; (( l Iff liUUUii i PAGE 6 NOVEMBER 23, 1905 THE LD OF PRGGRE ii i & ii - r - u ii mi n r. n jrr u is u a v 11 11 11 11 m j m u m es. v ii n ii dm mm b0 iM to. h n hi m am w. jv w m n v. m j ai n n w j tiw j-j U U J U U H Emm U W U U Lraafce H U u w w u ww X5he Nobraoko Indopondont State Dairy Commissioner II. R. Wright of Iowa proposes to show in his triennial report, which will bo given to the public printer soon, Iowa is pre-eminently a dairy, rather than a cattle feeding state and that the reputation of the state for feeding cattle i3 misplaced when compared with the dairy interests. He has obtained from the state auditor facts and figures to prove this. The figures show that the cows of the state, not including the heifers of 1 and 2 years, equal in value all the steers of all ages, all the cattle in feeding and very nearly all the bulls. The value of the cows is $30,288,802, and the value of all the steers, cattle in feeding and bulls is $30, 369,874. The value of the cows and the heifers one and two years old is $41,268,965, exceeding the value of all the other cattle. This will be used by Mr. Wright in Impressing upon the legis lature the importance of the dairy interests of the state. About a year ago work was begun on & rail road in upper Egypt from the Red sea to the Nile. Little has been said about it, but it is now reported that about 180 miles of track have been laid, leaving about 130 to complete the road, whose Red sea terminus is now at Suakim, which has always been the port from which the caravans have crossed to Khartoum, but at a point thirty miles farther north, where a better harbor is being built. This has been called Barud, but will be named Port Soudan. Thence the road pursues a southwesterly direction to the point where the Atbara falls into the Nile. Work was begun at both ends at once. There is very heavy work on the road and many bridges, for though there is little rain, when it comes it conies in torrents. The railroad may be said to be a com petitor of many of ours, for a chief reason as signed for building it is to encourage cotton growing in the Soudan by giving a cheap outlet to the sea. The work of developing the British port of Dover into a first rate naval base and fortress, to rank with Gibraltar or Singapore, is proceed ing apace. The great southern breakwater of the edmirality harbor, 1,400 yards long, begun less than a year ago, is to be completed in eighteen months. To give an idea of the gigantic, nature of this work, it may be stated that the solid masonry is constructed in forty-five feet of water, at low tide, is seventy feet thick at the base, and about 100 feet high. In eighteen months the har bor will be completely protected from the sea, and will afford fleets lying in its complete immu nity from torpedo attack, being, with the expec tion of Portland, the only harbor in the United Kingdom which offers these advantages. It is understood that a scheme for constructing a dock for submarines will appear in the forthcoming parliamentary estimates, and that floating dry docks will be stationed at Dover, although it is proposed that these should, if necessary, be towed in war time to any base the fleet may be actually working from. Unless more effective measures are taken, it Is admitted by the police that they are power less to defeat the army of 5,000 Camorrlstl who Infest New York. So bold have these bri gands become because of their success in black mailing Italian merchants and escaping even sus picion of complicity in the crime that their de mands are increasing at an alarming rate. So systematized has the campaign of brigandage be come, according to Sergeant Petroslno, who has applied to Commissioner McAdoo to have the force of Italian detectives at police headquarters Increased from five to thirty, that members of the band are employed In many of the little Italian banks scattered through the east side to watch the deposits of the small merchants. "Only tho national government can save this situation for us," declared Sergeant Petroslno. "As tho law Stands at present wo are helpless to a great ex tent against these desperadoes. They know tho penal code from etui to end. I have Information that, there are not leu than 30.000 member of the Camorra In this country, working under twelvo leaders stationed In tho principal cities." That the railroads ore looking forward at no distant date to the time when steam railroads will not bo used and that thU fact U m lm por"" consideration In tho building of new tint In the went, was lntlmatd by jamrs J. Hill, "There I not going in bo any mad rush for competitive railroad building In the went," f&id Mr. Hill. "Hteftin railroad are eipenslve and the time may not be far off when railroads other than steam railroads will be used for trans portation. Some such roads would be better adapted for the western country. The country out west, is well supplied with railroad facilities. It is not thickly settled, and in view of the farm ing occupation of the people, requiring large tracts of land, I don't think it will be much more thickly settled for years to come. The stretch of country, through which the St. Paul is to run in going to the coast is about the only country that is back in facilities." When pressed for an explanation of his intimation regarding other than steam transportation, Mr. Hill smiled and refused to say anything further. The latest projected search for a treasure ship is being organized in Rome. In the bot tom of Lake Nemi arc some curious antique gal leys. According to a tradition they represent one of Caligula's mad freaks, and exploration confirms this report in a measure, for leaden pipes recovered bear that emperor's name. That is not proof, but it shows at least that the pipes were cast in his day. And the description of Suetonius is recalled not referring to these gal leys, indeed, but to the pleasure craft in which Caligula used to ail along the coast. They were of cedar, the poops inlaid with precious stones and the sails painted. There were baths on board, galleries, spacious chambers, vines and fruit trees of every sort. Those at the bottom of Lake Nemi are big enough for such luxury. An exact measurement of the smallest has been taken; it is 200 feet long and sixty feet wide; the depth could not be ascertained. The large one is supposed to be more th..n 250 feet in length. Many efforts have been made since that of Cardinal Colonna in 1431 to raise the galley, In 1904 8,600,000 pounds of aluminium were made in the United States, an increase of 1, 100,000 pounds over 1903. In 1902 the output in the United States was 7,300,000 pounds. The out put in 1902 is of particular interest, because "of the fact that twenty years before that the out put was only 83 pounds, and at the end of the first decade of manufacture, in 1893, only 339,629 pounds were made. Every day aluminium is ap plied to new uses, increasing the consumption to a wonderful degree. Aluminium paper is one of the latest products, and it is said to be far superior to tinfoil and similar articles. Aluminium is used for household utensils, as well as those for military purposes. In textile mill work aluminium spools and bobbins are very popular, and as a setting for lenses aluminum is much lighter than brass. It is used on railway cars, on locomotives, lithographic plates, letter boxes, in patented explosives, for making acid carboys and many other chemical vessels. Buenos Ayres, the capital of the Argentine Re public, has just passed the 1,000,000 mark in popu lation. It is the mourteenth city in the world in inhabitants, and is by far the largest city on the western hemisphere, outside of New York, Chi cago and Philadelphia. Fifteen years ago Rio de Janerlo was ahead of It. Now the Brizilian city is far behind. Thirty years ago Buenos Ayres was exceeded In population by St. Louis, Boston and Baltimore. It Is far in front of these big United States towns today. It Is growing as fast as Chicago, and faster than Berlin. Ar gentina has an area almost as great as all the United States east of the Mississippi, although its population is a little less than six million, or smaller than Pennsylvania's. It cxport3 more corn that the United States. Before many years pass, on account of our own home demand, Ar gentina will surpass the United States In exporta tion of food products in tho aggregate. For tho first half of 1905 Its total exports wero $175. 000,000, or several times as much as those of tho United States In proportion to population. Some of the Parisians, ever ready to suspect tho Hermans, are convinced that sotno sort of Teutonic intrigue was responsible for the pla cards recently Issued by tho "international Autl Militarist Association of Working Men," appeal-' Ing to iho conscripts to refuse obedience to their ofllcers to fire on them If ordered to ue their titles during utrtko dlHlurb.wioue, ..hi, If order for mobilisation wero Riven, tu retort by lnur rtciu, wince 'all war U criminal." The pla card, which were posted up In ewal Pari dUtrlru, were signed by a score of revolutionary sochUUt or anarthUta, Tho question anked In many quarters was where the money came from to pay for the distribution of such expensive posters. The government quickly removed the incendiary appeals, made several arrests, and gave stringent orders for the suppression of every anti-patriotic or anti-military demonstra tion during the departure of the conscripts. But there does not appear to have been any great necessity for the .extensive precautions which were adopted. Indeep, the departure of the con scripts was made the occasion of uncommon pa triotic demonstrations by the populace. Germany still holds the high position in forest science which began with Hartig and Cotta. The German forest schools, of which there are seven of the higher grades, are still among the very best, and the study of forestry, both in the schools and in the forest experiment stations, is eagerly pursued, says the National Geographic Magazine. The forests in Prussia, Saxony and other German states are admirably managed and yield important returns. The total value of the German forests, public and private, is said to be about $4,500,000,000. Forestry in France has long been associated with the names of famous men. Henry of Navarre and his friend and minister, Sully; Palissy, the great potter, who called the neglett of the forest prevalent In his time "not a mistake, but a calamity and a curse for France;" Colbert, the minister of Louis XIV; the botanist Duhamel du Monceau; Buffon, the celebrated na turalist, are among the men to whom France owes the rise and progress of its present excellent forest policy. Their peculiar service was to lay the foundation, both in law and in public opinion, upon which modern forestry in France now' rests. The forests of the French government are admir ably managed. They cover only about 2,750,000 acres, but they yield a net return each year of more than $2 an acre. Besides nandllng their natural forests with great intelligence and suc cess, the French foresters have done much for the general progress of forestry. The state census of New York for 1905, whose results have just been announced, reveals a continued concentration of population , in Greater New York city. The state as a whole gains 11 per cent in the five years, but the city gains 16.8 per cent, reducing the increase from the state outside of the city to 5.9 per cent. Greater New" York contains at present substan tially 50 per cent, or one-half of the state's popu lation. In 1890 it contained little more than 40 per cent of the state's population, and in 1880 only 37 per cent. The figures make no account of the business population of Greater New York which lives on the New Jersey side of the Hud son river. No less than twenty of the up-state counties show a loss of population during the past five years. The Massachusetts state census for 1905 shows a population increase of 6.9 per cent for the five years, or little more than the in crease for New oYrk state outside of New York city. During the same time, which has been a period of enormous immigration and unexampled industrial prosperity, Iowa has lost in population and Kansas has made no gain worth mentioning. The trust regime is drawing wealth and popula tion disproportionately from the country at large and piling them up in the financial center. An airing of Canadian life insurance methods, suggested by the revelations elicited through the investigations in the United States into the busi ness of the great American companies is Inevit able. At the last meeting of the Canadian insur ance Institute It was stated that the Canadian companies were ready to open their books to a government Inquiry. In any case, an amend met of tho existing laws, such as the federal In spector of life Insurance has repeatedly recom mended of late years, must bring the whole question before a parliamentary committee. The government Is regarded as pledged to the Intro duction of an amending bill, and this will open the way to such a discussion and overhauling as alono will satisfy the country, Tho methods of the Canadian companies have attracted tho attention even of the Knglish weeklies and Dnnn clal paper. Thero U no suspicion at present of such wholesale misappropriation of tho policy, holder' money as have como to light in tho United States, tho main evil being the high rates of commission pnb for tho Introduction of new business, which have. It Is claimed, reached pro portions tlmt are unJuftlMed. unjust to the pollev. holders, and reckless, if nut dangerous, to all tho Interest Involved, v