THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: PATUHUAi, tjfcribMHfcit o. iW'- Tun Omaha Daily Bee. K JtOI.WATI.R. EWTOR. M.IlUHMKO EVKItr MORNING. TI.I-.M8 jV HI'IiH' ltlfTION. Xl!y ff (without Hun'lnyi, One Year. .Hit JiiiV Iw-i si.l H inOiy, Oti Yir ' 111 mif.ii'-'l ijin Y-.r 'i ' Hur.-lay '.-'. Oi.! Var. "' ruijniiy H One Y r If) 'J w i iK-rd f,ii;rjr Farmer. 'ne Y-ar.. l.'Ki Dhl.lVKIlfcD T f AIIR1F.K. ! 1 1 v Ji'i (without H'in'layi. -r copy.... ?c Iiniv ih-o (without Muti'lari. fc-r wek...Uc liy U-n (iricl'i'lidR Hor.l.ij, lir we-lt..lic Honoay It e (without Sunday. tr wm c nunusy;. rt c,y. (Including Kverilr.g li J.Vr.f,ll, J wk '(.rT.irl.iit,t .f IrfKul'i title" In oHtvii ahnuld be adlrK.1 to Uty Circulation L tHrti(K'tit. ...tr In OHIviry e- Omaha -The !'. HulMlng Mill H ty hfili and M Street. Ko'ith Omarm -' "y Julldlng, Twen- Cohik'II lilufra-io I'-rt Street. i'ti-ny'tl'iV) I'ril'y IKriMlng. .w Vork-STJ:"! Park How JsuUding. WuHiiiigi'm - ('I fourteenth Hlrett. COHUEai'ONDENCH. Communl'stl'itis relating to news ar..l edl tttlul rr. utter should he Addressed: OmaM Jir-e, lvlltorlyl Iinrttm-rit. KKMITTANCKfl. lli-mU by drsft, espre or prmtni orW cnAnai.a what thavtic will ntAn. Tha Kansas railroads will not in errnse th frIcht rata on live? stor-k. After an eihauatlve hearing of th testi mony of th fatilenien before the Kan aas llailroari roiunilsWin, that tli rates ar as high now aa the huln-ss will permit, the traffic managers and rsll rond attorney have concluded that tbla la not th time to Inrress the rates on live stcxk. Home of the pilanihlona for the withdrawal of the projiottwl higher rate schedule are Instructive and stiff gesUve. Oeneral Waptfonf-r of the Missouri radflo declared that while be lind no doubt the courta would bare hld that the commission bad no authority to Is sue an ordor prohibiting the raiae of rattle ratca, be, for one. did not troo(e to do an Injnatloe to one of the irreat Indualrtf-a of the Mate by forcing a rate on cattltMnon at a time when tbejr all any they are loalng money. Vice PrVkldent I'nul Morton of the Atchlaon, Top-ka St 8anta Fe declared In.ly i crtit lmi rrM.l In yrnnt t.l tf)nt Jn j,, the present ratea mml (hcoiiiiiii IVrfitiHl rlufckx. x-ir on OmiiiKi or "Mttorn nchimit, not cci'td. on live Ux:k In Kanaaa were aa niRU Ra TUB HICK I'UJH.IHIUSa COJJJ'ANX. BTATKMKNT OK ClilCt;iATION. ptm of Sr.tirnkn, Iioiiklatt fount y, ta. : ;oricfl I'. 'J'cnrhuck, nc.TrtHry or T H rul.llrtilnic cotriimriy, liolnff duly iiworn, da y that ilio actual numlr of lull and com-pl-ti cool of Th lmlly MoniliiK, KvenlnB and HiitKlay Ha nrlnlril (I'ltlna tl month of Auauat, !?, wa aa follows; 1. I.... I.... 6.... 7.... I... .... Ji.... U.... 32.... U.... 14.... .... ToUl.. att.itio ...sM'W .....T(I ....ai,Tn ....J2I .... 0,IM4) ...,il,IIO ...,21,NM ....an,MV ...aitVMO ...ai),KU . ,,.vi,:m ...ni,(j .vi,t:to 17.. n.. zz.. 23.. 24.. 26.. 2J.. .. 28.. 211.. JO.. HI.. the traffic would bear. Ill company had to do bualnea with the cattlemen and wanted their frlendahlp, but It re served Itaelf the rlht to ralao rate on lire atof;k at a Inter date by giving alxty daya' notice. Jlanlfeatly the orderly retreat of the traffic ma no kit and attorney of the Iaa utiaulil and roturnud cuplci. Net total kaI'' JMet avcruae aalaa OliOKQM 11. TZbCiILCK. HuhKRtilKtd In my praaijnca and aworn to tfor ma tula 111 day o( Augunt, A. . 1903, M. JJ. jilJNUATK, (Sonl.) , Notary i'ubllo. m. . " ' I'AHTIKS LEAVING TUB CITY. PartUa Icavlas b city at anjr tlma may hav Tba Bea at to thra rearalarlr ,r ottfylna; Tha Da Doalnesa ofllaa, In pmoa oi by mall. Tha addraaa will ba chanced a often aa desired. ..ao.oio ..mjt'ut I rallrcmd opera tin a; in Kanaa wa In !!xM")o Kansaa Kallroad commlaalon would rule ..si,ao ncnlnat them n It waa by the eonvlc "'ui!!! tlon tnflt thc llve tor,c l"u,,try (t KaQ- !.2!!:ihd n would bo acrloualy crippled by rai ..ao.aaol infr ti,n rate. In other worda, It was an "S'i'a'ln open confcalon on the part of the rail- ' i . . . . . ;M,470 rona manager inai iney were nirenuy crfttlnrr nut of the live atorlf linalneaa of H,fiVA l ivnnaaa an xnai im intuiu wuum iimr, The aaaertlon of aome of the railroad revenue, ahould not ue that atirplu for I although now a little ont f the ropula pajing off It obligation and thereby I tlon ceuter. It ought In comparative saving Intereat to the people. It la aald I abort time to obviate tbla objection with that the queatlon of reducing the public the Increase of population in the terrt debt will be preaented to the neit con- tory more naturally tributary to It It gresa. If ao, there I more than a proba- ahould be the pride of Kearney tp make blllfy that the declalon will be favorable I the Institution, when finally opened and under way, hold it own with the old normal acbool in usefulness and effi ciency. to reduction. . N1MVUTO .. 8n,im:i I attorneys that tney wonia rainer not have any cattle bnalnes than to lone money on the hauling wan plainly sheer bunco. Members of the Kansas Live Stock association, who havo been fight ing the proposed Increase in rates, testi fied that live stock rates bad been in creasing west of the Missouri river for a number of years, and they fortified this charge by an exhibit of freight bills they bad been compelled to pay. The ruoat conclusive proof that tht railroad are not losing money Is to be found In the report-of the Interstate Commerce commission for the year end- fllr Thomas never expected to take ,n T ' which ahow. that the not earning ol iuo ronronua were $00(1,610,704, or $51,31)5,000 in excess of those of the year ending July 1, 1902, which was notably the most prosperous year railroads bad experienced within a, quarter of a century. When It is borno In mind that the, increase In divi dend for the last fiscal year was about 25 per cent over the preceding year, it take a great deal of nerve even for a Like any other sporting event, a yacht railroad attorney to assert that the rail W;'ir O.T THt JVAVT. Admiral Uewey believes that the navy oi xue Limeu piaiea buouiu ua verj The Taclflc Express company Is a greatly enlarged and be preaenta good domestic corporation chartered by the reasons therefor. Of course those who it,te 0f Nebraska with IU legal bead- aro not In favor or a large navy win uarter here In Omaha, where its say that it Is perfectly eonalstent on the stockholders' meetings have been regu part of Dewey to urge that the sea neld. How does It get into the power of the United States ahould be federal courts with' litigation that be- made much greater than it Is at prea-longs properly In the state courts? ent, but that Illustrious commander has very good and substantial reasons fori Iowa manufacturers are forming an his opinion. I organization to make sure that the He says that our Immense coast line I manufacturing interests of their state and our rapidly increasing world trade I are creditably represented In the Iowa demand a davy. In his Judgment we! exhibit at tba St. Louis World's fair. must have It for our own protection, I Nebraska has Important manufacturing not only with respect to the safe-1 Interests as well as agricultural Inter- guurding of our own shore and the I ests to advertise to the world. protection of our Insular possessions, but also for the security of our foreign commerce, which Is steadily expanding. I not this a perfectly sound and reason able view? No one, it is safe to say, will queatlon the fact that we ought to make adequate provision for the protec tion of our great coast line, covering thousands of miles. It Is equally neces sary that we shall take care of our in- i stilar possessions. Even more vital Is the protection of our foreign commerce. All these considerations make It imper ative that the United States shall tie a strong naval power, for It I mani festly upon that power that this nation must depend In the future for the main tenance of Its position among the great nation of the world. As a matter of fact the Influence which the Unitod States today enjoys Is in no small de gree due to Its naval power and this Is the best possible reason for increasing that power. ' King Edward baa concluded his tour of the continent Incognito and is again homeward bound. The succoes of his ruse' ha been unquestioned. Every one who recognized him showed their re spectful deference by pretending to be fooled by his royal disguise. With the public who uses the streets It (s not a question who gets the con tract to repair our perforated pave ments so much as that the work be done by someone and done speedily. Ta A. Carararle, Kaa.. Chicago Inter Ocean. Tha flay may coma when tha Eal and the Lion will dwell together in tha same national house. 3ut when that day cornea the Lion wilf dwell inside the Eagle. LKSSUS or THt CVP BACK. We have again demonstrated our su periority over the British in thc build ing of race yachts. The signal victory Reliance conclusively proves that Pinching; tha Comamcr. Kansas City Journal. flntHM nf flhA anthraMt mlnM In itm aaat in this special particulor the American hav bMI) ,hut down on aec0unt ofthe of that cup homo with him anyway. Leas than a month to Ak-Sar-Ben's royal carnival. Let all loyal knights get busy. An injunction fo prevent more Injunc tions would bo tho popular 'thing In Omaha Juat now. .' Is fur lu advance of the Englishman, but how is it in other respects in rela tion to marltlmo superiority? Aa the Brooklyn Eagle suggests, while we have again proved our superiority in yacht ing, there remains unproved our ability to ruu successfully a merchant marlue of any importance under the same con ditions as our rivals, race lose its power as a drawing card Nvhen it becomes a walkaway. Senator Ilanua may be under a pby alclan's core, b,ut he will keep Tom Johnson buay Just the same. Perhaps the question will have to be submitted at the next election. What to Co with the new market' house? Entries In the great republican county tournament close next wecV. And for once the dark horse Is completely barred. roads are losing money on freight trans portation. The withdrawal of the proposed In creased rate schedule in Kansas will, doubtless, also impel the railroads op erating In Nebraska to do likewise. The farmers of Nebraska are already paying all that the truffle will bear, and while they have no railroad commission to appeal to for redress, which In all prob ability they would not have been able to get out of a railroad commission If we had one, they have a right to ex pect the traffic managers of the Ne braka railroads to conclude with Mr. Ex-Senator David B. Hill Is speaking raul Morton, that "it will not be wise at county fairs. The ex-senator, how-' M cnPP,e lne IITewo industry oy ex over, 1 candid enough to admit that he ocUn- more than lhe trafflc w111 bc"-" talk politic all tho time. KtDVCltiQ THt ItATlUSAL VtDT. Reports of Improved cotton crop con-1 The policy of the republican party has dltlons are bringing the prices down. always been to reduce the public debt. Tho speculators, have the consolation, I Wnnt it has done in this direction Is a however, of havlug something soft to I matter of record which is one of the .full on. moat houoruble chapters in tho party's history. As soon as possible after the Now that tho Sugar trust has gobbled I war of rebellion the republican party aM tho beet sugar factories of Michigan, I entered upon the policy of reducing the it will be In accord with the eternal fit- vast debt which, that terrible conflU nesa of things for that beneficent mo- had created and it kept up this policy tiopoly to abaorb the beet surgar fac tories of Nebraska "ns a measure of couomy." A Freuch baron has Juat been sub jected to a flue and Imprisonment sen tence in 1'arU for autoinobllo scorching. for many years, until the great debt hud been reduced to a point that gav no concern to tho country. In" tho process of doing this the re publican party met with more or less objection. It was urged against tu! Vselesa Precaatloa. Chicago Record-Herald. Mexico la busy erecting forts along the boundary line between that country and the United States. It Isn't likely, though, that the American capitalists will let thla fact keep them from ultimately annexing "overstocked market." Simultaneously an Increase In the price of anthracite has been ordered In the west, presumablyyon ac count of scarcity of the product. And the trust did the ordering at both ends.s Stlrrlnar Ip Bad Memories, Chicago Inter Ocean. The British commission of Inquiry into the conduct of the Boer war Is out In a re in yachting we I port which makes recommendation aa to auk no odds." savs that naoer. "but rn th lessons gained. Borne of the British international shipping we cannot main- f"er'!' wht wr nald 'fh that T" I fllftf al II nor nrnfl r miinn rw tha onmmla. tala a respectable footing either with ,,,., conclusions, as they have long been or without protection. We can build familiar with its lessons. the fastest yachta for amusement, or splendid warship for defense, yet we cannot run tho 20,000-tonners- which carry tho world's commerce and pro- inoto the world's peace and progress un less we hide them under an alien, flag. Why are such craft beyond us?" 1 t'nfoaaded Feava. . Indianapolis Journal. The German press is expressing satlsfao tlon with what It la pleased to consider aa "the advent of the United States aa a factor In the Turkish problem. " Nonaenae. The United States has no more thought of Inter ferine In the Turkish oroblem than It has of lucy wouunot do neyona us ir we reviving , memories of the Scheiswlg-Hol extended to ships In the merchant ma-1 stein or the Alsace-Lorraine question. It is rlno for ocean-carrying trade the same "imply looking after America interests, aa policy that foreign governments give to all natlona do after their interests when ever thoy are threatened In any quarter. Time's Merry Round. - Cincinnati Enquirer. The summer has about waned. Time will eat the lovely autumn mbntha up almost before we know it, and thfn winter will "blow over" rapidly. Then will come sprln OTHER LAD TTM OtHS. The German government baa lssu4 an ofndal estimate of the population of Ger many on July 1, placing the whole number of Inhabitants at M.W.0. The ransus nf December 1. 19, fixed the population ,f the empire at K4K.17S. Tha apparent In- crase In two years and seven months Is about 2.232.000. That makes the rale of gain a little lees than 1.1 per cent annually luce lhe latest enumeration of the pepU of the fatherland was completed. A country gaining In that way about aWMt poj.le very year and likely It add about IQ.V'i.V In the neat decade to a population which already comes very close to W.W.W Is certainly big enough and strong enough to face the world with all the pride and con fidence characteristic of tha Germans of today. All of their boys and girls go to school. Illiteracy la hardly known In the German empire. Industrial training is a marvel of care and scientific thoroughness. The .national habit of doing thlmra well dominates German commerce. Oersean citlea grow at a rplendid pace. German trade expands beyend the fondest hopes of the German captalna or industry ana masters of commercial enterprise, a rew yeare ago. It Is not without reason that the kaiser and his subjects hold their heads high bfore all men. Germany has the lareest white copulation living under any flag save two. Russia baa perhaps ew.000.OW more subjects of European wooa. neiuier this country nor Russia baa so many adults of the whit race ho can read and write and show some knowledge of arlthmeUo and world geography, or prove themselves skilled In a trade or trained In a profea-elon. In Abyssinia telegraphlo conetructlon la making rapid progress. Tha station Dlre-Daonah, the present terminus m " svanoh rallwav of Djibouti, has Just been connected by telegraph with Harrar, so that Addis-Ababa Is now in communicant with the entire world by way of Djibouti and the French line. On the other hand, the Italiane of Erythrea are actively push ing a telegraph which, starting from Adl- guala la the Berae, win -" Addis-Ababa. The work has been simul taneously atarted from both points. It Is eapected that in 1903 Erythrea will be In telegraphic communication with the prlncl- pal towns ana centers m - - Em of rapid couriers will be organUed between the north and south "ons of Ethiopia. The Italians tnina . . . nnrtiical than line will be more rapiu the French Aden-DJioouu rouw. The apUt in the councils of the social a.morrat oarty in Germany u I more than local Interest, me m a?t issuers whether the organisation is to continue It policy of atuDDorn noe ... v,. ,ivi.rniTiiiiL or whether it i.tA hecome a progressive and enllght ened opposition, capable of formulating arrvInK to the Iront COIUiruim. . . . rf awiA.1 ron measurea lor me ucuiuuci" - i.in The vouncer element In tne pany, as led by Herr Bernstein, la in favor of assuming legislative responsibilities and f having a representaUve of the social democracy among the vice preamen i the Reichstag, even if that official should have to stand In the presence of the era rim tlma to time. The hissing of tha veteran, who atill cllnga to the -K-,...o.ir,nist theory, in the present con venUon in Berlin, would aeem to Indicate that for the moment the younger men are In the ascendancy. Should the change of policy occur it will ahow that partiea. like demagoguea. are aobered by the re'P""" blllty. It would doubtleaa draw to the i.t ri.mnorata many votera who atill think of the party aa one bearing the r.t anarchf or of revolution ana ... m it the party of genuine so. clal progreaa and reform it is slowly be coming, roi.mcai. DiiirT. their merchant ships. The reason why the United Stutes Is not today one of the greatest of nations in regard to Its merchant marine, Instead of being one of the least, depending almost en tirely upon foreign ship-owners for the transportation of its products, is In the land summer again, with the same old ex fact that our government Is less libera! S"10" advertlaementa; the same pictures than thc governments of Europe In en- -m" X courngihg their merchant marine. Per- .. the too rapidly disappearing autumn. hap In time the American people will I eta. What an Insidious, rapid and relent- real ize this, and if ever they do we shall e automaton the whirligig of time is. have a merchant marine that will eur-1 anynow-, - After the Vacetlea, Heat. ' Chicago News. At this time of year, when summer vaca tions are closing and the Inoomlng trains are dally bringing thousanda of city toilers back to their work, it may be worth while pointing out that the advantages of the va- pass that of every other nations Then we shall have complete commercial In dependence. te In order to relieve the Douglas county district court from the heavy pressure for injunctlona. tha federal court has c.tlon custora are not merely physical, taken a hand in the injunction business Theoretically, the Returning workers should by issuing an order to restrain City feel rested and refreshed and ready to Treasurer Hennlnga from enforcing the Plunge at once Into their labors. As a mat- 0 tas fm s ma rw tt f hm will fjAl 1mji In. U-o! lection of the city tales levied on the oMjw4 t0 wor tnan they old befor0 th, va. rnciuc txpress company. An lnjunc- cation term. Borne. who are not actually tlon to restrain the collection of taxes fatigued by overexertion will bs enjoying strikes a blow at tho Ufa of municipal thl basful condition of physical repose ... , wherein they feel literally "too string to guYeruuivni. tu. rae.uc ..res. Thy w,u heftrUIjr wtn w. company can stave oCt tho payment of D. Howeile that the only time one really its taxes for an Indefinite period I needs a vVcatlon la the day after the vaca- through the intervention of the Courts, I tlon ia endedv policy of debt reduction that it was un What's tho us of having a - title of I necessary and that the effect would In nobility. In these degenerate days If it I cvltably be bnd upon the general affairs other corporations may do the same doc not confor even the privilege of of the country. The argument In op- ruimiiig an auto car at any speed that position seemed at the time to be plaus- Xieasos? lble. In the opinion of a great many ' t . .. i people the government debt was at the Congressman llurkett' persuasive time rather a safeguard than otherwise Iouence Is suld to have secured a to the prosperity, of the nation that it Ilomesteadlaar in Alaska, thing, and if corporations can restrain I rour yrAe News. the collection or taxeB, why not also in-1 Th passage of tho homestead bill, which dl vidua Is who profess to ba aggrieved I gives on the right to take up and improve at tho asaesHinent of their nronertv? 130-acre tract in Alaska. Is the roost Im- If corporations and Individuals can all promise out of the supervising architect was a good thing for the people to own of the treasury to complete the plan government bonds and to that extent to for the Lincoln postonVa next month be Interested lathe financial affairs of instead of next sprmg. Chicago and the nation. The Idea was that, the in several other cities ought to enlUt Mr. evltable effect of this woukl be to make iturkftt in the cmuho .of Ihoir much- the people more patriotic. ' , delayed federal buildings. 1 The republkun party took tho view that it una iuit a matter of nutrlot Ikiii John Teiuplo ti raves of Georgia 1 not h,,, of btiHlness iollcy In. regard to the mu orltlnul lu his Ueportallou solution paj-nulif of the public debt, and that or. tne race protnem. ine ucportutlon thn sooner this great burden mon iue is a reiic ot ancient slavery daya tho pople could be reduced the better that has never appealed to sensible peo- fr u concerned. Consequently the re- plo aa practicable. It Is cei tulnly leas I publlcuu party set about at the earliest rractlcablo now than it was before the opportunity reducing- the mM.lie debt war, when tho negroes numbered lestf I Hmi tl0W groat its work In this direction thuu half what they now do, 1 wa. cun n,adlly be ascertained by those - I who care to consult tha figures showing Tha Joint debate between the Omaha the decrease of tho public-debt since wono ueraia ami tiio Moux City Jour- the end of the civil war. It Is au un .. i ...... in. it i . . i .... ... .... .n iiuuuuuimi aiuiuiiu on pnrallelMl record, astonishlug every th eiinnka republican platform I other uatlon of tha world. wonia do very null rcuduig wera it not a Washington correspondent ouote a aplced tilth souie fiction. It U asserted, member of congress as expressing the r.r efcsmpiu, lint llum Hammond re-1 opinion that it will be expedient for signed tlw iM)stinastershlp of Freimt I congress to further reduce the public bacausa' of his conscientious scruples debt, lie Is quoted as saying that with against supporting .the policies of the I our present great revenues there Is no successor to William McKlnley. it la good reason why the government ahould aa open secret that Mr. Ilsmmoud a re-1 not rut down its indebteilueaa aud tentlon beyond his four-year term was I thereby save tha people tha lutereat that in the nature or a concession made by I la being pnld on these obligations. On the Nebraska sMihtors and prearranged I general principles the soundtiess of this and agreed upon months befora tha I proiOHltlou will not s questioned. resignation bad been tendered. This I There is no good reason why tha govern much U dua to tha truth of history. I weut, with a large aunual surplus of portant act sver paased in behalf of our far nnrtharn terrltorv. Heretofore Alaska has enjolu the collection of their taxes, mu- hMn tJim hom. of th, rovw the fortune niclpal paralysis Is Inevitable. Without hunter and prospector, and having no home money with which to pay its policemen, stead law It has given no encouragement to its flrmen Ita street ..nli.ir forces permanent homeseekers. We have regardei . . - i i. ia AlUHk muv, us lire v s scaiau w Its water rent and lis public lighting go,d wh0M tlgM cllmat, .,, ,nadw,utta bills, the city would be without police transportation facilities made Ita treasure and lire protection, without water, with- Inaccessible to all but the man of indomi- out light, without public service of any kind. 'On broad gauge lines Injunctions huve formerly been issued only where no other remedy la available. Tartiea who feel aggrieved over tba assessment have a right to recover the overcharge tlirough the courts, but to give them the privilege of standing off the tax col ics-tor means simply anarchy in local government. table courage and robust health. In truth Alaska la a land of limitless agricultural possibilities and this new order of things. which haa been too tardy In coming, la sure to result in development along less pre carious lines of Industry than those pursued by the gold hunter and the adventurer. There la a rainbow of great promise arch Ing Alaska Immediate future. Kearney people take decided excep tion to the Inaluuatlon that the loca tion of the new normal school in their city wits not fully Justliled by the rela- the democratic convention and nominate tlve merits of, fhe competing towns or New York Bun In the Nebraska populist convention the Hon. M. F. Harrington laid down a line of conduot for the most eminent Of Ne braska fusionists: If the money bags of the east control was determined chiefly in the interest of the old normal scboo at Peru. The lice's comment on the award did not question the correctness of tba solution reached by the state board, but merely a man like Gorman, and Mr. Bryan does not wa'.k out. I shall regret every vote ever cast for Mr. Bryan." Mr. Bryan's aversb-n to eastern money bags needs no stimulation. There are western moneybags on which he look with a kinder eye. Tonight, for instance, he la going to. make a spoech in laudatloa declared unworthy any motive iuaplredlof a great western "moneybag" and mo l.v a .loilru in rrtnnla the new tnalltnfl.in I nouollat." the Hon. Tom Johnson. Mr. for the benefit of the old. . In point of ,ohn,K,1n r,ch "oulh " ?ott? . . , . . . campaigns on.tila osn hook. He Is tha fact, the champions of Kearney made a Urget and moat conspicuous representa- remarkable exhibit to show superiority tlve of the money power in politics. He Is of its claims which The Bee sincerely moneybag denouml ur moneybag, and hopes It will ba able to maka good, "f, Bra on u . , .. Ita fine railroad fadlltlea and easy ac- ,f ,om, of cont,g r, con. toasitiny win ix reaany conceaeo, ana, I tribuud te hla aide (, the gam The project of connecting" Venice with th. mainland by a aubstantlal causeway 1. again being revived. Three year, ago the sindaco appointed a coramlsalon to in vestigate the matter, and thla commission v,. .,,. handed In Ita report, or rather nv report., for each ot the five commla slonera had a .pedal duty to Pform Prof.' Alessandro Betochhl wa. to Inquire Into th possible eneci. --. vt hvelanlc results: Prof. ' .it nr. commerce; Prof. Boubee ; .ruction, and Prof. Lulgl Rossi, gVai va ws - - artistic results. With tha exception of the laat, the commissioners rmr - .. - ...i.mJ to them, although n(. Betochhl. wassani - gest a rebuilding of the old bridges so aa to permit a freer flow of water than U now' possible. The ;'laguna morta would ten ceaae to "'" 1Jt ould disappear, while If the brldgea were be broadened freer access cuum w with the mainland. Aa to B.gnor a with fine old Venetian cynicism., he neither deplore, nor yet advocates the propo-4 innovation. "Bo much of beauty has Re appeared from the city." he,. ays. . that the moat mon.trou. rnu" ''"' . i .i.h the uncouth rem- even be narmoiuo- ---- nants ot the .haltered glory that remain. Between the ugly .trvciures v Ity and the discarded and shunned or pil laged .plendor there is little to chooae. t.. ...ti.tiM from Manitoba and -the Canadian northwest territories showthat .v.. .... r Increase In the aettUng ot va cant landa during the last year ha. been truly remarkable. The increase wa. dde to the demand from Americana, and therefore It la very mtereaung irf,..trlal condltlona in thla counUy. B- ldes, the development of the Canadian northweat rnuat add greauy m trade already nourisnjng u.... w.- United States and the nonunion. " ernment of Cafcada does not sell land. It granta homesteads, under certain condi tions, to actual aettlera. In the year end ing with the last day of 'June It disposed .r twice as much lana in me nonn a. U allotted to homeaeekere In the preceding t.iv months. The province oi bm.ium soils tend. It disposed of more than 280,000 acsea in the last flseal year.- again 161.000 in the like period preceding. Meanwnue. h. Hudson Bay company, atm tne owner nf vaat ooaseasions In ! Brltiah America. aald over 308.000 ecrea during tne year wnicn ended with laat May. agalnat aales of 1M.00O acres the previous year. It seems tnat tne three great sources of land aupply for aet tlera In the Canadian northwest, tne do minion government, the province oi Mani toba and the Hudson Bay company, sold or granted about 8,700.000 acrea In the last flseal year, agalnat lesa than halt aa much In the preceding twelve months. According to M."lockroy; former French minister of marine. It Is useless to talk about France taking the Initiative In the disarmament movement. ' alnce It haa a! ready done .6. In a long article In Le Tempa he ask what M. Pelletan haa done with the navy: he points out where worn on ships has been suspended, maneuvers abandoned and officers withdrawn from ac. tlve service. The Mediterranean squadron, the Northern squadron, are weakened through Inactivity and reduction, while the Far Eastern squadron la "absolutely Im potent." And he concludes: "Aa I. per celved, we are disarmed everywhere. Squad roV-.s without cohesion, coal or commanders, there Is nothing else anywhere. Tet the French are so absorbed by what is going on at home that they will not look beyond their frontiers. From Dunkirk to Saigon the national defense is broksn, foreigners are laughing at us and France continues ta pay her tCO.000,000 franca." I rlf,fi1 W. J r.ryan an4 4Jerge Frl WiMlarrie will do a eplellng tnrn foe Trnn Johnson In Ot,k fxrtb spielers are eea sptru'ius In lhe tlaas of "also ran." Cms of filg fll;l I.wv'Tr'e political plr r.l'S In New York ar7rbel n.Vn sanyl wl'hee and V kege e beer. Big Mill Is tHTornlng a formidable candidate for mayor. It Is repotted thai IW.af'W Quay of Penn sylvania would like to t'und oot his politi cal earner try a term la tha cabinet. A detriment of hortlruilBre would fit hla UI--trts. Then he eould shake U rlam tree at all hours. In hla I-abor day proclamation Governor Ijurbln of In1 1 ana says: "With ua labor la not merely dlgnl.Vd and attended with op portunity, but Uses on the nobility ef patriotic service, and there la dishonor In voluntary Idleness, either of rich or poor." Congressman Drlggs, accused ef com plicity li the postal frauds, pleada that the deal waa made In May and that be did not qualify aa congressman until the following December. Nothing Is said about drawing hla salary from tba 4th of March. No democratic national convention haa been held In the east for more than thh-ry years. Tha defnoeratlo national conven tion of 187 was held In St Louis, of 1XD0 In Cincinnati, ef UN la Chicago, MM In St Louis, In Cnlcago, 1XX In Chicago and 1W In Kansas City. A Milwaukee alderman without a shadow of fear In his soul prodded a home corpora tion In this cruel style: "Resolved, That a naphtha lamp be placed at Twenty-third and HadJey streets so that residents in that vicinity may see the electrla lamp sus pended there." Oovernor Jeff Davis of Arkansas, a fighter of Sronderful lingual power, at tempted to contradict an opponent on a political platform near Little Rock. When the governor brushed the dust off hirgood ciothea he waa four feet below the stage and hla jaw ached. - Geheral Simon Bolllvar Buckner of Ken tucky la SO years of age, but haa vim enough to enter the state campaign in support of his son-in-law, Col. Morris E. Belknap, the republican nominee for governor. Oen- eral Bolllvar is the right kind of a father In-law to tie to. "A number of eastern contemporaries," says the Kanaas City Journal, "persist In the. mistaken statement that a Missouri state senator waa. lined 1100 tor accepting a bribe. The fine wa. Imposed on the sen ator for asking a bribe. The senators who accepted bribes have not been punished in any way." Arthur Pue Gorman, Jr., son of the Mary land senator, apparently is sure to be re turned to the state senate from Howard county. The young man la In every way a chip off the old block, an astute poli tician, frank and outspoken about most things, but very cautioua when it comes to talking politics. He ia an only son and from early boyhood has been great chuma with his father. He Is a successful lawyer. A Lancaster (Pa.) newspaper man who hobnobbed with Senator John T. Morgan of Alabama at Sulphur Springs, Va., reporta that the senator haa a apeclAc for demo cratic troubles. He proposes a financial scheme by the "adoption of gold and silver on a parity as money on no stipulated ratio, the government impressing ita stamped' valie on the coins, issuing and re ceiving them at that value, opposing fur ther use of the national debt aa a basis for the national currency, requiring banks to surrender the. bonds on demand, and td hold an equal amount of gold' and sliver coins to the amount of the notes they issue. these coins to be behind them. Instead of. bondsi colna, not bullion, to be the basis of circulation. National banks are to be the medium of supplying bank notes to the country in return for the government's protection." Talking about( Sarsaparilla Ever hear of any other than Ayer's? 9.C. IfffOi liar situation, aa regards the anthracite coal Interest waa that they controlled a natural monopoly of a product necessary to the comfort and ta tha very life of a largo portion of the people, A prolonged deprivation of the enjoyment of this neces sary ef life would have tended to precipi tate an attack npon these property lights of which you .peak; for, after all. It Is rain to deny that thla property, so peculiar In Its condltlona. and which Is properly spoken of as a natural monopoly, la af fected with a public Interest 'I don't think that, any president aver acted more wlaely, courageously, or promptly In a national crisis. Mr. Rooee rait deserves unstinted pralaa for what he did." FLASHES OF FTX. "It's hard to have a lot of debts that you simply can't pay." "Oh. I don't know! It's worse to have a lot that you, simply have te pay." Detroit Free Press. Only tha rich man gets Intoxicated. The poor man gets drunk. Somervllle Journal. "Tea." aaid Misa Howell s, after her solo "I Intend to go abroad to Apish my musical education." "Huh!" snorted Miss Ore-wells, "why not finish It light now and save the expense T" Philadelphia press. - . "I hear that McJlmea has come into the possosalon of considerable wealth. We'll nave to admit him into our set now, will we not?" "That doesn't follow. He came Into pos session of his wealth by working for it" Chicago Tribune. Trembling Missionary If, aa you aay, yenj are a peaceful .monarch, why are all those human heads on your tentT Cannibal Chief well, you see, thla la my headquarters. Llpplncott's. First Moequi to Great New Jersey, but I'm having hard luck. Second Mosquito What's the matter? "There's a plump girl wearing-a peelc-s-bno waist over there, but she keeps singing 'Hiawatha' all the time." Indianapolis Journal. - - "Well," grumbled the crsfiky woman, who was Inspecting the new house he had recommended, "there are disagreeable features about the place that you didn't mention before." "They weren't here before." "What features are you referring toT" "Yours." Philadelphia Ledger. Alexander had Juat received Bucephalus aa a present. "Don t you think It's a fine horse?" asked the courtiers. "No," he retorted, weeping, angrily. 'I want Lou Dillon or nothln'. Spurning the gift, he aought for other Worlds to lick. New York Bun. Sir. Thomas built a lovely yachtl..... It cost, 'they said, an awful lacht Raid he; "Ain't she an amicacht? ' She'U lift the cup, and rake the pacht." - PRAISE FOR THE PRESIDENT. Judge Gray Commends Hla Coarse 1b the Great Coat Strike. Interview in New Tork World. "It has been said,' Judge Gray, that -tha interference of Preaident Roosevelt In th anthracite strike, considering the power and Influence of hla office, amounted to a modification of property rights. How does that criticism atrlke you?" The Judge's reply was aa follows; "I have no hesitation In aaylng that the preaident of the United States was con fronted in October,. 1902, by the existence a crista more: grave and threatening than any that had occurred since the civil war. I mean that the cessation of mining In the anthracite .country, brought about by the dispute, between tha miners and those who- controlled the greatest natural monopoly in his country, and perhaps in the world, naa brought upon more than one-half of the' American people a condi tion of deprivation of one of the neces saries of life, and the probable continu ance of the dispute threatened not only the comfort and health, but the safety and good order, of tha nation. He was without legal or constitutional power to Interfere, but hla position ar president ot the United States gave him an influence, a leadership, as first cltlsen of the republic, that en abled hire to appeal to the patriotism and good Ben se of the parties' to the contro versy and to place upon them the moral coercion of public opinion to agree to an arbitrament of the strike then existing and threatening eonaequences so direful to the whole country. He acted promptly and courageoualy, and in ao doing averted the dangers to which I have alluded. 'So far from interfering or infringing upon property rights, the president's ae tlon tended to conserve them. .The peeu But Iselin had a counternlacht He also built a costly yacht. And though at times tne race gaeni naom, The cup stays In the same old pecht eomerviiie journal. A TRUB 'INCIDENT. " " Estelle Lennan In Boston Globe, 'Twas only a child with quivering Jlp O'er a broken dish she had le-sllif But the look of fear In those sweet bins eyes V , Filled my heart with a sad surprise. Not much more than a baby she. Surely .not more than six could be. Her heart ahould be light and free aa air. isot even a tnougnt anouia sne Know ot care: But she looked at the pieoea with shrinking dread. Tears in her eyes and a drooping head. l urtea ner up ana saia:' - vvnv cry I We'll get a new one, you and L And then, you aee, It will be allrlg-ht," But I could not banish that look of frfarht. "Mamma will whip me," she whispered low, "And I tried ao hard to be careful, you know. . She says I am naughty and careless and bad. And' aim loves little sister, not ma." How sad Came the words of grief from that baby heart! I could feel the teara from my own eyes start. How can a mother ever bear To hurt a baby ao small and fair. A treasure sent to her straight trass) heaven. The greatest blessing ever given? How dear the touch of their clinging arm. How sweet to shield them from all alarmal Had that mother laid her babe away, Aa I did, one ead summer day, Sha , would rule through love, and not through fear. The heart of this Innocent baby dear. Perhapa when' too late she will realise That baby's love Is earth's paradise, And when no longer the little feet Run so eagerly mamma to meet. When no pleading arms 'round her neck - shall clasp. When naught but a memory's left to grsjm, She will wish she had wiped the tears away. And only loving worda did say. I bouaht the dish, twaawll I could do, Klsae the aweet baby lips and said: "Now you ' ' Tell mnmma you're sorry and next time will try To be careful, and perhaps she won't whin you a-oodbv!" Children's School Wearables Our clothing for boys and children like that we make for men is cut to fit, and is thoroughly well tailored and of trustworthy materials. We carry large lines, giving a wide field for , selection. We have just the. style you want and in the right size: ' When you are ready to look, we would be pleased to show you what a fine gathering we have for the boys Jn clothing, furishlngs and hats. "No Clothing Fits Like Ours' , R. S. "WncoTsV-ManaiBrmr.