the whole central west. She lias the ma terial right there and in unlimited quan tities. She has the water power to turn the wheels of that and other industries. And, what is as much as anything; else, she has the wideawake, go-ahead men who will make things hum. "Superior the Cement City." That has a mighty pleasing sound. The last legislature authorized the sale of $4,000,000 of bonds of other states held by the permanent school fund of Ne braska. And twenty years ago this spring Nebraska farmers were planting corn and sowing wheat furnished by the state because they were too poor to buy it themselves. Twenty years ago last winter train loads of clothing and provi sions were being shipped to starving and freezing homesteaders in central and western "Nebraska. Now think that over. In less than twenty years from a hungry, half-naked state to a state that is able to hold $4,00,000 of bonds of other states for the benefit of her school children. A state that can do that has unbounded re sources of her command. Tell the world the facts about Nebraska. After reading the reports from various sections of the state Will Maupin's .Weekly makes the following crop predic tions: The corn crop this year will ex ceed 185,000,000 bushels. The wheat crop will exceed 47,000,000 bushels, spring and winter. The oats crop will exceed 05,000,000 bushels. The potato crop will be the largest in the state's his tory, and alfalfa will exceed 2,200,000 tons. The apple crop will be less than that of last year, but small fruit will be a .better crop. Paste this in your hat and wait for the official returns. THE REMEDY AT HAND. 'The Omaha World-Herald is greatly exercised lest the time soon come when the greatly increased value of farm lands will make it impossible for a young man to acquire a farm, thus bringing about a system of landlord and tenant, result ing in a peasant class and landowning aristocracy. The Wrorld-Herald's fears are well founded if the present system of taxation is adhered to. But the remedy for" the growing evil is ready to hand if the people will cultivate intelligence enough to use it. There, are ,16,000,00 acres of tillable land in Nebraska that is untilled, most of which is held in large tracts by specula tors. It is constantly increasing in value, through no effort of the owners and at the expense of the men who are developing the agricultural resources of .the state: NeDraska has about 17,000,- 000 cultivated acres. Suppose 7,000,000 acres of this area were suddenly thrown back to wild land, what would be the re sult upon the remaining 10,000,000 acres .still possible to cultivate? It would in crease in value from 35 to 50 per cent. 'The owners would not be responsible for the increase. It would be a community earned increase which the community would not profit by. Hut, on the other hand, suppose the taxes were levied upon the land accord ing to its value for use and occupancy, instead upon its value due to the thrift and enterprise of men, what would be the result? Those 16,000,000 idle acres would soon become productive, and the pressure upon the lands now; tilled would be lessened. The result would be a read justment of land values that would rid the esteemed World-Herald of its night mare. There is not a scarcity of tillable land. There is, however a scarcity of op portunity to get upon the land. Of the 10,000,000 acres of vacant lands in Ne braska capable of cultivation, nearly every acre will produce bountifully of one or more of the grains adapted to this section, such as corn, wheat, oats, rye, barley, or potatoes, sugar beets, alfalfa and cane. Tax the men who are depriv ing others of an opportunity by with holding that land from the market until the men thus deprived get a fair share of the increase in the value of that un tilled land. The comnmnity is adding to that land's value, and the community is entitled to its just share of the increase. The danger of a system of peasantry and landed aristocracy is not due to lack of land, but to a system that puts a prem ium on selfishness and a fine on enter prise and thrift. Tax the land's vain a for use add occu pancy, not the thrift and enterprise of brave and industrious men. TALKING OF MEN AND MATTERS It is difficult indeed to pay a proper tribute to such men ay Melville 11. Hope well. One wants to say so much, jet is afraid that if he writes what the heart feels he may be accused of maudlin senti ment. If he writes less than the heart feels he fears that he will have not dealt justly. As a soldier in the field, as a school teacher, as a lawyer, as a judge upon the bench, as an official of the state, and as a neighbor, citizen and friend, Melville R. Hopewell measured up to the full standard we so much love to see and meet. Big of brain, big of heart and big of soul, he took front rank among the men of his time. He never shirked a responsibility, nor failed to meet every requirement de manded of him by his community and his state. He was not the typical politician, yet men instintively trusted him, placed political responsibility in his hands and rested well content that their trust would not be. betrayed. His home life was beau tiful. His daily walk and conversation was such as to exercise a powerful influ ence for good. All in all, Melville R. Hopewell was a man. It was the privi lege of the writer to know him for nearly twenty years. While he was upon the district bench in the Omaha district the writer was a court reporter for an Omaha paper. He found Judge Hopewell always courteous, always ready to give the newspaper men whatever assistance possible, and always more than willing to temper justice with mercy. Young men found in him a safe advisor and a stead fast friend. Three times lieutenant gov ernor of his state, he presided over the upper branch of the legislature with firm ness, a fairness and dignity. Less than a month ago lie was with us, seemingly in the prime of advanced manhood's strength and virility. Today the place he once filled is vacant, the home circle is broken. In the passing of Judge Hope well Nebraska loses another pioneer who helped to make Nebraska. His life was a blessing to his community and his state, and he leaves a record of faithfully performed civic duty that will be a cher ished memory with his children and his children's children. Exit Governor Marshall of Indiana from the list of presidential possibilities. His extradition of McNamara in the face of the plain provisions of the Indiana, law simply means that he is either a tool', of class interests or too ignorant to be; considered as a presidential possibility.. . The democratic party may not be able to elect a president with the aid of the trades unions, but certainly it can not hope to elect a president with the active opposition of the unions. The Marshall presidential boom, born with the ricketts, came to its death even before the expect ed time: The Aurora Republican insists that the legislature of 1911 "was and still is a standing joke." The Aurora Republican merely advertises its blind partisanship and its ignorance of the legislature's, work when it makes such an assertion.. The legislature of 1907 was a splendid! one, but its record for economy in expen ditures was earned at the expense of the welfare of the state's institutions andL wards. The so-called extravagance of the 1911 session was forced by conditions brought about by the failure of former sessions to make adequate provisions for keeping up with the increased demand of a rapidly growing and developing; state. Will Maupin's Weekly, while ad mitting that the 1907 sesion was the best up to its time, and the real forerunner of reforms that has since come, will not ad mit that any legislature is "joke" that made it possible to secure the initiative and referendum, that increased the pow ers of the state railway commission, that put a fatal cirmp in the white slave traf fic and kindred vices, that recognized the rights of wage earners to protection of life and limb, that conserved the water ways of the state, bettered our irrigation laws, gave splendid recognition of our ed ucational institutions and made humane provisions for the unfortunate wards of the state. True it allowed some legisla-