each year to about 50 per cent of the original cost of the car. The railroads do not charge the express companies a penny for car rental. The government pays the railroad companies 800 per cent more, lound for pound, for hauling the mails than the express companies pay for hauling their stuff. To wipe out the deficit in the postal de partment Postmaster General Hitchcock is taking drastic action. By making the railroads carry the mails for a fair price? No! By knocking out the grafting system of weighing the mails? No! By abolishing the infamous "car rental"' scheme? No! How, then? By compelling the already overworked and underpaid mail clerks to work longer hours under higher pressure, and proposing to cinch the maga zines that do things while practically exempting the magazines that endorse "Big Business" and all the graft and chicanery that the term "Big Business" implies. Of course, if you want to read the real truth about the gar ment workers' strike in Chicago you are not reading the Tribune, the News, the Times-Herald, the Post, the Inter-Ocean or the Ex aminer. If you are reading the truth it is because you are a sub scriber to the Chicago Daily Socialist. The Daily Socialist- is the only daily newspaper in Chicago that is not edited in the department store business offices or the headquarters of the beef trust. "Profit patriots" is a new and very good expression. It fits a great many men in this country. It is quite as clever as Dr. Johnson's definition of "Patriotism." Dr. Johnson defined the word as "the last refuge of a scoundrel. A few days ago the dispatches announced the death of Mel ville D. Landon. Very few people gave it a second thought, yet a generation ago Landon was known in every village, hamlet and city in the republic. No platform orator was more in demand, no writer was more sought after. Under the nom de plume of "Eli Perkins" he made millions laugh, and therefore made millions happier. Lan don. however, appealed to the brains of the people. The man with out any brains could not appreciate the delicate humor of "Eli Per kins." Such men must be entertained by the cheap "knockabout ar tists" and "slapstick" exponents of the vaudeville stage. Men who are tickled almost to death by the sight of a stage Irishman with green whiskers sinking an axehead into the caput of a stage German with an impossible paunch, or a stage "nigger" with red lips who never saw a full-blooded negro with red lips being kicked all around the proscenium arch by a stage club man who wears his swallowtail with about as much grace as a cat would wear breeches men who find humor in that sort of thing never would be able to appreciate the subtle wit and the delicate sarcasm of "Eli Perkins." That's vhy Melville D. Landon's death a few days ago conveyed a mes sage of sadness to so few people, and they of the generation that is now swiftly passing from the stage of action. Andrew Carnegie has just given $10,000,000 to establish a fund for the promotion of universal peace. Whose millions did he give? Certainly not his own, for no man can earn that amount of money honestly. The millions he gave were wrested from the muscle and bone and flesh of underpaid labor ; from the tears and heartaches of wives widowed and children orphaned by the remorseless maw of, his iron mills; from a silly and supine people that allowed Carnegie to write the iron and steel schedules of a robber tariff law. He robbed the men who produced the commodities he sold, and he robbed the consumers who were forced to buy the commodities. Labor on the one side and consumers on the other, then, gave the ten millions. Labor because it could not help itself, and the consumers because they are such blooming chumps that they were deluded into believ ing that they could tax themselves rich. This country is still full of men whose advocacy of "protection" gives color to the belief that they hold to the opinion that a man can lift himself over a fence if he pulls hard enough upon his bootstraps. During the year ending December 1, 1910, there were 25,171 births in Nebraska. There were six sets of triplets, and 102 pairs of twins. The total number of deaths was 10,371. Yet with all these births, and the promiscuous distribution of twins and triplets, there are a great many too many homes made up of husband, wife and a fiea-bitten poodle dog. But perhaps Dame Nature is wise, giving the aforesaid poodles into the keeping of those most likely to waste upon them the caresses that any normal baby would bitterly resent. The people of Nebraska want an initiative and referendum law that means something, not a miserable make-shift. They want the right to initiate legislation, state-wide and not merely local. They want the right to veto legislation, state-wide and not merely locaL And they want the recall system so that faithless public servants may be discharged. The party,, the interests or the man who at tempts to thwart the will of the people as to these matters will meet up with disaster. Edgar Allen Poe is finally to have a place in the Hall of Fame, the managers of that institution having so decided after several refusals to admit the erratic genius. We are quite familiar with Poe and his writings, but who the devil are the fellows charged with the c'uty of selecting our literary honorables for us? The eminent democrats who framed up the Baltimore affair have bowed to the inevitable and invited Mr. Bryan to become party to their conferences. Mr. Bryan may never be president and it wftL perhaps, be better for his future fame if he is not but he does not need the title to that high "office to fix his name permanently upon the pages of the country's history. One thing, however, is quite sure : the democrat who is elected to the presidency during Bryan's lifetime, if such a thing shall come to pass, will be a democrat whose principles square with the Bryan principles. The democrat who seeks the presidency on any other basis, and the interests that back him, will merely have his trouble for his pains, and a pretty bill of expense for money squandered in a fool chase. " PARAGRAPHS APPERTAINING TO MEN AND MATTERS Thomas B. Hord. the largest cattle feeder in the world, died suddenly in Minneapolis on December 24. Mr. Hord's' home was at Hord, Nebr., a village on the Union Pacific named in his honor. The world at large knows very little about Mr. Hord, and very few people even in Nebraska are aware that he was the world's larg est cattle feeder. This is due in large measure to the fact that Mr. Hord never courted publicity, did not pose as the discoverer of any new road to wealth, and was quite content to attend to his own busi ness. Yet Mr. Hord's success might have been made a valuable asset to Nebraska, by making it known of all men. But that has been Nebraska's chief trouble for the past two decades she has neglected every opportunity to advertise herself for what she really is the state of golden opportunities for the industrious. The success achieved by Mr. Hord should be made known everywhere, for by making it known Nebraska wilL advertise herself. "Given the same amount of care and attention that is bestowed upon the orchards of Oregon and Washington, and the orchards of Nebraska will beat them in production and in profit," said G. G. Mar shall, secretary of the State Horticultural Society. "We have the ideal fruit country in eastern Nebraska, and especially in southeast ern Nebraska. The trouble is that so many orchard owners were raised to believe that an orchard would take care of itself, and when it quit bearing on account of bugs and fungus and San Jose scale they jumped to the conclusion that 'fruit growing won't pay in Ne braska. That idea is being wiped out by the experience of men who are cultivating their orchards by improved methods. ,1 expect to see Nebraska one of the leading fruit producing states of the Union within the next ten or fifteen years." men wrho will go into it sensibly and conservatively, and Lincoln would benefit amazingly. Lincoln ought to be the center of a score of diverging trolley roads reaching from twenty to one hundred miles. This would add immensely to the value of farm property, provide, easy and cheap access to market, and make Lincoln a great commercial center. Lincoln capital ought to take hold of the.Omaha, Lincoln & Beatrice project and push it to rapid completion. There should be a line running southeast down into Nemaha and Rich ardson counties; another due west, and still another running to the northwest. Just, as soon as we can quit the foolish habit of scran ping among ourselves over matters that should lie with the indi vidual concience, and quit "knocking" because we harbor malice just as soon as Lincoln can quit that sort of thing well begin making a real city here. Senator Ollis of Valley county is really the author of the pres ent primary law -which fact is another proof that even so able a man as Senator Ollis is liable to make mistakes in his zeal for re form. The primary law as it now exists is a sorry blotch. Either it must be amended so as to provide for a closed primary or made in fact what it is now only in name, an open primary. M. I. Aiken of Lincoln has the right "huch" concerning the inter urban line business. There is big money in this sort of thing for the If organized labor is to secure the enactment of any; laws safe guarding life and limb at the coming session of the legislature it will have to show some signs of life pretty soon. To draft a bill pro viding for these things and then let it drift into a pigenhole will sim ply mean the usual result failure. The legislative committee of the State Federation of Labor ought to have all of its bills drafted by this time, and preparations made for maintaining a committee at" the legis lature during the session. Up to date nothing of this kind has been provided for. This means that when the legislature adjourns with out recognizing the needs of labor, union men are going to again