THE OMAHA DAILY HEK: SATUKDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 11)02. Tiie omaiia Daily Bee E. ROSE WATER. EDITOR. rCBLISMEl EVERT MORNING. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. t1Iy lice (without Sunday), One Year. lmUy Hwi and Sunday, One Year Jilumrated ilee. One 1 ear Sunday Hee. one Year tiaturoay Be. One Venr IweiiUeth Century rarmer, One Year. DELIVERED BY CARRIER. Dally Bee (without Sundky), per copy. Dally B-e (without Sunday), per week l.M .l.w .12c Dally Bee (including Sunday;, per week. .lie Miimmv nr rimv "C Evening Bee (without Hunday), per week (k; feventng; Bee (Including Sunday;, per week .100 of "irreguiarit 'lei' in' delivery Complaints hould be addressed to City Circulation De (jarlment. OFFICES. Omaha The Bee Building. South Omaha City Hall Building, Twenty-fifth and M Streets. Council BlufTs-l'i I'earl Street. ' Chicago 1M0 t'nlty Building. New YorkZU I'ark Row Building. Washington 6ol Fourteenth Street. CORRESPONDENCE. Communications relating to newa and edi torial matter should be addressed; Omaha Uee, Editorial Department. BUSINESS LETTERS. BuHlnesh letters and remittances should be addressed: Tha Bee Publishing Com pany, Omaha. REMITTANCES. Remit by draft, express or postal order. r,v.hl ia Th Hee Publishing Company. only 2-cent stamps accept-! In rnnyrnent of mall accounts, personal cnecas. excepi u Omaha or eastern exchanges, not accepteu. THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. STATEMENT OP CIRCULATION, fitate of Nebraska, Douglas County, ss: Oeorge 12. Tsschuck, secretary of Tha Bea Publishing Company, being duly sworn, aaya that the actual number of full and t-unriDleta co tiles of The Dally. Morning, Evening and Sunday Bee printed during tha month of August, 19ua, was as follows: 1 8H.TXO t . I . 2N.U8S 4 2S.610 t SH,10 .2S,70O 7 2M.7UO II itg.TSO SM.OOO 10 JtH,7B 11 , 2K.7BO 12 1M.7SO 13 2N,8i!( 14 2S.U20 U SW.730 14 2M,HM) 17 asyiao it .2t,3) u 39,770 20 ao,:io 21 80,120 a ao.otw 23 30,810 24 28,735 25 ito.sao 26 20,800 27 21,03 28 2tt,M) 29 30,070 AO 30,110 (1 21M20 Total 006,440 Less unsold and returned copies.... B377 Net total sales WM1.B6.1 Net dally average 28,021 OEO. B. TZSCHUCK. Subscribed In my presence and sworn to before me thin 1st day of September, A. D, l'JOZ. M. U. HUNUATK, (Seal.) Notary Public. It Is evident that the weather man Is trying his best to ''recoup his popularity. It Is not the first time Speaker Hen derson has refused to entertain a motion to reconsider. According to ull accounts "the Iowa Idea" on the tariff Is just simply the old prottction idea. Several kinks In the primary election law ought to be straightened out by the next Nebraska legislature. Whoever may lie elected In the Third Iowa district, be will be best known as "the man who succeeds Henderson." There need be no expenditure of sym- puthy upon the coal dealers. They are Charging the highest prices they can get. ., Of course "legitimate" combinations of capital are ull right. And, of course, you can Blur no trust maguato who admits being In uny other kind. It Is to be noted that ex-Governor Holes Is not olio- of the distinguished gentlemen who appealed to Speaker llendcrsou to reconsider his with' tlrawal. Lieutenant Peary consoles the public with assurance that, while he did not reach the pole, he made Important scion title - discoveries, but he does not mention what they are. umana s national banks come promptly to the scratch when the comp troller calls for a statement of their con dltlon and they have every reason to be proud of the sound exhibits they make. Not to be outdone by President Roose velt, Colonel Bryan has succeeded In be comlug the hero of a smash-up accident No man with presidential aspirations Is safe until he has weathered at least one railroad or trolley car collision. That reminds us those carefully pre pared cartoon which our Dave hud shipped to him In big boxes from Wash ington representing him as the colossus of public1 buildings with dogs barking at his heels must have been lost In the shuflle. If the County Democracy does not be stir Itself the Jacksonlans w ill win all the laurels. To offset the disturbance of the kitty, the Jacksonlans are arranging for periodic social sessions with music. oratory and other harmless amusements. The County Democracy will have to start something quick. The Bee will lssua-its special Ak-Sar- Ben number Sunday. It will be replete - with 1 Illustrations and feature articles relating to the Ak-Sar-Ben carnival and ' President Roosevelt's coming visit as Ak-Sar-Bcu's guest Place your ardors for it and send extra . copies to your friends. The edition is limited. Trial of the direct primary under the Minnesota law seems to give unusual satisfaction at any rate the people there have persuaded themselves that they have had more to say on the make up of the tickets than they would have had uader the old convention sys tem. Even if there were no more sub stantial galas, this comforting faith a ought to count for something. As the price of anthracite coal goes up, the pretense of the operators that they cannot concede any part of the de mands of the strikers because tha In crease In wages would have to be got. ten back tn Increased prices which In time would restrict the sale, become all tha more shallow. If the operators fear high prices will drive consumers to ths us of cheaper bituminous coal, w by ax the putting prices upl THE TRIE.1D Of LABOR. The Connecticut nrnbllcan platform says: "The) rrpuMirnn party nns ever recngnUrvl the vnhte ami dignity of la tor, which Is the foundation of our na tional wealth, prosperity and happiness. and Roupht to enact such legislation as jjj would safeguard the true Interests of lft i. bor, and It will continue to favor all measures Justly calculated to secure that end." This Is said of the party In Connecticut, but It applies generally. In every stato where the republican party has been In control It has shown Itself the friend of labor. It Is to the republican party that the credit Is due for legislation In the Interest of labor. Before that party came Into control of the national government there was little recognition of the dignity or the rights of labor. The republican party Is still solicitous of the Interests and welfare of labor. It still believes In protecting American wage workers and maintaining and pro 'moting industrial conditions In this country that will Insure to labor steady employment and good wages. The pol icy for which the republican party stands has elevated labor and made the worklngmen of the United States the most prosperous of any In the world. In no other country, not even In England, Is labor so much respected as here or Its value so well recognized. The work- lngmnn who remembers conditions a generation ago knows bow great has been the Improvement, and this has been attained under the operation of re publican policy. That party has the strongest possible claim to the support of labor. COXGRESSMAK LITTLE fltLDS ViCR'S. Congressman Little field of Maine, who Is expected to lead a movement at the coming session of congress for legisla tion to regulate the Industrial comblna tlons, and who has given the subject as careful study as perhaps any other man In the country, In a recent speech pointed out the error of several proposed remedies for trust evils. He denied that menacing conditions can be re moved by tariff revision and said that democratic Interference would result In driving all business enterprise out of the country. He declared that tariff reform and tariff revision is the panacea of the democratic party for nearly every difficulty'' that afflicts the body politic. It has always, in good times and in bad, fought the principle of pro tectlon and It Is now simply following Its traditional course. totn parties concede that there are trusts and industrial combinations, Both admit that these have Injurious effects. The Important consideration Is as to which of these parties, the repub lican or the democratic, shall be trusted to deaT with this question, In connection with the other great questions that con cern the welfare and prosperity of the country. "So far as this question Is concerned,", said Mr. Llttlefleld, "the republican party asks the people of this country to trust the party that has given It In connection, not only with this question, but all other important questions, constructive and not de structive legislation. Thd democratic party has never suggested reasonable constructive legislation. It is destruc tlve legislation tear down. The repub lican party proposes to give wise and conservative legislation." This clearly states the attitude and aim of the two parties. The republican party proposes to regulate the combinations, to put them under such governmental control and supervision as shall be found nee essary to correct evils and abuses. The democratic plan Is one of extermina tion, which If It could be made effective in regard to the trusts would necessarily also destroy the Individual Industries. It is not to be doubted that most In telllgent men understand this, knowing that It Is impracticable to strike the combinations through the tariff without also hitting those enterprises, which are numerous, that are outside of comblna tlons and competing with them In the home market. But those who are de voted to free trade are of course quite Indifferent to this consideration. They are willing to overthrow the protection policy at whatever cost to the Industries and the business of the country. It is not conceivable that a majority of the American people are ready to support the purty of destruction. HtLPlXU CUBA. Senator Piatt of Connecticut, author of the amendment that was incorporated in the Cuban constitution, said in a speech before the republican convention of that state that he believed "the time of dealing Justly with Cuba has only been delayed and will surely come." He urged that there should be reciproc ity In trade between the two countries mutually advantageous, a reciprocity whereby we would extend our own trade and at the same time benefit tha industrial Interests of Cuba. This he thought to be entirely practicable and said: "If ever ou'e nation was obligated to' deal' Justly' " amf liberally with another, we are obligated to deal justly aud liberally with Cuba. We can help Cuba In the maintenance of her Inde pendence with great benefit to our selves. We can enable her to start on a career of self-supporting nationality without perceptible Injury to any Ameri can Industry and with manifest benefit to all." Senator Piatt, whose state produces tobacco with which the Cuban product competes to some extent, la one of the most earnest supporters of President Roosevelt's position regarding Cuba. He has given the question of reci procity with the Island most care ful consideration, from the point of view, of a thorough protectionist, and when he says that tariff conces sions can be made to Cuba with out perceptible Injury to any American Industry aud with manifest benefit to ail, the statement la entitled to atten tion. It has been intimated that the presi dent may not refer to thU question dur ing his western trip, but It is highly probable that be will discuss it with his characteristic directness and candor. The people of ,n ""t w"1 wtalnly be glad to hear the president's views on this Important subject and he will flud that a very large number of them are In accord wlthils position. AMIR1CAX tUHUlS MLXACbh. Duly atniut six mouths ago IttissU gave a pledge to at once begin the evacu ation of Manchuria. According to re- cut advices T.e Is now determined to expel all foreigners from that Chinese province, which she practically donil- nates. If this course shall le pursued by llussia It will violate the treaty rights of Americans and should be met by a very decided protest from our govern ment, r By the treaty of 1-StiS, which Is still in force, between China and the United States, It Isjirqvlded that citizens of the United S Jr visiting or residing In China shall en'oy the same privileges, immunities cr uiemptions In respect to travel or residence as may there be enjoyed by Ihe citizens or subjects of the most favored nation. Under this - treaty Americans have as good right to reside or travel in any part of the Chinese empire as have Russians or any other foreigners and it is the duty of the Chinese govern ment to see that this right Is protected and respected. If Manchuria has be come Russian territory, if it has been ceded to that power, China should make the fact known to the world, but until she does this It must be supposed that Manchuria Is still a part of the empire and that Americans there are to be pro tected In all the rights secured by treaty. The United States has perhaps a greater Interest la Manchuria than in any other part of China. Our trade with that section is large and In recent years American Investments have vastly In creased. It Is a rich region that holds out great promise for future commerce. Our government should make an earnest effort to prevent any Interference with the rights of Amerlcau citizens there. Tilt FRKSlUtXTS WtSTtRS TRIP. President Roosevelt's western toul will be a fitting complement to his re cent travels through New England and the south. His welcome here will bs at least as spontaneous and cordial aa among the Yankees and the southerners. The west has always had a fellow feel ing and admiration for Theodore Roose velt, eastern-born though he Is. His courage and progressive genius, his op timism and his broad, genuine Ameri canism have every badge of the west ern spirit, and his varied life on the plains and mountains have endowed him with common experiences entered with the zest of a native. The ranchman's saddle and the hunter's rifle are familiar suggestions In connection with bis per sonality. In the west probably more than In any other section are the presi dent's energy and. boldness appreciated. The west will take pleasure in the op portunity to signify its approval of his positive and aggressive stand on public questions. It will not merely greet the president with formal honors, but it will approve the man and his public course. Ills progress through the west will leave him In no doubt on that point. The west is not the whole country, but the presi dent will understand the true attitude of the American people toward him after he completes his western trip. PREPARE FOR OCR QUESTS. Only a week remains for us to prepare for the guests Omaha will be called upon to entertain during the reception to President Roosevelt and the annual fall festivities of Ak-Sar-Ben. Omaha's high reputation as a live, progressive, up-to-date community must be sustained and it devolves upon every person who takes pride In his residence in Omaha to contribute toward bringing about this desired result The public buildings will be suitably decorated and Illuminated, but the decorations and illuminations should not stop there. Every business bouse can at small expense put on a few extra touches in honor of the event and noth ing will Impress visitors more forcibly with the public-spirited character of our citizens than the extent to which all par ticipate in the work devolving upon us as hosts. This year's Ak-Sar-Ben carnival Is to be an extraordinary occasion by reason of the promised presence of the presi dent and an extraordinary effort should ue maae to make tne occasion memo- ruble. The voting trust in the Southern Pa cific, whose powers under the reorgani zation are to be made perpetual, is an other device for entrenching perma nently the clique now In control. This trust agreement has been signed by the holders of $1)1,000,000 of the capital stock, the total of which is $180,000, uuu. nut uuuer tne trust agreement a majority of the pooled stock controls the action of all, including the election of the board of directors and the whole administration of the company. Thus the holders of $10,000,000 of stock, or only a trifle more than 25 per cent of the whole, can indefinitely hold and dic tate the control of this vast property. This Is one of the most dangerous aspects of latest trust development. Delegates to republican county and congressional conventions want to real ize- the responsibility that rests upon them. They owe It to themselves and to the party to nominate only such men as may reasonably expect election. To put up candidates sure of defeat in ad vance can bring no satisfaction to any body. Republicans need a strong ticket to win this year under present condi tions, and It Is up to the members of the conventions to make sure of victory by nominations that will command the whole party strength. A Very Mvaera Notion. Chicago Chronicle. ' There are members of the Chicago city council who are fully convinced that If George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, Altxsadsr Hamilton and other giants ot Ue revolu- "The Evils "Combinations of cspltal the market In commodities necessary to the general use of the people, by suppress ing natural and ordinary competition, thus enhancing prlcra to the general consumer, are obnoxious to the common law and the public welfare. They are dangerous con spiracies against the public good and should bo made the subject of prohibitory or penal legislation." Who was the author of the above words that certainly leave no doubt as to the meaning sought to be conveyed? Waa it William J. Bryan or Henry Wal- terson? Is It one of the oratorical periods of Champ Clark or the written lucubration of ex-Magnate Wetmore of St. Louis? Were these carefully worded sentences formu lated In the brain of Orover Cleveland or of David B. Hill T Is It an oratorical effort of some Mississippi valley republican, spurred to brave words by the sentiment of his constituents? ' Theodore Roosevelt might have been their author, so straight forward are the words and devoid of double meaning. - v . They will be found. In the letter of ac ceptance of William McKtnley, the la mented president of the United States. This man, whose memory all revere, who was acknowledged during his life as the fore most republican, who was certainly con servative In all matters affecting the busi ness Interests of the country, did not split hairs about the evils of Illegal trusts or "combinations of capital, to use his para phrase. He said that suppressing competi tion and raising prices to the general con- tlonary period were In the flesh at this time they would not be able to carry their own precincts. . Don't Get nay. Chicago Tribune. Uncle Hod Boles, however, should not be In a hurry to let the contract for bis con gressional air castle. A Wise Hnallflratlon. Washington Post. Mr. Bryan told an Ohio audience that If be had been elected he would bave put stripes on a certain class of millionaires. The little word "If Is much used In the Bryan speeches these days. Greasing the Tentacles. Boston Transcript. They are forming an elevator trust In England, and the London papers refer to It aa "a lift amalgamation." Lift la English for elevator, and "amalgamation" has a tenderer sound than "trust." Forcing Legislation. Buffalo Express. Anthracite coal has reached $12.50 a ton In Philadelphia and some dealers are pre dicting that it will go as high aa $25. Such prices as those will force legislation of some kind to deal with the problem of the coal supply. Working Mexico to a Finish. Chicago Inter-Ocean. American money Is said to be literally pouring Into Mexico these days, with the understanding, of course, that by way of a slight return for the Interest we are tak ing in the siste republic, Mexican money will be literally pouring into the United States later on.; : . . V 7 - Prinirj. 'iw Worki Well. MlfttssVpolls Times. -The new primary law realizes almost all Ua friends claim for It In small voting dis tricts, where candidates are personally known to voters. It has kept In office ex cellent county and city officers, well known by long service. It has caused the feeling of the community to be reflected In gen erally sound legislative nominations. It raises the standard of the city council year by year. HOW STRIKES AFFECT POLITICS. Few lllnstratlona Taken from Re cent History. Leslie's Weekly (rep.) Let the republican party beware of the effects of the coal strike in tha congres sional canvass of 1902. Strikes bave an ugly habit of registering themselves in na tional politics and they hit the party which Is in power at the time. This has been the experience of the United States in all the great labor confllcta. The first or these took place in 1877. That was the year of the great railroad strikes throughout the east and middle west, in which there was rioting in Pittsburg, Chicago and many other places. Hayes waa then president and the republicans were the dominant party. In the congressional election of 1878, the first Important canvass which came after the strike, the republicans were beaten. In the strike of the Gould sys tem of railroads. In 1886, which lasted many weeks and which was under the di rection of Martin Irons, great destruction of property took place and many cities. In cluding St. Louis and Kansas City, were terrorized. . That was during Cleveland s first term. Consequently It was the demo crats who were hit then. In the congres sional election of that year the republicans did not carry congress, but they reduced the democratic majority to comparatively small figures. Some of the democrats afterward said that the strike of 1886 had something to do with Cleveland's defeat for re-election In 188S. The experience of 1892 is near enough to be remembered by every voter. The Home stead strike of the year, affecting the Car negie steel works, figured with decided prominence in the campaign which began Just as the strike was sending. Cleveland was then running the third time and for his second term and his opponent was President Harrison, who was seeking re election. Several things were assigned by the democrats after the canvass waa over for Cleveland's brilliant victory in 1892. In which he gained a majority of 132 votes in the electoral college. The McKinley tariff of 1890 was one of these causes. The Sherman silver law of the same year was another. The republicans themselves, how ever, lay the blame of their defeat to the Homestead strike. When the coal miners first and the em ployes of the Pullman company afterward began their strike in the early half of 1894, In Cleveland's second term, the political borlion suddenly darkened tor the demo- crats, who controlled congress as well aa the presidency. The fate of the republicans in the strike of 1892 was cited m iss aa an omen or the things which were to come to the democrats when the people went to the polls. Nor did the omen fall. The re publicans won congress in 1894 by the most aweeDlnc victory which any party ever gained in a contest for the national legls lature. Ia 1902 it Is the republicans who are In power during the year of a great labor con- fllct. Senator Scott of West Virginia, a stalwart republican, says that the strike may cost his party three congressmen la bis state and several tn Pennsylvania. With the drift, as it is, against the re publicans for other causes the outlook for the dominant party is far from being rosy, The coal miners' lockout may register Itself In politics la November with a decisiveness which may surprise the country and con found the republican fisrty, of Trusts" Mtnneapolls Times, which control sumor was obnoxious to "common law and public welfare." He called Illegal com binations "dangerous conspiracies" that should be mnde the subject of parliamen tary or penal legislation. In what speech of early or recent date has Theodore Roosevelt iffed stronger language concerning Illegal trusts? The New York Sun and other Morganlzed news papers, who seem to be preparing to op pose Mr. Roosevelt because he will not yield allegiance to corporated wealth, lay great stress upon the president's promise that his administration should follow the lines laid down by his martyred predeces sor. That Is Just what Mr. Roosevelt Is doing In regard to the trusts. If he shall go further and demand a "careful, prudent and businesslike reduction of the tariff" he will still be following the course out lined by Mr. McKinley and one that the lamented president, had he lived to All out his term, would have followed on his own behalf. We are proud in our belief that Ameri can sentiment once aroused to the justice of a cause is irreslstable, magnificent, dominating, and that money cannot dic tate to manhood in this republic. Great is Morgan and powerful are the monled Interests at his back, but his greatness shall avail as nothing, his finan cial sinews shall crack in very weakness when the American people decide, aa they are ready now to do, that Illegal trusts must bo placed under governmental super vision and that those of them that are fed by a protective tariff must seek elsewhere for unjustified sustenance. POLITICAI, DRIFT. David B. Hill is not saying a word, but is doing a powerful lot of fence mending. ' ' Tom Johnson's political tent has been lined with asbestos so as to withstand the ravages of hot air. The democrats of Delaware bave turned their backs on the sacred platforms of 1896 and 1900. Common sense Is giving hysteria a cold shake these melancholy days. Under the new election law of Maryland party emblems to distinguish the candidates upon the official ticket have been abolished. Maryland was one of the. early states to adopt them. The liberal democrats, or Bryanltes, in New York declared themselves In their platform in favor of "the establishment of an agricultural school by the state for dependent children." Tha New York Herald has hoisted this political pennant: "The people's anti-trust candidate for 1904 for president, Theodore Roosevelt of New York; for vice president, George Dewey of Vermont." George Thornton Beck, whom the Wyo ming democrats have nominated for gov ernor, is a business associate and chum of "Buffalo BUI," a son of the lamented Sen ator Beck of Kentucky and a great-grand-nephew of George Washington. For the first time in the history of Vermont a Koman Catholic priest has been elected to the legislature tn the per son of Rev. D. J. O'Sulllvan, who was the successful candidate for town representa tive from St. Albans, Vt. Father O'Sulll van was elected by the democrats and local option republicans. He is a total abstinence man In his personal practice, but Is op posed to the prohibitory law. The defeat for denomination of Governor Gage of California recalls the fact that factional divisions in the past have more frequently defeated republican candidates tor. governor in California than the pre ponderance of the democratic vote against the nominee. In 1894 the republicans car ried the state by pluralities of from 20,000 to 40,000, but their candidate, Estee, was defeated for governor by 1,206 votes. In Oregon the advocates of the initiative and referendum should be satisfied, as both parties declared in favor of the sub mission of a constitutional amendment providing for the system. Submitting con stitutional amendments and adopting them are different things, however, as past ex perience has shown In Oregon. Oregon voted on five proposed constitutional amendments in 1900. They were all de feated. One was for woman suffrage. It received 26,000 votes. Chief Justice Fuller of the United States supreme court, appointed in 1888, is 69. Justice Harlan, appointed In 1877, Is 69. Justice Brewer, appointed in 1889, is 65. Justice Brown, appointed in 1891, is 66. Justice Shlras, appointed In 1892, is past 70. Justice White, appointed in 1894, la 67. Justice Peckham, appointed In 1895, Is 64, and Justice McKenna, appointed in 1898, is 69. With the retirement of Justice Gray, there is now only one supreme court Justice over the age of 70, and the new Justice, Holmes, is 67. There are three justices under 60 three of the nine. A FRl'ITFVL YEAR. Bonnteons Harvests Invoke the Spirit of Gratitude. Philadelphia. Press. The shortening days and the Increased chilliness In the air are reminders that the year Is two-thirds gone and that the season for gathering up the results of 1902 is fast approaching. It Is an acceptable season, especially when the year has brought so much as this one has to make people glad. Taking the season of 1902, and it Is doubtful if, all In all, any similar season In the pact gave more. If as much, reason for gratitude. There bave been seasons when some one crop has been ' larger than this season's. The wbeat crop of 1891, for instance, measured 135,000,000 bushels more than this year's crop and the rice and cotton crops' It the south will be somewhat below the average. But corn, oats, rye, barley, potatoes, buckwheat and nearly all the fruits have yielded bumper crops. The only shadows on tne year s landscape have been the nigh prices of meats and of coal. But the former Is fast correcting Itself and reason must soon rectify the latter. With an abundance of cheap food and with plenty of work at good wages the American people can look back on the eight months and a halt of 1902 which have gone with well earned satisfaction. Whatever has happened elsewhere their country has been free from famine and convulsions. Bountiful crops bave re warded the husbandman and good wages and plenty of work the laboring man. The latest report of the Massachu setts Bureau of Statistics, taking the years 1898 and 1902 as comparative points, showed that the annual earnings of an average family had Increased $164.73 and the expenses of the same family $96.94, a gain for the worklngman of $67.79, in addi tion to the Increased expense of being almost for Increased comforts. This la only one example of many that could be given. It Is ten weeks and some days away to Thanksgiving day, but it Is not too early to begin to realize what the season of 1902 has brought to this country In order that the gratitude expressed on that day may be adequate to the occasion. It Is a satisfaction ttat should be general and is typified by the full corn cribs of the western farmer as well as by the increased saving bank account of the eastern work man. It has been a fruitful year aad has made the people glad. other lai m oi r. Australia has gone farther than any other country In her restriction of immigration. The "Immigration Restriction Act" which went Into effect toward the end of last year was passed at the behest of the labor rsrty and was aimed primarily at "yellow labor," meaning Kanakas, Japanese, Chinese and EsRt Indians. In reality, however, it can keep out of Australia anybody, white or black, should It so be desired. The princi pal clause In the act provides that no per son shall be allowed to land tn Australia who "when asked to do so by an officer (the word officer being defined as an officer espe cially appointed, or any customs officer) falls to write out at dictation and sign In the presence of tho officer, a passage of fifty words in length in an European language directed by the officer. There are additional clauses providing for the rejection of un desirables, but the first Is widely embrac ing enough for all purposes. The broad character of this clause was purposely de signed so that any class of laborers, even Englishmen, mipht be kept out of the coun try if It seemed likely that they would work for less than the native. Some of the Im portant industries, especially sugar grow ing, have already been materially affected and great discontent has resulted. This is only one of several differences between the various states, which have not yet been able to get the national standpoint and look for the greater good of the whole country rather than that of one section. All the while that Great Britain was busy with the work of war In South Africa, the work of peace In North Africa never slack ened. The dam of Assuan Is now completed the newest engineering wonder of the world in the land which holds the earliest of Such wonders that still stand. This pen ning of Nile 400 miles above the Pyramids has been a work of a generation, abandoned as Impossible by the Egyptians and the French; but pushed to success by British skill and perseverance. When the easier task of Aselut is finished, as it soon will be, Egypt will have a reservoir of a billion cubic yards of water every year; crops will be dependent no longer upon the risings of the Nile and the fatness of the land will exceed that of the days of Joseph, father of all grain cornerers and first of trust mag nates. The cost of the two dams will be $25,000,000, but their value in the future when the "Cape to Cairo" dream is real ized will be tncalcuable. It la but a few years since the Japanese assumed the mastry In Korea, but the evi dences of Japanese progress and advance ment In commercial pursuits are already marked. In Seoul, the capital of the coun try, there are now published two daily papers, representing two views of public opinion, and one trl-weekly. The dally pa pers have a combined sale of 6,600 copies, while the circulation of the trl-weekly is 2,600. The papers are especially Increasing In favor in the provinces, for they give the only means for the ventilation of popular grievances against the official classes, who up to the present time have been supreme In their tactics ot oppression and have kept the people in ignorance of what was going on except when it came the time to collect the taxes, which bave been extraordinarily heavy. The office-holding classes are bit terly opposed to the publication of the pa pers, for with the letting in of light upon their doings their chances for peculation na turally grow smaller. The transformation of Seoul into the semblance of a western capi tal also goes on apace. The electric railway now embraces a large portion of the city and suburbs. The principal thoroughfares are lit with eleotrlo light, whioh Is Installed also in the palace and many prlvatSl houses. A handsome" Xfew Japanese postoffice bas recently been erected in the foreign quar ter, and a scheme of waterworks Is talked of. A difficult point ot etiquette bas arisen over the rumors of a possible exchange of visits between the king ot Italy and Presi dent Loubet. Although these visits would 68 most heartily received by the people of each country, It is bard to see how President Loubet could pay bis respects at the Qulrinal without haxardlng a com plete rupture of dlplomatlo relations be tween the Qual d'Orsay and the Vatican, and a consequent rending ot the Con cordat. It may be taken as slgnficant, however, that the section of the Paris press which most enthusiastically advo cates such an exchange of amenities Is run by the Combes government. It Is not seriously believed that President Loubet, with an antl-clerlcal campaign in full swing on bis hands, would have the courage to present himself to the pope while the guest of Victor Emmanuel III, whose stringent views of the rights of the Qulrinal are well known. But that Is what M. Loubet, the chief executive of a nominally Cathollo state, would be obliged to do If he visited Rome. Stockholm, the capital of Sweden, prides Itself on being the best served city, so far as telephones are concerned, in the world. A correspondent writes that while London has forty-seven telephones per 10,000 Inhabi tants, Paris seventy-one. New York-150, and San Francisco 706, Stockholm reaches the figure of 980. In every bedroom In every hotel there is a telephone; every tradesman, warehouse, shop and private dwelling Is connected, and even the ordinary washer woman Is on the exchange. In the streets nearly every corner Is public kiosk, where on payment of a small coin one can speak not only to any local subscriber, but even to one in any other town throughout the length and breadth of Sweden. A Light Weight Overcoat would be about as pleasant an article as you could purcbas: of us now unless you mention gloves. The Coats that we are selling at $10, $12.50, $15 and up to $25 are all that you could ask or desire for the money, and No Clothing Fits Like Ours. Exclusive Clothiers and Furnishers. R. 25. Wilcox, Manager. mr. nnYAv ami iiowF4 nti.r.. Another In Mlaonarl. Kansas City Times (dem.) A groat deal of Interest bas been at tracted recently to the efforts of the larger cities of Ohio to secure home rule, and the slate legislature has been much censured for ita apparent determination to keep the municipal affairs largely under the control of the state's officers. In his speech at Toledo last Saturday Mr. William J. Bryan said: "They say you are Incapable of home ruie here In Ohio, and If you bave s bit of American manhood about you, you will re Sent that Insult." That was very well put. Rut It is to be noted that Mr. Bryan did not say It or anything like it In his speech at Joplln, Mo., a few days ago, where be spoke from tho same platform with a governor ot Missouri, a former governor, and the mayor of Kansas City, who defended two years ago In public addresses the system by which the state machine at Jefferson City controls the police force and election ma chinery of Kansas City. The principle of "home rule" for cities Is correct, whether It Is opposed by a republican 'administration In Ohio or a democratic administration in Missouri. The only reason for the refusal to permit Kansas City to administer its own affairs for Its own benefit Is to perpetuate the state machine In power and overcome aa opposing political majority by a trained force of 275 police officers aud the concen tration of Flections control In the hands of state officers. Whnt evils In this regard exist In Ohio prevail with greater force In Missouri. The Ohio legislature attempted, at least, to grant special charters to Cleve land and Toledo which would allow those cities not only to control their police sys. tems, but to determine their own course in levying taxes for municipal Improvements. But Kansas City may not go beyond a narrow limit of expenditures even If every taxpayer In the city desires to do so with out getting the consent of the people In the Oxark counties and other parts of the state who know no more about the affairs of the city than do the residents of Green land. From an economic standpoint Kansas City Is very well able to take care of Itself, and from a political standpoint it Is an outrage that a police department owing allegiance to the governor only should be allowed by law to spend as much of the city's money as It wants to without having to ask the council for permission. If Mr. Bryan bas any regard for sincerity he should advocate municipal home rule In Missouri with as much warmth as he bas cham pioned It in Ohio. FLASHES OF FIX. Baltimore Herald: "Thank hearens. said Cheerful John, "that the man who borrows trouble never pays it back. ' Atlanta Constitution: "I tell you," cried the author, "I'm going to rise in this The editor eyed him doubtfully for five seconds and then asked: "Balloon or ele vator?" Washington Star: "You say that young woman complimented my singing, he ex claimed, aUAiuubij-. "In a way," the young woman replied; "she said she would rather hear you try to sing than try to converse." Chicago Tribune: Mr. KreeSUs What is that tropical landscape worthT-- Art Dealer Two hundred and fifty dol lars Mr. Kreesus I'll take It. I want to bang it in the parlor. It will be cheaper than having a fire in the grate Baltimore American: "A man In Wis consin," begins the Individual who reads the papers and then tells about it the fol lowing week, "ate a hundred ears ot corn the other day. and thenrr'' . "And then,' Interrupt the person who Is blessed with a logical mind, "and then they planted Jilm, of course." . , ' j Philadelphia Press: Copy Editor Did you write this stuff referring to Dr. Bocum as "one of the ablest exponents .of medical science? ...' , New Reporter Yes: hes the prominent physician. Isn't he? We has a large prac tice, anyway. Copy Kdltor Exactly. He's an "expo nent of medical practice," not "science." QIIET MAN IN THH CORNER. 8. W. Glllilan In Los Angeles Herald. I lingered o'er a checker game a night or two ago; , . , The one who played against me seemed to have no ghost of show; I bad a bunch of lusty kings that strutted all about . And bullied my opponent s men, who dared not venture out. Way over in a corner shrunk a timid little Who "staid right In his station ever sine the game began. He watched my crowned heads marching by with banner and with song. And seemed to be discouraged over stand ing still so long. But pretty soon an opening occurred two blocks away, And not another moment did that little fellow stay. , He bounded o'er the board and took three kings In one fell swoop. Then landed in my king row with a wild, ecstatic whoop. You've known these quiet fellows that Just sat around and thought, And never made a noise while tha others raged and fought; The whole community had coma to think of them as dead, . Or else so very near ft that their hope of fame had fled. The chaps with recognition for their por tion pose and strut, And seem to overlook the man who keeps his talker shut. But some day, when most everyone la looking t'other way. This quiet fellow sees a chance to break Into the play. He reaches out and grabs things that the others had ignored; He puts Into the life game all the energy he'd stored Through all the years of silence. Bo you'd better not forget . . . The still man in the corner, for he'll reach the king row yetl