is worth while. Ex-Senator W. E. Mason of Il linois is out today in an interview in which he denounces Senator Aid rich for an alleged plan to defeat the postal savings bank scheme. Here is another curious instance- of a con fiding citizen gone wrong. If Mason ever had the idea that Aldrlca was in favor of a postal savings bank, he shows a lack of perspicuity simply amazing. Aldrlch Is not In the sen ate In the Interests of savings banks. He has always been against such ideas. Aldrich has generally been re cognized as the mouthpiece cf the trusts and the Wall street interests and for an ex-senator to even intimate that he believed him otherwise, is to expose of perceptive faculties simply amazing. Of course, Aldrlch is against postal banks and of course postal savings banks will not pass. The only tanking system which will go through If Aldrlch and Cannon have their o say will be the central bank plan to Jbe controlled by Standard Oil and Waif street. Congressman Hitchcock of this state does not propose to be outdone by Congressman Norrls or others and yesterday he got into the limelight with charges affecting Secretary Bal linger which are described as sensa tional in their nature. Mr. Hitchcock's charges include extravagance and fa voritism in the land office as well as misappropriation of the funds of the department. He charges that the funds of the department were im properly used in paying the expenses of the nephew of the secretary. Ow ing to the specific nature of the charges there was a hurried meeting of bureau chiefs in the department to locate who had been giving out the information. It is probable there will be a lopping off of heads In tho de partment in consequence of the charges. Another Investigation will now be had of Balllnger on these charges as they are of such a nature that they cannot be overlooked and If he' can substantiate them it la hard to see how Taft can keep the secretary In his official family. It is now denied from Washington that the suit of the government to dissolve the merger of the Union Pacific and the Southern Pacific rail roads is to be dropped. According to the report as given out several days ago President Lovett of the roads had called upon President Taft and Attorney General Wlckersham and the three had gone over the cases to gether with the result that Wlcker sham advised the dropping of the suits on the ground that the govern ment did not have evidence to sus tain them. An immediate protest went up from the press of the country and this was followed by the announce ment that the agreement contem lated the voluntary dissolution of the merger. Now it la stated that the cases will not be dropped but will be prosecuted to a finish.' It remains now to be Been whether or not the evidence warrants prosecution or whether the supremo court decides that the merger is authorized by law.