"rTyjipi: Jr w' The Commoner U VOL. 13, NO. 28 $ IP I -ill r tho Whlto IIoubg. Tho capitol build ing, sot high above tho city, caught tho brunt of tho wind, rain, hail and lightning. Tho sonato was in bgb--Blon at tho tlmo and when tho hall ewopt down on tho glass roof of tho chamber with a roar that made tho transaction of business impossible, a hurriod rocoss was taken. Tho storm created a noar panic all over tho city during its short duration. . Physical valuation of tho railroads of tho United States by tho Inter state commorco commission, will take from flvo to t-ovon years by a spe cially organized corps of men and will cost tho government from ten to ilfteon million dollars or more, ac cording to plans of tho commission submitted to the houso appropria tions commission. Tho commission has also asked for an immediate ap propriation of $1,500,000 for tho or iginal corps of ongineors necessary to undertake tho work. Tho plan contemplated the division of tho country into five districts, containing approximately 50,000 milos of rail road each. William Donman, of San Francis co, was appointed a spocial assistant to Attorney General McReynolds to prosocuto ponding and proposod suits to recovor tho government's title to millions of dollars worth of oil lands In California, Wyoming and other wostorn states. The question in volves the legality of ox-President Taft's swooping oil lands withdraw als of 1!)00 to conserve the country's oil resources and especially to af ford tho government a supply of fuel oil for tho United States navy. The department of agriculture an nounces the selection of fifteen men prominent in tho protection of game and other birds in various nections of tho country to advise tho secre tary in framing regulations to make tho now federal protection of migra tory birds effective. The act of March 4 gives the federal govern ment jurisdiction over the migra tory birds of the United States. Professor Charles F. Marvin has boon selocted for chief of the weath er bureau to succeed Willis L. Moora, recently removed. Professor Marvin was chief of tho instrument divi sion, and was appointed to tho old signal service in 1884 from Ohio. Under tho now chief more attention will bo paid to weather reports and forecasts as they affect or are likely to affoct agriculture and general farming conditions throughout tho country. .-Hei frtEWAY ir uibu TO &E, t - t tm jvra. iw w .- bl mw v w 4 " f vocv yteWJ TIII3 SHOCKING CA$I3 OF WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN From tho South Bond Ind.l Nows-Tlmcs. than two million acres of the so called Oregon and California rail road lands which the United States district court of Oregon recently ordered forfeited to the govern ment on the ground that tho railroad had violated conditions of the grant. As tho company will appeal the issue will not be settled until it roaches the supreme court, and oven if the government is suc cessful, no disposition can be made of the lands until congress passes spocial legislation for the purpose. The public -was also being induced to make applications to purchase from tho railroad company in order to ac quire preference rights of purchase. The Southern Pacific railroad has is sued a warning that no money will be accepted by the company and no preference granted pending tho end or the litigation. abolished by Postmaster General Burleson. Hereafter all undelivered third and fourth-class matter which has been heretofore sent to tho di vision of dead letters -will go to the postofflce at the headquarters of the railway mail service of the division in which the matter is destined. There the matter or manifest value will be held for one year, subject to reclamation and then sold at auc tion. The postofllces which will handle the dead lette'r mail are Bos ton, New York, Washington, Atlan ta, Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Cleveland, St. Paul, Ft. Worth, New Orleans, Seattle, Omaha and Pittsburgh. William J.. Price of Danville, Ky., has been selected by President Wil son for minister to Panama. A monumental legend, written in great concrete letters on the face of Culobra cut and tolling tho history of the building of tho Panama canal, is tho central feature of tho plan of the commission of ilno arts for beau tifying tho canal. The commission's report was sent to tho senate by tho president. Tho recommendations by tho committee were based on tho ad vice of Daniel Chester French, sculp tor, and Francis L. Olmstoad, landscape artist, who visited tho isthmus early this year as a commit tee on architectural plans for the boautification of the waterway. Tho senate confirmed the appoint ment of George Harold Todd of New York to be assistant to the attorney general of the United States. The postmaster general has an nounced that the "banking by mail" feature would be introduced into the postal-savings system. This reform, which has been under consideration ' no.v.n wn wMl enable Tannin liv ing In remote districts to avail them . . . i-j oi Llio benefits of tho system. . A constitutional amendment pro hibiting the sale of all alcoholic, bev erages was proposed in a resolution introduced in tho house August 5 by Representative Hobson of Alabama. Advices to the department of jus tice of attempts to perpetrate whole sale land frauds upon innocent peo ple throughout the entire west, espe cially in Orogon, brought forth a vigorous warning to tho public by Assistant Attorney General Ernost Knaobol and an announcement that the government would spare no of for to detect and punish the guilty parties. According to Mr. Knaebel, designing and unscrupulous persons are making false representations to tho people for tho settlement, which is imposilblo at this tlmo, of more Secretary McAdoo announced that wood pulp and papor would not bo admitted free of duty from Russia under tho "favored nation" agree ment, the commerce treaty between tho United States anl Russia' having been abrogated. Ho said countries with favored nation treaties with tho United States only were entitled to free pulp and paper because that provision was granted to Canada. The treasury department has accepted tho principle, but for the time boing it applies only to Norway, Austria, Hungary and Russia. In order thut the farmers of tho United States may profit by the ex perience of the farmers of Europe Secretary of Agriculture Houston has decided to send abroad Dr. Thomas N. Carver, head of the rural organi zation service and Bradford Knapp who .is in charge of ihe farmers' co operative demonstration work in the south. One of the principal objects of the trip will be the study of suc cessful co-operative schemes. They will visit Ireland first., th r mark and Saxony. The annual "dead letter" sales, which have been an annual feature of Washington for years, have been Colonel Mulhall continued his tes timony during the past few weeks before the senate lobby investigation committee regarding the alleged po litical work of the National Associa tion of Manufacturers. Some of his charges, implicating many prominent public men in the past and resont political life of the nation, are sen sational in the extreme, but as yet sufficient evidence has not been in troduced to prove tho truth of his charges. On one occasion Colonel muui.ui i-uuajjHea unaer pressure of the constant fire of questions aimed at him by members of the commit tee and pleaded for a short resnite from the gruelling examination. - ml hTe 1(Jbby investlSating com mittee got under way August 5 with Louis Seibold, who prepaid the ex posures of Martin M. Mulhall for the New York World, as the first tnesB testifying as to the public state ments and otherwise laying founda tions for the cross examination of Mulhall Mr. Seibold said the in vestigation made by the New York World as to the truth of the Ma hal charges hud been confined to el tabliahintr th nilii,n.ii.. . rs .documents and did not go to the truth nf tho nU 4.1- . lu. Ule Seibold's UmoiV wa7intorZd to allow James E. Emery, of coin-SJfS- te manujacturerSj tQ letters and legal documents Dis cussing the list of public men classi fied as those whom the national as sociation of manufacturers had no difficulty in "reaching and influenc ing for business, political or' sympa thetic reasons," Mr. Seibold testi fied he had no purpose of implying any "moral obliquity" or "legisla tive impropriety" to the men men tioned. "The basis for this list" said Mr. Seibold, "was the Mulhall letters, his personal narrative and statements he made to me." He told the committee that 400 or 500 new letters had been discovered. Examination of Martin M. Mulhill, self-styled lobbyist for t;he national association of manufacturers, was postponed August 7 until Monday, August 11, at the request of Mulhall, who announced that in a few days previoiib he h d discovered in his files in Baltimore some 200 addi tional letters bearing on national politics, and believed that if given a few days he would be able to find more. He pronounced the letters found important. Complaints from many railroads against alleged inadequate compen satipn for increased weight of mail matter under tho parcel post sys tem has culminated in a notice to the postofflce department from the Toledo, -St.. Louisv & Western .rail way company that . at the end of sixty days it will discontinue trans portation of mail, althoi'gh its pres ent .contract does not expire for two years. The department has informed the management that discontinu ance will not be permitted. JOHN LIND John Lihd, who goes to Mexico, not as an ambassador but with even a higher mission as a ministe" of peaco on behalf of the president of the United States, has a name that a Viking might have borne. A na tive of Sweden and iA yet sixty years of age, ha has been governor of his state, a representative in three congresses and an officer of volunteers in the war with Spain. He is typical of that large and splendid element of oui citizenship which produced the lamented John A. John son of Minnestta. Such a man may not be familiar with the character and habits of Latin Americans j he may not te gifted in diplomacy and finesse; ho may even be ijnoiant of or inatten tive to the fi. 3 points of violence which distinguish political contro versies south of the Rio Grande; hut of his ability to present to the war ring chieftains in Mexico' facto, prin ciples and conditions wh'ch should persuade them to accept American mediation there can be no question. In him the far north appeals to the far south. It will be said ot him that he does not understand tne temperament of the people whom lie is to address; yet through the ageiicj of such men far no th has instructed far south more than once in s ate craft, in respect for law and ordei, in true pride and honor and in cour age, and it may do so again. John Lind carries to Mexico a message of peace, good will and com mon sense which has back of it tne determination, the patience and tne power of many millions of ou Linds. New York World. II '? 'i wBBpiHW(gi "' '