-,--.-v,r,T' -witf tP-rwTW-v-"; The Commoner. VOLUME 11, NUMBER 3 14 IF " i ill WASHINGTON NEWSl ins Mfi m M Black Hog wallow Land In the Gulf Coast Section of the Texas Rainbelt Deep and Fertile Soil that Produces Two or MoreCrops a Year TH IHESE lands are being sold in medium size rarm tracts at pnces tnat are very low, compared with what the same kind of land in the best farming sections of northern states is selling for. Delightful and healthful climate schools, churches of various denominations, good society in the heart of development, where are model farms and prosper ous farmers. Average yields : Com, 40 to 75 bushels per acre; cotton one-half to one bale per acre; alfalfa, seven to eight cuttings a year; potatoes, 1 50' to 300 bushels per acre; other crops in proportion. Our lands will bear .the closest inspection. Come and see them. Join our homeseek ers' excursions Leave St. Louis and Kan sas City on first and third Tuesday of each month. Cut out attached coupon and mail to us today, receive Free illustrated Booklet. ALLISON RICHEY LAND COMPANY General'Offices: Second Floor Carter Bldg., Houstonf Texas, (Cat oat here.) Allfson-IUclioy Land Co. Houston, Texao. 1911 Please send me, without obliga tion on my part, your Gulf Coast Farm Land Booklet advertised in Bryan's Commoner. Signed :i Name '-! v, ''' '' '-' ''- ...-. ,- m State Officials of the postofflce depart ment aro reticent about discussing the opinion given August 81 by At torney General Carmody of New York to the effect that postal savings bank deposits are subject to taxation. This is the first time that the ques tion has been brought to the atten tion of the department and it is felt that Mr. Carmody has raised an im portant isslie. No one was found willing to dispute his contention. The act establishing postal savings depositories is silent on the ques tion of taxation of moneys so de posited, but provides that the bonds issued in lieu of surrendered de posits "shall be exempt from all taxes or duties of the United States as woll as from taxation in any form by or under state, municipal or local authority." representatives have been filed as yet under the new law. With many sug gestions coming forth as to what tho intent of congress was in passing tho law, it is reported that the secretary of the senate will refer the law to the attorney general for an opinion as to the secretary's duty under tho enactment. Postmaster General Hitchcock has designated Washington as a postal savings bank. An effort will be made to have the bank here at the capi tal regarded as a model for others throughout the United States. A new six pound gun, equipped with especially adapted explosive projectiles and schrapnel shells to demolish aeroplanes and balloons in battles has been perfected by tho United States army. It can bo ele vated at any angle and possesses a maximum effective range of 7 miles. A total production of 12,918,200 bales of cotton as the final yield this year is indicated by the department of agriculture officials on condition of growing crop on August 25, which the crop reporting board from re ports from its correspondents and agents throughout the cotton belt estimated that 73.2 per cent ought I to be normal. i An Associated Press dispatch from Washington says: Primary election expense statements for Senators Mar tin and Swanson of Virginia, the first to be filed under the new publicity law that Went into effect August 19, reuuutiu uio omce 01 secretary xien- Inet Aug. 30. In the absence of Sec retary Bennett, officials of his office The two battleships authorized by the last naval act probably will bo 28,500 tons displacement, or the biggest war vessels in the world. The largest ships so far designed are the New York and Texas, with a dis placement of 27,000 tons each, and it became known only recently that the navy department contemplates ex ceeding their size. The new ships will have heavier armor than ever before put on a battleship, which ac counts for their increased displace ment. The armament of the new vessels will be the same as the New York and Texas with a main battery of ten fourteen-inch guns. With this approach to a 30,000 ton battleship the naval ordnance experts are con sidering the question of a sixteen- inch gun. It will require a 35,000 ton battleship to withstand the ter rific recoil from a main battery of ten sixteen-inch guns. declined to make them public. Fol lowing this declination, examination of the new publicity law resulted in the startling .disclosure that .in the account presumed to be most 'drastic there is no requirement for publicity of the individual statements filed by candidates for the senate or the house of representatives. The law requires the filing of individual ex pense statements and has apparently left to the discretion of the senate secretary or the clerk of the house, as the case may be, to decide whether these statements shall be given to the public. The publicity law of 1910 required that the expenses of cam paign committees "shall be a part of a public record" in the office of the clerk of the house and "shall be open to public inspection." The statements received from Senators Martin and Swanson will ho for- waTded to Secretary Bennett in Now York. What construction he will place upon the new law is not known. It was generally understood here during the preparation of tho new law, amending the act of 1910 that the amendments were designed to give actual publicity to the individual expenses of candidates for the senate or the house of representatives. Much surprise waB expressed when it was realized that the law was enfarely silent on making these private ex pense statements public. Tho lnw requires that expenditures by com mittees in tho election of represen tatives shall be a part of the nuhlio. record of the house. South Trimble, me ui tuo nouso or representatives, said he would construe the law as permitting publicity of Individual ex pense accounts If the case should come before him. No expense state ments in contests for the house of A Washington dispatch says that ambassadors and ministers of tho American foreign service have been instructed by the state department to submit estimates for construction or purchase by the United States of homes for them in every foreign capital of the world. This is in ac cordance with recent authority granted by congress providing for embassies and legations in order to relieve the diplomats of the enor mous expense of rent, which in some cases exceeds their salaries. Con gress limited the cost of any embassy or legation to $150,000. State de partment officials believe that this will be inadequate to afford abodes in keeping with the dignity of the nation, especially in the largo capi tals, where it is believed an appro priation of $150,000 or $300,000 will be needed. With the $150,000 limitation it is thought the policy of erection or purchasing American le gations can be inaugurated in some of the small Central or South Ameri can countries. The center of population of the United States was announced by the director of the census bureau to be in the western part of the city oi Bloomington, Monroe county, Indi ana. This is eight miles farther west than the location announced July 17, when Director Durand placed it at 5' miles south oi Unionville, in the same county. Ten years ago the center of population was bIx miles southeast of Columbus, Ind., thirty-nine miles east of its new location. Following is an Associated Press dispatch: An outline of tho pro gram of legislation for the postal service which Postmaster General Hitchcock will ask the congress to follow during the regular session w begin in December was indicated wr Mr. Hitchcock recently. In hifl w y .!' I vM 4